--4 1 Terms of I'nWimtion. Ths Somerset Herald 1, ,.,ibli"l.ed every Wednesday M rub'f -'" ,f annum. If M In advance; otherwise -c is. ( n Invariably 1 chanced, j N salwriptlon will ! dlsoaitiuue-l until all ar ( rvanarcsarcpabi uj.. r.!ui IK-ulecllns to j notify bi when subscribers Jo not take out tbclr pa,ier. will 1 held I ,e "'Tiptl..n. iulerlliers rw" I"-' fr",n I'ostitflce to an other should art" ,ue nc former as writ as the I-"-""' ,,,1,c'- Somerset Printing Company, Hie Of omer set Heralc J MIX I. SCVI J liuslnes Manager. KSTAHLISHED, 1827. VOL. XXI. SOMERSET, 1A AVEDNESDAY, JULY X 187-2. Jill-' Hard truiY I k!t. K. M. KIM M LL will rwntinue to praii. j I Mr.li.-inc, ana ternler his pmcssMiai serve oci to the .iilictis of Somerset and stirroundluu , rountrv. otm-e at the old place, a lew d..rs eai j l l he 1 1 lade Hiaue. uiw.ti.Tl. lTTlJjiMM.K 1 TZ, ATTOUNKY AT i Law. S.Mii.n-t. I'-, will ' prompt attcn , tloUtohUsilli-S entrusted to Ills Care ill S-HIHTSet J and the adjoining counties. OlMce In the Jail t t.utl.Hiiir. J-v - OK ii. Hid IIA K KU tenders his prohssional , ri lew to the cititclis of Somerset mi I ieili- I,, i itnoe In rreidence, one diaf west oi the Hnr- : uci House. jaa.il. To. j 1 K. .1. K. M1LLKK has ieriiinc?itly located ' I 9 b, llerlin lorthe practice ..I his proics:ioii. ittlce opp.ltr iiarlcs Krtsinrcr's More. apr. -a. In tl. HARDWARE. John P. Blyaya Has re-oicued )i Hon a 1 AW J 4 rwuined the practi.-e ol law in Somerset ami ul..ihlnff counties. tel.. 2b. To. NOTICE. AlexamliT II. C.tinith has irflcc in the Keenrder's ottloe. Few Doors Above the Old Stand, I'lMMKL h. COLItoliN, ATTOKNEYS AT J LAW. Somerset, 1'a. t irriee. lu residence l A. J. Collloni. liujt. U!-ly. ' A LENTIN K H A Y. ATTOKNEY AT LA W and dealer in real estate. Somerset. 1'a.. will atieuii to an nusiness vtiirusici 10 ms wire wun promptness ami tidelity. aim. li-ly. V atlo I inn ! A nl olh-rn to his eust..iiiiT.j a ii.l Irini.N a full line of jjoo.li. at the very l..w. yt lirkv?, j Hardware of Every Description, LAW. S.Hnernet. I'a.. lll practice In S.un- ct Kl).t almoin!" e.rtlfltie. All l'llfllli'S0 eil- ti-ii't.Nl to them Mill tie jr..inj.tly altcii.li'il to. auu. li lv. 1M. M. ftU.LlNS. IiKXTIST. S.uicisit. I I I'A. t Iht In tlie front part of jail, up stairs, w here he ian at all tiling lie tnumt prcpannl to ilu allkmilKot work, rai li tillinir. n cuiatinir. ex-Iri.-nii. fce. Artilicial teeth ol all kimlii. ami ol the Ul material. Inrtil. All o)eratiiii war- j rauted. June 7, To. I iihn ii. mil atti;m:y at law. sum. I it vret. lJa.. will priiiptly attend to all l.uin..sii vhtruKted 1a him. M.rticy advaneeil on eillerli.ii : t... ttie ia ait rei.kv, Main trvt. I L T. . j IHHNII. KIMMKL ATTttRNKY AT LAW. ' .intret. 1'a.. will attend to nil hurinus t-u- trusted to his rare in Sunienict and at)oiniiu; itun- j ti.. with ir.iiiiptiiif.- and tidelity. til ce inCuin I UlUm. t h. i. '7U lv. ! u:ox. SAILS A XI) GLASS, j I M.MH.4-II M jirO f All liilltlK,! TIIK BRIDE'H HTORT. I1T T1IOVA8 W MS K50LISH. When I wa. lmt a country lass, now filteen yean a if,, I lived where flow? the thiTjieli through tnead- ow wide and low; ! There flint, when vkiea were N-ndltiif hlua and Miouif tiluwlna- fruc. I MW the rairse.1 little l.iy who went to aehoul with me. Hii lioincspun cvat wa Iraycl and Worn, with JiaUhes eovercj o'er; Hi hat ah, meh a hat a that wai never seen lie- fore. The boya and K'rl. when fimt he came, they fliout ed In their plee, 1 And jeered the ra?;reil little W who went to arhool with me. ' . llix father wan a lah-.rln limn, and mine war l.ljrh- "J1 thc Plinippinpf his sllOll!- lyhorn: . . titrs. "Arm now tor a iiloasant crcn- (iiir..ple held hoth luuiand Mt lu great cuntemiit and ac.ru . , Tin y aid I uliould not Mnp to own a playmate such at he. The liriirlit-ryrd. narj-ed little hoy who went to po1hm4 wlih Die. Yet. ?piteof nil thc fneerf around froiu rhndrcn better drepi, . My heart went out to meet tlie heart that loot within hU lireaKt. : , Hi liaik was foiid, his voire was hw, and str.mre ar It may W, I loved the ram'd little lx,y who went lo -h.. with 1110. ,. "I dare- sar I've lon a very fool-itntlnre a lp-atlicn till.-; lifuteforth it ish iliiii";,"she jMnltToJ( "hut "iinlt'i'il liuy Ix-eu kuowu as tin: Castlu of St. I foulil not help it. Of course Iio'Il ! Aiitrt-los. or Aii'i-lo : and if nnv nn.. tin- " u i iu i tuuinv in- ii i . ufioH, or -illiX'i" j mill II an v oil spend it all ot the public house, and I doul.ts the truth .f the Iffji nd whie shall do without my now oilcloth ;; produced this elianpv of name, th wt're iidtieed drops of caudle crease, lish t-ven then, notwithstandine; a j the Lcfri-lature a resnlutioii d. clar and tin? eiul of a cantlie was found in introri-r accent. It wa9 Dlain hemicht ins the uiialtcralde hostility of Mas- ja pirki t of the suspicious man's ' have taken a high rank in literature. ! sat husetts to the further extension of trowsers .1 - . t I ... il. MiaU . 4II11I. ,,,,, . 'Hlllllll r a""t same period. I. . .. ....II eeution of persons of fjualiiv. ' -. t,:..,. i',.....: , ,.(r. i .1. ...t. i..." i.: :.. Ktriinient in '.M. In Kn-'htnda :n:- i!ar niachirn! was u.-ed, and a full d -jxeriptiori of it may be found in tr.e j Uriti.-h .State Calendar for 170. The : "maiden' of Scotland, which v. r i used for the liehcadin? of .Morton in J.81, was an in-trument similar t" tho.- already i:ientiined, and is stiji Iosid to have J-n brought over from (ermany by the. very man who suf fered bv it. It is still preserved in the liui.-ctiiii of tlie Antiquarian Soci jetyat Kdinbur. Kv-n France jo : j sessed it a earlv as the fifteenth ccri- lhat will be the end of it all. ' And there was a conscious flush on her cheek, as if she had done some- thinjr wron when she rejoined thc Squire in the sitting room. 'W ell," said Squire Tartlet, that ne'er do well gone at last ?" "Yes." "To Stokes' tavern, I suppose." ' "I hojie not, Josiah." I'm afraid it' nast honinn- for" in. How it does rain, to be sure " And Mrs. Partlet kept the secret of the dollar -'bill within her own heart. It was six months nfteawards that the bronze statue of St. Michael is there to convince him of his error, standing with sword in hand just where the iin gel himself stood. During the fierce struggled between oopes and has ; emperors anil rival pones, which dis graced the history of the church dur ing the tenth and eleventh centuries, this castle was the centre of many a bloody encounter. From being a hu man it became a papal castle. Its interior history has never been written, and no man can write it It has been alike the castle and the prison-house of the papacy. Within its walls lano-nished and died a prisoner. Ppo John XI. It heard and tieas- tury, under the name of ' IMoire;'' ami two centuries later the Uofjrtun- Il..t.. .1 . w After the verdict, the pris- lie wrote well, as it was: sometimes ' slarerv in America.. and her fixed de- , ., .-"""WioreDcy oner was identified as one convicted ; for the love of it, at others when he termination to use all legal and con-; ti"ation of richer """'' tn'ln" of burglary several years ago, but wanted a little money ; but he never j stitutional means for its extinction. ! u have na rut'Tf V,' i whose sentence had been postponed J wrote what he might have dono had He supported this resolution in a ! H.vn frttvu nseanItol.ae n i-uniiiuoii uiul ne woiiiu leave xne ue tievoieu niniseii 10 mai kiiki ol siH-ecn winch was pronounced bv tlie : When then f re Tie r it country. This he never .lid, and so, work. He had fine tastes, particularly leading a.iti-slaverr journals to Ik- ! ,...:... .' A ' V 1 J";"!,h nac being adjudged guiltv, that overlook-; in music, lint he gave himself up ed bit of the knife-blade cost him five as a martVr and sacrifice to his aims 3'cars, at hard labor in Sing Sing. jforltalv. He lived almost initial One of the mysteries of a large city j or; his health was poor from the first came out in a trial lor manslaughter, i hut he took no care of it He used The defendant was sttindin? at the ' to moke a frreat'deal. and drank eof- he Squire1 came into the room where ured up the cries and pravcrs of uii- COAL OIL LAMPS. COAL OIL. II KNltYF.SfHKLL. ATT ill K Y A i LA W, And cv.-rvtl.i WH1TI LKAP, CH1MNKVS, UI .n:;iii) lo the Kimp trade. i'a. ith.v iu the Court lloum.. Jan. 11 It. I JAH-VKT HOI SE. 1 he uiidcrsi'nil rcMytruUv inform the puli-! lie Hut lie bar leased this well known hotel in the I kiMull ol Somerset. It in Ills Intent f. .11 to keep' l! 111 a style w iileh he Iioms will irhe s.itislactioii to i all who mav lavor him with their eusti.m. ; Apr 17 :i .ItiilN illl.L ! LINsKhliniL, ' For yearsthey had fotvotten blm, hut when aain I we met, 1 His I0.J.S, his voi, bl. urmle way reuaiiued lu j memory yet ; J They saw alone the man of mark, but I eould only : The brixhtyeU raififed little U,y who went I aetua.1 with me. ; lie had retuctuliered me. It seemed, af I rewt-m-I U red him. Nor lime, nor honor?. In hi uun.l. tlie i herL-lieil past ruuld dim : Y'lmnt? love had rMn to older love, and . to-day yon see "VIM S MKVHiS. V Sotner.t. ln.. will give prompt nttciiti.ai 1 nil business entrusieil t adjoiuitiu e'Unties. 1 Mflce site the residen.v of Kd. ATTOKNKY AT LAW. httciiti.ai to Itis care in Somerset an.l on 1 ni..n street, opim ull. y. i ll'. VAKNISIll.S, i:idSIlES, I'AIXTS IN t)lL ANU IdiY. ANll PAINTERS' GOODS IN GENERAL. DU. A. i. MILLKi:. aflertwehe years' aeflve praillee In SlinnksviMe. has 11. .m 1 rmafiently Iid-hIiI at Si-mersct ..r the prac. l!.... ..I medicine, mid lenders his protcssi-iiia I s-r :-ff l" the eitizciis ot Somerset and M.-iittly. i.n.v in tlie tin shop t.riucrly occiipic.1 t.y i ' A. hiiumcl. where lie eaa Ik consulted at all times, uiile-s prol'.ssi.iually enaiireil. 4"Niht eallK jri.iip;ly answere.!. it.v. 1:;. '71 ly. 1,' KNKri'KK. riiysicl.in an I licntist. lh-rlin. . I'a. Will 0e prompt altemion t- u II eas. s entrusted to Ills care, fllluie mm disrt-west.,1 the 'l:r;tll.T House." same as ocenpi...! hcretolorc l-v lr. I'. f. Musivr. A lare f t. k of have gone awav. -Where."' : "I don't know out West some where, with a colony: And they say Luke hasn't touched a drop for six months." ' "I'm clad of that," said Mrs. Part let. "It won't Iat long," saidthe Squire despairingly. "Why not?" "Oh, I don't know. I havn't any faith in these sudden reforms." Mrs. Partlet was silent : she thought thankfully that after all, Luke had not spent the dollar in liquor. Six months six years the time sped along, in days anil weeks al most before busy little Mrs. Partlet knew tlinl !t ivna minn Tin, Minlilllmvic How it did rain that Xovemlier knii wt t, s.'..,.w t ..i-' IHO-IlT XiitlO aF 1.ttlff tlti.l.ia.iK.il L l...ia i 1 a m . . ers, with hesitating intervals, as itj.rntjn tne far awav KI Horado, w ere between : n.i.ie of your mild vaguely expressed "out West" bv the persistent pattering on the roof, but ! simple Se(iocsseter 1 I "They do say." said Mrs. I'ueking, 1. in ne va j.re.MTving greai red ap- nappy J.eatnee Cenci, whose tragic pies into jelly. history Shelley has made famous. 'W ell, well," quoth he, "wonders The subterranean dungeons, whose never will cease. The Kuddiloves traurie tale hhall not be told till t he lust door of a saloon when he saw a tipsy man coming down the street, follow, cdbv a ieerinir. buzzin? crowd of bovs and girls. The man picked up a large piece of paving stone anil was about to throw it at two of the children, who were running away from him. screaming, when the prisoner knock fee with bread crumbled in it, but hardly gave anv attention to hisfood. His mother used to send him money, out he gave it away. H hen fche died she left him as much as two hundred pounds u year all she had but it went to Italian begsrars. His mother was the only meuiler of his family ed it from his hand. Upon this, the , that stuck to him. His father soon man struck him; they clinched and i turned his back on his son; his only I wed the rauned little hoy with u.c. that went to school THE 0F. IHJM.VB RIM. great day, still remain, and the visit or enters them with a shudder, aut! thanks (Jod that the power which put them to so cruel a purpose as that to which they were often put has passed forever away. A covered passage leads from this castle to the Vatican, and thus renders it an easy aiuLpractica ble place of refuge for the pope in ev ery time of peril. From "The City of the Saints," in Jlarper'a Jlaijaziiif for .'. 1 mi JOH. CitTEXIiRRM. the assailant was thrown down. Ris ing to his feet, he staggered on a few paces and again fell. Heing picked up, he was found to be dead from con cussion of the brain. The prisoner was acquitted, but it came out that nothing had ever been disvovercd con cerning the identity of the dead man. He was advertised, his body exposed at the Monroe, and every means tak en to secure publicity ; but all to no -No ister married a strict Roman Catho lic, and she herself became too strict to have anything to do with him He did sec her once, but the interview were too painful to be rccatcd. He desired, I am told, to see her again when he was dying, but she declined. Poor Mazziui! 1 could not have any ympathy whatever with many of his views aud hopes. He used to come here aud talk about the 'solidarity of llll-.-iairii J""!""" I'J 1 f In ,. ,1 t . , t I. i the fullest and most comprehensive j ,780( ; Fn.n(.h c speech on the slavery question that; tuent Assembly to afleviate th- hor had been made m any legislative body I rors of capital 'punishment by adopt- III tlie eiulntpv- nn.l I fin pi..iliiti.iii . ... . . . I - i ... ,?iin.i4 '.mi i u (ii.kiii'iii; jioiisc ov in ma- i "vas adopted in thc majority. He was elected a delegate to the Whig National convention of 1S18, and on the rejection of anti-slavery resolutions by the convention, he withdrew seceded from it and took a prominent part m ortranizin-r the Free Soil partv of that year. He : ni;r a iiiacnine wnicn wouia dispens , with the axe or sword, he was mere ly reviving an old contrivance, which had been uperecded in Germany, France, and Italy by the very instru ments of decapitation which he was trying to abolish. J)r. Guillotine motion was not for mally acted on until the 20th of March. purchased thc liostou lU nuUiva,,, a '1: " , I ., . i , 1 j ordering a decapitating machine of dad.,ewsparr which he edited for k;n(, hy A . . 1 O J fa 1 . . - I . 1 rhainnan of thc JreeSnl Mate Com-! tr i t i mittco of Massachusetts, a post which i t. ,7.., " S-Anil . he actively tiled for four years. In , ... f. nifll(lini. . 180 and again in Ibol, he waschos- aftf.r niuT cLa-, .tf,.r en Mate enator. and uunnjr Isotu ..: . .:.L ' . -i ii as maul- nitnaiuu yiifrman terms was president of the Senate.- lm.than!(. nnnu.(, S(.,ini;l?f "nr. In LSo2 he was made president of the tn frr,r ,.;i,.,.e J u ... . Free Soil convention, at Pittsburgh, LtP11.ntJJ: "... t. . I and chairman of the National Con,- ZlrZ, I m.ttetf of the Iree So. party. In i fir,t tri,.j 0I1 tllC Hlh f A ;, the same year he was the t ree Soil i -f,.- ... , , 1 It h , ...n M llillil.FVl LU OM'ri aL ItT POLLY AN THUS. T:iMo EiiiitcH :tn I'rk.!, IIH'KLT KNI KS. 11' H. I1ISTLKTI1W Al l K ATHiKMJY If at Law. SoinerM't. I'a. lr.esi.inal Im-d-ness MiManiully solieiteil and eunctuallv atleud. Kl t.l. 1 J. KIMISKK. . ATTHUXKY ATL1W. Somerset. Pinna. SlILMKS AXII SCISSORS. ItiK. LLVl.N LIMIU KLTTLRS, 4u-., 1 o:rctLcr with many arli.-les t.i numerous lu men tion in an adenis meiit. He is d. tiriniiie.1 to m il at t he very lowest pri.vs. Uive him a call. June li' 7i 1 1icki:i:s;ill, lvoxs a- ( o. I ilAM I'Ai'TI IIUIS A IiKALKKS IN LOOKING GLASSES, ran- .uuiui' ami I I' r l.kiUK .j.a.--. r ..... j I'i. ture Fn.ioes a Speciality. mi wtHiisii(i:i.T. I'insin linn. pa. j 4JOMi:i.Si:T riANINC-MILL ! GOOD Sl JONES, Arc now pr..p.ir.-.l to do all kinds of j.UiiinK and , luiiuulaelui illtf ol bulldilia materials. I I'l.iMiKlNd. WF.ATHKK-IAKIIXI, SSIi ANU FKailtS. WlNIKlU'k lKKdt FHAMES, YKNKTIAN SlU TThliS. V.U At "Kins. a.e. It. -lion anttliiuK irenerally used in house I uiM li.V Allkln.l.ol work doue to order. orders ir..uip!U tilled. .luliU'Tl Kin ti. JUNKS. AMi:s Pl (JH, MMXSTllKKT, SOMMISET, PA. I- now prepared to uianulacture all Vin.!s ..r WAGONS. SLEIGHS, Ac He will also promptly attend to N.4icbuttbeHIT M ATKKIALwill tie Mil ALL WtdtK WAKKAXTKH. All work done in the latwt an I m wt a4vnl stiles, at the LOWEST POSSIBLE TEICES. N.,iiicrct. Man h 6th. LIFE INSURANCE For Business Men. "The Rcwcrvo Fund Policy." " issi id 11 v Tin: BERKSHIRE I LIFE INSURANCE CO., ! ! l.t?(lKIt)KATKItlll. SeciircH Shh-u1 Protection to Every Policy Holder. Tor example? Snpsie vnu are thirty-fire years ol aue and take a "Kei-rve Fuikl i'oliiy" alur itiuarv lite rates. Hie annual loyment will insure you i yeurs and 3 da vs. Two annual payments will Insure yon 4 years unit VI davs. Throe annual payments will Insure you years and 'T days. Five annual payments will insure yon 11) years and ati davs. Si annual Kiyment will insure you li years and 11 davs. This Protection Appliesto any Age, And i exiressjy stated in every Policy. a regular tempest, a wild deluge, a rush of arrowy drops and a thunder if openintr floods ! squire j art let iieurd tlm angry rat-!1(, th" against the easements, aud drew his snug easy chair a little closer to the tire a great opening mass of an thracite and gazed with a sort of s-leepv, reflective satisfaction at the crimson moreen curtains, am the gray cat fast asleep on the hearth,! and the canary bird rolled into a! drowsy ball of yellow down on its; jK-reh. "This is Miiisr" oiiolh the Souirc. j "Pm glad I had that h akyspot in the ; barn roof fixed last week. I don't ob ject to a stormy night once in a whiie j when a fellow's under cover, and there's nothing to do. Mary 1" f "Ves." Mrs. Partlet answered. , XI... fl:.v 1 . r ! checked apron tied round her waist, j ham, "that lie's lioiight that ere lot 'down opposite the Court House, and pillow that math s iroin' to liinld such a houst never was." "He must have prospered greatly." said gentle Mrs. Partlet. "And his wife, she wears a silk gown that would stand alone with it's own richness," said Mrs. Buckingham. "I can remember when Luke Rud dilove was nothing but a drunken creeter." "All the more credit to him now," said Mrs. Partlet emphaticallp. "It's to lie sure all o'stun," said Mrs. Buckingham, "with marble man tles and inlaid floors. And he's put a lot o' papers ami things under the corner one". "Tlin - "t- foor or mantle : "Stun to le sure, said Mrs. 15uck- The golden sunshine of the Autumn morning streamed iu through the small, latticed panes of a cottage win dow in .Mam.. ; It has often shone as brightly on the great oaken settle beside the hearth; tin the quaint old chest and carved high chair, but nev er until this 'morning had it lighted the baby fingers that were stretched up to meet it, from iho great stripetl a nest for a new as ! atom of humanity, come to claim a ' name and place among men ; what f ,tn la .a ........ At .. T 1. I.. e.l.t . T .... " .. ...... I I slightest clue wa lever found as to j was less ami less interested in such 1 district of Massachusetts, in whit h ! , r I who he was or whence he came. Con-1 thinrrs he l,.l ret m.otJier .timet. n ' th in.;riir .,;nt th.. Vr..a ,.;i..,. ! ' " " . . ,l" faPl,l!ty an r'-1"-'' jjecture can exhaust itself in vain : hi-than mvsnlf which brontrl.t him to lexeee..l i ..o?i n.l I,.. f:.;i...l w. .ter 'l was "'Pwyed for the may have been utterly friendless and us. Rut he found that Ac also bv no . lection bv onlv'ninctv-thrce votes. I "J" ." f':-,Lwa alone, or he may have left a mourn- ! means entered into his opinions, and He was elected to the Constirm to,.- 1 1 T "am7! ,.l,,'tl, r- . 1 1 "rea.!- mg lamiiv in some distant ouarter. He is buried in Potter's Field and has j vanished as thoroughly from the earth I as though he had never here a led. It" invested the ens., with nwrJ ; tain weird interest ; this spectacle of it inn n citiinsr from nowhere to 1I his visits became Rut we alwavs i fewer ami fewer, al convention of 1853. notonlv bvhis esteemed hini.- iind vanish in oblivion. -Cor. X. V. auerwards r , x- .. , ,' , r - , in ine wiioiesaie massacre ot mnocent I own i town of N stick, but by the town mn Wo!11(, anti von -hn.j.,, ,.,,. its very name a horror, and probably ft I tl i ndl tvof A KtIia ? -, a. 1 . . 1 - . I w a " I V"llll.lin u JI'L a III III- LtJ 113 ! lit'- I'Aciut-iveiv. ia the same vear he was the rc ' r i . i r..T. i , . . , -i i- i r n m jii.; uu' nit: . ii litMMl.Ml Al t in Sml t'Ulut i.litn fiP I Ii wfrntw ami . ' . . .. i. , r 1 : i . . V " " tt-d states, instead C'Hiiv: lll ll nil; ut VilIOU tin i.eii uieii. lie was a very religions soul I of lJerlin and and took a urommeiit rmenr. ! U'L, I V,rt 1,..,.... I.:... I... - i 1 . :.. .i. .1.1:1 . r .1. a 1 1.. : u' ' ' ' 11 ! " ui-i Biie- uiui iviuvuicuj 'ii t 111 iu uciiocruiion 01 mat oouy. ; contributed not a j'aute When :f not were the protest to you ' -Mrzzini became for; In 1855 he was ilcctetl to succeed ' name antl place, the happy German father never guessed, nor that the tiny fist held in its crumpled rose leaves chiefly. ...'. lax.. VI'VIIVH HV LIIV : Oil (.niMlMltitl lt lil'JI. UIUI Itll. , .IkJ-i... - . t It a means of inflietlu'jr eajital pu:.iL- Miward Kverett m the L mted states ; l,,..,,.,,, i town to the hnsrlish f Senate, aiid shortlv aftrr takinir hi? iM w-r;,.!. 5t; i i . , 1 ime w as Teat liKiitniation ! seat nia.Ie a wech aUvtKatin? th re-1 ...t i ..:r.. .:.. , , ?- r w . .1 .-. . . - . . i imuiit- niiii un UDiinuf vnrn i 11- Prof Agassiz t.-ome to the conclu- u,ino'? yernnient tak.ugthe pea l or the fugitive slave law and the mfori;r Ti. raplM.,t firniIv t .,..,.,. .a . I ,ll!it llf (I'll tlot rlil II niTiiin.t l.ili.i.. ! ilu.lii'o.n Y Clnt"r.a,i . Tt! ,...a Af k i 1 " niou mm i in-eoiu:nenioi iui ill -liner- i . , Vr . 7 . - . ."'""- v : and tnmst la for -i ' painoij., ami Jiazznii was much i Loiumoia. lie has ever since been ontineiit 4'overesJ nlth lee. i which I wrote j which you refcr the first time k' people. ice sought tor, invited to dinners. He , conspicuous in the Senate as an cam-: the wtirld of print ; for, the baby was ! period. ica was fince covered with milt! in thii-k.tt,.p.. . llitr.bv nrrre.itie witli Prof? Hitehfrtek nod ofhnr en.iJ Wlrit t(1 Ilaces. He formed i . . 'it -i. ,i . i lielit wr tcrs concern no- t L,,.;.,! ' "n"cv iiu ui jvsuuns wuicn I John Gutenberg, to whom we owe 'lie says that the slopes of the Alleghe-;!'f,mc l'irtlu for the rest of his life j but on the adoption of a pro-slavery j j moveable types "antl their perfections !nv ranire of mountains are trlacier- i '" '''and. At last it has come to , platform by the national council of; . i . .- . ' 1 . ' ' I . t.:.. :.. . i . e . ... ...:.i i e . . ... i ce downward between het posts, so that his neck is direetlv under the knife. A surin'' is touched urcs. 1 i ..,-. t..... ...i 1 1 .i " i ,i , . I or a brief r.od 111 1 he was anJ tLe ,lt:aJ j, , . , . , ily as a sharp razor severs a t atlvocate of anti-slaverv meas worn to the very ton. except a few i ?n "l1- I went to see him just before which were above, tho level of the j I, rt l'on,ion f,r n '"- time, pass icv mass. Mount Wa-himrtou. for iu smll"r- aml ca,nc aw'y f''4'1"1? 1 should never see him again. SO if is. The naiiers nn.l nni. , I pie have gone hlubljeriii ion, for iu u stance, is over six thousand feet high, j , , ami fh.. r.moli i,..i..1i;i...,i .ef...... ..n Ami its summit, covered with loose fra . . . t . .1 , ....i.i:.. i..,.i.i lllglianl. IjIKC TI1CV no ilioiii- ouim- ings vou know." "AVell it's kind o' tpieer, but Luke P.uddilove never wan't like anybody else. Folks think it dreadful strange he should put a one dollar bill in with other things." Mr Partlet felt her cheek llnsh I'm nearly ready to come iu now, ijosiah. Now, 1 wonder," oio vice, ! "if that was really a knock at the door, ! or just a little extra rush of the wind i and rain." ! She went to the door, nevertheless, I and a minute or two afterwards she went to her husband's chair, i "Joe, dear, it's Luke Kuddilove." she said, half apprehensively, iue Squire never looked up from his pa-1 checking off a list of legal items in the per. t bill he was making out against some "Tell hiiu he's made a mistake. The j eirnt. Hut tho Squire never looked tavern is on the second corner beyond. around, and Mrs l?uckinghain went "I.ut lie wants to know if you will i on w;tn her never-ceasing flow of lend him a dollar !" said Mrs' Pratlet ci,it chat, and so the hot color died "And couldn't vou have told him ',,- v in her cheek. After all. the which, until this time (1400) wer qnite unknown. God kept it safe through all the hap ami chance of childhood and a busy youth, and John Gutenberg was first known as a skilled workman in pol ished stones, in Sfrasburg, in the year li.lT. It was here that thc ro mance of his life met him, aud- thouy tint Ii. InsV.ireil nn Attachment whic lie could not requite, that there was a than six thousand fi-A-t, and this is m broken troth plight, antl finally, union keeping with the country; for wh; with a woman whom he loved. Per- the. mountains are much below s'x haps it was the initial of her name, th.ou.Miud .feet, the ice seems to have thnt love taurrht John to cut from the passed directly over them, while the bark of a tree as he walked to and ' few lcaks rising to that height are 1. ' ' ' P !., - Y. . . lllll llllll rm.flt friiiul VIVA lm,l a Ir, rul ! nsJU'iatml U'ltli II. a mnpi..an rnslr. in prom oi tins conclusion: t -.t.... ...iu .... .nmm.., ,ii,; iair. Ilr Cmii.-i,?,! I.:,., ...ir t.. ... , . . ....... l r l! iiiuiiii miiiiMviv t's- u,. JlU u ,urc iron. am, , j ix.iaz a victim of f, e j- took and active share in t'rganizin'jr ; ....r,,, -i.;,.i, i, v,;. ir .i p ,,. . , , incut w hich hears his name. He was the Kepubliean rartr on the basis of ji.-.,,t. . , , t .t ui. ; throw niruo pri.-on during th- re.gn "i'l"-" ' 7 - "f Urr"r but was released lu-uai, iw, -nr. euuiuw, ,leath f)f Kobt, ins coiieatrue. was assailed nv 1'reston llO'llts illst Ii.. low t Ik. lov-i.l s.f u-lol. i nun me erv papers and ieople r. lirooks. or toutn Carolina. Air ' J i"- ' " i I., . , i,.,.. . . oijvi ilu il iiuieiiv ill ins 1 mi i . :i p-l.-icii r niiirl-s i..,n... in .... .... i f.-iij ll'at denounced linn dunni; Iile, see- iLson, in a speech to thc Senate, de- . . ., ... .... tim, . .. , .. . . . . i-uiuoi ,iiiii.-n. ii-i. 1 lie c urv lhat, it.Iiftxl I- l..l -1 u-1 iu.UV Willi.. -ty Wr t'WWwtbikt uuutiwj tlm .t. ..L-.i-J.- .--.-ot.-lt J( .,.,,-f vlA orr-....vrr-yV cii-oi iue ice caunoi iiave. iK-en mucn i,n .i;,..! -..,..,;.-:,, the liomrrp of on the "round Uiat duelling is a oar-t ,,, lotine is comparativeiv nai the'oeonle and peeinir Italv united, I barons practice which thc law of the j was Tavd ul France soon aftci with Home for its capital. Well, one may le irlatl he has succeedetL We awav over spierre, re de ! S. 1 ; practice' of his professian (in un-.ed in the tL- I . 1 .i: .t ......, i . . ' uuu uieu tjuieiiy in ms Octl On the nainless Iter tho .1 . e . I . . T .. i reinirouuciion oi xne m.-ininiein. in anv tiling great out of what she has broadest sense country has branded as a crime, out . .. . , . i i i . . stated at the same time mat, ue oe- 1705, L'r.Sonimcnng, 111 the ?; tl- nr denounced it as too rapid in its op ra . n .... .... 1? 1 iu. :!. ,.r , ..ir ,i..r..r,. h.iu 1 wait to see whether Italv will make hcm-o hi me ngm i -r...... .e..v. ant. We wait." M. 1. Conway, in scarlet ; involuntary she glanced up i-red pigments was but one easy si fro, full of lover's fancies and yonng left unioucijed. .. ihe glacier lie ar-j;, .rV ,y(,jozi,ifor Jul;. manhood s dreams, t rom the shape- r;ics, was tvds great jiiougn, ami i lv letter, to its imprint made by col-; when the ice vanished fuom the lace to where the Squire was serenely F FairM's Standanl S C A. I . 15 S ,i ( sf all khals. lie earelul to buy ' ady the irenuliie. I SeaU-s repairiM tin.nnniy. i-Alsw. i.ii..aai.'c luriows. are house Track. Imprest M.se v drawriv. . ' KAlhliANK S Mi:.sK k t'i.. MartT - lai Second A vcjiua. I'll teuurx. TIlLAHVAXrAULIiFSl VH I'KUTU'TIUN. W Ci:.Nl(iHAM, . PHYSICIAN AND MKi.KoN. LAVASV1IJ.L.1'A. Nov. H, '71 tn. CO.. IIKYNOLDS. STL' EX i (tlpp..site St. Charles Hotel.) 41 Wimip Sth.'KT, PiTTsni uuu. Pa., lin'lMiricrs of (uit iiKnarc and Mainifac tiircru of d'lassittarc. 'IN WAKE. Hie uii-lersiyrned If prelatrvd lo manulaeture all kiiikful TIN" AX1 SHEET IKON WAKE. ! Tbi is toeertltv that mv late hu'linnil. Oanlel !. Thompson, was insured In the Herkshire Lite ! lii-urane. fompaiiv, rillslicld, .Mass., lortl.ouO, TV".?' L1""1"'. ".'.'f.I.'f.r;; iV iust let him know i li71. that heiliil tkiola-r lath, four mouths after ' he tailed to make his loiymenu Hie usual prnols of death were forwarded to the : 'onipany. and Hie lull amount d the imliey. less 1 tlie iwoi'iuarterlv pavmeuts due ntthe tiuieof his ! death, was paid 'to me bv their tJcneral Agent iu i rhiladelpliia. W. H. it raves, at their utilee, S. W. vomer Chestnut and Llevenih Streets, j (Signed) NK1TIK THOMPSON. ! W. 11. tireene. late ol New York, insured a lew years s;ni-e in the Berkshire Lite Insuraiiee Com t p.iiy tor ..iise. lmt nwinx- to mttonnne in busi 1 ui-sii was uualde. to mako any niynictit to the ' Coiuianv diiriutf aie year and Vive months l.rior lo ! hl itec-ase. 1 have" this day iUI (at the New : V.. rli 1.1H.W ,.r il... '.unidiii' .ri lindilnv. e,nier 1 ol I'liamcers stn-t). Ihrt' thoumiKl two'hundnil ' ami iiiiictv-niiie dollars, (bis Units the full amount I due t In- w i.i.,w, ait. r deducting lite overdue y ; Hu nts an ! linerc-t. J. li. I KANC1SC1 S. New 1 ork. Mar. h nth, T11. Suia-rinteudeiil. iVrii.tatitir on keitli. trul eaas an. bsi.J a supply ol eopiier and brass I alt kinds of IIoiim' I'uriiisliiiig C.'oodx usually ke i 1,1, line. Shop one door wet ot C.srlur store. Main string. siswl. I'a. .uk. la-ly. MlAli CASKHhKK. COLE. P.lKKiKS A' C'., Produce Commission Merchants, No. 4CAMM: sti:kt. TO THE SALE OF IH'TTEK. Meter to J. M. HiMfrta-tm. S.(Tsrt. JJeirs. M. J. Miller ... .Mrvers Mills. Alessrs. Meyers a; Arm wall. IWIln. ' bauneey Hruoks. I'rli1,.i U ei..n. v.. IKIIftl aur IT Tl ly Our liuslniw strirtly ,.uiuis., live. Special alleutiun finm I llankof Kaltiinoru. HE NEW FLOCK MILL. Tlie new tomt Mill ImUt oa tlie site of the OLD "DEXNISOX 5LILL," weII'l,' r mn r " is menurU''Ula' Ul"tll.tesll,pne SSf """nJ lodothe lt kind ot w.k. JZ1 to""1 11 kln'" "' k. - - ii , YAkKKTUIB HA. Haul tlio rollout nc LM ot 1aiiiiHlald. Janus Joiee. New York City. 41,io. payment overdue 4 months. V. H. t". Hamjie. New York City, 1.0o0. pay ment overdue 4 months and idnys. Mrs. . Ii. Hart, Chieaci, III, ,000, ayincnt oviYdue 7 nHmths and la dav H. V. Moore. lt.m. Mass., i:.0u0, layiaent overdue 6 months and 14 dars. Jamm 11. Adair. New Ataysv ille. lndM i.Ouu, tatvmeiit ovenlueti nimth auu 7 davit. ifaTiiard O'ltrady. Ihroit. Mieh.. (lTOOO. pay- nieul overdue t t ears, IV moot lis an.l 11 nays. Jones I. Fj-tabns.k. Kltehbinv. Mass.. (.l.nno, iwynieiit overdue 3 yean, 1 imrntn and X days. G4NIPC1IILD k. MAliSHAJU Ak'HIs. June li-'7i Somerset. Pa. The Improved ELLIPTIC SEWING MACHINE. New Draw Feed, T.OCIC STITCH. There are some jHiints In 1 Sewing Marhlno that l.lles devtrina- to purchase. rh.ld take tntoouo si.leratino, namely: IJirhtness of running. Lase ot Marunreincnt. Caix-ity toilothe Werk Keairtsh- reeilfim from Noise, and t Non-Liability to iret not of Isnler. Wa claim tliat the IMPKOVFP rXJJITIC siMwjies all these iolrits, ami tlial H in TH E VEB Y 11 EST Now Manufactured. And we solicit an examlnatto of It. Airents want ed in every txiuuly, to whmu wa will give the most liberal terms. EATON UUOS., pi Fith A.PltliiljUTgh, Pa. Xo, without the preliminary ccrento nv of coming in here to ask me ? It is" likclv that I should lend a dollar or even a cent to Luke Kuddilove Why, I had a great deal better throw it among yonder red coals ! Xo of course, Xo ?" 1 Mrs. Tartlet hesitated. "He looks so pinched and cold aud wretched, Josiah. He says there's nobody in tho world to let him have a cent." "All the better for him, if he did but know it," sharply enunciated the Squire. "If he had conio to j'ust that patch half a dozen years ago, perhaps he wouldn't have "been tho misera able vagabond he is now." "We used to go to school together," said Mrs. Partlet gently. He was the smartest boy in the class." "That's probable enough." said the Squire. "But it don't alter the fact that he's a poor, drunken wretch now. Send him about his business, Mary ; and if his time is of anv consequence, that he had better not waste it coining round here alter dollars." Aud the Squire leaned back in his chair after a positive fashion, as if the whole matter was definitely settled. Mrs. Partlet went back to the kitch en .where Luke Kuddilove was spread in? his poor thin fingers over the blaze of lire, his tattered garments 'steaming as if he was a pillar of vu- por. "He won't let you havfr it, Luke," said she. I bought ho wouldn't. ! "Then I'vc ot'to Ptarrelike any other dog!" said' Luke' Kuddilove, turning moodily away. "And, after all. I don't know that it makes much difference whether I shuffle out of tlie world to-day or to morrow !" "Oh, Luke not to your wife ?" "She'd be better off without mo," said Luke, down-heartedly. "But she ought not to be." "Ought and is are two different things, Mrs. Partlet. Good night I ain't going to the tavern, though I'll wager something the squire thought I was." "Aud isn't it natural that he should think so Luke ?" , "Yes yes. Mary ; I don't say but what it is," murmured Luke Kuddi love, in the same dejected tone he had used throughout the interview. ,, "Stop!" Mrs. Partlett called to him as his hand lay on thc door latch, in a low voice. "Iler'a a dollar, Luke, Mr. Partlet gave it to nic for a - new oilcloth in front of the dining room stove, but IU try aud make thc old one do a little while longer. Aid Luke, for tlie sake of old times for the sake of your poor wife and littlu ones at home do, do try to do better. Luke Kuddilove vacantly first at the fresh, new bank bill in his hand, and then at the blooming young matron who had placed it there." "Thank you, Mary," be said, and crept out of the warm, bright kitchen into the storm aud darkness that reigned without Mrs. I'artlej stood looking into thc kitchen lire. . , . nionev had been her own to give, and the old oilcloth in front of the dining room stove had answered very well. She met Luke Kuddilove that af ternoon for tho first time since his re turn from Sequosset Luke himself, yet not himself the demon of intem perance crushed out of his nature, and ita better, nobler clemeflU triumph ing at last. He looked her brightly in the face, and he held out his hand. "Mary." "I am glad to wc you back here again Luke," sho said, tremulously. "And well you may be," he re joined. 4-lo you remember that stormy night, .Mary, wnen you ga e me that dollar bill, and begged me not to go to UwiUvwu -"Yes." - - ' "That night was the pivot on which my whole destiny turned. You werc very kind to me when e v ery one sjMike coldly ; you trusted in inc. when all other faces were avert ed. I vowed a vow to myself to prove myself worthy of your confi dence and I kept it. I did not spend thc money I treasured it up and Heaven "has added mightily to nfy little store. I put the dollar bill un der the corner stone of my new house, for the house has risen from it and it alone. I won't offer to pay you back, for I am afraid," he added, smilingly, "the luck would all go from me with it ; but I'll tell you what I will do, Mary. I will give money and words of trust and encouragement to some other poor wretch as you gave to me. And Squire Partlet never knew what his wife did with the dollar bill he trave her to buv a new piece of oilcloth. Thratle fsit. Aocrlo. A wonderful history could this Castle of St. Angelo tell if some mag ic influence could give its dumb walls the power of speech. Hadrian, whose passion for building has in Home more than one witness in snl stantial structures which neither vio lence nor time has been able to th stroy, erected this massive tower as his tomb. Here were laid to rest thc ashen of his son -Elius, Hadrian him self, the Emperor Antouinns Pius, his wife, the elder Faustina, and four of their children. In one of the upper rooms was placed a colossal statue of Hadrian, the head of which here found may still be fsepnin the Tnnpeum of the Vatican. From' the time of its erection until now this castle has wit nessed how many and . how great changes I Situated on the banks of the outskirts of the ancient city, it was converted into a fortress, aud looked down upon many a bloody conflict be tween (iotll nnif Penman On its sum mit, if we may believe thc lloman Catholic legend, Gregory the Great saw in a vision St Michael sheath ing his sword in token that the pray ers of the Komans for preservation from the plague had been heard. The building on which the divine messenger had stood could no longer nioiv. Soon after this We find hiiu assici ated with John Hiff, printing from characters carved in solid tables.! At the great fair of Aix-La-Chappelle, there was no lack of earnest and cur ious inquirers for specimens of his wonderful work. . In 1445, after a quarrel: with h'u partner he returned to Mainz, and there printed the celebrated vocabu lary, known as Catholicou, in -1450. Xo" book however, with his imprint upon it, is now known to exist, and should one lie discovered, it would be almost priceless. All the while a great and terrible sorrow was lurk ing behind the-years toward which thc first printer drew near. There were days when the long lilies of types would dance and dazzle like unruly troops, or lawless children ; there were nights when hot arrows of pain darted through the burning eyeballs to the weary brain ; and then twi light, and dimness, and misty vision, until the old man knew at last that he should never again see the blessed sunshine, or the faces so well In-loved, far he was blind.' The Archbishop of Mainz, who had ever been a staunch and faithful friend, now appointed him one of his courtiers, a position to which was at tached a considerable-pension ; while enjoying this, he divulged his method, and "whatever of mystery remained, to others, so that the art might not be lost. In 1467, the skillful hand and slightless eves were laid to rest iu a church in 'Main, bufTfor forgot ten : for. each year , there .js... a meeting ol the Gutenberg Society to dohim hon or. In 1S3T, a monument in bronze was erected to his memory in his na tive t'ity.andto-day.the classic scholar and curious stranger alike linger, to read its inscription, and dream of the long line , of incidents and chances that link the guide book in their clasp with the rude shaped letter carved by a lover's hand so long ago. , . i. ,, . -On M Jury. of the laud, it left it prepared for the hand of husbandmen. Tho hard surface of the rocks was ground to powder, the elements of the soil were mingled in fair proportions -.miilrt iirflD stneeijirl lltv 1 1 til 11 10111111-1 t 1U.1.I' ,..- .1.1 I I' i. "" ....... . v . - . , 1 i. . .:i ..l .1 .:.! born nine wus liiiujficu nun mu uiuir uuu i liox. iii:ky wiiaox. A SUrtett of III life aad Serticea TTie Poor fairmer'a Appreotiee, th Hhwinaker and the Seuaior. Mr. Wilson (Jeremiah Colbuth) was ii Faritiiiiirton.Xew Hamp.-diire, the ll.th of February, lSIi. His . . i u.. .i:, ,! on ami uaprotoicmeaiou.-. , ..liiath lioin-r J ' ' , - - r o he was upnrt-ntici'ii at ten a soil wns prepared, in ior me. uj.ti- i There are evi-!vtr.v P,r' the polar regions to! 3 ' tP f ' h I,a.u e period the heat of ; (' tow'i ' ., Xcvv England tended all over thc township,) with whom he con- cultural use of man donees all over show that at one the tropics extern glolie. The ice period is supposed to -be long subsequent fo fins and next; t,o the last boioro tlie advent of nian.'s ' 4 arlyl and .Mazslai. An extremly odd instaneu of cir cumstantial evidence oceurred in one trial which is worthy of ladng record ed Workmen, going in the morning to the building at the eonwT of Broad way and IiConard street, found there a man who not ucinar iie to irive i any good account of himself or what he was doing in that place, Wa.4 hand ed over to tlrepolrrerakentrr-the sta-tion-honst?, and rlotained, for' cSamina-1 tioti. He was previously searched and a broken-bladed kniCrj taken from hint . Hardly had this been doue than a porter, belonging to a store in Loonr ard street, about eight buildings from thc corner, cainc in to aniiouuee that the store had been broken into during thc night It had Wen entered from the scuttle, lwxes ransacked and sev eral drawers forced openj in one of which he bad found about three quart ers or an inch of a knife-blade. . The sergeant immediately thought of the broken bladed knife taken from; the suspicious man, and compared: the two they fitted together exactly. Upon this a detective was sent to examine the new building, and discovered from the roof a rope hanging down about twenty feet to tho adjoining building, whence was a clear level to the ..store entered. Around the open drawers It is a high circumstance that while Thomas Carlyle was, ajuidst the lone ly hills of Oraigenputtock, steadily shaping out the idea of a task ordain ed for every life, Joseph Maz.ini was gaining the same revelation in the solitude of his prison. Xeithcr of these had heard of the other until many years after that ; but when they met it "was with a mutual recognition that they were brothers, born of this mother-principle, and many differ ences on other M)iuts could never thwtrov this sense of religious rela tionship. When an Engiisli Home Secretary hail opened the letters of Mazziui," then an exile iu London (1.S44). and could only confront )op ular indignation at his thus having made the government an Austrian detective by trying to blacken Maz zini's charaetw,-1rlykiid not wait or the rctrartirm that had to be made, but uttered his protest in the London Timr. "I have had," be said, "the honor to know M. Mazziui for a se ries of years ; and whatever I may think of his practical insight and skill in worldly affairs, I can, with great freedom, testify to all men that he, if I have ever seen one such, is a man of genius and virtue, a man of sterl ing veracity; I humanity," and noble ness of mind. Whether the extrane ous Austrian emperor and miserable old chimera of a pope shall maintain themselves iu Italy, or be obliged to decamp from Italy, is not a question in the least vTt T ti EnglTTiHien. But it is a ouestioii vital to us that sealed letters in an English post-ouice be, as " know not ; but hope it was his moth turned eleven vears. durinar wnicn period he was scut to a poor school at irregular intervals, amounting in all to alout one year. He early formed a taste for reading, and from a private library in the neighborhood borrowed and read on Sundays and of evenings, by firelight and moon light, iu thc course of his hard agri cultural apprenticeship, nearly one thousand volumes, chilley of history ami biography. On attaining his majority he quit ted Farmington, and with all his worldly josscsioiis packed on his back, walked to Xatick, Mass., where he hired himself to a shoemaker un til he learned his trade, at which he worked for two years, at tho end of which period, having accumulated some money, he returned to Xew Hampshire where he studied for a while iu the academies at Stafford, Wolfsborough and Concord. His plan of education was cut short by the insolvency of the person to whom he had entrusted his savings, and he returned to Xatick and resumed work as a shoemaker, in IS".. Then it was that he finally shook the dust of the Granite State from his shoes, or bare feet, as the case might have been, ami threw off, also, his name of Jeremiah Colbath, and assumed that of Henry Wilson, which he has since made honorable.' without conferring any honor upon his family name. Why he changed his cognomen we know not. " Perhaps he did not deem Col bath a prcttv nanie; tind maybe tlioiiirht Jeremiah too surrirestivc of lamentations. Possibly some of his kin disgraced the name of Colbath. At all events, he had some reason en tirely satisfactory to himself for put ting off the old a-id putt'ng on the new name. Whv he chose Wilson we wo all fancied they were, respected as! er's maiden name. r . . -( w . a -v .0 Ition- and maintained that sensation Burin? the four following years j (kj tCae immediately aJ"tenicc:ii)- Mr. Wilson took part in all important : nation. Many experiments were trie! debates in the Senate, and made clab- tl (nith 0f j,;s theory. Ei.:i- orate speechcs.reniarkabTe for fullness and accuracy of statement, on Kan sas, the treasury note bill, the ex penses of the government, the tariff, the Pacific Kailroad, and many other topics. His speech in defense of free labor iu reply to Senator Hammond of South Carolina, March, 185'., at tained an immense circulation through out thc free States. In January of the same year the Massachusetts Legislature" re-elected him to the United States Senate by nearly a unanimous vote. On the assembling of thc Senate iu March, 1861, he was made chairman of the Committee on Military Affairs, a post which the great civil war rendered one of un precedented labor and great responsi bility. In this capacity he introduced ami carried through Congress, during the extra session of 161, the acts to au thorize thw employment of fiOO.OOO volunteers, to increase the regular army, to re-organize the military sys tem, aud various others of nearly equal importance. It was said by General Scott that Wilson did more work in that short session than all the chairmen of the military committees hail done for twenty years, and, in a published letter, dated" January 22d, 1862, Mr. Cameron, then said of him: "Xo man in my opinion, in the whole country, has done more to aid the War Department in preparing the mighty army now under arms." In the regular session (if 1861-2, Mr. Wilson introduced the bill abolishing slavery in the District of Columbia, and also the measure for abolir-hing the "black code." Evcf since that time Mr. Wilson has been regarded asonc of the ablest men iu the Senate, and one of the strongest supports of his partv. He has taken a prominent part in behalf of all the important Republican meas ures that have lieeu passed since the war, and throughout his senatorial career has proved himself an efficient and sensible Senator. He is a man of stronger practical sense than Sumner; and more magnetic and his nature. If elected ice-President he will do honor to the office and the j pent physician.? assiduonsly attended executions, and by striking at the se vered head, shouting in its f ar. and divers other ways, endeavored to as certain whether sensation survived the shock of decapitation. SomiiP-r-ing's book was followed by Gedillot's "Historial and Philosophical Reflec tions upon Execution by the Guiio tine," and the next year the same au thor continued thc discussion in a work entitled "Anecdotes of Decapi tated Persons." But the question re mains unanswered. S. S. C'onant. in HarjH'r'.-t 2Iajmiiie for July. Larcer Crots. We must ra;c larger crops, and to do this ninst raise them less frequently. This is the key note of the coming improved system of American agriculture in all settions where good land is worth lc.s than one hundred dollars per acre. In the neighborhood of large cities, and wherever land commands a high price, we must keep our farms in a high state of fertility by the purchase of manures or cattle food. Thic of us in the interior, where we cannot buy manure. must raise fewer grain crops and more clover. We must aim t raise forty bushels of wheat, fifty bushels of barley, eighty bushels of oats, one hundred bushels of aLel'ed corn, and five bnshels of clover seed per acre. That this can be done on good. Well-drained hftid, from the un aided resources of the farm, I have no doubt. It may give us no more grain to sell than at present, but it will enable ns to produce much more mutton, wool, Vef. cheese, butter aud jtork than at present "But. then, will there lie a demand for meat, wool, etc. ?" The present indications are highly favorable But we must aim to rai.-e good meat. The low priced beef and mutton sold in our markets is as profitable to the consumer as it is to the producer. We must feci', higher, antl to do this to advantage we must have improved stock. There is no profit in farminir without god tillage, larger crops, improved stock popular in jam! higher feeding. Josiyh ILirris. Care of Houses at Xp.ut. Few country. But whether he lie elected , ,lu.n who handle horses give proper Es,- Ia lIu.icit.n tr IHt Mr V.:OTl lP-l Atrntiiin t. tV.t IHll It"-. VO lllin pvoinvta ..-, i Mil l.af'sa - - k serves great credit for having worked j cially is this the case en farms. Much himself up from njpoor farmer's ap- j t;nie" p spent of a moi-ning in rubbing. prentice and the shoemaker s oencn to i i,rUshiiig and su;oou..ug me i.a.r thiuirs saered ; that the opening of men's letters a practice near of kin to picking men's pocket,., uml toother still viler, and .far latalcr forms of s maitit u nan. . his presi-ut high iosition as a enator j the sitles and hqis, but at no time are In 1840, the illustrious subject of, in Con rf tlf .lis country, ifis the feet examined and properly cared this sketch took an active part in tlie . i,nri,ble one. and r.,r seoiuidrclisiii be imt resorted to m j speeches Emrlantl exceut in cast's of the very I too." tin last extremity.'' j ;l . .; ,, I Mazziui lived in Loudon for many years almost as a hermit ,. Bevoud his fi.'Htiy-'.iles, then , a large panv, ;he had hardly .anv friend except Carlyle. Xow, be it known, that the feet presidential canvass oi . . t i ,...prv ,MMr . ,. iinrs- reouirv more care than the it Year and made upward of -ixty,. . - i,:i;., inform himself i lw.lv Tbev need ten times as much. memorable th and Tvh r for Prcsi- ior " 1 ippecaiuM Whig candidate dent and Vice-President, not dream ing that he, thirty-two years thereaf ter, would, like Tyler, he found run- com-; uing tor the oince ot ice-i resitienx, 1 .....it IV mtiuiatc on the same ticket with a hero, i Hir ing the next fivtf ,ynr, Air. J dson 'and strive to elevate himself in life. Wilson i, in all respects, sirporior t f..lf,.v tl,..iili t he latter has none very well, and deserves great for his rise in the world. Tke Uailllotliae. "1 ri.iiu.niln.r w pII " snid Cnrlvlo fiic Colbath ) was three times elected his voice had all its depth , and ten- mefnU-rof legislature of Massa derness, for he had just heard of Maz- chusetts' a a Representative ' from zini's death "I remember well when he sat for the first time on the seat there, thirty-six years ago. - A more beautiful person I never lielield, with his soft flashing eyes, and face full of intelligence. ,Hc had great talent, certainly the ouly acquaintance of mine of any thing like equal intellect who ever became eutaugled in what seemed to mo hopeless visious. He was rather silent, spoke chiefly in French, though he spoko good Eng- Xatick, and twice as a Sennator from Middlesex county" In' the Leeisla- - turo he soon became known as an ac tive antl zealous opponent of Slavery ami in 1845 be was selected, in con junction with John Greenleaf Whitti- er, tho "Quaker Poet," to convey xo Washington the great anti-slavery petition er remonstrance of Massa chusetts ntrainst the annexation of Texas.. In the same year he introduced in rredit It is generally taken for granted the beheading " instrument used in France and some other conutries of Europe was invented, or at least ier fected, by the amiable and philan thropic physician whose name it Wars, but in reality this doubtful honor be longs to some earlier inventor whose name has not been preserved. An instrument of this kind was used in Germany ttirly in the thirteenth cen tury, and was known as thc "Pankc" or "Diele." In 1233 it was mention ed in the criminal statutes of the Xetherlands, and its name appears in for in one respect they are almost the entire horse. All the grooming that can be done won't avail anything if the horse is forced to stand where I. is feet will be filthy.' In this case lhj feet w ill become disordered, and then the legs will get badly out of fix ; ami with bad feet and bad legs, there is not much else of the horse fit for any thing. ' Stable prisons are generally severe on the feet and legs of horses; and unless these building- can afford n dry room, where a horse can walk around, lie down, or roll over, they are not half so healthy to the horse as the pasture, and should be avoided by all good hostlers in the country. Xorth VrHi.-'h Iii'vk'ic. The word love, in the Indian lan guage is "schemleiulanionrtchwager-etar."
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers