r r ) ii - I. --.I - t JUOliY & IKELEE, ruMisberi. yOL. XXX- j ou wni THE DEMOCRAT AND STAR IUBLTSHED EVERY WEDNESDAY, IN BLOOMSBURG, PA., BY : O ACOBY 6c IKELERi TEBMI.-ri OO in advanro. If not paid il Y4 of tho rear. 59 rent. nditionl wi '; CT" Npapr ai.eontioued until all srrearafes ro tiecpt at Ibo opi'.ion of lac editor. RATES OF AT) VXRTI S I N Q. - unrroKmim w. ito sqaaro one or ihreo insertions t opac. Ix. 2. 3. CH. It. On aqaaro, Twi'iiui'fii Tare Fr si a are. Half olumn, VM olin,- SIX) 3.0O 4,00 10 10.UO li.00 6.00 0.00 l-'.OO I 4.011 IS 00 30 00 10 M 00 18.00 20 00 30 00 SO 00 Bxernlur'a and Administrator's Nolico 3 Oil Am itr Notice IXber advertisement inserted accordia to special Mntratl. . Rasins notice, withont advert itenoal, twenty. . t per . '.-. , , ,, Trajaiat arfvartisminits payable is adtanee, all ethers dn afW the rtrtt insertion. C7- urFIC'E-Ia Biiive'o Block, Corner of Miln aad Iron Itrerto. Address. J ACORY fc IKET.ER. Moomibnrf . Coiumaia I'nuuly, Fa. For tiie Democrat and Star. Columbia County's Serenade to Iliester Clymer. T col. Jou o. nozt, Jttr"Klng lltnrg of JVavarr," Wo era eonilaj Iliaslsr Clruier, from tbo valleys aud the bill. Wear ontnf from tho el-arings, from tho work abop. from th utilla ; . are full four tbuianU voters, and unitedly we stand, - . -. On hope turpi roe each boaom.and one motive nerves - the band. Cnoaoo-Avaot there Johnny Geary, why do yon turn your bark, it!'nt 8tonowall Jackson who is couiinj on your Bat it full' four thonimnd" voters wilh n ballot and a will And ran far aa ever 70a can, tbo ballot's sure to It Is to plaoo an Jjonost man, ones again In (Ualr of state - And aee on f food old Commonwealth, with new hap piness elate ; Bo full four thousand ballots with your name on every no, We'll depnsitfntha antes lon'b.'fjro the set or son, 1'aoaca Avast Uicie Jwhnny tieaxy, olc. TTiry nro tbo votes of honest men, tn lovo ol coniilry true. ?Vbo daro bel ieve that Ptslcs have ritbts. and that wbile men have them l'o . froo as tbo air wo offer tliein. so swells tha tide alnnc. Aad stakes voar trao mijoriiy, fall fifty tbcusand strwnf. Caocca Avaet tbaro Johnny Geary. &c. fJo. brother vf tbo Keystone, conio listen to oar oon(. Raise bigb tbo voice for Clymer. end let it roll alnnc. Till from the rushing Delaware, the still increasing roar Breaks wiib a trashing thunder shout on fair Ohio's sbore. Caeaos -Avast there Johnny Geary, tec COMMUNICATIONS. ' T.II88R3 Editors : "We, fellow-?olJicrs, in response to the call of our country, im pelled by patriotic motives, kit our homes nod friend ftmi "went "forth' to the fielJ of battle, to endure all the privations and Buf ferings incident to a soldier's life, to aid in nutting down the rebellion and restore the Union. The rebellion tras put down, but ha the Uuion been restored ? No 1 and why. not? because the present Rump Con gress, from selfish motives, aud in order to fiocure the perpetuation of their party in iHJWcr. have labored inwssantlj to prevent iL Now if we vrifsh the Union restored upon terms of equal richts and justice to pvery State, let us, with united voice and action, by all honest means in our power, remoTO from iower the party which now suled, or rather mirules, and pla'.o the reins of Government in the hands of men of right principles, men who will take the Constitution and Laws made in accordance therewith as thir guide, and therefore, let us earnestly labor to secure the election of Hox. Heister Cltmek and all other nom inees of the Democratic party, and let U3 uupport President JonxsoN in all his no ble efforts to restore the Union and nan tain the Constitution. . Greenwood, August 8th, 1SGC G. L. K. For the Democrat and Star ' Messrs Editors : In reviewing the ter rible struggle from whioh the Anitncan peo ple have just emerged, how thankful all con wrrative and all law-abiding citizsnn should feel, that the great leaders of our Northern Armies vi : Grant, McClw.lan and Huirmax, were men who' respected the Coo'titution and Laws of our Countrj-. Had they been imbued with the Deinoniao spirit that characterizes the majority of the present llnrop Congress, there is no esti mating the misery they conld hav inflicted, when we contemplate th xat power they wielded ; but to descend in the scale, crea tnres, sycophant? and lick-spittlen were all ready to do the dirty work assigned them. Like the swollen stream as its rolume increas es, during the storm, throws to the surface a vast deal of drift-wood and trash ; so du ring the great civil war, when lawj were sus pended and military despotism was the order of the day, wo had lots of human drift-wood floating about. Men scarce ly noticed when society was in its normal condition were then prominent actors, and like the taught Parrot would sing out Irai tor," " Copperhead," 44 Treason," and all the other epithets well known in in the Abo lition vocabulary ; Int sinc Johnson s Uefi tiition of Traitor and Trctuon, it is all tiuiet along the lines." ... But of all tho ba.se ingratitude during tho late troubles, was that of a larga portion of the Clergy, who seemed by their actions to have, more rever ence for John Brown, of Harpers Ferry notoriety, than for Christ of Calvary. This vicinity, viz : Benton, Columbia County, is troubled with occasional visits of one of that clas3,known by the cognomen of P. P. II. 11., who continues his wrviccs out of epite, it ppears, or ebefor the good of a few Abo litionists here, who arc in a " very bad way," just now, from Catnip John down. This same P. I. IL, In an edited address to the soldiers, 6aid, he justified the arrest and in carceration of some of our best citizens ; the very men who in connection with their Jmmediata ancestry assisted to feed and clothe him before his degeneracy. How nice trig mne,j 013 peiya m gwus "i' J " " the creek, and his brave body guard, (who escaped the draft by a miraculous interposi tion just in time,) stood by hia, and accom panied hiia, regardless of danger, through e.11 hii fatixins marches; but without any f arther irony, really, P. P., if you bavo or dinary Eagacity, you must saQ your presence is ofrnrivs &b! the cresturg ha-l the au ,,:v tT r-t k1 tYi irt."Ti ac-1 re?Tct. I 3 M I 4 00 I 3.uO I .W I 7.0 I 8.30 I S. IW.OO 1 12 00 ( M.O'I I in 00 j S-i.00 BLOOMS able people were with him ; for example, SSfSPbW guard and the man known here for his generosity m wanting to charge anoldcripplo t.00 for exhibiting sacred scenes in the Cliurch, at this place, and these are about his stock in trade,, (except a few out siders who fawu around him tor his negro proclivities,) and the-community can fudge what sparkling intellects encompass luin, August 8th, 1SC6. Bb??ton. BURIED ALIVE. Is it true that eomeliincs "coming events cast thoir shadows before ?" Is it true that at times the mighty unknown of future vaguely impresses it.elf upon the present ? I think So. If not, how do we get that pre science of good or evil that so strongly ele vates with hope or depresses with fear ? that throws over our spirits the serenity of a pla cid lake, or tho wild agitations of a stormy sea? From my earliest recollection I had always been afraid of being buried alive. 1 do not remember that the fear of death had ever troubled me only the fear of entering the grave while yet a living man, and Incoming conscious of it when too late. Of all the horrors which the mind can conjure up, this, to ma, always seemed the most drcadiul,and the fear of it fastened itself upon me with all the power of a hauntiug specter ; ana it tic cam one of the deep concerns of my life to guard against it. At. twenty-two years of age I ordered my coffin and purchased my tomb. The coffin was so constructed that a living person closed up in it could touch cer tain springs and throw it all apart ; and the tomb wa contrived with proper ventilation, and provided with blankets and key inside, so that in case of life returning after burial, I could secure myself against a deadly chill and speedilv find my way out. Why had" I this fear to lead rac to these precautions, unlaw the coming reality had east its shadow upon tae ? My monomania, as many termed it, was known to all my friends, every one of whom had been sepa rately charged to see me positively dead be fore burial. But what arc precautions taken against fate ? 1 was doomed to be buried alive after all. At the time I speak of, I was twenty-seven years of age, and living in my native place an inland city. Urgent business called me to Boston where 1 had only one acquaint ance, a very dear friend, who often invited me to come and make him a long visit. Un fortunately, he was out of town, and expect ed to be absent several days ; but his family insist od on my making their house my home during my stay in the city, ond would not, in fact, permit ma to go elsewhere. On the third day I had finished my business, and, as it was the last of the week, I decided to re main two or three days longer, and I should perhaps get a bight of my friend before leav ing. On the .following morning I was found dead in my bed at least it wa so reported, and the itrongest evidence I have acainst it is the fact that I am living now. The peo ple of the house, of course, were much ox cited and alarmed their physician was called in, and afterward the coroner. It was at length decided to put me in a enffin, and place me in a church vault until the return of my friend, who would, of course, have my body conveyed to my native place for inter ment Thus it is fecn that all my precaution avail ed me nothing, for abroad, almost among strangers, I had taken on th semblance of death, ami had been coffined and entombed in the ordinary way. I returned to consciousness in tho night, in the vault of the church, t )f course, I knew not where I wa. My first impression wasone of Ftrange pressure and confinement. I fancied, as in a dream, that 1 had been seized for a maniac, a Ftrait-jacktt put upon me, and then forced into a narrow cell. 1 his idea did not long hold its pl.tce. As my mind grew clearer, I lcgan to recall what had. hap pened the past week leaving homeTguing to Boston, transacting my business, and so on. I remembered being at my friend's house, and of deciding to remain longer than I first intended, hoping for his return bt-f'ore my departure. All this gradually became clear, along with the last pleasant evening I had spent with h'u family. But then came a blank. What had happened since ? And where was 1 now ? I attempted to rise, and fund niysflf shut up in some narrow phice that scxret'ly allowed any movement what ever. How did I get there '( What did it mean ? Suddenly my life-long fear relured upon me with a new terror that no language can express- Perhaps the dread horror had come, and I had been buried alive at last ! The thought was so appalling, that for some mo ments I remained paralyzed. Then 1 seem ed gathered into one great ngonr, which sent forth the most wild, piercing shrieks of de spair that ever issued from mortal lips. Yes, it was a truth I My foreboding had ended in a reality, and I waj now the tenant of a coffia, if not a grave ! With another shriek I turned in my m narrew house, gath ered in my strength as it were, and threw it out from me with what cecmed the bursting power of a giant. There came a sharp crack: my prison seemed tlightly to expand, and 1 fancied I felt a change V f air. I rested a moment, prayed God to help me, and repeat ed the effort with even greater power. 1 here was no resisting this The coffin lid was burst assunder with a crash, and my limbs and body were free in -the awful darkness which enveloped me the raylcsa darkness of a tomb I . . In considering this wonderful feat, it should be borne in mind that none of my strength had been exhausted by sickness, and that besides beingnaturally a very strong, powerful man, my physical powers were per haps doubled by my fear and despair. 1 was free now to breathe the damp, de licious air of what I believed to be a vault or a tomb; bnt 1 confess my terror was scarce ly lessoned at the thought cf having extend ed the limits of my prison ; for after all I might not be able to escape 1 rom this horri ble place ; and if not, it would only be a pro longation of the agonies of life and death. Fortunately I had been coffined in my own garments, and it was a season of the year when I could not suffer from cold, eo that question of life without escape was reduced to two points suffocation from foul air, or starvation. H I could escapo the first, I knew there were several days of life before me, and perhaps the time would be long enough, with unremitted toil, for me to dig my way out, like a convict from his prison. The first thing for we to ascertain was the dimensions of my Bepulcher. Whether it was day or night I could not then tell, for I could see nothing whatever not even my hand when I held it close up before my eyes. Every thing must be done by feeling, and though Brraddering with horror at the thought of what I might discover, I knew that delay BURG, COLUMBIACO., PA., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST about the work before me. I rose up in my coffin and stretched my hand above .my head, but they came in contact with nothing. I felt out on either side but felt no object. I put them down below the coffin, and found it rested on a slab that was supported some distance above the ground, I could not tell how much. I got out of the coffin carefullv, stretched down my feet till they touched a solid basis,' and then slowly and cautiously began to grope around the vault. I soon touched the wall on one side, and carefully felt of the stones, I found them as I feared I should, large, solid, and evidently put to gether with cement There seemed little hope of my ever finding my way through them. I followed the wall along till I came to a pile of coffins, one upon the other reach ing up as high as my head. They had evi dently been there for a long time, and I fan cied, from the slippery feeling, were mildew ed and decayed. After passing these, 1 Came to another pile of colins, not so high as the first but even more decayed. In turning from these my feet slipped, I fell against them, and the upper one came down with a crash, burst open, and thebones fell out with a phosphorescent glare, lightingup the dark ness and looking like so many orbs of fire. I staggered back with an involuntary yell of horror tho thing wa3 ho sudden and the sjectacle so awful. My reason returned in a moment,, and, though my nervous system had received a shock that for a longtime kept me weak and trembling, yet I saw at once how much I wqs the gainer by the accident, si nee by this means I now had a dim view of the charnel house which had become my prison, if nut mv grave. The vault was not large, but con tained quite a number of coffins, not one of which was new save my own. which led me tc believe that it had seldom been used of late years, except, perhaps, as a place of temporary deposit. It was a strange light to sec by, the phosphorescence of dead men's bones ; and when I take every thing into consideration, my return to consciousness, the horrible suspicions, certainties, and dis coveries which followed in appalling order, I am even now compelled to wonder how it was possible for me to keep my senses, and to continue my cllurt to escape with thccool-ne-y I did. I soon found the door to tho vault It wai a wooden one, and seemed much decaj-cd on tha inside, like tho coffiins I have men tioned. I tried it with trembling eagerness, but discovered, alas ! it was fastened on the outisule probably secured by heavy iron bolts. Oh I for the ue of an axe for half an hour ! 1 would willingly have given for it all I was worth in the world. I struck against the door with my fist, and threw my body heavily against it; but only to discover its massive solidity, and to know that, without some implement to work with, all my efforts to escape would be worse than vain .that 1 might as well sret down and wait my appoin ted time. But perhaps some tool might lc found in the vault, left there by mistake? Some hatchet, hammer, pick , crowbar, something! 1 searched cvcy-wlicrc:,as well as I could by the dim, ghastly light, but found only two things that I could possibly use a. large spiked nail and a cbble-stouc weighing over si pound. How preciousdid even these seem 1 No miser ever clutched his gold and diamonds with such intense and heartfelt joy as I did these possible keys to the living world. There was a portion of the door fo decay ed that,-with the u.c of the nail and the stone, I beleived I could work a hole through larse enough, perhaps, to admit my arm; and ns this place was near where the bolt, if a single one, would naturally be, I had great hope that I might be able to reach and slide it back. With this idea, I commenced at once, with all the energy of a man in my situation and lor hours I labored unremit tingly hammering, prying, and getting off splinter by splinter, till at last I found I could pass my ami through the aperture. O! what wild emotions of hope and fear thrilled mc then ! . 1 trembled from head to loot, my respiration became gasping and. difficult, large beads of perspiration siceiued to start fruin every pore, and, sinking down 011 my knees, I prayed God to have mercy on me. and restore me to the world of life. Then I aro?e slowly, thrust iny arm through the aperture, and f it around for tin; bolt My hand touched it Withtremblingoager nessi worked back; and then the hea vy door came fclowly 01 er:j harshly grating on its hinges. Oh? Heaven ! what a moment was that ! Perhaps 1 was to be delivered from t hat awful sepuk-acr ! The very t bought was an overjowciing;oy, which my nervous sj'stem, so long wrought up to the most in tense excitement, c uld not War, and I fainted, and fell at the foot of tho stairs which lead upward from the charnel vault. When consciousness and strength again returned to.me, 1 went slowly tad tremb lingly up the damp, dfm and narrow stairs, till 1 came to the tlag that shut in the whole. O11111ypowcrtorai.se this depended . every thing ! I put my shoulder against it, aud pressed upward with all my might Gracious heavens I It did not move I I was doomed 1 I uttered a wild, pierzing shriek, and fell back in deepair the most wretched ln ing in existence. As I tat there, on one of the cold, slimy stops, in an agony of mind that must soon have deprived my burning, throbbing brain of reason, I fancied I heard steps above me. What! Human life alove and I to le doomed to death in a srcpulcher? No, no ! Never! never I I sprang to my feet with the determination andstrengthofamadmnn and, again putting my shoulder to the stone, sent it upward with a force that turned it . over with a crash. Fresh air and light burst in up on me. I saw I was tcneath the roof of a church, and, leaping up from my pit, I yelled forth my joy. . w It was an early hour in the morning, and the sexton had come into the church to put certain things to right'. Seeing mc spring upward from the tomb with an appalling yell, he instantly fled, with a shriek of tcrsor. lie soon returned, however, with half a dozen excited spectators, and found mc on my knees, giving thauis to God for my won derful deliverance. I scarcely need add that my friend's fami ly were astonished beyond measure to see me back among them, a living man. The next day I had the pleasure of taking my friend himself by the hand, nnd giving him an . ac count of my dcs&h, burial and resurrection. As had tcen arranged, he went home with mv bodv. but not with my corpse. Since then I have never traveled alone, for fear of again being buried alive. The doctors, after a wise consultation, pronounced mine a rath er singular case of caUJepsy. JEST A lady who ha I been just three days married, perceiving her husband enter, f tolo secretly behind him, nnd gave him a kiss ; tho husband was angrj', and said she offend ed against decency. f"Pardon me," the ex- p1o?rr)Or 'J f)ifj T-P Vt; rwiVj TVP ft !" TRUTH AND RIGHT GOD AND OUR -- - - 1 - - - - 1 - . . - - - - Great State Trials in this Country. The Chief Justice of the United States having been clothed by a recent act of Con gress with authority to hold a special term of the Circuit Court of the United States in Richmond, it is now generally conceded t hat ex-President Davis will be arraigned for trial upon the charge of " treason ' in tho month of October next The trial will be the most important which has ever taken place in this or any other country. No such State tri.d ever occurred in England. It is a remarkable fact in the history of Richmond, that if the trial of Davis shall te held there, three of tho most important State trials .which have taken place in this country will havo occurred in that City. The history of the two previous trials is thus given by the Richmond Timet: The trial of John Thompson Calendar, in ISthJ, for seditious lilel upon President John Adams, was the first of these criminal cases. Calendar himself was little worthy of tho whirlwind of excitement which his trial then excited. 1 Te was a foreigner who was represented to have been as depraved in morals as he was malignant in temper. His case derives its importance from the fact that the Demo cratic leaders of that day having marshalled their forces for a terrible conflict with the Federal party, availed thcmclvcs of his trial, and of the rude, contemptuous and indecent conduct of the partisan Judge who presided, to break down the alien and sedi tion laws, and impeach the ju-tice of the Supreme Court, who had made himself most odious in mercilessly enforcing them. The alien and sedition laws punished with fine and imprisonment any one who discuss ed with disrespectful asperity the jrublicaets of the President of the United States. Cal endar published a harsh and vulgar political pamphlet in which ho abused President Adams. For this he was indicted, on the 2Sth of May, IS(K), by the grand jury of the Cir cuit Court of the United States, Justice Chase presiding. The prisoner was defend ed by Messrs. Uay, Nicholas and Wirt, and the course of the trial was marked by the mo-t brutal and indecent conduct on tho part of justice Chase towards the counsel for the defence. He refused all reasonable and proper motions for a continuance, bul lied and scolded the counsel for Calender, ami played the part of prosecutor in a man ner to completely eclipse the District Atfor ney. HL rulings were evidently dictated by bitter party feelings, and why not by justice or precedent. When Wirt was proceeding to argue to the jury that the alien and sedition at was unconstitutional, Judge Chase insultingly ordered him to take his scat The counel for the defence then refused to argue the case. After along aud violent charge from Justice Chase the jury retired, and, after an absence of two hours, brought in a verdict of " guilty," and the court sentenced Cal endar to nine months imprisonment and im posed a fine of two hundred dollars. Cal endar was subsequently pardoned by Presi dent Jefferson upon the express grounds " that the law was absolute a uulity as if Congress had ordered us to fall down and worship a golden image." The tempest which his trial occasioned through out the United States at that time can scarcely be understood. The newspa pers of the. day were for the first time, crammed with detailed reports of the case. Virginia was in a llame ; for, even before the trial affidavits were circulated in which it was stated that, before the trial. Justice Chase had said he would have no " d Dem ocrats on the grand jury," and, "that he would teach the lawyers of Virginia the dif ference between tho liberty and licentious ness of the pres!i" He also likened him self to a " schoolmaster who was alout to birch a few unruly loys as they deseved." His political admirers got up caricatures of this judicial ruffian stretching in turn, Wirt, Hay, Nichols and other eminent Vir ginians across his knee and Hogging them soundly. His rude, coarse and indecent. le havior during Calendar's trial, was design ed to humiliate the spirited and able bar cf this citj. The slaps ho gave Nichols and Hay. at the outset of the trial were terrible specimens of judicial mden ss. Tho offended and insulted lawyers .resent ed the conduct of Judce Chase so fiercely, that John Randolph, at their instance, pre ferred articles of impeachment against him, five of them based upon "Calendar's trial." He wa found guilty upon the articla which charged "rude, contemptuous aud inde cent conduct to counsel," although acquitt ed upon other chanres. Nothing but party sympathy of the Federal members of the Senate saved him from conviction by a two thirds vote, and the imieachmcnt is said to have utterly crushed Judge Chase. The next great State trial, whieh drew the attention of millions to the Circuit Court of the United Suites at Richmond, was that of Burr, for treason, which com menced on the ""Jnd of May, ISO". Rich mond was then a city of only six thousand inhabitants, and it is said that there were at the commencement of. the trial, twice that numbered' strangers in the city. Among the striking scenes of that day was that of a lank, ungainjy man, named Andrew Jack son, who is described as " mounting upon the steps of a corner grocery, and denounc ing Thomas Jefferson fur the part he had taken in frustrating tho scheme" of Aaron Burr. The trial took place in the present hall of the House, of Delegates, and the struggle for admission was terrible. So great was the number of distinguished jar gons claiming seats within the bar, that law yers of twenty years standing were excluded from their accustomed scats. Among the yonng men of the town, who succeeded in forcing their way in, was Winficld Scott, who clamored up and stood for many hours on the massive lock ol the door ot the hall. Justice Marshal presided at the trial, assist ed by Cyrus Griffin, Judge of the District Court of Virginia. George 1 lav, who de fended Calanller, was the United States Dis trict Attorney, and with him were associat ed Alexander McRae, who at. the time of the trial, was Lieut: Gov. of Virginia. Ed mund Randolph, John Wickham, Luther Martin. Benjamine Botts and "Jack -Baker," appeared for Burr. The grand juries of those days were composed of tho most eminent and distinguished men of the State, and wefind a U. S. Senator (Giles) among tho grand jurors, who was vrithdrmcn in consequence of " prejudices against tho ac cused.' John Randolph the great orator of Roanoke was smmmoned in the place of Senator Giles, and was foreman of the grand jury. Contrast this grand Jury with that which so lately met at Norfolk, nnd after listening to Judge Underwood's Ilaranguo, found a true bill against Mr. Davis I After the finding of a true bill fourteen - eresrfpt 'in cet jing an tn ynHHil ji ry COUNTRY. who. had neither formed nor expressed an opinion as to tho guilt of the accused." Out of a renin; of forty-eight but four men were found whose opinions were sufficiently undecided to permit them to act as jurors. There lva,s but one juryman pre-cinptorily challenged by Burr. It must be borne in mind that he had, but a short time before his trial, killed Alexander Hamilton in a duel. A person who was being examined as to his competency as a juror, sharply questioned and somewhat nettled by Burr's counsel, turning to the spectators, said : I am surprised they should be in euch ter ror of me. Perhaps it is because my name is Hamilfon." " That remark," ex claimed Burr, " is a sufficient reason for objecting to him. I challenge him pre-cmpt-or'ily." Out of a second venire of f rty cight all had formed unfavorable opinions to the accused, and matters looked so despe rate that the counsel for the defence .moved to squah the trial, fur the simple reason that no impartial jury could bo obtained. A jury was at last obtained Jy permitting JJurr to ft lrrt eight Jurors, who were added to the fuuralrcady selected in the usual way. The procurement of a jury had occupied from the 2nd to the. 17th of Aucrust and on that day the examination of witnesses for the government commenced. The examin ation of the witnesses and the argument of counsel continued from the 17th to the L"Jth of August, when Chief Justice Marshall virtually decided the case by that famous opinion, the reading of which occupied more than three hours. N'o "ovcract"Vf treason had been proved asraiust Burr, and the deci sion of Marshall that no testimony, relative to the conduct or declarations of the prison er, cWwhere and subsequent to the transac tion on Blannci-hassot Island, ((he alleged ov-rt act of treason,) can be admitted; be cause such testimony being in its nature cor roborative, end incompetent to prove the overt act in itself, i-j irrevalent until there cau be proof of the overt act by two witness es. The jury with these instruct ions return ed the followingqualilied verdict of acquittal: "We of the jury say that Aaron Burr is not proved (0 be guiliy un,der the indict merit by any evidence submitted t j us. Wo, there fore, find him not guilty." This verdict greatly excited Burr, who at oiice sprang to his feet, and with great ex citement of manner protested against the form of the indictment, and demanded that it should be rendered in the regular and less damaging form. The verdict was finally en tered on the record as "not guilty." Bun was then admitted to bail, and tried and ac quitted of the charge of misdemeanor, on the ground that the offence was not com mitted in Virginia. Thus, eight months after his arrest, and six months alter the com mencement of proceedings against him in lrima, Burr was once more free. The trials of Calender and Burr, in their day and generation, enchained the attention of the whole nation, but compared with the proposed trial of tho ex-President of the Confederate States, they shrink info abso lute insignificance. Calender was a low, bru tal and drunken hack writer, whose cause was expounded by a party then rising into Ejwcr, to Annihilate the Federal party. urr was a disappointed adventurer, whose real o'yect must always remain a question of grave uuuui. The distinguished and unfortunate states man who is s?oon to be tried is tho represen tative of the millions who agreed with him in sentiment and who conferred upon him unsolicited and dangerous honors. His character as a man of spotless integrity, abilitv and christian virtue, is not question ed, nor .i it pretended that he is the author and principal promoter of the late civil war. Thousands who were far more active in ini- mtincr hostilities than hinclt have lioen long since pardoned. 11c alone, merely as a consequence of bar 1113 held a high office, is to be tried for his Ji'e. In this trial we recognrzo the arraignment and prosecution not of one man, but of an entire section. Hence in dignity and impor tance it will be the mot important trial which has ever occurred. Three Men Suffocated in a Well. Three brothers, Merlin, Charles and Al len Mea l, living at Cross River, in the town of Lewisboro' Westchester county, alsmt live miles from Katonah Station on the Harlem Railroad, wero suffocated in a well on Tuesday. Merlin, who was a bachelor, and Allen, who wits married, lived upon the homestead of their father, which th-y own ed together, and Charles possessed a farm which lay adjoining. On Tuesday, Merlin took a pail, and in company with one of Lis nephews, went to a well at a barn-yard, a f-w hundre d feet from tho house. This wtll was not ordinarily used, except in winter time, and wa.s kept coverd with board". He removed thcsc.and in endeavoring to draw eut some water, lost the pad. Then he descended into the well, sustaining himself uj -on the stones with which the wall was made. Before reaching the water be slipped and fell. The lad who had come with him 'ran to the houso and gave an alarm. Allen rushed to the well and hurried down it to rescue his brother from drotrning. "When" he had gone about half-wny to the water, he slackened his speed, aud set his feet firmly against the stones on each side of tho well. His arms he also placed in the evenings between the stones. Almost imme diately hi.s head dropped forward, and he Iteerunc insensible ; but his limbs were fo braced and stiffened, that his body remained suspended. The terrified women and children could, of course, do nothing to aid the dead or lying men. As soon as possible the oth er brother, Charles Mead, was called. He said ho would go down and take out Allen, who, he thought, must be still alive. The women, now convinced that the air in tho well was so poisoned that it would not sup .... ... , .. Hiort hie, legged him loocsist lie insisted, jowever, saying that he would enter tho w-.ll. and if he found that he could not help h'u brother, would return immediately. So ia-tcning to his leg a rope which he intended to tic around Alien's body for the purpose of hoisting it out, ho stepped into tho we 11, and nuickly but carefully descended. He had hardly reached the place where the lody wa., when he made an effort to come to the surface, but his strength was insuf ficient, and he fell. By this time all the member of tho two families were assembled at the well, and the scene was one that need not be described. In the confusion a boy. a relative of one of the men, rushed to tho well, and in spite of tho resistanco of the women, got himself in the mouth of it, but he poon felt the stifling effect of the air, and started up in time to save his life. After ward the threo dead men were dragged out with hooks. The funeral took place on "Wednesday, from the homestead. The brothers were much respected, and were pos ca.v1 "rfj'Pmvlorqblq srcglth. Hr. J.vr. 5. Two 15,1866. Bill to Equalize Bounties. 'n, C.llnwinrr n tho hill to eoual'ize boun- ties, as it passed both Houses, and was ap proved by the President : " Krrrrriv 1 Ri it rnocfcd. that to each and every soldier who enlisted into (he army of the United States at ter the 1 5th day of April, 1SGI, for a period of not less than served his term of enlistment, has been honorably discharged, ana who ha received or is entiuea to rcccivo from the United States, under existing laws, a bounty "of one hundred dollars, and no limrn 'ItiiI nnrr ci,rli cljlwr nnll:1fl1 till Tlflf. less than three years, who has been honora ,. ... . , . oly discharged on account ol woundsreccivea in tlio linr rf" rliifw ond thr viiloW minnr children or parents, in the order named, of ot any suoii soiuicr wno uicu in t no service of the United States, or of disease or wounds contracted while in the service, and in tho line ot duty, shall he paid the additional bounty of onehundred dollars hereby author ized. "Srn. Tliaf rnch nnd I'vorv soldier who enlisted in the army of the United States af ter the I'.Hh day of April, ISfil, during the mi.f.llln t'r.r n wriod ol' tint less than two 1 V I V. Ill ') . " - - - years, and who is not included in the forego ing section, and has been honorably dis charged therefrom after serving two years, and has received, or is entitled to receive from the United States, under existing laws a bountv of nlty dollars, and no more, anu any soldier enlisted for less than two years, who has been honorably discharged on ac count of wounds received in the line of duty, and the widow, minor children or parents, in tho dr.l.r nmnrvl. of anv such SoMiCrwllO died in the service of the United Siates, or of di.xcaso or wounds contracted while in ine service of the United States, and in the line lnll hr inid the additional bounty of fifty ' dollars, here authorized ; provided that any soldier who has bartered, sold, as signed, transferred, loaned, exchanged or von rwiv hij final disi-hirfro iancrs. or any interest in the bounty provided by this or any other act ot Congress, thai! not uc cnu tled to receive any additional, bounty what ever ; and when application is made by any soldier for said bounty, he shall be required, under the pains and penalties .ot. perjury, v make oath or affirmation of his i Tcutily.and that he has not so bartered, sold,. assigned, irfinvPrrxl. rT"h.m?ed. loaned or triven awav riilwr his ilischarrft mr.ers. or anv interest in any bounty as aforesaid ; and no claim for such bounty shall be entertained by the Paymaster-general, or other accounting or dis- bursing officer, except upon receipt oi mc nla'iiiiit'B di lifirn-e n.iners. accompanied bv the statement, under oath, as by this section provided. "five. .1. And le it further enacted, tTat f l ho additional 1ountv herein provided for, it shall be tho duty ol the Pay-rnaster-gcncral, under Fuch rules and regulations as may be prescribed by the Secretary of War, to cause to be examined the accounts of each and every soldier who makes apphcat ion thcrc.lorc, and, ll entitled "Sec. 4. And be it further enacted, that m the reception, examination, settlement , . , 1 ,1 : i ! 1 and payment oi fiaims ior saiu a'l'uuu.iai bounty due the widows or heirs of deceased soldiers, the accounting olliccr3 oj trie ireas nrv hi11 V,r mvprnrd bv restrictions nre scribed for the Paymaster-general by the Xrprctirv r.f War. and the navnicnt shall bo made in like manner, under the direction of the Secretary of the 1 rcasury. Conirrcss PhotorrraDlied by the N. Y. Herald. The New York Hrmhl, now that Congress has adjourned, thinks a few pictures should be taken of it small and large to iif.vnofniiii !tj rrmrmlir:irort w' h liif nco- tiL, V ror.rrnliirvi Mimrt of I lift sinallpr ones. By looking at them the members of Congress can sec their own likeness in min inturc, and the people can sco what sort of Representatives they are cursed or bletsad with. Jierc they are : A Pfrson a t. Jon. Congress demands retrenchment in the departments, and raises the compensation ot iUeiiiUTS to nvc tnou- and dollars per session. A CoNTKMrnr.LE Jon. Congress cufs off the bounty to poor Soldiers, raises the salary of members to five thousand dollars per annum, nnd squander., over two hundred and. fifty laiilions uselessly. A Si.v Jem. Comrres proposes to fund the National debt an I sell surplus gold, al lowing a ercentr.ge for the business to out siders, and raises the pay of members to five thousand dollars. A Down East PF.rur-oarE Jon. Con gress pro; ose5 to a Rurcau of education at a cost of five millions per annum, and in crease the pay cf members to five thousand dollars per session. CoNetRKs meanly cuts off the Falary of Minister If auvf.v, because be wrote a pri vate letter in defense of the President, but increa-cs its own salary, earned only by abusing the President Coxsui.5S is going to. pay ite'f a higher salary for keeping the Union dissolved. Coxoress votes to pay itself.more mon ey for remaining in session to legislate against the people nnd in favor of Radical office holders. A Cracicinm Jon. Congress raises the salary of its members to five thousand dol lars per session, and compels the. Govern ment to pay the National banks thirty mil lions per annum in the shape of interest on Government bonds, for the privilege of bavin"- Treasury-notes and legal-tenders Eupcr ccclcd as currency. Congressmen have evidently made up their minds that they will not be re-elected, and are stealing all the money they can. A Very Serious Jot. With a revenue of over two hundred millions nbove what, is demanded. Congress piles on taxation by in creasing the tariff and internal revenue tax thirty-cLdit millions, and raUvsthe compen sation of members to $5,000 per session. Conors, havin?roUJ the public treas ury in evry other way, now makes a direct grab at the greenbacks by an increase of Eal- aries. .i A Charity Jor.. Congress raises the salary of its members to five thousand dol lars per session, and gives Feven millions in one lump for another great chanty hum bug called the Frcedmcn s Bureau. A Bad Jon. Congress raises tho salary of its members to five thousand elollars per session, and proioses to lend Mexico thirty millioas of dollars, the revenue of that country bcinc collected by Frenchofficers to satisfy French claimants. CoxfiRESR votes to increase it own salary bnt defeats thft Bankrupt Bill, designed to relievo poor debtors. gsoT" Amusement for young ladies on a wet afternoon knitting thcur eyebrovrs. Dollars per Annum In Adranee VOL. 1- NO- 25- Adventure in Southern Africa- fin rmr ronto homeward, wo halted at a annf whprn A novel FCCnO OHCe OCCUTTed, and which was described by a individual who witnessed it when a boy. Near a vcryBmall buntain, which was ehown to me, Etooa a camel thorntrco. It was a stiff tree, about twelve feet high, with aflat, bushy top. Many years ago, the relater. then a boy, was returning to his village, and having turned aside to the fountain for a drink. lay down on tho bank, and fell asleep. Being ' awoke by the nicrcing rays of tho sun, he saw, through the bush behind which he lay, , a giraffe, browsing atcasc on the tender fchootsi of the tree, and, to his horror, a lion, creep ing like a cat, only a dozen yards from him, -preparing to pounce on his prey. Tho lion eyed the giraffe for a few moments, his body gavo a shake, and ho bounded in the air to , seize the head ol the animal, wnicn instant ly turned his stately neck, and tho lion, miss ing his grasp, fell on his back in tho centre of the mass of thorns, liko ppikes. and the giraffe bounded over tno plain. The boy in stantly followed hiscxamplo, expecting, as a matter of course, that tho enraged lion would soon find his way to tho earth. Sometime aflcrwardSj the people ot the village, vino seldom visit. that spot,.Baw the eagles hover- , ing in tho air, and a it is almost always a certain sign that the lion has kilTed hisgamo or some animal is lying dead, they went, to the place, and sought in vain, till coming under tho tree, their olfactory nerves direct rd them to whero tho lion lay dead, in hi thorny bed. 1 still found eome of his bones under the tree, nnd hair on its Lrancbei to convince mo or what 1 scarcely, could havo credited. The lion will Eomctimes manage to mount the back of a giraffe, nnd, fixing 1 . -. .-I.nwn ..In n-i.fn n 1. il.Anlitft. .Y,,YY ma cum ir oans iiilu cam ruuuiuvi, uan away till no reaches the vertebra of the neck when both fall, end oftentimes tho lion j lamed for his trouble. If tho giraffe hap pens to be very strong, he Fuccced3 in bring ing his rider to the cround. Among those we shot the healed wounds of .the lion's claws on the shoulder, and marts of his teeth on the l ack of the .neck, gave us ocular dem onstration that two of them had carried the monarch of the forest on their backs, and yet conic off triumphant. A Girl in Male Attire. 1 1 wa s. whispered around several days ago, that a fair damsel of lome sixteen summers, encased in gray pants, linen coat, boots, ana soft hat, had made her arrival in Des Moines, and was creating quite a sensation among the b'hoys. In fact it was reported that, in company with a lot of lads, sho refreshed herself one after noon by bathing in Coon River. By some mysterious process, un known to Dobbs, it leaked out that he was -not .all sho seemed to be ; and so tho Mar shall considered it his duty to arrest her, and have her lodged in jail until Fuch time as the Mayor ehould have an opportunity to give her a bearing. She was accordingly captur ed, and brought into the presence) of Mayor Cleveland. At first eho wa3 inclined to bo reticent in her remarks; In fact, he refused to open her sweet mouth, until the Mayor intimated to the officer that ho had better return with her to tho calaboose She became frighten ed, and then in answer to questions, she said that her name was Emma Hammond; that her parents lived in Ottnmwa; that she had been seduced, and had donned male attir in order to give effectiveness to her pursuit of the betrayer. She told a pitiful ftory, but failed to impress anybody with the idea that the was opposed to seduction cn principle, seeming, on the other hand, rather pleasea with the blandishments of vice. She. wan sent back to jail, to await the action of friends, if she has any, at Ottumwa, Neter took APArxR. Whilo travelling through this county last. week, wo came across a man who believed it a pin to patron ize a newspaper. Ho told us that a t aper never entered his house thathisgrandfath cr never took onc that his father had lived all his lifo without ones and that ho had ' done firstrate without one. We passed big house, and was satisfied of the truthfulness of his story. His home was a ricketty, torn or: v: cm , 1 fences were tumbling down, and his children would have been surpassed in neatness by a litter of young wolves. Tho man himself was a woful specimen of humanity. He had Income so accustomed to sitting and looking nt nothing on rainy days and evenings that his eyes had a vacant stare. On making in quiry wc found that nonocf tho family for generations back had ever known how to read.. And j-et this man is a citizen. He i permitted to vote, and is not disqualified from holding office For the sake of huniso ity wo hope that such men are ecldora to bo seen in this countv. A "FrERY Serpent." A young laj at East Windsor, Mass., wa3 pretty condcra bly scared the other elav. Sho was brush ing the dust from the hearth of a cooking stove in which was.a full fire, when an enor mous live and particularly lively tnake sud denly i-suod from a hole in the rte.vo door, full in her face. A succession of screams brought tho feminino portion of the houo hould to the kitchen, and. the mother dis patched tho sarpint, which. was charging about tho room and writhing in groat pain. It seems that a basket of chips had been scraped up the previous eveninr, and a mo ment before the scare, the mother had emp tied a portion of them in tho ttove, and with them went the f nako. Cn rxcEY Beers, of Roxbury, N. Y.. has fourteen livinar children, ten sons and four daughters. Tho eldest is twenty-four vesrs old, and the youngest five years of age. They are tho children of tho same mother and wero born at Eingle births. "Do Tor consider lager beer intoxicating?" "Veil, ash for dat, I gant zay. 1 trink fecfty to fcoxty classes a Lay, end it tosh not hurt mc ; but I don't know how it would po if a man vash to make a hog of hissclf." "Tilly," said a mother to her daughter, who had seen but five summers, "what would you do without j-our mother?" "I should put on every day just such a dxesa as I want ed," wa3 the prompt reply. tS- A lawyer cngaged.in a case; tormen ted a witness so much with questions, that the poor fellow at last cried for water. "There," said tho judge, "I thought you'd pump him dry." tSf Write your name by kindness, and lovo and mercy on the hart3 of the people you wmc in contact with year by, and you will never be forgotten. EST A hypocrite may spin o fair a thread as to deceive his own eye. He may admir the cobweb, and not know lurasclf to be the spider. 1 I SOU- If J8 -