ADVERTISING RA. : lt 1 mo. 3 mos. moe. 1 yr. One Sonars, 1.50 1.75 3.50 5.50 12.19) Two. Bstuares. 3.00 3.50 5.50 0.00 20.00 Three enures. 4.50 5.26 0.00 17.00 25.00 Btx Squares. 11.60 17.00 25.00 45.(0 quarter Oolomn, 19.50 VOO 40.00 60.00 Halt Column, 20.(0 40.00 60.00 110.03 One Column, 90.00 50.00' 110 00 200.00 , Profeeston4l Cardolll.oo per III:leper year. Admlntstrator's and Auditor's Notices, iu.oo Losal No ticee.9o Gents per line let le n ertlon 116 cent ep er Ins Sash entmegnent Insertlon. Ten lines agate eel:161,111as a squire. • ROBERT IREDELL, JR., Punwannie, ALLENTOWN,PA OPENING NEW BOOT & SHOE STORE, NO. 700 HAMILTON BTREET, Two door, oboes Kramer'e Corner more, ALLENTOWN, PA The undersigned would respectfully Informyou that they have opened at the above place with an entire now clock of BOOTS & SHOES of all etylei and qualities, purehaaed at low figures, on abilog us to offer EXTRA INDUCEMENTS to buyer.. trusting . that by fair dealing we may merl your favor. Very Respectfolly. RITTER & HUBER. air-BOOTS AND SHOES MADE TO ORDER. ALSO MENDING done In the neateat meaner and with prompt nem Jos. M. Rirrsit eaD 7•d LUMBER I LUMBER !! WI-J( )11,E SALE AND RETAILI 110 FFNIA N 'S STEAM SAW MILL AND 11T1'IBER YARD! KINDLING! BILLS CUT TO ORDER OFFICE AT THE MILT, FRONT AND LINDEN STS. WHITE AND . BLACK OAK BAW LOOS wanted. (or Which the highest market price will be paid er m doing s/. 41-w ins 12-17 LIAYES, COULTER & CO., Successors to W. A. Arnold, m•ourAoitra es. or Heaters, Ranges, Low Grate AND MARBLEIZED SLATE MANTELS, 1305 Chestnut PHILADELPHIA. 1101.410nd for cotulorwe Cmv7-602d0w " True Eoonomy is buying the BEST." VAN BEIL'S FOUR DOLLAR WHISKEY 1.9 PURE RYE, COPPER DISTILLED OLD AND VERY MELLOW *4.00 n gallon *MOO a dozen lu huge bottle, YELLOW SEAL SHERRY, SII.COn doxim In Inrga bottles. GOLD SEAL BRANDY, Large bottles, #lB.OO a do: EVERYTHING IN THE WAY OP The Finest Liquors and Segars AT THE LOWEST - POSSIBLE PRICE, AT THE LOWEST PO SIDLE PRICE Best Brands of CHAMPAGNE AT CO H. & A. C. VAN BELL 1310 Chestnut Stree , Philadelphia oct2,v 707 KITCHEN WARES, TOILET WARES, TABLE ARES, FANCY WARES, In All Varieties, at Lowest Prices TYNDALE & MITCHELL 707 CHESTNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA CHINA, AND CROCKERY, ==l jyatowEttikt NO. 902 CHESTNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA, ♦ few door, woe of thri Coutineattl Hotel, JEWELERS SILVERSMITHS =I Fine Watches, Bronzes & Fanoy Goods MODERATE PRICES FIRST-CLASS • GOODS, MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES WITHOUT DEVIATION • Protoptstleollon Overt to orders sod iriquirle.bY ma' rod?-ly DAVY •&-. H U NT; GREAT WESTERN AN Carriage & Harness Ci?. 6 0.10 BAZAAR. 1311,1313, 1315 and 1317 Market Street, PHILADELPHIA. Palling sod Elhiftlog•Top Boggles from WO to SM. Germantown (8111fIlog Seats) from $7O to $llO. Rock II ways (Leatho• Trimmed) from $3O to $135. Its whoa., No Top Boggle., Jagger and Dueluoss Wo gon■ from $5O to $l 2O . t i gr l. R i t a f. $l 5 to $77 per net. le rues. from am to vs per eat, Blankets, Whips. Halters hheeta. Afghans nod every. thing •pitsgspag to th i e b buere &ft ertl , l7 tow t priers. Opr all raTOA purcht:slrg r ele:Wl34. ''P" " Ilingl4 7 ;e4 a VOL. XXVT THE LARGEST AND BEST! The attention of the public la InTitan to tho tuamonso stock of • Stoves, Ranges, Furnaces Grates, TIN AND SHEET IRON WARE, WM. G. RITTER'S, 831 HAMILTON STREET, The storo las boon greatly enlarged to moot the demands of. an Increasing trade. Our MOOS ore no boat? that we offer the grentot advsnt.ogeo to oar costumers Don't numbs o °Nowhere before out horn taken a look at one ato•k, whim we will explain the advantages of oar na l:normue varlettos of Moron. Among our Parlor:Stove's and Double Heaters RPRAR'S ANTI•CLINkRR, MORNING GLORY RADIANT HOME, PLAIN CYLINDERS. COOK STOVE, SHEAR'S ANTI-DUST, READ/NO, PALACE 00 OK. MONARCH, EXCELSIOR, RtiOUL A TOR. C. LEWIS HUBER so ll.w no Regulator Is something now, and has a revolving top. Very Rue RANGES AND FIRE PLACE HEATERS, of different klutla—All of Superior Excellence. Solo :trent for the.celsbrated MO nNiNO O LoRY RASE BORN INO STOVE, greatlylmproved Also the Morning olory Parlor Farness or Dot,lo • ;t e m°, TS • iti orn iu r Olorit Potable Furnace made I dltforout starts to heat two ir three slut y bou,e, mud tho n Morulug Ulory Finn Heater. Would cull special attention to SPEAR'S ANTI-CLINKER Hot-Base, Self-Feeding Revolving Light Parlor Stove and Double Heater. The theory of Item Burning Sloven bag been known In the meanifilc world for more thn forty years. Numerous efforts have been male by Stove a manutacturen and liters to immune an feet Bone Move . , but they knee signally failed, becausa no adequate moan, Were invent ed for romestug th slam nail clinkers without durerung the tiro out. The object of the SPEAR INVENTION Is to REMOVE THE ASHF.H and CLINKERS FROM TILE FIRE TOT WITDOOT DROPPING THE FIRE OUT. This can be done every morning witn lens trouble than it takes to rake the old kind of Stoves, and n rontlnuour fire bo kept going always Irerh en the grate. U 9 this UN.. the untie Finance of the Move con strays be relied on for boat; but In other stoves, when the grate surface becomes co•ere I with clinkere and the cylinder bait 0 lied with seller and clinkern, only the upper carfare will afford he t,—thus very often resulting •In* the overheating and ruining of the etovo. With the Improved Orate the base of the Stove in always hot In thin Stove In given a Bot tom av well tie a Top View of the fire. whereon inail other mover rile fire con only be reen iron the top. With loin improvement we can Maws 111-11 thrnogh the win dow% In the h toe, and tell when the Ore require, raking. Tie Stove Is nine eopplied with it Patent Unmoor at the emoke•pipe, and the Wm windows are placed In PAT ENT Ith VoLViNO CYLINDER The windows earl thus be doted while th fire in being Mad ed , tad after the coal in ignited the cylinder can be reversed, throwing too wlndowe open—e•airele free fin in /eke—ant pro- Renting perfcctly bright aro/ clear lig h t ,which cannot be /maim:ell inn any other Store! By there improvement. /I.lro atready IPA.] overcome tho great objet ion to be totted to all other illumlnatiog Also, FIRE PLACE HE of all kinds. LOW DOWN ORA I'ES,IFURNACESof different kinds. oct3o w or ... , doctored, spiced, and sweetened to please the taste, calle ' l "Tonics," "Appetizers,' "Restorers," F.., that lead the tippler on to drunkenness and ruin, but are a true Medicine, made from the native roots .d herbs of Cali- fornia, free from all Alcoholic Stimulants. They are the Great Blood Purifier and a Life-giving Principle, a Per. feet Renovator and Invigorator of the System, carrying off all poisonous. matter, and motoring the blond to a healthy condition, enriching it, refreclrin s and invigorating both mind and body. They arc C 3, ~1 adminrstration, prompt in their action, certain In tic Sr results, safe and reliable in all forms of disco . . . . . No Person can (alto (Irene Bitters accord ing to threetiot, and remain long unwell, provided their bones are not destroyed by miner:ll poison or other means, and the vital organs wasted beyond the point of repair. Dygproxitt or Itullgeetion. headache, fain in the Shoulder;, Coughs, Tightness the Chest, Dirsi; Mms, Sour Eructations of the Stour:Wl, Bad Taste in the outh, !Minus AttackS, Palpitation of the Heart, In flammation of the Limes, Pain in the regions of the Kid neys, and 3 hundred other painful. symptoms, are the off springs of Dyspepsia. In these complaints it has tin equal, and one bottle will prove a beater guarantee of its merits than a lengthy advertisement. For Ferntslo Complaints, in young or old, mar tied or single, at the dawn of womanhood, or the turn of life, these Tonic Bitters display no decided an influence that a marked improvement is soon perceptible. For Intlatontatory 1.111111. Chronic Rliell 11111h110111 and Gout, Dyspepsia or 'lndigestion, Bilious, Remittent and Intermittent revers,Diseaselffof the Blood, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder, these Bitters have been most successful. Such Disc, es are caused by Vitiated World, which is generally produced by derangement of the Di gestive Orgstis. They ore a Gentle Purgative as awl' as a Tooletn ,, sitiq . al, the peculiar merit of acting as powetiul :meld in relieving Cougestion or 1.111.1m:won of the Liver and Viiceral Organs, and in Bilious Diseases. For Stoln Divensre, Eruptions, Totter, Salt• Rheum, Illmehm, Spots, Pimples Pustules, Boils, Car littueles, Ring, orms, Scala-Ili:ad:Sore Eyes, Erysipelas,' Itch, Smiths, Discolorations ot the Skin, Humors 31111 Diseases of the Skin, of whatever name. or nature, are literally dug up andcaied on of the system ill a short time be the of (hero littler,, Otte bottle in such cases will conyiace the most incredulous of their curative effects. 707 Cleanse the Vitiated Blood whenever von find its impurities bursting through the skin in Pimples, Eruptions, or Sort.: cleanse it when .yon find it ob• street.' and sluggish inn the veins; cleanse it when it is foul; your feelings will tell you when. Keep the blood pure. and the health of the system will follow. Grateful thousands proclaim, VINSGAR BIT TERS the 11104 Weeded - el 111eigerallt that ever sustained the slinking system. Pin, Tape, and other AVortus, lurking in the system of so many thousands, are effectually destroyed and removde. Says a distinguish.' phystologest t There is scarcely all inditMlitat upon the face of the earth whose body is exempt from the presence of worm. It is not upon the healthy elements pf the body that worms exist, but upon the diseased humors and slimy deposits tint breed these living monsters of disease. No system of Medicine, 110 vermifitges, no notheltniuitics, will free the system front worms Inc these Bitters, Mechanical Diseases. Persons engaged in Paints and Minerals, such am Plumbers, Type-setters, Cold•beaters, and Miners, as they advance in life, will be subject to paralysis of the Bowels. 'llo guard against this take a dose of WALlratt'S VINIIGAII Uncross 011 CG Or twice a week. as a Prerrillire.. . . . Bilious, Remittent, nod Intermittent Fevers, which are so prevalent in the valleys ofOor great rivers throughout the United States, especially those of the Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, 'rem. nessee, Cumberland, Arkansas, l ied, Colorado, Braros, Rio Grande, Pearl, Alabama, Mobile, Savannah,Roanoke, James, and many others, with (heir vast tributaries, throughout our entire country during the Summer and Autumn, and remarkably so during seasons of unusual heat and dryness, are invariably accompanied by extent 'sive derangements of the stomach and liver, and other abdominal viscera. There are always more or less ob structions of the liver, a weakness and imitable state of the stomach, anti great torpor of the bowels, being , clogged up with vitiated accuinulations. In their treat. mein, a purgative, exerting a Jowerful influence upon these various organs, is essentially necessary. Ittere.is no cathartic for the purpose equal to DR. J. WALKER'S VINEGAR BITTERS, as they will speedily remove the dark.colored viscid matter with winch the bowels are loaded, at the same time stimulating the secretions of the liver, and generally restoring the healthy functions of the digestive organs. Scrofula, or IC.lng , s Evil, White Sweihngs, Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swelled Neck, Goiter, Scrofulous Inflammations, Indolent Jnflaninnations,• !germinal Af fections, Old Sores, Eruptions of the Skin, Sore Eyes, etc., etc. lu these, as in all other constitutional Diseases, WALKER'S VINEGAR DEEEERS have shown their great curative powers iu the most obstinate and Intractable cases. GLASS, 707 . . Dr. Walker , ' California Vinegar Bitters act on all these eases in a similar manner. 11y purifying the Mood they remove the cause, and by resolving away the effects of the inflammation (the tubercular deposits) the affected parts receive health, and a permanent cure is effected. •. The properties of Do. WALKER'S VINEGAR liirraas are Aperient. Diaphoretic and Carminative, Nutritious, laxative, Diuretic, Sedative, Counter-Irritant, Sudorific; Alterative, Mid Anti-Bilious. The Aperient and mild Laxative the of DR. WALKER'S VINEGAR BITTEKS are the best safe rguard in all cases of eruptions and malignant fevers, their balsamic, healit, and soothing properties protect the humors of the fumes. Their Sedative properties allay pain in the nervous system, stomach, and 'bowels, either from inflammation, wind, coat, cramps, etc. , 'Their Counter-Irritant influence extends throughout the'system. Their Diuretic properties act 011 the Kidneys, correcting and regulating the flow cf urine. Their Anti• Bilious properties stimulate the liver, in the secretion of bile; and its discharges through the biliary difcts,and are superior to all remedial agetixs,"for the-cure of bilious Fever, Fever and A , atte, etc.'/ - Fortify the hotly against dhiense by puri• lying all its fluids unit VINEGAR Itirrens No epidemic can take bold of a system tints forearmed. The liver, the stomach, the bowels, the kidneys, and the nerves ate rendered disease-proof by this great invignrant. The Ethertry of DE. I‘, A LKER'S VINEGAR DIT TIIRS, in Chronic Dyspepsia, levers, Nervous Disorders, Constipation, deficiency of vital 'tower, and all maladies affecting the stomach, liver, bowels., pulinonary organs, or musc ular system, has been experienced by hundred, of thousands, nod hundreds of .thousands tutors arc ask ing fur the same relief. Dlrcetionia.—Tnite of the hillier, on going to bed at night from a half to one and one-half Ai/too-glassful!: Eat good nourishing food, such es beefsteak, mutton chop, venison, resist beef, nod vegetables, and take out. door exercise, They arc composed of purely vegetable ingredients, and contain no spirit, J. WALKER, Prop', It.,4I.MeDONALD&CO., Druggists and Gen. AVE, San Ft - mimic°, Cal. and corner of Washingion and Clmrh ou Sta., New F ork. SOLD IW ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS. march D•ly dhw c4i'be Vrebtoeb Ilrot6lrr 631_ ALLENTOWN. PA ENINEI IR diteinaL NO CURE, NO PAY. DR. H. D. LONGAKER, Graduate of the University of Pennsylvania, at Philadel phia has boon in maccessful practise for a number of yean In various parte of the United dtates; will promptly at• tend to all branches of his profession at kin rooms.. Bost side of EWA street. bet. Hamittomand Manta, ALLENTOWN, PA No Patent Medicines ate need or recommended; the rem adios administered are thug° which will not break down tho constitution, bat renovate the system from all Impales It has sustained from mineral medicines, and leave It In • healthy and perfectly cured condition. CONSUMPTION, BRONCITITIS, DYSPEPSIA, • and all diseasee of the Lungs, Throat, Stomach, and Liv er, which yearly carry thousand. to untimely glues, can undoubtedly be cured. MELANCHOLY ABERRATION, that state of alienation and aberration of mind which ten ders persons incapable of enjoying the pleasures of per forming the &aloe of life. RHEUMATISM AND PARALYSIS, In any him or condition, chronic or acute, warranted cur able. Epllopry. or falling etch netts, and chronic or •tntir born cares of FEMALE DISEASES epeedlly and radically removed; Salt Rheum, Skin DieloBBoll (of yearn' standing) ovary dercription of Ulcerations, Piles and Scrofulone dis• saner, warranted cured. • , SirPorticular oilman:ln given to prlyste Mumma of ovary descrip tion of both sores. Ladle. PEI erica . from any complaint Incidental to their sex, rho consult tho doctor with thmurance of relief. Cancer oared, and Tumors Grail kinds removed without the knife or drawing blood. Diseases of the EYE AND EAR soccoearnlly and offeetnally removed. . D e ra.niVo'Vdcratfe will ibr; make i ( d e l o i d a d n e y n t dis tance and I f de aired Woe tont with proper directione to any part of the county. OP/106: East aide of Sixth street between Hamilton and Walnut Allentown. Pa. may 28-ly WATSON'S CELEBRATED FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF • SAFES. ESTABLLSBED IN 1843. TILE OLDEST SAFE HOUSE IN PHILADELPHIA. Thn only Safe with lesion Dorms. Orman toad Free from Dampness. Alen prices from 15 to 20 per cent. lower than other makers. Ploaso send for Circular and Price Lust. T. WATSON & SON, Late of Evans & Watson, Muunfaeturers No. 53 S . Fourth St. Philadelphia. M. S. YOUNG & CO.,Agents, augal•dowl ALLENTOWN. • PILES OR HEMORRHOIDS. PILES OF ALL KINDS perfectly and permanently CORFU), without pain, danger. caustics or inatrumentd. by W3I. A. McCANDLESS, M. D., 2001 ARCH STREET. PRILADELPHIA, PA, Who can refer on to over 12C0 casee cared In Philadel phia alone. We dealt . ° to say to those afflicted, there is positively no deception to tho cure of these Discuses, it matters not how long or how severely you have been afflicted, wo can cure you. We also core Fistula, Fissure Prolapaus, Stricture!. and D [motion of the lower bowel. Come you that ore suffering, we will not deceive you, Wo have patients from utmost every State in the Union and from Europe. iiIIVO treated these diseaeos for twenty yearn without a failure. apr W-ly flyer's Cathartic Pills, For the relief and '4( cure of all derange. ments in the stom ach, liver, and bow cis. They are a mild L'oellethN aperient, and an 'l4 ' IWei% excellent purgative. Being purely vege .:.• table, they contain • — *l.. no mercury or minc . ral whatever. Much serious sickness and • • suffering in prevent. ed by their timely use; and every family should have them on hand for their protection and relief, when required. Long experience has proved them to be the oaf. est, surest, and beet of all the pills with which the market abounds. By their occasional use, Um blood is purified, the corruptions of the eye. tem expelled, obstructions removed and the whale machinery of life restored to its healthy activity. Internal organs which become clogged and sluggish are cleansed by Ayer's Pills, and stimulated into action. Time incipient disease 18 changed into health, the value of which chat, when reckoned on the vast multitudes who en enjoy it, can hardly be computed. Their sugar coat g makes them pleasant to take, and preservea their virtues unimpaired for any length of time, so that they are ever fresh, and perfectly reliable. Although searching, they are mild and operate without disturbance to the constitution, or diet, or occupation. Full directions are given on the wrapi to each box, how to use them as a Family P sic, and for the following complaints, which ese Yills rapidly cure:— For Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Listless. nem, Languor and Moss of Appetite, they should be taken moderately to stimulate the stom ach, and restore its healthy tone and action. For Liver Complaint and its various snap toms, Bilious Ileadache t dick Mead. oche, Jacrnglion or Green nlClnseia, 101t* Colic and Dillon* Fevers, they should be judiciously Laken for each case, to correct the diseased action or remove the obstructions which cause it. For Dysentery or Diarrhoea; but one gild done in generally required. For itheuntatism, Gloat, Gravel, Pal. phonon of the Heart, Pain In the nide, Dock and Loins, they should be contin uously taken, as required, to change the diseased action of the system. With such change those complaints disappear. For Dropsy and Dropsical Swellino, they should be token In large and frequent doses to produce the effect of a drastic purge. For nuppression, a largo dose should be taken, as it produces the desired effect by etym. panty. s Mutter Pill, take ono or two Pills to promote digestion and relieve the stomach. An occasional dose stimulates the stomach and bowels, restores the appetite, and invigorates the system. Hence It is often advantageous where no serious derangement exists. Ono who feels tolerably well often fi nds that a dose of those Pills makes him feel decidedly better, from their cleansing and renovating effect on tho digestive apparatus. PREPARED BY Dr. J. C. AYERS CO., Practical Chemists, LOWELL, MANS., U. S. A. FOR SALE 11Y ALL DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE. BOLD IN ALLENTOWN t Y W. E. BARNES & SON. Ayer's Hair Vigor, For restoring to Gray Hair its natural Vitality and Color. A dressing which is at once agreeable, healthy, an d effectual foe preserving the hair. It soon restores faded Or gray hair to its original color, with the gloss and freshness of youth. Thin hair is thickened, falling hair checked, and baldness often, though not always, cured by its use. Nothing can restore the hair where the follicles aro de stroyed, or the glands atrophied and decayed; but such as remain can be saved by this application, and stimu lated into activity, so that a new growth of hair is produced. Instead of fouling the hair with a pasty sedi ment, it will keep it clean and vigorous. Its occasional use will prevent the hair from turning gray or fulling off, and consequently prevent baldness. The restoration of vitality it gives to the scalp arrests and prevents the forma tion of dandruff, which is often so un cleanly and offensive. Free from those deleterious substances which make some preparations dangerous and inju rious co the hair, the Vigor can only benefit but not harm it. If wanted merely for a HAIR DRESSING, nothing else can be found so desirable. Containing neither oil nor dye, it does not soil white cambric, and yet lasts long, on the hair, giving it a rich, gloasy lustre, and a grateful perfume. Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Practical and Analytical Chemists, LOWELL. MARS. SOLD IN ALLENTOWN BY W. E. BARNES & SON. orpPHILADELPHIA 810 H. OBONS' BANDAGE INSTITUTE. No. 14 North NINTH Street. above Blark•t. B. O. KY NETT'S Patent Graduating Preseure True. posltive• ly cures ruptures when alt other . fall. Also, a large •a siety of cheap Trams, Improved Elastic Stoelting.. Belts, Shoulder Brace., abdominal Supporter.. Sampan. code., Pileßandages. Spine Instrument., Crutches, Se. • lady fully competent In attendance. ' • . Street 'spaciAL NOTICE TO LADIES! i&HN MRS. 6 IMIOUANAN. M. 1).. 'Professor of Mrnwint ay, e soles special attoollon to the treatment of Mamie. of WOBIRN AND CLIII.DttSfi. She has boon 90 years In active practice and eared over 30,000 ca.os of Mesas., peculiar to Woman. She solicit. difficult ehronio nod generally coosldered Incurable eases, and guarantees a safe and speedy " afire ROl(oted, please call upon, or satires. MIN. JOHN lIUCIIANON, el. D., OF PICE•I PRIVATE—SUPINE St, Holm from 0 0. el, to 9 P. 51. vi fp this out for future rsfertnee 85 TO 820 per day I Agents wanted! All alums Of Working prople.of either nex,yorlag or old. make more money at Work for na la their spare momoala, or all the time. than at anything else. Partin- Mara free. Addreca O. IiTINBON ' & CO.. Portland, 111 In* - • cep ieklyw. . ALLENTOWN, PA., WEDNESDAY MORNING, NOV MBER 20. 1872. AN IRREPRESSIBLE BOY. Mown Tonna. Rancid Made Things Un ' comfortable for him Meter and a Unehfnl Mowing Man. John Smith—you've heared of him—levery bashful; is too bashful in truth. Ho was born and raised in the country, His father gave him a good education, and allows him plenty of money. But John, with all other attain ments, never could accustom himself to female society, not because be did not like the girls but because his nature would not permit him to associate with the fair sex. It once happened, not very long ago, that John's father had some very important busi ness to transact in this city. He had also some very particular business to attend to at home, which demanded his personal attention and net possessing the power of übiquity, ho delegated his son John to transact that bust• nese in the city. John being thus commissioned, immediate ly proceeded to the city, and to the residence of his father's old friend, whom he found to boa very nice old t,entienaan,with a beautiful daughter and gold spectacles. John was ush• end into the parlor, (a new thing for him) and motioned to a seat—no, a sofa (another new thing). But we must use his own language : I took my seat and made observations. Everything was fine, fine carpets, line sofas, fine tables, fine curtains, fine books, Sine pianos, fine everything, and especially a tine young lady who was dressed in fine silk, fine satin—and who:had fine curie, and a fine appearance geri molly. After chatting with tht old gentleman a few minutes, he took down his'bat, told me to make myself at home for an hour or two, and left me alone.with his daughter and a young mischievous boy, the young lady's brother. I didn't relish the situation at all. The idea of keeping a city belle engaged in conversation for two hours-perdition ; silence reigned in the parlor for a short time, you may bet. I amused myself as much as possi ble with the boy—that , is, I loaned him my knife and watch key, and watched him cut holes in.t he carpet with the one, and spoil the other. I don't know what I would have done had it not been for that boy—ho was so good to attract one's attention you know. It Is true he asked Borne startling questions occasionally, such as this : "Are you going to court sister Emily but such things must be expected under such circumstances. Miss Emily, thinking, no doubt, to be a good hostess she must keep her guest engaged in conversation, asked me how I liked country life, &c. She said it must be a beautiful stet to see the laborers, male and female, romping on the new mown hay on New Year's day ; that she always did think she would like to spend a Chrismas in the country,a nut gather ing with the village lads and lasses ; that it had always been a mystery to her, how they got eggs off the trees without breaking them. In.return, I thought, to keep up my part of the conversation, it was necessary for me to quote poetry and the like, which I did Among other quotations,l unfortunately quot ed the well•known lines of Shakspheare : "There Is a Divinity that shapes our ends, • Rough hew them how you will." At this juncture the boy, who had perched himself upon my knee, looked very earnestly and said : "Divinity shaped the end of your nose mighty curious," I'm certain that I wished somebody would spank the young rascal. We talked of hills mountains, vales, cataracts—l believe I said waterfalls, when the boy spoke up and said : "Why, sister's got a trunk full of 'eta up stairs ; pap says they're made out of boss hair." This.revelation (drunk into me, and blushes Into the cheeks of my lair companion. It began to be very apparent to me that I must be very guarded in what I said, lest said boy might slip in his remarks In uncalled for places ; in tact, I turned my conversation to him. I told him he ought to go home with me, see what nice cnickens we bad in the country. Unluckily I mentioned a yoke of calves my brother owned. The word calves ruined all. The littlo fel low looked np and said : "Sister's got a dozen of them, but she . dont wear 'em—only when she goes up town of windy days." "Leave the room,unmannerly little wretch l't exclaimed Emily, "leave immediately." "I know what you want me fo leave the room for," replied he, "you can't fool me— you want to sit in that man's lap and kiss him like you did Bill Simmons the other day—you can't fool me, I'll jest tell you ; give me some candy like he did, and I'll go. You think be cause you've got a grecian that you're smart. Guess I know a thing or two. I em mad at you anyhow, cause pap would have bought me a top yesterday if it hadn't been for your getting them curls,dog goneyou; you needn't turn so red in the face, cause I can see the paint. There ain't no use winking at me with that glass eyo of your'n cause I ain't going out'n hero, now that's what's the matter w ith the purps. I don't care if you aro twenty-eight years old, you ain't no buss of mine, you old fool." That is all the story that. John related. He says he don't know how he got out of the scrape. GLEANINGS AND GOSSIP The City of Mexico has ordered a $40,000 statue of Columbus. Natchez is said to have the hest society of all the southern cities. The Now York papers aro full of aavertlse ments of oxen for sale. A lawyer of Brooklyn, named Paul Miller, blew his brains out on Tuesday. James E. Dunham has been appointed post master at Bridgeport, Conn. The population of British India is now es timated at a little less than 200,000,000. The loss by the burning of Vandyke's cabi net factory, New York, Monday night, was EBO,OOO. The four great orders of Swedish knight. hood are the Seraphimer, the North Star, the Sword and the Vasa. A series of meetings are to be held in the north of Ireland in favor of the State purchase of Irish railways. The President has recognized Willoughby Herbert Stuart, Vice Camel of her Britannic Majesty at Boston. Receptions at the Russian Embassy, Wash ington, will commence In about three weeks on a very grand scale. • Three of the leading periodicals of Great Britain are engaged in a controversy as to the conditions of certainty. The Supreme Court of Now York has ap. pointed J. Blade as receiver of the Interna tional Insurance . Company- A. Spaniard named Coggi was found dead with a pistol bullet through his,head, on Ryerson street, Brooklyn, Monday night. Lace shawls appear to be again in style. At the opera we have noticed many of white lace wore with fine effect over light colored silks. Preaident Grant returned to Washington on Tuesday. It is understood that ho will compaence the preparation of his annual mss• sage at once. A. private telegram from San Diego, Cal., dated Monday, says D. C. McCormick has been reelected Delegate from Arizona without. opposition. EX= Recent experience'on Briglish railroads does not confirm the popular theory that the safest railways are those ttpon which an lin u et happened. LADY LOAI'ERS A. Cynical Anonyms writes to the Cincin nati Commercial as follows : Sometimes it seems to me that the whole social life of woman Is based upon two ideas —aping and envy. The woman who lives in two little back rooms up stairs, apes and en vies the woman who has a whole house to her self. The woman who has small house apes and envies the woman with a largo house, and the woman with a largo house is in a steady fever of tear and fretting lest she Le not recognized and visited by the woman who has a stone front house and a circus chariot with a clown dressed up m buttons• No mat ter how high up a woman climbs upon the social ladder, there Italways still some higher height which she can't scale, some other woman over her head who looks down upon her, and givesher days and nighteof Jealousy and heartache. Not a blessed woman of them all is happy and content In the soil wherein fate has planted her, but must needs spend her best time and strength in frantic efforts to pull herself by the roots and transplant herself somewhere else. The snobs who ride In cir cus chariots curl up their noses at the school mistresses, the echoolmietresses look down from infinite heights upon the clerks and dress makers, and the clerks and dressmakers in turn pay it off with the interest upon the kitchen girls. What nonsenese, what supreme tomfoolery it all is. is a schoolmistress any bettor or higher up than a washerwoman Not a bit. And are not the schoohnistressand the washerwoman both infinitely better and higher up.than the lady loafers,—the Stofe Moores-of the feminine sex, in short Y Yea, verily. Woman are the most absurd creatures, all owing to the silly fancy that it is lady-like to be a. loafer. A little time ago one of my small busy housekeeper friends asked a lady-loafer caller what had become of her sister : " She goes down town every day, now," says the lady•loafer, hesitatingly. "Is she at work ?" quoth the housekeeper. "Well, ye—yes," says the lady loafer, still more hesitatingly. " What does she do ?" asked my friend. The lady-loafer stammered and backed off painfully, two or three times, and finally made a clean breast of it, thusly : "She—she—she has charge of the trim mings In a—dress-making establishment. She has nothing to do with the dress-making. She has charge of the trimmings. It's not a . common dress-making establishment. It's one of the fashionable dress-makers. She won't make a dress for a poor person." "Oh glory I fan me with a cabbage leaf I" quoth my friend, the small busy housekeeper. The idea of a dody's dress-maker setting herself to be "highatockraeo." The laurels of the lady loafers In the circus chariots are quite laded and withered after that. And yet, why not a dress-maker I' Isn't money made at dressmaking quite as aristocratic as money Made with pork, whiskey, hides, soap, tallow and tobacco I' Those are the material foun dations upon which our American nobility found their airy castles of aristocracy, you know, and I'm sure dress-making is quite as high and honorable as any of them. Removal of the Shops of the Reading Railroad. Rumors have been afloat for some time that the Reading Railroad Company Intended to remove their shops from that clty,a fact iyhich has greatly alarmed_the people thereof. Re. cently, as we learned from the Reading Dis patch, of the Bth inst., the President and Di rectors of the company were in the city,when an interview took place with citizens and Mr. Gowen, at which:the following was elicited : Mr. Gowen stated that not until a very re cent period had the company ever thought of locating their shops elsewhere. On the con trary, it was their purpose greatly to enlarge their industral establishments at this point. The building of the car shops, on North Sixth street, destroyed by fire a year or so ago ; the erection of the large new brick foundry at Seventh and Spruce, and machine shops, be tween Chestnut and Franklin, was cited as an evidence of their good intentions in this re spect. Arrangements had also been made to teer down all the old buildings still standing on the blocks owned by the company, between Franklin and Chestnut, arid Chestnut and Spruce, and erect new and commodious work shops and offices in their place. It was not until the corporate authorities of the city in their official capacity, allowed themselves to be made partizans in a leeal contest with a rival road, for right of way over what they conceived to be their own ground, that the Heading company took the alarm, and felt that the further Investment of their capital in a town that appeared so decidedly hostile to their interests, would be Imprudent and im politic. We gather further, from the conference with Mr. Gowen, that the company is seriously considering the expediency of purchasing several thousand acres of land at some eligi ble point on the line of their roads for the pur pose of building up khrn of their own,which they would make theffegreat manufacturing depot and business headquarters. It will be recollected that many years ago, the Penn sylvania railroad company removed their ex tensive shops from Packersburg,Chester coun ty,and built the railroad town of Altoona,w hich has since grown Into a floursishing city. A similar course was adopted a few years ago by the Sunbury and Erie road, which built up the town of Renovo in Clinton county, on the west branch of the Susuuehanna, above Wil liamsport. In these towns the real estate is mainly if not entirely owned by the companies named, and the houses, hotels, stores and ma chine shops leased to the citizens, who are . mostly employees on their roads. The present officers of the Reading company held that the removal of their shops, manufactories and thousands of employees to a new locality, would at once build up a flourishing commu nity, and that the loss they would sustain by the Bale or abandonment of their present e B tablishment would be more than made up by the rapid appreciation of property in the new town, which would always be under their ex elusive proprietary and municipal control. NO PECUNIARY AID NEEDED Boston is righting up with wonderful rapid- Ity, and It is hardly too much to say that the disaster has already sunk in the popular esti mation to the level of any fire calamity a little larger than usual. The newspapers are crowd ed with notices of resumption of business by most of the sufferers in new localities. No bank has suspended, and it really appears that a little forbearance upon the part of creditors with perhaps some extension of banking fa• citifies, is all that is required to set Boston firm ly on her feet. The offers of pecuniary assist ance which are pouring in here from all outset the country must in the end be de• clined. It will not require over $lOO,OOO to make the few poor families burned richer than they were before the fire, and it is not proboble that the merchants and real estate owners, who have been the principal sufferers, will need or accept pecuniary aid. The city authorities are placed in an ,unpleas ant dilemma by the haste with which the first offers of assistance were accepted, as they cannot with any decency receive such aid. The buoyancy of feeling is so great that there Is not only a general disinclination that any outside aid of the kind which has been so largely proffered shall be received, but quite a formidable opposition Is already appearing to the project of the Legislature authorizing the city to Issue bonds to aid in the rebuild ing. '"WO HOURS IN CASTLE GARDEN. "And what Is the mair, and where do you conic from ?" I iniptiredt f a little fellow with a mond, chubby face, who was seated discon solately on a trunk, keeping guard over a satchel and an umbrella, inside of Castle Gar den. " Testament and London" vas the reply The former portion of the answer I could not understand; " And where ain you going to?" I asked. " North Atiteriky," replied the little boy. " Why that's hardly any place at all. You are there now. lint what part of North America ?" " Don't know—only it's North Ameriky for sure. Mother's with me, and she's gone to look after the luggage. I have got a top and a bail In my trunk, and she has left me here to watch this 'ere bag and umbrella, and wish she'd. conic back, for I'm so hungry, and there was a mu as snatched away a Testa meet a lady give me ou shipboard, rind there he goes, and won't you help me get it ? It ain't fair to crib a boy's things, is it?" And here his sturdy Anglo Saxon nature showed forth, for he doubled his little list as if to hit somebody, and then, being but a small child, overcome by the sense of injustice, he burst into tears. I was just bestirring myself to re capture his book, when from the centre of the rotunda, emerging from. those cattle pane, where the immigrants are stalled, I saw a bright business like looking little woman emerge. She smiled pleasantly ns she ap proached us, but seeing her child in tears, straightway Inquired the reason. The state.. meet of the purloined book was repeated, and to work in an instant she went to recover it, I following alter her to help, if necessary. But she required no assistance. The offending party, a tipsy German, wrgi collared, a good shake was given him, the book 'ambled from his pocket, and was snatched up by the moth. er in an instant. " That's right, Johnny," she said triumphantly. " It's almost a sin to quarrel over such a good book, but do you at ways stick tip for your rights, and fight for 'em if you must. Ile must be hungry, little decoy, for I know I atn. There ain't no porter or beer to be 'ad about 'ere, is there ?" she asked, for the first time addressing me. " No, ma'am, but you can get bread and meat here, If you want," and I pointed to a refreshment stand. 4 ' It's precious little money I have to spare. That poor boy's father was a good husband, and I never knowed what it was to want for anything. He was a mathematical Instrument maker, and was adoing well, when the Lord took him away from its. My own brother, when he heard of it—that was twelve months ago—sent for me and the boy, but it was most eight months afore I could settle matters. Brother's name is William H—. Ile lives in St. Louis, and is a gunsmith. May be you know him The money he sent is just enough to take us to him. He is a good brother, and has been asaving for six months to get enough toget her to pay Ills passage-money. Dear me what a worrit it is to be a lone woman, when there's luggage to bother with. Now, you wouldn't mind being so obliging as to stay just five minutes with the child here ; there's that same drunken fellow prowling around here," and apparently taking it for granted that I had complied with her wishes, she was off again. I turned to my companion. " Hungry, Johnny ?" I asked. "Just ain't I." "Got any money ?" " This here crooked sixpence Aunt Chloe tied around my neck, which I must never, never spend. Mother said she would buy me some victuals." " Well, Johnny, let's have something." " Mother said I wasn't to pay any attention to strangers, but I am hungry ; but I ain't go ing to leave this 'ere luggage." " Well, stay where you are; I'll bring you something ;" and I went to the lunch, counter, Johnny following me With wistful eyes. Cas. tie Garden sandwiches are no fragile diapho nous thing. The approved sandwich, costing ten cents, is half a loaf of bread, superimposed by a chunk of meat or a sausage. This, with half a pie, made up the luncheon. All this was placed before the hungry Johnny, who ate with a will. Just then the mother came back. She watched the feast for a moment, and then I noticed a tear in her eye. " And I, who bad forgot the poor child, that he was hungry ; and I can't think of your paying for it ;" and she brought out from the depths of her pocket a bright English shilling, which I had great difficulty In preventing her forcing on me ; " and I ain't rich, you know, but It's good for the to see a stranger kind to pool folk, and we'll shake hands, and I'll take your name, and if yoviever come to St. Louis you'll look us up. And now we'll shake hands for good-by again, for I must be going. There is some friends of mine going to Chicago, and they tell me my place, where I am to find my brother, is a longish bit off yet. So good-by to you," and with a hearty shake of the hand, I wishing her froth my very soul God speed, she lifted up tier trunk, shouldered It much more easily than I could have done it, gave Johnny the satchel and the umbrella, and they were off. I gazed at the post of dee3rated with the translations of post office in all known lan. guages. I made them all out but one, and that was Lyt h urd ay. Somewhat of a polyglot I asked for information, and was pleased to have been able to add one Welsh word to my vocabulary. Just then a clerk with the sharp. est and most ringing of voices, shouted "Mary Kegan I—Mary Kogan I" at the top of his voice. He was followed by what, I think, were two Irish servant girls, who were dreseed in their best, with no end of red plumes in their bonnets. Mary Kegan did not answer to the call. Suddenly there was an express- lon of delight In one of the faces of the two woman and rustling forward she was met by a flne•looking girl, who bounded like a deer over the benches to meet her. There was an embrace, a dozen kisses, a plentiful flow of tears, and perhaps Mary Megan went through then one of the happiest moments of her ex istence. After all, she was not a lone girl In ri strange land, but among her kinsfolk. May be before she had been with them ten min utes, and after Teddy's and Paddy's and No rah's health had been satisfactorily explained the question of where that elegant bonnet which they sported, with the showy flowers, came from, and how soon she might be able to buy one, was thoroughly discussed and elu cidated. Ono woman, with a glorious face and a pro fusion of rich golden hair, with a sturdy baby at her breast, Was holding in her hand a dress of gay colors. 1 got once a smattering of her language In the thirds and bays and gulls 0 1 Norway, and this was what she said to a friend : " And I would put on 'the best dress I have to meet him with. Gone a year—twelve long long months—and I have not seen him, nor has ho seen hie child I nurse I and they tell me I must travel still further. Am I tot arrived in the United States ? And they speak to me of a town called Boston I My God I will I never, never see my dear husband ?" Seeing I was Interested, she asked me in her strange, strange patois, which I could barely under stand, " How far Is Boston ?" • "But a few hours," I replied. The poor woman would have kissed my hand. " And some tell me I must travel yet months to see him. We are but poor Ignorant people, and I did not know that God had made this beau tiful country so larger Then at farthest, I may see him to-morrow ?" "Yes," I replied. Then, kissing her child, she laughed aloud, and then burst into tears. Ono group singularly interested me. There was a father, a mother, and three daughters. Evidently they belonged to the better class of French immigrants. The man was Iron; ,10.- sass. "I am a paper-maker by trade," he told . me, "and there is nothing I cannot do in that line, from making pulp to adjusting or even manufacturing the machinery. We have been paper.makers on. the Vosges, from fallen to son, for the last hundred years. Quo gouges eons? I have lived near Metz. It was my misfortune to see the factory where 1 and my wife and children gained their bread, bom barded, one day by Prussians, for our men held it against terrible odds, and when all was over,ah Monsieur there was not one stone left on another of the finest factory In France. "louse, tools, food, clothing, everything was gone. Poor Wife, poor children I I have not a sou, Sir : my last centime went for postage. Why did f leave? Because I did not want to be a Prussian, It was just that. They did nut, these Prussians at the end of the mat- ter, treat us badly; at first they did not :spare the sticks, nor the showers of blows but of late, to do them justice, they have been kind. Why shouldn't I say so? It was'nt In my case, but I know that some good Prussians did distribute money to help some at the poor er people to get away who were not willing to be Prussians. It is a hard caae; here lam most sixty, with nothing but these two arms to help me. - Here is my Beret," and he handed me a little pass-book, detailing who he was,hia pro fession,and where he lived, all stamped with the seal of the Imperial arms and a final para. graph signed by some Prussian official. "Ab, we can work—must work. Pray God that this my new country may only give me the necessaries of life. I am used to dispense with the superfluities. Poor France 1 Can you tell me anything about her?" I had one of our Now York French journals In my. pocket, which I handed him. "See, wife,' he said, "here is areal French journal,publlsh. ed in New York," The text, however,seem. ed for the moment to interest him less than the quality of the paper. "Good quality—quite as white as ours, but different material—notas tough. Au, .the thousands and of thou• ands of reams I have helped to make. Do they make paper hero in New York ? Do you think I can find a place ?" Fortunately his questions were answered by a gentleman at tached to the Society of Alsace and Lorraine, which Institution, with great humanity,at the present moment is doing all it can to find places and care for the exiles from this particu. ler portion of France, There was one eollectioti of people who were very curious. It (oxidated of two wo men and no end to-children, who were camp. ed on their baggage, which was made ,up of the most diversified elements. Conspiclomi was a gun—of fearful length, apparently a century old, with its old flint lock, and stuck on top of it was a woman's bonnet. There was a parrot in a cagf,wh ich chattered in some unknown dialect in a most constant manner, as if anxious to find an interpreter. Present- ly a fine-looking military man approached the woman. That he had been a soldier was manifest from his bearing, the stripe down his pantaloon leg showing that he musthave been in Prussian service. Then there was a stolid Scotehman In a bonnet, :with a heavy tartan wrapped around him, who remained smoking and pondering In a corner for two mortal hours without budging, until a merry little lass came tripping in, gazed around for a mo ment, then ran to him and kissed him, and there was joy in the demure Scotchman's lace as arm in arm they left the pla'ce. More clerks came now running in, shouting out people's names, who never replied todthem, one crier distinguishing himself like Demosthenes, only instead of pebbles, he had his mouth filled with apple. There were squads of half-grown boys in high-lows and fustian jackets, who lounged about in a s , tolid wag, recalling White Chapel and munched Castle Garden sand whiches, and then smoked shorts pipes, and got in people's way and impeded progres. There was even a love epiode, the parting of a young woman and a bright young fellow. "They were both on the ship together," said my informant, a Liverpool docklaborer,come to New York to try his fortune, "and they just made up to one another without their folks knowing it, and he's a tidy lad and a wheelwright by trade, and she's an honest girl. He is going out West to an uncle, and she's going to stay here in service. It's a bad thing, I tells them, to be courting and a splic : ing of one another before they knows what's going to happen to ,em." I could not help but cast a look at them. There was an honest frank expression about the young fellow as ho kissed the girl—not, I hope, for the last time —as, taking one last long look at her; he pick ed up his bundle and strode out. She, poor thing, when he was gone, went into a dark corner and I saw that she was weeping: May their loves run smooth. If somebody was to ask me, as an expert, how I could distinguish the newly arrived Ira migrant,putting aside his national appearance, discarding all the varieties of dress, save one, I should unhesitatingly reply, "By his boots if he is a man, by her shoes If she is a wo man." The blouse, the jacket, the jerkin, the overall, the bonnet, the skull-cap, the turban, have, in cosmopolitan New York, both inside and outside Castle Garden, lost their charac• terietic features, but the peculiar physiognomy of the boots and shoes points to the wearers as new corners to the land of liberty--New York Times. • SENATOR WILSON.' The Republicans of Boston met in Faneull Hall, Tuesday night, to exchange congratula tions over the glorious results of the elections. Hon Henry Wilson, Vice President elect, bad quite an ovation when he appeared on the plat form. He felt as though a great victory had been won, and thought that all personal trl. umphs should be merged into the victory of the Republican Party. He hoped all would feel that they had done their duty, and said the Republican party was stronger than ever be. fore. We have heard a great deal about "pu rification," and we have got It. [Applause.] He hoped that the next four years would bet ter than the last, and that wherever there was a Federal abuse it be corrected. The Republican party was not owned by anybody 'for It owned Itself, and no man, however emi nent he may have been, can make us untrue to our principles, which were born - In heaven and are inscribed in the New Testament. This election has stamped Into the soil of the North eru American Continent Republican Ideas, measures and principles ; and the country must In future years be administered in accordance therewith. Gen. Grant has been more than vindicated, and stands like a great central sun, the shafts which were hurled against him hav ing fallen harmless at his feet. Let us be magnanimous In this hour of our triumph, but let us continue firm to Republican principles, and hold the G,vernment in our hinds. Mas. arichusetts, as usual, has done her duty, and deserves congratulation ; and If Pennsylvania has returned a larger majority, we will make Paneull Hail and Boston ring with shouts of congratulation for our brethren in the Key stone State. In conclusion, he thanked the eudiencefor their kindness, and promised to be faithful and true to the great political party which he believed, under God, had saved his country and made it a free land. [Applause ROBERT IREDELL, Ettaftt attb „fang fob prime No. 688 HAMILTON STREET V- ALEGANT PR INTENO LATEST Sc'irLES • Stamped Cheeks, Cards, Circulars. Paper Books, Conan tutione and By-Laws. School Catalogues, Bill Heads Envelopes, Letter Heads Bills of Ladllll. Way Bills, Tags auddhipplngCards. Posters or MID aim, etc., etc., Printed at Short Nolte.. NO. 50. THE ANDERSONVILLE PRISON. Ito Condition To-Dny A letter from Andereonville to. the Cincin nati Commercial says : • The first thing that strikes the traveler as he approaches this memorable place is the old flag suspended one hundred and eighty feet in the air, waving gracefully to the breeze arid standing sentinel over what remains of thirteen thodsand seven hundred and sixteen departed faithful soldiers for the Union. I have made it my business to make exten sive Inquiries before reaching thin place, and have heard condemned, in unmeasured terms the course pursued by Wirtz and his small, ring; they say, were not actuated by any love fcr the lost cause, but by a desire to profit from the misery of those under their nuf thority. Every soldier that came into prison had money and many watches and rings, 'all' of which found its way into the hands of a few outside she stockade. Principle never governed Wirtz. There was a total want of moral sense. lie never knew a generous erno.' Lion ; cold and heartless, ho thought only of gain and selfish gratification. But he is dead —peace to his ashes. The cemetery le under immediate charge of John Maloney, on Irish man, who, in ono year will have served in the army, under the stars and stripes, a quarter of a century. He was among the faithful be trayed by Twiggs in Texas. He loves the old flag as he loves his life. It does one good to see this old veteran suffuse with tears, as be recounted his hopes and fears during the severe struggle through which we have just passed. The cemetery is beautifully situated, just north from the stockade, on gently rolling land, embracing in the enclosure thirty-seven areres of ground ; a neat substantial fence sur rounds it, and within this an osage hedge is being cultivated, that will ultimately serve as a fence, and also add much to the beauty of the place. Fine carriage avenues are being constructed, many of which are completed ; trees are planted and are growing finely on the sides of them, and in a very few years the tops will meet, creating a dense and cool shade making a delightful drive. Five thousand five hundred feet of surface drains have been laid along the avenues. The soil washes so easily here that brick drains are necessary. There are employed here, beside the superintendent four colored laborers and two mules, all of whom are kept constantly busy. A comfort. able house Is erected at the entrance gate for the superintendent whore ho always keeps a spare room for any chance visitor who may happen to pass this way, which is not very of ten, as the place is too secluded and remote from the great lines of travel, and then South. em Georgia, with its chills and fever, has no attraction for a stranger, or even the native citizen. The dead were laid in trenches side by side, and if they had any article of cloth ing worth wearing, our own men would take it to cover their nakedness, or keep out the chilling blast of winter—no coffin, no clothing often (and nearly always) but their naked frames. A neat headboard made of wood now marks their last resting place, with name, age regiment and company. And yet there aro many marked "unknown," and will always remain so until the great muster day in that eternal world above. The first man buried here was J. Bwarner, a German, Company H, 2d New York Cav alry ; died Febuary 27, 1864. The last man that died was R. Hanson, Company F, Wisconsin Infantry; died April 1865—a per iod of fourteen months. During this time 13, 716 brave soldiers passed away, nearly one thousand a month. The largest number dy ing any one dayas on the 20th day of Aug ust, 1864, when eMe hundred and sixty-six were buried. The most painful spot to visit was the graves of those executed in the stock• ado by our own men for the murders and vio lence they had committed. The gallows is still partially standing, an additional monu ment of the accumulated miseries our men suf fered. The auperintendant Is making good use of Wirtz's bath-tub : filling it with dirt; he is propagating flowers to ornament the grounds.. After visiting the cemetery we went to the stockade. It Is fast falling into decay, and in a year or two will all be down, and everything that marked the suffering of our soldiers will have passed away. The grounds within the stockade that was once so bare of every shrub and even root, for I was informed that the sol diers would dig for the tiniest root to secure fuel to warm their aching limbs, is now grown up with shrub oak and bushes, until you can hardly get through them. The dead line, just seventeen feet from the stockade, le so far de cayed that but few traces of it are left. Here many a poor victim has bitten the dust, it•may be from a chance misstep cr a determination to end his misery. There are about thirty.five wells still remaining that were dug with spoons and cups, while rope made of blankets was used to draw up the dirt and afterward the water. They are from sixty to eighty feet deep, and while peering into them, side en trances may be discovered that led some to light, outside, and freedom. Every prisoner hero doubtless remembers the providential apring.that opened near the dead line, on the hillside, during a violent thunderstorm. one autump night and continued to flow so freely as to supply nearly the whole camp with deli cious water. Well, this spring is running as freely still, and at it I quenched my thirst,and also in the stream, where so many have wash ed their aching bodies, I, too, stripped off my clothing and took a generous bath, thankful that it was under so different auspicled. The forte, of which there are several, still preserve their original appearance, and show less of decay than anything else about here. Yet, trees are growing in them, and soon•these as well as the space within the stockade, will be so densely covered with the thicket as tone rendered Impassable, and thus biding every thing that makes it an object for a stranger to visit here. All the money and labor is spent on the cemetery, and no pains are taken to preserve the stockade grounds in their °rigi nal condition. The cemetery excited but little emotion in me, for there I felt the soldier se. cured relief. There they were beyond the reach of man's inhumanity. DA this stock ade should be preserved throughout the com• Ing ages of our country's history as a monu• mont, not of the soldiers sufferings so much, as of man's cruelty. —Letter to Cincinnati Commercial. Robinson's agency for Smith & Wesson's pistols and the sewing silk store of Gond & Co., on Chambers street, Now York, were robbed of about $l3OOO worth of property by burglars. Mr. Brassey, member of Parliament from Hastings, England, who arrived at Washing. ton in his steam yacht, now lying off the Navy yard, was introduced to the President on Tuesday by Secretary Fish. Mr. Joseph Lamb, of Hawkins county, Tenn., died last week at the ago of 110, being fourteen years older than the American Union, and certainly, as Charles Lamb once said of himself, "old enough to be a sheep.” . The declared value of horseSexported in tho last nine months from England was £187,081, of which 282,070 worth went torrance. In the corresponding period of the previous year the' value was 1e2813,082, and of that amount £171,- 080 went to France.. ALLRIVTOIZ , .?, PA, NEW DESIGNS