11 11 M I " 1 1 BY S. X ROW. CLEARFIELD, PA.. "WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1864. VOL. 10.-NO. 2-3. T Ell MS OF TT1E JOURNAL. The Raftsman's .Iocrkal is published on TVed bmJit at $l,0 per annum ie advance. Adver tisements inserted at SI. IK) per square, for threo or lea insertions Twelre lines (oriels) counting a quare. For every additional insertion 2a cents. A deduction will be made to yearly adver tigers. IRVIN BROTHERS. Dealers in Square Sawed Lumber, Drj Goods, Groceries. Flour, Grain, Ac , Ac. Burnside Pa., Sept. 23, 1863. I FREDERICK LEITZISGER, Manufacturer of II kinds of Stone-ware. Clearfield. Pa. Or der solicited wholesale or retail. Ja. 1,1863 f iRAXS BARRETT, Attorneys at Law. Clear ly fild. Pa. May 13. 1S63. L. J. crass. :::::: wai.tkk bakbett. IOBERf J.WALLACE. Attorney atLaw. Clear i field. Pa Office in Shaw's new row. Market sireet. opposite Naugle's jewelry acere. May 28. HF. NAUGLE. Watch and Clock Maker, and . dealer in Watches, Jewelry. 4o. Room rn Graham's row, Market street. Not. 10. H- BUCHER SWOOPE. Attorney at Law.Clear . Eeld.Pa. OEct in Graham's Row, four doo s west of Graham A Boynton's store. Nov. 10. t p. KRATZER Merchant, and dealer in p) . Boards and Shingles, Grain and Produce, front St. above the Academy, Clearfield. Pa. jl 2 "T7ALLACE A HALL, Attorneys at Law, Clear TV field, Pa. December 17. 1862. H1LMAV A. WALLACE. JOBS a. BALL. I7 A FLEMMTXG. Curwensville. Pa.. Nunery- . man and Dealer in all kinds of Fruit Mid Ornamental Trees. Plantsand Shrubbery. All or ders by mail promptly attended to. May 13. " TJIt.LIAM F. IRWIN, Market street, Clearfield, W Pa., Dealer in Foreign and Domestic Mer chandise. Hardware. Queensware, Groceries, and family articles generally. Nov. 10. JOHN GFELICH. Manufacturer f a!', kinds of Cabinet-ware, Market street, Clearfield, Pa. He also makes to order Coffins, on short notice, and trends funerals with a hearse. AprlU,'5y. DR. M. WOODS. PitACTiciNG Phvsicias, and Examining Surgeon for Pensions. Office, South-west corner of Second and Cherry Street. Clearfield. Pa. January 21, 13(53. 7 W. SHAW. M. !., has resumed the prac- . tice of Medicine and Surgery in Rhawsville, Penna. where Yi-e still respectfully solicits a con tiiiuance of public patronage. May 27, 1:63. JB M'EX ALLY, Attorney nt Law. Ciearfield, . Pa. Practices in Clearfield and adjoining counties. Office in new brick building of J.Boyn ton. 2d street, one door south of Lanich's Hotel. 1 ICUARD MOSSOP, Dealer in Foreign and Do V mestio Dry Goods, Groceries, Flour, Bacon, Liquurs. Ac. Room, on Market street, a few doors west of journal Office, Clearfield, Pa. Apr27. T nilOMPSON, A WATSON. Dealers in Timber Saw Lo23. Boards and fchingles, Marysrille. Clearfield county, Tenn a August II. Ioj. s. w. THOMPSON -. c : : jas. e. watsos I ARKIMER A TEST, Attorneys at Law.CIear- 1 J field. Pa. ill attend promptl v to all legal and other busineos entrusted to their care in Clear field and adjoining counties. August 6, ISOrt. TK. WM. CAMPBELL, offers bis professional JJ aervices to the citizens ot ilushannon and vi cinitv. He can be consulted at his residence at all times, unle-. absent uc professional business Mohs.innon, Centre o.. Fa., May 13, I6u4. "TT.I. ALBERT A BRO'S, DaaleTs in DryGood3, If Groceries, Hardware. Oueensware, Flour, iJacnn. etc.. oodlani. Clearfield countv. Penn a i. extensive dealers in all kinds of sawed lum- "er. thinglcs, and so uare timber. Orders sulioi fd. Woodland, Aug. 19th. 1S6.". rplIO.MAS J. MXCLLOC'GH, Attorney at Law X Clt-arfield. Pa. Office, east of the -Clearfield c... Eank. Deeds and other legal instruments pre; pared with promptness and accuracy. July 3.' i). ti. bcsh. :::::::: t.j.x ccLLoiea BCSH A MTULLOUGII S Coi.lkctios OrricB. Clkarficld, Pkks'a. DR. LITCII'S MEDICI-N ES. Afresh sup ply of these invaluabl Family Medicines ar for sale by M. A. Frank. CleaHLeld, consisting ot Pain Curer; Jle.ttorative, a great care for colds and cough; and Anti-Biltov Physic. They hay oeen thoroughly tested in this community, and are highly approved. Try them. lYEW WATCH k J EWELR V STORE.- i. 1 The undersigned having locntcd in the bor ough of Clearfield, -at the shop formerly occupied by K Welch as a jewelry shop.) is prepared to uo work of all kinds an the mwt reasonable terms. The caxh will positively be expected when the rk is delivered. K is confident that he can iiot be excelled by any rorkincn in town orcounty. Come one ! rome all to the Sig flhe DiiS Walth. April 9. 62-ly-pd. . H. LACCllLIN. 1 ICTIONEER. The undersigned having - oeen Licensed an Auctioneer, woul auioria !ie citizens of Clearfield couny that he will at nd to calling sales, in any part of the county, benverealJed upon. Charges moderate Address, JOHN M QUILKIN. May 13 Bower Po., Clearfield co., Pa. V B. Persons calling sales without a proper li Tcse are subject to a penalty of 560, which pro vision will be enforced against those who may vi olate the me. l?rLKLEYS PATENT LUMBER DRIED V bY SUPERHEATED STEAM. The under- gned rflipeetfully informs tfe people of Clear nd adjoining counties that he has the agen CJ of the above patent and will soli individual, want? or township rights for ita us-e. The lm r dried by this process is stronger, finishes bet 'r! is easier on tools, and requires less time in frying than any other process known, drying 1 'Mn lumber perfectly in 33 hours better than "any months under the old system using the me sniount offset per day that a common kiln coi"umel. The certificate of a number of resi nt ehanics well known in this community is . npiy sufficient to convince the most sceptical of j ty' Peon aeeirous of purohasing rights w"ddress JOHN L. COTTLE, Jll. 1363. Cearfield. Penn". MILLINERY & FANCY STORE. MRS. II. D.WELSH, RESPECTFULLY ANNOUNCES TO THE LA h WES of Clearfield and vicinity that she iiJ na opened a Millinery, Notion and Trim 'ZL "!ln6 "ore, on Second Street, next door to ob ' L.anicn'8 Hotel, where she will be Old V receive orders for either work or goods. ad pi0-?';' md 0Ter into the ,atest Jfew York eh,,v , e,Ph5a t'y'. on short notice. By pnr- ing often she will always have on hand the k a tyles of Dres Trimmings, Hats, Nu wll .7.' Co,Uar- Sleeves, Ac, which she will 'm,le possible profit for cash. . - 'we.ld. Pa. Noy. 18 .1663. Select iVctnu BLACK EYES AND BLUE. Black eyes most dazzle ,'n a hall ; Blue eyes most plcese at evening fall. The black a conquest soonest gain ; The blue a conquest most retain. The black bespeak a lively heart, Whose soft emotions soon depart; The blue a steadier flame betray, That burns and lives beyond a day. That black may features best disclose ; In blue may feelings all repose. Then let each reign without control The black all mind the blue all socl'. CTJBTrU'3 INAUGUEAL ADDEESS. Delivered, Jan. 19, 1864. iWotv-citizens of the Senate and Jlouse of Representatives 7 Called by the partiality of my fellow-citizens to the office of Governor of I'eniisylva aia for another term, I appear before you to solemnly renew the prescribed obligation to support the Constitution of the United States and the Constitution of the State of Pennsylvania, and to discharge the respon sible trust confided to me.with fidelity. When first summoud before you, three years ago, to asuiMe the sacred duties of the 'Executive office, the long gathering clouds of civil war were about to break upon our devoted country. For years treason has been gathering in might had been appro priating to its fiendish lust more and more bountifully of the nation's honors had grown steadily bolder in its assumption of power until it had won the tolerance, if not the sanction of a lormidable element of pop ular strength even in the confessedly loyal States. The election of a President in 1 St'-O, in strict conformity with the Constitution and the laws, though not the cause was deemed the fit occasion for an organized at tempt to overthrow the whole fabric of our tree institutions, and plunge a nation of thirty millions of people into hopeless an archy. The grave offence charged against the President elect, seemed alone to consist in his avowed fidelity to the Government, and his determined purpose to fulfil his sol emn covenant to maintain inviolate the U nion of States. When inaugurated, he found States in open rebelliou, disclaiming allegiance to the Government, fraudulently appropriating its property and insolently, contemning its authority. i 1 reason was struggling for supremacy in Uuvery department ot administrative power. In the Cabinet it lelomously disarmed us our arsenals were robbed to enable the ar mies of crime to drench a continent in fra ternal blood our coasts were left compara tively defenceless to fall an eay prey to trai- tor-our navy was scattered upon distant seas to render the Republic helpless for its own protection officers, educated, commis sioned and swern to defend the Government against any foe. became -deserters, defied Ifeav-ea in shameless perjury, and with frat ricidal har.ds drew their swords agauist the country of their allegiance, and whea trea son had thus completed its preparations, wanton, wicked war was forced upon our loy al people, .Never w-as war so causeless. The North had sought mo sectional triumph, invaded no rights, inflicted no wrongs upon the South, It aimed to preserve the Republic, not to licttroy it, and even when the rebel lion presented the sword as the arbiter, we exhausted every effort consistent with the existence of our Government to -avert the bloody drtiua c-f tte last three years. The insolent alternative presented by treason of fatal dismemberment or internecine war, was met by generous efforts to avert the storm of death wfcich threatened to fall ; but the leaders of the rebellion spurned peace, unless they could glut tfceir infernal ambition over the ruins ot the noblest and freest Government ever devised bv man. Three vears of bloodv, wasting war, and the horrible sacrifice of a quarter ef a million lives attest the desperation of their purpose to overthrow our liberties. Mourning and sorrow spread- over the entire nation, and defeat and desolation are the terrible tro phies won by the traitor's hand. Our peo ple have been sorely tried by disasters, but iu the midst of the deepest gloom they have stood with unfaltering devotion to the great cause of our common country. Relying1 up on the ultimate triumph of the right, they hive proved themselves equal to the stern duty, and worthy of their rich inheritance of freedom. Their fidelity has been well rewarded. In God's own good time, He has asserted His avenging power; and if this war is persisted in by the leaders of the rebellion, as has become evident, then sla very aoid treason, the fountain and stream of discord and death, must soon share a com mon grave. In this great strucsrle tor our honored na- tionalitv, Pennsylvania has won immortal fame. Despite the teachings of the faith- ess and the hesitation of tfce timid, she has promptly and srenerously met everr de mand made upon her, whether to repel in vasion or to fight the battles of the Union whenever and whereever her ioople were demanded. Upon every field made historic and sacred by the valor of our troops, some of the martial youth of Pennsylvania have fallen. There 13 scarcely a hospital that has not been visited by our kind offices to the sick and wounded, there is not a department in which brave men do not answer with pride to the name of our noble State, and while history endures loyal hearts will turn with feelings of national pride to Gettysburg, where the common deliverance of Pennsyl vania and the Union will stand recorded in the unsuroassed glory of that bloody field. 1 need hardly renew my pledge, that du ring the terra of office on which I am about to enter, I will give my whole moral and official power to the prosecution of this war, and in aiding the National Government in every effort to secure early and complete success over our malignant toes. . For the preservation of our national life, all things should be subordinated. It is the first, highest, noblest duty of the citizen it is his protection in person, property, and all civil and religious privileges, and for its perpetuity in form and power, he owes all his efforts, his influence, his means, and his life. To compromise with treason, would be to give it renewed existence, and enable it agaiu to plunge us into another causeless war. In the destruction of the military power of the rebellion is alone the hope of peace ; for while armed rebels march over the soil of any State, no real freedom can prevail, and no governmental authority, consistent with the genius of our free institutions, can properly operate. - The people of every State are entitled un der the Constitution to the protection of the Government, and to give that protection fully and fairly, rebelion must be disarmed and trodden iu the dust. By these means, and these alone, can we have end aring union, prosperity and peace. As in the past, I will in the future, in faithful obedience to the oath I have taken, spare no means, with hold no power which can strengthen the Government in this conflict. To the meas ures of the citizens chosen to administer the National Government adopted to promote our great cause, I will give my cordial ap proval and earnest co-operation. It is the cause of constitutional liberty and law. Powers which are essential to our common safety should now be wisely and fearlessly administered, and that Executive would be faithless, and held guilty before the wcrld, who should fail to wield the might of the Government for its own preservation. The details of my views on the measures which I recommended are contained in my recent annual message, and need not here be re peated. I beg to return to the people of my native State my hearty thanks for their unfaltering support and continued confidence. They have sustained me amid many trying hours of official embarrassment. Among ail these people, to none am 1 more indebted than to the soldiers of Pennsylvania, and I here pledge to those brave men my untiring ex ertions in their behalf, and most anxious ef forts for their future welfare, and I recom mend here, as I have frequently done be fore, those dependant upon them, to the fostering care of the State, I cannot olo.-e this address without an earnest prayer to the Most High that He will preserve, protect and guard onr beloved country guiding with divine Power, and wisdom, our Government, State and Na tional, and I appeal to my fellow-citizens, here and elsewhere, in our existing embar rassments, to lay aside ail partisan feelings and unite in a hearty and earnest effort to support the h involves the welfare of us all. Gentlemen of the Senate and House of Representatives, I pray to you in God's name, let us, in this era in the history of the world, ;t an example of uaitjT and concord in the support of all measures for the pres ervation of this great Republic. Andkew It. CrRTI.V. JOHN MIK0B B0TTS. He Declines a Seat in the U. S. Sentto Tooms' Prophecy May be 1 ulfiUed. In aisver to a letter from the Hon. G. b. t.Ml'iil, treasurer ot the Virginia State Government, to the Hon. John 31. Butts, urging on behalt of Governor Piekpoxt his acceptance ot the position ot Senator troia that State, Mr. Borrs has written an elo quent response declining the proffered hon or, lie states that he is fullv aware of the responsibility of a United States Senator ; that the position is one which ought to satis fy the aspirations of any moderate man, but that he is compelled at present, by solemn convictions of duty, to decline accepting any office from either of the numerous govern ments of A irginia. representing or profes sing to represent that State. His unselfish motives, he states, might be impugned, but he nevertheless belives the time not far dis tant when he may be able to aid iu healing the bitter animosities of the two sections. He charges the leaders of the Rebellion as having, '"with miscalculation upon miscalcu lation, and blunder upon blunder," brought ruin and destruction upon the "old Mother of States," and closes by saying that nei ther w ar, nor want, nor suffering can last forever, and that when the proper time ar rives he believes he may be instrumental in the work of Union and reconciliation. In a conversation with Mr. Botts, he started that never for a single instant during this war, has doubted the final result. His opinion of George B. McClellan is not at all complimentary to that gentleman, tchom he regards, if not positively disloyal at heart, at least in the light of an ambitious aspirant for undeserved h onors. Mr. BOTTS stated that he belived that the -majority of the Rebel army regarded McCleixan is being as tru ly devoted to their interest as Robet E. Lee, and that a man who would not, icheu his name teas vsed in ccmnection with IAVIS, Valaxpigham, Wood and othen of the same political complexion, come out boldly and disclaim theassociation, was totaly unfit tobe commander of a Union army, Mr. Boits says that , of all the promises made to the Southern people by the leaders of Secession, only one may possibly be fulfilled. The promise refferred to is the one of Mr. Toombs, of Georgia, who, it will be,remem bered, said he would yet call the roll of his slaves at the foot of Bunker Hill Monument. Mr. Botts thinks that if President Lin coln will collect the slaves of Mr. Toombs, and permit him to visit theNorth, the proph ecy may be fulfilled. Gen. Anderson, who is quite feeble, is living in New York. The physicians say he will be no better. He says the flag low ered at Sumpter was only, a email signal flag.: He still has that and the reIar en- ngn of the garnpon. THE CALAMITY AT SANTIAGO. Wiry the Victims Were- Not Saved Brutal ocene on tne .Removal of the Dead. The Providence Journal publishes a let ter received by Mr. Wr. A. Pearce, of Provi dence, from his father, resident in Santiago, Chui, who witnessed the recent appallin catastrophe by which more than two thou sand human beings were burned to death. It appears that the failure to rescue the un fortunate victims was owing to the idiotic police system of the Chilians. The writer says : I hear you asking, Why were those suff erers not rescued .' 1 es, why were thev not rescued r Aiy neart sickens within mo at the question. Those determined, stupid ignoramuses of policemen ! Fifty foreign ers, had they been allowed to work, and to work in their own way, could and would have rescued nearly or quite the whole mass. But no, as is always the case here on the a larm of fire, the police place a sentry on every avenue leading to the fire. They "have, as you know, no fire engines except some two or three old Gordon pumps. I fought my way past the police one entire square, by wresting guns and sabres from their hands, knocking them out of my way, and bciag knocked io return, until I was overpowered by numbers and compelled to retreat, and all within hearing of the most heart-rending lamentations that ever sounded on human ears. And nearly every foreigner fared sim ilar to myself; was kept back. Mr. Demi low, of the gas works, received a bayouet wound at the tire while in the act of rescu ing a young lady that he recognized, a Miss Larren. He had fought his wav in company with one of the workmen at the gas works to the church, and battered down a side or private door and saw Miss Larren ; she at the same time recognized him and called on him to save her. He could not enter in consequence of a sheet of flame between them. He reached kis cane to her which she grasped with both hands, when he and his friend attempted to drag her through the flames, but she was so surrounded and hemmed in with the dead and dying, that her strength was not suffi cient. Ihey abandoned this method and went in pursuit of some other means to res cue her, and returned again, and on present ing themselves with the means ot saving her at the door, the police ordered them back, and not beetling the order, he (Demilow) was bayoneted. Ilis friends wrested the gun from the police, knocked him senseless to the ground, and made a second attempt to save the poor girl. But the time lost in dispute with the police was a life lost with her. This is only one of many similar scenes. Your brother Charles battered a door down on Calle Bandera' or Flagg street, en tered and found in a small anteroom some thirty females and all living, but like so many statues, perfectly unconcious. He was compelled to take many of them in his arms and cany them into the street, and saved them all. M r. 3Ieiggs and Keith fought their way through the police, and reached the church at a late hour, and when the tower was falling about them succeed ed iu saving several. Mr. Meiggs saw a woman still alive, under a crowd of others then dead. She recognized him and called to nim.saymg, lor uou s sate save me I He pushed through the fire to her, and pushed several of the dead from her, then attempt ed to lift her out from among the dead, but they wiere so firmly wedged in about her and on her, he had to abandon that. He then procured a lasso, fastened that about her waist, and the united strength of eight men could not extricate her from her companions, 1.1 11.1 1 ! 1 ana tney nad to leave ner, amid such cries for help as no christian heart could endure, neither can language describe. The police had full charge of the front of tne church, and m such force that the for eigners could do nothing there. The police rescued but a few. Axes and crow-bars were not to be had unf.il a late hour. A sin gle instance will suffice to show the stupidi ty of the police. An officer of the police" set-i some hair dozen ot his men to hew or batter down one of these large front doors 'with their eld broad swords. The doors are made of two inch hard wood, double thick ness, and rivitcd through and through with iron rivets. You can judge the effect their old cutlasses made on the doors better than I can describe it. The scene at tlie church the following day was trie most revolting, heart-distressing that ever was witnessed since the world was created. There were the poor unfortunate in all stages of consumption, the greater portion of them naked. But a few could be recognized bv their surviving friends. The police ordered on the peones, or laborers, to remove the dead. Those demons, worse than devils damned, commenced their work with as much hilarity as you eversaw school children enter on some pleasure excursion. The dead were pulled about and pulled a part as one would pull apart tangled brush wood. You could see two or more persons pulling on a limb of some one buried under the others, until the limb was pulled from the body. Then they would have a peon rejoice and howl ot exultation, and com mence at another. , The dead were actually separated with crowbars and pick. Limbs, head and fragments were shoveled into carts with no more feeling than Irish laborers would have in shoveling gravel into a rail way car. Hundreds of bodies, but partially burned, entirely naked, were tumbled into open carts and packed up in the cemetery in one pro miscous heap, without even the covering of a bundle of straw or bullrush, and hun dreds of those heartless wretches comment ing and joking . on the scene, and all under the supervision of the police. I have seen within the past ten years here among . these people many things that were to me very unpleasant. But this is so horrifying to the soul that I cannot find language to ex press my disgust of them. Twenty-two hundred bodies have been counted out from the ruins, and it is sup posed many were burned entirely up. The Iirevailing opinion is the number of lives ost will reach twenty-five hundred. The count and names collected to date amount to some fifteen hundred. Many families have lost the entire female members six, seven, eight and nine from one family. All those that couhl not be recognized by theirsurviv ing friends are now buried in one grave or hole. A place twenty-five yards square was excavated, and into this they were, laid or tumbled and shoveled. STATE TEEASUEEE'S EEP0ET. .We have received a copy of the report of Mr. McGrath, the State treasurer. After showing the financial condition of the State Treasury, which has already been given in the Governor's message, he says : The subject of the payment of the interest on the public debt of the State is one which, from its importance, ought to receive your early and earnest attention. For the last two years, and including the amount due on the 1st instant, the interest has been paid in specie or its equivalent, through means furnished by the banks of the Commonwealth. In 18(i2, under the act of April 11th of that year, they were re quired to pay into the Treasury their ratea ble proportion of such premium for gold, or its equivalent, as had been actual!' jwiid by the fcrate. uring the last year, under the provisions of the act of June 30th, 1SG3, they were required to exchange with the Commonwealth a sufficient amount of coin for currenc,v to pay the interest on the State debt ; and the State Sreasurer was author ized to issue to them specie certificates of exchauge, not transferable, pledging the faith of the State to return said coin and re exchange for notes current at that time, on or before the first Monday of March, 1864, said certificate to boar interest at the rate of per cent, per annum. Under the provisions of this act Commonwealth has exchanged with banks currency for coin, amounting to 968, 484 "37, the interest on which, due the the SI, the banks on the 1st of March, 1862, will amount to $41,040 15. To return this amount iu coin at the present market rate for gold, 151 J. will cost the State $1,013.986 06, which with the interest thereon, $l,0f5, 026 21. This the Commnnweilth has pledg ed her faith to pay on the 1st of March next If it be determined to keep faith with the holders of the loans, by paying the interest on the public, debt in specie or its equivalent and the banks were Ireeu Irom sunuar calls I do not doubt, from the disposition they have manifested to aid in maintaining the credit of the Commonwealth, that they wil be willing to relieve her from the repayment ot their com for the next vear, it prompt steps be taken to provide the means for their reimbursements at an early period. But to continue longer this system of compelliD? the banks alone to furnish coin for the inter est on the pubnc debt, is I thmk, aski T.I 1 1 . more tnan they can bear, ana more tnau they can be expected to do. Holding thi? opinion, and desiring to obtain lor your honorable bodies all the information I could get on the subject, I last mouth addressed a circular to the bauksof the Commonwealth inquiring whether, under the terms of the existing acts, tney couia oe reuea on to lur- nish specie or its equivalent, for the pay ment ot the interest ot tne next year. Some of the banks that have replied deem it unjust to their stockholders longer to con tinue this system of exchanging coin for cur rency, and therefore decline doing so. Oth crs are willing to continue the system if con curred in by all the banks, and required by the State ; but all agree as to the impolicy and ltnustice ot singling out a particular m terest in the State to bear all the burden of doing that which interests the whole people. They claim that, as they furnish an annual revenue to the I reasury of over three hun dred thousand dollars, and are now being brought into competition with another svs tern of banking exempt from a large share of the taxation imposed upon them, it ought to be the disposition of the State rather to relieve than impose additional burdens upon them. . . It is evident, therefore, from . all the information that he had, that the State must look elsewhere for the purpose of maintain ing her credit. And isitnot the duty of her people, in view of her heretofore well settled policy, to make some sacrifices in order to accomplish it? , 1 he subject was very ably argued bv my predecessor in his report to the Legislature last winter; and fully concurring in his views, 1 take the liberty ot quoting two or three of the very pertinent questions there in put- He says : 'The question generally asked m discussing this suoject is, can tne ftate arford to pay this large difference between currency and specie in the payment of her interest? Ought not the question rather to lie, can she afford not to do it? "Will not the credit of the State suffer materially if she refuses to do it? Is her credit of no value to, her and her citizens? Is the State so stronga nd powerful, so above any liability of future want, that she can ex ercise her power irrespective of any effect her action may have upon her credit? This State, by the act of June 12th, 1840, appropriated a sufficient sum to reimburse her loan holders for the difference in value between specie and the currency in which they had previously been paid, and then solemnly declared "that hearafter the inter est falling due on Pennsylvania stocks shall always be paid in specie or its equivalent. ' ' This is the law to-day, and for its observ ance, and the maintenance of the present good name of the Commonwealth, no effort or sacrifice ought to be spared. . . ' The General Government pays the inter est on its debt in specie, and New York partially so ; though the system she has adopted of driminating in favor of her foreign creditors I think unjust Some of the States that pay in currency contracted their debts since the suspension of specie payments, and therefore borrowed currency ; but Pennsylvania borrowed mon ey from her creditors, and she ought to pay them in mon-y . Let us therefore so act now that, in the future, it may be the boast of our honored old Commonwealth that amid all the trials of this eventful eriod of. the nation's his tory, she faithfully performed her whole du ty, and came out of the ordeal with unsul lied honor. . . . In another portion of this report the dis continuance by the Pennsylvania Railroad Company of the collection of the State tax from the bondholders is referred to. This ia the only company in the State that ever performed that duty, and as I am unable to find any law imposing it ujmju them, I pre sume, of course, it was done voluntarily. It is a fact well known, that a very large portion ef the personal property in the State escapes taxation altogether, either through the neglect of assessors or the failure of the owners to report to thein. And it is there fore surprising that the easy and effective mode of securing the largerevenue due the Commonwealth for taxes on the bonds of corporations, by requiring the cornorationa to collect the tax and return it to the Treas ury, has not before this been provided for by law. I beg leave, therefore, respectfully to urge the passage of an act authorizing and di recting railroad corporations, at the time of paying the interest on their bonds, to de duct from the amount due the holders there of the tax due to the Commonwealth in the sameroannpr that treasurers of municipal corporations are by the act of April 29th, 1814, now required to do. By the report of the Auditor General, last year, the funded debt of the railroad coni- fianies alone is stated at sevnty-soven mil ions of dollars. A very large proportion of which, even exclusive ot' the amount held by nonresidents, escapes taxation. It must be evident, therefore, that t&c enactment of such a law as I have alluded to will pro duce a very largely increased revenue. The act of April 16, 1862. and the sup plement thereto, of .April 22, 1863, for the pay and expenses of Pennsylvania Volun teers, provided that these claims should be paid out of the "war loan" of $3,000,000 authorized by the act of 15th May, 1861, and li tbat were insufficient, then outof any other money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated The "'war lonn"1 is now exhausted, and as these. claims, it is supposed, will amount to " nearly ;?2,QOO:000. it will be seen that they cannot !e paid out of the ordinary receipts of the Treasury in any rsasonaf'le time.. When it is rememltered that all the income, of the S tate, except the tax of 2 J mills on real and personal froperty, is appropriated to the Sinking Fund, and the Commission ers of the Sinking Fund are authorized to transfer froin the general fund an amount sufficient to pay the interests, and redeem a Eortion of the public debt annually, it will e apparent that pome other means will have to be provided for the payment of these claims Gen. Grant as a Farmer. 1 he editor of the Milwaukee Wisconsin. writes to that paper from St. Louis : ' I have been profoundly interested in studying the history of" Gen. Grant while a resident of this city and county. Six years ago Gen. Grant occupied a little farm to the southwest of St. Louis, whence he was in the habit of cutting the wood and draw ing it to Carondelet and selling it in the market there. Many of his wood purchas ers now calling to mind that they had a cord of wood delivered in person by Gen. Grant. When he came into the wood mar ket he was usually dressed in an old felt hat, with a blouse coat, and his pants tucked in the tops of his boots. In truth, he bore the appearance of a stu-idyand honest wood man, lhis was his winter s work. In the Fuir.mer he turned a collector of debts but for this he was not qualified. He had a no ble and truthful soul so when he was told that the debtor nad no money, he .believed him.and would not trouble the debtor again. One of the leading merchants of St. Louis mentioned the circumstance to jne. . From all I can learn of his history here he was an honest, truthful, indefatigable always at work at something, but did not possess the knack of making money. He was honorable. lor ne aiwavs repaid Dorrowea money. iis habits of life were hardy, inexpensive and simple. About Lis. being an, inebriate, I find nothing toconfirm it. On a cold dav. when he brought a load of wood to the Car andolet market he would take something to keep himself warm. Thus, so far as I can trace, is the foundation of manv renorts of his inebriety. The Cold Snap South. During the cold .term early in January, ice formed on ronds iri the viciritv of Xat'Kz. Misn.. from six to eight inches iri thickness A letter frohi Beaufort, S. C. , says : "New Year's night here was terribly cold so severe that three negrces; exiKised to the elements, were frozen to death ! One of these victims sat -down oh the wharf be hind a barrel, and was found stark and dead in the morning. The two others were little children, and perished in their mother's arms while in a skiff crossing the Port Roy al River. "Such was New Year's night, 1864, in South Carolina a tropical domain with Arctic adjuncts. Good skating was enjoyed on St. Helena Island three days ago, and if ice houses were here they might have been filled on Morns and roily Islands a week since. Ie the North pole floarinz dowa thif way?'' . ,