l)c 2cffcvsonian, THURSDAY. JULY 27, 1865. Col. Ilannura of the Luzerne Union lias associated with himself, Walter II. Hibbs, formerly editor of the Carbon Democrat. jMr. George P. Ileim, of this Bo rough, has sold, his Grocery Store aud buiding to Amos Labar and Shumau "Wagner. The President has changed the sen tence of Mudd, O'Laughlin, Arnold and Spauglcr, convicted of complicity with the assassins of President Lincoln. They have been sent to the Dry Tortugas for life, instead ot Albany Penitentiary. -p- Our townsman Charles Bortre, Esq., while on his way from Philadelphia to Lancaster, was robbed of about 811,800. lie had collected his money together and was on his way to tho "West to invest it lie had his money in large bills in a small package, which he was carrying in his coat side pocket. He fell asleep between Philadelphia and Lancaster, and when he awoke near the latter place, he fouud he was robbed of all of his money. lins is a severe ana sad loss to jir, Bortre, and one which, perhaps, can on ly be comprehended by a like experience. ISone can be too careful of their valuables. A meeting of the Union State Commit tee of Pennsylvania was held at Harris burg on Wednesday of last week. It was presided over by Simon Cameron, the Chairman, and was attended b7 nearly all the members. The Committee resolv ed to call a Uuion State Convention to meetatllarrisburg-on Thursday, the 17th of August, to nominate candidates for Auditor General and Surveyor General of the State. The session of the Commit- ice w; ?as pleasant and harmonious, and af- tcr the adjournment the members were entertained by Gen. Cameron at his pri vate residence. . i . E-ST'The dialogue purporting to have taken place between President Johnson and Senator Sumner, published in the Pcmocratic popers, is a fancy sketch en tirtly. No such a conversation was ever lield. Mr. Sumner has not been in Washington since President Johnson took the cath of office. This fact conclusively xefutes the whole story. But the fabri cation hardly needed so direct a proof of its groundlessness. It bore on its face the marks of falsehood. Sumner is not a Ijcorish simpleton nor is'Johnson wont to ape the deportment of a surly hack dri ver and none but a thick-skulled cop-j-erhead would pin his faith to a story which presented these gentlemen in a manner so foreign to their real character istics. 67th Eegiment. This Regiment is gradually returning Lome It was expected that the mem bcrs of it belonging to this County would return in a body, but circumstances di not favor such an arrangement. Hence they return scattering. A few coming heme on each of the last five or six days Thc llegiment has seen much service and acquitted itself well. It participated in the battles of Bunker's Dill, Winches tcr, t edar Creek. I ishcr's Hill, Peters Larg, Five Porks, &c. Peter Marsh, of this place, who succee ded in enlisting many men in said Rcgi ment, and who went out as Lieutenant, now returns as Lieutenant Colonel. We say welcome home to all our brave and faithful boys, and may no future mergency arise to render further sacrifice cn your part in behalf of your country. lour work is thorougly done. Stroudsburg Mills. The Hosiery and Woolen Manufactory, which C. Pi. Andre has for several week been using his endeavors to get establish ed in this place, may be regarded as fixed fact. The stockholders met on Tuesday, the sth mst., and organized the Company by the election of the following named persons as officers : President Stogdell Stokes. Treasurer C. D. Prodhead. Clerk Charles R. Andre. Directors Thomas W. Rhodes, Eman uel G. Miller, Joseph Dusen berry, Wm. P. Wintcrinute, John Smith, Robert Huston. Immediate steps will be taken to build the house, which is to be 30 feet by 80 fect, and two stories high. The lot se an th whe lected on which to erect the building is ceiv ictwcea Wallaces' and 11. S. Staples' nores. 1 his is an enterprise worthy of the al- cntion of moneyed men ; as such cstab Jshments iu the ast usually net from 25 jcr cent upwards, and everything there -5 hher than here. We understand tnat "mq. little stock yet remains - to be sold. a Seven-Thirties were subscribed for on the 24th inst to tho amount of 810,213,300. Mason Brothers, New York, an nounce as in press, to be ready Septem ber 1st, a new collection of Church Mu sic for Choirs, Singing Schools, Conven tions, &c., to be entitled "The Praise of Zion." It is by two new authors Solon Wilder and Frederick S. Daven port j and the publishers, who have had great experience in such matters, and whose judgment is rarely at fault, ex press great confidence that it will prove extraordinarily attractive. An import ant feature will be its presentation of number of compositions from distinguish ed foreign authors, as Neukomm, Novel lo, and others, as well as from American favorites, among whom Chas. Zeuner is fully represented, all of which are, now first minted from the original manu- sm-intc Hnhiil mW Sl.fiO. Tim nnh- J ,. , ... ,r , c ... usiicrs win .euu an auvauco copy ui una book to any teacher or choir leader, post- paid, for one-half of the retail price. - The Unionists ot New Jersey held their State Convention at Trenton on Thursday last. General Judson Kilpatrick, of Sus- sex couuty, was elected President, and wauu5 1U v,l wM stitutional amendment, were adopted. A resolution in favor of black suffrage B tabled. Marcus L. Ward, A. G Cattell Hl rr;inofr.-nL- worn nrpconfnrl twin ULHiiii ixii it.. w w f.ww-w . r, mt . ii . . uuu ffiissncu uu -uc luuim uauv lu Marcus L. Ward, who was the Union can- didate three years ago, when Governor Parker was elected. Our Jerse' bors seem determined to put their ncijrh- littlc State right on the record next fall. "Wait a Little." Our Democratic friends who are for sup porting Andrew Johnson because he is "op posed to the radicals" and is "a good enough Democrat" lor them, appear now to nave much to say about the way he disposed of the assassins. A little while ago they were maae a stirring spceeu. a twica ui i- which they are enrolled, or go beyond the end ot it, and when one picKs a quar- nauiu iu uuuusrauuu, uu ia. Marqh nf TT t i olutions fully endorsing the Administra- the limits of the United States, with the rcl he gets.a stab, and is off at once. opinions have confirmed the judgment of - ; ; ' , M V , r,;e J!,a tion of President Johnson, denouncing intent to avoid any draft into the military Country Gentlemen. the Secretaries of War and the Treasury, .n.;, -M, ,nn nnd .1,. or naval service duly ordered, shall be : on which this action has been ordered. t v t r it - sure lie wouu mow ineiuiiiuary commission evuiy paiLnuu a uu cuuniry got on whu skv hi"h, and send the accused to a civl out them when their help might have court for "a fair trial." He was too good a Democrat to countenance the proceeedings brought about by the willfulness of Stanton, and he was going 10 restore the habeas corpus put a stop to militar' commissions, and all that sort of thing. Wait till it comes the President's turn to act, said tbey. Well, we have waited, and we have seen what he has alighting in the timber known as the dene, and how he did it. If there is anything "13ig Woods," and there is every praba in his manner of doing things that pleases our bility that they will pass through and be- Democratic friends in an especial manner, they have an extraordinary way of appear ing joyful over it. 7""""' The Beport of the Iransactious of the x eun.ynania ocate .igncui urai society, for the years 1SG1 '02 and '63, has been published in an octavo volume of over It contains a great - - i nine uunurea pages. i contains a great deal of truly valuable information. D the re- mong the important matter are ports on tne Agricultural college ot Pennsylvania, of whifih Dr. W H Allon 1 - l . l m j - - " - v 1U1TV "."a'u r"l iS AucPa.; on the Organization of Colleges for Agn- tj" culture ana tne iuecnanic Arts, and tho r it tt , i Oi i r -loco I crops of the Lmted States for 1863.- mi; nuuiiuiai juiic''u. wuicn nas a strone: bodv of Professors and tennhprs. L J ' is in thriving condition, and promises to r -..v.. l . - , turn out every year a strong corps of far mers, lully masters of the practical science of cultivating the land and mak ing two blades of grass grow where only one had previously been produced. The State Agricultural Society, we per ,:n uia ti- lo.i. , 1 -1 ... asziiT ; r,?r2 t '6th d.nr .. 1 . ole'TflmlnLfTrntdistiE under the following general heads- Hntflo cjicnn rilncinni. 1 1 n i- , aa : v w a.i,u uiuoiuujj uuiaes auu muies, lour divisions ; sheep, swine and poultry, six divisions ; agriculture and manufactures dairy, field, and forest : fruits, flowers and designs ; household and manufactures, and" household arts, painting, and penm wares displayed by tradesmen and mechan ics : silverware, nianns sonimr timni.;..nn &C. and winfnr rrnnc ml, r y - - . w . V. V. JU. O. tl till Ul I speed between blooded horses of repute tx-;11 fol- 1 -i .i i , F . "T.r.y Piaceontie third day of the exhibition. vi7. Tr,nrcri :n x.i. i ... . : r 28th. " r 1 j-uuiouuv, uculkiuii r xium vuuuery. Tr.iA t)vi potatoes Luring the night he sold his load and . - A ' while in the market settling with the purchaser a man stand take thewa-on furthr nn Kon and drove off IK,- -i w j j i- . . rr AS SOOn as the theft was mad3. knmvii word was sent to P.WRnT" aud diliVfintRi.ni.nl,.- u. r n las? we KMrulrfM ste This , rtr fi. 71 . J' tiii- in ik si i n rr nrnnniitT i run w ui I . .in i. Tin in nnrt ,am.mi nn ? on rnhhprioa fT.n i. I . wva auu UU1JU time 001 ln a i0DS rno nor,i- i . lhe establishment was a valuablA nnn On Tiipsdnv niirlif Inef n .1 Commission, has bp.p.n ilottn-nntnA Urr civilians ? dnv Allon kh1 1? n . . . "-o a musu uunug , , --.fautu ujf nut. . , ..v... jjuuvuiuui IjUUneCllCUt, fcjCnt 10 I 7fn S'imiinl robbery was committed, by which one of 1 sidctit to proceed on a tour of obser- Moore, of La. They were escorted by Dowin" born in New YnVt ' Nnl "? our citizens lost a valuable team of horses v!on trough the Southern States. He about three hundred men well armed and 17G1 'james Birh-nn h;rtlmli and a wagon. Mr. Abraham Morrell, of wul11 7atc,h thcf working of emancipation, provisioned for six months. Generals known, May 17G4-Willh, llXhin? JfSlmVwen- 10 WMhinJSton Mar. l? 'h the condition Hindman. and Pee, also Gov. Murrah, born in Maine, 1764 A h . t ! ivui, xiuw iurs. witn a toaa or nntntoa " uiuuks, auu me uiness oi tne stnoQ uau icit several navs nrnvmns being valued at 81I000.-Zon 07 v - W0 - Lo farmer. xu uuiiuk ior ou,in uieardhp. d ennnfn ouji,, juaieaa or "Oil." was "Rrrnnfr" of depth of 760 fect.. Hard on Sneaks. No small nuuiber of able bodied men have left the limits of the United States, or have dogged about from town to town and state to state to avoid . the dreaded conscription. Many of these left family and property behin'd them with some in definate idea that they would return and enjoy both as soon as "the storm blew o ver." In every case these men were sneaks and cowards, who were willing to live under the forfeiture of that respect from others which they could not feel for them selves A man who is not willing to dare for the country he lives in and the gov ernment that protects him, is unworthy of any of the rights of citizenship and ought to be tabooed m all decent society. This was the opinion of Congress. On the 3d of March, 1865, Congress passed the following : "All persons who have deserted the military or naval service of the United States, who shall not return to said ser- Tice or report themsclves to a Provost Marshal within sixty days atter the pro 1 . . 1 sv .'.Till clatnation nerematter mentioned, snau be deemed and taken to have voluntarily relinquished and forfeited their rights to become citizens : and such deserters shall be forever incapable of holding any office of trust or profit under the United btates 0r of exercising any rights of citizens thereof j and all persons who shall desert e mi itary or naval service, and all per sons who, being duly enrolled, shall de- the jurisdiction of the district And thc President ina inc rrcsiuenc is ucreuy aumunzuu Z I I ... 1 I. u. and required forthwith, on the passage nnrfc w.iclnj Miia .irtf f rt lectin tic Trnnlnm ntinn cnr. ..v, .vv. r.Vw,uu.....vu ting forth the provisions of this sectiou, ,u nuuuuiauuu uib j. iwiuuui 10 iv:- i l . . -f l " 1 a il IV K i j - n II i , . 1 quesieu io noiiiv-aii ueseriers return iur TOitnin civf tr iinva no nfnrnaoiil f nor Mint? i mf j i 7 j s i;i ho nnn nnpri nn nnndif.inn nt rfttnrn. ing to their regiments and compaines, or to such oilier organizations as they may 11 " "I , ."1.1 Till do assigned to, until tney snau nave ser- tnr1 C ri n nnr? r nf fitVin nnnnl ir flirtlrl original-lcrm wlajw wuuu .v kw rm Ot enlistment. The President's proclamation in accord ance with the above was issued March 10th, and the sixty days grace expired on the 10th of May. Now that the war is over, hundreds of these poltroons will come sneaking back as they sneaked a- wajP Let them be marked and not al owed to exercise any rights of citizen ship. They deserve the reprobation of oeen or some service ; let us show them that the country does not want them now. The Minnesota papers give gloomy ac- counts ;of thc ravages of the grasshoppers m that State. lorsakmg the" prairies I- , tr.rt1" U1US a"u yond it, and sweep the southwestern part ot the otate. In the counties ol Itenville, Brown, Blue Earth, Nicollet, Le Sieur and Scott, there will not be an average of vest, and hardly be enough vegetables left for seed. Corn has hccn iesscinjured than other crop aQ(i whwt h f. rprari r; In Heniierson. thrn ? L - nn,i iQn 0j ,l n i ri n nniinrcnru t ii nrn i r ntri i rr n -- i n r f- i nr troofi i0r, nr1 fU nj.nil Xn, -x ' I VA. kWU ili Vm UUU LUC llillVCU IIJL. I.t " I I II I II. rowful tale of the desolation of the plague. Currant bushes and young fruit trees and shrubb f eve kind h fc j , . r. J.. . ' oeen stnppea ot loiiage, but ot bark also. In some fields of wheat they have enter e(1 thcy have simly cufc ft ' ea tnev nave simniv cut a Rtrnirrht. swt , 1.1 , , - . nf BPi rnAa ':jfl, ,u 1, i J , r. . . .o" ii iuiu iuiuuuu' uiuiiu LU the d deviating from a di- j i .i . - i iuul iiuc. mill imiviii"' nip rntnmnr or titi root lino inri Innnino x.r.nr,1A .. I ' mi -P . fiiiinnii 1 nor n nnnf if u T""vlL, m and loosest aiuuii ouviM iu uiu warmest earth during August and throuch autumn, and the number laid by a single grass- the Court and jury were manifestly with hopper certainly reaches into fifties or her from the beginning, and nobody sup hundreds. As soon as the earth warms posed that she would be convicted ofarim- in the snnnir thev hatch out mnMirino- .. .... 1 in about two months, when they strip . u 1. ?d-id, ..a icgs-of skin, and come out schooner-rigged and t... ? J rUUULI' " , IO"J-e,gnt. ot exposure l" ! prepares them for their journey. 'lhe Pemalc Medical College of Penn-r . i sylvania, now in the sixteenth vear of it? t iu uiu msHJuuiu year ot Its . i. fJ --" U1 iucau has just graduated class Jfacthe Government has resolved to en- will find enough to do. The Philadel. lub tilUD LIlGV PUia North Amerirnn jivi fTiom nr-n W - I , S?me S1? or, eiSufc "reSu,ar female phy SlCian? in thnt Piftr whnco .loll., 1 . .. " I Uiomno ,ti (i.f ... i -,- i T"; Jfi f uauy practice is equal to that of the average nf mno physicians. r -. . o " nn n i ai i -, , . 1 yun mjuurZj naving resigned hisl I 1 . I for restoration down and h., Z I o??J nf T"' 't' WM .., .. .. . "" wa"uu, infnnd to kuo tho h 1. r .7" " jur.ua. amount. ru aj ' " ' bn a of . ce. xhe wag- toi n-nn tnnn m mm i ivt ni rx 4. 1. 1 . ... " made thR milR In twn 4" ;?. . seconds' the man ran lfcin five minutes twenty seconds, and the horse's time was f.wn m?n,,f,n ti;rfw.M j IT was n a i-. - . il was begun last week m to Unnnrf. " I ri WB u" Richmond by ttarfn of the Tredegar It Ford's Theatre. Tho Secretary of War having occupied Ford's Theatre has informed the latter's counsel that he recognizes his right to to compensation, and after a careful in vestigation of the value of the building has rented it until the 1st of February next for one thousand five hundred dol lars per month with the privilege of pur chasing it for one hundred thousand dol lars, the price agreed upon with the Christian Commission, if Congress see proper to do so, if not to return it in good condition. Tho building will probably be needed for a depository of the Rebel archives. Taming Fish. A little girl residing near a pond Massachusetts has succeeded in taming some of the fish bv throwing crumbs of bread, crackers, &c, into the water. The species called perch seem to be the most tractable and docile. One ot them olten takes the end of her finger in his mouth, while another will glide gentily into her hand and turn on one side, aud so re raised mam apparently reposing, till quite tn the surface. The little trirl walks out on a plank sustained a few inch- cs above the water, and before she reach- es the end of the plank the fish may be seen darting rapidly toward their feeding crround. The larger ones, especially, are disposed to drive off the smaller ones, but she keeps order among them by means of a stick with a sewing needle attached to Pugnacious Robins. I - I a mnci. n,,,-nh insfjir. n t in hn-. ii,rerent qualities of the robin, recently I . i - -i t. . ncnc(. ln jsomersec. l'a. it anDears ilslic rown cslt belon-insr to a citi- i n cj n zcu, had a faucy for killing chickens and Virla A ffwr rlnra slnnn wlipn nnsc tvnq I . . . nnrrnrrfifi ir. iht invurnf :ninisi"iri('iir, six or eight robins combiued to close her career. They attacked her in a body, poun cing upon her with great fury, and plant ing their beaks mto her head with a scv- P t.i ..11 I ami r m iinh noiicnrl in not f r inIn I rrn 1 ti fV?,,! ernma TTnnn ihn Inmnbc , frightful screams. Upon the inmates of the house coming to her assistance, the robins retired from the conflict, and the cat es caped under an adjoining kitchen. Not coming out, and' a rather disagreeable smell issuing therefrom in a few days after wards, the floor was taken up, and the cat found dead with her eyes picked out, and other evidences of having been severely Health w:th The Eight Place for a Monument. It is announced that a large force has been sent from Washington to Andersou ville, Ga.j with instructions to properly inter the remains of onr noble soldiers trim r3 1 nrl toIiiIa nnnfinwl ? 4 1i niiinn house at that pIaco. Thc p-1 takes wkh ifc 15j000 headboarda 4to Jark thc restin- place of those brave men : and this fact will, doubtless, suggest the tho't to every mind, that a movement should at once be inaugurated to erect a monu ment which shall hand down to future generations the memory of that noble army of martyrs which passed through such privations and suffering to seal with life itself their devotion to- the sacred cause of liberty. Bull Hun, Antietam and Gettysburg arc to be thus marked. -j " ny shou y should Andersonville bo forgotten ? Ar. Ir. Times. v--. Miss Harris, a young woman employed xn tbe Treasury Department at Washing- ton, who has been undergoing trial for !. i. -i? S j L,1U uiuruur ui one jurrougns, in the Treasury Building, has been acnuit- i-.i. . mi. r. i j i i i tii. ii. i i i i iiii, iuu - xne iact inai sue uiu Kin tne de- censed, who hod hrnL-on o nmm;Cn nf 1 " -y..... vj. uiui - riage with her, was not controverted.- I HO nofonpO OQf Oil mnlnlw nnnn tlin 00 ij n 11111 . 11 1 1 1 ;i 1. 1. 1 1 1' 1 r 1 1 1 w w ynninnr rrt nn 1 riodieal fits of insanity, arising from her fffi,- f "I7i Z-JZr. A physical conditiou. The sympathies of mai intent. 1 . . w. r, .f short. 'y the vicmitj of Salt Lake city. The "T?. " Pi 4 mcy nave never contributed a dollar to the support of the iNational Government, nor have thev. up ... i i . .-. . ' .uus aalc PaiU a renny lor the lands w,ucU tney occupy. In view of these thc lands thcy have appropriated to their -.w.v. onuu uui IUI own use. 1 . A Texas paper stales that thc follow- nf.i -xc r. . . . . -mm I iul: uuuicuL-iaLC tiiiifMMS inir. nnn Antnmn " Ar: i,' " -i " .V iiji iiii..vii.fi. wii I'iiiiAii. w uu r r n inst. Lrens. lii. Kirbv amith. MnariwiAr i ci..iL.. "i n r. . ' anuoiieiDy, aiso the tollowing 1 St - . J ohn C. Breckinridge, Colonel Wood J -"Ti". . rTVu :.. ". on ?reki"Me s accompanied from Car- xj.hi, uiuuauiv irom tneilorida nnnst,. a. n piuauui, mui aptain-uenera , and is now in "aau.a - " stated that thc Governor Cardenas" howeTtnT i ing traitor slaughter, i t nM,:n .J.rr , U1 wnose somiers had been I Tlrnn nt rf-lcrvi . I 7" V"";' , w" l0,0K . roLuS at Alat- amoras, had also arrived at Havana . " - "?nS the past twenty-eight nonce . .,".. J vn.i ra 10,000 persons emigrated to America from Norwnr. Twn.f.lilrda nf (1, l J w j i till V5 1X1 W I 1 1 I C.nnndn flio voot fn tt.:. j c, , fa noted ihat Tiarge-nub rf rf 5 crs one w iv - v wu - VJ I -c$s- Acquittal of Miss Harris. Miss Harris, whose trial for the mur der of Burroughs, clerk in the Treasury Department, has been going on at nasb ington for the last twelve days, was ac quitted on the 19th irist., after the Jury had been absent about ten minutes. The evidence of the murder was conclusive, and the verdict was grounded ostensibly on a plea of insanity, but really on a maw kish sympathy for a beautiful woman, who claimed that she was only seeking re venge for a breach of promise of mariage. The scene in the Courtroom on tho. re ception of the verdict was disgraceful. The announcement was received with loud applause, the waving .of handker chiefs, aud the throwing up of hats. Miss Harris fainted, and was carried from the Court-room in the arms of her coun sel. Hereafter gentlemen must be care ful in their manner of paying attentions to ladies, or they will be liable to be shot at any momcut. Northern Eagle It is understood that proceedings are to be commenced against Ben. Wood, of New York, for the recovery of the lit- tie sum ot twenty-live thousand dollars, which he is said to have received from the late Confederate government. Hon. A. D. lliissel, City Judge, and George Wilkes, of the "Spirit of the Times," will be the witnesses against Mr. Wood, to prove his signature of the receipt. All property of the rebel authorities com- ing within reach of our government is The New York Tribune thus aptly puts the case : Mr. Calvert Comstock, late of the Al- bany Argus has been making a speech, wherein he says : Vl'n ft M11 .Arthnrn Nfofno miiciK nn be uncharitable toward those of the South- I j . JL LI1L( AlUl lUVl II K V(l IVl-t tJUV i cm States who hesitate to admit to the control of public affairs men just emerged from the condition of Slavery." " Good so ! We admit the plausibility of this. It sounds well. Now try it this end foremost : "We, the Southern States, must not be uncharitable toward our Northern brethren who hesitate to admit to the con trol of public affairs men just emerged from the condition of treason." How docs Mr. Comstock relish that ? Thc F approachim "The course clear that a way-faring man need not err In I-nl-inn Jf " It- tnrliAni t 1, 1! iu cutaiug m. Lb luuiuitua tuc uuiiuy n:K i u : 1 i nf'l,XTnf;".11c.. mm 1 r . j.m.m u. co ita,w jwguwj uuu u nujii: iu siii: liiu unvenuon ex- press itself boldly and firmty, on the im- i a " . r r . i portauc questions arising out or oouth- ern reconstruction. President Johnson desircs to known the will of the people. be simply "dumb, driven cattle." to lies- itatc and be silent, when they ought to speak plainly. - Valuable Currency. A broker at Augusta, Ga., has publish ed a tahle illustrating the progressive de elinc of liebel currenc'. At the first is sue of Confederate notes in 1SG1 gold was o per cent premium. (Jn the 1st of ,I.TV fitt TO inn HlO finnl coin wnc mnlsi took V T: " " . . o uiuuu ,l vi M I ii t t ii : r ...... t i ... gold. yi,w ui ijvuu iu uuy 'ji. iu il J 1 1 1 I ( . I . . '. . A female rebel in Canada, who was Sr"V , ' lu v. mii arm clock under her hoop-skirt. j-iiu vair: nn ucaier in ciocks. knowmir her intention, set the clock so that it would strike the alarm just as she wa or A in nr through the Custom House, and . o oflicer was examining her itset up its whr-r, and betraying itself, was captured .0. Geo jj. iicuuui;. ui mo jjouisvine Journal, has come to the conclusion wwy. xu nis. paper ot the zyth Ull. IJU adiS . raukhn Repository says of thcLnrnnl ..L,L:. .V, ,t?snl uion State Conventions -niiOPt ft ji:p.. m, J ot tlie Union party is su to whom it is consirnml rp.isnnr.1,1.. t;m- t " ..v. .iiiiiiv.umH.ll oil UbUlU Ull. Ctrl "I. - II . . ... . ..I - -auu democrat says that, up to this time we have been against abolitiot. Put whats tho use of being against abolitiou when abolition is a fact ? Why advocate a uog s lire when the dog is dead V b The New Bedford (Mass.) Standard core Wn.i.m. t. m j i - j i t 4 ' 71 CT ..ar.e DeiD 'thot'OuShly clean- ed. II 1 1 I 11. 1 ,1 r I umravB uus port snortly tor iN ew 1 ork, and will I w I nrk fimi n.iii n.AL. . .. I 1 l . 1 n . . jduuauij nuu nei 1 She brought only 42 000 and it s "id I. "0,,u uiy v-,uuu .inu ic is said mJ "W UIUIVI Ull UI IIUU1 1 1 V lll'l S I ""j iu iiui luruier uivernooi ownnrs tmr. n.i...m ..!. tnt nnn u,lJ" 41115 wu,lu ovul oau.uuu." TtiaM u..i. v revolutionary pen- sioners ivino- T,omni . " LU Ulil COOk born jn revolutionary pensioner, one hundred and ten years old, died at Cornish, Maine uno i4 Itt ti. c ii. - .1.1 "1 1 1 1 j iiiiiiv inuu ut mu UIU J'jieventh - ' -j vaum v o.unteers, one ot tho ong- .,..1 :.. ir.1 . . organizations, reached Westmoreland aS iuai aim most lm nn nF 'nm,..,-was u. l.iu. lufjiuu 10 OattlO IOr the country. -inc execution ot Mrs. Siimtt omisod intense excitement amnno- th - J"1 w w w " T".lll",a. u aua. xney inamlestcd V0 fniin n fl .1 rn i r - I cnoir, toolings by wearing crape on their in arms, singing soccssion songs, and threat- ening the President of the United States with terrible retribution. The Chicago police captured tho keep- (locli,n.cl! ar11 .vr lt counl tlt n nf ninotv fmii. limine x-i nt which fresh beef are retai ed m the east a n,V It uTLll Z V1" and west is attributed to a combination of the o night last week. Thov 1W1 nvov , .... , m .... j ght last week. Thev had ()rir i sinn.nnnwm.fi, np ;.!..!'. m... : . r"" iu u.h i1." "."""s'"' U1 luiTuiiv uu tuoir per- Interal Revenue receipts since July 1 tl ready amount to $15,301,000. Barnum is out in a. card promising U rebuild the Museum immediately. Six millions will beexpended next week in paying off the 40,000 troops in and about Washington. OCT" According to the ruling ot the. Com missioner of Internal Revenue, the carding of wool is not regarded as manufacture. The Erie Railway Company sold 30, 000 worth of tickets at Elmira depot, bit month. The President's family, including his, two secretaries, when all assembled, will number fifteen persona. Five hundred barrels of yellow anu are stored at Greensboro, N. C, for Southern women to chew. " ' , Twenty-five thousand men are busiTj engaged in pushing forward tho Pacifio ilailroad on the California side. Hay is offered at from five to seven" dollars per ton in the Erie Market. So says the Dispatch. OCT Joseph A. Sears, Jay Cooke.s agent af Port Royal, S, C, announces that he has al ready sold seven-thirties to residents of South Carolina, Georgia and Florida. The appointment of Col. P. C. Ellma ker, of Philadelphia, as U. S. Marshal for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, in place of Hon. William Milward, was officially announced on Saturday. aru at -uSU5ia; a 1 a j. rt Sir Isaac Newton's nephew waa a .cler gman. When he had performed the mr- r.Iaffc ceremony lor a couple he always re- ,useu ,u,e sa 1 "uo oUr y Pr "m " " J "-vmn wuuuuii I n I Kin if " r" I 1a About SoO.000 worth of mutilated and wor 0,11 fractional currency is replaced fey new issues, at Washington, daily. The total amount now in circulation is unwa'rd of 921,000,00a No more of the three cem denomination will be issued. OCT ThciYcw Hampshire authorities arc getting ready to receive at their State Prison- hlty convicts from the national government. The convicts are to beset to work like other prisoners, and the government is to nay s-. dollar a week for the board of each. OCT" The New Hampshire Court has dc open the package and determine whether he I ...III a. I win reueive u or not. xruiiHiiiiary measures arc in pros- pact ior the trial ot Ci.pt. Wirtz, formerly jn cnargc or me Anaersonvnle iMiutary Pri- on. A large number ot witnesses have ah rcadey been summoned, and letters are con- al i c . siamiy receiveu irom :nose wlio posscaa Knowledge 01 tlie cruelties practiced on Un- Ion Pns,Jcrs by this Ilcbel commander. represent that in other portions of the State as we as Richmond, the regular SecpJ sion candidates have been generally succcss- iui. iiiiicouraged by these result--, it is said that the guerrilla chief, Mosby, designs be ing a candidate for Congress. OCT The cholera is making sad haroc in. Turkey and Arabia. No less than 49,00tV of the pilgrims at Mecca have been swept off, and the stree are filled with corpses.' Jjrrn tlmnc-irwl nftl.. II ! 1 t !., , . . .. r j'""- men. nmonir them a s ieik reooripil to hr ' w 1 - - i - - saint. Tlie truth about Andersonlille, and who i to bear the respousibditv for its bloomy re. . SJUiti,y soon 10 bc niatle apparent ... . o J ;Five officers have been sent to atiend to the proper interment of those who sank under its accumulated woes, and afterwards to collect such evidence as can pe obtained, that the" Su," 5CIs au instigators may bc brought to justice. A Switch Club. Twenty women armed themselves with beech switches and therewith soundlv flocr- gcd one Taylor at Eastmanville, Michigan, whoso comtr on with a certain fnmnlf. ilia. pleased these Knight-esses of thc rod. Taj. nr lllllnniliilnln .... .:,.! 1 Hoggish Incomes. The income of John Roe. pork packer, at St It. Louis, is reported for the year 3664, to e 8471,000. The income of Henrv Amea & BrotllLT nnrk n,1ftpr rfnil nnwicinn trnt. crs, for the same time, is rumored to be over --!fnnrn 8VI0?: The Instinct of Reptiles. Tho ITew York Tribune, in a dcsciDtion -w,w,, vf J i iuiuit, in uwuifmuu of thc late destructive fire in that city, says I 1 . - wncn tne -snaices" in Uarnum's Aluseum bo irrnn tn Knm t.nn. c .1 . iih p "inn nuui tim nit;, uiuy jiuiurunjr " immcdiatolv tnrnnil in tho .1; mJ - Mm w M ivllvll V worId office r shelter and protection jhw..mu Before leaving GettTsburg, on the oc casion 01 u,c ,ate celcbratiou, the lultieth, ;""0J,,',,u,a) 'm uauu ui luux-utj- ou.ni i'nisaiiuuuautis, tenuereudonn uurua- the old hero of Gettysburg, thc complt-- mentofa review and also a sereuade,. much to the disgust of the copperheads in the . i ... neighborhood. Thc gold coinage at the United States mint for June amounted to 400,700, alt of which was in double eagles. Thc sil- IT11. niliini r.nv.s. 4?..,. .nnn COO QAH ,v'1 v.uiua"u oaiuu uwu aa vu-iiOVV)! .. 1 1 : i.. n .iii m. "u."a,ir- . C0PP?' UU in cent niccns. S .1.3UU m- 'wo.'cen pieces, and $6,850 in three-ccnf A Dutchman in New York, on seeing' one of the posters announcing the coming of the panorama of "Paradise Lost," and reading this line. "A Rebellion in Hcav- on, suddenly exclaimed 11 11 1 Heaven ! iMein GottI Dat lasts not tare." long now. Onkle Abo ish Neat cattle, on the hoof, can be bought hv Toledo for four cents a pound, prices have i. i : mi : oncmn!? m our citiod for men who will mir- I I ml .. .. 1 lirhnqfl nnil soil nr ronennnh p rntos.