BY S. J ROW. CLEARFIELD, PA., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 186-5. VOL. 12.-N0. 10. nvrn V TnrB H A T. Xt-"3 v n,.B4Mx'f JocPt if pahlished on Wed- ?msts inserted at $l-SO per square, for three Tr S m ie-ertione-Ten lines (or few) eomting a . laire. For every additional insertion 60 cents. Jdedaetioii wUl bo to 7rly advertisers. : guinea gtrectorg. TRm BROTHERS, Dlon in Sqwro 8wd , Ae., Baraside Pa, Sept. 23, 1SB3. RIDERICK LEITZINER. Manofturer of .. - j. . c...sra. Clearfield. Pa. Or- LlaS-E Jan. 1,1863 c BASS A BABBITT, Attomevsat Iw, . CTear t leld. P. May IS, 1863. R"0BERTJ-WALLACE, Attorney at Law Clear id Pa Offioo In Shaw's new row, Market .tree apposite Sng' Jw.lry store May U. . WACGLE.Wateh and Clock Maker, and e.aler in Watches, Jewelry. A Room in aTgmQirket street Kt. 10. ifTsWOOPE, Attorney at Law, Clear fl.ldV 0C inGreW. Row, fo.rdoo erert ef Graham A Bovnton'a storo. Nov.ltv tTARTSWlCK A HUSTON. Dealera in Drags, I 1 Htdiclott. Paints, Oils, Stationary, Perfume ry f aey OoodM, olions, etc., etc.. Market street, Cliareld, Pa. Jn. . 19g- J p. KRATZER, dealer in Dry Goods, Cloth. . lag. Hardware, Queensware, Groceries, Pro viso oi e. Front Street, above the Academy, CUstseld, Pa. April 27. WILLIAM F.IRWIS,Marketstreet,Clearneld, Pa., Dealer in Foreign and Domestic Mer chandise, Hardware, Qneens ware, Groceries, and family articles generally. ; Mot. 10. T0HH GUXLICH. Manufacturer of all kinds oi J Cabinet-ware, Market street, Clearfield, Pa. He also makes to order Coffins, on short notice, and attends funerals with a hearae. AprlQ,'59. txk if w ruins Piinicnt Pirnaii. and fTaminin? Hnrireon for Pensions. 0ee. South-west eorner of Second and Cherry Stmt, Clearfield, ri. January ii, iw THOMAS J. M'CULLODGH, Attorney at Law, Clearfield, Pa. Office, east of the "Clearfield ee. Bank. Deeds and other legal instruments pre pared with promptness ana accuracy. - ui j o -v- utviiit AnmKt I.. Clearfield . Pa. Practices in Clearfield and adjoining eeanties. UBe in new ones: oaiiaing ui.uju I , 3d street, en door south of Lanich's Hotel. T) ICHARD M0SS0P, Dealer in Foreign and Do- XV; meatie Dry uools, uroceries, siour, bkko, Lienors. Ae. Room, on Market street, a few doors wert ot Jmnrwoi UJtee. uiearneia, r . Apr THOMAS W. MOORE, Land Surreyor and Con Dflia sit Itia iaidnca. 4 mile eA8 i a BUBllii woivmvv wuwawwvT - Seeds and other instruments of writing neatly . T tr.L 1 w 1 w d..h-:ii. tnaailiM mAArm (Irtmnitn Hills. WM. ALBERT A BRO S, Dealers in Dry Goods, troeeries. Hardware, Queensware, Flour, laeon, ate., Woodland, Clearfield county, Penn a. A!ie. extensire dealers in all Kinds oi sawea turn ker, shingles, and square timber. Orders solici Ud. Woodland, Aug. 19th, iS63. TkR-J.P. Bt'RCnFIELD, late Surgeon of MJ the 83rd Kegt Penn'a Vols, haTing return ed from the army, offers his professional services te theeititensof Clearfield and vicinity. Prof fsMienal calls nromntlT attended to. Office on nth-East corner of 3d and Market streets. Oct. . 1865 6m-pd. . AUCTIONEER. Tho undersigned having w. a I-?- am. ocen Jjicensea an Aucuoneer, wuuiu imurm Ibteitiseni of Clearfield county that he will at tend to calling aales. in any part of the county, w ..ui ri - J Address, JOHN M'QUILKIN, May 13 Bower Po., Clearfield eo.t Pa. A rCTIOSEER. The undersigned baring X. been Licenced an Auctioneer, would inform the eititens of Clearfield county that he will at- wad te calling sales, in any part or tne county whtnerer called upon. Charges moderate. Address. NATHANIEL RISHEL, Feb. 32. 1865. Clearfield, Pa. . n. roJTia, sow. rrncs, J. . u qibk, . waiont, w.a. wAttACa, a. k. w right, SUC14BJ) A W, JAI.T. LB0MAB3, JA8. B. fl&AHAlT, . L. RCBD. Banting and Collection Office FOSTER, PERKS WRIGHT CO., Philips ansa. Ccstrb Co., Pa. Bills of Ezebange, Notes and Drafts discounted. t petiti ree fired. Collections made and pro eeeds promptly remitted. Exchange on the Cities constantly on hand. The abore Banking House is now open and ready for business. Philiptborg, Centre Co., Pa., Sept. fi, 1865. HAl'PT ft CO., at Milesburg, Pa., continue to furnish eastings of erery description at short notice. They hare the best assortment of patterns in the country for steam and water-mills of erery description. All kinds of machine and plew easting furnished. . NewWorld and Hatha way eook-stores always on hand. . They make 4 norse sweep and 2-horse tread-power threshing machines price at shop, $154 with shaker and M feet of strap. Warranted to gire satisfaction ja threshing, and kept good to thresh on crop, free of charge. June 23. 185-y. Isaac Hacpt. at Bellefonte, continues to Uke iks for insurance in anr good stock company in the State. Also in New York; the Royal and Et na at Hartford ; and the Liverpool and London, capital $6,000,000. FIRST NATIONAL BANK or Cubwbxs ills. Pa. Job Pattok, Pres't. Capital paid in $ 75,000 8AM'LARaoL,Cash. - Authorised cap $200,000 bibectobs: Irrin, John Patton, Samuel Arnold. I. K. Arnold, Dauii-1 Faurt, B. A. Irrin, . F. Irrin, G. H. Lytla, H. P. Thompson This bank buys and sells al! kinds of Gorern nient securities. 7-30 notes always on hand and Tor sale. Receives money on deposit, and if left a ipeeifie time allows interest. Buys and sells arafts and exchange- JJotes and. bills discounted , 'te of interest, and does a general bank ing business. We hare recently erected rery. substantial oaakJog house, wlta a good vault, burglar safe, ., and will be glad to receive any valuables our jnends and customers may have, that they desire to leare for safe keeping. 4 e would respectfully solicit the business of erchnu. Lumbermen, and Others. id will er oeavor to make it their interest to do their bank ghusaesswithus. SAMUEL ARNOLD, , grwepTiHo, Pa. Oct. 25, 1865. Cashier.' T EATI1ER an asaoitment for sal by -j . MB&&SLL A BIGLER ""WKlMt eUsssrteM,? Juried IJoctnt. THE DEATH OF SUMMES. The airs of mild retreating hours In soft embracings float around, While pensirely maturing flowers Lean toward the silent somber ground ; From nature's mist-enveloped lyre. Symphonic sweetness trembles low; A faded hue its vestures wear ; Funeral murmurs come and go. To-day. the last of Summer days, Old Time recalls the seasons breath ; But so to sympathise displays Banners rf promise for" its death ; To-morrow's sun will gild a bier, Where lies in pageant state. a queen, So late the monarch of the year Her foot prints guido her ourial-train. Let grains of gold be scattered o'er The parted Summer's flower-lined tomb. And fruits delicious, which she bore From bluesoms legAcied of June ; And spread no dark portentous pall Around her vanquished loveliness. But leaves she nourished, in their fall. Weave crimson folds her bier to dress . October's plaintive breeies sing A triumph dirge, O queen, for you. When birds have flown on startled wing, ' Where Summer lives as though anew: Ton sinking sun. cloud marshaling, Let fall those many-colored gems For kindred muses thence to string The uonyareil of diadems ! The Oil Territory in Canada "West. From the Detroit Com. Advertiser. There are few of our readers who are not acquainted with the fact that a very exten sive region of the country in Canada West, comprising a portion of the counties of Lamb ton and Middlesex, the township of Ennis killen, in Lamb ton oounty.being apparently the centre of the territory where the pre cious fluid is found. The existence of rock oil in this region has been known to the In dians of Canada from time immemorial,and was highly prized on account of its medici nal virtues. Two very extensive beds of Bituminous resin (gum beds they are com monly called by the Canadians) attracted the attention i of the white seders as early as 1859, and some successful attempts were made to covert the substance into illumina ting oilbydiatillation. The company which first entered upon this work had occasion, in the fall of 1858, to sink a well for the purpose of procuring water to cool their re torts, when, after digging about fourteen feet, they encountered petroleum in large quantities, which flowed to the surface, en abling them to secure from twenty to thirty barrels per day for six months. This led to various excavations, all attended with simi lar results. In a few months there were some thirty flowing wells in that vicinity, yielding thousands of barrels dailv. But the value of rock oil was not then fully un derstood by the world. It had just been brought into use as an illuminator. There was no steady market, and it commanded a very small price, and was hardly worth storing. Its use however, soon came to be appreciated, and it has for the last three years formed an important element in the commerce or the country, and the workings of the oil wells at Oil Springs has become a prominent and highly profitable business. lhe Oil wells ot Uilfcpnngs are classified under three heads, to wit ; Surface, Flowing and Pumping wells. The surface wells are such as derive their supplies of oil from the upper strata of the rock. There are several or these, yielding a very excellent article and in great abundance. The flowing wells are not so numerous, and cease flowing after a few months. But the most reliable source of oil is through the pumping wells, which if supplied with powerful machinery and prop erly managed, in large paying quantities. The rock from which the oil is obtained is drilled from two to eight hundred feet, through various strata of limestone, shales and soap stone. There are now in opera tion at Oil Springs and in the immediate vi cinity, about one hundred pumping wells. averaging three to thirty barrels per diem, a few yielding fifty or sixty. The price of crude oil delivered at the wells is five dollars per barrel in gold, and a ready market is found for a!l that can be. produced. It is forwarded east on the Great Western, and also to Sarnia, by plank road, giving em plovment to nearly two hundred teams. 1 he early' attempt to work these wells proved unsuccessful for two rea-sons : First, from the want of skill and experience in the business, and the absence of powerful engines and pumps; and second,from the low price of the oil in the early, stage of its introduc tion to the world it was found to be unprof itable. The facility with which oil is ob tained in this section induced many individ uals to enter into the business, without ade quate means to work the wells to advantage. .Most ot thera long since were compeuea to abandon their wells, which are rapiaiy nassin? into new hands, l ne iormauon oi several companies, with heavy capital, bas given new impetus to the busmess, which is now assuming proportions. The vigor with which these companies have prosecuted their work, and the success which has attended their efforts, augur favorably for the devel opment of the oil interests in Canada. There are several extensive refineries at the Springs and we have seen specimens of as beautiful refined oil there, as can be producea any where in the world. It gives a brilliant light, ... W- 1 1 . 1 is as clear as water itscir, ana wnai, w m uu ttle consequence to consumers,is complete ly de-odorized. For a while in Canada oil suffered by comparison with other mer chantable oils, but it is now bejinning to take rank with the very best that is offered in the market. , " " The prospect that is now presented, ot a steady and remunerative market, and the very great abundance which is found is this territory, of course creates much excitement. A large number of adventurers are in tnax locality, with the view ot purchasing, and property .is exchanging hands very rapidly, mostly in small parcels, and purchasers de ngning to sink wells and embark permanent ly in the business. There is one peculiarity in respect to this territory which arrests the attention of practical men, who are wel posted in oil business, to wit : ISo well has yet been snnk where oil has not been found . i . i ,. . wun me proper appliances, in paying quantities. The value of some of the best wells is estimated at almost fabulous prices dui engioie lots ot one acre or more, ana. which may prove quite as prolific, can be purchased for a thousand or twelve hundred dollars more or less. It is worthy of no tice that the oil interest of Canada is chiefly r . I i J a , r .. i iu me nanus oi Americans, neavy capital ists or in ew x ort and Connecticut have in vested largely in the enterprise, and hand some investments have also been made by the citizens ot Michigan, Illinois and Wis consin. The oil territory in Canada is found to be much more extensive than was at first supposed, embracing an area of more than one hundred square miles. Put a Good Face upon It. If you wish to succeed in life, if vou wish to find friends, if you wish your relatives or associates to enjoy your company, wear. cheerful face ; everybody dislikes and shuns a sad one, if it is habitually sad. Everybody but God grows weary of being reminded of sorrow, and the heart that is always full o bitter waters will be iett alone. .Pretend to be happy ii you can do no more. Coax sun beams to your eyes, smiles to your lips. T 1 r n opeat nopciui, yea words as otten as you can : make fun, if you never feel it Get the name of being cheerful, and it will be as incense to you. Wherever the glad face goes it is welcome : whatever the laughing lips ask is apt to be granted, if you are starving tor want ot either tood lor body or spirit, it is better to laugh than to cry as you tell the tale. There was one once who. with a face like a tombstone, told and told her wants, and met with repulse after re pulse from those whose faces fell at sight of her; but at last, laughing in strange mirth at her own misery, she told it once again Tears started into the eyes of her hearers, and instant relief was given. Men are ira patient of tears, and women are weary of them. Don t give way to them, no matter what the case may be: get back the smiles as quickly as you can. Let them be but hollow smiles, if that s the best you can do. Keen at that. Bv and hv von wiH do better. Laugh to keep from crying, jfever give np to gloom : it is a wrong to those a bout you. Sad faces add to the weight of trouble that life lays upon ever' heart. Wo to us if we cannot look about us and see bravely cheerful faces to encourage our hearts ! Let us be careful that each one of us has one of these faces. A man who car 11 A nes a giaa face aoes an amount ot gooa in the world impossible to compute, even if he be too poor to give one cent in chanty, and a man whose face is generally sad does, every aay ot his lite, more harm than can be reckoned. This is a hard world, full of all manner of troubles ; but every one of them can, for much of the time, be wrest led out of sight ; and every living man and woman, as soon as the first distress is a lit tle past, at the very least, assume cheerful ness. This is decent. More than this, 'tis duty. Nobody has any right to go about perpetual dam pner ot enjoyment. And no one has just reason for habitual sadness till he has lost his soul. Tor Little Girls. A lazy girl was Lizzie Idler. She would lie in bed every morning, after being called several times, until her mother would go to her room and almost rorce her out ot bed Breakfast was always ready before she could be got down stairs to the breakfast room and when she did make her appearance, her hair was not combed, nor her clothes put on tidy. And we fear she often forgot, in her hurry not to miss her breakfast, to say her Eraj'ers. She was always hurried ; soon as reakfast and worship were over, she had to hurry to get ready tor school, where she very often arrived after it had been opened. Her lessons were not prepared : for the hours she should have devoted to study were spent in idling about, or wasted in the pleas ant morning hours by lysng in bed. But Jennie Sprightly, thoueh a very lit tle girl, was up" with the lark, and after thanking God for his watchful care over her during the night, and asking his guidance during the day, and washing her face and combing her hair, was out in the fresh air of heaven, bringing the roses to her cheeks, as bright as those she gathered in the gar den, and health in every pulsation. She saw the glorious sun rise beyond the distant hill tops, and heard the sweet songs ot the robin and blackbird as they chanted their mornintr lav. Out in the garden she gath ered a boquet ot flowers to carry to her kind mother, who made so many nice things lor her little girL : She thus showed that she had a heart to appreciate all her mother's kindness to her. She never sat down to a k hurried breakfast, and was never late at the schoolroom, tier lessons were always well prepared,and she had plenty of time to play. This was because she uever idled away the best hours of the morning in bed, or of the day in foolish acts and conversation. We love these Jennie Sprightlies; for they are al ways cheerful and happy, and no frowns or looks of discontent mar their pleasant faces. They are ever obedient to their parents, and hasten to do as they are bidden without a murmur, cheerily. They bring sunshine wherever they come, and are welcomed by alL Is this the case with you,dear readers? Are you a little Jennie Sprightly ? "What is the chief use of bread?" asked an examiner at a recent school exhibition. "The chief use of bread," answered the ur chin, apparently astonished at the simplici ty of the inquiry, "is to spread butter and jam on it." Georgia will send a full delegation of TJ nion men to the next Congress. Mr. Na3byhasa Most Horrible Vision. Saints' Rest, (whicii is in the State uv 1 Noo Gersev.i tlctolr lfi: ISfiS I Last nite weary and disgusted with readin eiecushun returns, 1 picked np a volum uv Cammell's Poems, and red that splendid peese tne u he Last JUan. ' ' Cammell is . I . 1 1-ra mer aiat no aouut uv xt. XaX my a. .! 1 saw too partial mends, aint too partial, 1 can whop him on the sublime, but, on the pa tneiics, i acKnomage him ez my soopenor. Be that ez it may, the poem made a impre sion on my rxind, which is proof that ther is suthtn into it, and my mind wuz a dwel an onto it ez I sunk into slumber. Ez yoosual I hed a dream, and sich a dream may I never hev agin. Me thaut the epidemick, which is now de- vast atm Hiurope, hed struck JNoo xork. For a time, it struck down all classes. The Erowd Cauca&hen, the hidjus nigger.the no le red man uv the forrest, and the almon eyed Chinese, all, all, fell afore the ruthless destroyer. But, at last, it abated, ecept so far ez the nigger wuz concerned. The white man wuz spared, so wuz the Ingin, and the Chinese, but, among the Afrikins, it raged 1 LI. 1 I -V t t , wun reaouDieu iury. j, it wuz crusnin ; The planter looked abroad, andlo! thestal wart field hand, which wuz worth $1,500, wuz a cold corpse, and the ieeid wuz un plowd. Agin he looked, and alas! the brawny wench, which alluz bore him a pic aniry which wuz worth UO ez soon ez weaned, wunst per year, and by a little extra whippm did a lull year s work, wuz pros trate in the cold embrace nv death. Agin he looked, and wo to him ! the oetroon, for wich he paid $2 500, find whose girl babies he cood sell in rioo Orleans ez soon ez they wuz 16 for $3,000, on akkountuv their hav in his blood in their vains,wuz torn from his lovm grasp by the stronger hand uv disease and wuznt wuth a copper for any purpus. nil -nv i rtti ine .uimocrisy DeKum alarmed. J.he in defatigable leaders whispered : "The nigger is fadin away! sposin he bckunis extinct! Whereupon a consultation uv the head men wuz held. In view uv the crisis, a pair wun male and wun female, wuz selected and ex amined by a committee uv expert examiners : : n,.. iu nit? ju&uiciiw uviu rallies. a. ucj n u& Liiir- nounced perfect specimens entirely sound and free from disease. These two wuz lock ed up in a room in a healthy locashen, and twenty-four uv the most eminent physicians uv the country wuz detailed one to 6tay with them one hour of each day, that, in case the disease struck cm, the remedies might be towunst applied, that, from these two, the race might be propogated, and the cappytle uv the party be preserved. But all to no purpose. The last nigger in the loonited otaits perished, and hnaily these two were struck, and notwithstandin the precautions adopted, they too died ! 1 here wuz a season JN acher sym nathiscd with the partv in its atSickshun. The hev- ens wuz clothed with leaden colored clouds. atbort which, ever and anon, flashed gleams uv loond lite. Low-voiced thunders mutter ed ominously, and birds and bea.t3run howl in o'er the feelds. Dray hor.ses fellded on the stonys treets, and wild beasts rushed fran tickly fruui ther coverts, and snapped foori- ously, madly at whatever came in their way. lhe last uv the Atrikms were Iaym pros trate in the hall. Fernandywoodentered,and, ez he seed em, he bustid into tears. rare wen, gushed he, a long lareweu, last uv a cussid race l I ou wuz our tower uv strength ; you wuz our corner stun ; on you we bilded ! Hatred uv you give me the 1 rish vote uv Noo York. O ! how cheerin it wuz to se them lambsabust yer heds and innocently haug yoo up to lamp posts ! But vou in pond vou m cone ana hentz4th l:i i iT.L iy ii : ii i me si mans w me. rareweii, vain worm i for what is life without a nigger!" and sezin a jack knife he saw stickin out uv the nigger's pocket.he struck it in his stummick, ana, iainn across tne aeceest Aintins, ex pired peacefully. iranklin Peerse approacht. Alas! and thou art cone ? Too troo, thou art 1 In life thou wurt lovely ! Twas thou alone, that made me President ; thy woolly hed wuz mv stenpin-stun to place and power I Ihou wast my right bower my left and ace I Et I wuz a Dimekratic bampson, thou wuz the hair wich the Deliler, Death, hez sheer ed orf. Fernandv I kum ! I kuin I and 6eez in the jack-knife from his hand, he plunged it into his bowels, lallm across rernandy. lrll J sA "T tnn must say farewell," sed he, kissin their cold leatures, tor thou wast my anker, inou, twast. who made meUongressman thou exil ed me. and hate uv thee eave me $30,000 in ten cent nieces when I wuz in Canady. Do I wunt to go to Congress again ? No ! no ! 1 shood be dumb, ler the main-spring uv mv elokence lies here !" and.takin the jack- knife, he immersed it in his bowels, and fell across Pearse. Old Jeenis Boocannon, and v orhees, and Brite, and Florence, and, in fact, all the leaders uvthe party North, numberin suthin over 200, kum np, and each inakin.a short orashun, stuck theirselves with : the jack knife, fallin across each other, as cord-wood is piled. Finally I felt it a dooty I owed to the party to foller suit. Seezin the jack- nue, I made my orashen iwhich wuz tech- en ! 1 and was about to sever my intestines, when I seed a quart bottle stickin out uv the nigger's pockit. Drawin it 4th, I pull ed the cork : Glory ! it wuz whiskey! Two sucks and it wuz gone the room spunVound and I fell senseless on the top uv the pile uv ded Dimekrats. Jest then Horns Greefy cum in. Be hold Democrisy," sed he, "ez it wuz in the beginnin, so it iz in the endin. Nigger at the bottom, whiskey at the top, and a stink in the middle," and, holdin bis nose, he shambled out uv the room. I awoke in a cold sweat, happy to una that it wuz only a dreem : that the nigger still lived in hia cusitood.and that we still hed suthin to go on. PetholeTM V. Nasbt, Late Paster uv the Church uv the oo Dia- pensaahnn. -" The Episcopal Convention. The Episcopal Convention held in Phila delphia has just closed its labors. The ques tion of thanksgiving for the restoration of national authority created considei able de bate in that body. The New York Inde pendent fy& that the House of Bishops had at one time determined unanimously to give such thanks. Just at that moment Bishop At kinson of North Carolina, and Lay of Arkansas, entered and took their seats. Immediately all was changed. With them must have entered the phantom of Bishop Elliott, whose famous "Silence, if you please, but not a word oi censure," was henceforth the order of the day. Bishop Whittingham whose proved loyalty is beyond dispute, attested as it is by the paper left by Gov ernor Hicks, in which it is stated that the Bishop did more than any one else to help him in keeping Maryland in the Union, and who is honored by the hostility of his clergy, almost unanimous in their sympathy with rebellion took up the part of pacificator. He was aided by Bishop Potter, and the work was accomplished. It was conceived to be an injustice to force men to rejoice over what they had contended against for four years, and would place them under the suspicion of being hypocrites if they attend ed, while their absence would show that the church was not reunited. So the compro mise if that can be called compromise where everything was yielded to an insig nificant minority of two was made, and the church committed to a half-hearted policy. It were a nice question to inquire what must be the feelings of men who dur ing the last four years had asked God to grant the very thing they are now ashamed to thank him for. No consideration for the feelings of Southern brethern prevented them from imploring the Divine aid in their hour of agony ; but, when that was afforded, they dare not offer up praise for it. It is the oil, story : "Were there not ten cleans ed, but where are the nine !" The steadfastly loyal Bishops, however, were not willing that all the members of that House should appear to have concurred in its refusal to return thanks for the restora tion of the national authority and the de struction ot slavery. Seven of them joined in the presentation of a paper which has been published in the Episcopal Recorder, and which explains their position as fol lows : The undersigned have desired one of their number to read, in his place in the House ot Bishops, the following paper. It is not. a remonstrance against action, which is al ready past. It is not a protest, for which they are aware that the wholesome rules the House allow no place upon its iournals. It is simply a statement, which, after it has been road, can be by themselves preserved made public and transmitted to the know! edge of those who shall come after. In the decisions of the House of Bishops with reference to the day of Thanksgiving for the restoration of peaee, and to other important subjects, the groind has been taken, that, for the sake of more complete conciliation, no sentiment should be express ea iy tins iiouse, or tnis convention, on subjects of such importance and so dear to all of us as the reestablishment of the Na tional Union and the emancipation of the slaves. The House of Bishops unquestionably loved their country and its unity, and they could not approve the system of human bondage: but they will seem to have adopt ed as the position to be henceforth occupied i . i , . .... py mis ennren, one wnicn is consistent wun indifference to the safety and unity of the nation, and to the freedom of the oppressed. This is a position which, as the under signed believe, should not be maintained by any branch of the Christam Church in the United states, whether m the present or any future generation. To signifythat it was not accepted by all, only because an extreme desire for conciliation and unanimi ty prevailed for the hour, the undersigned have prepared this document, with perfect and cordial respect for their brethern, but under the consciousness of a great duty to the inseparable interests of their beloved Church and country. Charles . dicIlvaine. Bishop of the Diocese of Ohio.' Alfred Lee, Bishop of the Diocese of Delaware. 1 MANTO.N' Eastbcr.v, Bishop of the Diocese of Massachusetts. George Bcrgess, Bishop of the Diocese of Maine. Hexrt w. .Lee, Bishop of the Diocese of Iowa. G. T, Bedell, Assistant Bishop of Ohio. Thomas II. Vail, Bishop of the Diocese of Kansas. Philadelphia, Oct 24, 1865. A certain minister, going to visit one of his parishoners. asked how ' he had rested, during the night "O, wondrous ill, sir, . Iied he, tor mine eyes have not come to- eether these three niffhts." "VV hat is the reason of that said the other. ' "Alas !' said he,- "because my nose is betwixt them. Phebe Doty.of Wayne, Maine.is 103 years old, having been born Uctober 6th, 1,62. She is able to read without her Vspecs," and ha3 been for the last year, "goes a vis iting to the neighbors on foot, knits stoek- t i n . i . i. . i mgs, taifcs uuenciy on most, suojects, ana reads more or less every day. : We see it recorded that a soaD pedler was recently caught at sea during a violent storm when he saved his life by taking a cake of his soap and washing himself ashore. Ibis soap, or the story must nave oeen maae from very strong Liz ! ' When upright men die, they are suppos ed to go right up. Per contra,' downright rstecaia are supposed to go rtgni amen. - Letter From Nebraska, Forest Crrr. N. T., Oct 24, 1S65. Dear Sir: According topromise, I now proceed to give you as true a description of this country, as my limited knowledge will allow. Omaha, the Capital of Nebraska, is loca ted on the West bank of the upper Missouri river, and on the edge of a very extensive prairie. It is rather a pleasant place, and improving rapidly. The soil in this section is of the very best quality, and needs only to' be broken np to be ready to yield the rich est harvests of corn and wheat, (the staples.) Sorguui also grows luxuriantly, ana . the raising of which is very profitable. For stock rasing, this country stands pre-eminent among all the States and surrounding territories. Fruit also grows to great per fection, and if farmers are without it, thay must blame themselves alone for a lack of this desirable portion of the "staff of life," for surely nature will do its part This prairie is some six hundred miles in length and about one hundred and fifty wide. Timber is plenty along the streams, and . a fine bed ot coal underlies the whole ; but the coal lies at a depth of from eighty to one hundred and forty feet below the surface. It is, however, of good quality. The entire country is nearly level, just sufficient fall for thorough draining, should draining be necessary; but the greater portion of land is dry enough without drainage. Frosts hardly every occur in this territory earlier than the 1 5th or 20t h of October. Taken, "all in all," I think tht the far mer who would remain in Clearfield county, and resign himself to the fate of having sore shins and bruised heels, only for the sake of having plenty of stumps and stones for his pains, when he could beter his condi tion so much by coming here, deserve to eke out his life under the weight of debts and poverty, that are usually his lot As, to sickness, there is not near so much here, as in the more healthy parts of Pennsylva nia. Game, such as Antelope, Squirrel, and Prairie Chicken, is plenty. In a short tramp over the prairie, several days since, I succeeded in bagging a fine lot of the two latter. I will now close this epistle, with the promise of another as soon as I can find time to do so, and gain information of suf ficient interest to warrant my writing. Yours, A IILGRIM Eeligious Unity. That there is no unity of feeling between the North and the South has for some time been apparent to all who are not wilfully blind. In political affairs this fact is clear ly deducible from the spirit prevading all the political bodies yet assembled in the South ; but in the religious assemblies, where the restraint felt by politicians just now does not intrude, it is too plain to be mista ken. 1 n every religious assemblage of the Pres byterians, Methodists and Baptists held in the South, since the close oft he war, a deter mination has been shown to maintain intact the southern organizations of those denomi nations ; and even in such bodies as the Old School Synods of Kentucky and Mis souri, which -et remain in union with the Church North, there is arampant spirit of defiance and resistance to the anti-slavery action of the General Assembly. There is much more probability that these Synods will go over to the ultra southern church, than that the General Assembly will be able to cure them of their disloyalty. In these southern religious bodies the peo ple of that section act without restraint, and consequently manifest the real spirit that animates them. We are able, therefore, to see themfree fromthe concealment and ar tifice shownlby politicians ; and they stand re vealed in all the bitterness, malice and hos tility to the North which actuated them be fore and during the war. I here is no change in their temper.' The war has not transformed them ; and their persistence in keeping up their sectional religious organi zations shows that we have nothing to ex- Eect from them . for some time to come, ut a continuance of the war by its transfer from the battle-field to the pulpit and the forum. all the denominations referred to have made progress in extending their borders south ward ; but they have to organize anew, in every instance, and have not succeeded any where, in winning more than a small por tion of their former friends back. The southern religious organizations are all, as organizations, against tnem. I'riA onlv exceDtion to this is the TCninw- pil Church. It has won black the Episco pal organization in three or four States : but. it did so, not by changing the spirit of these southern organizations, but by debasing its own t their level ; and in : doing thin, in stead of promoting unity and harmony, . the House ot Bishops was unable to asTeeunon a pastoral letter to the flock. , Two were . framed, and both will be published, a part of the bishops signing one and a part - the other. Thus the church speaks with di J vided voice. In abasing itself to obtain s nominal unity it has sacrificed what real unity it had. These facts may be regretted, but ther are still facts : and they teach us the folly of all this hurry to bring things back into their old channels. However desirable the unity fought for may be. both politically and " religiously, it cannot be attained to-day, nor to-morrow, nor perhaps for a generation to ' come. The hatreds and jealousies begotten i of a thirty years struggle, which culminated, in a four years' war, cannot be suddenly ob literated. The Constitution is and must be a work of time ; and it were better to wait for it, if need be, until this generation pass- ; es away, than be completed to reap a har- , vest ot mortifications by trying to force a union without unity of mint. PitttbrmrgK