4. 113=1 littslntrg Gairtts. PUBLISHED DAILY, BY PE-AMMAN, NEED dc CO.; Proprietors. F. 11. PENNIMAN, I JOSIAH KING. T. P. ItOCETON. N. Y. HEED, Edlttits and , Manager.i. OFFICE: GAZETTE. BUILDING, NOS. 84 AND 86 FIFTH ST Terms—Daily. - I &Mt -Weal 71.1 Weekly. One year-421.50; One year.g2.sa,Slngle copy One month. 75,51 x. Inns.. 1.50, 5 eoplefri. earn. By the 'week, 151 Three Mee. 75'10 • • • • 1.15 (from career.) - 1 and or.e to Agent. TiJESD.A., **ROTC 17, 1868 "We print,on the inside pages of this morn: ing's GAzErrz : &told page—Ephemeris, Poetry and Humerosis ,Selections. Third page = „Financial Natters, Imports, R New, Markets' Atwood, ?Iv, Sixth page 'Nuance" and Trade, Home 41farhets, Opera tions in Petroleum, Allegheny Cattle. Hai4vi, Beventlapage—.Agritultural Dtpartineni. • sr- .• Goiri do.sed yesterday ill. New York at 'lB9 1-2. ' , , GEN. Hex coca is ordered to' report tat 'Wash' &ton immediately. It is under'stood , - that h is to be placed in command of the _'trees tlaidicatilitary Division. - Whatever • may b the nature of the President's plans and expeciations, we are curious to see .whether . Gen. HANcocK---the splendor of whose War record only maes our regret the more painful for „Ids complete failure as a administratorwill be found willing to tkiiish the lustre 'of - distinguished services - foi . theTruicin'in leirditig himself now to the •. dangerous uses of. a falling and desperate =rt. Se'C'retary SEWARD contends that our ob jection to the exercise by England of her right, under the state of facts then existing, to concede the privileges of belligerency to the Confederate States, is one that we can not abandon without prejudice to - our na tional honor. yet he does not undertake to deny that the' 'Federal power at •an early hour in the rebelliOn yielded to necessity, and under that compulsion, the inevitable requirements of the situation, also ackuowl -edged the rebel title to all the privileges and immunities of belligerency. Had we maintained this ontbreak to be only an insurrection, every prisoner captur ed; of whatever rank, would have been lia ble to summary trial, before court Martial, . , and punishment as a traitor, taken in arms. ' Reprisals would have followei, and , the re hellion would instantly have becorde a repe tition of the indiscriminate butcheries with which the internal - counnotions of Mexico shock the humanity Of the world. In short, for thisand other good reaSons, both , practical and technical, we were -. forced. to grant to our "war - ard sisters" a regular position , 1 under the laws of international -warfare: THE RITMORS from Tennessee;of anticipat -1 The Secretarfs_point has therefore no - sub- ed danger to the publie Peace, are undoubtedly Istantial weight, for, - offended as We might occasioned by the increasing audacity of a `have been at England's unfriendly haste to secret .rebel organization iu that State. I anticipate our own acknowledgement.' her spreading perhaps into Kentucky, arulstl-1- 1 official action was in due time abundantly ing itself the "Kuk-Lux--Klan." - This orb=- •, justified. , _ . •-.. anization, in its treasonable objects and the, I Why then Wage Words in bootless contra- desPiiate violence of its rebel - Sympathies, ii" versy upon a iechnial point winch serves thb - 6id‘brother of the "Orderof the qolderi I -•- only to embarrass; that adjustment o' every i Circle": to which our copperhead Democracy material matter in dispute, winch is to-day were so part i a l during the war. With the awaiting our acceptance? Canthe Secretary first indications . of - its existence., a few I • specify a dollar. of damage done by rebekpri- months since, the belief was generally i en , ; vateers sailing from British ports,before our tertained that without any - -aim to .control I - own - official ree4ention of the war-rewer general politics, its - especial °Object was: 7 _ of the rebels? He ;may sair, and with rather to perpetrate outrages on individdal• I truth, this only, that Englandi"hasty" re- Union citizens, but of late their operations , cognition was powerfully instrumental to have become so extensive and systematic as I foreing,the Federal Gofernment, to follow to inspire a more alarming belief,' The !--• !its footsteps. But can he satisfy his own Memphis - of the 11th, - noticing their ; . -•• I' noway -men or the world, that. had - England appearance in that v i c i n ity. ta y s: ; i 'CoxxEcrienT holds her State election on 1 forborne that recogm ~ k ' - non an I-held entirely I. • We take it that the rebel order of ti; the 6th of April. The vote will be•close, ! aloof from the exercise other sovereign Knig,hts of the Golden Circle havebeen and its - result , doubtful. The State vibrates iPg , , government., ht our own would have resurrected in this form to attempt apin their devilish work of 'arousing neighbor from .one party to the other in alternate years, found itself ablcto quell the rebellion, sun- in, strife and civil war. Their history in 'by majorities of less than one thousand. Ply rind legally as a rebellion without yield- ' Middle Tennessee, so tin . , has been a carni . ; While we believe that the. Republican ticket, e- ' vat of blood andand the overrid ing its chum to the higher category of a r . _ .outrage,. • - and defiance of law. Effectual mess- Eff 1 lar bellinerent? . - headed by MinsmAtt. 'JEWELL for Gov- gu z• • b • urea should at once be taken to put :i. stop ernor,.has,at least an equal- chance fqr win- In all questions of etaies, politics or nu , - • ' to this secret organiiation of enemies of Wing the day, it should.be remembered that tic' duty, domestic or _international, let Ltus i society and mankind. Appearing here at ' willlittlepolitical either result have or no maintain only what is ,right.. And, when-I first in the form of rebel nonsense and gds._ significance in a national point ..of i view. 1 ever right, we WI - Ist no Ame • . 1 ricau states. . serials, it may hereafter assumes more---4,er ions aspect, threatening the , peace of 'the Our frienamayinaintain their ground and 1, ularl,,ur citizen, d false to his 1 will be found .. city and country. , yet lose' the State, which went Democratic I euuurrr's•elailas• I,er us at all times ac 1 _____, ~........ ____ last year. Eircourand by New Hampshire, ~, I cept the truly American idea, so practical ; ly - . - - ; AN EPrsit'oPAL REPRIMAND. , • whichprefers the substance to the : and re-invigorated by - the "hack Done" dis- *lse,' . • • n . In accordance with the judgment of the played at Washington,.we have a strong , l shadow, and contents -itself with reaping ecclesiastical court Iley S. H. Tixo jr. <-• k. ' ' - - , - • • , • nope thai, Conidectitat will ,resnme her for- I_ • . . . 1 friends of the worda unprofitably :in splitting hairs upon _ _ . t . iner place 'among the, loya ••_ TER. on raturday last. at he Church of the Unit 11. • 'nice points with opponents, who can i l naite Transfiguration, in New York. Mr. - Tvi46', a i quite as good a show as ourselves in ogle offence consisted in having held sees ices it. and law, and whose side•of the controversy the edifice and according to the forte; of. ' is that which concurs, with'our own high- -; auptherk,ehristian denomination, of which est National interests.. For nothing is more, , he the.. More easily convicted, since he evident that in future years America should freely and defended his act. The be free to elaim, undisputed, precisely that scene at the Chuleh was peculiarly Interest sovereig,n - right for which England now con ing, and. none the less so for the protest . tends.. ~.. •• • ffff which Was offered against the official action The question is,. simply and 'properly, offered, against ofthe Bishop. - The admonition was very only one of law, not of feelin r If the first long, and partook of the nature of an argil he against us, it is our duty and our interest went reviewingithe• entire case. Of the to yield it, and we can comfort our wounded proceedings and protest we have the annex pride by'remembering that we have, by that ed account froMlthe Evening Post: • . concession of the 'international principle, %_ , . rour policemen occupied the head of the most effective means of gratifying thei out aisles to prevent persfins.from crowding in raged sentiment in future!, retaliation. Con- front of the altar 'during 'the Bishop's ad ceding that princffile (and we can firi d no dress. law to defend ito it shier&•us incorning After the preliminary exercises, Bishop Years, when, if we unwisely --- Potter rose, and in a•loud voice said : ,"Rev. choose , to re- Stephen H. Tyng, Jr., come for Ward !" main vindictive, we can retort with her own Thellishop repeated the summons a second forward and bey, upon the unfriendly power.. We ,tune, when Mr: Tyng stepped , . po , , - higher motive' i'securing . haves than Rua, n took the second seat in the central aisle, His father also occupied the same pow% '. ' the broadest expression of the rights of a soy- Mr. Tyng throughout the entire reading ereign power. The most absolute free- of the admonition kept his seat, witiihis eye doin of rations in this respect is the trip steadfastly fixed upon Bishop Potter. ! Bey for America and -we are crippling The deliver -of the admonition occupied__ Po - • ' about three-quarters of an hour, andtowards ourselves in the false position which Secre- the close Bishop Potter's s was tremu tray SEWARD seems resolute to maintain. ions with emotion. The members of the The satisfactory settlement of the presient court and assisting clergymen remained affair with England is practicallydim 1Y standino•, ' during the reading. ' As soonasßi hop Potter said "Amen" at our reach. We nrge its immediate adjus the close of the paper, Rev. Dr. Stephen H. merit, wet matter only inferiqr. in. , ^ '',Tyrig rose, anti producing a manuscript twice to -reconstruction and impe a "-• , • from his pocket, read as follows, 'to the ' esent The delay , has thus far proved beneficial, fo amazement of nearly all pr R d RI h , "Horatio Potter, Right eve : ren 8 op the discussiontas been temperate and dig of New York"-- nified;.arid the Solid' English common sense Bishop Potter immediately turned to Rev: has slowly but decisively been led to sic- Dr. Houghton and said in an _excited man knovidedge ' the' substantial merit of 'our "Go on"! "Go on!" Dr Hou hton ner, •- , , • _ g.. .. claims. But now the solution whichtwo then.prOceededluth his prayer—Dr. Tyng also reading his protest at the same time: great_nations sincerely desire, upon a basis Dr. Tyng read four or five linesi of the mutually satiafaetory, hangs upon ri; 414- documenti when,finding that - he could not fatally imperilled by a mercpunetilio. Noth be heard .rteardquietly' folded up the paper,and ing can be morialisura thinthis,•were it : not,, ;remains , .standing until the cousion of fhv nel so dangerous to interests of really vital . 1 1 1 .':' ' .434oplibtier lien advanced to the front poriance. The discussion bag matured' itself of the chancel and pronounced the benecile; can result id tion, at the conclusion of which a scene of 1 , 5 a point Where farther delays -. • •..: - . , - 11 :'and may ..erp . , ...,,5e0d ' , to sit er party, great confusion ensued. , „• - - r Rev. Dr. Tyng went forreard and handed carrse , .frisii and " iiirturciali complications. , Biel Potter.% .protest Which ho wadnot Tie nevi British Ministry is committed-11s 'perm' ed 'to . - read ' This document was "a liblitrif •i its 'inii‘iiiitsiqrs to the main 'solemn prosest against this whole proceed usineltd ander diet, arid *Ali `itabinge 'lug, now; ciimipl,etd, from its commence ‘ - r ' "." ". ' ' ''' •' ' - ~ merit to its conclusion as false in its allegaT to it. But ft . suligentlidry admits, ini. p%F - til l , ~ tion, Naljust4Lita ,prin 'elide, untsumincal in tie diitialetiei,br. Waters , neutral*/ ithra its":ratu,' illegatin - its transactions, iniqul . . .. - • *A her o Wri Mcklsfqxess ,to titAFS I PC I APL_ itti'us IP , Its. I'II7PCEI! and voluntarily anti per How profound the obndient reverence in ' which the Juilibiary is held by the Dein): crady I. And holy Consistently they manifest their • - respect for the ermine ! For exam pie, in the Ohio Senate, last week, a Demo: cratic majority unseated a Republican - nntl admitted his competitor, on the strength of forty votes cast for the former by citizens more than hail" white, but yet showing a ad in4ture.of blood—plump in the ,teeth of re peated decisions by the Supreme Court of the State, establishing the clear constitution al right of these citizens to suffrage. Con , stitutiOns 'and Courti are nowhere, when -•that party sees its advantage, and yet they have the assurance -to talk to Os ! - NEvr HAMPSHIRE politicians of both .par ties,_, before the electicn, canvassed the State and published their estimates of the vote to be given, and the Republicans were - within‘ fift'y of their own actual vote, while they put the Democracy about fiveiundred too high. But the Democratic figures were sadly out of the way, claiming for themselves two hun dred votes more, , and ' for the Republicans five thousand five hundred and thirty less than were subsequently polled. Our friends estimated the totaL.Vote at only four hundred and•fifty less than were cast, while the Dem ocratic estimate fell five thousand short. `We shall consider the New Hampshire Re publican figures as entitled to great confi ildence hereafter. 11. mum PENNSYLVANIA REPUBLICAN STATE CONVENTION of 1860, MT. 310,EROW B. Lowny, of Erie; acting in behalf of the supporters of Mr. SEVION CAMEILON, offered a resolution for the appointment of a Commit itee, consisting of three=members, to frame an Electoral,ticket. to nominate the entire delegation from the Comnionwealth to the National Convention at:Chicago, and. bind ing the delegation so *appointed to cast an unanimous vote ~for Mr. CAMERON as the candidate for the Presidency. The adop tion of this resolution was strenuously re sisted by all the friends of Mr. Alvnarm G. CunTLN, in that body, ourselves among the number. After a protracted' and warm struggle, the respective districts were allow ed to select their own delegates"and eleetorg. A separate resolution was then carried through instructing the delegates to vote as annit for Mr. Cascanom When the delegation met at Chicago the effect of this resolution was' "nought under consideration. Mr. ".A.NDIZET7 It. REEDER., from the Eleventh district, insisted that the delegation was under obligations to go in a solid body for Mr. CANrFnnzi. 'Considering that Mr. CAAXESON, at . that. time, had very - few supporters in that district; that the other three delegates from it were all oppiased to Mr. CsatEnow; that in that *oPposition they reflected truly the wishes of their constiti eats; and that Mr:lliatom had been made . one of the delekates solely on the ground of , personal courtesy; his position was pectt 'flatly offensive. DATA! ,WILMOTI one ;of the delegates at large, _and also a suppor -Jer of Mr. Canziox; talk the opposite and just view. He held that the district dele-, • gates _not receiving -their appointment from' the State.Coay.entron.,_were Ant amenable to, its instructiotw- This view prevailed, and the delegation / did not vote as a unit for Mr. / con. We hap Pen to . know that ,if the 'decision of Vie delegation; as to the force , and effect of the int:tractions p,f the State Convention, had . been 'the other way, the • result would have worked no change in the sentiments or-vntes.of the delegates whO'dici l 7 'not rtrger 14,9,4=31. for President 44, WateApuelican State Convention CURTIN had - a very large majority, fa iriadleative of the weil-earaed poptilarity - ofthst gentleman with the B publican - masses. His chief supporters in this body were members of the Convention of 1860. Yet they; forward. and carried through, a, resolution empowering the Chairman of the delegation in the Na tional Convention toca.t the whole num ber of votes for Mr.' CURTIN ,for the tice Presidency. In adopting a rule they ,had denounced as,v, - rong, if not infamous, these "gentlemen •put : themSAVO in a false position, and clearly invaded the rights of the 'minor ity. The resolutioiz is not' binding on the • delegation, t ,This been our ground from the origin o° 'this contiover4y in the party, and we shall maintain it to the end,. no Matter what temporary 4dvautaies we or our associates might gain by accepting the other view. • _ En . _ Mr. TIIO3EAS MAnsnALL signalized. himself in the State Convention of 1860 by fesisting the resolution of instructions when pressed upon that body. He earned equal honur by resisting it in the late Convention. thete Acas'a noble manliness in his attitude on each:of these occasions, and strictly ac cordant with the impulses Of his generous nature. • AN UNPROFITABLE PUNCTILIO. PITTSBURGH GAZETTE TUESDAY, MARCH 17, 1868. Without this, 4he.ifnuld not entertain our. reclamations for. an instant. -This is all we need,; ask;' it is all We can hope" to sustnin." Why should DOl_Congr ess, then, recognize- - anti control the situation ..by quickening - the I hesitating. diPloniacy of our Fabian Secrets ry, into an earlv'tmd wise decision improv -. ring the ripe opportunity inthe true interests, t present and rfmote, , of the United States as a first-rate power, and of exactly that "na • tional honor" for w i hieli.he is sol needlessly solicitous? - . - r WALL STREET - experic;nce . g monthly excitement agaiu. i - now convulsed, by a stock-jobbing conflict between the two railway Titans, Vanderbilt and Drew. The prize they fight for is the control of the and, no contest - of such magititnde hasever before been 'known in the annals of even that "arena of gladiatorial finance. ander - Ift bought into a majority of the ex isting stock. Drew thereupon, having the inside track in the - . Present control of this 'company, threw fifty thousand riew shares upon the. market. Both parties flew to the law courts and injunction:4, were piled upon - injunctions by each against the other, and Drew, being,' somewhat .; worsted at this game,--since his adroit "adverSary had man aged to. envelop him in a series of mandates and prohibitions so essentialiy,contradictory that he could neither go forward nor stand still without committing a ‘JeContempt;"-- fled by night with his Directois, his books and - his millions.of the Company's cash; to the friendly shOresof New Jersey, and there directs his further operations and snaps his fingers at the Commodo . re in exultant defi ance. Thee latter's next move ,is not yet revealed, but in- audacity and strategy, whatever it may be, it will certainly be worthy of the ability of man who never yet failed of ultimate success. . The - control of the Erie Railroad With its proposed`extension by Akron and Toledo to Chicago, is an essential point in the Sue-. cess or defeat of the far-reaching plans of consolidation, with Which these rival railway kings of New York are aiming to.secure to their own lines the traffic of the. continent, even to the shores •of the Pacific, and to secure - it, these two men, each; backed by his retainers, are wielding:Millions as other men use thintsauds. . ' • sisterstly Tersecu tis; its - its spirt, rircice'ss - - • It was also a "sole.* appeal from this.de 1 cislon of this courti- - finionv this apprOVal thereof, bythe'Bislinp pf thiS diocese,_ tinder . the Most earnest sensetsf• the kinelliij ustice. 4 with which this respond - efftlingibeen treated, to the Supreme and final. deelSion of the Gen- 1 oat Convention of the Protestant Episcopal 1 ChUrch in the United States; to the abiding 1 sense ofjustic,e and righteousness in the inch- I vi.dual members of this Church; to the con- I 'scientious 'review of the Christian Church throughout this land ; to the record of future historic truth ; to generations of advancing -light and teligidus purity and poWer, which • may come her( after; and with the deepest humility, but w th - confidence unfeigned, to the judgment-s at of the 'Lord Jesus Christ, who is the one rest Head and Ruler of-His Church,.and 'hose. approval cilia:never .be given to the rsecution•ot the innocent, or to the oppress on•-of the weak." . The friends of Mr .. -Tyng• crowded about the pew occu ied by him, and some of them denounced tl court which' fOund the ver-1 diet, while a few alluded to Bishop Potter in no CoMplunentary termS: • - " - The noiseandconfusion'b;,,n :he vast throng was very great, and it.requfied .the utmost efforts of the four or five pelicenien present, to dispenie the audience, a. large part :of i whom, it is s ' f d, were e xceedingly dnxions to organize a meeting to sympathize with. Mr. Ty - ng th n and there. ' ' At length-t le audience dispersed, and the \ t friends, of Mr. Tyng proceeded to the Church of the Media or, where other proceedings took place. . - • = MR JOICSSON'S VERACITY. As Military Governor of Tennessee, mr. JpITS'sON made teri• grave charges against General BUELL, then Commanding thd Ar- my_ of, tliii Ohio, and finally succeeded in procuring his removal froni that command. A commission subsequently met, at Nash to investigate these chargeS and it wits found that!they *ere very difficult to proVe. Mr. JonssON,,was called upon - to testify. buf tiffs he'declined doing, altfiough every effort was made to procure his 'attendance. In; these efforts, says a writer: , ; The Judge Advocate was aided by Gen. Buell, who said openly, that Andrew John- son would never dare swear in his presence to what he had publicly asserted. At last the pressure became so strong that Andrew Johnson fled to Washington -to escape thrther.process. - To Washington the Judge AdVocate follOWed, the reluctant. Witness, •an'd succeeded at Wit in procuring a sworn . Statement very much softened from that niade by the same Johnson through the Rev. Col. MoOdy, President Lincbln, and the press . generally. Thi4 affidavit the Com missioir treated with deserved contempt, and. General Buell, before. the CominissiOn, in his published defense, denonneed= it as false in every particular. It became evident to 'slhe Commission that Andrew Johnson was • as deficient in courage as lie. was devoid of trnthfulneSs. ' But the confiding Judge Ad vocate: still havirig a remnant of confidence in the noisy demagogue, urged him, afterhe. became acting President, to open the con. , tro'Versy, and at least niake a rejoinder to Gelferarßuell's damaging charges. =ln this beta - lied. This man he fouritt*illing to rest under the charge of perjOrY preferred" Lagainst hhn'by an officer,z_WhoSe word-,at least has never been dOhtakrind it is rather latglor one - thus impeached to make charges that must rest, if sustained at all ; on his Apivit word against a man so well known.as f General Grant for courage and , high - toned m „ teglity. _ _ "The Neenger R ailvp v." Eurrons GAZETTE: An article in . the Sunday Leadeit of the 15th hist., under , the 1 .ais , . , ivecaption, calla for a brief notice: -The 1 svriter charges:that the said mad is got up for the puris)se of selling of t, etc. j r, I Now, that the • road has th 114 fat* been . suc cessfully carried along to a hird reading in the House, the Citizens Rai 3ad monopoly is no doubt A little alarmed. lint the neces sities of 111,0 people along t e line" demand thc road,_and notwithstanding : tile libelous ardele,;(*hieli was written for a,purpose it did not taitto accomplish).. the bill for its in eorporatidn will become. a law. • It - is' he. kieved the members at Harrisburg from Al ,K,Fthenv are notry,et prepared to vote that ' we shall ride two and three miles with forty . or 'fifty .Caliers, crowded together like so. Many aniunils, in a ear of capacity for only twenty,„; and this,. too, day after day and year - after year. . The statements in the ar ticle are false, all false, and known to be so by the writer, or informer, who has imposed upon that paper. Such men as Samuel Kier, I\ . W. Yonne; W.:11. MCCallum, Fiattl Hu .gus' J. II: Hillernian,'A. J. Cochran,' Chns. ' IL ~VrinStiffilg, atoti,,'are men well known in 1 this eon tut. 2, , .-and ..‘ Lt, shell non are ehargcsl4 iiii ge - gettingllt to sell it out, in other wor s:to blaCkmail the Citizeibi PAS.. I 1 senor Railway. They leave simply taken charge of the matter in restsMse to the wiShes of every person. who ravels the route, and, moreover, they intend to put it through. l4. W. gitarnit. Amasements._ OPERA lioUsE.I--M'lle Zoe commenced' the second week of her engagement at the ' Opera House last night. The audience, though' not as large - as we expected, was quite,-respectable. "Levangro'.arils pre sented with Mlle Zoe in two Characters, the title role. and . that..-of Henri INS, Lacy, both: of which were lidminibl2,- sustained. In this piece She evinces a versatility of talent beyond our expectations.- To=night , sht3 wilt appear-again In a double 'vie, in "Green Bushes; or, Ireland One Hundred Years Age;" which we are informed is one of. her best pieces. -Seats will - doubtlem in deiraina. • P IT MBE IRIR. THEAT EE—TiliS evening our friends"will remember, is the grand open ing night of ;the Theatre Comique, at .. the old Pittsbiirgh Theatre, under the manage ment of Fred Alines. A first-class dramatic company has been engaged, and-it is the in tention of the -Manager, as is characteristic of him, to spare neither expense nor trouble to render the establishment attractive. The - "corps do ballet," headed by the Zocolo sis ters, premier demuses froin Niblo's Garden,. New York, is said to be one of the host ever put on the stage in Pittsburgh, and conse quently will he One of the most attractive leatures. Go and see them. Iktscoverles Ui Rome. .• . Interesting antiquarian discoverie.s have been recently mule on the site of the Pal ace •of the Cresars, in Rome, where Signor Rosa,. who directs the excavations for the Emperor Wiipoleon, has found the base of what appears to hive been- - an altar, bearing an interesting • inscription,:_stating that it was'erected • by hi 4 , eacs Domitius Cal "vines," who twice filled the consular dig ,nity .in the years B. C.:53 and 40, and who employed the treasures granted to, im by tho Sehate, after his'. suppression of the 'lberian insurrection in the reign of • Augus tits, towards the decoration of the imperial edifice's on the Palatine. Froth this relic laving been found close to the basement of the Temple of Jupiter Victor, raised at the close of the Social War by. Fabius -Maxi mus, B. C. 80, it is possible thnt it stood before the statue of that divini`v. In an 'other part 'of Rome, - the Site el the Empo rium, between the foot of the Aventine and the Tiber, Signoi, VeSconti has brought to light numerous masses of rich ancient colored marbles, some bearing dates of. the" time of . Domitian. • • JJast weekne.ww.c,ll 3vas struck on the Cataract Lease, Still Mi t t. It is , now Lro7 dudng about- fifty barrels : , per day. The worldng interest Is owed by R. H. Survivor of the * Minnesota_ Massacre Iluu4ed•altd--,,E4bt . From ti Duta.mic (Iowa) T. 111112.4. Mareil 4. younT, man IS now stopping at the - Key City House, by the name of George W. Par ::ter„, whose parents, brothers, sisters: and relatives, -were, all murdered at Redwood, 'Minnesota, in the great Indian massacre of 1861. He is the sole survivor, and was the only one left to communicate the mournful intelligence to the nearest settlement. Bereft - in one brief hour of all that he held dear on earth, and with the victims ti of savage ferocity extended in death before him, took a solemn vow Ofvengeance. How well he has performed that vow, the reader-- may judge when we state that in six years young Porter has,- 'alone, and with the assistance of nothing bitt his trusty rifie, - Sent to the happy hunting grounds the souls of one hundred and eight Indian braves. He carries a piece of canebreak, . about twelve inches in length, and whenever he killed an 'lndian he would make a notch in this One hundred and eight notches are now to be counted on the piece of bane alluded!to,Alie last one being cut on Christmas, 1866. Surely Yonng,Porter has been an avenging Neme sis on the. fooistepi of those who slaughtered :his kindred. The • Indians .em brace . representatives from nearly every tribe the._ plains. By night and by day he has followed , them tbrOugh. the trackless forests, over desert wastes, by the mountain Side and in the lonely glenhas; he pursued his victims until the crack of the , rifle and the death yell proclaimed that •an- • other redskin hail been sent to his final 'ac count, and sated with blood the vengeance of his- pursuer. Porter had not passed through all these perilous scenes unscathed. His body has been riddled by eleven bullets and stabbed in thirty-three places by , the knife. But he has withstood all, come. out victorious, and now exhibits with pride the trophies of his prowess. Truly his parents and relatives have been deeply, terribly avenged.. Colonel. Rose Assmilts a Witness,Who Tes-d titles ; Against Him. 1! The following from the - Richmond (V n.) -Dispatch, of the 12th inst., will be read with interest by ninny people of this city, where Colonel Thomas E. Rose is so well - 1 ; known : "Our readers will remember Brevet Cot: Thomaa E. Rose, Captain of the Eleventh United States Infantry and Superintendent . of the election in this , city for members of the State Convention, and that chargea Were preferred against him .• for unfairness and conduct unbecoming an officer and a:gen tleman. He appeared before a Court of In quiry convened to `investigate the charts. After a patient hearing the - Court sent their opinion of the case to General Sehofield, who, in an order sent to the Convention, announced that the Court had declared • the Colonel to be innocent of some of the_ charges. :Before the Court appeared .a num-I - her of our most respectable citizens, who testified to the truthfulness of some of the charges. Among these gentlemen was Mr. William jr . Fleigenheimer. After the adjoarnment of the court Col.• Rose left for Lynchburg, to . ‘rhich place his company had been previously sent. A few days since he returned, and late Monday evening met Mr. Fleigenheimer on the steps of the Exchange Hotel: The Colonel int-. mediately commenced a tirade of ahuse against Mr. F., saying that he had testified falsely, and that he could whip him and all other witn&ses whose testimony Was to the same effect, all of Whom, he asserted, lad perjured ihemselves. The Colonel's wrath got the better of him, and he drew his Pistol and was about to cart-, his threat into eke cation. He was calmed, and Mr. F. Went tb Gen. Schofield and complained of the Col- . Otters conduct. The General told Mr. F. to have his charges put in writing. and he Would. have them investigated. Thus the matter stands. ' • Yale College.. - William E. Dodge, of New„ York, has just given $lO,OOO to the fund for the eree- tion .of the new Theological Hall.- The Yale Coanrant says: • The outside world hears - little from Yale In regiird to what'she is doing tbr the cause of science by way of collecting geological,. zoolOgiml and botanical specimens. The Cabinet of Yale is widely known as being very complete. It appears, however, very small in comparison with many others in the country. In several specialties many Colleges now rank ahead of Yale. During the past .year, hoWever, a work o 1 collecting -specimens has- been quietly going for War d. which now places Many colleges second to her which hitherto have stood first in par ticular collectiOns. When the Peabody Museum is erected, so 'that the thousandi of speclmensnoiv stored away in boxes can be arranged' Yale will present one of the finest and best cabinets in the country. If we were at liberty we might make mention of these specithens which have lately been se- cured, some of which are very valuable and rare: We can assure our readers that the- Yale Professors are doing honor to their Alma Mater in this respect. ' Thousands of dollars are being very judielouslyexpended. Twenty of the last Freshmen . class failed t 6 pass n satisfactory examination in arith metic. Important Discovery in Gas. .An English paper says: "In- accordance with instruetionsjecetved front the British War' Secretary, some important 'trials in connection with the consumption of as, and which promise to be of great advantage to the public, have been completed at the gas , works:of the Royal Arsenal, Woolwich. It has been found that by combining bitu men with coal in gas retorts, the gas is evolved with great rapidity, andthat it gives an illuminating power- - from one burner equal to twenty-five - spemuieeti candles.. The experiments, which have been conduct ed by Captain Arthur Cocklin, C. 8., "pf the Steam Reserve, Sheerness have been so sat-, isfactory, that-7 - two hundred tons of bitu men have been ordered by the War Depart ment for use in the Arsenal." . • . —A call has been issued for a meeting of the Friends of Temperance, in Crawford county, to Meet In Convention at the Court House in Meadville, Thursday, March 17th, at one o'clock". at., fin. the purpose of or 'ganizing a' County Christian Temperance Association, and for taking , such other steps as may be deemed advisable to promote the temperance cause, A WnenzzarroN letter,says: Grant settled the question of probable delay. in the• im peacbment trial yesterday. Some one told him Johnson was I , oing to ask time to , send off to Alaska and other b ends of the earth for witnesses. "What's the use -of that?" said the General. "He can prove "anything le wants to by Welles and Randall andlc- C ulloch I" SAncAwric.---The Portsmouth Tribune responsible for the following cruel iteni : "Eleven Democratic delegates from Cincin nati went up to Columbus; the day before the meeting of our State Convention. Their legs were chained together and they were accompanied by a very attentive escort." Striatum Acctnrarr.-4 baggage roas ter on the Cincinnati and Lafayette Rail road, on Tuesday last, - threw a bundle of pickaxes from the trairl'as it was passing London at twenty-five mile speed. One of the picis struck a matt in he breast, with probable, fatal result Josh 1111.1hwsimos. 11,strane.s. a mans, philosaphethe wust ; kind tew hat' when he gits beat. Awl ov us kortm amlW the %badness or life, yet we awl waste mere time than we, Don't mistak - arrogance for wisduni,r menny peple hay thought tha wits wizel when tha wuS - onla Windy. • • I . • The • man who leant git shed without pullitt others back, is a limited cuss. . ',The principal difference between at luxury_and a necessary, - is the price. Whenever the soul is in greit, it is taking root, and when it is in -miles, it is t.tkingf wirer. "6ive ;the devil his due," but be carefu there ain't, much due in him. After a .man has rode fast oast, he nevert . • wants to go slow agin. : .! Faith that is founded on an arnest and a truthfal. convic.k.shtm, is beautiful to be-1 hold;.but faith that is founded simply on courage, ain't ennything more than good grit. 'Evra sorrow has its twin joy; the fun ov scratchin almost pays'for havingthe each. • Those* familvs who are really fust class I: -- never . ar afraid that the shall git cheated out uv, their respecktability; while the cod= fish familys, ar always nervous lest tha mite. • - • It won't do to stir up a man when he is thinking, - enny more than it will a pan ov milk When* the cream is rising. It is easy enuffto raise the devil, but he's ;a hard crop to reap. • -The only sure resipeo tew govern man;; kind with, is the roll; you may fastoon it ./ with flowers and-case h. with velvet, if you pleze, hut is the rod after awl that duz the bi ziness. - • We ar told that a contented man is happy; and we might hay bin told at-the saineP time that a mud turtle could fly if it onla had' wings. Lb' rom the 11C0iVeraz... 31. L. Sullivan, of Glatsworth,.Livirimston county, owns forty thousand acres of arable land, partlf . n Livingston - and partly iu Ford counties, Illinois. On, this ground he has :1 three hundred and twenty miles of Usage orange hedge in thrifty condition. This year he will break up and pit into .cultiva- . tion ten-thousand acres in 'addition to the broad area now sown, three thousand of which.he will plant in corn, the balance in wheat and grass. .31r. Sullivan' last year found that one of his outlots was not yield- 1 4' ing the profit that he expected, so, a pur chaier coming along one day, he sold him fbr cash twenty-four thousand acres in Champaign county, in one body. 111±. Jno. T; Alexander, of Jacksonville, was the : lucky purchaser. In.,relatiou-to_the profitl - of'suchM extensive farming as , r. - Sullivan. 1 carries on, we may say that rumor hai it t that 'his net income -is from. $60,000 to • 1 $BO,OOO a year, from his 'agricultural opera- 1 tions, most of which he expends for widen- in7,.the area of his vast possessions, and for l(redeeming and improving the land acquired. t I= =1 Mt 1/RIMER'S RESIDENT CONSULTING OF. YIP:E• 'FOR LU.NGEXAMINATIONS AND TREAT. MENTlOP.orutomo DISEASES, No. IRO rim; I STRUT. PROM 9 A. M. UNTIL 3 P. M. a!M2 A Large Estate..., Sullll.-mit'(lllinots)Deniverat.) —About two months ago a new well was: struck on Benhighoff Hill, but it did not produce any considerable quantity of oil until quite recently. The• well has been, thoroughly tested and the production now reaches forty baiTels per day, with some prospects of au increase,.. The workin.4 in terest is entirely owned by W. J..Rtincle, of Williamsburg, New York. Freshet in the Hudson. City Telegraph to the Pittsburgh Gazette-1 ALBANY, March 143.—The river has" risen some fifteen feet and the ice is nearly up to the roadway, of the railroad-bridge. Water street, is navigable and boats are plying about on it. The stores are all closed and the goods removed - up into the city. The ' , weather continues very warm and the gorge is likely to break at any moment. HAVE YOU A COUGH! Dr. Sargent's Cough Syrup wILI cure you If .I.VE roc A COLD? Dr. •Sargen's Cough SFrup'vrill cure you lINVE YOU ACUTE Olt CilliONIC 'Dr. Sargent's Cough Syrup !rill cure you. }}ATE YOE ; ASTIIXA O 1 PIITIINIC? Dr. Sargeor4 Cough Syrup will relieve you.. HAVE YOU OPPRESSION IN TUE CREST? Dr. Saiviit's Cough Syrup will nAlere HArE. you WELNK Lrscs , Dr..Sargeut's Cough Syruti will cure iota.. HAYS YOU A SOItentROAT ? Dr. Sargcut' Cough Syrup will cure you HAVE TOL; A: 4 ;Y DiSPASki OF, TIIETIII4O.I.T, LUNGS On CIIEST? • ; - Dr- Sargent's Cough Syrup is the best preparat ton for such diseases you can take', F9r sale by all Druggist rwry CENTS PER BOTTLE. A FALLACY. some people think-that Chronic Dyspepsia may be cured by exercise and dlet alone. This is a mis take.' The stomach must be stimulated and regula qa, and the liver and the discharging organs put in good smirking order before a cure-can be effected. Sdchie the operation bf HOSTETTER'S BITTERS. • 'They tone - the stomach, set the liver right. And put the stomach in such licatthflil That good digestion waits on appetite.. Many persons fancy that Fever and Ague can be avoided by adopting unusual precautions against damp and cold. Never was there a grouter fallacy. There 1= no absolute safeguard, against mutations malatilet, except HOSTETTER'S. HITTERS. "To brace - the frame, and make it ague-proof, - - Ts keep the causes of disease Moot," There Is nothing like this genial- Vegetable tarts°. rant. So. too, In eases where. there is a predisposi, . _ Ran to biliousness; the constittitiOnal tendency la combated and heid is check bribe alternate action of the BITTERS. Diet and regimen are powerful allies of judicious medicaitrestrient when the preservation of health a In insalubriceis localities is the object in view; ' but they will not answer the desired end alone. Use them as aids to the BITTERS, but do not rely upon t i the efficacy of any formula that does not laclude this admirable- tonic. The BITTERS cons lt of an unadulterated vegetable essence (nnrivalle among stimulants) medicated solely with herbs a d roots of acknowledged virtue as tonics. It is a reeable to the taste and perfectly harmless. Even to chil dren of delicate constitut lona it may be given with perfect. Impunity. In fact, with these, as with . those of older growth , i its wonderful recuperant properties are at one apparent. . . . . ANOTHER CURE OF DEAFNESS; I lost my hearing during the last year. Part of the'llnie I was totally deaf In April of this year I wasinduced, from. an advertisement, to make ar,= pliCatiou to Dn. XEYSER, 1.40 Poin Street, Pitts- 'e c- . burgh. After haying tried various medicines froM doctors, without any benefit, I have been under Dr. Ke'yser's treatment now for nearly two months, and ' am entirely restored to my' hearing, so that I can hear a pin drop. JOON SCASTLAN, • Coal Illnifs,"Washlngton Co., Pa. ANOTHER CURE. t man called 'to-day at -Dr. Keyser's oftlee,to . - • form himof a great cure Made by hislxsu CURE, or kta.stoN.U.TX RESTORAtIiri- the.se cures, are made with the Doctor a proptirations, he desires It to be distinctlytinderstood therimost of his great t ,cures arc made in aceerdincesrith. the established laws that govern the science 'of 'medicine, in which he hai been engaged for the past twenty-ANT Tears:! Last Week he'vrits also in receipt of a letter from a clergyman in the State of Chid; 'detailing another, most - wonde rful mire. 11 11 II II