' I I gittsintrOj Gairtts rinsugam) Br PENIMIAN, REED & CO A? GAZETTE BUILDING, 7:Cra. GO 3ThLtua. 191troot. fir ,Pi A r i llfuls". • stsp,"..- TIERS FOS WU:XL] . Thrbe CopLub ybrr ybyr. by Irma, ubb........111 $0 car's . ' I 9.5 PO4llO. SO au, adtrasa. and axle /no to 111 TRW 7U$ °ALLY t•I amle• De/Inm! by tamer, (par evelt,)-- 3 Puts. MAO. Liberal red. • to Newsbm mad •211114 • WEDNESDAY:MARCEL 11,1868. . No Ckr i rrinesiovran,ernbodied . - - in the C ' tntion, Is more deer and anal by e, than that of impeachment. IF . , conferie on the two Roues of. Coi f- gnu., power hai heretofore been f - eze on 'event ctonudou, but al. r• 'royale persons , holding compare. . t - - tiiely au Nitrate posillons. So far as . f .. ~ °Too- ol i tlors Was duiciplintid wire . - - coneetne ,no complaint of injustice or 1 hiudstiO ever tittered. The corn. . : mon Medi ant of the country has stead !' fly o proceedings against them. • ' . And the cling tuts been general that forany o impeached and dlaplaced, at leak an undred have richlydeserred like deme ation. But, . slier all, the •:-... - p chief ublie W w d elf t a to rs, ih t e e 'Ca th i e terryss ilniti° t 'i nati t li the of . . civil liberty, - Lea not arisen from the short-comings. or overt crimes of. men .. - in low or medium itatime. The great ' - experience in all .omintnes and ages. .:. . i Deliberative asumblies may, indeed, de. I . • . tterired=cgerhairkes:' emanateda t Ir"stmhetheunzeifornic. generate into "instruments of faction. , Instances of this infirmity are not want- • lag lethistory. But merlons encroach- menta upenpopnlar freedom hove al- i. . moat invariably come from the opposite i direction--from the chief executive cal. 1 • *cer craftily or by force extending his . l prerogetives and megnifying his author. - . . ity. Po lathes this gone in the United i • States, during the last thirty year& that ~. the -President hal come to claim and use - • a much larger'. measure of rumor than 1 _ • any limited -monarch in Bum* has .•• • dared to assert in the last two bun. .)...' died - nem- Tenn usuzmalons hare ! been justified, naturally enough, under . - • pretense of inaservitiarn. That is the plea invariably, urged for despotism But that this plea should be urged here - . mainly, if not exclusively, by those who claim to be Democrats, may well mate surprise not , untaingled with contempt. In this posture of affairs it is moat suitable that the bolt of impeachment shook fall oa the head of s Ptealdent, and panicalarly on the bead of that one who his done more than all his mede. °mum combined, not. only to bring the office into disgrace, but to render it a formidable menace to'civil liberty. • , It has been held that Panora Basra; , -• in thou ancesaesot fervor which marked, • his opposition to the ratification of the -• Federal Constitution, was swayed by , unti:hided and unmanly apprehensions --imperially when; RDMI reviewing the large mum:onof authority actually con.; ferred on the nesident, and the liability , __ always existing that more er would be routed than was given, he exclaimed, ' "Your President will become a King." The experience of the - nation since then has shown that he was not miat,ken in estimating the tendency to executive en croaclunent encouraged by the very terms elate Constitution itself. Indeed, • so palpable has this become that Mr. SEWARD has not sernpled to declare that the people of this errantry; regularly elected a Ring every four years. This iris become the ' , actual working of the goiernment, thoegh . It was not the in tention of its founder& Ot all mon. 1 erclies, an elective one to the worst of all to he deprecated. The history of Po land is felt of .adnacinition and warning on this head. : - It is time the tendency towards. M. perkily= was checked ; and the way to do this' is by Impeachment. . This con sideration has Dressed upon us strongly for two years pan. Hence ' while most f the Benublican journal s flippantly . diimissed impeachment as a "farce" or a "sham," we steadily regarded it as a stern .neceillty, if Republitan ft:unite- 1 I glans were to be preserved aming na, not simPli In form and seeming, but in I , subatan-e and reality. The eresident's violation of 'the Odic. Tenons in fur. tithes no stronger imams for iroosed- • ing simian him than existed before--in 1 -_tie teisapmosniation _of the funds aria. 1 mg from Bid sale of confiscated estates; to his management respecting segues. ' , rotted Southern railroads ; in Li. abuse 1 ' of the pardoning power; in hlaprostliu- , tiers of patronage; in his threats against 1 the . legislative department; and in his asanniption of exclusive authority over' . the revolted States. • Iwieed, we doubt not ultimate and impartial' history will adjudge [that 'the gromds upon which Congress has finally decided to. proceed ' , . against .the Offender are .feebler than those it rejected ea insufficient at the opening orate present session.' . Mist .is most needful Is an example - which shall henceforward deter the ' ~ President—whoever be may be or by ! - yid& . party : soarer elected—from stretching his authority beyond the' strict letter of , the Coutitution. , I this judgment, we doubt not,, all con siderate and thonghtfhl Democrats con cur isfully as Republican& . Mere poll, Belau, nrayed by . temperaty passioks; excited by portioned hopes, or Impelled by flaming anlinosines, may object. Bat these routing," - a:Wm minority ! , elsmonitte, indeed, but not worthy to be taken into account in dab:railing seism 'so momentous to the republic and to civil liberty everywhere and for all time. Tun RIPITSLIC4B &Vas Convict' vow,- assemble at Minis borgh on Wednesday neat, will prob ably express a preference for some eiti - - aos - of this Comm,onesith as the sand. Mae for 'the Tice Presidency. Dele gates to that body hare been chosen, who are - dWided* in. Opinion between - three differed lamdualii—elat la Cm.' sow, Snow and 011/LEY. The Stnte thireention will select the Star delegate, at large to the National Conviitlon, and no more, the balk of the delegates being , Sl:wine/srby . oonventioasorattferel/Mte within the respective ,d/miticbc . It is tAintiore, that any eXpresehm of wifely:no* On the part of the State • Convention, while confeusedly of high nuthati ty, conclu de' and bled . only the four • delega tes at- aarge " Tao district delegates will not maybe . at laxity, bit will doubtless 'fee am . strained to fallow wither the local in : artistic:W or the local preferesees, as ~ the cue nisi be. ileiCe, it is prawns.' - We thug the same. dirsmities of prefer ence which ire now apparent - . in the Stain will be exiebited at Chicago In - May.- This wautotunalimitimay lead to a setting wide . ohill the gentlemen I tithtedPean4haias for the, wooed plater on the natiomstithket. - Such a rts• I s uit can burdj7..be astdrktd unless the • minority in The State- Convention. on Whir:hetet side it may be found„ well wai ve:thcf;.,Millis:Wens.-andsomake. an unanimous rectommeidation, and an 'tree the pada delegates, shall - =mit to lay 'wide . kited sod persooel prefer; emcee ; and'Juts/lily :thatain at Chicago the thdiridnal witontay receive the dersemesit of the State Convention. , . Damon= to-the- &publican Bute . convention" at llabidepbll4" tbq 414, gobig by the Pennayitiniq Ceti raiitoroad and midrib!, fa:1,1011i ikee.'fteelve fralacal 4 03 4 1 4 3 ( ieqini vows THE IPROJECT RENEWED. . . At the union of the Legislature for 1807, it will be remembered, a bill was introduced into the House to tax all Transportation Companies, which also mined and traded in coal, twenty.. flee . ectiti for each ton seat by them to market. The wording of the bil was as general as the terms in which we have now stated Re scope. Only three Companies were in the 'category described. These were the Delaware and Hadson Canal Company, the Pennsylvania Coal Com pany, and the Delaware, Lukawanna and Western Railroad Company; known as the - New York Companies, and carry ing roths exeltuively from Luzerne county. I . . • The Delaware and Hudson Canal Com , pany . vras chartered by the State of New York; received State aid in constructing - its seal from Rondous, on the Haden, to a po i nt on the Delaware OppOstta the mouthof the river Le ckawaxen ; and b, yro believe, the only Company so aided that ever repaid the fnioneys or credit so advanced in that. Comnronwesith. Me Maumee Wi.trere,ot PlilladelPhiS, at an early day, wateonstitnted a corporation sole, with right to haptore the naviga tion of the Lackawszen by building dams- and locks ; so creating a stack water nevigation, which the Legislature reserved the power to take pusendoiof on cartel° condniona -The Delaware and ' Hedson Canal Company became the as- I algab of Mr. Wones, and so obtained a 1 standing lit Pennsylvania. Mr. Wears I had no authority given him:to mine and 1 trains: in coal. He arse, at most, only made a common Carrier. The Canal Company, by its charter, WAS empow ered to mine and sell CoaL Being in this stele under Mr. Wynne assign ment, it used ts.B the rights here which its. New York charter conferred, and so , became a tranegressor. As the time drew near for the Common wealth to resume the privileges granted to Mr. WITILTE, a Legislative Committee wan appointed to Investigate and report upon the expediency of suchresnmption. It decided that liking the Lackawaxen section of the Delaware and Hudson Canal, (as .the Womb's improvement came to be known,) bo the conditions prescribed, was altogether inexpedient. But, in the course of the aforesaid ex amination, the Delaware and Hudnin Canal Company was made aware teat It was exercising rights in this Common wealth to which It had no title; that It was, in fact, usltigtte New York fran chises-within our borders without au thorny, At the following_ sesalon oft the Legislature, a bill was introduced , waiving the States right to Venom,. the 1 franchises granted to Mr. Waters, and ' authorizing the Delaware and Redone I Canal - Company lb proceed in Pronsyl. a-Apia under its New. York charter. Phcre was a pieligiona fight over this bill; but it is elan to affirm that notinore than one number of either House com prehended the microbe and snore of it, and that the „Gertantor, who finally ap proved the bill, was equally tit the dark. They eupposed It was a sinrrendet, with out considetation, Of stumble rightslas longing to the State, when the design wan simply to domeetkedehere the New York charter of. the Canal Company. By the passage: of that bill the Delaware and Hudson Canal l Oompuy became a Pernaybania coreoration ; a fact public men at Harrisburg have not discovered up to this time. I The Pennsylvania Coal. Company grew on of the comblidation of several companies created by the Pennsylvania .Legielature. In form -11. Is strictly a Pennsylvania company. All its elec tions are - held within the State, and a 1 definite proportion of ate officers are. Citizens here. This artupany owns a railroad, extending rom Pittston, on ' the North Branch of the Seim:lemma, to Hawley, on the lackawaxen, where it strikes the Delasare and 'Had-' eon Canal. From this point to tide water on the Hudson, It has, ty con tract,-the right to use onehalf the lock. age on the sad canal. In fact, it em ploye not more than 'thirty boat?. pro [ (erring a railway trsnaportstion ot Which it has the option. This is by a branch road of its own constroction, from Haw. ley,edown the Lackawexen, fifteen miles, I to' its confluence with the Delaware, I there intersecting the Erie Railway, over which it runs trains either to New burg or New York. 1 The -Delaware, Lickawanna and] Western - Railroad Company also exists excludvely by authority of our own lawn Scranton is the Centre of its opt. rufous, from wheoceit ' ,extends esst and west. Towards the eas t, it rune an In dependent line of - railway down to Euton, or near thereto; land from thence a third rail on the. Central Railroad of New Jersey to ' , acme:iodate its broad gine. ...Thus it reaches Newark Bay at Elizabeth, and runs on to Jersey City. From Scranton its independent road ..., rune west to Great Bend in Siugnehan na county, where It intersects, the Erie Railway, by - which it xesehes E.agham- I ton. - Prom this - point It Isends coal by i the Cheotoogio canal,' to Riles,-and by railroad, :direct. to Syracuse. It alto follows the Erie to Owego, and thence, the branch to Ithaca, where It frelghs flown the to Central and Western New York., I , - ~ . Bat all three of these .Compaulcs are, in reality and substance ] Now York. Their stock is ambit:held ,Ixi Now York; their main -of are there; and the management procecea from thence. The laws of this State, so iar as essential to the existence of the Oro:parties, are complied With, but that is MI. • It was claimed, bat year, that these New York Companies had powers which ninid of the strictly Pennsylvania Com- panlei enjoyed; the latter-.. being simply I COliinnili carriers, and hence making no /site by merchandizing in I oats. When 1 the bill &tense referred to er a Mtn:alum:l set, the current impreesiOn. wan that It was designed in the interest of Imola- I Mrs to legislation; that is, that the per. 'pose watt to make the three Cempuilei I • • off, at a high price, the promoters of I the bill Sub proved not to be the fact. I 'The: bill originated in the Timmy De-' partment as a revenue measure.. The tax was reduced from twenty-five cents a ton to four cents, in which ehsipe the bill became a law. Estimating that these Companies mine anti sell three millions of tones year—wld Is near the 'tam mark—this tax yields one hundred and twenty thousand dotterel annually; and this, In addition to the hues prey fatuity paid; • Within the last few days a bill has been brought forward to. In ' erease the tax to twenty cents a ton; or , l say, six bandied thousand dollars a year. If this movement is honestly In favor of the Treasury two' (Mulleins ?cite.' Can these Companies affnd to pay this as. easiment? Ought it to be, c Weed to . [ these th ree CutuPalliss , 1 . It ts, deutniess, true that . these three companies lake vast weelistd of the -ii I State every year, which. vided up anent stockholders resident elsewhere. In this way Lezennicountile kept mrtil partitively, poor. The oiher system by which' udisidual owners mine Mid , mil ' coati, the . , Menspeirtatkm coMpardes smug only as Common cerebra. Pro duces very different result,. Thii wealth produced • by lids coal • bellac fa at once ' brought back - within our borders, and i s a .peipetual- source':of. mien* to the counties in which • theholders Of It re side. 'Let any one lake the income re. tarnsof Lusemesid biehnoilitoenutlek and Institute comparison between them; and lie will see that laisaine AN Owat immewirably behind ElehnylkilL In as inhaled wealth. The NeW York System Inunrsitnishisa, Whlle he .Penneylvaimis , system einlebes ourown Teople.l This las outudderathni lsglidaturs ought not to oserlook-- • -.. It is not straining pohg to es Woo Woo Now York Companr, franchises that ought not to have been conferred on them or any other corpora tions, and that in the present enlight ened condition of public opinion, will ' not be granted to other corporations. Individual 'operators In their respective neighborhoods are entirely at their mercy, haying no outlet of their own, and tying enastraineC. to accept such price for the coals mined by them as the companies nearest their lands sea fit to ofrei. But, it must not' be concealed that un der the Pennsylvania system individual operators have made nut gains. Indi viduil operators can be named who have returned, year after year, more than half a million of dollars as net galas. It would not hurt these Ins; any Z 12613 than it would hart the three New York Companies, to contribute liberally to the resources of. the State . Treasury.. The fact Is that all coal mined in the ',State ought to be pat under contribution for 'public purposes. There are points of objection to this policy, springing out of its apparent tendency to detract from the local advantages of our manatee turea. But we apprehend this tendency Is more imaginiu7 than real. At fall ' events, a tax cannot be imposed on such coals as go out of the State, while what is communed inside remains unburdened. The federal Constitution elands In the way of inch discrimination. Whitten.? may be the intention as to' the bill now brought forward—whether it is really in the Interest of the Treas. my or of legislation-mongers—whether desigifed to help the Schuylkill region by laying burdens on the Companies operating la Lucerne—we do not know. In the absence of reasons for Inferring a mister Intention, It is but jest to infer that the purpose of the bill la laudable. Bat we cannot refrain from submitting that the whole question of taxing coals ought to come under legislative review, and be dealt with upon broad principles- _ - PRACTICAL CONSIDP.R MONS. Intelligent citizens who bare uell& ly Observed the indications at - public, opinion in Ohio daring the past six months cannot be surprised to learn that theßepublicans of that State, In Con- vention, on Wednesday, declared •In favor, rind, of making all future issues of United StaMs bonds expreuly liable, to taxation as 'other property; Second, arresting the coaincilost of the cur many, the volime of which shoold be commensurate ,to the wants of the pen-, pie; and, Thin', of the inviolability of 1 the public AIM to Its creditors,. bat de- ! daring that the Plye-Twenty bonds may legally, and shOuld be bully and right fully. made payable In the currency oi the tountrjr which may be 'clogs!. temder whenever those bonds are redeemed. 1 Prom oar knowledge of the tone of the Republican. preen, and of the opinions prevalent among the masses of the party in 'Mkt, ,we have no doubt that these resolutions were adopted by more than a majority vote—probably with some threw near an entire unanimity, and that they faithfully , represent the conclu sions of th., great bed: of the party. The text oithe rew.haion relative to bond redemption is as follows: liltalitti. That the Republican pony pledeta itself to toe !tablet per meat or the Ihtblie debt ucortltatp to tee /awe miler which the hre4trnatty bonds were Issued, end sell h=et. " 4 ' rli It: paid ialek7:l tender Chen the Government 'hal/ be pre , plied to irdees4 0000 tonna. Upon the question of taxation of lends, the Indiana °Donation proposed to subject the present issues to their share 1 at the public bathes's, except where en primly, protected by ' exiatieg enact ments, while the Ohio Repubticans con fine the question only to future busuea' Substantially, these positions agree, since the adoption of either .secures the approval of the other by the Govern ment. To the position which Indiana and Ohio have thus taken, the reader may prepare iiimeelf to see the Republicans of the other States of the West and Northwest bringing those States, one after another, when their GNITCI3tIOIII are held. Those States will cast very nearly one half the entire vote in the National Conlin:inert at Mingo, and heir constituents will demand the earn est efforts of their delegates to embody similar declarations in the platform of that body. It is proper to state these facts and the Jost inferences which we draw as to their betting upon political calculations, that Our readers, citizens of Pennsylvania, and moat of them Republicans, may4x nutty understand what to expect, when they meet their western (needs at Chi cago. Them questions . will come no, backed with great numerical force and will'haveto be dinposed of. The. Re publicans of three States will any—and probably with truth-i.that they will be in danger of losing their State elections, and of perilting the.inte for President in November, 'exam they can squarely take the grounder Equality in taxation and One Uniform Currency for the din• charge o( public and private obligations. As to ezpsesioa or contraction of the currency, an ngreement can easily be reached on the basis of things as they are, prohibiting any farther tinkering legislation and leaving the question sub. Ject only to the eccessides of the Treas ury itself. But it Is easy to see that the other and main points will be insisted oa by the West and Ifinthwest, and it is by no 'means sure that they will not me. 'end la incorporating the phial to suit them in the Chicago platform. The Whole question of the redemption of the principal' of the Five-Twenty bonds in coin or currency would be prac tically settled by a return to specie pay. silents. A decision by the Supreme Court, upon what are known as the Legal Tender setts, from the Pacific slope, —which have been partially argued, but are not expected to reach a dual judg ment before next winter—that the legal tender notes are unconstitational, and that goldand ailver are the only lawful money, timid <have the effect to being the Treasury to'specie payments at once, and that would end the, whole question, at whatever coat to the country in the way of a pressure upon all its financial and indultrial Interests. Treasury re. 4110:11/t1011 means universal resumption, and brought about In that way, without being generally aziticlpated,and prepared for, would cause a tremendous aback to the business of the country. It Is idle, however, to borrow shy troutile chain that. What the Court may decide licit winter, one way or the other, Is of no consequence whatever in dealing with the immediate questions of to-day,— questions which will govern the State elections in Ohio, lectlasta and lowa in October, and will powerfully influence those of Michigan, Illinois, Wisconsin and Minnesota, which dispose of the State end Preaidentlatiasnes at the same polls IsiNovember. We lay entirely out ofyiew any possi bility or probability that the Western view of these questions may be adopted to any extent in the. Kiddie or Eastern States. These' communities are wealth ier, and, u holders of liveatelcapilal in the bonds. -of the government, are more inclined by their interest to take the sanarazy view. But at is well to consider that In these States wealth is not'contincd to ono Arty and that the I muses of alt political opinions are very I likely to think for themselves, and their lieu of what may ha for ihelt interest Will naturally lead them to aide with the Western thew. They will lane it tally expounded to them by Deaicsaitio flats and stamp oratots, 'whose Convect. lion it frairiaburg the otliei day am p. ted and endorsed it to the tallest extent:l The question cannot be kept out of the mantas Tentaylnnia, unless one friends decline to make it a party ; ism* by- oicapyhts identical gromed them.' selves. ifthey make an tune upon lt, they will have to rely fir their support. upon facts of which we are lino:ant and op prinelyda not yet familiar to a PITTSBURGH WHKSLY GAZETTE common understanding. When that same Democratic Convention also de clared that the exemption of any gov ernment bonds from taxation Is =Out and Inequitable, that means the re pudiation of contracts, and illustrates the pertinency of our suggastlon that none of these questiona can salely be en trusted to their controL • Looking upon these questions as ris ing fun In political Importance, and re cognizing the wisdom of our western friends who repudiate once for &lithe pro position to draw party lives upon limn, and who, appmnisaing their intrinsic importance, hays determined that their future solution ft safer for' all interests in the hands of the Ilipubliean party, which is now about to &arum° that entire control of the government to which its majority ofnumbela has long since en titled it—and reminding our readers that not above anti beyond these questions, but aide by side with them, a part of them intimately and nemesis :11,y inter woven, goes the express and absolute recognition of ail existing couttacts with the public creditors—we' Invite their serious considerationnpon the positions taken by the Republicans of the great States of the west We recommend that consideration in the interests as well of public Faith and Public Policy as of Republican Success Waco PRUIDHNT JOLINSON started on his career of treachery towards the party by which ho wig elected, he ap peared to have vividly before him the parallel cute of Trull and Pittston,. In some of his public addresses he ill,. ded to the fate of those his predecesaon as tarnishing warnings as to the wrlUng nese of democrats to applaud treachery' ao long as they found It profitable, and to desert the deceiver when he could not be made further available Ho evident ly saw the right, but had not sufficient steadlneu to puma it. 'He war not long , In becoming the thing he stoutly profes sed be despised. While Ws. powit to mained unbroken; while Le had patron age to bestow, or appeared to. Lave it; while he could be used as an instrument for creating divisions in the Republican ranks; while his course operated to rein. Ylgorate the spirit of revolt in the South. I era States, and to beget hopes that re construction would ultimately be accent plished on conditions which would be a virtual endorsement of the rightfulness of the rebellion, the democrats crowded about him, defending his wildest excus es. approving his most high-handed measures, and urging him forward to the commission of new and yet neural:ter outrages noon his honorable pledge.s. As soon is he was hedged about by new enactments, and, especially Ikea Congress, long Incensed, finally revolved to strike the blow unaccountably with held, the democrats, with one accord began to desert him. Already he stands pretty much alone. Those who remain about him stand only on the order of their going, and will soon fled opportu nity to take themselves away. • It is possible Mr. JOBNIV), illll latter ly indulged hopes of becoming the 1 presidential nominee of the Democratic National. Convention. What vagaries may beset end halltleilrAi a mind like his, 1 1 and beset with chronic lefirmities, can easily be csioce Iced. Men in high ;Awes never hear the truth except by accident. Their ears ere fills l with ideation hoods, .and they are furnished with ev I dence for believing respecting: there, selves, what they most want to believe. Bat, whatever usenet:ea Democratic leaders may have privately given )lx. Jonsson, and whatever reliance he may have placed on the conga:sling power of public patronage, the Democrats hay e clearly not designed to make him their standard-bearer. The qualities he his disclosed are not at all to their Ukinp, excep when exerted by one for whom they are not responsible, and evillest their opponents. They would u soon trout a bull in a china shopaa Mr. Jona, sow at the head of an administration eh ic ted by them, and by which they expect ed to be advantaged as a party. Hence, the unanimity with which they now wipe themselves of all responsbility for wlar. he has done and for the fate impentlig l V over - . r JUSTICE. CUASIS diScWirg. faithfully his duty to the Constitutes to the Court and to each of the panic; in the trial of Impeachment, la statitß the suggestions in his communication tb the Senate on Wednesday. This body', however, had the clear right to deciele for itself the question presented. by the Chief Justice, and did accordingly .1(4 tide, the same day, that. Its rules of p t cl 7 endure hi the trial could be adopted by the Senate before it, organization s t a Court. Oa Friday,' however, after 1 !tr ibes rouilderation, the question being again suggested by the Chief Justice, then silting as its preeldiag °Meer, .1 he Court, as such, formally adopted he sumo rules, a single Democrat only Tot% g in the negative. The cavilling °tient!, ns of Mr. Johnson's friends are thus prim dent/3. 'deuced, and the country will be entirely satisfied with thisdisposal of the question. Tan PillifllDEST it is deti, prONOSelt to call a large number of witnews In Ida defense, and his friends talk ct dently of prolonuing the trial for moraine. Hut this matter, like others in the Im— peachment, will not be controlled by :his wiehea alone. When he makes bin sip. petreece on Friday, be will probably. be allowed reasonable Jimn--curtairtly not over ten daya—to prepare his dela Ise. The trial Peel! will not be protracted by any delays or diflicultlea in proof, ex. cept as to the tact two article; and la is in reference to these that the cloud of witnesses, said to be at Mr. Johns , six's call, are to be made use of, We ace, therefore, good rause to believe that the first day of April wall find the trial pro, grossing rapidly to Its conch:mien, on• embarrassed by any aucceuilkil maw. to I frivolous objections or dilatory pleas. d - 01 , 71 C /AL trzyunns from the Alab BEM Elections/tow the defeat of the CO Mai. •tntlon by about three. thousand v ;leo Orte unfortunate result of this ril I be the postponement of her redo:trail° u to all her "practical relation" for act rend months. Another submission will! he necessary and the requisite legal pre dim friaries therefor will unavoidably be pro. tracted. Ia the present look or et fairs in the South it will not In surprill og If Alabama, whose Convention Was the rst to complete its labors under the Re. geoastruntioi Leis. should be the last to be restored to the Union, unless MI NlS uppl claims that plaee. ' ./T le ItZPORT,D that Geo. Steednian has violently harangued a State o:in vention of Demo Critic en rebels at New Orleans, enstaining the President and advising a forcible resistance to Con gress. "Jim" and hie hearers well un derstood all that sort of thing. They hid all the lighting they wanted for their ' natural lives in the late "unpleasant ness," and have no 'Wes 'of trying it again. But be was perhaps, half in earnest, as, it all stories' be true about this warlike Collector of Revenio, he hu already begun his campaign, TIM ortnnunott glantlog a foes of one tdtllion dallara out of the Tremor, of Baltimore city to the Pittilbmgh and ConnellMlle Railroad Company, was jeaterday paned` by both branches of the Coattail of. that ininialimlity. This will enable the Company to at onto con enact shalt road from Connellmilla to Cim2betiand. President W 0. linghait donna" much credit tor effectleg this large and huportint loam - - Tall notnittatbaa of Mi KU. Cox as Minister to Vkana; wilt not• be con. firmed while the' Lnuaelment la Dead. ins. , Thera Is also summit!! hope that It will be ultimately :Ideated, u not In any aspect entltiol to the mopott of a &publican &rusk.' • THE bU3t, The summons to Ain is Jonmion, to appear before tie Court of ' Imr. meet, with the instructions to the •r -geant-at-A.rms endorsed thereon, left was duly served upon Mr. .1•01 lath • on Saturday,. reade as foUows: 1 • The United Stasi of America, r.— The Senate of the United State to Andrew-Johnson, Ptheident tithe Ur hell States, grating: ' 1 Whs, Th Hotels of Ibprese 'de. lives of ere t t he . Un i t ed States of America did on the 4th day of March rxhibi to the Senate 'Articles of Iniyeachutent against you the sold Andrew Johnion, In the worth following: (lerefollow'the articles.) And demand thst you,the said Andrew Johnson, should be pu to answer the accusations as it fort 'in said articles, arid that such plothedl gs, examinations, ..trials and judgm te I Might be thereupon bad as are ogre - We to law and justice. You, the said n drew Johnson, are, therettre, her by summoned to he and appear before .heSenate of the United States or America, at their eltanabtr, In the city of Wt th Ington i on the Thirteenth &TM:Mar:6, at one' 'clock,'afternoon, ti as and th ire to answer to the said articles of im peachment; and then end there to ab de by, obey, and perform ouch orders, di rections and judgments, as Cm demo,, of the United States shall make in he ,premiees, according to the Coustilutson and laws of-the United States, Hereof you are not to fail. • . ' Whitest., the Chief JusdrO of the Su preme Court of the United Suites, • and presiding officer of the said Sea. ate, at the City of Washington, this sixth day of Attach, Intim year or oiir Lord eighteen hundnd and ?del eted, and of the indeposdence of e United States the ninetyflrst. The following le the eidoreement ' ' f the summonc Tho United Stales of Asirrica, cc: The Senate of the United Steles to ere T. Brown, Sergeant -et-Arms, greetin You are hereby commanded to deli, r to and leave with Andrew Johns° . President of the United States, if cm ventently.to be found, or If not, to lent at his usual place of abode, or his net , ' place of business, in some constrict:tot place, a true and attested copy of ti wiihm writ of summons, together wit a like copy of this precept. And I whichsoever way you perform the set vice, let It be dune at least firer days be tore the appearance day mentioned t the sold writ of summons and Pre.ll with your proceedings thereon endues mi, on or before the npftesnmee dal Mentioned in said writ of suremone. Wriest—Teo Chief Justice or the Su preme Court of the United &ems no presiding officer of the Sena-e, at tlt • City of Wathiegton this Math day a March, In the year of our Lord eight teen hundred and elvy•eigitt, and u the Itidependence of the United StetH the ninety-first. 1 u META L 4. The report of Mr. J. U. BROWN E, tiny Mining Cuinnlitinioner who has been fri nito • , the year past eoy.l in, Ilicannitalink the nondltlnn of the mining Interests of the Pritclfiu slope .nod of the mountains' was transmitted to C•merese a few days Once. This report:closes with n review of the Whole field, and his rea:on I tor predicting an increase rather thy, a di minntlon of the yield hereafter. The COMmlanloner remarks.. ' .Nu_ uneasineis need be felt as to n decreatot in the source of supply. After turthy years of travel over. the Mining regions. I feel jortltied in essertieg that our. mineral 'resources are practically without' limit.. Explorationa made by ' competent partio, during the pest year In many parts of the miners,' regiou hitherto unknown iletnunetrsie the fa, that the ore of like mineral dernntt rough larger than vas ever before sm. potted. It la Lab: to esthete that of t.,- claims already recorded in the rented parts of the country, and known to he valuable, not more than one to a bus. Bred In being worked; end of thore worked perhaps - not more then on e In fifty p bye anything over revenge*, oar mg to mletuansgeurent, insflicient sys tems of reoncing the Ott,, want of capi tal, Cant 'nf transpornition, and other enures susceptible of remedy. In many districts of Nevads silver ergs of it,. trine thou cue hundred do•lare a ton cannot br worked by mill proem, et, as to pay expenat u, and - there are districts In Idaho and lilnetsun where gold-bear. log Ores will nut juatiry .-aarklog dries they yield from luny to fifty dollars la, ton With such wealth of tresitirel.Tiog dormant, it ctiortht be doubted .rhar by the ineritte.ted facilities for tow spotlit ion and accers to the mines soon to he fur niethd I y the Paden railroad rod Its proposed branches,. and the itsp,rienen In the treatment of ores and theta tembie knorvigitge to be acquired in a n.slioLal school of mince ' Wel:Vista to the nec , oni. ties of the mining pltulation, the yield moat eventually lecreatte. " • Wont: Ma. JOUNSON, net lola way to Wad:ling:on be lusugur.tted Vlce Pr : caldera In Fehryary, 145, tleelared to Col. Matthew., at Cinc unati, hla pur. ywl° reenteitnte the Demor.ratic (nate, the trauma which he already theJltnted to the other party which elevated hint . . was In its very nature to bssely unprin cipled, so indieattee of a moral sense In curably depraved,' that his subsequent descent Into the still lower and blacker depths of treason to a loyal ountri was but a natural, inevitable result-4nd, probably, elan than contemplated. Gon. lIANCOCK, it is reported, is to be relieved et New Or!eine, and the Pres:. C (brat into giro him the commander the . 3 new Atlantic Military Division which Kerman and • Tliccuis declined. At * Washington, it will be the PreaNeer s aim to embroil him with the Generahlo,.. Chief, and If this should come ahem Hancrock would soon Lad himself the fc victim of his Lisa position. I ' E.NDLETON'S CtutitrXi 141 IL the I eastern Democracy arehopelensly "gone tip." • What little merit his one ides had at an electioneering dodge has bran lost 'Moe the .4:catern Ihsittildicans have put the true liana in to only /ft nsilde end prsinticabie light, and Pendleton has no idiot claims, either Mists present epic- ions or Ols past rerurd. They will Laic no nee tor hitt. W.A11131.30T0K gossips are spitculatieg open the resignation, by Senator Wade, nr tits positron as President or the Sen. ate, in enter that ha may,he ahn to vote as a Senator twin impeachment. It will be finite time enough ter• Mr. Wade to' consider his duty In that matter when a he ascer. alna that such a vote , will be " decisive upon the finalligi of {lie (Dort. 13 _ - - -- A Comm/rise of ilia Oato Lvgista two recommends tbst' , Asricultursi si G Hoge fund be (astir. ly devoted to the la election and support, oh lt stogie 'waltz Lion, (Jr which turther donations w. be Invited from citizens, ............. at. th• Atnig* • A special iVrahingt on thipatch to Ills bee Chleag n 'Tribune map: There Is 'wino in noodlere ozeitement ever tbn wommunt owtion by. Una( Justice Chaim t o th e doi Negate at his view. as to !Ito proper or gonization of a apart of impeachment the p, try the Proielthint. The onendenra of the coosionittoo anti °diens Simuto, oo re well *wow of tin position of the Chief not Justice before tildßirrtlltm Worn romorted to the Senate.. Hho exportation soma to horn boom that lb* rules would In- n ee formally, agreed apt/I1 by, the Senators Tier merely ota s Ueda for prlSSlMtaltlttli 10 the w t Court when oranised. It . r is known that moat of the SullatOtb Critertaitt dm &rent. trothregard their remora es more extensive, and the fart of their having - proceeded to adopt the rulto after titl e knowledge of the poontion likely to be M taken by the. Chief Justice. Oeetnit Indicate that his opinion will toot innu- 1p even their. action in the mother. The Chia pronedonle, in nil the rum to whlrh the, wit Serum, how heretofore acted as • Contort of w .Imionchreout, aro In favor ofhir. Cliano's ." slew that Co ro rules ean only Ix, adopted Jar( odor the Mort 19 organized. 'On month at other points the ' Engine!, prisiedentio woof to ho agatunt him, air elaborately • preeenteol wo n debate ion the subject by RamOool.konkling. : . • —The Pall Mali 15 , Mrerte ham a pore- T "' arePtt which allows the oppromlyemen mime of t h e English Dom. Lowe. It says: "A. "A. laborer is meted to have been cloargtni .., Um other day at the Morley Petty Son- . Deis slow. with Ito: dine. a dead pheasant, the 'darit property of the Earl of Derby." • - There hod been a hhooting party at Ralnford no, ; the boaters had overlooked the bind, ew e{ was i the ininucar, peening by some tlmeation. at a, ward, had . picked It air,. without, as be ...„,„ declared ~ , 'anyfelonione intention The ..."" police met h im with tho pheasant in Ti. his hand; but there woe nothing to show, ~,,da . that he wasno:ourrylng It to th e keeper's ledge ar to .the . nearest pollee station. Publi The iientit tpok a favorable view of the nate, awe for the prisoner. The Chairman d • 'mid that Um lifsgbitrates Intended to be " In very. lenient; :an It wan the priatmer'e pletlX tiret offence, and'Ablit• they - would merely give him a month'. Imprison- dnie,. . men! with bard labor, hoping that It 04 1 18 would be saturnine. tohita. The dI Derby- vide, shim deerftser says • tine Um man Las actually hem' seat toprleen, .. - a pro; EDNESD.A.Y, MARCH 11, 1868 BE.LIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE. riSM Revivals of religine in the Evange foal churches stem to be general through out the country. • Scarcely a community Is 'Without this reviyal power. Almok all our exchanges contain items of this character, Secular ZI3 well as religio papers. In some sections 0ft „... 4.-euttn. try, the influence of there extraordinar r y visitations of the Spirit of i3od upon the public mind, is remarkable, and of rare occurrence, SitCh has been the power of .the, religious awakens ng ins large )Vesiern city, that it has put a prettY effectual stop to balls, parties, dm. AU instance la given of a ball announced to come olf last week at one Of the moat popular and respectable houses in that city. A splendid supper was prepared; but the guests came not—they were nearly all at one or other of the church ea where meetings were being held. From the same cause, it is supposed, not over forty or filly persons attended a fashionable concert at the Opera house of that place. Another noticeable feat ure of these revivals of religion is; the lanie number of male adult converts and heads of families. 'Thu John committee of the Old end New School Presbyterians, noticed sumo days since, meets in Philadelphia next' Wednesday. We observe the manes of Drs. Charles C. Beatty, of Steutieuirille, , Ohio, 41.1 W. D. Howard, pastor of the: Second Presbyterian Church of tiller city, among the clerical members of the Old School representatives. Hon. Robert McNeight in the only laymen of this body from this section, Hon. Henry W. Williams, LL. D., of the District Court, Pittsburgh, will represent the to. tercets of the New School body - in the joint committee. The Chrsirtion Intellivencer thinks it a waste of zeial to try to draw the Re formed (late Dutch) Church Into a union with the Presbyterians. It as sumes there is not the slightest desire on the part of the Reformed Church to limit Christian fellowship, • and none to merge its Identity In any Presbyterian organization Lags or small. The (Rah Division of the Bons of Temperance, in Onto, has leaned a dr. cuter setting apart Sunday, the lath as a darof fueling and prayer to God • . the canso of intemperance may be done away In the lumi. The ministers of the State are requested to presets at that time, earnest 'Mated sermons upon M. duty of Chriatiatas I. Yiew of this great Ite . v. Mark Traitors, alter reeving he Independent Memorial Church for a year, has returned In the itilleitinillllll , istry of the M. E. Church, and is to stationed et Providence, It 1. The court ut the ca o S. It. Tyng, Jr., have repay d, recommend. log that he in, reprimanded by the Bill, op, in a Cinireb, lAelure at !cart three clergymen. It in slated that three 01 the court Were in fort, of suspending itterh from the sacred office, but yleWeil-io the at,reenores °Open , ' thin of the two other members. , The question, it appears, le tot eett:eal yet, as it goes up to the Gen ere: 4.5011`,131i0n. 'the New YOrk Indepeu4ent.ln on nr• :liCle On "flt,l'lnil,", state. that IllIfIn; talll 1'f1 ,, 11.,n,::01 casts of hopeful Con 'sentient are re;•cried or the Methodist !tapers. Thu number reported in other 'denominations are much leas, but large, ',inducing ste e r. 2,040 among the United Biethfcc, 1,000 sto.mg the Presbyter'. one, and nearly a tiodaind among the E 4 9ltrigationaliett, Inc lisp:lett and the I...utbcrans. A Presbyterian Chinch at Harrisburg, Pa., sapporis two bottle toletionaries, laying 42.10 to each per rumbal. The number of interleave performed a Philadelphia by clergymen during 847, according to the report of the • curd of Health, was 11,054, nearly one earth' of which, or 1,516, were solemn. red by minister. of the- M. E. Church. t appears the Catholic element it the eat greatest In numerfeal strength, se 11 were married by them. The Boll= bp.ll came in nest, and report 780 est to thorn come the Presbyterians, 27; then to 14 tptlst, 549 i . 1. . Two of tho Slooluu Col:acreage', or -1,102,1 to tile Muth, by the idalbtobtt uledopol Church, slime the war, have 'it held their at onal Bell6lOns . , ode in eargetewn, D. C., and the otlicr at. louhcone, S. C. Great telecom has tsHaded the minlnti•ition of the word in ' Wanda of both. Tae indicate of ombens to the form•-e, Iron ifiet„wit.qi a Courerenee was orpoluat with : tit thouited members ; is fall lively, ousied, about two hundred and Goy r cent. Thu income of members and p obstionera alone in the. South Caro li ' (Ansfersuer, during the year, was ei St thousand dvohuntirol and twenty. i e, or nearly onu hundred par cent. D 'ring the WIIIIO Period the inflfClEe of eh edifices has been Ally-See, or o rh,ndied and rusty per cent Bishop I r e, the presiding ofilecr, during hie so earn at Charlescon, was 'the guest of At jor General Canby, the military cont. oiler of that department. nun ElllCliO4 of the ,lslnfalan; fri silly to the Excite and Banda.. law in e w 'Perk, was held Sunday after. a it week at the Corner Institute. 30 1 ,,i sal Bierwath, an honored and in. In istial merchant, presided. Strongly Co of resolutions were adopted in iv rof the law, for la' benefit deii:ed y losing within thirteen mouths two to semi four hundred and twe a ty•lis a of in Worst places of dissipation and vice . hat city and Brook ly^. A commit. J of German ISINI1E111•11 worn appointed J p latent the action of the mass facet. dim o the Leglelaittre at Albany, end cat t petitions against the repeal Of the Esc se Lew. • The Episcopal Theological School at Ca rirge Massachusetts, hai fi ve pra tes n, two resident, Rei. Dr. ; Stone and ay. A: V:l3 Allen, aid thrte non. .col mt, Ilea. Dr. Wharton, of Brooks pa, Rev. Dr. 'Potter, of Region, . and ley. Mr. Bteenitra, of Newton Corner. The American Congregational Union Wag' last year eirty.aa pen meeting too g. • The pressure of applications ie still perigreat. A I unlit school - established bin do voted elder of the Presbyterian Church, 'ear Waverly, N. Y., has recarritly ten avormi with • remarkable revival, an leer to prayer.' Already 'filly are Ipof fl y converted, and the interest is lobe ed. A very Intercating fdatuse of et w rk is, nays the New York Chris- In .e 'dedeate, that ft ill carried forward, . 1 ' it um er the lead or any minhier, but the happy co-operation of three ear , at la men, representing the Preabyte ini past and Methodist Churches. by ay not other' laymen perform a oiler Work. ' . Rev. harlesDoOke, I). D., formerly of a ell ',and now poster of Hount Zion E. ~ ttrch, Manilnk, bait beea great. faro rid with revival power . in Ida nth. ~fietrenty hare Joined the church' lin x weeks. ' ' 31abo . Stevens, who . ives went', in ed ,a r4llroadaccident and . ditsined• Willibarro, is 'fast recoveri ng.: 'lle J, ho ever, be (Welled fur active scr , e for c ' considerable length of time. Ids . "neat; the Buindingponimitteo I I pr trio temporary assistance ot to of 'the' other Bishops, moat likely i hops sndall of Colored°, and Lee of I mar; will perform Episcopal duties . 1 rig t present mouth. ' IY. r. Paddock, of Detroit, who Mean iy elected Millenary' libbers i /rep "and Wa s hington ' Territory, I !nest !accept.': '' • ' ' ' 7 . 1 1 nll ' TM* Ziulepindant recently pi . lariat - ibtni% ,at indecent'l Amnon Aid 'iscliuroi. - :f3;range to ' de, tho -, . imue °Mahanadi& vulgar I I advertisem r, worse .. than th e otocsinel weittres 'an . papers 'cipOscatat 'news- skis ;it .`Reaehltis;" in the , artart7/ tellivacer, nays be was ells.. 1 ., m A n d and vexed, and vreuila aEI to wring the neck,' of the ignorant manager and proprietor, and • slap the smooth face of Theodore the Bowen erger. • 011 a late Sunday afternoon, Rev. William B. Wood, pastor of the new Rapti" urc • at Doylestown, Pa., t ptised eight persona at the borough dam, notwitbst . nding the intense cold weather Naval , iog at the time. The new Constitution of New York allows women I to vote for trustees of congregations. The New York Obrerr , er says this has o reference to the elec tion of any ellicilr of tho Church proper, pastors, elders, ic., which is determined by the usages of the churches. • The following l ll iniereeting item; taken from an account Inoue of the Canadian papers, of the deication of a new Eng lish Lutheran Ch rch, in Welland main ly, Ontario,(Can a West,) we would ti d commend to our readers, as an . evi dencnhow our German population are "rooted and grounded" la the faith of their fathers: "Ma what giyea special Interest to this little dock, onsiding of Ina nine fonlilier, Is that they are the descend ants of ton me therm of our Church, named Ilaris N (Nat) trod Nickolas Michael, who •mtgrated to Callttllll Weld front Rhin teck and Clarorack,on the Fludata, Ne York, in 1797, or 1708. One perso , Mary Catharine Ml• 1 chael, is yet heir g of those who last came from- New York. Though now flora than eight eight years of age, she makes use of her ad Denim Lutheran hymn book men red by the patriarch, hlutthatherg. It 4 well boned and pre• servial, and was tainted in German town, Pa , by. nristoplter Sauer, in 1760; -It contain the gospels and epic. ties of the church year, -with a short prayer atter each gospel. It also con tains Luther. Catechism, wpb a abort and excellent application., A:pother of her hpusehold treasures is a copy 01 Lather's Catechism, published in Ptah, deli:Min, by Carl Cis', in 1791. These families were in DO COlllltetklll whatever with the Lila/Cr:II Cool eb, except through there invaluable little . 16hIlasts of doctrine 'and devotion, for seer,- than sixty year., and yet the mull of a few years sit missionary labor in their to" igh bratatiol was the organ iz aton find e lishment of an Etrang.ale Church ! What an argot meth of of ''or fathers 11/611 it/ the faith rat bit lisp .... , r,ylflg n (01111d :rend ot the eptitme if! tumid Letiod Lids rin, the tridlarnets tm forgot -the Brotherhood, bet he nano riattly• commended ta the future moo and protection til(Lat. Much has Meted %mit hist and scattered widely, hut G.•d 'cailyet gather the scattered, and bring hick that which DOW teOrlia .16peitetty prat." • • 1 ME Cheyenne City .t I. It,; 'tit etsloatts Republica ru; In the Mine/Zed entraeln, w einii Jest of Mu rapidity with whir:ll,lmi owns spring:lmo u vigennus oxistonu thing:nor tratoolsontittental rulleaVs ,ro, first timber (n 2xl :scantling) ww .3 on unit on the Anglia last Then muse the nosh for msrnor tote, g , i. lontlnue. lb.. eontor of linemnesa. Mos were wild: excittatent ran high, lit / oollort lime that whirl, boon a more Plain whom; tiro white man Inot ,firer rintled, now' osautu.d un iippear. an tor life whielt stirprisisi even Ile most isolseftil. Storrs, !holt of *t3 11, Isrlok nnol .into, spring into existence as if al a Armin. lifeloiln Nero billit nud tilleol in i, stuek. Saloo'orn, coy, gorge en, taa,Ot fount, worst opened on usery band, latellitatoubso ensue in for their shale of attoutinn. Banks, pr:li,t• satohe:o., tile,. of •alsonsess 101.1:inik iron,• ro, all sides, until bodily ehoyenne lay, ohms] to. poplin:lon ofb,oinq r think .11315,0v:3 or ti,locs would 103 t las in of the ...It,. ant all done within .1,0 months.: lteyon 1., la. mite. Wen, of Omaha, to mile,, notch of Derivrr..s:ll nine', root Salt City, 3 , 1 rant tor Ibe Oahe,. Nola, 'of the rood In crossing the Slack If slit, not the ii higlient poolol or lot liorky MoUtitrilos", „n tle read, b: Vie ;toiler noon!. Iron. :be Rooky ilnuntain , , l w, 111 I roi Past r e ,,, lirweetwaler NI too.; wost frina tlin grid. beds of Ir. , soil ens! sebtols Ile woos of tho Sil.vir tint Waterlog sin the ex tistous cold Cogan I JO. rintillt Pass. Sweetwater said Wm {Wet regiotoo, nit which will Ix' :real benotit to the place in haws:, It rite that Chops/inn is located at the tau the ittrain taion — notwitlinlautiont; it i and 0, 'eh, if you haps.* look while ist the city; twit la at thi (lint bekhoo the grand grade or in ci:ist of the Iffiroillotaire, rthieb, ~ P rding to ill.. Milr TO r, alVengni 70feet so the 011ie, Lot ai no plot, reacher, torer 80 foe 4 Ws: could. haally ext... 3 a city,,ottly five nc , otbn ill It, baant Or tirst clines le, tole, banks, ,be. !cut it is true - ,1.th.1 has 011.. gaud hand, rist ",ii.•r balloting— bk. leet ~' 'll r, lien sio. I lobe,— to on, t t iti%ell , l), three lonokn, rleno daily, Irl• Week I r 411,1 weekly I/ t•tte, papers—Col well rotpleirtest ON, elan., stone and brick ntille. , ; uriSof warehouses.; fine dwellings.; it usual sohisu uonso; stecke of amass wisielt coat a rib:, vier or., tine no. lonion, gambling housm—tinisheil nliol I Orlileheol In szoorgeott. style+, now° twin,. ty inure hatega, or none Or ICons aro tenisions, and everythine else in the building line whit+ one - would Onlniet u, lleti io a city of nix or eight thoh.and inhabitant, 'llto buildings of Chop:nue are enlitilatrob to, bare oat n..,t0 than itt.ooo,oott, whiett 1 Amu ilthlk a fair estinsale. Tbs. ray in tiro:Soot terminue of tbn U. P. It. v bust train's run no furtaor, Ire roe., to comphtial 2.3 stales Liel!sx, F.lll tht.. f.bterermtziwit, 'hp:arrow. .DontrAbe it. following nor remarkable experience of Acre' 111 reducing dm SIZ,O of her . trout twenty-three Melte, to fourte She .aye, went and orilertat pair ideas, amide very strung and Oiled wit stiff, lame. measurnig may Tourtite litchi.. rennet the waist. Theta°, with the assktance of my maid, I bet on, env managed the tees. day to Ir 3, my into eighteen inrbte; at ntglar, I alept in .my corset without heating the hien In the Tho next day any maid got ,n wrist to noTealoon inches, and soon, an In.-b, smeller every day, until 'the get them to hi rer, I wore thorn regularly without er taking . !Lem MT; having. them titilitenesi afresh every day, an Llio Neat might stretch it Ilttlet. For the 0r,,, far days the pate ran very great, Itin. a. I ewen las the stays wen; rime, haul 1 hall worn them ao - f, a few data, l began to care nothing about it, and iris month I or .‘o I would not hare taken thew uff en. any account, thr 1 quite enjoyed tilt, AOll - cation," .she writer tittlidtaa. • her totter. by saying, that although she bay graven idder and the hlootit of yogi it has germ ' from le.r cheek, her tigam remains the sause,aind eye pcseeesesn charmefWL left j site anima rob' her, and that-she has never regretted the step she hue taken. lint the itutlrel. no not yet finished, for !other ',correspondents otilte Conneria 7 1 t a"t'b°j"kt""iZ tie oren inrtaatt.eOrltr that her ' valet measures thirteen inehre,'ltud an ther triumphantly .worts that alto has reduced hers to twelve Indica, producing I'llo , rveinit by tightenbar the larval four or Coo times a day for. 'more than - at year. liven tlde In not the saddest part of the entry, for . itlaterl' wrftra imaueroing the r corset quanta°. forirtfonfx, and menta -1 niendana elastic, bolt, LO CtILIILMInti to the reqelred else the delitnio and pliant frame of the child! We look with pity tip an the igndranee ' of the Chluiseavlio hind beauty In the un nem reify small fret Mid Mitering gait rif their women f weexclute the barbarity of the Fitat-liertiled /actions aim bled hoards Gt the headeoftlirir infant eitildren; but it ht dfdlealt to find worth* to anilines our 8811NO,Of LllO velekedueas Cod frivolity of Moan who are willing to indict. 4 , r00 thentsolvea nail- helpless laranis such Curter° 'far the Mirka. , of 'prod raring a form width nature never. .11lietalee should charaderize a - well -develop Death of Dr., 111111aue, e.:lluutt, Dr. William Gibbon died at tieviiantill, on. _Monday ragL. Altliihugh lung withdrawn trout Mu, native 3in h ilemianal pursuit, Dr. Gibson Is still :veil manna bored lmlhla rsitnniuulty no one of the mond'itlngefuhedalltaimee dinner the many toen 'who have h Mhotimul the hisirdl eal and sorgiral prafereilonii of Philadel phia. ' , arrival-1y hall am:artery h Ito on. eupled the - Chair of Stitcher).- In the Uuk varsity of Pentionivaniei and, held the, Lintrittishllicifeisorablp the time huf h hot +lsiah, In his tin iliti weaa tewar.ol, l aity/OAP: that inalltullon„ and thiy 'hit rate talents-and great akin, beith us en uperatorind Instrattefterelegery, Icing Maintained thb apteni thotriarer alty 'among the tdedieidueboulanf thia hcoun landti7.hDr.Ulthiren Wila a nativeOf Me l 7' ouid renalved h prefeardmiatedm I cation 1,, kill nburg,:iirtur, gnalwating at l'tbstaitainh Vellege, At the Uwe or bin I dean; whleh.reeulteil front an attack of erygpaliui, be huh Igillioll, /141 Ogillleth Soar , hes tong' Igen nitwit fru aelhe ptarmigan !which heed ihni Dinette miere ed end, at Ins tolvtitteeit ege't Ale watt net tittexpoekel. ' Iglu theatinoente., mint will twat' hla memory to the large I binge of peolemiouel and other Intends, of ma. generattous,, .ho were ocelot touted. In bygone.yoere, to attire In the , hornier. which ' conferred upon lilt ehoeen • .autencer'bi the' great - abilities whleil be we, ettountyy. developed arid an long. mortised. in behint—libtadel pAtti ' —A sonievritat, ban!. ease, has been derided sc the, Louts. , l'Angers. aucUult to,the termit en; , tho Frsitch Ltn. the. child of a wi d en ;, ir beta tiara hundonl days isiter brr husbundra death, is doesldetod to Jeattlinite. Madame litercler, a wittOn"plearled ler - the rro. °coition Of her sat,. horn Allow buoilne days aid sir helms and a half alter the demise of her hasltand.• The deCtia9n .or the 'Wart -WSJ .that the . child tra, Illegiilm•te• • ,This proretti• the child from inheriting his share oaf. Iteroier'e coporty, winch wonl4 otherni•e. Et= Look at her! lock et her! Cu the cold of t too! 01 he. , think of two! With het bare feet.. ' ramhnenra era flare with Mei iinow•O ekes ure gting. Will winds am sweeping her— liee! she Is - crying, sweeping her - hang Acerb, . Slavering fermi &moiety tbaycever her hark from the storm; On she trudges how, Poor little elf! Basket upon her it mu • Irks as herself, Italy passing by, Cast thou no 0118! What if her father drinks lu the cit 3 Whet If her mother brawls On the strum cornet! Christ Massed the little One.- 00! do net scorn her. • One of thylercv One of the jeweled tinge, One of 1110 glittering things Aiding thy afau. , ft Would fold her little feet In juice warm atoekinge— See how they mark the ntnad: Bawl drop! how shocking— Woeld atvn her feed sail drink, Sur, her from flint dread orink Wliinh thou art lustatng. See! eke to bentatfill. Might be nn ungd, If thou wouldsconlytn, . lii pp brlaltt nynogel. El uvlc her from depth, clean, Einpt ont.lhn enst; • Kind lady, brut:; tier In, • Ern she Is Inst. for Lny InsrellerighL ricir In r•lnn, Thnn ohnit Mon near Ilk •PrOlde ''elenut, well dont'' , TABLE TALK. —Emigrat on in felling oiC —Seward nee bought Samaria. --Jed: Davis in in New Orleans. —CardinellAntonetti in to retire. —New Grl utns °wee $13,500,000. ratirottil to Mexico it talked of. —Staler, tlie German norellit, indeed. --Judge Clirter was formerly sprinter. =The fruit promin:m well lu —Egypt w,inte to lisrrow $13,000.000: —Nestivillti is infested with burglars. eleDilant 1312, is rapidly dying —Black Fe 4 Indiana ate raiding Mon- Ulna ' —Thu Riu will tie eidipiied in August.: next . TCllllt56:-1.: his n w 11.4 lams rectino. j —Mrs. Lizieote is not crazy, ae.re ported. —Mr* Fra Icis U Gage is parsJyzed and pout - —Hannibal I I Hainan id stumping New "2.l.lclllgan Central" mule is to iter-slat tido, in mean& limey fli a). littJal unfit id said to ti cot neally —New Orlenus rtlyiers la the didcor-• c of gds wells.. Montreal ie to landau another corps Papal • —Ja. nu lon l a heap et G pubic is inc. rerolutilias. I -Josuph Vermuclin is ehautpionhil -dist or Ithimis -Wild thmlca and geese abouud in ...chows etatutY, 'Mx . —The Doll city gold discovery turas it to he a Imulibuit. - —lcopeattirout his committal the Ku i ,[ll lican party evetywhere. Nona liogiolN is pay iog much at ion to wool:grossing._ . 7 . . A. il'..e. !hrii 'Lain o. lead /Lad been d m , 7 , V,ltai at Millersburg, Ky. Au Ouloisu ism constructed au mi n it Mr hilf-Mediug nail machilm. ' 'se who of the editor of the Chi .: gt Times Lae :obtain d a divorce. '. . Iherr ITcrt. , ,,rer iLveattca th ou.. a if births in P/itl.teulplei, Last year. Tito Iletrojiolitsu hotel, at Peoria, Li uis, was rectally destroyed by tire. Ashobt is Stunting ecothiville. Vs. 41 r ward of PA) is t.ffored for ita 'cap , nib to • • A little chil l d fell into a and pool la °dams and Rat Eatronated to A um in Alins, swallowed ern ponntla iT ten pen 7 nails and ITtrineffie, , pirtimicd ' two • hen pvt‘y stt more mime ZOrphioOi on res....ll'lg fora I d ',h 1 :11, in PICA itlalohia, (Oland was se. ver tirttl. I 'ho MrT%Citatubcr of Cinn tnertrr ailott! to c•itlt..brate its one bun dredtr acrivcietitty; John W. Dins, of with a other Pert tandem, rxently died of chAlcra at Itio l Janeiru. • flue etvuo 01 Jefferson will to inaugurated at Charlottesville, en the blink' of July. • —Orer tiny tbrio tirluatitit .ration oh I food Wert 1114.11ihrhka in Febrasry, by I he scup beam al Cincinnati. '• • I —A. tol'oituril Richard Brooke, oh Steubctiville, Ohid, weattadly burned by.' the explosion of ots ml Mutt. —A. New Task nxelrinant has had his license broken for I swim:link a traveler. ,Should It ive.hat Ito head broken.-,. —Dcanteinea, Sion, has elected a Detnocratle 3ltyor—the result ofi'a.dia. sensien lo the ranks f the opposition. game of feeding-rebel pipers with • itevi4eniettlal arlverliso: men's has been st4ped by Gen. 'Grant. —A Philthlelphla cant& has decided that It Islovoluntar i Flainkruetry to make . au in.ikninent for tht- benefit otonen creditors. • • • 1 ixt —John Render, of tfew Yorly,,bayo7: netted hi: wire to - tit;nti t and then we* after a ittynteittn,ilit! hid taken etithltally • • . 7 -The nut sitinitlattlaten tO tlie •rceent Duniorittle hi ion at 111r1 - I:sbarg, arc charitt . several pockeia tit,ttio inarketititt;let • rTlattl..l..oiattuia, pranticilot lOaring, I'cent Charity, of the world and culdlr ateps of lint:Dane ettiono , , prntiallito ha a'Ointinig • iiztent, fointerlyOgeut .for . ti4lnterto eircnit,S . Intsiteert • aiiititc4.4‘. (.41rge I of victinilzin concern sotto; Coniptiell la. a . propo&ition to 'pending In grcza to call fa' all 'th, frantitiniat notes . iander tweuiptivo lean°. a. new ten cent piece of tbei tame material and relatirn vokeitt :ns • Prcient Ave cent nickel 'nein. ' • -A !Able tt en .Piepaied nompne r fog the seveaun . (torn titailtlna Plegra, fur the hait tour tattLttia - "O: ISCO and inn:. The Agurca ihow a falling ott of . • , ..,„ • 3.070mt*: • 1 • -4. i Peon and fall whilu wal‘zing,, falling at heattli as to tbtqc largo piLis of Lei: ,p.bip,non Alkorlier bratu. will not recover.. —During the nag teivnly years thill-. totals Lei' forsiabill - $01.10,000.000 la gold; .litiradrt, .$1 1 0.000,000; • Hdittnas, ltue,000,00e; Idaho, lit:i,Goo,e4Xl; palms ! do: 01,000,000. ::. .. 1 5i...,1 . . ... is '---41.C..td.V.1 PlthautiOA-ill'hiekil that marble float tenement helical* !trete() for letting to reasons .of righted' ' indis and elite salaries:. Bosh; lettbem lire and Itive le a tottere. - • - •'' ! Tkettuantles of •littginla• galenite' , ann.tr to bare been of stout sad service able mileage - 4.treison's fell ion Peal dleou aed.now merge tOld that Pairlek flettry'a MI oo Mi.lifoUratry, ' -.:riii 'et Ogre of :iaLtd - rtn probzi.i," ,i,,w fifty Fitaies ittlie bilen. Pilo : tido . want, In now; wren oiler Tartisiifee art on probxkloo, two now Territerici are to be oigesionl, 4444.Fallfernta 4as Tessa are In be ebOdirlded mothtee . alaza aim bats! oat or, * ll . .); ~ '.: • --e. tad y droppectalx.bernited,dollan. oa the alma in Brooklyn.. d i ragged . little &liar/Led li.ppaad lostored it tii . , the owner. :with.. zi11i,9%. /Aberiill • mad born:nob:ace 'the tad". ',awarded the honest child withal oent,r, 3 :„ .., -.. •''''A 'whalebone cones **Ted *Oho, the mite to D: - L.-BroWn, of Toe, Res, Teti.' The 'wicked nitiollre *used a! kWh' into her bosom bnt &whalebone • *tided If ea' end tainted mf.reeebing 1 her bean, only left a deep Ann iiratuut., BRIEF TELEGAiLMS z -It is stated (in a speelal to the New Verb firrefdi-that Jenenialt S. Black Attorney. General Stanialt . y, and Beals win, of Massachussetts, Rave been posi tively determined upon;as counsel for President Johnson is ink approaPhing trial. Several additional, gentlemen will be associated with those afroatly selected. but as they have not yet tneen consulted or given any assurance Of.aseeptanee in the event of being chosen; nothing defi nite bas as yet been done, The Presi dent will subunit alt triable mac to his counsel. They will act foegilzu, and their acts will be was/tiered' is acts. The omnisel have had eel era% consoltations vi kb the President mid , 'among them selves, but no corminkione)awe been ar rived `it us to the details f-1 the defence. -The opposition paperat of New O. le ans ore still apologiaing (Pr the conduct of Jefferson Pavia and Iladcesek. On the occasion of the flrenien'S 2parade. Not ono of them pantie one ILI Gen. MA ouck's poi ey, seems still More ruinous. City notes! have depreclatell to twenty ttre cents discount. nal aamid estate an kl the city. The ayor of life city, maid- 1 plating to , ultio, issued a proclarnation, irallreetly eliargiug Cieneleill Hancock , and loading rebels with: the respon sibility ef any event that May occur. The people ere not haisly 'Amami; that Grant will send a eater and older torn foamier to minister atherg Au that Dis trict. b -The Ttriti•li iron ship ljT.cats, which left Fan Frandsen, CallfoniN on the 'Rh, f r Liverpool, with a eetiot of wheat valued lit over nine U- thetk.ruid dollars, went reitierejost. outside 04 - Heiden Gate. A portion of her carte, a a‘f titnneti over hoard, and the vessel liocare embedded itt the send. -The lee in the ilaiinutel 'liver, oppo- site Toledo, onumet.cod mifying at two o'clock yesterday. There 6 , as yet no unteilial dood, Etna a wide Outline! hay ing. already been - opened; below thit bridge, it Is not probable tn.V. any seri ous damage will result. 1 -,tinotig the officers elecliti at Meal phis; Tenn., Saturday, O ON? klttronlered. Less then fear linuttred whites voted the Radical. ticket. It is sold that a number of the defeated mndidates ;7111 contest theidection of their opponehle. -A mow slide , live or etx miles In , • lenglh, near Cisco, on the ;Ventral Pa, title Railroad, killed 8110 Chleamee, buried seven locomotives, and destroyed e ,, nsitlerible other preperty;', -The United States Senate now cora prin..t filly-fur snout bers-16-publicane, forty4wo, Democrats, twelod. Necessa. re for the acquittal of the'. Praddent, ulnetteen votes. 4 s-Riht largo dist illeriesalid rectifying estabbs g lauvubi were seized 4t Now York on isthiday night. ley govern:mut nail:en% The properly taken possession of is valued at hullo ruilliou dolltore. -Lotlia Schaffer. cashier 6.f the Mil- wankel" Cimino (trisconslny,tnink coin mined • suicide' by ehootllty: himself. yesterday. Cause, lasses bylpeculation. 1 Ile bank loe.sosnothing. -'rho proposition to su Am stock In the Nashville and Paelfik Railroad woe defeated Satuntsy at thireleetion in Nashville, Tennessee. P. carrot! in Wil -Sam M. Campbell, Ing4 editor of the Memphis deufasehe, wesignumilted to jail yeeterday by, Judge--banter; on account of a remit contempt;leine. -The Radical ticket la reported do (rated In Williamson, Tennessee. In , ilurtreetburo the Radical ticket, includ- , tug three negossi, was °lacteal , -The ..Uabaina Conventlvn imam monsly reennimended the mitaination of General. Grant for President , . No seg. !Moth./ may mute us i"1 Vies irresident. -Fayette and llardennear counties, Tennessee, have gone Demeeintle. The town of Willy:wanes, only erie,llote for the Republicans. .4 -The Catholic Chuirell loSitineyPlact Brooklyn. Wan burned on Sunday. LOSS: $50,000. 'Several valuable path:Hogs were dottrel ed with the building,{; -Wooster's patent hisopsklit tape ae. tory at ID rmlngluitn, Unity wits destroy ed by .lire on Saturday hltht. Loss $30,000; pullallyinitured. i= -Ate tune: hay oldie New Ilifrk Board of Fire underwriters yesterday it was renolved taiimlonously that 4",robate of Wizen per exit he mato to nig' natured. . . -The Hoboken (New derßiy) ferry boat Morristown wee burnt on. Sunday . . Fortunately no body was aboard, ...Tatum Drilla was shot sib& killed near Waverly, Tenn., a few de4.5 ago by f 0.410 unknown pasty...t.' 4 , The sieamer Europa, from, f/laagow, arltivLal at Nem York yesterday. The wheat. crop of middle ; i.t came pronnyte to be tory fun. ...: The Lematature of Elent4y will adjourn to day toad die. l i ' - "rug noro.•• '.; i "Thu boys are corning hems. to.!ihorrow I , W T h747 ?.Tl.l an n":lllll .tml.:,elliee, I Fall of TAMS. tlastrOkta drear Ti's ', Bud we hitter come tor quiet, t 1 4 Miner fled the cities come, ~ Bat to Chance It fOr um tumult '' Or those horrid eauntry ben 1 ' Waking ono with loud hallooing 1 4 i Eseny ovary sammor dal'; 11., . Shooting, robbing, tettelag AM.* Prighterdngthe wrens away: t.. : *ambling oryr trailing Bounces : , * f 1 Temblios sot ernes of sold and On; I Clamoring - for sugared dainties, ,til Tracking earth the passage throggti. , Th ese Intl atter kindred 'obits 0 ; , Paneled we with IrOafol alsh, ,t . I .1 wThe.e boys, tense horr.d hove, to-bierrogr , Bally rrtusparest Lou Audi. , • • • , • • • • I.y • I wrote dish ' sdish'slines eels hare, ationotri TO-flay I mils tore td them *Null ItetnOtabortna , how tall of terror t., Wc tretatest all day the opeolegatior. - TM:woman-45e boyeln-strfeetlildatere, uraadel, ywiy, pinishisi men; tl. I looped to Lou,' behind My kaltillu§ , Tetras; au umber's word againi- Tor boyhisalis xt thing immortal. TO ovary slather'. heart and 'i. eye%.,,t- And cone are boys r. to her foreye.._ t Chamesaa thily i may to, fon and It: I To hyena Bee comes sharply ausrklng , whither or when theirebildhood Took Ser whets the eye gleam Upward tointor Lsveted at last their downward befit, Sow by the window, elan and sunny,. Warmed by the stab octoeermow,,. t , The dekr °lithely welt; and watcheiY ' Jost as atm wafted yea.nag% I • Atresys aim speaks to (anti- fashion, Stamm •May boYa o -ehealways wait Though ono Is gray and one has yanisTied Beyond theta:matt or aunt or tit I- AI A eastonall: seisweli et' ittet ~ 'The Senate - Corninitleo 'to Wile was referral Senator titewan'e hill imitable' her n Notional school otinines„ reported back the same, with reverpf /idiom!- , manta. providing Hutt The la... Opted upon anti" and silver billion ° the States west of the eastern base, of the , Rocky ifuuttlaina'l ithall be usedier the maintenance of the school, Itistesoldll that of Um whole' country, that the mintage mem of too Iroultution abed! be ;tinder the control of (Mat director., to be. ap pointed by the , President, by.and with the Adr.ico and consent of the baste,who shall hold office far four yearik that Shermen Biz and Williatri Ashiero. of oCaNliunmP. CA..G T bi eAdD..IX *1 7 / , Simulants, DCHOutanunnd JrgnNA.. of Cotonou), shall constitute snob Beard fan. July, Ls6B, , to July, "NUL ten amendment to the sixth ' , Motion anther. tees the faculty ti require, at a Ont.( • theregtilar oeu.ree of. Instruction, Jae vice of theta tie for e prcessibed tied In practical mining and Wiling_ ..- • _. i-iffmalegfatilletemetei lir .- . . .-1---,---reete...,...-..„-___ it The fate ot Barnum'. and at tract. newer...perr. 'attention'' end item. m i . graphing,' It lb Mated that en Wefts.' day the giraffe Wm found deed Ig.tbe amble to stitch be had begn removed, ' We-had ettemmbed stisatto thetrongids receive/11.in extrianteg hini innit aim flames, sggravuted ay they were bEthe o partial snifoi th olnen he hidendursHierd exposun, to e weather alter Ida reafev al from the building. No one who t...aw thaTbeautiful animal brought ttn froitio fiery fttrinsee . can aver forget the skit. The pout/ bratehed Adieu down edkort (light of stains, and when - Le retie-hes{ elm street MI jaw was broken, there Wat a doea out ovor sot, of his. eyes:andel* great Mahout trightenal by lila terr Pile tairroundlupi dolts bat a huge too,it..or heiplea4, he:forint Blob. ...us o :°° ''''.° lighted,! Lot-wills MM. bul %WRY" aud; to I amated passively to the bands (ditto dozen men required tolomohlm thronlitt the Street: to n. place of safety. Tie , 4 11) .009 at which ito wav valued Is addict) to tho groat sum orthe disaskei lidt the , bilig elephant, "KWh rai - Tuesday**, thought to be .tlyingoe .new out of dig.) nano ad wit& Yo sr I,`,¢d to We oinks.' I This Mlle - animal hint threughout. acted I le i'lnottticernmeadable Manner. , Ile I adhered hltusalf.ol3 the ntt/ht.Of the die to bo red from the Mating willviet Making tiny 'reMetance. He Moot waitidg y. Pg. neatly In the Wan for au luottr. ,/14. the mien.. cold for Outpost Mol'O. nail hay now added to Isla achfornitMe bygotileg wellowhert entrybotlr eald he lmust dan.... .4 , , - ' ..:.-4...,,..•_- I'; Astoxo tne animals lemn! et llap. Clunealluerat in were fouriteneuba.lobt leopenbonn. hyenas, one whltobeero,4 lynx, four poreanince, two largo Honk 1 boo pannier. tiro Nark- beers - t een Min). one 'unman. Alger. four b angst aes, lien white yeerocka, logptbrr with all of ilia L birth. Pima. mookole.'''.ba ; on ?I'M finnan' Mewl 4:ete nisi , barned. Ilei lora% treentirreal DO badly Shalt la Deb exported to lite tin rinz nat day. It wait Tented at tweet} Inouneed denim.':The. seal /*matt (torn *elite at the aid btrn,; aqui:Lovas bnitted. , Thc,wards)bo of Rat Etnaottin kat neartr nen'. • 11•11ffe been bimodal jam* thif eihr a two yaws and* ibailer. natillles TabrlltrAC9% .T 4 tllodil;4°o(7lloo7o9rgrektnre=a a= nnirsern ' ' . o tniakeent - frbelefit. Is in . that Mom. autialati eupPiFt tit . the acietalra, are not known. do hundrett anti Mr.', it;ger - r ° 4=Z thr94ll , i nt of , em: I utr "" P:i'it for whi ch; ! 7 ~ , ma _!, roarblearynari . Pavel . . ry: .lineeiroye:. /twat ! i Inatelet.lib eighteen tboatnan:alellant. A ' Mrycr•bUrfettiabeiatrfalectiolT" T'Adnallt I beat parents 'ammeter! w 7 . hit lbet Ala *elan stun aLacellehateienatia. .., . ' A DA MON Lot me UOlOll iy limas Ith issnkeleth sad etreW ..bee oar 011 Let me clam the doer. of mourning, hit 1.111, wretched thing be said: Lc! the hearth la col.l and naked, and Its light tartly= fled y . Letmedig thy graTek norltneased, In the llogertes wth4er anow, aline may know And conceal thee na t Inn3nre - : so that, nOne • ' ' What the world bee J lett, or 0/11/01,1' Ito eupremest cm/ono/ gO. I could never think thee mortal: when/ • looked into thine 0 I beheld a wondrou, ybion through the • gate, of Pemba All the light, the 1100 e lath , of the f tdgent • loner skies. Nay, Oboe art not dead another.: thou haat .ouly Inn/ thy worthi To make Nem Wel and *Hal a Oki Rea Opoo but senseless earth,i •. Awl thount stye dn.t. a spirt; an tut aortal second birth. • Yor aline earth contains thy beautyi the las grown a holier thtnl ' ' She will waken fairer , otter, lathe com ing days of spring • When the early Mosso open andltie MVP . daring snags take log. , • • Wristlet' 30/1 within theroiei glittering Ibis onetime • In the Itly-of.the-ralcr shell thy: purity co Med yet later then ohslt. tritimyttlin. the splendor of the rokm,": • • So that neon wilt 111, (lIV foe ateps mitt have been among tho dower., . , And will fail to rules tale thrOugh thy RUG to Nature's power, In the Mau ton analliterl mornings and the Lawman evening he ups. • Quill Shall have the secret, end the fatal truth alien know, BY this grave / dig to Lino thee in the tardy winter snow— lly this vacant deselati n—by this attar, endleis woo 1 Au Ai tactt Upon tbc ttnltet antlAtied tiro "tomtit..." An article entitled .The Formren of the Fig•LeSves," in thb March ainuber of the Northern .Ifonthiy—attribtited to 111-ss Olive Logan—is toy far the ableet attack on the bullet that!has been elicited nine° the °Black Creek ' find displayed Eta domorallulngattractl us. The writer, who has evidently had Al ex tensive Matto experience, assails not i,nly the ballet. but the expoSures tOlerated by the ex treme fashiona of the Jai% A ;single Paragraph will give a good idea of the treatment of thle ;milieu , . ..A somewhat weary' distance • may seemm to have been travelial over In this rather resnsnc than statement of the oblb gations at once binding Woman to mode* ty and her guardian!. to desist her In the maintenance of that quality; but it is to be feared that before all 14 sold the con nection with the special - subject of im proper personal exposurvir may be only., too evident. For there hytmatt or atelon of treading on the palatal( not danger ous ground of, specification, to prove either that there Only oalsta one forfeit ure of modesty more assured than that Incurred in throwing thd swiredneas of theperaon open Cu the public gage—or that there does nut exist even one, road mote .Inevitable toward ;that impurity". Ibllow tog iihmodrety. .Thieve is a luet of the eye mentioned by, tbut same com-' mealy neglected authority before quoted quite as guilty as that width fullows„and more destructive, because hundmis may be contaminated at once; end the ever- recurring test of brotherhaled, Comes up again, inevitably to illustrate the ;Arcot ty of pandering to it, 'la !the marriage contract what Imsband will fail to chain that tha woman whom he takes to his arms and heart contracti to keep the glories of lOC wemanhoodlsacred to his only eye? ' And what fattier or !mother will fall to visit with the severest repro bation the first ;Wye tree toward undue rely-. elation' of form of either , diughter or sla ter, simply because be, in Common.with • the busband,'recoculae-s smell expeaures, If continuing, app incompatible with. pu rity of sonland threateaingly dangerous; • to purity of body? .. • it alight puzzle even an imaginative writer to concentrate in few ore s more sneering •Itnt grievdd bittexnass than that exprefeuid, many ycirs ago, during u temporary reign of the disease now persistent, by a certain husband who was aenested-with a question while looking on at a dance in which hie very dccollete wife was figuring. I `What very handsome and very unimiltlcently form-. ed lady is that vender, in the green and ! peens?' naked one of the ether, gnestii, an liedualutance of tho hisiband \ bat a stranger to hie fatally. 'nit? Oh. that is my wife; or. at leest, thinnest that it Was up today But, by the.Prophett am inclined to .think, by the way she ' dresses to-night, - that eke IS the,wife Of every gentleman in the room." 1- Urea, tae Mime Joanna.) Trientanc Mina corn cif We. blie received "Ito . foildwlug from Mr. Gimpredo, too arlistengraver,ln gods' io slot is 'cousidered leis ?Tee In turning down card corners. Ills opinion in snob matters is worthy of 'attention : "Much has been said print(' respecting the fashion, or custom abroad, °rimming down the corners of visiting cards,' ; A wt .- respondent or ynur paper duclinci to the opinion that that custom co gen eral in Perim that a lady, roielvlog _tier friend's card with either of the four cor ner:, broken down; can tall, at n glance, the object of the call; this ill au. error, for, ax n amoral thing, tbsTO is no rule; the cardl:enPvarlorti°4 on o the the c k i fouls o o r he f ahem union the following words on cards •—as, for Instance, in French it lute been used, Frlinlatiou, the fight • unpar band of the card; Condole-Ace on the lowerrioht band; Viaato on too loft up- per corner, and Congo on the (left lower • corner of the hart; and I h u rt. Seen this - ordlug placed just in tho opposite di rection.. A trams:Won ofthePreneh has also been made net assn in this Spanish • language. In English it bat been used in various moaners—somo having It con. do:deuce, visit, adieu, regret; also, remdo lomee, visit., 'lstien and congratulation. The I.tters P. P. C. on a visiting curd ateanitm pour prmlre conger—to take lade—ore not much In Ono noisy. finch . mrds um often enclosed In envelopes and Went to miens friends just on tbe of eof n • long journey. Most of your_readera are unquestionabty quite Ismillar with the: ininaLs It. 5.1% P.; on luritatitin dude,' moaning, responetrz. all row filait., or, iSend an answer if you please." • This • idea Inur in, teen expressed - ten. plain English, !The raver:of an antiwar-la re quested.' In the matter of Invitation cards being . Island in too name of the • mother, or pamnts, instead of. doling the daughter's. come,. I" quite agree with „your last correspondent, that when pa rents are at hones itts •in much better tasto•• to issue party Invitttiona in their own name. - For wedding partq or re. captions they should always' In the name of lathe: and Mother, both,having equal 'lnterest:ha the marriage their daughter. I •will make mention 'of an original idea dr - the late 11: -P. }WHIN, namely: . In the 'earner:of bla r riiing card, In neat script letters he had laced, • 'Tho wish, but not tho time to call: This Ides la - gone nretty, -. showing that you have not quit loot track...or your friend, but It is rather 100 bualrinsa-like . to become iribChle vogue. We rentem her printing only one pock o r them cmtla far Mr. Willis, ." do not think. the Idea Ana eyer adopted • i.' • The_Promeent's Defense...l) A Washington Special saws t Those In the ring- say that thePrel4dent's Imp= feel-poetic:ly. satisfied with their case that thoyinteud to show that the whole praCtloe - Mr all' adnhoistMtlons has been to remove; under the ()misfile-. don, and that the Tenure pfladlosi 'hill its =mot so pdpably nummatitutlonal as to Justify Mr. Johnson in disregarding It, the mime Mir as art had boon Pasted staying that he anouhl send no meeaage to Congress when the ConstitutiOn, says he snail; To meet Butler's lad ham's - articles, however,' they dad no Precedents, and thews really give them esssiderablll trouble. It la undenitood' that the-counsel for the defame will dot „ challenge oartou+ Senatonalorinstanom; Wade, on Me ;mound of interest; and Stnner" Chat:Wier and other,, for paw-' tug empi'vesed On opinion. Next, they] I will contend that the Sonate la a cloud and that the President has 'n right to,' have a fulreSitft present, and that ten{ States with their twenty members of the; • court-are absent If the votes on . these' .! two points should bei atmngly 'against!" Omni, and few now doiddthey will. then their next step, his thought will be for : a long continuance. 'lt instated by aome s 7 in tho President:a same= that' he May offer his resignation on the ground that atteh.-Yollea boiled no good to him, end that a ruslanation would save hill111:602 the political -- disabilities - following lin nmehment.„, Axis the challenge of Sen atom, the Board cv,. Managers hairs (Si' Into the question 'Closely, and find ' Mat all procedontei- id. Englan- and this -! country .ate - entirely agahmt, any latch rights. Nit factious delay la expected'en I the part of Mn lawyers, aa some at them so men .who could not afford bo thus , med. .. 1 —Tbotondon Evgiorer, • Most valna.. • ble saientlec paper. baa °penal up a nab- • loot Um+ will appom to Many. tboumnda in lattfrosb—tho .neutenclature of natal( the power cif steam - co/dam At prettoot au engtl3o aalo 40 be Mao many "hone powar," bat army one underwtaoda th u d "horse pow pbrato boa, by ihe development Of •; die machine in` three day*, become .• migno and litliart anmvarib,g. . hien talk about "salmi honio-power" and fe n bores power," and no mate buys an ; engine without. knowing that. lie foal 1 tome fareszoodi Ila nominal rattOS• Th!, were fact that WATT ieleeted a force o f • al,ooo pounds, exerted id a rata of .one L per 'minute, (the Mat moot to which be: had redueed the aver= . age labor of a horse ZO pounds .moom tato of twti mid a balf miles Per. , ' i) and.took. that. oare unit of Measurement for the breat rival; ideate meant iiinnothlun Men., But att' naillonar•power,AvPatufthg on the . 48,113, , o r the pawn and the velocity, of Its action, hi* thing - malty varied In; .Iht, sam e onsdno by Changing the aiaunt Promos azal doS,atkeyou Moro on 061 , • marl of th e bollorAtunt . .ollllhat: of the cylinder .by *blob now: calculated: sionovalron then, ..inaane—emytldng ~• you arms& The PTV/Mahlon la, tosgrvial upon a new unit of nano and to oall it a I : Mybat , " . " 2ll 6 - auggratioo Is good, it pmetleablit. 'lt Ia easier to psopiato s uch 1 . 'thing Man to saute and ll.r. Ita condi- ' 10*.s? • • . • ' • iNZZ
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers