a Alk 4 ' ----, , \ ' , \ _, , , , - 17( ' • ' ...'",\ '' - li i ' F( II •-\) \-(,(' - c* - - niti ( _,_, 4.) i tt !. k i c IL ,:) 1 &_.) ).) __\)) • El inutilt, paper-Altooteb to Agriculture, fittraturt, sfitlift, Art 110111t5tif ad @enrol jutelligtift, tr. ESTABLISHED IN 1813. THE WAYNESBURG MESSENGER, PUBLISHED BY R. W. JONES & JAMES B. JENNINGS, WAYNESBURG, GREENE 00., PA frrOPPICE NEARLY OPPOSITE THE PUBLIC SQUARE. Tally Suascatertow.-82.00 in advance ; $2.25 at the e at . piratios of six months; $2.50 after the expiration of the year. Antrawrisaromers inserted at $1.26 per square for 'three insertions, and 25 ets. a square for each addition al insertion; (ten lines or less counted a square.) Mir A liberal deduction made to yearly advertisers. 'Jon PRINTING, of all kinds, executed in the best Ore, and on reasonable terms, at the "Messenger" Job ce. 161 alutsburg Nasintss Barbs. ATTORNEYS. CLEO- L. WYLY. J. A. J. DUCDANAPt, D. 11. P. HUBB. WYLY, BUCHANAN & HUSS, Attorneys & Counsellors at Law, TVA YIVESB Uh'G, PA. will practice in the Churts at Greene and adjoining counties. Collections and other legal business will re ceive prompt attention. Office on the South side of Main street, in thg Old Bank Building. Jan. 28, 1863.-13, ruuttax. J G. nacm.E. PURM AN & RITCHIE, ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELLORS AT LAW, Waynesburg? Pa. WAIL business in Greene, Washington, and Fay ette Counties, entrusted to them, will receive prompt attentions 3L. w. DOWNES, 'ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW Kr Office hi I edwities Building, opposite tbs Court 'House, Waynesburg, Pa. R. A. M'CONNELL. 3. J. HUFFMAN. VIVCOII7II7I/IL & 31117a'ERUW, ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELLDES AT LAW Wayuesburgi Pa. Ogice In the "Wright Ut tie," East Door. Collections, &c., will receive prompt attention!' Waynesburg, April 33, 1802-Iy. DAVID CRAWFORD, Attorney and Counsellor at Law. Office in Sayers' Building, adjoining the Poet (Ince. [Sept. 11, 1861-Iy. dt ♦. •LACK. JOIIK PBBLAK. BLACK & PHELAN, ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELLORS AT LAW Office in the Court House, Waynesburg. Sept. 11,1861-Iy. PHYSICIANS. B 1 M. BLACHLEY, M. D. PNWSIOX.AN olic SURGEON, Ogee—lllacthley o a Building, Main St., ISSPECTFUILIT announces to the citizens or JR, Waynesburg and vicinity that he has returned from tha Hospital Corps of the Army and resumed the prac tice of medicine at this place. Waynesburg, June It, 1362.-13. DIL A. G. CROSS WOULD very respectfully tender his services as a PHYSICIAN AND BURGEON, to the people of Waynesburg and vicinity. lie hopes by a due appre ciation of human life and health, and strict attention to business, to merit a share of public patronage. Waynesburg, January 8, 1862. DR. A. S. BOGY ItESPRCTFIT LEX offers hie services to the citizens of Waynesburg and vicinity, as a Physician and lagoon. Office opposite the Republican office. He .hopes by a due appreciation of the laws of human life and . health, so native medication, and strict attention to business, to merit a liberal share of public patronage. April 9, 1862. DRUGS M. A. HARVEY, Druggist arid Apothecary, and dealer in Paints and Oils, the most celebrated Patent Medicines, and Pure Liquors for medicinal purposes. Sept. 11, 186I—Iy. MERCHANTS. WM. A. PORTER, Wholesale and Retail Dealetln Foreign and Domes -3e Dry Goods. Groceries, Nations, lee., Main street. Sept. 11. 1861-Iy. R. CLARK, Dealer in Ury Goods, Groceries, Hardware, Queens ivare'ned notions, in the Hamilton House, opposite ttre Court House, Main street, Sept. 11. 1881—Iy. MINOR &• CO-, Dealers in Foreign and Domestic Dry Goods, Gro. reries, Queensware, Hardware and Notions, opposite the Green House. Main street. Sept. 11, 18.61-Iy, BOOT AND SHOE DEALERS. J. D. COSGRAY, ObOt and Shoe maker. Main etrovt. .arly opposite !ha "Farmer's and Drover's Daak." Every style of Soots and Shona constantly on hand or made to order. Sept. 11, 1861-Iy. N. 13. McOLELLAN. Boot and Shoe maker,Blaeldey's Corner, Main street. Boots and Shoes of every variety always on hand or Mae to order on short noticej • Sept, 11, 1861-Iy. 4:1 JOSEPH YATER, Dealer in Groceries and Confectioneries, Notion°, Medicines, Perfumeries, Liverpool Ware, &c., Glass of 01 sizes, and 0%. Moulding and Looking Giese Plates. ./ar — eash paid for good eating Apples. ;Sept. 11, 1861-Iy. JOHN MUNNELL, water In Orriceries and Confectionariert. and Variety ,looris Genet/Ay, Wnsnres New Building, Main street. Slept. 11. 1961-Ig. BOORS, &c. LEWIS DAY, Dealer in School and Miscellaneous Bonk., Station ,try, kik„ Magazines and Papers. One door east of ,porter's Store, Main Street. Sept. 11, 1861 ly . SADDLES AND HARM 55 SAMUEL M'ALLISTER, Saddle, Harness and Track Metro*. ald Baal, 4acct.allral—fr TOBACCONIST,. • HOOPER 4. HAGER , menufaeingers and aluiitsale and retail derdendn Trobsuco.Seffitea and Snuff. Segar Cases, Pigumice, lelloinaNOldbuihrang, Main street. *lot 11. CALM FOIL !AIM irimmicert rim eel ammbramas in at As Inakanans.. Am. ' • 'tiff* AO. 'Agritultaral. HINTS TO FARMERS. We have printed in the course of the past ten years, a large amount of useful matter, principally original, addressed to the practical minds of the farmers, with a view to make them more systematic in their busi ness, and consequently to possess a more accurate knowledge of the re sults of their labors, than has usual ly been the case. The following which is added to the mass, we find, without a source and we copy it as worthy of perusal and remembrance. —Germantown Telegraph. Those who have never kept, in detail, a record of the income and expenditures of the farm, will find the present just the period to com mence, an operation of this nature.— You ought to know, at the expira tion of each year, the amount that has passed through your hands—the receipts, and what has been paid out—what purchased, and what sold, and the exact state of your finances. Any person doing business without a full knowledge of thislepartment, is working in the dark. w • BE SYSTEMATIC.—here we have one of the•first principles of success ful agriculture. Let all your trams actions be in a business like manner. Take note of every operation, wheth er you buy or sell, receive or dis berse, sow or reap, make a promise or a bargain. To do this, it will be necessary to keep a diary; • and we say, do so, if for no other object than as a ready means of comparison. BE THITROUGH.—Never half do anything yourself, nor permit your men to glide over their labors. "If it is worth doing at all, it is worth doing well," would prove a golden maxim to thousands of farmers if they would not only adopt it as a portion of their creed,but exemplify its teach ings in their daily life. Away with these scratchers—men that go be neath the surface are the kind want ed. LEAVE YOUR LAND IN GOOD HEART. —lt should be the object of every til ler of the soil to leave his land in good condition after the removal of a crop, and, at the same time, obtain as many remunerating returns as pos sible. This can be done only by hus banding all the sources of fertility upon the farm, and adding thereto in every available manner. This is the Alpha and Omega of progressive ag riculture. Never boast of a "buck ac count" if it is obtained at the expense of your Varrn. STUDY YOUR PROYESSION.—It is not hlone the energy that wields the plow or spade that insures success.— `There is a "higher law," the culture of the mind, and it must go hand in hand with the culture of the soil The relations of science to the farm.- or's calling are intimate. Good books are aids in the attainment of knowl edge, but never pin your faith to the ipse dixit of any-individual—think, experiment and judge for yourself. STICK TO THE FAam..—,A.mid your plans for the future, never for one moment, harbor the ilea of bettering your condition by"entering the arena of commercial Life. Do not exchange a home of quiet, real enjoyment for the turmoil and illusion of a city res'- dence. Barter not sweet repose for visons of empty wallets, nor let notes due on the morrow assume the pre rogatives of the nightmare. Very poor comforts for care and anxiety are these little walities in the com mercial world. Stick to the Farm!— What thopgh hard labor be the every day command, it is noble, healthful and conducive to the development of the whole man. MAPLE SUGAR. The following timely article is from a large sugar manufacturer of New Hampshire We have been in the practice of Rakng - annually, in our sugar estab ment, from 2,500 to 3,500 pounds of maple sugar ; and when we could obtain from two to four cents per peund more than the cost of the best loaf and granulated sugars, we have sometimes sold ourselves so short as to be obliged to buy for home use a barrel or two of the best granulated sugar. Much depends, however, upon the manner in which maple sugar is made. We make our sugar in this way : Our buckets and holders are all thoroughly scalded and rinsed previ ous to setting. Our evaporating pans, of which we use eight, are scraped, washed, and made perfectly clean befere use. We then endeav or to ged4her and evaporate the sap, as speedily as possible after it has left the trees, to a consistency a little thinner than molasses. It is then strained and set aside until we are ready to sugar it off.— When we commence this process, to syrup enough to make forty pounds of sugar we add one pint of milk and one or two eggs well beaten and mixed together. Place the syrup over the fire , and when the skum ri ses skint it dr for future use. After the skimming is through, remove the syrup from - the fire and strain it th-rough fisntiel, to remove all little curd*, whit*, it *aged to remain, troika sot oaly - injure the quality, but, `b/lietbling, 10 the bottom, we* WAYNESBURG, GREENE COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1863: endanger burning. Now we wash our evaporating pan, return the syrup, and place it over a brisk fire, and evaporate as quickly as possible to the right consistence. If it is to be caked, it must be harder than tub sugar, or to stir off dry. Keep saleratus and all other drugs out of your sugar, if you desire a pure ma ple taste and a wholesome article. When the season is through, gather your utensils, and scald and scrub every one perfectly clean, if you wish to continue making good sugar in the future. In this order the evaporating pans are excepted; which should be put away in a dry place with the glazed coating on them, which is the best protection from rust.—Journal of Agriculture. Bi,stEllantnito. The Fredericksburg Battle.-- Scenes in the Hospital. At the hospital we found poor Bayard. Of all the ghastly wounds I saw . that day, his was the most awful. It needed but a glance to see, as he calmly stated to those who visited him, "that his days on earth were numbered." If his wound had been a mere scratch, he could not have been more cool, quiet, and collected. He talked calmly of his death as of a settled thing, and only inquired par ticularly how much time he had left oil earth. He was told; "perhaps forty-eight hours." He did not live twenty-fbur hours. My heart sank within me as he gave me his hand in farewell, and I almost murmured, "Why are the best taken ?" The large house to which the wounded were brought, was now filled - with mutilated and dying men. Cries and groans resounded from every 'apart ment. Ghastly- and bloody wounds I met the eye in every direction. Some had their eyes shot out,the tongues of , some were swollen out of their mouths; some had their bodies shot through ; others were torn and man, I gled by shell and solid shot. and all were crowded wherever there was 1 any space. The surgeons were hack ing off limbs and E.rins by the dozen. The odor of blood was oppressive.— One man called me to him, thinking / I was a surgeon, and said that one of his wounds bad been dressed, but he found that he bad another, which was j , bleeding rapidly. Another poor fel- I low hold up his arm to me, with a great bulging hole in it, and asked with an expression of pain and anx iety that I could scarcely endure, whether I thought be would have to lose it ? Such is the horrid reality of war behind the painted scenes of honor, glory, and romance. How ever cold an ear the poor fellows may have turned to the story of the Cross when in health, es a general thing they were ready enough now to listen to the offers of mercy. One woun ded boy had his leg taken off just a&t: ; be was entering the hospital, which building was under fire all day, and was repeatedly struck. The scene from the windows of the hospital was truly splendid as night came on umerable camp-fires gleamed from the hill-sides, and occasionally the darkness was lighted up by the flash of cannon. But weariness, and the knowledge that our own regiment might be engaged the next day, caus ed me to seek a place of rest. The medical department of our brigade hid been rendered small by the ab sence of some of its members, and it might be that our duties on the mor row would be 'very arduous. The ground outside the hospital was so tramped up, muddy, and filled with horses, that it was impossible to sleep there. But there was a stone alley way under the hospital, filled with tobacco in the leaf; part of it lying on the ground, and part drying overhead. One end of this place was already fill ed with wounded men, but the sur geon in charge said that the other would not be occupied before morn ing, and that I had better stay there. As a light came I saw something White lying near the wall. I first thought it was a dog, and going up, I stirred the object with my foot.— On looking closer, I found that it was a ghastly pile of arms and legs from the amputating room. But I had seen so much of blood and horror during the day, that I had grown callous. I quietly spread my blank ets within ten feet of the bloody heap, and listened sadly to the shrieks and groans from, the hospital above till I fell asleep. The reopening of the battle on Sunday morning awoke me, and as I was rolling up my blan kets, a shell bursting near warned me to hasten. I joined the regiment, and with it recrossed the river. We have since been doing picket duty on the Rappahannock. Many a careless light-hearted sol dier wore an anxious troubled look that day, as we stood facing the rebel batteries, and many a loud-mouthed, coarse, swearing fellow, was quiet and pae. Bat I saw no flinching or skulking. You at the North who cosily read about battles in an arm- Thk*, know little of a man's sensa tion who stands in frontof the ene my's guns. He hears shot and shell scream sad explode over and •sikeknd hitt Before bid wiles - the wat ous smoke of the conflict. From out of that obscurity, he knows that at any moment some swift messenger of death may be speeding on its way to his heart. Ho thinks of unfinished plans, of bright prospects and hopes fbr the future. His home, its belov ed inmates, and the forms and fea tures of those friends that hold the chief places within his soul, rise up before him, and he knows that at any moment he may be snatched from all these, and lie a mangled bleeding corpse upon the ground,— And then come graver and still more solemn thoughts of the shadowy world beyond, and "conscience which makes cowards of us all" awakes.— In the mad excitement and tumult of a charge, everything is forgotten. When patiently standing under fire, everything is remembered, and this, of all that the soldiers has to do and endure, is the most difficult and dread ed. CHAPLAIN =II JAPAN, America was the first to find the key by which the long-locked door of Japan was opened. But it re quires something more than an open door to insure an entrance. There must be bold, zealous and holy men to speak the Word. "What," the London Record pertinently asks, "would have been the present condi tion of Japan, had its people beheld in the teachers of Christianity, and in the conduct of its professors, a spirit and practice more worthy of that Divine religion? What, also, wo may ask, would have been the fruits of Evangelical missionary toil in other parts of Asia, in Africa and in the South Sea Islands, had Chris tianity come to the. natives recom mended by nothing of a more exalted character in those who preached it ? The wilderness that now blossoms like the rose, would have been a wil derness still; and where tens of thou sands have been brought from the depths of pagan wretchedness into the light and freedom of the gospel, the people would even now be either the blind devotees of' a barren cere monial, or be driven, by their very disgust at the Christian's hypocrisy, into a more hopeless slavery under their own superstition. "Japan is generally allowed to be the most civilized and refined of the Asiatic nations • nobleness, intelli gence and docility being strikingly characteristic. of the people. Their remarkable industry is of itself' an in dication that men possessed of such a quality, have capacities for the greatest intellectual and moral ad vancement. The very hills and moun tains of the country are richly culti vated; and wherever a square foot of soil can be brought under agricultural treatment, it is made to yield its quota of the general produce. Nor do the Japanese, like the Chinese, everlastingly move in the same track, working and manufacturing as they did five hundred years ago; but, on the contrary., are highly progressive, copying the inventions of other coun tries, sand bringing out similar pro ductions with marvellous rapidity. They put Europeans to shame in the matter of education ; for the instruc tion of their children is almost univer sal, and the consequence of such a general attention to the training of their youth in elementary knowledge and industrious habits, is, that indi gence and pauperism are almost un known in their land. To what ex cellent purpose might not such qual ities be turned, if once fairly brought under the influence and direction of Evangelical truth ! "Taking the facts as they stand on both sides of the question, we cannot but regard that interesting country as one on which the eye of Christian expectation should rest with plea sure ; as one the conversion of whose inhabitants might in itself be a sig nal instrument in spreading the light of truth through the nations of the East. The unhappy prejudice con tracted against the religion of Christ has, doubtless, been a formidable hin drance to the missionary's success in that country; but there is a might, and a power, before which even this great mountain may be made a plain." Gen. Casey's Division at Fair Oaks. It will be remembered that a storm of censure has been visited upon Gen. McClellan for the tone of his dispatch, i n which be spoke of the discreditable behaviour of Gen. Ca sey's division at the battle of Fair Oaks. Gen. Heintzelman's report has just been published. He says : —The defensive works of Gen. Ca sey's position, in consequence of the increasing rains, and the short time alldwed him for labor with entrench ing tools, were in a very unfinished state, and could oppose but a feeble resistance to the overwhelming mass. thrown upon them. The artillery was well served, and some of the regiments fought gallantly till overwhelmed by numbers. Af ter they were once broken, however, they could not be rallied. The road was filled with ftigitives (not all fiam this division) as far as Boston's Bridge. Col. Starr's regiment of Gen. Hooker's division, lad to force its way throagh them with the bay onet, ands gaud I pissed at Bot tom's Bridge, stopped over a thou sand men. An officer informed me that after we had driven the ene my beyond our first entrenchments, he visited Gen, Casey's camp, and found more men bayoneted and shot inside the shelter tents than outside of them. As Gen. Casey, in his re port, has not designated the regi ments who did not behave well, I do not feel called upon to name them. HOW TO TREAT AN IDLE HUSBAND. The people (the inhabitants of' New-Zealand)are much attached to their chiefs. •If they require an ad ditional patch of land, or liberty to build a Louse anywhere, it is grant ed. If they quarrel among them selves, or have complaints to make, the head chief's ear is kindly opened to all—to the poorest man as well as to" the petty chief. If invasion threatens their district, he is in the front ranks to repel it ; and, let the war cause a sharp skiimish or a great battle, he is always in the front, and where danger presses most, so that he has their love and respect. The head-chief often inter feres in minor matters of a domes tic nature. For instance, if a lazy fellow has a wife or two and a few children, and, through his love for fishing, dancing, or loitering idly about, neglects to bring in the neces sary supplies for his amily, a com plaint is made. The chief visits the house in person, and, if he sees just grounds for punishment, ho orders out the whole population of the vil lage. Men, women, and children arm themselves with a stiff birch, made of canes, and then form a dou ble line about six feet apart, and wait, with anxious glee, the approach of the delinquent. At last he is placed, at one end of the lines, amidst a shower of yells, screams, jibes, etc. The word is given by the chief, and away he darts at his ut most speed. According to his des- . erts, he may get off with running the lines once, or may have to do so twice or thrice ; but he is skilled in cunning and fleetness that can run ; the lines once without having the skin tickled for him by the hearty application of the birch, wielded by some strong woman. As the pun ishment is not of a fatal kind, the whole affair creates unrestricted merriment. For . one month after wards his family are provided by the public at large under the fatherly superintendent° of the chief. At the expiration at Oat time, &he has all domestic matters in perfect or der, as a good father and provident husband used to have, he again re sumes his place in society, and short ly aftewards helps, with L.x, .peri eliced hand, to flagellate see one else —Coulton's South America. JAMIE FURGESON. In the early days of our country the Scotch-Irish Covenanters were numerous in the western counties of Pennsylvania—a branch of the Pres byterian family. The Covenanters of those days used "Rouse's version of the Psalms" exclusively, and held the composition of Watts and others in utter detestation; and so tightly did they draw their sectarian lines, that for a Covenanter to attend, even once, the services of any other church, though it might be of the Presbyterian order, was considered a crime almost as bad as sheep.steal ing. James Furgeson—or, as he was generally called, Jamie Fergu son-a well-to-do farmer of Wash ington County, was a member of the Rev, Mr. Buchanan's congrega tion, and one of the strictest of the strict in all matters of church doc trine. "Ila,v,ing set up a distillery he be came, in another sense also, very often more tight and more blue than any of his fella v-members—which, indeed, is saying a great deal on that point. "His parson (a truly good man, but suspected of using Watt's book in the family devotions) did every thing in his power to reclaim him.— Suspensions from church-member ship and restorations thereto follow ed each other for some time, unti: the good parson, losing patience, resolved if possible to effect a radi cal cure, and exposulated• with him in the strongest terms. Jamie• con fessed his numerous short-comings. [Men are wonderfully ready to con fess themselves great sinners; but greatly dislike being told that they are such 4 "Quet it, mon,' said the good parson, in his broad dialect, `quet it at onee. No more of this aye sinnin' an' aye repentin'; but quet it entirely, or you'll become a disgrace to the congregation !'— This was rather too much for Jamie, substantial man as he was, and a liberal contributor to the support of the church. It put him on the of fensive. lie began to think he was not altogether so bad as other men, or even as his own pastor, in some respects; and he determined to re, taliate. he, I am a poor weak body.' said he, acknowledge that I do get a little drunk, or so, occasionally ; but I never sing enrol Watt's pawns:" The parson withdrew; and Jamie kept or aye sionin' and aye repentin' to the day of his death.—Harper's Magazine. FRANCIS XAVIER. Some three centuries and a half ago, the little kingdom of Navarre ' gave birth to an extraordinary man. His family oft both sides was among the proudest of ancestral Spain.— While his elder brothers were trod , with the military ardor which ad I filled the escutcheon of their fathers with deeds of renown, Francis, call ed also, from his mother's family, Xavier, was smitten with a passion for letters. His education was com pleted at Paris, and there where five centuries before Abelard had drawn upon himself the eyes of Eu rope, and attracted to his lectures admiring thousands, Francis was now expounding that same Aristotle, and was rapidly winning a similar popularity. He had fallen upon an auspicious hour. It was the dawn of a new era. Faust had just revealed the magic of movable types. The Port uguese had opened the ocean path way to the East Indies. Columbus had returned from his discovery with a story that electrified the na tions. Luther and his coadjutors were agitating Europe with the pro foundest religious sensation. At this opportune moment Ignatius Loyola, one of the great founders, made his appearance in Paris. Re had as yet found but two men fit to become his associates. lie presently marked Xavier for the third. He sought his acquaintance, and laid open to him the glory of converting the infidels, to Chretianity, but his words fell on ears deaf to every thing but the glo ry of this present world, which was just then opening to the rising phil osopher in its brightest splendors.— And "What shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul?" was the solemn message which he reiterated from day to day and from month to month, till at length, in an hour of sadness, it struck a new chord in the heart, which had at first spurned so grave an admonition. The great thought which now began to find an echo within him, "What shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul?" went on —deep ening its own impressions till it transformed the world and him, The world, which had been his god, ho now despised and spit upon; its hon ors were faded rags; its majesty mean ; its riches despicable dust.— He literally forsook father and moth er, and houses and lands, for the kingdom of heaven's sake. He seized the first opportunity to sail to India as a missionary, and pass ing on his way to the seaport almost within sight of the home of his child hood, he refused to look upon it with bis eyes ; refused to see the face of kindred; refused the final adieu of a fond mother, lest.the tenderness of earthly affections should shake the steadfastness of his soul. Arrived in India, he wont up and down the valleys, and over the moun tains, and through the islands, learn ing the languages of the natives by miracle, and preaching Christianity with a zeal which brought hundreds of thousands to seek baptism at his hands. With an art which none but a disciple of Loyola could imitate, he knew how to become all things to ail men. Repulsed by the Emperor of Japan for the meanness of his garb, he forthwith arrayed himself in the gorgeous priestly robes of the Bonzes, and, presenting himself again to the monarch, with a tone of authority he commanded reverence and obedience, and thus, through the edict of the emperor, a nation was converted in a day. He, now looked over to the broad valleys of China, and burned to add her hundreds of millions to the list of his converts; and midway in his voyage to this enterprise, which was to be the crowning glory of his life, his great soul was obliged to for sake the frail body that refused to sustain this additional labor. , It matters little that we say he was a Jesuit, arid that his converts were no better in their baptized heathenism, who shall claim perfec tion of creed or act for any man ? That which is worthy of our atten tion is the superhuman energy of a great soul under the inspiration of a great idea. Here was an earnest man p th e i n n e g t r a a ted appointed i with a d him conviction to d ea of the thing t he e did it with a might that will stand to all ages the astonishment of the world. In this example of the single eye, the undaunted courage, the un resting aim, Francis Xavier exhibit ed all the human elements of moral power in the highest degree. And the minister of the Gospel, whether in heathen or in Christian lands, who shall imitate the'apostle to the Indies in these things, and shall in addition have his soul filled with the light of truth and with the Holy Ghost, shall, even in the blaze and stir of this nineteenth century, give a new imffulse to the moral world, and a higher tone to the Christian life. /®-Ceremony was always the com panion gr weak minis; it is a plant that I'M never grow in a strong soil. NEW SERIES.--VOL. 4, NO. 37 ( Frightful Casualities on Oil The following are the details of a terrible calamity near Titusville, which we have already briefly no ticed : On Saturday afternoon, Jan. 31st, a shocking accident occurred on the Mellhenny farm, on Oil Creek, by which three estimable ladies lost their lives. About four o'clock in the afternoon, a fire broke out in the house of H. C. Poole, blacksmith and machinist, burning it to the ground in a short time, and in it the bodies of his wife and only daughter, also the wife of Silae Gonzales, formerly of Stark county, Ohio. Miss Poole bad been visiting Mrs. Gonzales du ring the afternoon, and the two started to a store on the Mellhenny Farm. The house of Mr. Poole be ing on their way they stopped. In less than five minutes from the time they were seen entering it the house was discovered to be flames., Three men, who were near, rushed to the house and tried to open the door, but found it fast at the bottom.— They . then took a plank and forced it open, but they had just time to see 2 of the bodies lying black and lifeless near the door when the flames forced them to retreat. All possible eer tions were made to save the house and rescue the bodies, but all in vain. It was nearly an hour before the bodies were recovered. They were then a black and shapeless mass, and could only be indentified by frag ments of their clothing that lay be neath their bodies. Mrs. Gonzales and Poole were both in the prime of life, and Miss Poole was a beautiful and accomplished young lady of sixteen. They were highly esteem ed by the community among *tom they resided, and their dreadful fate is sincerely deplored. Mrs. Gkiniales leaves three small children. Poole was absent in Erie, and Mr. Gonzales was in Pittsburgh. The cause of the accident is all conjectaire. Ten gallons of refined oil •Kere known to be in the house, sitting up stairs. On the Thursday previous, a Mrs. Vincent, residing on the Story Farm, was so severely burned that she has since died. She had been washing some of her husband's clothes in benzoic, and in passing through a room, her dress caught tire from the stove, burning her so severely that death ensued next day. Shocking Accident to Union Pa'. roted Prisoners la ibichniond --A Number Drowned. The Richmond Examiner of the 26th ult. says: Between 4 and 5 o'clock yesterday morning, while upwards of 1,000 ex changed prisoners were being con ducted from the Confederate States Prison to the Petersburg' depot„ for transportation to City Point, the foot bridge spanning the basin at Eight street gave way, while the line was passing over it, and went down a wreck, in ten feet of water, carrying with it all upon the bridge, from 50 to 80 in number. The utmost ex eitement at once ensued among the prisoners, and the members of them under guard the company having ex erted themselves strenuously to res cue them, but the morning being dark and cloudy, their efforts were attended with but partial sivftsa.— On calling the roll, 21 of the priso ners were found to be missing, or, at least, not answering to their names. Two of the guard, members of Capt. Maule's company (E.) City Battalion, were also missing, and it is feared they have shared the fate of the pris oners. Notwithstanding the lamentable mishap, the prisoners were sent on to Petersburg by the regular train.— During the morning throngs of per sons assembled on both banks of the basin and at the [midge to witness the preparations for recovering tho bodies from the basin. At the sug gestion of Coroner Sanxay, the out lets were opened for the purpose of drawing the water off; but the basin emptied slowly ; and up to 5 o'clock p. m. yesterday but three bodies had been discovered, two of them Union prisoners, and the third the body of a Confederate soldier that had evi dently been in the water a month or more. • Darkness approaching, the further search for the victims wag. postpon ed until this morning, when an offi cial investigation will be held. It is stated that the fallen bridge was constructed after a pattern in troduced from Cincinnati, Ohio. 1B The Greek Question is settled at last by the selection of Duke Ernest, of Coburg, to fill the vacant throne of Greece. Duke Ernest is a brother of the late Prince Al bert, and of course uncle to Prince Wilfred, of England, who, as the Duke is childless, is next of kin, and his heir to the vacated dukedom. The Duke is said to be an ex cellent man, of large and liberal view iThe best way to do good to ourselves is to do it to others ; the right way to gather, is to aesittar. aq.The evil that ota4 , lira after them, but the good is oft inAarred wit b, their bones. Creek.