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' .1,. ........ \ d. - t , _ _ _ _..._ ...... .." . ~.. „:.'t .., o'. f il 1 .' . - I 1 •.. • i i ..... --,ir 1-..; i : i i [ \:. -1 ,, - 1 i 1 . /..,„,, - , rivf --- — ll 1 . .4. , t- ..• ,c,,, ,, ;•>11.e; 'ivA. - ---- ( : .i , , 1 1 • 1.251 ,_ -7 , ,,,„„, . • ..,, 1 . ... 7 4 7 : • . 1 4 1 ! • i • i ' 1 .: I .. _ __:11. 4 0 1 - ‘ /-. •'' '' . l i . ~ . • ' • . . \ ~ \ • '':',..Z...---'7'---7 . - - .... 0, .. - -------:- . - 1 - - 4. . ,:•;;' _ • 4 .. . -......-. . . . ~ • _ . . . . • - . VOLUME LXXXIV. fIaST Ill Moll. .911 D-I IGHT. __NEWS BY CABLE. Charles Dickens' Political Creed—Ad drt ee of Archbishop. r :Cullan—King Vic tor Emanuel to receive the Empress Eugene--Death of Cardinal Emanuel Bento , Rodeciuez—liing of Portugal and the Epa Dish Throne—London Times on French Affairs—Lord Llarenden's Address before the Hartfordshlre Ag.. ricultural Society—lle denounces the Tenure-of.. Land Law lii Ireland. f.By Telegraph to the Pittsburgh Gazette.] GREAT REMAIN. , . Lo..foori, September 28.--Charles Dick . ens opened the winter session 'of the Midlind Institute, Birmingham, last evening, with a pleasant speech. After revie wing the history of the institution, and offenng advice for its future man-, agement, he tohched upon other Sub- - jects. The present, he said; was a mate rialistic age. His-political creed could be summed up in two articles. His faith in the people governing was infintessi -mal,—his faith in the people governed was illimitable. Archbishop Cullen, in reply to a depu tation zens of Wexford, Ireland, said that by moderating their demands, and not by interfering, with the legitimate rights of any class of institutions, the tenants would enjoy the results of their labor in -undisturbed tranquility. Lord Westburg has declined the ap pointment to the Bench of Court of Appeals. ' Lord Clarendon has returned from t '. Paris. He delivered an Address before 4 the Hertfordshire Agricultural Society tonight, in the course of which he acknowledged that the subject of the tenure of land in Ireland was a Momentous and vital one, but it should mot be considered a party question. The evils connected with the land system must be abated. The solution was diffi cult, but not itnppossible. The Gov . ernment would not adopt any wild or subversive scheme. The pro moters of such a plan were ' • enemies of all equitable settlement, and no friends to the Irish people. He asked ~. if there was language strong enough to ...t dondemn a landholder who evicted a ! tenant and reaped the whole benefit 1 of the tenants labor and expendi ture. - This course was too often followed, and the 4301 must be abated. He • believed' the rights of 1 1 property should be scrupulously upheld and its 'duties rigidly enforced by law. ' The Government, he said, intended to introduce a measure which would com mand the res ' et, support and praise of every honest an, Lord Clarend n, in conclusion, aUuded 1 to the present condition of Europe and ' expressed the conviction that at no time in the past three years has there been a fairer prospect of continued peace than at present. • _ FRANCE. LONDON, September 28.—The Times in an article on the situation in France says the coincidence of the Emperor's sickne and reconstruction of the Gov ' ernme t is -a serious misfortune. The = energi s of the Emperor lannot - be well spare at such a crisis. The reforms coins fortunately while the Emperor is inc pacitated, and at a time when he is mdst required. The Speculations of the *pie on the uncertanties and op- Wrtnnities of the future are so amour ' aged,l and augment the public disquie tude.' It the crisis had occurred ten 11 7 312 yea ado, the Emperor could have Iwo r, to the work the energies he car ried into the Italian campaign. If the / experiment had then succeeded, France would now possess a generation . of statesmen with some parliamentary experience. The.only question is, was . the prospect of success so clear then as , to justify precipitating instead of post , poning the trial. The present peril, se rious in any case, is aggravated by the Emperor's enfeebled health. But peril of some kind has been the prospect of the Government for the past two generations. .. —..--- PORTUGAL. Lissmc; September 28.—The Cardinal .Emmanuel Bento Rodrigueo, Patriarch of Lisbon, is dead. The King of . Portugal, in a letter, de nies that he has any intention of abdi eating in order to accept the throne of irALY. , . FLontENcE, September 28.—King Vic 'tor EManuel. and the diplomatic body at Florefice, will go to Venial to receive the Empi ss of the Frettch, on her way to , the E t. ----.--- FI. ANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL. Los iv, Sept. 28.—Eve..—Console, 93; Amer can securities quiet and steady. t ir rive-t enty bonds: '658, 834; '67s, ' 8230 ' 2s, 84; Ten-forties. 75%; '62s at Frank ort, 87%@87%. Eries,23%; Illi • nols, , ; Atlantic & Great Western, 27%. Stocky steady. French rentos, 71f 22c. LIVEBvoOL. Sept. 23.—Cotton firmer; , middling uplands at 12%@12%; New il m Orlea s at 12%®12%: sales 10,000 bales. • Califo la white wheat 10s 84; red west.- .ern 9 4d Western Flour 248. Corn, mixed, 2866 d. Oats -Os 6d. Peas 44s 6d. Fork i ills. Beef 89a. Lard 74s 6d. Cheese 635. Bacon 658 6d. Petroleum unchti ged. Naval stares dull. Linseed oil, 53 gonads, 55 Sterling. • LON ow, Sept. 28 .— Tallow . 475. Cal cutta inseed 635. • • As sir. Sept. 28.—Petroleum 56%f. HAVRE, Sept. 28.—Cotton steady at 245% bppostuoit to the Exclusion of the Bible from the Public Schools. 'EBY Telegraph to the Pittsburgh Gazette.] CINCISNATI, Sept. 28.—A. large meet ing was held in Pike's, Opera House to. aught for action against the exclusion of the Bible from the public schools. There were thousands present, and many came and went away, who could not get in. WOL Rsinsay and Geo. R. Sage, of the Cincinnati bar, and Revs. Dr. Wiley and. B. W. Ohldiew spoke. Resolutions favoring the Bible in schools, and ask ing the Board not to act on the matter till after the spring elections, were passed unanimously. BRIEF TELEGRAMS. —Nlationey's kerosene factory in Brook. lyn was burned Monday afternoon. boss MEM —Capt. Somerby, of the Eighth Caval ry, on a scouting . expedition, killed twelve Indians. - - , —John Barge was dangerously cut by a man named James Dean, at Cincinnati yesterday, in a quarrel. -- -Mr. Johnston, Conservative. 'was elected to the Legislature, from Alexan dria county, Va., yesterday. —Wm. Byrne, a young man, com mitted suicide at- St. Louis yesterday. His parents reside in New York. =A, slight frost visited Raleigh,.N. C., yesterday morning, but no damage was done to the crops. Tobacco planters are a little uneasy. —Gov. Walker, of Virginia, has ap- pointed nine delegates to the Southern CommerciAMtivention. The attendance promises to be very large. —Great preparations are being made for the approaching State Fair at Ral- eigh, North Carolina, and the prospects are that it will be a grand affair. —A jury in the Massachusetts Supreme Court has awarded $17,950 damages to S. 0. Pollard, against the town of Wabum, for permanent injuries received by the plaintiff from a defect in the highway. —George Springer, who was com mitted to jail in Lawrence, Mass., last May, for placing an obstruction on the track of the Lowell, and Lawrence Railroad, hung himself Monday night. —Arizona advlces, of the 11th of Sep tember, say a band of one hundred Indi ans attacked the teams hauling ore from the Vulture mine, killing two Mexicans, wounding two and capturing sixty-three mules. —The Board of Examiners at the 1 , 4 aval Academy admitted, yesterday, as cadets, John Farnsworth, of Illinois; Wm. A. Northcote, of West Virginia, and Charles B. T.,Moore, of Illinois. There were no admiSaions on Monday. —The number of entries at the Indiana State Fair are much larger than last year. The show of horses, cattle and sheep 1s unusually large. The weather Is fine, and there is every prospect for the most successful fair since the war. • —Judge Benjaman S. Cowen died at St. Clairsville, Ohio. Monday evening, on his seventy•seventh birth day. He was stricken with paralysis on Friday evening last. He lived, an honored and useful life, and his loss will be deeply felt. —Two-thirds of the town of Port Dal housie, Canada, was destroyed by fire yesterday morning. The principle suf ferers were Messrs. Cole and Wood. who each lose about $9,000. Ten stores and dwellings were consumed. Total loss about $40,000. associated banks of Boston have informed their non-resident stockhol ders, that by a recent decision of the Supreme Court of Massachusetts they must pay the State tax upon their ;hares. These are now two taxes assessed for the years 1858 and 1869. —Seerum, a friendly Indian Chief of one of the principal tribes, was attacked by a drunken white man and seriously injured. He has sworn vengeance against the whites, summoned his tribes to arms and committed several murders and de. predations already, —Herzog, the famous running horse that made a mile in one forty-three and a half, the best time on record, died yes terday afterntion.at Buckeye track, near Cincinnati, where, last May, he achieved that triumph. Hls owner rufused /15,000 for him within a week. —One of the Miamia powder mills, five miles north- of Xenia, Ohio, exploded at three o'clock Monday afternoon, killing a colored employe named Thurston, prostrating five buildings, and injur ing the dwellings near. The telegraph wires were torn down. —Samuel Dryden, a prominent citizen of Johnston county. Mo., is suspected as the murderer of Mr. Cox and, his wife, near Kingsville last week, mention of which was telegraphed a few !days ago. Dryden was the owner of the farm upon which Cox lived. He has fled the coun try, but officers are in pursuit of him. —The Grand ',Age of Odd Fellows, in session at San Francicco. adjourned sine die yesterday. Vice President Colfax was present and was introduced to the Members. The Grand Sire, Mr. Farns worth, was presented with ,a diamond ring set in gold from the filings of the last spike. The Grand Secretary, Mr. Rid rely. was presented with a cane by the California brethren. —An examination was held at New York, on Monday, in the case of John E, Gould, the Wall street broker who is accused of outraging the person of Mrs. Anna Meade, of No. 73 President street, Brooklyn. The complainant was cross examined at ledgth by counsel for de fense, who sought to damage hsr repu tation by a :aeries of singular questions. The examination was not concluded. —Senor Lemns, the Cuban Minister, states that there is not a single sentence in the Cuban constitution which contem p'atea anything but absolute and une quivocal freedom to the slaves of the island. The Republican leaders, long before the adoption of the constitution, emancipated their slaves, and wherever the army of the Republic marches free dom is proclaimed to all of everyk color. —The liabilities of Clark Holt, of Rock ville, Conn., a large manufacturer, and President and Treasurer of the Tolland County Insurance Company, are much larger than supposed when his business irregularities and defalcations were dis covered a short time ago. A full inves tigation indicates they will reach - a quarter of a *million. Mr. Holt's where abouts is unknown. The soundness of the Insurance Company is not affected. —lt is stated that the Cuban privateer Hornet, which sailed some time ago from the British Provinces, where she was detained for a time, is on her way to Cuba, if she has not already arrived there. It is the intention of her coin mender to keep a sharp look out for Spanish transports carrying troopti to the island, and also for the regular steamers plying between Havana and Spain, and carrying the Spanish dg. The Hornet is a fast sailing vessel, and can probably get away from any Spanish man-otwar she cannot tight. It is thought by the Cubans that the Hornet can engage most"of the vessels in the Spanish navy, with two or three exceptions. She will take her prizes into Mexican portsthat country having acknowledged the bel hgerent rights of the Cabana. PITTSBURGH, W EONESDAY, SEPTENIBER 29, 1869. SECOIII filMoll. POUR cretiocK, .1. .71. THE CAPITAL, C By Te:egraph to tte Pittsburgh Gazette. WASHINGTON, September 28, 1869 DIINIST.iR TO CHINA. Fredrick F. Law,. of California, has been appointed Envoy Extraordinary, and Minister Pienepotentiary to China. CABINET MEETING At noon the Cabinet met, bat the only members present were Secretaries Bout well and Cox, and Attorney, General Hoar. Assistant Secretary of State, Davis, and Assistant Postmaster General Earle, representing the heads of their Departments. ItTILWAUKEE. Dedication of the National Military Asy lum—Description of the Edifice—Elo quent and Patriotic Speech of General Butler—Touching . Tribute to the Mem ory of the Gallant Dead. CGy Telegraph to the Mein= Guette.l MILWAUKEE, September 28.—The new building of the National Military Asp Inm, to be located here, was dedicated yesterday. The building presents a tine appearance from the exterior, and in its neatness, beauty of finish, and complete ness of appointments, is a model. It is in the form of a cross, and when the wings are completed, will have a frontage, of IWO hundred and forty feet. The entrance is in the center, and opens into a corridor, upon the east and west of which are the spacious reception rooms and offices. The accommodations are sufficient to contain comfortably five hundred inmates: The dedication was informal, the more imposing ceremonies being omitted on account of the death of Gen. Rawlins, who was a member of the Board of Managers. Gen. Butler, of Mass., and President of the Board of Managers, delivered the ad-. dress, as follows. Friends and Fellow-Citizens :—ln be halt of my associates, the Board of Mana gers, I bid you welcome to the National Home of the disabled soldier in Wiscon sin. [Applause.] Welcome, welcome, frienus of the soldier. I trust you will be ever held very 'welcome here. Here in this magnificent building pra vided by the liberality of the General Government of the United States for the maimed, and disabled defenders of the country. This is but one of the institu tions by which the Government is en deavoring to carry out the protniscs which we made to the soldier during the war; that when the war was over he should be provided for; and here I you have the evidence of the care of the Government. I wish every soldier, and every soldier's friend, to un derstand that Ibis institution is not a charitable institution, except in fhe very noblest meaning of the phrase. The sol diers of the country have earned this by their valor and sufferings, and it belongs to them. More than chat—it comes from them—the very. ,funds appro priated by Congress for this building come from the stoppages, and tines, and forfeitures of the deserter, . and thus the bad soldiers are compelled to make the homes for the good ones. I[Applause.] Therefore let no soldier coming here understand that he is coming to an alms house. He is coming to his own home, earned richly, earned by him, and iti is his forever, with the single condition that he shall so conduct himself in it, that it indeed shall be a home for himself, and others. That is the only condition we impose. Such Is the only discipline we moan here to enforce. We desire to have the soldier realize that there Is no discipline or law for gov erning here that shall do anything more than keep order and good, conduct for the welfare of all. It has not been thought, fellow-citi zens, prover on the part of the Board of Managers that we should, at this time, make any considerable demonstration of ceremonies in the formal dedication 'of ,his hall. There are memories so sad connected with the hour—sad to our selves—that seem to forbid it. Death has twice entered the Board of Managers and taken away it% most valued members. The first and eatliest pioneer of this en terprise of benevolence, him to whom you owe to-day, citizens of Milwaukee, the tact that this:institution is here to beautify and grace your city; your late, beloved fellow citizen,Col. Walker, who was-taken away In lle promise of his usefulness as an assoviaP3 in the cause of the the disabled soldier. And now death has again entered our board, and taken one whom we loved and revered as an associate, and to whom .the whole country gave greatful — tribute for his services, the late Secretary of War, Gen. John A. - Rawlins. In view.of our own and the nation's bereavement, it would seem fitting that there should not be anything more than the sober festivities belorging to this oc casion, when the w a bole nation is bowed in grief at the loss 8f that patriot, soldier and Christian statesman—the friend of Liberty and Equal Rights all over the world—who, with 'his dying lips, pro claimed his devotion to the cause of Freedom to all mankind. Gov. Fairchild, Gov. Smythe, Matt. Carpenter and others, made short speeches, when the flag was raised, and a-salute fired. The grounds were much admired by the distinguished guests from abroad: Fair at Altoona. (By Telegraph to the Pittsburgh Gazette.) ALTOONA,, Pa., *September 28.—The first annual exhibition of the Altoona Park Association is a magnificent dis• play, and the fair a grand success. The entries were far beyond the expectations of the managers. The floral display is admitted by good judges to be the finest ever seen in Western Penntryiyania. The entry of stock ' embreeefettie finest the country produces. „lit. Brat -Autos races three horses were, entered for the premium of fifty fitillarst* gentlemen* driving horse, sulky or wagon; best three in five, won by McCartney's daprde gray. Time: first heat, 3:263;; .second; third, 3:03. Three horses are entered for the grand trot on Thursday for a punie of 1760; time to be below 2:30. - The track is admitted by old jockeys to be the beet in the State. POLITICAL New York Republican Convention— Speculations as to the Nowlin es—Pith of tile Resolutions to be Adopted. (By Telegraph to the FRU:burgh Gazette.l SYRACUSE, September L'S —The hotels are crowded with delegates to the Repub• lican state Convention, which meets to. morrow. Horace Greeley has been here, and is strongly supporting the nomina tion of Gen. Frank Sigel, for Secretary of State. Mr. Greeley will not, however, attend the convention. It is said Sigel has telegraphed that if is name is used in the convention, be w uld rather have it for State Engineer. It is expected that the business of the convention will be completed tomorrow. ! John A. Grin. wold will be its permanent President. LATER —Geo. W. Curtis is now called for Secretary of State, and Gen. Sigel for Treasurer. - ridnight —"'" Itfor Midnight —The platform to-night will be substantially as follows: In favor of equal suffrage to all pfiaple, without distinction of race or color; in favor of the filfteenth amendment; sym pathizing with all oppressed people everywhere; sympathizing with the people of Cuba in their , efforts to relieve themselves from the yoke of a government in which they ; have no representation, and urging that whenever, In the opinion of the administration they h we establish( :d their status as a belligerent power they be recognized as such by our Govern ment.a Also that when t ey have achiev ed theirini ependence and desire an nexation to the Unit States, they be so annexed; in - favor of the payment of the national debt is full in coin, and denouncing all schemes or pre, texts for repudiation in every form; de nouncing corrupt legislation • and corru ptionists, and repudiating all Republicans who join with Demo crats , to pass corrupt measures ; denouncing the election frauds perpe: trated last fall, and charging the Demo. crats with being responsible far them; denouncing the Democratic party fcr its opposition to all measnres for preventleg such frauds, and Gov. Hoffman for his signature to such corrupt measures. The following is the ticket as indicated by the sentiment prevailing at this time: Secretary of State,,Geo. W. M. Curtis; Comptroller, James 0. Putnam; Attor ney General, Charles Andrews; Treasuer, T. J. Chatfield; State Engineer, Franz Sigel; Canal Commissioner, ' Stephen Tbayl; State Prison Inspector, John R. Vance; Judges`of Appeals, Woodruff and Mason. I=l Labor Reform Cotiventiou—New Ticket In the trield. WORCESTER, Mass., September 28. The State Labor. Reform Convention was attended by two hundred and eighty delegates, representing all the •counties except Dukes and Nantucket. The main Purpose of the Convention was the formation of a new political party In the interests of the working men. Resolutions were adopted de nouncing all laws creating distinctions In favor of color, condition, nationality, or pursuit; in.iisting upon lle reduction of the hours of labor at the public ox pause, to eight hours per day; demand ing of all candidates for office a pledge to support a law prohibiting manufacturing corporations employing females and minors over ten hours per day; favoring the taxation of all bonds and securities; opposing the ktitroduc.tion into the country of a sandlot race to de grade and cheapen labor; and asserting that the recognition:of the claim of the bondholders that the national debt is payable in coin only, is a clear repudi ation of the national faith. The following nominations were made: Governor, E M. Chamberlain, of Boston; Lieutenant Governor, James Chattawav, of Springfield; Secretary of State. S. B. Pratt. of Randolph; Treasurer, N. W. Stoddard, of North Bridgewater; Attor ney General, Charles. Cawley, of Lowell; Auditor, Joseph L. G. Lines, of Haver hill. None of the gentlemen named have been prominent in political matters._ The action of the convention is not like-. 13 , to make much change in the present political aspect of the State. Republican Meeting in Bedford, Pa. BEDFORD, Pa , September ?S.—The Republican meeting here is large and enthusiastic. Senator Sigham made an able and eloquent speech. Scull's nom• ination for Senate was unanimously ap voved. CHICAGO State Fairs—Man Killed—one Newspa per Defunct, and Two. Others to Spring, trout its Ashes—Corn Crop Injured by Frost. tar •felegraoh to the rittsburat. Gazette.l CHICAOO, September 28.—Faibred by good weather, the Illinois aud Wisconsin State Fairs are in the foil tide of success. Entries at the former Fair will number four thousand, and every department Is well tilled. At the latter. Fair articles are arriving in quantities beyond any former precedent. The attendance at both Fairs is very large. A Norwegian carpenter, named Chris. tian Oieson, thirty.two years old, was instantly killed this morning by falling from the fifth story of a building on which he was at work. The Office and material of the Abend.. Zertung newspaper is still in the hands of the Sheriff. It is now stated that two daily 'papers, in the German language, both to support the People's Municipal ,Ticket, - wiil i spring Lout the ashes of the defunct sheet. Frosts have occurred in various por tions of this State, in some instances se• rionsly injuring the corn crop, which is generally two or three weeks behind in rowth. CaWorld& Items. C By Telegraph to the Pltteburgh Gazettei SAN FRANC/SOO, Sept. 23.—Ex-Secreta ry Seward returned here to day. His progrese through the Southern. portion of the State Was an ovation,. He sails for Mexico on Thursday. Numerous tires nave occurred in the city during the past few days, causing great destruction of property. ,"The first rail on the Truckee and Vir glide Railroad was laid to-day. Work on Sutro tunnel commenced yesterday. At the cricket match today between the Tied Stocking Eleven of Cincinnati, against all California Eleven, Red Stock- ings scored in one innings 118, to 79 in two innings by all California, winning the game by long odds. NEW YORK CITY [By Telegranh to the I'Rttir;h uarette.J NEw i or.K, September 28, 18459 The New York State Tobacco Manu- facturers' Association to day adopted resolutions in favor of raising the price of manufactured tobacco. The steamer Westphalia, from Ham• burg, arrived to day. The Committee appointed by the Gold Room to adjust the accounts of Friday last, have been busily engages all even ing at the banking house of Jay, Cook 'it Co. The work cannot be completed to night, as statements' have yet been furnished by only about two hun dred and fifty Out of the three hundred members of the Ex change. The work of adjustment is proceeding oh, the basis of 185 for all contracts made on Friday, except those of Belden & Co., whose accounts have been thrown out, and who are gen egallyspoken of by the brokeris as None • up." Very few persons outside of the Committee are present. and there is no excitement whatever. as talked of A majority of the brokers adjusted their accounts before the Committee of the Gold Room to-night, withodt asking any abatement. The statement of Heath & Co. was received. Smith, Gould, Mar tin & Co. called on the Committee and stated that their account would be sent in immediately. The Committee are still engaged at one o'clock. Points of Fact lathe Cuban Business A letter rom Washington says: The course of the managers of this cause in New York and in Washington is disgust ing. They hesitate at no misreprescnta: tion, manufacture accounts of battles, originate dispatches to incense Spain, in short stop at nothing which will involve this Government in trouble. Their deal ings are far from what should character ize- the leaders of such a movement as they claim theirs to be. Further, nothing is more remote from the thought of the administration than to seek war with any power. Nothing but Circumstances clearly involving the honor of the nation will bring it about. Presi dent Grant is, within the proper applica tion of the term to national affairs, for peace. All branches of the Government are bending their energies to reducing expenditures, collecting the revenue and paying the debt. The results of this policy are just beginning to appear, and the people are everywhere rejoicing over a real success in public retrenchment and in the steady redaction of the debt. A mere declaration of war, or even an active preparation in view of the possibil- ties of war, would immediately destroy the whole work thus far accomplished - . . There is one feature of the Cuban ness which has attracted but little - atten: Lion. The information which the Gov ernment has upon the subject proves that a very large majority of the Americans engaged in the movement de ex-Confed erates. This is true alsa of the parties op erating in New York. The whole affair is little more than an old fashioned filibustering expedition, and has few other claims to the recognition of the Govcrnment than had those bands of marauders which were so popular at the South.. before their rebellion gave them work to do at home. The Magnetic Spring in Michigan The "Magnetic Spring' . at St Louis, Michigan, is now entirely a myth, not a speculative job, if we may iu ilge from the accounts. The spring is at St. Louis, Gratiot country, north of St. John, which is on the Detroit and Milwaukee ailway. The Grand Rapids Eagle says: The accommodations at St. Louis are passable and the charges not over a dol lar - a day. The hotels and boarding houses full, and their is an increasing demand for additional facilities. During the last week there were about one hun dred inva!ids there from different sec tions of the country. The company own ing the well have erected a bath house containing six rooms for the use of which a moderate fee is charged, the water is free to all, and quantities of it are carried oil daily. There seems to be no doubt of the powerful properties of the water. Cer tain it is that it is a strong diuretic, and for all diseases of the kidneys it gives quick relief. Mr. Ilike was there a week and returned feeling better than fora long time previous. The water is I very pure, clear, cold and delightful to drink and excellent for washing and bathing purposes. It has many of the properities of the noted chalybeate waters of Europe, those at Brighton, Vichy and Kissengen. Of its electrical or magnet lad qualities, there is no donbt. The discovery of this spring is an event in the history of this State, only equalled in importance by the discovery of the silt wells. _ How .. Professor Agassiz Confounded a Mayor. The oration of Professor Agassiz upon the character of Humboldt, delivered in Boston recently, reminds us of an anec dote never yet put in print. A pompous Mayor of a western city said to him that he had himself been deeply - interested in science, but ' the pressure of business had prevented its purse t. "I became a banker, sir, and I am what I am." The style of grandeur in which the words were uttered is indescribable. Agassiz immediately recited his own early history; how his- father had provided a place for him in a , bank on his leaving college; how he had begged first for one year more of study, then for another, and when he got a third his fate was fixed. "And, air. W.," said Agassii, , "if it had not been for that little firmness I should to-day have been nothing but a banker." Somehow the Mayor looked rather fool ish. .• • - • —The International Union locomotive firemen are holding thair forifth annual convention in Cincinnati. Forty dele. gates are in attendanoe. The proceed ings are profoundly secret. —There was a light frost in Richmond, Ya., last evening. Reports from the tobacco growing regions say , the frost Is is light there, and the to ba cco is not damaged. 1333153 NUMBER 225. GENERAL NEWS. lowA is sending large herds of cattle to winter in Southern Illinois. Wl'mix the last three years seven per sons have been killed in going into men agerie cages and facing lions and tigers. THE latest local sensation in New York is that of a conductor on the -Sixth Avenue Railroad who is said to be worth several millions, more less. Beartimorm, Pa.", a number of Eu ropean capitalists are negotiating for the purchase of lands in the Lehigh Valley, on which to erect extensive iron works. SOMEBODY reports the following as Humboldt's opinion of Bayard Taylor : "Of all the men I ever knew he has trav eled most, and knows least of the coun tries that he has visited." THE Methodist Episcopal church in Clinton, lows, is to have a bell which will weigh two thousand pounds or over. The people are subscribing for it by cents and fractions of cents per pound. If the bell should weigh four thousand pounds, subscribing - one cent will give $4O towards it. . OUT of the ten men under arrest at Jackson, Mississippi, for the attempted rescue of Col. Yerger,. seven are ex•rebel :Virginians, enlisted at Richmond. One of the soldiers' wives implicated knew Mrs; Verger -before the war. Seven thousand dollars were to be distributed among the conspirators. A SLANDEn CASE is on trial before the New London county, Ct.. Superior Court, the parties being the Rev, Harris Howard and Gilbert B. Allen, both of Ledyard. It is charged that Allen said he "wouldn't go to hear the old mutton head preach," or something of that sort, and Mr. Howard sues him for defamation of character, laying his damages at $5,000 . : Mn. Hmax ARNOLD, . living near Kal amazoo, Mich., a few days 'since' issued invitations to the poor childriPr of that city ' just outside the village,s'and would give them fifty bushels of peaches: This liberal offer was generally accepted, and many of those who are unable to purchase fruit for once had their wants supplied without price. DA2STEL WEBSTER once wrote, after continued provocation, to an editor who accused him of not paying his debts: "It is true that I have not always paid my debts punctually, and that I owe money. One cause cf this is that I have not pressed those who owe me - for pay. As an instance of this, I inclose your father's note, made to me thirty years ago, for money lent hits to educate his &fps." Tim venerable Anna Bishop, famed as a vocalist in antediluvian days, has been rusticating among the bones of the mas todons and other fossils who mete totem. poraries, on the Hudson: She says she will stnz no more in public. In her pro fessional capacity she has traveled quite around the globe, and at one time, after a shipwreck in the Indlim Occan, journey. ed fourteen hundred miles in an open boat. .A GREAT fire has been raging for the past three weeks, in the Cypress Swamp, in Sussex county, Del., and forests, fences, houses, barns, corn-fields and • pastures have been destroyea. Nothing but a good soaking rain can stay the pro gress of the flames. Nearly a million of bushels of huckleberries grew in the swamp last year, and the Sussex Journal says there will not be one hundred' bushels next year. Ditching has been resorted to in some places In order to save houses and barns, but such a body of fire, when the earth is parched and dry, is really unmanageable. A SENSIBLE suggestion is made by an English druggist, whose professional ob servation has show that many lives which might be saved are annually lost through ignorance. He proposes that, in addition to the warning label "poison,"aon all packages containing dangerous sr b stances, sold at drug stores, there should.' -alWays be printed or inscribed the com mon names of the proper antidotes for each class of poison. In almost every case, if tie - knowledge of these antidotes were immediately available to those first informed of accidental or intentional poisoning, they would be used before a physician could be snmmoncd, and the chances of success would be infinitely improved by the saving of time. - A WASHINGTON special states that early on Friday morning last Secretary Bout well received a dispatch from Jay Gould, asking the -loan of $BOO,OOO in currency, on - collateral security of bonds, at the same time calling the Secretary's atten thin to' the fact that he (Gould) was the President of the Erie Railroad. He gave as a reason for this singular request that the Erie road was now engaged to heavy improvements in Ohio, and that the currency was needed to pay the hands, who would otherwise go unpaid, a calam ity, in the view of Gould, (in conse quence of the great dissatisfation it would produce,) which would be injurious on the eve of an election, especially when it became known that the l'reasury had any quantity of currency locked up. Gould made other efforts to obtain cur rency, but Secretary Boutwell did not deem it proper to furnish capital for specu lation on the present condition of affairs in Wall street. SUPERINTENDENT ICKNNEDY, Of New York, calls attention to the doings of a well-dressed young man who has started a nice little trade of his own. This gen teel youth reads the • newspapers, and whenever he hears of a case of myste rious disappearance" gets a description of the missing person and calls on the family, representing himself as a detec tive, and gives bogus information of the lost one, for which be wants to be 'paid. Mr. Kennedy makes the following re quest, which people will do well to heed: "In order that the operations 'of this swindler, or any of his class, may be speedily terminated, the friends of miss ing persons are respectfully requested when any such representation is made by an unknown person, accompanied by a demand for, or intimated expectation of receiving reward or compensation for the information; to cation the nearest police man, who will bring him to this office to have his statement tested."