The Daily Pittsburgh gazette and commercial journal. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1861-1863, December 13, 1862, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    <■■■ • ;
i
.-vrv.\«
.»V-
' j/
1 * . S*T V '«* 1
S}'* - t »«‘ N 1
: v.;-,
* -f:
' • -■ Ij .
is&H:' : : : -.o :: ' '■■■■,.
7*? -.jji. ’ ' •
i#!2?h%: v -: ■.:■■;d,
4---- k’-- :•'■••;•
I• *% • >f\ »•■••••; t - * 1 (.« v i-jt*.
K V <> <-*
$ -?;4g v ■:- r' < .
* j "*ij ;;.; <.*, l , *»
■, -f ;.i ; f:;...; ■;;;■ .ys y . •-, *\ -. ;y ■ y
...y> -I' 1 '
: r-'\;
r - y~
11l
C-K.-iU
,'i
• • co.njussipjr x He.
JfjjfjJl
-wuittd*, . ibddnM j« wt?vW j»
(■weeq WpodaoASaUhftftM. Fltfbtintaj r .** *£& ,?,
J Fi&toii ijiD Ooviatf
tut Sfuciujrrf, far th»w« tf'OtAlfl/flXxm.
Pitubanfr.fn' <• -i-.g ,-v:j tet 4 v.j
ill ajs 6ui t riewM. FaamsASftQaMKiiJxctß
ItaiiiMAtlSi'al or Ftomf, tftrttfiSOl;
: Jmb HTuect nude oa Ooodgwaiti, f
No. g&7 Liberty «t„, Plttaborgb. ' j
lTiilS B, OAJiFIKLD. CnMigi*.
V MO* ASH foagaKDiwn iMyni >TTT fcnd vholft-
In W&TKBSFIJXBJ&Sfi CHREBj£
BUTTNB. L4BS t FOBS, BACON. FLOtJB. FISH*
|OT ANR FJCABIj ASUEB, fIAisRATM, LIN*
AND 'LABD OILS, BRIRD FRUIT Ud
r IULP & SHEPARD. Ouonsaioa Mss
•. In TLOUB, OBAIjf AKD
f liberty, itrtiet, PUtabargh-P*-.
oL-RettMar EwuillSw
ooniUuOpr *tUntionSltol
fllliog ordwi for Merehaoai— generally. oc&djy
VA> tiOKUKK, 1* BOD 1702 AMD
* Ooiiuuoi UuctAO. dtilviaPLODß. fiOT.
f *1 V AY, -FoMriaDiso no
v. WTO»4w>JttAxoMigttmeiiti«aiiritod. ja22:]yd
OCHOMAKEB *
g 3 Hwougn ttf »bd«tal» ds*len In GBOCS*
psS'fi£lllgi
v toui ot laBD OIL, and Oonuwoa Mn.
*l^oncpMjqiinfflttj
aw
KhcltodL " '. • r .
wm» whit*
mvrtspn,?,
pISnSSSW 1 In'
• -*« CBD^6
A - l UoMmaimf
<£X* dole? to GBOPX Alf BBBI'IBED OiBBDHi
SJ£5» U * 11WF, SAILS, *c.» Ho. iB3 Üb«rs\j
f .: S- y^)XQY3fe:<3o. T f
n&J&A£!&P* G * AKD «c£kUBlOS
OH Astd,.B*T Überttrtreet. Pltabigdi.P*.. jgs
SiiwAKl'. Waoii-
W 7 Wfeod Hoi’
DSm - £ss&’cm^ii
’ -• umojqjrers, :y
GKO. R COCtiBAN. s Arroßmrr a»d
fefflc< go. fla‘‘.grant
'ftCtitfrproapt mention!,■Collection*
nndjtn AUfrfrcayittd Innll »diafnin«'«anßtie*.fcfl<i
*feo mgpjytßfaa fcaproariiiirf ~ : • - • • ■ -
' -■i--«lTX8BUBOH t FA: ■
Omen- Qi B» conarJcfartn«ad Grant stntti.
mgtfefia.- tc-.'.'.-a : l. -i.k-: .',.<-,s
t OHN ‘ O, ALibuunn elu A*ioaaix
2L“£' *'***■
w W»tJai»d ta ih*«etfl«nieߣ, •ocurlng and oolleo*
**P° cl i W-lrf^r.Dirtrict
cfgplqiabU.
—w MKt-^vTi*
|TrBKP4JBICK & MELLON, Atto^
No. 133 rtroet, Htddoor*
ifrm Smithfleld, Pitt*burgh. fZ myU:dtf
iv.:< 4 ' : .r
;>'4Wv.'M'v,svi:uy^v
rjIHOMAS EWING, Auburn ahd
-I- OOfMALMa AT lav. .
JUFSisSlg'E** p °ngl°ft7»
ka, 1 . mubal c. kuoxc^
4 8* G SCHOYER, Attobhbts at
&?T ** oa^**S**, ««rth«trwt, .MitiMugfa.
R. ;Afc L ~SMTTHy'~.ATTUkHity ttasd
fSaSigS':
doer ttoarVCtattCH;'.: >:• •. / <’. ’ i -ujylSsdiy^-
wv>v<.v.v.'avi»a.w. ... - c
V , WBOIiisAIdIDBUGUISrS,- v
..V .v-^.-X I
Ho. tW tICEttTTf CTSEIT. -
iSfesiafsgakS^
- .«sBBMmsrf
lty» v&wrfM'Ofiearatrloireft prfcw, - 4
STift^jaSM^BScSj),
• at
•frßifc Pttubttndu •' 1 ‘ i L--rr*. sU'-
elf* DBPcs,PiisxB,o«a,>
::,‘::<:.~-PBapvcE.
/iSWSV'WAEEHOn?^
; V> H/SOfctaiTSi Fabr»rflui*»
: chant and dnler to CHU3JE. >_
; graaMttßßre«fl&
JAMES HyLMBS A GO' Pow
Cjj*«
iJraipjßM/VB * ~
J ftAttl/in... _
• Ijunwni PxcuzaaMiA .
•omASos Cmuas* Norti£«Mt
1H M. OOBIWJf,- Saaaftteinißm
' «ImatK»a«Mi. O Wutt »lre«t. j
' I~¥ M. ikR)MI, BaoilMAßy bul imy
y* » BlauM fePAirir.TlT-ymh-tttwt.:-; ii
oair aoooa.
in <l»«fef-arfwn. tenant*—:l
i l’<4*><*.rotvau*MAui»«£3. a..' r-« ; b
TOIU^N-ABDIX)XSBTTO-l>BT'<3oCtt&.' H
' «•' :V
-•ys-'5
■aoofcwor to
&2S2* iSSJSW t 2™KB*tf£S&.
tot oarunot Fourth and Maritot
T TCcßAßK3SßfcCOijjsiLt«tf manti
rtamdounxiv
i,«■(»/-> tAL-Q ;3^9rSSf^sii
V,. t ' - t‘ii' « *«r. V “ ' 7 ' '" ‘ -****-" wi I
—np.
TTf^
5-J W&s.
GAZETTE
~ A ~?-P . ■ J OTTT? IST A, T.,
PITTSBURGH, SATURDAY MORNING. DPriFuLpD PJ ioen ~ ttL» —1“ ~
vn.nT:
• GROCEtIS. ~ ~
QHBiTOHTuiSSrTT
i. r ‘ , _ .WHOLMiLI OBOOBBS
AMD
ooMMiaaios j
—t Pmsapßflß.P> ..
WV4UUU * » .
WHOLESALE OBOOEB,
80. 271 ÜBEHTT BTBBBIf
i . .< ;.. ( TOTBBOBQB. Po,,
taUn « <>f W» Ut. nrt»k
£?! Wp*** ** th » om •«»a I , £fSS
Sf fo"™*** of hi. old Wood,
-1 r ~• ta»lB:dtf •.
oaj
i^Ssassaaaag'
m&CA* M*ao»Atji,-. ,il*?^l
W’DOnII?CTbucKU&. Wmi*
mSiS^roaS??* l * 0D,7C1 ajedOowcuczoi Uu-
Ibwtss
*<SM»n(lM4 jtibinj at.,
" f 6 ' coH:lt
*‘>feß3fettigr*i s. inns.
&BBQTB KBB, noMs^n
*3 jygfrdlr
wSSi'aSLffgg jffi
Tr”v? WnnrptiTa Tmaifep"
tta aop^SiSS£
IOKKT dalzeuTa-o^'^S: 1
0o*»«oo« iiD imrAMxaa
OD ' IBX ««r
BIX ~ mrk -
wBaSS
jjlOCrM, PkoDPOI DXALKM and GOMHiiaioa
•.^■warStSbu^sr"
feßasawcaat
YSAUH DIOKEY A CO.W6oi.Wu
m>Ecol? , N? , ?swi2“ Maamn,and daalon in
Ho. SO Waur itnot, aad 65 Trout atn«t,
™ *«**««,**
TIJJAM BAGAUSy, ffp/irwim
?■*
KING, Wbolsulb
: '"
ANLEL "BENNETT A SOnT&W
**■>
saa^a^^jiug"
- ' 'iffii«tsBß
in thtf olm oi
j«3fclyd
2IAOHIHBBT,
pylfctf
~SuFSfaSSFSE
rfWIWBMTOi
AND BAILBpA^
'WWW 1
j ,S
S 8 M. BALFH,
,i 2 dii3w
fc«v| : 'js “ AI WHIt*OV..... -OTSJI ■)■,
:S*W"*j™nTDifaTOar'i«>-sf*o w S£i ?
bssss m
LttiilllWfUtt i
uidudforaiKi
Bhw£ 8 F 2 K Taß TIMEa-The
By pfflr Oabntj. it
Br Dr ChMi!/ ta.
fe&rJiJjEm Bl ""* A B.rn* * *l.
p 'n*«Mud?A
Pnrct. 750 P “*® Brownto* mil B*». A.
■tOidlswl” BJ Frodortck I.„ Olm-
ClSj aL°“ S ‘*’* Tr * d »- », B.t. Bata W.
TIZS‘Ji‘ > '‘£'“ , ' 8l ' l ’ t ' Book. 05..
2iStS:gS •*■
SSSiKS 1 : 552 °Bftai?iL!*°i p V So -
E' I P"'o Im P<taioj d&i.. i? * l - 5 -
— lB ' 8.8. DATIB.O3 Woodotreot.
JgOOilSl BOOKS I l-IT
i'SSifSs^'ss*
wSs b “fJss:
r"£i/K h * t * '»««: » Urg i
i -
JpMOIUGKAPS ALBUMS, various
feljlaa and pr'oee, our o»n maaafeotnru. plug* cell
•ad them.
MEW BOOKS. ‘
It, Merlon Harlan d,
1 tJTw 1 ' 1 K * r, ‘. B » Baa, Ward Beecher.
I^*gJ« r Sfcn»AU.*ho l U«.. Bp. T. Bach.
Ammij the Plats. ■■ .. „
"Uit hunlenl Abroad. Bj Kimball,
uoaatrp Lining sad Coaatry Thlnkina.
Amtrlcs before laraps,
fwMen. Women md Children.
, Olleer Wendell Holtaae* Poeme—blae sad cold
Appleton’s Tsiperer’e Manual,
i lilt. sad OnlltT O, 4.b.'S*.
For sale bp KsFaiHV
Jj'OK 1863.
POCKET AND OOUHUNO HOPBE DIAEISSj
PHYSICIANS' VISITING LISTS;
lIJQMBB gEBMAJf ALMAiUCtt;
66 Wood Btfflt.
JjAA'A’a AlfiW OiSUHXjy.
GEOLdOt—Treating of tbs P’rin*
Cfpte* Of tb* Bcf#;ce, vllb IDGCiaI nktwua tn Amr
fcM (teolo**.! HUtorj. mT"
L 'fcl?il“°£S° r ° f " A “l*** 111 o( KIMT*
k a. DATIB, raWood .1.
V UISVELLAATEOVS CAROS.
JPURNITDRB '
RSU.UIS on m
VfiOLEtALI OB RlTAii.
F*
Dithxidge's Patent
OVAL LAMP CHIMNIEB.
... M>nnfirtanKi «f
XX FLIRT GLASS,
***** Ohlaai« in in traded far ti.y
Att. fiifflt) which baattsg ill mrli
equally, foetnoi upon 1(1
AD. WHHIDdK,
fort Pitt Ulan Work*
Waahinftoa tti«ot a
' Httaburjhv Jri
M^«sSSr
'Vi 1 r ... WOQDAJDg A WALUfi^
«*. , , : ,-Wugp^us*wauSausT
*a, FOB SALE VERY
"AOOHB, OIL WAGulitt »ha NpRTHfi
UAKTB *wti COAI
OASTB;jriMBSa WHKSLfiLUAS Af~UArtJkm
mA&BOWH, all mad* of (he beat ary tUuber; ajjoall
«llai:lj4 ° fr * d “ ral ,tr "'* Allegbeo,.
J AMEB LKWiN,
oiu 0» YIIEOL.
JPI&XS *nd BIV-
Tiaaenjaa
«SSif «.» «a£?S A «£SfBSSii.
SJ4E4S*- “* F,m ,tr " u . «“ •«ei«p|om pl
WORKS.-
ftrmt, comer
‘ .'Tssaw*.
OIL WORKS.
i *
. 215
sa
“J d *» 1 “* *■>. mnartMiM
&j nay In the uutlut.
*h?i^n!"^£ WjOlB< * o<iould * * <3*WO,«ttdP»
tU it. Cbijioj hotel, et the oiaco;oi Bnutb, Park A
Btqort'td Crnde oil r ,
X)S - ABNSTHAE, htroKm tim
.^^assws.tefarsßgg
>s*“2-
BSDSB XUE ST. OhWw’solK
Xgfl» ’
.—The-TMS. tnpplfad oollbkrll Wmi: > ' J
mjlL-dly
fl^^msSߣS£ :
“ •U"in *U kinds qj OUTLBBY
onSi* i* 8 ' PW aui£
Ac -> Ac. A bug* Msortmont of tbs
m hl
jJT'tiM.i PAJPMMa.
/■ IM4 Wall
Fapim, Bouuitio., Mo. 81 Wood wtr
-KSfifyMi*CTACT»iTtt«Eor
iNlM9fiO£&of %rwj «*aSbtidß'; 80.
*«ju, w*ot*.
>cny-Ifouthu
. jPuateMcjutir-a. :. r.
CIiAB&BS H; STOWE,- ‘
PHTBI01A» «D BHBJBMH, £ •
. Office He, M YEDXBAIt ,r .
ita (Wounds Sow t near 6ssp«ixioq jPrldgvj,
jy ,;...Q ~.j
--*• —B SUUM£, ALunifAotiras
/w° ".PiAKO-rOBIKS, tod Im.
lutnimentt. ■ ft] e mbl
4 HAMBUBQ PIAUOS. alto for HAI.77ET
'IS * 00.-B BOBTOU «ys. "uSfiSs
QaljSoUan AtUcbmmt. Ko. 61 Wh MmSl Iff?
Ht JUSALB&fI in
•.BVSIO A9D' MOSIOAI -iMTBVUms* 4Dd IDi*
• J RltC-i* 'i
■T *r* lit iWoa
Mtioncaa, Ho. £| Wood ftnet. Utwwn
j*.oert& itmt «nd Dtonond tSlt. Pfttttajyfe, S** B
■ ji..'i .* Ms !«#«*;-. ' ; ..
'ijjo. IfoYAY, i= "'
r T.AMB.--6 Biddlas Veniiflh ;' ~ ' '"'
e&tw* I’ .•:••. .sNsstfvi*^
•Wir BOOKS.
BBAD, 78 fourth. street.
J. L. BEAD, 78 Fourth street.
55 Wood n.
GAN* ABB WOOD OHAIE9
EXDOGSD rtUOSS,
JAS. W. WOOOWELL,
Mr. Daris said he wanted tome person'sn
wnom no avoid rely who would go to Wash-
and present to Mjv Lincoln iaforoaUy
certain propositions whloh ho (Davit) thooaht
might lead to the desired end.
At first I objected to ; he the blaterbf tho
propositions of Mr. Dari., fearing that I
might he pat in Port Lafayette, but I finally
contented to do eo. 3
The propositions of Mr. Davis are in sub
staooe as follows:
/Jiiii'A gniurfata^uiohaidanfiuuM.
ty to .11 political offenders against tho Fed-*
} eril Gorornment, .nob aa would place them
in tpo poi(Uoqthoy,oOTUplcd'.tafore tho com
■mencement of ho.tilhieo, respecting all thoir
1t»duultIo«, right, and prirlleg...
- Tho 'Witbratton of all f«»ltlra
BlaTeawllhih tho6ssu-ol.pTtha FodoralfloT-.
ornihonl, and a jfdaranty‘that tho General'
fiuvpramont wjll giTo thf outfit weight,of it.
umnenco and authority In carrying out tho
proylili u. of tho FugUfra 31.r0 law for tho
neororr of thpoo fugiUroy ,who hare paaied
beyond the nhmodlato oontrol of. th« Geteiu-j
r*A* f«sntpniingnnAy oholfhohild ro.pon. ?
glblOonly for ‘ho /thttuppirod hy ltj fn'fhe
•ami manner u if-ftoj'had'bwn roeognl.od
independent Powers. t u • -< ,
Those prepositions, as'Mir. Davis expressed
; *v *£* the basis upon which A restoration of
itheUnlon can be effected. «*•'•
tterowero many etbe* points upon'whlcb
mtiu be,
toct little dilßoulty in reference to thorn If tha
“•A".?;?P 0 J l '‘ | o°t 1 "™ sadUpon.!:.' =
Mr.jtlaonh’. ■ propoii Hon to libarate the
spassttywsifcSßs
•, Thta Mr. ;Darla explained by 1 lirfn* tbit
jf.tho proelamxtlonof itii Lincoln wiTnot
•astpendod or ranked, it would only boe.tlm.
bta. to an Interminable end rninona war
tbpn todo .omotblpg toward arririgg aifja;
„ H arlng l . ret urn od r , to Pittsburgh, 'Mr.‘
tonne wrot. to . Prea Want LlhooTiroiTtM
I Oth of govcmbcroOipreislnfr a »HUrigneti to
oitheHtb Hormsblr bW.^tJro.tffM^iiVid
o/nrrlrint;.Jn:;JrtKS|Sin, BrrareMw
called oaPreßldonTLlncolnnad related or.ry
thing ifnmumeOon wUffaUe. (Grettafa) riit/
to Btohaond. ' •x« a *i/,
' The sami tfl*rnbon;HK9rbehe dttehdcd
Ctblpet “Wtfag^'nt''-wfaiib
•tatetaentnttt»dAlf>; t«(ld«{t'Lincolh.
Thb next morning iMrVOfraenr wasagain
sent fot-hj President IdaeolB,«od attended A
leTOnd^inet.mefting.JhrwmA^fihaitJua:
Mri drdtzM.nUhd.ott
tnreesucoessiTefliorningaaft*Twardv^*,’>
’ , Th* affidavit of Mr. Qrt+fe* Is Jttfichbd to
tbla, statement, and hoaweaiattaC lt U
in erary datmtl and partfetflar.
Mri (Jrcs.'no .glrea a. tba raaadtt why Mr
Darla tent for him that ho (Greeue)hni debar .
Hr.Daruawamnice daring theM.rfr.n -«‘&-itiSSi££frZ&iZi»
warr wfloh ho (Dari.) gratofnltyremtiaheraa. «ii> tha air to whleh-tbat rnih of rohai ZOu
Md-Mr.Dariaeboirhlm bojaaaab.wia W tlfennt3^opl?ffTriySo TOnanriiSu
j>nt b ?miqoii from n pootin effnrlon taubto
(Sola) boUayad.that ba CGs«ia)> - (i|ad.pte? lMguagaranUtlad*‘Don'tbng
pent,thapdaoapmpoouwitbonHneniniwlng otherrlmm"-. = «.»:wJR?
,ta«m with side issues or minor !>»■*> -r.4_.oj - --rf .
. J ; -. ..;_ ,c^yio4
iUaofictam ol
MATLOB dIBiTITB,
, HATS* BTBAW TJ
/PS generally,. •
iaJTO&m*,
S. RIDDUE &, OOm
SDITOBB AND PBOP.SJSTOBB ,
PnbUtatioo . Office’ So. 84 fifth Street
IfOBHING AHD EVENING EDITIONS, DAILY,
CHAINING THE LATEST NEWS /DP TO THE
HOUB OF PUBLICATION. •' **<■"* *
SATURDAY MORNING/ DEC. 13.
J. Wesley Greene’flStQcy,
The Chleago Time* gives a long narrative
purporting to have boon written by one J*
Wesley Greeno, who claims a re
sident ofthis city, a prettygoodfjco'pils of
whloh we give In another *
Oreene describe* himself as “sin tal
japannar,.in the shop of Mr. JoEa Dunlap,
dealer In tin plate, sheet iron, brass, Copper,
As., and manufacturer of japanned!- tin ware,
A*., southwest corner of Marty and Second
streets, Pittsburgh, Pa.” -i* *
The narrative, though ufUrlyincredible, la i
Ingeniously and rather ab!y ! . written, and
brings to mind the celebrated moon hoax that
startled the world some years ago. If wo had
room w« should give it •» «*t*nro,’as a carl
eslty. The object o v f the whole thing Is per
fectly transparent. It is togetapaaenUment
favorable to peace on each terms/ns will re
store the almost raised rebels to their former
plioe In the government, open, thf way for the
letnrn of Jeff. Davis and his traltorons oom
peera to places in the Senate and the
Cabinet. Witness the following extract from
the narrative, the manifest object of which is
to awaken sympathy for Davl£ by holding
him op rather as a martyr, a saffering patriot,
than a psijnred traitor:
Mr. Davie coaid have had no objeetin seem
ing to appear to me what he really was not,
I looked upon him as • man accustomed 1 to
deaung with nxen, and I regarded him as one
not only bowed, down trader A- tyght of tre
mendous respobsibUitiei; but of constantly
overpowering sor
rows. It ma^be-digressive, btttfl_ttobosita-
Ungly assert that Tregard Mr? Davis aia
man who thls day needs, and I may say de
serves, the sympathy ofhhmaaity inapre
eminent heart,.l dp .not believe
him a rebel against the constitution. WJiai-.
*»W»n«iiy an<T miad t***l
>?' - •* ■ * >e s ieva toal Aai «e*r. dteirtd
theold order oftkingt t aiid wiU oo operate to far
attedareiabrijpfiagualxmt. I think he ha*
taken, and maintains at mnoh personal d}*J,'
the position he newooenpies, wutf
the slnoere hope of navlgatingtbe hostile vis-!'
sol end dlrooting the oonrse of Abe ship uf j
State Into a harbor, fhere HosßllUeii musti
cease, and from a bettof'indoraUnd
tod springing up, they.may sally forth with
tfa f °“ unfurledj to waveln- every breete
and gladdeb .every tea. ’ • ?' • -
Thiais not the language of a-journeyman
but of a, man of consummate craft,
One of a.clique of -eehemers wbwwre doin g all
they'can to betray the intothd hands
of tqra who have, done all they
could to deitxoy it lp.
that,are, asa Uit desperate resort, essay jog
euoh base trickery as this, ' ;
Reported Peace Propositioae*«State
mentby thd Bearer o£ the Pxopo*
aula—A General an 4 Unconditional
Amneaty-«ReetoraUoniDrAll Fast.
&r
r,? Bebt.-Whatt^TlaTiUnhe
■ *s® Emanclpauon Proclamation
-•1 be Whole Affair Pronounced a
Humbug in Washington.' '
J. Weiley Greeoe r formeriyuf; Pittsburgh,
publishes a long Statement In the Chicago
Tima, to the following effeot:
I wai called on by. a gentleman from Baltl
more on October Hd, who Informed me that
Jeff. Davis greatly deiirod me to go to Rich
mond. After two or three Interviews with
this gentleman, I consented, logo.;s
I arrived at Richmond on the 26th of Octo
ber, andoo oalling on Mr. Davis, was informed
by h m that he (Davis) desired a termination
ft if * ar ' and an amicable adjustment of
Ue, difficulties between the North and tho
south.
President idtne time in November, and stated
to Urn that he had two .interviews with Jeff.
.Davis at Blchmond on the last day in Ooto
sl»o related eerUin statements
which he said Davis had made-to him upon
tno occasion. ‘ : ■
.. T . k “ PrMld.nl, however, became’ satisfied
tnat Qreene had not seen Davis at all, and that
the entire story was a Very shallow attempt at
deception. Jeff, can redeem Greene's charac
, M T# 1 ' by Terifjlng hls lUtotoeat.
A later Washington diapatoh adds:
J. Wesley Greeno,!who furnished to thsChl
oago, ffawsmie reported peace propositions
from Jeff: Davis to President Lincoln, (sen
imposter.
He came to Washington to see President
Llneoln, whd soon ascertained that there was
so ground fur his nonsensical statements.
t TH B OP THE PRINCE OF WjtLRS.
■When the last Prince of Wales was twenty
received a Parlimontary grant of
$500,000 as an outfit and half that amount
as annual .income. This was half what
hit father (George III.) had received on
coming of oge. Ho claimed from his fath
er the accumulated income of the Duchy of
Corn jail, which lapses to the Prince of
?iftrt , nX? lltabipU 2» and then -worth
$lOO,OOO a year t bhl his father, who had
cei a i e . mone Jf refused to pay up,
protesting that it iras, little enough to pfty
him for the expense of boarding, - lodging,
and educating his hopefulheir from infan
cy to manhood.
Thfi present Prince has been better treat
ed. His revenue has been carefully invest
ed. Over $1,000,000 of the accumulation
ij* B f>r I*l* lately purchased estate in
J[orfolk v tbe mnts of which will be $35,000
Ilia'S place adapted for a rich'
nobleman w£o baa a stately mansion else
where, and desires .good fishing and good
Shooting. The balance at his banker’s after
thlft payment, leaves $2,200,000 to the
Prince, and his Duchy of Cornwall brings
in a net .income of $125,000 a year. Bo
sides this Parliament will vote him about
$500,000 a year during his mother s life
and vote $250,000 a year as pin-money ta
bif bride. They will also have Marlbor
ough House,-close to St. Jame’a Palace, as
a rent-free residence. Certainly,» it ini
.not be doubted the British royalty is in
clover. Lancashire may starve, hut the
Toya! family flourish upon the fai of the
earth. They toll not,, neither do they spin,
yet were they born with golden spoon in
their mouths.
Hitherto, as English history shows every
Prince of Wales, within the last three hun
dred amtfifty years has bolted from the
coprae, .Immediately after -reaching his;
majority, and become head of a' party op
.posed to the reigning sovereign, his father.
Ihie js .o, particularly with Frederick,
eldest soaof-George It, and with George!
eldest son of George-111. The Times, with
»ory donbifol taatp, read a homily on this
.head to Albert Edwanf, and bade him* not
go.onddolikejise 1 .
-Nepotism
The London Review, inn criticism of the
nepousm-itt-the-management of the Eton
CoUege,.Bays that the Vice-Provost, with
•ri
CpDege living, is the brother-in-law of i&e
Senior-Fellow aad Bursar: who haswn fa
of, we believe, £1,400 a year He r is
b 7-a>»rri*g* with another
of lhe Fellows. Two others of the seven
Fellows are brothers-in-law, having mar
ried with another of the Fellows. Two
other® of the seven Fellows are brothen-in
h*W, having married the daughters of a
former head masker, by whom they were
introdqccdjototh i school aa.aasistantmfts-
bead i i&eter, whose inoome is
£v,OOOftyear, is tl e son-in-law of the Vice
!’ r 53“?.!i. tlla !owei master, whose inoome
ts a year, id son of the Vice-Provost.
Qne of the assistant jaastora in tlte Lower
Ifohopl is brother-in-law of the lower mas-1
ter, another is nephew of the late Proyoei-
How trey, and the assistant
master ia his ~ brother. The French mas
ter ;i® son of the late French master: the
drawing master is son of the late drawing
master* the .tencing master ie eon of the
late fencing mister?
'Vur a Lamp Wick doej sot Born. if
we take a piece of lamp wicking and place
it in the Janie of a lamp it Is immediately
consumed, tot the same kind of wloking
placed in the lamp and .lighted at the top
lasta the whole evening, and if the lamp is
anpplied with aleohol the wick, is not even
charred. The cause of this was ■ a perfect
myftery until a hundred years ago. when
Dr.i Black,, of . Glasgow, discovered the
principle of latent heat As the oil or the
alcohol comes near the Same it is evapora
ted land by this ohange in its form a large
quantity of heat is destroyed, or rather is
rendered latent, so that it does hot mani
fest!itaif in any way. It requires a great
quantity of that to ohange a liquid into
vapor. so that evaporation always cools
surrounding objects. The wick is coaled
by the evaporation of the oil or aloohol be
low Ithetemperatere at which it will burin
Dr. Buck's discovery suggested to Watt
hi* great improvement in the steam engine:
condensing the steam in a separate vessel
from the 'cylinder. Watt attended Dr.
Blank’s lectures. -
• MB. C»is. Bsaoa, of Penn Tan, U said to
have invented a method of reducing flax to
v , th * tn»nafactnro,of paper. It oon-
Ini Catting the flax-straw into short
pieofs, usually abont an Inch In'length', and'
subJfoUng it, thus preparodj-to the operation
or grinding, by meant of prepared rblteri
sevolving bed, the effect of
whlijh i, to completely pulverise the woody
portion of the stock and separate it from -the
fibre;,or tint, whiohis leftin aoondltlimready
* nto pnlp. A pe
cnllerity. Whlch: insures - the xuoceis of the'
process, Is, that no routes is required, as the
be worked in the condition in which
it U left when threshed fpr. the seed. Thie is
no experiment, ha Mr. Beech baa' a machine
now in operation which la producing lint from
(lax of this year’s growth at a cost, he states,
or fira.oant#-per-j»oaiido - - *
nmes lsttly elated
lerge.amnune-of fmwder-aad crashed'
: beeneollootedUt 'RotmdCPoUr/and thnlfov
weseion made ,byi the atatemenr was, : that
tlesjimmury iqppliej won. designed*for the
ralmfii, whom they would reach by some' smug,
■giingoperatlon through eomeof thaohaanaii
""“•'“■own to beetlllopea.
“of |» thli instanoe' ttwn a mlsute. The
S£.V” Bot d '» l * l ‘sd for the ate if the
***•, wore destinedfor Mexteo, and,
w«l deafen from- the. Maw -ToriToultom.'
bensi tegnUrlyandopeuly, and were shipped
?I*N*owners in their own names. All the
th( ’ irstisactidb.wss
without any attempt whatever at
jpoaoyunj^tr"'-—■' ——
if IS fiohjilsUng,
g f J»WWslTliCTri»tiir of the Weet
(TsoqO a. jiaper which
™ suppressed some time einoecn aocountnf
.Jte troaimtebUßtteronou,ha. brought ante
-JJ? B O*» 1 " , ‘0” l “d BUtes Marshal AlUward,'
of 'thh eitabllsh
“,BH H « .leys.(ha damaxo at UO.OOO. ■. •.
RELIGIOUB INTELLIGENCE.
’ The German Reformed Musenger gives
the statistics of the German Reformed
Churches in the United States, from which
we learn there ere eynods, 2; classes, 25;
ministers, 421; congregations, 1,122; mem
bore, 100,691; communed during the year,
87,861; baptisms, 11,894; confirmations,
5,636; received on certificate, 1,649; ex
commnnioated, 151; dismissed,46B; deaths,
1,330; Sabbath schools, 941. ,
Recent intelligence fiom Sweden
represent the Baptist Churches to bo in a
prosperous condition, notwithstanding the
opposition from the Btate Church. Rev. t.
Wiberg, a faithful missionary at Stock
holm, writes that thp Church has been un
usually refreshed. Since the beginning of
the year, fifly.four have been added by
baptism, and several others are waiting to
receive (he ordinance. '
‘ The Society for the Propogation of
the Gospel in Foreign Parte, hold its lfllst
anniversary in London. Since the year
1702; in which the first missionaries sailed
from England, under the auspices of this
Society, upward,of £2,000,000 hare been
expended by it, andmorethan3,sooblergy
men hare preached the gospel to 2,000,000
members of the English Church in regions,
where, about one hundred and fifty years
ago, scarcely a dozen preaohers could be
found. ' Receipts in 1801, £83,885.
The Notth Wtitcm Ckriitim Advo
cate says that "the man of feeble health, 1
who is never able to attend church on col:
leotion-deys, is underatood to be paying
serious attention to the -who is posi
tively unable to attend evening meetings
of any hind, except Sociables, parties and
weddings."
The Mission at the (Catholic) Ca
thedral of this city ended Bunday week
with the ceremony of blessing and erecting
the Mission Croas. It is reported, during
its course, over sir ah thousand persons
approached the sacraments. About' fifty
conrerta were receired into the Church.
The Bishop of Pittsburgh, on the same day,
administered the Sabrament of Confirma
tion to upwards of seven hundred persons.'
Her. Dr. Keogh was announced through
the official paper of this Diocese to lecture
Sunday evening, 7lh inaL, in St Patrick's
Church. Subject: "Leave to Commit
Sin."
•— C '*P *ta following from the
Pittsburgh Catholic of the Gth iuflt:—
: The Festival of the Immaculate Concep
uon, which falls on next Monday, should
be eapeoially dear to American Catholics
since the Blessed Virgin, under tbs'-title
of Conceived Without Sin, has been chosen:
by our Prelates as tho Patroness -of the
United States* Never in Uib history of
our conntry have we needed her internes-;
sion more than at the present moment. In
our extremity it is proper that wo should
have recourso to the, prayers of our Holy
Mother, of whom it is said that no one in
t aB T ago Over sought her aid in vain. 'We
would earnestly recommend to oiir Tenders
thaton the approaching Feast of the Im
maculate Conception, and throughout tho
Octave, special prayers be directed to her
for this intention. The Church in an an
tiphon addreeses her in these words: *“Be- :
hold, Ohiary, thou art our hope, to- whom
; order Uutthou slightest
I as and come to oar atßifltaacq.”
—-The receipts of tho Boards of the
Presbyterian Church, during the month of
October, were as follows: Board of Mis
sions, $4,244 96; Board of Education,,
j $2,421 01; Board of Foreign Missions,
( $ 7^ 177 38 ; Board of Publication—sales
52,210 23—-dotations 1,118 19; Board of
j churoh Extension, S64G 70. The Fund for
Disabled Ministers has received, since the
last; report. $906 72. .
I A querist in the Watehtnm ahi Be
fleeter requests some one to toll seine min-,
isters how to leave a Church, for. whoso
prosperity they have labored for year*,
without distracting its members, dividing
its councils,'or bringing refitach upon the
oaaqo of ,God. , . "
• Iho Bqaton AVol ;(Eoman Catholic)
■made the following statement in lie Christ
niaa artfclej last year:- *• > v;
“Xho chief festival ofthayear is now
»t hhnd. Allhaii to its return! .IVnever
eoiaeawjthoiit causing> onirersol .diffusion
or happiness, The damned themselves-are
aaiditoexuljiniU.ajiiroaei, Ho be released
”°3 »in*„whUe. it ,laeU,; and.
to be wro^JtaWnfi^ M eonTnWona s eC woe
whoa its final Mctenda are annoonoed by;
the rejoicing . devils wiiA command their
jtormenta.”, . . , . [■
— SeraU, im-ma-editorial “Qon*
to Hjaven," says the Minutesbf' theCoiU
fereijcM elioir that tea six” fiaa
dredj tuidtwwly-iiro^iiia^irs' of (ha *L
E. Church hare died during the past twelve
months. Hearty a thousand a month for
this baa' Christian denomlnstiots"mostly
confined.tp (he loyal .'Slates, of this’ jeonn
try, und, generally,adults. . A:regiment
I erery month! And thebe people die wen.
•Itis:etrange for any : one' .ofr.'.lheia. to go.
j?? i»tp.CuTjwallege txpmhjfng
sparing, but common for, them. to. testify:'
That*he Sariourds- with- thesr-and gires
them! comfort and a good bops of beaten:-
' to thePreshyiiriip.lSan-.
ncr-, th'ero.ia.yet.reqaiipd, to ,oqmpietei i the
endowment of tin Fourth.Profersorabip in
the 'Western iThcologloal 1 Seminary,-ftp
sum ,of of«r eighteen thoniand doUprs.’. ‘ .
oS'es
. Thn .New Testament from.tho haudsef
ib immorsiouisf rorisera is somr toappeaf:'
We.aro glad to.kara.that-the great ions
teat has-peensetUeiamong theinhymakw.
ing thp,translation to read, Mniihasodare
.eeßidilphn thAlaumatn.' i 1 -., .-.m, ~a V
v. Jt fcaa»] foregonoconclnsion,-.' when) the
had wofkwaa begua, toiatrikeooutiimita*
Md Insert t mmtrte, bat there vu & sertotut*
otyeetion to -oat
ot the ltr
nama from the Bible- tara I '^ifcwaa' , o6t“
polley-to reject it ; Bdt HheHj no
other way. Ifibp(i»';li. (o' bb'vitileken
out and miatriirpiiUe,:;Maptiu Sniet ’wo
too, and | ibiiserrer. take.ib place.,'Thu:
esclaair«iy;eeotarbn,
* nd i *o' »te happy. to say. so marrowS
eeptanan, tlutMhe great bodyof-onr Uo%
intelligent, Indnentiat ftnd' pions iianiUt
friends regiud the: work wiftnoEtrOrSf
-Hi.-- ; '■*<• *2 <► - r \S V, Au—
roftaed to make an appointnijßt'-to-* UoUar
—lt is staled on good authority tint
the number of priesta ini.ltaly that have
lately seceded from the Bcman Cathqlio,,
Church is immense.
Rot. Dr. Durbin, who preached in
Christ M. E. Chnreh in this oily last Sun
day morning, is analysed in the following
style by a correspondent of the Lutheran
OUerver;
Who that has ever hoard Dr. Durbin, Of '
the Methodist Churcß; can'forget, in the,
beginning of a discourse his wwi, piping, r
whining voice,>rnng on theaar like the '
flUng of n saw, or the tooting ; 0 r a penny '
whistle, but once entered on his subject,
“ e earthquake, oruahing all be-
—An address has been published AomT
a portion of the Italian cleigy to- the
Pope, praying his Holiness to renounce the ‘
temporal power. The letter bear* 8,948
signatures, ' ~
—-Rev. Tobias. Spicer died, 18th. ult., ■
in Western New York, aged 74 year*. He "
was fifty-two years a minister, and
preaohed eight.thousand five hundred and
fifty times—averaging over three sermons
a week.
, The Wesleyan Methodists have
purohaaed an old Roman, Catholio Church
at Parma,. in Italy, for public worship.
When it was opened, 460 'persons were ;
within the doors, and hundreds remiined ’
in the streets. "
Cavalry Women in the 1 Banka. ''
WhUe the late of Generii:'
SUhi wb out, a portionofit recohnoUered
around UpperriUe. . This body meta squad , .
of rebel eayaliT before them, and pursuit ;
wat gufin. when closely in contact with >
them, two females on horseback. were da*-' .•
scribed riding with thecaTilry. '
women were supposed to be epiea iii dia- V-
J guise. ' . ;
Oar men were,determined to captnro tie;' ’
■ whole of the foe. They told them to halt .
end surrender; but this ,w*i diaregarded !
bythe rebels. Both, par tier wheeled into :
a fevqrable position, end fited their 0».,' ’ :
bines, . , j ■t V
Sejual jui bqth sldesweresllghtly woun- i?
women'was shatinthe
* f fr. The ball fracturrd, the bona badly:,.'.'-'
butit was thougbt’that amputation would
not hare to-be resorted to! „ Wfiile she laj ‘.
bleeding on the ground, her rebel oompan
ions flea from, her,* and sho was left tothw •
merejkof ber caplora. / •
She was conveyed to a house, and prop-...,
®* surgical , aid was promptly procured.
Everything tending to alleTiate her
ings was dons for her... She said that she
was ; a Southern,'woman, and . voujd notV.c
care so mupb for the wound and p**". if .. Vk
she could but see the dastardly;.. Yankees ‘“ ’
who shot her buV&ered before lev. The ; !
shot was a random one.'and hot aimed at 1
her..
H.Cochlnon Emancipation*
ALCOohinon* the “Results of Emancipa-* ~
tion, la announced for immedialepublica-!
tion la Boston, & Co.,The.';'
following is an extract from ,th© chapter^-: >
relating to emancipation s the Botch coin* •»
nies: ' • • ;•« ’
thousand men f Thiiiy-thiinl’ .V>’,
millions francs l It is tety little, ac4roely•
more Cum what ip tested and cxpewSi t.•
m f !?*&■ «4*rt S'tSto' bctweenthoHorth
-®?jd the r Southl lam .persaadedthat.tha /v -
King of Holland inuatiiaYD. niened with'. '
heart-felt joy this dnpretendlbß law which V.
™* eo many unhappy, beings rat liberty, -
Sires toonreentdry .a sMctade >hieh'it
has rarely Ualod—Uiat of progreai. a‘o-' '
compushed v without., tiolimce—-and' - at ' '
length effaces from the name of Holland a
stain which rests no longer in' Earope ynt! *
the most, obstinate, the; practice /of,, the '
slate-trade did slatexy* Thia nation is :
Spain.”; ■ ' ••:
_ 4 HtSDOO PiPEIL ‘ OS Till! '
Sajiona Bfjmta, tut tir'd Bengal'paper.ad-' '■"■
rocnting-the introduction of the Blbls ihla -*
gorernment schools, deseHbdsitin wi4arfc-““
able language asoohithg'from a heathen! wt-'”; 1
“the best andmbst excellent ofallEngKak ’
books, and there is hotits like in the Sng->' ''
lish language; As erety joint of the eiutat’' "
cane from the root to the top is fnlrdf”' '■
sweetness,-so erery part of the ' ■
fraught with the most prooious instrno- . :
Hons.. A portiqn of. that hook would yield’ . I.
toyoa more of Bound, morality" th*nV l_
thousand other,'treatids oh the Bathe siA-" w r
JJ ct> *“ short; if. anybody studies 1 -the ! ‘ neo
hngush language with a slew to gain o
there is not another. .whiohia . T i
BtiSe >* iortijr . ° r l
jPMjroa. •
ATNER "BKOTHlißSr^^^^’ 1
cimb rated mw iobk. j ;-..... “
| : r •-, ' •■■-.*■■ ' * i t
f_ 1.4-?j;o-F:0-_R:-f'-Ei
r f*l I iv ft.VJv
!>• boot -Pjoiw iathafoxmlrT at *h» •■*> J» 51 ,
fi»po*tof*oiflyb#iuaß#th>*toWV)r r.int
I;;;': ” j.
.■;’;* ! ii‘Ji'. >«' V
mid*;** Mr*.-..,i-; ;
. ill Ksw York, for tha Actoei of fho iboro.
celobroledPJoncsi aQoritaa Uvmt titebiirplii excvpt
wnr ,
price from*l7sfo#soOT -
‘ j r -'-i f i«77f~J rjj S' ?j
g'niOWtt
lgtp *m>. osuhSSftaUß
sa.—BgAL . BABQAIh'B AtJ- ff O’OB
an»Md(M«tro’HS<>;ri>tod
£ S 0 *** fc*»-S! r.
.»*t
Wbt*W
,*Pp->• »«7*ood iDft/UCWQI 100..,.,,,.;
' :w
.ftMygod ft t**-
#■> a;;j
, - .aon» H,'BBIitOB, ' UJ CJ-0
lj-m^
ataovvi.
y Fluaa, from aU part* of
xssmß&ssg&l^
» to ASnr'*fENOß‘ DSOMi
P;<gjNd hpo *
-
«jßBia9&a£tes -