The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, February 26, 1868, Image 5

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    11=Eil
II
El
1itt5..114( Gaptts
D 1 DIY, TZEIttfiRY 26,11184.
bi proposed, by the capitalists of
Eochelltr...N.• Y., to bnild a railroad
inimlittt city to the coal and lumber
dionicts of rminffyivials, =kin con
nection with the Erie Railway, thence
seta to the coal Dada
-:Tau vote or the Home ofTleprebents
!Atte, appropriating fifty thousand dol
lars to defray supensesis the cases of
naturalized citizens imprisoned abroad,
tharoughly right, and cannot fail ofre
ceivinsrgenerla approval..
I
lace= ' the management of Girard
College ha e become .tto flagrant that
giroceedings 'have been commenced. to
take tho, trol of the trust cut of the
City t lad. Teat it la the So
-0-1,10 Geort.a the co.,:wmitipt.
Ms:ramie fest.relspung Into. Its an. 1
srads3 bstatt . Repudiations:. , proto',
chuneoici end revotations tips the hit
ti .
notsbbi incidents. The pop lstion does
„nt!tistitesis ilia elements out of whkh s
re speotelae had .Penswlent politic csn
Tamen theTariut Imre several times
"innattncid ttte, thJugation ..of the Cre
-tam limsninmstion seems further
off than It was some months age. 'Toe
.tlftteks have shown fetich of the fire and
101 . $ zip*.ctie Indent dock from which
y are descended; and are liters% In
the end, to secure n complete triumph
inter their opOessOrs. --.„_
- Sr. L01:110118 WritIc1:1:1,11 enterprise in
the way of public improvements daring
the past few years which has enveloped
lee acbt of 69.0 09 : 600 . Edi•
visaing the populstion at 240,000 heads;
and'a valuation oriloo,oomoo, this wm
gives, ratio of Vtt.26 per eiptts;sted be
.9.91 per (rant. on valuation. quite s re
ble burden under which to rest.
Moms is' prop:tilted a Slceded _.refurra
tit the dtatittmticwior seeds bythe Coin
iiiesiouer af Agriculture. Horticultur
ists(rill 'rejoice river this ennuancemerd;
uin days put wherillary planted what
were -labeled with high srositding risme
-se - fluorite .rich &mere, they Tare
-trettely mortified et seeing ststeli saw
flowersTcrogi up. likes Cinderella in guy
•
Garr. Sitsasus, in common
isith nosily ell the other °mails of thi
-evidently diesatieff ed with the
of the -President upon General
• Glint Us his, howaycz, sflowcd hls
sensitiveness to tarry him to extremes in
Uuateaing to - resign if he coo in no
- other inky avoid taking command of the
'new distriet carved out for him. It may
ye- his resignsti6n, tinder 1314, elratir
stances, would fait -the President bettor
than his acceptance.
•
S.. T. Edvirvaxxr, the merchant prince
liew,:k"ork„ has entered with ranch
spirit into thocamprign for Grant. He
hes rdready. dime. much good wink for
the' soldiefliero. When each men, so
.largris , interested in the finances of the
country, lend iirtr time and exertions
tothe advancement of Grant's Claims on
the presidency, wester aspit lasts seed
mot boasts,..3lr. - Stewart has made a
imilection !lOU= journals, and their
num is-legion, that have expressed a
emcee for.his favorite.
onn. advice:is from Harrisburg
`. stated that the Free Hiiiroad Bill has
rpused the Senate. This means that
ielteri the House till reached the t3enato
it wasitmended by imbstituting for It the
bill that originated in that body. It he
SOW SPparent, from the strong ma3ority
In-the Senate in favor of its own hill,
that Ito other can pats at the present
sesliOn. Either the House waist recede,
wad take what it can get,nr-gotnothmg
at ;tinder - the examinant:es , we
Krnat it wild recede and accept the Satiate
ItilL - Though not all that is domed, it
in the maim . . a Very ion& bitL If It
shall become slaw, and prove so strin
gent as to prevent enteiprises from
,growing np under it, the poptdar de.
"nand will force a revision. .
E
1
El
is swots probable that a einmeution
will he made between the 'Phut:with
and Cmthelliville Railroad and the dile.
glow Talley Railroad at TartlO theek,
abOntlielve milesaboye this city: This
-wilt enable trains of the fast named
-road to
run directly into business quar
ters here and easily .
,le effect a Inaction
with the Pittsburgh, Peat Wayne and
,phinago Railroad, The depots of the
Allegheny road and the Fort Wayne
mud are close together, an that this ar
rangetrent will enable the three ethr
necting-linea to use' one station, and to
- makes through schedede, liable to as lit.
tiedelay Or inetmveraeriee at this point,
experienced raider the moat favors
eircuisatar.eas elsewhere.
iMiths,'asitether for Passengers or fierght,
;Ana run through from lishlaters to Chi-
any other point west of this
city, withatrot the rlightest
=
CUE
I
MEI
,
19nars the Piria Fotposition was
progreas our country had just commen
ced to-recupenite trot:lithe state in which
it WAS left by the long waged war
stgairun rebellion, and was it1..110 proper ,
amend= to enter Ito a contest with ,
ther*Mid at large for honors sad Prizes
retregoition of the handiwork, EA
a e mechanism cid =ma. Not
iiihi4anding that fact, and the various
obstacles anti drawbacks in other shapes
ander which she labored in representseion, a comParison. of the awards demon.
States that we are number one in grand
'Oresund eiceedei evaluation except
leg P=o , 2 , in the general proportion of
gold sad raver medals- and- honorable
- . racutione. This is a aracedid cowman-.
easy`on the industry and geniis of our
people, but how great wtedd have been
the- MirlaMit : over the civilized world
had* uni.ediments beenoffrred to fall
tend genend sepretentation.'
1111
ao 131'ns in the • Uniera b more sadly
la aced of mineraland agricultural de
velopment than West Virginia. Her
'brosd fields and Lilt aides have been per
saltied to remain. Idle for the want of
labor, capital and enterpriss. ledeed,
- up till wIWIa a few years hack tLo great
Awful -Sty of the lehobluints of the in
- tarter dist:lett of that State lord devel
oped to energy or talent, and were but
-., a shads higher in the intellectual order
of society thanthe "pcornhltatrash" of
the slave States more sllateint from free
, once. =The egabliahmene of the pahhe
school roam, the influx of men of edit
. =dolt eadLaspital who airtight nen-acids
iii' elevation, have given higher tone to
-tirepeoo sad has around them into a
full mesa of their being part and parcel
of an enlightened nation. They • aro
gradually biting themselves, ont of the
bondage of Ignorance tied indolcr.ee,
twin followers of slavery, and a new
order of flange is slant lobe establlahett ,
Virginia. to rich In, mineral
Wesl4-:- /dlisarnteeming with rich
.dernetta Iron, bad, obi and copper,
..: a nd possibly old, as that reelects saebi
. his been bend onantirleiSuilaChopt to
--.4Mafrthe belief that 9 , ealsts Sashund ;
ince; `tompuTatirely litt!o capital has
beese devoted to the deveLopm,:ntof tha
• hut in proportion to the
ntsohnfoat
her, batons have
-yerew t•SorrOdable rivals ha rickneseof
indTeukierity of oil to our own
great .pbvllodlila poirilstun lands . The
daj la not be distant. mher!..tinot of reit
- • 'toed nisn,' el:elided will pus Waugh
?herinuistor afbrd one of the great
Of '..trade of -the. continent,
liVe sea tritirefaittra of WeitlllOgs
'lory dreamal of stetsri and
- but few' i,e4lnt,. will roll sway 'before
dm is permitted, to sake her Olice
'.:-Itia4 33 ttet' the most poo
roillwr Stategof
- _..09.1.3td0n•L'
■
1
=Eton
•
HInTORIC OF UNITED NETIII6II- I
Among the remarkable 11ter5...7 hid- I I
dents of the =rent century stands the
fact that tne best narrators of memora.
blo erochs in the histories of Spain and
Holland are aims of that:hilted States.
Mr. Pituacorr first won renown by his
masterly delineation or the period. of
FIEDMAND and followed
naturally by a graphic and scholarly
treatment of the Conquest of Peru. Mr.
Mortar, stertleg later, brought out the
Rise of the Dutch Republic, folloWing
it 'With the Illstoryof ttm Vatted Meth
eriands, in four volumes, commencing
at the death of William the Meat, and
the Twelve Years' Trace to
1699.
It is not exaggerating eta affirm that
lir. Marmanr ha* entirely surpassed : any
writer born and Ousted in Bollandfin
the thoroughness, accuracy and' brillian
cy of his treatment of these great
themes. Be wu not content to restrict
himself to a dry detail of tuts in chron
ological order, but preferred by careful
induction to show in whit conditions of
society, and in whit motives of individ.
uale, ;articular actions or policies had
their origin, and to. make the whole glow
with a freshness frofficlent to
realirestore
the--Impression Of i living ty.
This is the hardest ',task . of a
biennia. Any intelligent and disma
-1 donate citizen of oar own country who
shall attempt to review both sides of the
greucontroversy going.= forthirty years
between the North and Booth, and, un
fornmately. not yet brought toe close,
will feel this difficulty inch a Wk. It la
earl to detect the generaldrift of affairs,
1 1 but when an attempt is mideto go deep
i er and pry into the secret or occult MO
'
lives in which special acts originated; to
strike through ipeclons reasons and pre
teams set np to &bide followers and be
wilder opponents; and to2ay. open the
actual ISIIOMIXII that operated' ,.
vrent forth from, prominent leaden inthe
moment= debate, it la perceived that ties
teak is udercms and delimits, requiring 1
the nicest
. peraeptions and the most ex. i
qubffiebalance of judgment. Time will
doubtless remote mime of the
o bstacles
to
that now exist the prosecution II
study. We are yet too near the scene
IA action to take in all the details so as
to compregurnd the relations of the vari
ous puts of each other. - Passions rise
up and bias the understanding. Brea.
cations are still Waned that will coma
many years hereafter ; perhaps not till
the-present and next generations shall
-hue passed away.
In th e lßeary of the 'United Bather-
Lands Mr. Mon= trad the agyantage of
s theme congenial to the unreal beat of
in capacities, and to alibis Lutes and
habits. Pox= IL of Spain was at the
tad of a motpowerfuldespodkre. The
whole machinery of ervenament was
moved by his single will. Not only
allied to t h e ecelialaslicel hierarchy, but
imb=ed with its spirit, he resolved to
atimMUs the ridge Inclination to doubt,
to inquiry, to debate, to reformation ; to
subordinate all the instincts and aspire-
'
lions of the people to the despotic role of
monarOtat and oligarchs Against this
tremendous attempt the Netherlands
stood forth, singl e hauled and alarm.
By the edict of 1568 Pmair sentenced
every inhabitant of the Retheriends to'
Oath. The decree included women
and elfficiren as well as men. By the
aid of the Council of Blood, of the Wl
' oicipal officers of which he had the an
omen:min, and the e.laecntioners of the
Holy Inmusition,his todebtaies amount
ed soupany as elibteem hundred in a
week, and ran up to the appalling age*. ,
gate of eighteen timusstid in the course
of Mx yeas. While he thus struck st e t
the lives of the people, be coral:ad a
system of Courlicatians fell as sweeping
as in the madmen of pinion his been
recently proposed in ibis country, and
by which =Mien - families were re
duced from comfort or opulent. tq beg
'
guy. Embarrassedly the expenditures
his immense enterprises compelled him
to ma k e , he repudiator his debts and
=taut; and seized the public proper
ties pledged to the national creditors,
which depth of infamy, unhappily, there
are Americans who would have oar
-•oyenunentirsitane, without delay or re
mon. •
All this Putrar did professedly in the
interests of religions orthodoxy and.
social order, and to mks kainself the
soyer4gn of one universal and undid&
a monarchy. The ambllkm, however
censaMble, was not igaohle.
groat a prise has seldom dazzled a loi-
Inanmind with a posallity of secur
ing it. Equal to the conotption of such
&Velma*, which was favored by the
condition of European society, he put
forth searveSous stores to accomplish
it. Bat m Frazier , and saigisna has
projects were baffled. A sew spirit be
gan to stir amoag the populati ans.
While the old darkness had not diesp
peared, a fresh light was break:4 forth,
and destined to increase until it should
Coed the whole heavens with Its re-
diems.
But, whatever embarlaxteonts Feb.t
ir experienced in England and Stance,
the chief impediments that confrcmted
him were in the VOW Prorinms.
Liberty there averted its inverter of.
Barney. Narrow in bonmisties and
meagre in =toil resanreera freedom
gave such an impulse to the inhabitants
that in spite of the detastetions of
war - they were prosperous and lammed
in numbers. 'Various arts Of practical
ladustey were &nipped or doMentio& -
ted. individuals and anulks, penemk
tea elsewhere, fled thither sa into an ark
of safety, carrying with them - their
wealth,' and knowledge, and application.
The burghers kept alive the pinion
ate love of liberty. In a recent ratkie
we attempted to show Chit this was a
general tendency and • main excellence
of popular sannicipal gesemnerit. One
of thew burghers, Joss of Olden•Barn
essid, after the death of Waxy , * the
Silent, and the departure of Lord Lin.
coins, presided with genuine sad high
statesmanship imr the destinies of Hot-
ha._
_.._.. .
. But we cannot follow the unseen of the
eon. These who karts a taste for this
department of literature will certainly
do that for themsdree -
Ms. Mortar baa not laid.. aside me
pm, bet is stow mend in errithist a
History of the Thirty Years' . War, the
newel emplane% of hie other works.
This will take. him ores iro ns
melt
traraledandby eminent eirrtssoong
these, latterly, - hy_Wr. Ch.1i1313. MI
treatment of We new gabled will, there
fore, afford erummsenn opportunities for
comparing ids pafertnexces with that ol
' Teen additional tennity bat; Teased' hi
Congress and welting the dilatant of
the President, potitidek that is any "Per..
eon or persons -valid to thibounty
melded by teatime in indigo( the set
nuking epproprialona On the dell en. ,
nint flPf"noit Jul/ ed, 1886, tau we ,
died, in elealf. die before needling said
hoglintfe it theft be pad to the. heirs of
the soldicrois &gusted in this set, in
_
the order . -thatch ang to none
,th
'Tow . foipublicent :of -Indionk,baye
ipokenout in favor of Grant .t ot Pie a ! .
dent and Colfax for Ince .
The resolution was adopted numilmotuk
11 maidst much etubsudemiL
-Thensks
are doll growing oompart Lid solid for
the Mahn biro, solve will marvel not
shallia he he made the mauls= choice
of tip Xstiosu4 %Maki&
G
XaTIONAL BANK. RGSRRV Li..
In October, 1866, it was developed
that some eft); of the NatiOnal Banks
in operation throughout the country had I
an inadequacy of reserve, and were
compelling the wand beating =UM
dons to carry more than was required of
them in order to keep general confi
dence in the system. Thu GOirPtroller
of the Currency urged that the require:-
meets of the law be complied with by
the aelinquente, which was that twenty
five per cent. be held in reserve by the
banks of cities deaignated for redernp
hoe, and Mon per cent - bY all other
banks. There was certainly an effort
made in the close at 1866 to act on the
recommendation or order of the Comp
troller, bat the profit and advantages to
be realized and obtained by an Jude
*lacy of reserve have led many of the I
banks into their old ways.
From the report of the Comptroller,
embracing the statements of the Nation
al Sinks at the time attention was di
recteal to the insufficiency of reserves held
by the defaulting
~banks, the reserves
amounted to $213,941,476, against lia
bilities amounting to 6986,788,929, or 24
per cent The January, 1668, report of
the mine officer while it does[ ot direct
attention to the'iLtdequacy oreserves,
presents figures from which - it is easily
educed, that the number, of defaulting
banks has been largely increasing.. At
the _time of that report the liabilities
amounted to t 356,674,656; the reserves
to $162.394,0 64 , or 21 per cent, against
24 in October. 1866. The report is not
as concise regarding this subject as its
importance to the general community
.seems to warrant, and be who would
know of the increase or decrease of re
' serves must wade through a see of fig
ures, and in the end hardly arrive_ratany
definite conclusion. It hubieri surges;
tad that the Comptroller should, 'in the
future, add to his list of questions sent
at stated times to the banks, • query as
to the proportion their reserve bears to
the liabilities. Answers to this inter
rogatory could readily be obtained and
would develops at a glance the standing
and condition of every institution inits
relations with the Government.
Fromming that the Comptroller's re.
port discloses the fact that the number of 1 1
defaulting banks is increasing, and that
the system of National Banking is being
gradually undermined by i divergence
from the basis of their strength, It seems
highly important that the evil should at
once be corrected, and the provision of
protutlon affor3ed by the :law rigidly
enforced- Comparatively few examples
have been made of banks which permit
ted their reserves to groW.lnadequate,
but the most potent wsy to bring della
quits to a sense of duty would be, u
we have befom suggested, full publicity
of their affairs, and especially affording
a clear knowledge of their adequacy or
Inadequacy of reserve'. PrMic faith in
the different institutions would then be
held just is proportion to their own
showing of stet:ditty, and it would be
come an object with them to increase
rather than decrease theirieservea.
RID FOR TRF. CONNELLSVILLII
ROAM 1
In the first branch of the City Coun
cil of Baltimore an ordinance was in
troduced, on Tuesday, Peovlding for a
loan not exceeding foot million dollars
to the Pittsburgh and Connellsville Rail
road Company. with the; exprestunder.
standing that the money shall be app
plied to no other purpose than the con
sanction of the road from Connelluille
to Cuitterland. It makes B. F. New
comer end John W. Garrett trustees to
receive and hold as security for the pay
ment of said loan a deed for the entire
1 property 4 the Company, which to to
take precedence of mortgages laaced—on
1 arrangement tobe effected by the officers
of the Coutiany. It Provides - that the
I intend now due from the Company, sa
well as the interest that may accrue and
~ reasin unpaid, from , this to the first day
of January, 1871, on the bonds of the
city, be directed tohe froled, and that
upon the payment of the principal of the
bonds, with the interest directed to be
added to said principal• together with
the interest that may, fall due, at the
dates stipulated on the Bid bonds, on
both principal and funded arrears, from
and alter the let of Janus:Y. 1874 the
Company 'tali be diSclisrged from all
obligations ander the roortgua of Ang.
4th, 1854. That on the Ist of Jan.
1871, or sooner, if the Company
shall sooner declare lisrudasets to com
mence the payment of interest on the
bonds and fended at the Register
of the city be directed to &Mut the ar•
rears of interest l op to that time,
when the. Pittsburgh and Connelluthe
Itsilload 'Company shall execute end do.
liver to the liegider such en acknowl
edgment or speenthut as the counsellor
of the city shall appro ve, . U esldence
the amount On which, in addition to the
one million dollars donned, interest ls
tobe
mg .
The e aid thereafter by the
Company. , proceedings institu
ted -spinet the Pittsburgh and Con.
zeihmile Railroad Company, do account
, °She interest directed to be landed, ue
to be dismissed. : .
The ordinance Wu referred to the
,:. Committee of Ways and Means. Its
' adoption is highly probable.
td
STATE CONVENTION.
Tun lizrenzacens of Lancaster mum
ty have appointed J. d.. ilaboend and
it J. ILtinston, oele,estes to the National
ConventiOn, - and J. 3L Danisp, John IL
Wiley, Jacob 0. Peters, Wm. M. Wiley,
M. EL Shirk and Joseph O. Stubbs, dal.
cotes to the BUM . Convention. The
National delegates are instructed for
Gm. Grant.
-The Republiams-Of.liodford county
have instructed. thelr delegates to the
Stara Convention to vote for Grant and
Stanton for Prevident arid Vice Presi
dent. •
The Republicans i Romer county.
last week elected delegates to the State
Coniention and instructed in favor of
1114.1 re for Piesidint, and Cumra for
Tee President.
The Wreak= Central Ceizamittee of
Vernal's* county Met at Franklin on
Mendel , to aslant a delegate to the State .
Convention, and relso elect conferees to
represent the - Senatorial and Oringres.
dotal. Districts In Coaren - tions for
citOosing delegates to "the ItepUblican
National Canventioi.
*., Mom R. &' McCormick, of Franklin,
was chosen EOM State Convention.
The Congressional Conferees are Eton.
0. Beebe, of PlessanVile, and F.
W. 'Mitchell, of Franklin. The
Senitodal Conferees are Messrs. E. D.
Clapp, of President, and J. a camp
bell, of Oil- eityi The delegates , were
not instructed. -
- Tun
quarksliorthuntberland caumf 'slate
are pronounced Inexhaustible.
CigdtalLsts. are investing largely there
and the -emir of developing the lands is
1 being vigorously pushed forward. Js.
irartroad connection to bring the prodint
told market L' In consideration. The
elite obtained is of vary rope:tor quali
ty.- A. bed of nu dee liraelow ochre
km recently bin discnmeyd Lehigh
county. The mineral wealth of our
State esonot be esnmsted..
IT i. • singular fact, and one which
does pot relent mach eceda to the law.
makers of Maryland, that t z that State
the local incoranee COmpardes are taxed
ponosl,ooo to $5,000, *bile rich Lon
don companies are permitted to mama
lingua snedo her borders, and, in
deed,..to monopolise a lane amount of
thelsoritmut at WO per "outs.
TSE SOUTH.
—The Mercer county (Mo.) .ddeonee
says there is a great dearth of good me
chanics in that district. -
—The City Marshlll of Bowling
Green shot himself through the head on
Wednesday last, No cause for the rash
deed was known.
—There'ls a rumor that two gentle
men, Mr. David Bay and Mr. Varichive,
were murdered by illicit distillers in
Union county, Kentucky.
—There is in MirsourB a city called
Louisiana, and it fs to have an election
in March for Mayor, City Attorney,
Treasures and MarshaL • -
In Harrison county (Ky.) . the farmers
predict very large crops of wheat; while I
in Franklin and Bourbon, it is thought
' I
the frost has ruined the grain.
—The Memphis FM askethe question
in a manner or hopeless despair, " Bow
many murderers are now aspiring to oflice
lathe Conservative party in this State 1" 1 1
—Cassius M. Clay is Once more - to ap.
pear prominently in the political world.
gels lag to stump Kentucky for Grant
and is spoken of as a Radical elector
from that State. -
-Valuable tracts of improved land I
have been sold recently , in the neighbor.
hood of Dolly Springs, Mississippi, for
from sixty cents to ono dollar and tweet.
ty.flve cents per acre.
—The Conservative State Convention
met at Nashville Tennessee, and nom
lasted, es theirchoice Mr. Andrew John-
len for the Presidency. Their choice is
about as bad as their taste.
—A. petrified butterfly, the head and
wings of which were in a perfect state 1 1
of preserrition, was-found twenty feet ,
below the surface by some men who I
were digging s well In Hamilton, Mo. '
—Pond' near Montgomery, Alabama,
were recently frozen over sufficiently for 1 ,
staring purposes.: Search was made, 1
but only one pair of skates could be
found in the city, and those in a dilapida
ted condition.
*—The Roman Catholics are erecting x
new convent in Brownsville, Texas,' ,
near the old one. The new building is 1
11
to be much more spacious and conven
lent. The olden° is to be used as an in
firmary and hospltaL
—A few days ago William Wright
Parker was convicted of the murder of
William Childress, in Wilmington,
North Carolina. The murder was ac
compliahed as long ago as 1863, and the
murderer will be banged sometime dux.
log the present month.
—A Sedalia (Mo.) paper , sly' that
one huniired carpenters and builders,
fifty brick/gem twenty.6ve stone
masons, three Mick yards and a steam
planing mill are very much needed in
that village, and cordil find active and
continued employment.
—Armee= dramatie associations
which have been so popular in Wiscen
sin and Meagan this winter, hare had
:an equal share of popular favor In
Idisesonri. We heard of several villa
ges, among which are Farmington and
Sedalia, where these social troupes are
making fun and laughter the order of
the day.
—While Mr. Luray and Lis sister
were riding Ina sleigh last month some.
thing became loose about the harness,
kfr,L- leaned over to adjust the same,
when his pistol fell from his pocket and,
was discharged, the load paringl
through his breast killed him in stantiLl
Hiss Lanner was obliged to drive t
sleigh containing her brother's Corpse
several miles to Lineville, (Mo.) where
they lived.
—They have queer ways of settling
bills, and sometimes settling creditorg
too, in some parts of the South. A Dr.
Skinner presented his bill to a Mr. Quicir
residing in Galveston, Tema. The Di
bad attended Quick daring a recent at.
'ack of yellow fever and brought hien
safely through, and for these services the
trill was rendered. Quick objected, and
that to with a liege knife. Skinner
barely escaped whole to the nearest po
lice office where he succeeded'in having
the pugilistic and war-like . arrest
ed and put tinder beads to keep the
WM
•
Gan. Werrom., who was appointed
to survey the }meet anal at. Louis•
and also for a new one on the In
diana aide, in accordance with a bill
poised by Congress last spring, has for.
nisbed his report. kir, Zaautsros, of
the Committee es Commerce, to whom
the report will in referred, is mid to be
inlayor of the cempistion of the pretest
mail, so as to secure free navigation as
soon as possible. To do this General
Warn= estimates the elpeele at $ 233 ,-
500. Provided the some wale of calorie
went already, began will be_carded out. I
The amount of bonds c the Cow
pant to be a s sumed by the Government.
provided It took pouculou, ha reports .
at $1,670,000. From this he deducts
1200,000, which the 'Company has on
hand, and makes the total cost to Gov.
rnnsaat $2.303,300. He presents three
:dans for new canals on the Trains
aide, ate moo cost of $3,093,000, and re
commends the Government to undertake
to complete the present enlargement of
the old canal, and also to builda new
one on the Indiana side. His princiral
reason for the DAM ons is, that even If
the'Presmlt enlargement on the Ken
tucky side is completed, the thekll
will
still be too Small for tha largest lithe
boats. Ho intimates that It both are
ordered, two million dollars Will be
needed the int year, If the completion
of the old canal alone
ts
greed
agr upon.
There u hardly any doubt but the re
commendation far both canals will be
Istrorably acted open. .
TanDemomits have maths% high de.
tree or admiration for General Gnurr
they professed sit months ago. Indeed,
few men have been more soundly abused
by them than he is at the Prescott time.
And this Is only the tone encement of
their ram When the action of the
Chicago . Convention shall have made
him the papublleut candidate for the
Presidency, neither his vast salience,
nor his welbeented =min, will avail
to shelter him from the gathering storm
of °Ninny and defamation.
—Me- Bergh of New Took to too ab•
turd; he really smelt to be remonstrated
with. He is president "or • society to
prevent cruelty to animals, end to
tbee
capacity does that most preposterous
things. Lest week he had actually the
foolish temerity to, have a driver of a
street car undid, because he beat Ide
horses with s board. There were two'
horses and they had only one car to
pull. To be sure the car had more than
ninety people on It, and the grade was
heavy and the rails icy, but then they
had no business to fill down, end It was
not until they did that, that the driver
beat them, and 31r. Bergh had him Cr.
rested.
—Frederick Geralineker, the renowned
German tratelles and author, wee
i n
Cincinnati during the prime fight i
which Ulan Jones was defeated. lie,
In writiegto the /Cosine Editing, says
hi Suds it strange that inch things
should be allowed m a country where a
horrible outcry Is raised if onedrinks a
glass of beer on Banda'', particelarly as
the field where the fighttook. place wee
rented for that purpose by a Baptist
presole-- . ---
-A. strong Maiden squadron is being
title out for, the alleged purpose of ea-
\coiling the Grand Duke Constantinon
a visit to bin daughter, the Queen of the
Omuta. Takes! does not li ke stmh mi.'
torts so nes: Cote. d
, -
NEWS - PROM ABROAD
-Senor Jose Jacinto De Friss, an era- -Mrs Lincoln thinks
inept agricultural writer, Bled early this sane.
mouth at Havana. • ~ i -Charles Keith is repot
--General Salriave's reign in Hayti ' 1 $210,000 behind him.
was very short. Gen. Solomon has been 1, -Somebody asks if i
appointed as his successor. 1 Douglass" of histOry a
Bulgaria seems also to be Indulging I -Miss Bateman, is st
in revolution, % end Turkey has to keep with unabated met - esti
troops to watt the borders. ,„.„ I -Gen. Burnside ha
--Prince Ac le Murat and the Mar- I once more for
, Gore
quiz de Gall& are going to fight another l Rhody ." 1 t,,,L
. 'l
duel and all a t Corn Pearl. - -There are seventeen aspiranti for
-Don Cato Garcia, a daring and I the oeuirreasional nerethation in the
terrible bandit, n Cuba, has applied for Third, lowa, Dlistrictj. •
pardon to the Governor General., - Soli is be married to
to
s
-The French official journals flatly daughter of Senator Harlan, end not
contradict the rumors of changes th the Miss Harris, sa war reported,
cabinet, so we may expect them shortly. -Mr. Frederiek Douglass says that
-The Osserrators Romano denies that be has reason to believe that be is the
to - -
the Pope ordered the Italian Bishops to son of a Tinitad States Sena
offer To Delos in honor or the recent -Judge IL Holmes ol the r.
Missouri
Papal victory. ' BUM= Court, has been tender ed'a pre
--Mr. Tampion has become a regtiler ressorship in the; Harvard Law School.
contributor to the periodical press, writ- -Gen. Phil. Sheridan Is thirty.seven
rag three poems a month for as many y ea rs o ld. Ho' w as Ikon a t B em use.
different 'magazines : ' Perl county, Ohio, on ties fith of March,
-The dispossessed Italian princes met tent ~.
recently at the house of the ex -Sing of -a. portrait of Fred. Dough's spoils
:Naples in Rome and proceeded to con- the sale of Mrs. B. B. Stowe's new
cod ', ll common Pont*. -
-LA Chinaman was executed in Havana moved . •. '
oulh , e 7 th inst. Ito bad provionalybeen -It Is thought the Hon. N. P. Bald
reonyleted of the murder of a policeman, wth will receive' t h our the unardmotu,
noptlbUClnf rondos.
and this was the result.
tin Governer fr
-Ned Russianreenlations permit but of Michigan. 1' . -:, •
two War vessels of a foreign power to re- -General Albert Pike, the poet, . sot.
Main in a Russian port at one time, and diner rebel andrapactOlion, is a step ion
to remain but two weeks. - of Paul . Pillsbury, thiman who Invented
-Lord Stanley's spoken of ris the shoepegs. i
probable successor of his paternal rela- -Hon. J. B. Macdonald 'has refused
tire Lord Derby in the duties and cmo- the Lieutenui,Governorshm of Ontario '
Inetents:of Premier of England. and has been tendered a neat in the Do-',
+Oen. Marquez is about to publish In minion Cabinet.
Havana a pamphlet, the object of which -The ladles , of Cork presented Mr. ,
1
Will be to justify his conduct daring the George Francis Train with, what
boile theyd
Imperial sway, and to prove that he was mouldered a Mashie present, a ,
loyal to Maximilian. , blood padding.
Cholera has again appeared In Cuba- -The Davenports who have been fully 1
From the Ist to the 4th lust, there were exposed so often, Mill travel, and draw
Arleen cases in MMus, all of which large honsesi - When but heard from ,
proved Mkt In the Cabanas district it they were at Marseilles, France. I
is raging with unustud violenee. --Alum Victoria devotes a gr.at deal 1
HOn February sth the Emperor and of her time to knitting, on that employ-
Empress of Austna were received with Meat has become very fashionablel
loyal enthusiasm by the people of Pesth, among English.ladles of a certain age. •I
Who voluntarily illuminated their houses. -Col. A. IL Tyler was engaged, with
\
The policy of Von Heusi is telling well. a n umber o r Umlauts, at Rona, Mo., on
-Dean Stanley's new book on West- the 10th inst.,ln removing
as the bridles ot
minister Abbey h recently appeared Ualon soldiers' ed. there during the
in London. The book !sof course good, war.
. .
but is not large enough. Dean hillman -Garibaldi is y ill at Capra& and
IS engaged on a boos &heel his cathedral 'fears are enteral ed that he will never
-St. Paul's. recover. Hope deferre d has made his
I I
-General Lersundi has been making heart sick beyond the reach of rota-
a tour .f the tobacco districts of Cuba eines.
ex
,
mid has met with ith'enthusiastic recep- -Judge Billiugton was ecuted for
ilon tram the reclildi ' Me will shortly murder near Boston, In Plymouth Col-1
Irisit the principal cities of the eastern tiny, early in the seventeenth centnryj
perto( the island. . - It yes the lint execution for murder In 1
,
-Japan is haying another revolution, this country. I
on account of the opening of the port, 1 -Gen. Itherldnn's denial of his en
bill
of that country .to th e world. Japan gam:runt to p... 11—n.ls now wider.
bid. fair to fell into the ranks with Chi- stood. Ile I - said to be engaged and
nn. smo South Ameribe where zeroth- shortly to 'minted to is Grace Fen
tion is the natural Male of affairs.. too, of Alto . • , •
or; once notorious as
-Some one thinks It would be a good -Roger A.., 'Pry
ides. to keep a huge Ire going on Mont a fire eater, Who ate his own words at i
Blane all the time, and by melting the the point•of 11d.r.• Potter's Bewle.knife,
snow to furnish water enough to supply is now prseticing as a crloilzial lawyer
through pipes the cities of Savoy, South- in New .York. • -
ern France and 'ltaly with drink. -Tannin:On, is Industrious; he writes 1
-The two „young *raga, Princes of seven or . . eight stanzas ever) day and I
blond which Isnot very blue as yet, are roads a grerit deal Rio annual Income
said to be the greatest ecapegraces in I now amounts to $50,000, and Is steadily
France, and to be bent on inextricably i on the inerease. -
compromising thezateltes If possible, in -The Marquis de Cut Is said to have .
in spite of the almost fatherly kindness a fortnne'ef four Millions of francs of ,
of the Emperor.
-Mr. Enke, the Italian. cintespond- has at last
r been prevailed upon to send
cot of the Paris Temps, says that people him the mitten., ;
make • grand error when they suppose -Mr. George Ticknor Cattle thinks
that yictor Emanuel is lacking in ablll- Mr. Winthrop would be the proper per
ty ; and thst they will very soon have WTI 1.0 whom to tender the mission to the
an opportunity of finding out bourses/. Can't of St. James, but be fears he
curly they have misjudged him. would not accept it.
-There is • lady in Park who during -Rey';',llertick Johnson has been call-1
to daily walks in the gardens of the 1 ad to the First Presbyterian .Church (Dr. i
Tuilleries is constantly surrounded by I Eames) In Pbtlailairlda. Ills response,
swarms of Talus kinds of small birds, ' Was a telegram referriug to Prolerbsind,
who perch on her Person, CM from her Chapter end ISth Verse .
- 'I
month, and nestle in hi r hand. The ".--a, lia13:411 in Lancashire, Eaglet:o,ll
cause of the attraction is unknowu. starved to death recently because 'shel l
-The sudden coldnetoof Napoleon to would no . t . go to the poor house, and all i
the Pope is sr:counted for In the fact that because th i n once had *relative wa n wan 1
thousands of young • legitimists end ' i member - Ft r the parliament .
'other political enemies of the empire -Forrest, whose Infamous and 'cruel
are drilliag and learning the art of war behivior, at Fort Pillo w has embalmed
is the Pope's guard, which they algal. ids memory la rittner 'an undesirable,
fiantly call the new army of Condo. term, his recently Ned a petition in
-The add Archduchess Sophia, who bankruptcy In Memphis
used to be called the most ambitious i -The s e nator w ho made his appea. 1
woman In Lampe, has complete'Y bro- once at breakfast at Willard's recently
\
ken down Mace the death of her Wear. la the epitome usually devo te ted to the
Ito son, ' the Emperor Maximilian. It :h o urs of plumber. w. sot 'ras
Was prindpally owlets to her diplomacy ; reported, but Sanialtury.
that Ferdinand abdicated the throne-Meilkenthe figure-aunt) mils Rik
Aus.ris in favor of her son, the present i month for Hew York where shevrill rest
Emperor. - Dr a :Mont time, and then go to Ban
-The recent riots in Prague arose In Francisedwhere she has been' engaged
the following Inaliuser i Harr von Herne; to play one hundred nights. : - '
one of the newsCai, was in that city -The first child born of Christian Ms.
on a skit ; som of the German students , rants in what are now called the United
setenaded him. The Tzschechs, or Bo.: &alai was Virginia Dare, In the year
hemline, were indignant and collected , 15.11 i If still alive and unmarried she
around the hotel of the minister; when! would be quite an old maid. 1 •
the riots, which gave the authorities sir ' , -Mrs. Gen. Robert Anderson is Min.
much trouble, began. . ly to get fifteen thousand dollars for In
-The melancholy news of the death; juries:done to the plantation of her Nth•
by drowning, of Admiral Bell, while er, Gen. Clinch, In Florida, thirty years
trying to cross the bar at the mouth of ago by the Seminole Indians. , I •
Gooks (Japan) harbor, will be recelyo -,The ladles of Buda a nd Perth hive
with Maness by all - who knew or knew presented the Empress of Austria with
of that gallant officer. Ile, war buried, a benutiful cradle for the exclusive rnas
near the mouth of Oracka' River, and of Otto:peeled addition to the Imperial
Lieutenant Reed, who lost his life at he and , °yet family of Hapsburg. - !
same time, shares his gravi.l -Inure, who a few years ago so
-The Eaatem Indies, lesions Prob- scandalized Germany by bar exposure,
bly of the musation mused by the n o- in the court room, of the prom:edit:iv' of
ported engulphleg of Tortola in the a prominent member of the Berlin Cab.
West Indies, have gotten up a horior. inet, !snow doing the can can in London,
which scrPosiee even the worst romans sod la rnifie di-gusted that neithei . the
about that new possession. Fortunately Uenthient nor the police will n tea
those horrible stories are generally, like her. -,_---, 1
personal Itenia, denied soon after they i, Mr.: once said that Ir there
make their appearance. We cannot Un- was ever any difference In his cabinet
dentate however, to deny - that 80,000 to *„ always con g a to have the e i ten ,
lives were destroyed by a recent earth, ,i
quake ha the island of F'ormoss, but lwe be ? Crew Connecticut on bin nide ' l it in
hops that his not true. I hardly necessary to state • that; Mr,
-King John, of &Luny, is going to Welles was that member and that he
abdieste. The loss of several of Ibil etill exhibits the same readiness to le on
children, the rather disolute conduct of the side of the mid in power. ; a,
his eldest son, and the Dollar:11 degrade• j:7-4. gorous wedding took pl in
don which his .conutry has su ff ered, St; PM' on W6d161:11. The /fanny
have all winked severely on him. illet bride wore a $5,000 set of ear-rings and
the death, last rammer, of his favorite a' $750 taco veil. he
x S Is Worthi some
daughter, the lovely Dachau" Sophie, in g 400 ,000 to her ow , ight. m i t the
Barons, upped the Pyramid or JO bo• - bowell an lied with
resvements, and he is now subject to siroom, Is •et al PP ,
most distressing (palls of melanchely. fiat blare. His present to hill bride
Ills son Albert will be a poor successor was worth slo,roo. His same is James
to him.- -- - _ • i 'P. Thomas. He is a barberby profiteer'.
, • ,
mid a negro. The wife il a mulatto.
*be Interesting to some Persons
RAILWAYS.
—The Winooska bridge. the scene of '
the late sruident on the
thenVermot Gin-
twit. Railroad, is restored for passage
of treble
—The Trempelesu (Whs.)._ Record
says the La Crosse, Treeiwedesu and '
Prescott Railroad is to be eisaltdoted and
In full operetta a this summer,
—The West Bhore Redone 'liver road
tit° run through the Walkill Valley from
Rebottle to Kingston, end thence to ,
Albany. The construction of iko road
as far as Kingston ism assured fact.
—Cars on the Council Bluffs =deb:lnn
City Railroad reached 'ffoodberry,;
on the lith
seven miles from Botts City,
inst., sod the Journal states that the'
locomotive will be In that place by the
25th mat
—The La Crosse Democrat says work
has been suspended on the St. Pant and
COMO railroad, between Winona and
Si. Paul, and men ordered to be retained
on pay until railroad matters are sUsight:
tend out in that State. f
—The Peed (111) Transcript says the
Board of Stlperflllolll of Tazewell court
ty, Wednesday, ordered that an eleO•
den be held , in that county on the 1.78 1
of March, o il vete on the question of
subscribing SOOO in stock of the N
kin, Lincoln and Decatur railroad. We
understand the people of Delimit Mill
vote on the proposition fora toe/Wily
subumiption of $BO,OOO to the same road,
met Out the clry of Pekin proposes' to
Tote a subscriptlou of $7O,OcW. '
-------------'--------__
tit (Do; Alia/ LABOR_ A Splendid em tttt•• t desent a tios.cas.
--h. paper mill Is to be built at Cler- A brilliant entermincrient 0114 given in i
moat, lowa, next summer. I Boston on Thursday evening, by a; ,
—The Ditassoit Mills, at Huntington, Yonne milli N eke ,of that lin oi..the i
Kass., turn Out one ton et fine welling occasion of his colug of a goa and. into •
paper per day. • posse:Mien of his estate. The event Is
—Two cargoes of African peanuts, described: I'4--
comprising 15,000 bushels, arrived In i "Horlierditiral Hall was 1 evening
Boston last week.
the year 1661, 53,490 hides fashionable entertainment, which crest
-Daringmong th e L ana
were chipped from New Orleans to New edoZ,CreAte'ry°,,rein"°%at 0 „,,, i rea
York, and 11,287 from New York to Zvor this emenn andleet, of biriog a ball
Boston: for private belle, le sea an 'route,' and
I—The Dilatory steps have already been Femmes in, Trement str t, Hertieul
taken toward the erection of one of the
to
Hall and Minot Hall eve seltnesis
Isrgest woolen factories in the west, at 'ea many lively gatherings f this kind.
Lansing, lowa. Reaves wear and tear of f rattan. and
carpets, derangement of the internal
• —Several sales of lumber have been economy of households, I boa for ser
made at Bay City, Mich., Bering the vanta and anxiety :for f o rms COMIC% it ob
ast week—one of over 1,0e0,00 feet at views the amens* for a house to Im
0, $l2 and $35. turned upside dosen for a week in ad
-Baltimore, the newspapers of that Ya,le.. , ;. I-• -7
The party last. evenin was given-lay
city say, expects to become the first to: t , weathy .i.ay pt , ( hi, a
bseco market In the world when her new , honnr of
her eon, the holito o f
dinyrtune—
pean steamship line to In fall opera • whose father was one of e mlllienariea
bon. : . of Boston. No pains o r expanse wore
—IC taket 16,000 bales of cotton, or roared to render it superior to anything
0,480,000 pounds, to supply the daily de, o f the kind ever eelln 11071 x , x . ). TITD: t in l ...
mends of the cotton ndlis of the world. r ' s
rul t vv
deco fr l ' i m e !: 15 :11 eh ' s, Mr:" halls were
Of this immense amount one thousandth eight thnesan u a carnelias, innumerable
part Is used every. day by the Viamsulta roue. calla Bliss, and other choir* now-
Dills,i New Bedford. ore, rare plants, etc. I The pillars, the cor
-Lowell's old title of the "City of aloes, the chandeliers, the balconies,
Spindles" is no longer its especial due, every accessible eel salient point, Ives
Fall River exceeds it by 40,000 spindles, draped with stringe of inkberry leaves,
and its weekly production, when Its etudded with crunellas and other rich
flowers in great p ofugion. In the centre
mlllsare in fell operation, will aorta:as of every wind r ow o
a flthe upper ball bung
that Of Lowell by 300,000 yards. a globe boeqcut, a ball of :levers, mat
-Pi Pest Machine has recently been led close together, several feet inclrcurn
invented by Charles Moore, of Spring- ference. This form of bouquet is new
-field,' Masa., .which can be worked by .to Bosarm. Some or them contained, up :
steam or water and can turn out tloreolliLl...`,4.m.voZrovonprleVriceTrillO.:,...,Ag.r"°.
eighty tons of power , fol,t,,Fer 1.1aF,... Machi nes .,, nn Pena that of the upper hall being dier
of thin patt ern 1h " c°4 ' Min 9 "`"" t o with m irr o r floral arch. aurround
ssoo: • Bag s costly,' which reflected back
—nit granite mill of the-Granite Mill the whole arilliant scene: Behind this
Company, at Stafford Springs, Connee-* mirror wee stationed a full'Orthestral
lieut. containa 125 looms, and employs bra iti T c a . h , flonil, display alone cost
125 hand', whose Joint efforts produce "" !_
a •
"The greests who l arrived in carrieffea
1,206,000 yards of shirting and sheeting in full dress, alighted on a carpeted
per year, consuming 100,000 pounds 0 _ 1 • sidewalk, beneath a snotty , and wero
cotton in the work. The machinery m e corted up-stairs to the dressing rooms
driven by water power. each eideof the main entninee. • : Supper
• —it Moline, Illinois, the new works -
was announced at li o'clock . j There
of Dimoek & Gould hive a capscity of verZ:lelvleZl: f Sr=brie 1 12. itin ylar g
turning out daily 1,500 buckets. GOO the
a d
winee, a nd numerous autall tables
wash tubs and 600 wash boards . Deere were arran ged around the hall at which
A. CO. are soon to make an extensive ad- the guests were served. The - table orna
&don to their works, and are now turn, menus, silver, floral, confectionery, eta,
Ins Out over 000 Plows per week. beside' were exquisite. and in keepin with the
a large number of sulky plows and col- Invech manner in :vetch the w hole affair
denten. i was conducted. jipon each of the tables
was a pyramid of cantelias, or in the ,
form of stare, or grouped) together in I
massive bouquets, causing themenquet
hail to Made= all appearance ost ats
brilliant Rutile liege ono above. The in
terior of the building was carpeted, with
the exception of the floor of the upper
ball In which the'dancing took place.'
__,____-.-------
PEIRSON
. is not in
/ ted to have left
E p n l g i hn y ut• .L,uth
decided to ran
•or of "Little
—lt may .
6 lend a little about the private chase
ier.of ome of prominent men ofi Mest
a). The following wait:lipped from the
*Aram lack Book, a diary kept by
one of Maximilian's private secretaries
lin Mexico, and reveals sense curVirts par
.
venal traits of the chief actors in the Im
perial tragedy in that country. The n 4
lotions General lout M. /lamella, one
of the chief promoters of the iniarvon-,
tion, is described as "dishonesti evert.
clone, and reveugefel." The savagery
of Marbues. Is also properly booked.
with the remark, "Sent to Jemialeria"
Of Miramon, it is told that having once
lost at play the money of a company of
which he was sherd , ts and Magma. ,a
he drew his sword and swept all tali
. stakes backspin htto his pocket. Then
follows a recodnt of the way in which
I ha tinsel his fellowssecal Z *WM, took
nosamoton of the Government, took the
fold, levied contributions for the army,
and spent the money at the gaining
, table. O'Hontri is set down In black.
rile war, sounding
. to all accounts, a
raid and vulgar villain. Me sometimes
decreed death between cigar.pulfs.
"General, I am going to shoolyou," he
I, remarked to an 'uteniskted Owner,
ttt tikinira last swallow of VW/costa
' with him. The General was Marcia
Litman°, and he was shot an hear after
ward at Tenably'.
-
Tam PM*Mlle Illloaailor Jo
attpar Tres—note” of setae tattoo.
;Pro. tte Situ citlfarata, 355. 114
Mt.ll. 71. gate:this; the pioneer,
more generally known to the community
of kite Yeari through the autociadon
Vail
his name with the great
_Yosemite -
ley, trhere he now resides, is at present
en a vi sit Ban Francisco. He tells no
that on his visit - to the "Nevada Fell,"
he, With a companion from this city; as
cended to the summit of the "Cap of
Liberty" peak, to the north of the fall,
and, there, growing in the Assure of the
rock, away up under the very clouds,
found a iuniper tree, the trunk of which
• measured ten fret two inches in diame
ter{ Whist we remember that the j
per is; In most countries, • very slow
-grower, and at the best a mere bush,
hardly - rising. to the dignity of a tree at
till, the statement of the immense sire
,of. this one appears almost incredible,
and seine have been inclined to doubt
the exactness of the measurement. Those
' who are acquainted with Mr. Hutchings
will not, however, denbt the correctness
of his statement for a moment, and we
are inclined to think that the age of the
tree is like.y to be very much less
than those acquainted, with the slow
growth of the tree in oter lands would
naturally estimate it. On the elevated
plain lying around the base of the great
tarantula chsins of Central Arizona
tray be seeh forests of tbe luniper ce
dar extending to the limit of vision.
The trees la these forests are scattered
like apple, trees in a New York apple
orchard, gad are never of great bight,
but th e trunks are often of c onsiderable
sire. 'We have seen thousands which
would measure Irmo one to eve feet in
diameter, and would yield several , erds
of beautiful wood. They are, however,
almost valueless for timber, all the trunk
;Is Invariably but few feet in length--
several large limbs of minor trunks
branching mat as from five to ten feet
from the earth, the top limbs spreading
eat over a spaceentirely dhiproportiot -
ate to the bigot of the trees. This coun
try is thickly dotted with the ruins of
Aztec or Toler cities and fortifications.
in gone of which timbers exposed to
the atoms Mad blaring min of that try
ing climate are yet to be seen in a good
state of preservation, showing that the
builders-Must have disappeared at a corn.
paratively recent date. Juniper trees
of immense size are found :on these
ruins la some ;daces, showing that in
t climate at least the.tree is of more
rapids rowth then is generally supposed.
•Nevertheless, the Yosemite juniper is a
remarkable tree,. and worth the atten
tion of the scimatific. •
Tao Laud allies at atawlas-
A private letter from a gentleman of
this city dated at Sorrento. Italy.
ry 3lst, givee the following particulars of
the land slip at Napless. nf twhicia a brief
account is given elsewhererl
"We bare had a wonderful escape
(Min death. A mountain elver six bun- I
dred feat above th e road fell just before
we reached the spot, 'and, after we bad
creased the barricade In the road, the re
maining portions of the mountain side
013310 down with the roar of artillery."
"But this la nothing to vault has must ,
occurred at Naples. I.larard Taylor and I
family resided .at 'No. 21 Santa I
Lucia, 4 and I went twice, to the
hones to secure an apartment there; and
theoltuation was very lovely; ansislaould
certainly have resided there If the rooms
bad been large enough. The house
stood on the principal street—the Chleja
—and stretching sway up over it was a
hill with show, above house, for several
hundred feet. Taylor, roan, God, came
to Sorrento a few days ago, to see us ;
and yesterday the whole side of the hill
on the Chia). give way, and eighty per
son are lost In the ruins. Tavloests house
is entirely buried beneath the ye reek. of
throe upper ones; and I am sorry to fury
that an omnibus, coming from the rail-
way and containing (amoug'others) two
Americans, was pouting at use time, and
that all the passengers perished. I
went into Naples to-day to ace the scene
of the Allender and am sick at heart.
"I am disinclined to stay here for any
great lenghth of time, for it seems a. if
the mountains were all tumbling down,
and I think Vesuvius is at the bottom of
It aIL" •-
Mae Motivate Thompson as a Ow
sass lomuler.
A correspondent writes from Alabama:
°Anything in the shape of a personal
budget 'from Montgomery would be sad
ly incomplete without_ ,mentlon of Miss
Charlotte Thompson, the actress. Mien.
Thompson owns plantation, five miles
from town, where .die apends her time
with her mother when not on profs.,
Menai tours She has aboutone - tho . u of s .
end live hundit4 sent*,
twe-thi rd
which are devoted to the coltivation of
cotton. She has the reputation of being
a retnarkably. capable Woman to
business affsir*, though • with ell
her tact and . executive talent,
•
eh° has made nothing from her crops
during tee past two years. The cabin'
of her hired at:grecs are models of nest
ness end comfort. Often of a summer
morning she rises with the sun, mounts
a favorite potty, and in person directs
the gangs at work in the dela. t racts eps
.11 the accounts!, makes all cont and
superintends all tha t buying and selling.
I feel., however, that he next time' nee
her in Julio, Ishall be led to suapect
when she buries her face to herhs.olkor
cider just before wildly sobbing "Why
do n'A you speak to mo Clifford,' that her
mind is engrossed with the latest hullo-.
tip about the army worm, or the even
ing filapatches from Liverpool. In Opho- ,
llss mad scene theta wouldbetlo special
intpropriety•ln hir whispering with a v.-
taut stare, 'Upland flit cents and excitedi'
entoomil ,
A letter from Rome, in the Cbrres-
Tandem* itatfenne, my!):
Cardinal Antoneill, in his private con
orersations. expresam fi rm belief In. an
approaching war. Ile says that the great
works which the "French are executing
aro by no means intended to shelter
Rome from a i t de main of .Garibaldi,
but to guaranteeagainst an attack of
the regular Italian army. In the war
which is prepating,, ho recently said,
the French array will fight , alone
againat Italy aniF we shall . keep on:
troop* to hold in
fo respect the Roman pop
uladon. Thie, nay the least, is a airi
polar, lebninidon from the Secretary of',
State of his Uoliness, and you will per
haps bo abaci to make a pets of It. Let
me add dual boar froma good source '
that Cardinal Animal% while speaking
with sorne parents well - known La Rome
for the great alacrity with which they
I,72,7Miree ep7Etglesse"ncr h'inti"iirntreett%
In these term: "...the Emperor Napoleon'
has
lc
all sympathy for Italian unity'
ever since the discovery of the .sacrat
treaty between Signor Itattassi and Ilerr
Ton Bismarck
y loadof•d wagon - are Dow .
dra — rrn - " o v‘i vai common roads la Franca by
man, of steam rMd loocaroltres adapt:
ad to the purpriala
Instrege lOpegaiewr• tin Regiment.
A letter from Vienna contains the lot
lowing:
.'A fresh outings. on Jews has taken
lace at Birlat, a large etragging place,
half village, half town. of about 15,000
intabitanta, of whom 3,000 or 4,000 are
Jeers, situate eligtut. seventy . miles north
of Galata. -. Thin place elected about a
month ago as deputy to the Chunber at
Bucharest ono Vernoff, a 'West and
monk of the Greek Church, having im
mense district, among tho lower orders
ot his and famous for his im
passioned itermons.and speeches against
the Jews. On the evening of the sth of 1
January this priest died, anti from the
previous Saturday his doctor expregited
the opinion that he was suffering from
poison, said to have been given him by a
Berman woman, at whose locanda be took
his meals daily; she having been bribed
to this by tbe.Jews with four hundred
decats. As etbo ono trilinves lathe
sorting.. An y altercation on the subject
having arisen in a eofleiabouso kept by a
Jew, led to an' attack by the lioldavian
shopkeepers and poorerpeopleof the plaoe
on every shop andhouae belongingto the
Jews. 'fie doors and windows were
Widen in, the inmates shamefully beaten
anti ill-treated, and their property en.
iirely destroyed and stolen. and this went,
on in a fine moonlight evening from 6
r. Y. to midnight, when the rioters gave
113 exhausted. The prefect and other
officials who tried to Interfere were beaten
?Vri•l'Vnethrieolj'weltti.uld : have been resumed '
ne day, without doubt, but the com
mandant. of the place, who had some
nny itoruhansca• (militia) under his
orders, had obtained leave bv Icing mph
Irons Bucharest during the night. to fire
on the rioters.lThissoon became known,
and an end was put to the shameful out
rags. The veineant tbe property stolen
Is not_less than 175;0001r., and" destroyed
much more. h eft Birlat on the Idth of
January, and en Use commandant of
the district jvaa - in charge of the place
with a military fur or, and had over sixty
persons in prison charged with being
concerned in those riets. The govern
ment have promised a strict inquiry
lido the mutter and punishment for those
concerned: but the remit will, I fear, be
about nit." 1 • . •
The Chemloop, of reirofture.
Young honsekerpers do not always
understand the theory of the chemical
and mechanical action of different sub
.
stances on articles of forniturs. The
substances from which furniture to
chiefly exposed to injury are water, oils,
alcohols, and acids. •
Acids act on marble. Marble Is Heal(
composed et carbonate of Ilmeilthat
it is a coca the
or carbonic acid - and
lime. New; carbonic acid boa a
comparaliceiy wean allinity for lime,
and most other acids wiliprevall over it
and Its place when brought In contact
with it; thus destmying tee texture of
the stone. liberating the carbonic acid,
and lvtving nitrate of lime, or murinte
of limo, or sulphate. or acetate of lime—
s+ the cam rritqlie—ln the form of a
white powder, in its place. But MIN,
alcohols, and water produce no effect on
marble. ,
All varnished or polished surfaces of
wood, on. ; the other hand, - while not
Injured tumdly by acids, are attackedby
alcohol. Varnishes are composed of
different gomsl and resins, which, ate
generally soluble in alcohol. Many ot
them are made by dfssolelng the mate
rial In aloohel in as to Bone& them, and
then, when they am applied, the al ' oohol
evaporates. leaving the gum or' resin In
*thin, even' mating orer the wtiele sur
face. If new any sloahollo embstantss
comes upon l mich &surface. whether ILIA
alcohol Itself, as used for lamps, or
spirits of any kind, or even wine, which
contains buts small per cenlage of elm•
poll the va.-nish
sodat a portion of
St la dissolved, the brilllarmy of the
surface is destroyed.
Oils *ill not attack either marbles or
varnialfed surface, and will do no Injury
except to naked wood or other paroles
substance , which admit them into pore.,
I from Nehleii the; cannot afterward easily
1 Water arectino substances exceptsuch'
as have open pores exposed; in - -ethleh
case Banters and causes they substance ,
to swell, or such as are soluble I. ha water; ,
as glue in Joints, and mucilage or gum
arable, used sometimes - ter ettaclung
'Superficial ornamentsto fancywork. — .
AmerissalV Artisas. ,
WpearasseetssOMwkwatteaas sliaeaare•
A•correspondeue elide Pali Wolf Go
-I:ette writes: "1 - was lately conversing
',with one or our *mow eminent) scene',
- pe.Mters upon the late - ostastropne at
liar Majesty's Theatre, and. he gave his
decided, opinion that the accident pro-
evicted ,from spontaneetia- combustion.
lie stated that larges heaps of the debr is
and refuse of the painting andproperty
momswere often swept up` together,
and left to accumulate for years, and ,
Met betted often bad reason to complain ,
of this practice and to point out , the 1
danger of it. He related one Instance In 1
\
which such a heap bad stood in a tbragrn]
for a long period, and after many coin-
plaints he induced the authorities to
re
move it, and the moment a spade
was
, thrust, into Tune s urst into flames..
1 thnt In the a correapondent bunts' ',
I aside epontaneous combustion because
'scone painting is dons with water color,
Which is not inflammable; but the alltn
ger, though sometimes existing even ,In
the painting-room,liesmore particularly
in the property-room, where varnish and
`oil colons are largely need; and where
scraps of oiled nur, *toe . , varnish, sass -
dust, and flue or gulf are swept up to
gether with other matters. 'They only
require to be damped, as la not an
uncommon practice, fbr the purpose et
Toying the dust; to Induce eventually
spontaneoUS eardbnallOn. My. infnrinlint
so , pointed Lo the ease of tatters
Theatre, which be stated wasliunitdown
somewhat In this way Cron:tato sweepings
of the sawdust arid stables; sod from his
experience, which is very meat,. he felt
certain that many other theatres , had
-of I been no burnt." ,•••; • • -
war
------.-"'"'•
—AI shall shun recently at the no el
de Vllle, tn Parts, 700 white and rust
esnittlla trees were emphryed to deco
rate tbe epertmeats, 'which trice were
sent !Kim the city gardern.." 'There are
now 2,060,000 eametta plantain the.vat
melts howar-of -these gardens, wldelt
corer a seperttclas of about 53,000 agnate
yards, whloh space being round IneutB
-
.for the supply required, ' under
ground Louses are - being. coludrneted,
the excavations for that purism , ex
tending over 84,000: square ' yards or
ground. Four head :gardeners , super
intend this wast dqwer mantireotory.
_..-
---71,15 IT penguins of the. Ante:cotlo I
Moan exhl It a curious' prdlarlty In
t ho placo of deposit of tt
._ single e l f s g
ald by them. -.-Thle Instead of toe
laced in a abet, as With other birth, fa
hold totween the lege slid feathers of the
olly, and tronsperisa by the 'lard
'notarise lives ulltil heltehed. . ' . .
PENNSYLVANIA NEWSIII
—A:shocking aecideut occurred at the
Lehigh Iron Works, a abort dildafifie,
above Catmaqua, on Friday lute k S Y
which one mat lost he. if. and another ,
was serionslyeinjured. Several of the
hands had been engaged mlidasting Mod I
I had filled two holes with powder, otie?rif 1
1 . r•Pwthe b t.: l l: l u l f e:m g p'n dl it i lt:l : 3l . , u ti n t l i i m n o.th ku o" d w ir
„. : : :th deh g te w
... reop o fftt i w na n d 7br'' 7 1 : :,, Ft i a li i n. 1 nh
:I.
lifted u l anda cu
wn t, nc euhtit:B
heal
.1,,,e
ton i.
: C. hands*o b :l nOt l e e d mh f u rf : pe ll e
(a n : d w 't. ty :lah„
the
s ici' d a nger t''l:Y ll ::: : l . : o .rt n. ; ll . 1 ,,
a
some rooks, smashed In his skull, 411.-
11ml - its almost instant death. He le.Oes •
a wife and four children. One other jpan,
was also somewhat latired. .
—On Friday night, the 14th inat.liwo
villains, blacked and disguised, enta:red ,
I the house of Mr. Pant' Cunningham,'.
about mills from town. Mr. Cunelilg- •
' ham bran old man and a cripple, mitre
sides with his sister, an old maiden -tidy.
The rascals made their entrance thrllugh
sirindow, and, with pistol In hutall de
, mended the keys of the secretary, where
1 they. found Met with whioh - they Made
their escape, and, as yet, no dlrecillelne
as to who the parties were, has beetaldier
covered, ...although certain disreptiable I
I Persons are suspected. It is hope:lt'll:int
the authorities will be enabled toping
I the sotimidrols to 'plaice. FortnaAey.
they did not discover a larger =MOM of
money that was in the konan—Mmidfi. o.-
: field itcputifieon. - • • 11 „
—ln Monroe county there Is el, im
1 n'tilFriara'mlity..t.ll.°7l:la7;abe:ll3lrr ‘'ark"adbilPthh'ttidi;l'ienra.°ll:l
- this, he is able ti . ..r, saw
wood, do any htilo work around hut
house, and can, on a stretch, walk, five
tulles and more. - We doubt if Mei% le a
parallel to him lathe United Stated: .
—John Maier, of • Lower Nij‘trelh
township,Northumberland courrti, y r is
, charged with forging two checkdipaya.
ble to the order of Philip Reser, sine for
$ and one l'hr $67.10, and draw A.
S. lineal% Easton the Eagn Bank. IMe en
dorsed Mr. Bomir's name and rfitieleite
: the money last *disk. . • .11 ...
—The grocery stare of Mr. Botles on
Julia Street Altoona, was comfiletely
destroyed by lire-on Friday last The
loss was a good deal morstban She in.
alumnae which wee bat $1.,000. In num
ber at least Altoona competes NOM the
largest eltlesdn the onntiagratiorewa,
,1 •
—Miss blergareta Slap; Url nom woman
whip resided in Bucksville . in,
rid t porary aberrationof mind, Awe
it her
bed a short time before daybihak on
Wednesday of last week and waOhortly
ether .Itonnci. in jut open field ftbzen to
death. • 4-,
• •'i' r
—Mr. David W. Howell, of DA,illethel,
bait nurchasedland on Me Fletftl
eve
the Delaware bridge, in rhittlpab3ol,
and it is reported that he Intentle may
ing his cotton factory-from Mt. pawl to
Phillipsburg. ' _ t i,l
—Several persons from Ne* York
have been negotiating for the Iriarchwre
of lands on the Flats In Phillimburg,
nud propene, if they can makelarrange
meats, to put up a boiler 15e434; Mere. ,
—Tire Grand Jury of Suck* county
strongly reeoinmended the erection of a
hospital and asylum, for the .Igk and in
sane, in connection with the almshouse
establishment of that county, t!
—Over 15 000 toad of 'lron aNs card
over the Catiosariona dc Fostabsttle Halle
road weevilly. • - . , ir, • '
—The Buckscounty_ dime *cusp cost
the county about $ll.OOO daring . the last
•
year._ _--tt.'.
,
VAiiIOIIS TELEGIOCS
- ----- -,
--Bergenit Bates, carrying the Unite .
States dag, arrived at Montgontery, Ala-
Lima, on Monday. Mn wardirtet by 'a
large number of citizens Ini.carrlagee,
decorated with United States illags, and
by aba d ors:l:mato. About Have thous
and people turned out to hoaCthe ramp
don speecheri and to welcoma:hlnt. He
was the guest of the city. Altitte ssw‘ek- -
eland marshals of the day leeere Con
fiderate soldiers-
JETIts Cincinnati Price *rent will
publish to-day the reportn of pork
racking In Cincinnati this season.--The
whole number ricked WIIS: 08,801 head.'
average weight two hruldrial and tee [
pounds, and average of leaf lard twenty- I
live pounds -showing a fading off as
compared with last ye an of 10,779 head.
twenty-two pounds m the average weight
and live and one-fourth pounds in lard.
—Stephen Ives, preptnetor!Ts4 thelier
ideal Horne, in Meriden, Conn., Inwhosa
hotel Frederick Douglass Una celled a
"nigger" and from whose 311:1011a table
Douglass was ejected, brutally assaulted
Captain Ittriegs,editor of. Bre Meriden'.
Recorder on . Tnuradiy Morning, for ' 1
commenting on . the affair.li Much ex
citement prevailed and popular indig
nation was aroused whisk. Ives, who
was arrested and held to a4,wer both In
civil and criminal actions. ~[,.;,
--The Fort Sanders index keys an army
,
of two thousand Indians Hamarchlng
into the Sweeties* counl4Dom Idaho
and Montana. They are eathawar path,
and have burned the ?Imams north o f
Soda Springs, and driven */ the stock,
compelling the ranchmen s.
i.tiviiseek refuge
in canon -',
, .
—A dispatch'from Ha says: The
quittlen of the Hants 00inatundizal
l' A oujon citizens is absenlang the at
' Untied or many Cilium. ahem are ru
mors that the Spanish Cloy ernment has .
authorized the Captain Ounind to trans
port one hundred and arrenty criminals
to Africa. The shoemaker who bru
tally murdered his wife With an are, a
short time ago, was executed yesterday.
—A man named Henry iIL Ellsworth
pleaded guilty to a channUif bigamy- in'
the rotten Court, at, Buffett°, yonterdur.
The prisoner was inarried i iia Lake coun
ty, Ohio, in March, 1843. tit:one Caroline
Henderson; and re-martietlin attach.)
September. 1807, to Lucy Mel:ell.- Elle
worth claim* he war' intolicatodat the
time or the last marriage and not respon.
table for the act. • it,
—ln the Sgpreme CourCof Now Toxic,
rut „Wednesday. a citizere,of New yook
. -., L.,
sued *dna in Texas for *be recover y -n
certain goods delivered dbring the. war.
The tilalntLea wets noresulted,idikth :
ground that the contract Sinus treasenahle
and unlawfuL [.
-3lttycliTomppiirt, of Pim brsdlle, Ky.;
Was assaulted and badly iluatui In able,
room last night by Harry,
sham lfir diat.
*barged policeman
and
wested
and bailed In the sum 4 - one thousand
dollars. -I . , -; -it I
_Robert Ossetia, &finking billet Of
th lus el lue r"4 n IlenSicticedua,lsvto .le
y ll ea aw rs T in o t ik he .
State Prison. He pleadvdity to k
misdo
mariner under the Ititufaud•Ban sot.
—A. detachment of o f 'hundred - and .
..
arty rooming for the,P..44 Zones** pass-:
.erithrough hlttaruch Ite onThuraday,
on their way from . ibutrear to New
• -At Hillsdale; Idletc, Ntraanaday
1 1 night, the Waldron licidsowas deltroed
', by tire, cursing*. lou Of $40,000. Canso,
exploalon of althreserjr:i[larcip. _
~
—The Board of Aldermen of New
I York hove passed [ a 'n,tisolution Inviting
the amnion attire- Dekweratio National
Convention in that cies, ,
[ —lt is generally rutiderstood v. r.
rTyng will be found &ley wo n rece
1 admonition fore sinlatOg a of lb.
... — Episcopal Church :; j ;
A large steam nal atEirliumild.V.l.. ,
owned by Y. -Towel-Uwe* destroyed by
fire last evening,. Tun unaseertainod. ,
—Tewhiaky er Commisslith veil
l' meet to veil
-a n
-Ins Monday next to
I learn Sion praetimt thane. .. ' ...- ; -
Bishop /downs mss . *lightly. Injured.
by a railroad ao.hruit , t Wilkesbarre,
[ Pa.. Thursday tnorrdng, . .., ;-
. . - A tfatnerieftanatturne, • • t ,
The other day
w hoeater,. of the
poor Martha Grins was recently.
sent to a debtors! *Own la London: She
was released on ttatt;Pscimant of FAO try
liuskinosldull.36ojaore were outran.-
tea byeytupathizirig friends. ' The glene
father writes to tlier•Landon Telegraph:
"But kir your kind Intercession Ithe
must have.7rentabied
in jail u
can
- tor a long
time,. Unisex you. nu' a father •yo
not Imaginewbst err wattage Were when
I found mirpoor fikl hail been cast into
apt-Leon,- in aud it mir to the SuiXering she
lint previously endured. My SUrprien
at her release wax ieg , equaled by
joy It gave . Me,' h lie idea of ancoor
coming from such . a-Oa:ter. [All I can
I offer yon Is a' grateful `heart, in . which
will dwell the metteety army (Winter
\
astral and,noble4laduct its „long, tat
. Tn. remainder ti t the; hind has been
I Invested for the grsTa WWII, .7 Her s ee,
lilentastiggoill&C*9u4ilaVeru ti''ref
—The value ot in . I 'sfiss IA
given.
in n labia published In the lifontreak
which elbows r ho urine of
any in that dry fa: give n; sone:ally for,
places in tha . rheed of the - these
trio. Thus. the i., us sites near t he.
:The Franca* bare [ brought e
.),„... metre $23.', V•upt
_and , Avett:.
hair the Near Opebere datives ye
varied from MB*. the naw 'lands"
vise from fihoo •tn . :and. the.Cialets
from s9;t ape utli to
-
from
and t it Enlist rule,
—)t. - . artier - ile;' One; rot cur sedentliiii
weeklies adysigiat the adoption*
uniform itan tvl" Of t ime 'h e Wald
Lover. inimherbig the" heals (rations to' .
twenty-four, eth,libar- It Would :he, en.•
o'cl•CALPTPrrrliFf at the 002440.0•11;
Mil
POI.TiCAL
pirrslituvai.
. Pt *seines Axarain, torrws vsD.
In the, cart of thy ',teat It!. h.....
Ittudvappt reached ttatt..to tho deep—
Swart, And ,agetty.
catcl,tl tn.lnotliatAlTl n7.6el>t-
Thi, [it, h w,-tillo, ring. .
W Gal tt • I.llUltilor.
T tot , ct t 11 , Milt thy, ht dt.4
All.l mutter of ctliat, the S. ist
' T I T
hx * .
t n , r
oh o .
. i si ',
,•
~. e v, ,h .
.. i n 1 t .
~ :
~, , t b r .
‘ 0
t has ,. , , t , , ,
. n
: 1 1 . 1 . i/ 4 0 ) ; , " 1 . , , .
1. .
14, 1 Ilet atesol.• fro% a ot he vet,. I
rr-i-s-thrd
• ~, t• t- m .t''' , 0 , 1
When ktre,hlect. %tent ... ~1 li,eujta,
I. hitch sa the ,h ,, t et I's s a ter,:.. ii
Tbatatletchas the Cars 01 to luta. t''
• .__'•
Die mighty arena of ridges
t
I. Looks down:v sac
at the rament dust 1:
1 , :ptlt''::Vtfe'rlsluTftilfti;: C'
"08"
fights. I),C I.',
Front the entre of toe %lobo and 010 IJan- .
' tants
, -.Seim the monsters of of
to be guests ~
, And sliding the slopes of the morentains 1
1 The giants bting gifts o'er the crests. •
1 'Aroused by the age from ihr altsmbar, . , v
The great apai,hdan spine
Shakes down in the riven Ma lumber, . ' f
__Al . nd helehes the lite from the r mlot, . , 1
' 1
I 7 1.1 1 1 ". ::; , ! 14 : :::Z.14°L.1
The Iron that melts tor the dancing.
Smooth-kissed by the bountintl ell.
The danne, 111' allege . 10 finish; ' . •
The dancers are never to tint,
So long es there.; grilse In the aster,
Or south% the glow' of Me htei
, The tune, It is mare Man a nutalorez
' The dente, done it naught Mit amuse
The feet that slip deftly to plesunre. •
Sheeler , to generous nee. , •
They fashion the broadaxe edges .
Tht shall Addle tholomste to light,
Ana 1 110 1,11110 n tinapee rileite
Thal shall bled tab rooftree tight I •
77,gTAVV,TagigrlfTX°. -
And its great Meow. ow:mows salve, • .
: Like a rovednation'. gest...
So, with this grimy amide; •
Yoleaulte, /aye and steel. , . • '
ran slake ga
Barred ~,,ct,;ndltig amplest.;
le , weal.
The gm th• West sheathe ow.u. t
In a union never to Me,' - •
Till tbeheavens awl the earth like* yosteti•
anent, . _
tater vita fervent ire t
•
TIE PEARL WEARER- •
Withln the midni deepest hair,
flair bidden PI itdeeps,
A. single Dnotices, priceless posit,"
Ail tillay-ered forever sleeps.
without tho diamond's soarallnq es,
ey
'The ruby's bluelven—theca It lies I
/dal est as the tender Dawn
-When hermarplevall'e withdrawa
-
llot dower of gemi—alily,Oold and pale
Tet;what dotti all eked I
All its beetitY, gaits grace.
AU the tinhorn of its placer
lie who plucked it from its bed .
In the fair blue Indian Ocean,
Lieth. libast , the ...mica.
IS Ills earthly dwelling—dead t
And his children, ono by one, -
When they . leek upon Wu 0014
CUree the Ybk CO kirea
The
trend
fairat ILI bed Of blue. .
Cialltle bride. I'o longer
'ln thy night Mack, od or one hair
Such a spoilt 10 is not et- .
That a lender coal should pt • "
- Under nook steamed
What need's[ thou ad ad amt
• Thou, within :hose Eastern eyes
T treight, a starry e.t.a
Thou, whom
Lovelanda. arrayed,.
• Thou, whom Truth nave made
Seautlfull—in whom we trace
Wonsan% softness, angel . l. firscie— • •
• All we hope for. all that streams
Upon as iu our Wonted dteams I •
• U. sweet lady I neat
With a smiths, mnde Prlde
All to aln or pain allicaL
Let toe wlld.eyed conqueror wear .
The bloody laurel ba his hair r • -
Let the bleak and snaky vine
Round the drinker's temples twine ;
Lot the elaveebegotten gold
on bosoms herd and cold
But to thou forever known
BY thy natural ught alone
•22 r Orntaall
eug au ITMIt slum.
AZONSILOW ,
Along the frozen lake alto nOmea •
In linking crescents, !lent and dent
The lee imprisoned Undies hetet
welcome to her. little feet. .
I see the 'sooty hat, the plume •
Sererve.birl-11to In the Joyous saki— '
The cheekstrp to burning ;
• The yottogescs eparkanstnroash the Tell
The gulag breath pert her laughing Ups.
The white neck stanes through
,tossing
gusts I
liar gesture gently sways and dips.
As on sae speeds in snellllite• whorls. ,
• • +,
• -
lien atop sad analla to lai. bar go
Teel Casa, they watts to p10n...a noprisa
T •ay ottle bar name I they het show
. 'Soma !Want trlandottly theta ayes. — •
- • .
Satttte. 130 i. the paean on I
-
Her steely footfall quicker Min I •
%at follows 1%; To gr. k
- Smooth ho bar wayneueureker tram
Along eorluus linos .1 11(6. • •
ry•ca‘ 'mat, to it •neorsalve lad—
e:noble Malden, noble wife I
efixamr,
SfZIT o.!lo?cae
There le tr eerpeet ',holm envenomed bda
Ls rerely heeled. Yet. oho feels its tooth,
It be servives, eft goes again, forloOth,
Unto Its enis. sa if cro deligt'
Toles' MS bite Kean, until toe 01110 1
• of poverty end woe reveals the truth
; tte]." vile fiend, so lov ed., et so uncouth!
It to one's interest so perverts the eight
„ Thai
_enemies ese .thoyght,to he one's
frientni, ' •
And friends are seen ltillitlited come.% '
who.. blwrinnia slip trout the fin irevenro,
And character on thaetleg min Steal
What is this nionster_that such. power
mztencsl -
Ls name L Debtl—aviddlng tt be
1.0/nhincui Enqirer.
iioNivanir AND Dasskszio.
Llehti upon' the water .analog.
trttT?;et th: w
aa rralag laacn
ided_my
Word.
wltn tAaderfanC7i.g.
Long, long ago.
Clouds above a dwk sea benaina,
- slabs with sad *eawhw , olcainwir.
Words with woa,
All al , bean - with fears waterer:U=lC -
Years that-two:tett with theui astral:iglus
Hopes and Gi
ylssrtn Ati,artillgersh
Latta like °raver ehniging.
Toe swap= 31FAilLIDOT
Stint° bails.; still to be drest,
-as you sere staler to • feast 1 .
Still lobe polid'red. sallamlUmed
lady IC is to be pigs=
TlaOtiglitz LW causes me not fotoult
ALL not sweets, all ts sot sound.
Glve me • bete. • lab
Tbat MOSS AMplleitie a gram t
-144sts loosely losing, balr as Mee
Sory streets neglect more talddll Me t j
Thattlsll tb , adulteries orart.
Thud strike toles eyes eat - not rates Mitt.
• —ln a recent putted Bishopur
Cleveland Cosa Faye: , • •
"%then sei4he tawdrY'fashione,lhe
vulgarriv and wicked extensi
onal of the tides, Iles' sure that thous-
ands oft _orican women are strangers ..
Co the first tialof refinement —edmidlcity,
manners end att. end,
n When I ed that - thonsdols of- Amor -
imut women read th e most ehamelniro-
Mancesend thorned degrading newspa
ping-frequent th e vilest. doss:antic enter
tainments and Join in deices to shocking
to bo named -among Christians; I Piet
that Christian 'matrons are becoming too
.fow, and that civilized, heathenism le re
turning to the tields - 'we have wrested
..,Whert red daily, of themcat, un
godly divorcee and of crime dal. , peg so
cial urity and against hnman life itself,
Whic p he're torthities to be mentioned more
.partioutarly, feel,that too many of our
countrywomen are without God In the
world, and that radical ,refeime are ne
cessary, in the aysteme of. education en
which the young women of America aro
'dependent far their training: • , „
' hen ' I see thoasande of boutiehelds'
in.w hie: young girls , are reared fa life
otplesuture„ yr:l-bout reference to - duty, I
cannot' wonder at these rem; entat
the Weary' In which they involve fami
lies and communities, Sow the wind
andreapthe whirlwind!
oias ehrtstala . Bishop, therefore.' I
make my appeal to. you, Christian fro- .
inon,Wd I ask you to Wu t
u n e ti
refor -
nuclei:l; by faithindy bearing yo tes
tnon3r, wird all that tends to The deg-.
redation of your sex, and the more ea,
when such crime le not only winked at,
hut receives emintenancito enrolee which
ought to heeqmOtilia u ' , 7!' -
Genen 'pape, ntalidted at . ted •
aim glvoS re a rontsnos r of ei Arderlcan bolero. n.
• -
lug-school alfe,nrinch Is not. We Incredi
ble for belief tuespt trt one or ' twotwos par_
tleuLant. • The . scene ts loested at a
fashionable seminary on the Itedson.
attendedby young ladles from seventeen -...
totwenty. Vivre was One, whose blonde
marls and We eyes appwed to the Gar-
men heart who. seemed. oppressed ,- erlth
hidden arta. tho Chrbettose ewe
than she wenclanne-with the testi - but
did not retunawlth them, Itslegram be- -
Ing xlecelvedilorn her lather stattrg . that
Meese tree the cause: Boon she - nap.
mared; and ebbrtly-efter reedtrolzeblu
trontayoungsnan whobocamesosseldn
°us as to beat length: forbidden the boom
by the Prtheipal.,' *ben: threw oft
"ahMehie tch4te. the cherecter Of-st has
baud, sued- optarwrit of bsbess corona
and secured' the young woman of
curls audition eyes as Massifs. , It was
he who bad sent. tbs telegram intenatena .
In her.detentionorbile eho woe travel
log over the country with bleu - The
arents ewe crush.butilnally relented •
end all-te now pleasant: TheePlatd• dld
ma butt the repatallon of the wanintry
on the contraty it became more crowded
:attar the onset than errs before. .The
experiencemed to. harp bad - a=
, forte says. f`lf _
surrender-tbijroung ladles elalnend
Tonna dentioWoMes tbairMdleresiartnitd
of rtp4l . !t , sit oloneat tsay broaden,
Pad% tbe ropoial s..ierionsly .
„
nude;lsnecoont of iles 7 Kiest.' advance . ' •
tt,to et the colik,sold there, to establish s
cserAteette.froot which the etthtelle own:
be driven niCit morning tenet different
itettees,sutt thidndUccuside,theilAnilit.
Wen in the'possence - ths trastetsere.
.Thir recalls to the. Oslo& aorresete
-lountillsb s Whistelle the entry:Ste:sneer
rtn'Otiteethe, the iteet4,litteek tared
Ittette to the century. to pees the eato-.
icor. ' iosh se he nasality Installed
to it he went iii-iniateretA &Met who
hida witch cowv•fitetoodtood ens he
4stedide -cestr;.lo
Seftentwitko nste el
ettur
pult 0 OHL" ,M,Tfirw e 4A 4B.O g nt
*pox" Rai/ Wan. PAre rersf Oars."
',lathe, cue lite ten mini" -..Yett"-Seill
milk tothir-orteettee et ter, imtnrent:
thee Ottani tepod4"
',
1
• 1.,-
k.iz.