I iKKER, Hdltor and Proprietor. I llUTCHISSOX, Publisher. ISa.OO IX ADVANCE." EBENSBURG, PA., THURSDAY, MAY 10, 1866. NUMBER 80. I WOULD RATHER BE RIGHT THAN PRESIDENT. Henry Ulay. UUME 7. JTORY. OF POST OFFICES. 1 Post Masters. Districts a, Steven L. Evans, Carroll. r?nro. TTenrv Nutter. CUest. b, A. G. Crook3, Tavlor. J. Houston, Wa3h"mt'n. sburcr! John Thompson, Ebensburg. n TiM.hPT. C. Jeffries. White. "in'a Mills. Peter Gnrman, Susq'han. -In. J. M. Christy, Gallitztn Washtn. Johnst'wn. Loretto. Wm Tiler, Jr., I. E. Chandler, M. Adlesberger, A Tliirhin. Munster. lie, lBtine, 1. cvel, AnrlrcwJ Ferral. Susq'han Stan. Wharton, Clearfield George Berkey, B. M'Colgan, George B, Wike, Wm. M'Connell, J. K. Shryock, Richland. Washt'n. Croylc. Washt'n. S'merhill. ne thill, nit, lore, IURCIIKS, MINISTERS, &C. -slyttrian Rkv. T. M. Wilson, Pastor. !.ing every Sabbath morning at 10 ':, and in the evening at 7 o'clock. Sab hoolat 9 o'clock, A. M. Prayer meet 7 Thursday evening at 6 o'clock. list Episcopal Church A. Baker, r in charge, llov. J. Pebshixo. As Preaching every alternate Sabbath at 10J o'clock. Sabbath School at 9 A. M." Prayer meeting every Wedncs ng, at 7 o'clock. Independent Rev Ll. R. Powell, Preaching every Sabbath morning at ' ck, and in the evening at G o'clock. School ut 1 o'clock, P.M. Prayer i?-r en the first Monday evening of caca ,h ; end on every Tuesday, Thursday and y evening, excelling the first week in .Icini'tte MelhoJiU Rvv. Morgan Ellis, or. Preaching every Sabbath evening at 1 C o'c lock. Sabbath School at lr o'clock, . Fxnyer meeting every Friday evening, o'clock. Society every Tuesday evening o'clock. ,.' Rev. W. Lloyd. Pastor. rreach Sabbath morning at 10 o'clock. alar UaptisURizx . David Evans, Preaching every Sabbath evening at -. Sabbath School at at I o'clock, P. M . Aic Rev. R. C. Cuiusty, Pastor. s every Sabbath morning at 10.V o'clock sipers at 4 o'clock in the evening. ' EBEXSIJURO 31 AILS. MAILS ARRIVE, crn, daily, it 933 o'clock, r-a at 10.00 o'clock A. M.. M. MAILS CLOSE, n, daily, at 8 o'clock, P. M. n, at 8 o'clock, P. M. .The mails from Grant, Carrolltown, arrive on Monday, Wednesday, and of each week, at 3 o'clock, P. M. ave Ebensburg on Tuesdays, Thursdays Saturdays, at 0 o'clock, A. M. II All.nO AO SCIIEDirLE. s CRESSON STATION1". T.1i .1nn.n.o OK" A. M. A. M. Phila. Exnres3 ' Fast Line " Mail Train u Altoona Accom. " 9.55 10.33 9.02 4.32 8.40 2.20 C.41 1.53 1.21 M. M. M. M. fluln. Express Fast Line Day .Express Cincinnati Ex. Altooua Accom. A. M. A. M. P. M. P. M. COl'XTY OFFICERS. V? j of the Courts President Hon. Geo. or, Huntingdon; Associates, George W. ?y, Henry C. Devine. othonotary Geo. C. K. Zahm. gixter and Recorder James Griffin. erij James Myers. siricVAttoriiry. John F. Barnes. untj Commissioners John Campbell, Ed 1 Glass, E. It. Dunncgan. irk to' Cc?nmiisinncrs William H. Sech- tasnrer Barnabas M'Dermit. !'. to Treasurer John Lloyd. r;r House Directors George M'Cullough. Orris, Joseph Dai'.ey. House Treasurer George C. K. tors Fran. P. ficrnev. Jno. A 4.J l IJ t-IA . Ken- . Emanuel Brallier, tity Purveyor. Henry Scanlan. i bner. .-"William Flattery. reantile Appraiser John Cox. j 'f. of Common Schools J. F. Condon. "SUtRG BOB. OFFICERS. AT large. jrjess James A. Moore. n'ices of the Peace Harrison Kiukead, i ad J. Waters. ' ol Directors D. W. Evans, J. A. Moore, 1 J. Davis, David J. Jones, 'Villiam M. , H, Jones, jr. - :gh Treasurer Geo. W. Oatman. to Council Saml. Singleton. Commissioner David Davis. FAST WARD. ten Council A. V. Jone3, John O. Evans, uel Davis. Charles Owens, R. Jones, jr. iablc Thomas Todd. :;:'qf EleCwnWm. D. Davis. .: tors David E. Evans, Danl. J. Davis. tsor Thomas J. Davis. WEST VAHI. Council John Lloyd, Samuel Stiles, a Kiukead, John E. Scanlan, George able Barnab3 M'Dermit. t rf Election. John D. Thomr.a. ctors. William II. Sechler, George for Joshua D. Tarrish. SOCIETIES, &C. " AT. --Summit Lodge No. 312 A. Y. M. a Masonic Hall, Ebensburg, on the Tuesday of each month, at 7J o'clock, ( , O. F. Highland LonVe No. 428 I. O. ets in Odd Fellows' Hall, Ebensburg, ednesday evening. T. Highland Division No. 84 Sons of ainee raee -itl Temperance Hall, Eb t, every Saturday t7fning- MS OF SUBSCRIPTION TO . r TnE ALLEGIIANIAN :" $2.00 IN ADVANCE, ' , . . OK 00 IF NQT PAID IN ADVANCE. Song of Thorildc. FROM THE GERMAN. There sat by the foaming sea A maiden of tender look i For many hours ehc frshed, Rut nothing would bite her hook. She wore on her finger a ring, With a jewel as red as a rose And, binding it fast to her line, Far into the sea she throws. She raises up from the deep, A hand of ivory mold On one of its fingers glisten Her jewel and ring of gold. Now lifts she out on the land A knight who is handsome and fair; He is robed in glittering garb, And sports in the sunny air. The maiden in terror shrieked "O I knight, most noble and true, You must give me back my ring, For I did not fish for you." "They do not'fiih for fish With jewels," the knight replied ; 'The ring I can only give When you promise to be my bride." 33uriocl Alive, Is it true that sometimes co:nm events cast their shadows bciore t Is it true that at times the mighty unknown cf tlio future vaguely impresses itself upon the present? I think so. If not, then how do we p;et that prescience of. good or evil that o strangely elevates us with hope or depresses us with fear that throws over our spirits the serenity of a placid lake, or the wild agitation of a stormy sea ? Froia my earliest recollection, I had always been afraid of being buried alive. I Jo not remember that the fear of death hai ever troubled me only the fear of entering the grave while yet a living man, a:id becoming conscious of it when too late. Of all the horrors which the mind can conjure up, this to me always seemed the moi-t dreadful, and the fear of it fas tened itself upon me with all the power of a haun'ing specter, and it became one of the deep concerns of my life to guard against it. At twenty-two years of age I ordered my ecffm and purchased my tomb. The cofSn wa. sq ons?rucUi-J ih-at a living person closed up in it could touch certain springs and throw it all apart; and the tomb was contrived with proper ventila tion, and provided with blankets and a key inside, so that in casg of life return ing after burial, I could secure my?elt against a deadly chill and speedily find my way out. Why had I this fear to lead me to these precaution, unless the corning reality had cast its shadow upon me? My monoma nia, as many termed it, was known to all my friends, every one of whom had been separately charged to see me positively dead before burial. But what are pre cautions taken against fate? I 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 na tive place, an inland city. Urgent business called me to Boston, where I had only one acquaintance, a very dear friend, who had often invited me to come and make him a long visit. Unfortunately, he was at this lime out of town, and expected to be ab sent several days; but his family insisted upon my making their house my heme during my stay in the city, and would not in fact permit ni3 to go elsewhere. On the third day, I had finished my business, and, as it was tl.o last of the week, I de cided to remain some two or three days longer, that I might get a sight of my friend before leaving. On the following morning, I wa3 found dead in my bed at least, it was "so repor ted; and the strongest evidence I have against it is the fact that I am livins now. The people of the house, of course, were very much excited aud alarmed their physician was called in, and afterwards the coroner. It was at length decided to put me in a coffin, and place me in a church vault till th return of my friend, who wou'd of course have my body con veyed to my native place for fiual inter ment. Thus it is seen that all my precautions availed me nothing; for, abroad, almost among strangers, I had taken on the sem blance of death, and had been, coffined and entombed in the ordinary way. I returned to consciousness in the night, in the vault ot the church. Of course, I knew not then where I was. My first sensation wa3 one of strange pressure aud confinement. I fancied, as in a dream, that I had been seized for a maniac, a strait-jacket put upon me, and then forced into a narrow cell. .This idea did not long hold it3 place. As my mind grew clearer, I began to recall what had hap pened during the past week leaving home, going to Boston, transacting my business, and so on. I remembered being at my friend's house, and of deciding to remain longer than I at first intended, hoping foi his return before- my departure. All this gradually became clear, aloDg wiib the last pleasant eveningI had spent with his family. But then came a blank. What had happened since ? And where was I now? I attemptedto rise,, and found myself shut up in some narrow place that scarcely allowed of any move ment whatever. How did I get there? What did it meau ? Suddenly, my old life-long fear return ed upon rue with a new terror that no language can express. Perhaps the dread horror of years had come, and I had been buried alive at lost ! The thought was so appalling that for some moinents I re mained paralyzed. Then I seemed gath ered .into one great agony, which sent forth the most wild and piercing shrieks of despair that ever issued from mortal lips. Yes, it was a truth I My foreboding had ended in a reality, and I was now th-3 tenant of a coffin, if not a grave ! With another shriek, I turned in my narrow house, gathered in my strength, as it were, and threw it out Irom me with what seemed the bursting power of a giant. There came a sharp crack ; my prison seemed slightly to expand, and I fancied I felt a change of air. I rested a moment, prayed God to help me, and repeated the effort with even greater power. There was no resisting this ! The coffin lid was burst asunder with a crash, and my limbs and body were free in the awful darkness which enveloped me the rayless dark ness of a tomb ! In considering this wonderful feat, it should be borne in mind that none of my strength had been exhausted by sickness, and that, besides being naturally a very strong, powerful man, my physical powers were perhaps doubled or trebled by my fear aud despair. I was free now to breathe the damp, deleterious air of what I believed to be a vault or tomb; but I confess my terror was scarcely lessened at the thought ot having thus extended the limits of my prison, -for after all,- I might not be able Mo escape from this horrible place, and if not, it would only be a prolongation 01 the agonies of life and death. Fortunately, I had been coffined in my own garments, and it was a season of the yar when I could rot suffer from cold, so that the question of lite without escape was reduced to two points suffocation from foul air, or starvation. If I could escape the first, I knew tlere were several 'days of life yet before me, and perhaps the time would be long enough, with unremitting toil, for me to dig my way out, like a convict from his prison. The first important thing for me to as certain was the dimensions of my sepul chrt Whether it was day or night, I could not then tell, for I could see nothing whatever not even my hand when I hold ic up close before my eye3. Everything must . be done by feeling; and though shuddering with horror at the thought of what I might discover, I knew that delay could avail me nothing, and I resolved to set about the work before me. I rose up in my coffin and stretched my hands above ray head; but they came in contact with nothing. I felt out on either side, but Couched 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 carefully, stretched down my feet till they touched a solid basis, and then slowly and cau tiously began to grope around the vault. I scon touched the wall on one side, and carefully felt" of the stones. I found them, as I feared I should, large, soiid, hewn, and evidently . put together with cement. There seemed little hope of my ever finding inj way through them. I followed the wall along till caroe io a pile of coffins, one upon the other, reach ing up as lilgh.as my head. They had evidently been there a loDg time ; and I fancied, from the slimy feel, they were mildewed and decayed. After passing these, I came to another portion : of the wall, and then to another pile of coffins, not so high a3 the first, but even more decajid. In turning from these, my feet slipped, I fell against them," and the up per one came down with a crash, burst open, and the bones rolled out with a phosphorescent glare, lighting up the darkness, and looking like so many orbs of fire. I staggeted back -with an invol untary yell of . horror the thing was so sudden and the. spectacle so awful ! My reason returned in a moment; and Uthough my ncrvou3 system had received a shock that for, a long time kept ins weak and trembling, yet I saw at once how much I was the gainer by the acci dent, sinco by this means I nbw had a dim view of the charnel-house which had be come my prison, if rot my grave. The vault was net large, but contained quite a number cf coffins, not one of which was new 6ave my own, which led me to be lieve it had seldom been used of late years, except perhaps as a place of tem porary deposit. . It was a strange light to see by the phosphorescence of dead men's bo.nes ; and when I take everything into consideration my return to conscious ness, th! horrible suspicions, certainties, aud discoveries which followed in appaK ling order I am even now compelled to wonder how it was possible for me to keep, my senses, and continue my efforts to es cape with the coolness I did. I soon found the doer of the vault. It was a wooden one, and seemed much de cayed oa the inside, like the coffins I have mentioned. I tried it with tremb ling eagerness j but. discovered, alas!, it was fastened on the other side probably secured by heavy iron bolts. O, for the use of an axe for one-half hour I I would willingly have given for it all I wa3 worth in the world. I struck against the door with my fist, and threw my body heavily against it; but only to discover its mas sive solidity, and to know that, without some implement to work with, all my ef forts to escape would be worse than vain that I might as well sit down and wait my appointed time. But perhaps some tool might be found in the vault, left there by mistake ! some hatchet, hammer, pick, spade, crowbar something ! I searched everywhere, as well as I could by the dim, ghastly light, but found only two thiugs that I could possibly use a large spike-nail and a pebble-stone weighing over a pound. O, how precious did even these seem ! 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 ?o de cayed, that, with the use of the nal and the stone, I believed I could work a hole through large enough perhaps to admit my arm ; and as this place was near where the bolt, if a single one, would naturally be, I had great hope 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 for hours I labored unremittingly- hammering, prying, and getting off splinter by splinter, till at last I found I could pass my arm through the aperture. O, what wild emo tions ot hope and fear thrilled me then ! I trembled from head to foot, my respira tion became gasping and difficult, large beads ot perspiration seemed to start from every pore, and, sinking down on my knees, I prayed God to have mercy on me, and restore me to the world of life. Then I arose slowly, thrust my arm through the aperture, and felt around for the bolt. My hand touched it. With trembling eagerness I worked it back ; and then the heavy door came slowly open, harshly giating on it3 rusty hinges What a moment was that! about to be delivered from O, Heaven ! Perhaps I was the awful sep- ulchre ! The very thought wa an over- powering joy, which my nervous system, so long wrought up to the most intense excitement, could not bear; and I fainted, and fell at the foot of the stairs which led upwards from the charnel-vault. When consciousness and strength again returned to me, I went slowly and tremb ffngly up the damp, dim, and narrow stairs, till I came to the Hag that shut in the whole. On my power to raise this depended everything ! Life was above it death below it! I put my shoulder against it, aud pressed upwards with all my might. Gracious Heaven ! It did not move ! I was doomed ! I uttered a wild, piercing shriek, and fell back in des pair, the most wretched being in exist ence. Aa I sat there, on one of the cold, slimy steps, in an agony of mind that must soon have deprived ' my burning, throbbing brain of reason, I fan eied I heard steps above me. What ! Human life so near, and I be doomed to death in a sepulchre ? No, no! Never ! never ! I sprang to my feet with the fierce deter mination and strength of a madaian, 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 upon me. I saw I was beneath a roof of a church, and, leaping upward from the pit, I yelled forth my joy. It was an early hour in the morning, and the sexton had come into the church to put certain things to rights. Seeing me spring upward from the tomb with such an appalling yell, he instantly fled, with a shriek cf terror. HesooH returned, however, with half-a-dozen excited spectator-, and found me on my knees; giving thanks to God for my wonderful deliver ance. ' I scarcely need add that my friend's family were astonished beyond measure to see mo back among them, a living man. The next day I had the pleasure of taking my friend himself by the hand, and giv ing him an account of my death, burial, and resurrection. An had been arranged, he went home with my body, but not with my corpse. Since then I have never traveled alone, tor fear of again being buried alive. The doctors, after a wise consultation, pronounced mine a rather singular case of catalepsy. . m m J&aF" An auctioneer was selling a libra ry at auction. He was not very well read in books, but he scanned the titles, trus ted to luck for the contents? and went ahead. "Hero you ' have 'Bunyan's Pil grim's Progress," he said; "how much 'm I offered for it? How much do I hear fer the Pilgrim's Progress, by John Bun. yan ? 'Tis a first-rate book, gentlemen, with six superior illustrations ; how much do I hear ? All about the Pilgrims,- by John Bunyan ! i Tells where they came from, an' where they landed, an' what they done after they landed! Here's a picter of one of 'em going about Ply mouth peddlin', with a pack, onto his back!" . . Jfca?Some extremely hospitable persons keep savage dogs on their premises, that the huugry poor who stop to "get at bite" .may be accommodated with coming inside the dpor. in tue -Karly Carl Sliurz. Life of TheParis correspondent of the New York Times, under date of March 30th, takes the arrival in that cuy of the Ger man patriot, poet and philosopher, Gotfried Kinkel, as the text for an incident in the European history of Carl Schurz, who is no !es3 distinguished in this country than upon the continent. We quote : In the literature of Germany, Kinkel occupies a high position as a poet and his torian. When the Revolution of 184S broke out, he was a Professor at the Uni versity of Bonn, and his strong Democrat ic opinions induced him to take a very prominent part in the struggle. He fought, was made prisoner by the royal authorities, was tried for treason, and was sentenced to many years' imprisonment at hard labor. Among Kinkel's companions at this time was a young student not twenty years of age, named Carl Schurz, who was also captured, tried by court martial, and sentenced to be shot. Schurz, however, more fortunate than his Professor, suc ceeded in escaping across the French frontier, and was safe. Kinkel was sent to a common prison, placed among crimi nals of the vilest sort, and set to work making shoes. Young Germany, still trembling with the excitements of the recent llevoluticn, learned with indigna tion the treatment inflicted upon the emi nent poet and scholar, and numerous petitions were sent to the Prussian Gov ernment praying that his situation might be ameliorated. To all this, the authori ties paid no attention whatever, the pro testations ceased, and Kinkel seemed likely to be abandoned by his friends. There was one, however, who did not desert him. Carl Schurz left Paris, dis guised himself id rags, and, defying the scaffold, re-entered Prussia, with an oran on his back. In the day, he beirged his bread on the high road ; at night, he laid aside his organ and visited the abodes of his former companions and the friends of German liberty, to endeavor to reawaken their interest in the fate of the imprisoned patriot. In hl way he traveled three hundred leagues on foot, playing' the or gan through many towns and villages, carefully maturing his plans, and sleeping in b-iras or under hedges. On one occa sion, he was stopped by two Prussian gendarmes, who inquired where he was going. "To the Schurz. neighboring town," replied "Would you like to earn a handful cf pfennings ?" asked the ethers "Certainly." "Very well ; come with u to our bar racks. We intend to give a dance this evening, and the airs of your organ will suit our purpose exaotly." It was impossible to decline the offer of the soldiers without exciting suspicion ; so Schurz accepted, with a great show of gratitude, and during the whole night ground out waltzes and quadrilles for a battalion of gendarmes. Leaving, undis covered, the dangerous society of the mil itary police, young Schurz continued his journey, and, a short time subsequently, information reached him that Kinkes prison had been changed. He was now incarcerated at Spandau, and placed under the personal supervision of the prison di rector. v Late one night, when the streets had become deserted, a post chaise, escorted by a guard of four dragoms; drove rapid ly through the town of Spandau, and halted before the prison. An officsr, in the uniform of a Colonel of the Boyal Guard, alighted from the vehicle, and was soon in the presence of the Director, into whose hands he placed a letter from the Minister of the Interior at Berlin, and bearing the official beal. Receiving the packet with the respect due to a commu nication from the Knr s Minister, the Director opened the important missive, and read as follows : "A deep-laid plot ha3 been organized at Berlin, the object of which h to effect the forcible release of tho convict Kinkel, from the hands of the authorities We are now watching the movements of the conspirators, and are preparing to arrest them. In order, however, to prevent the possibility of a surprise, the bearer of the present letter, Col. , 13 commanded to take charge of your prisoner, whom he will immediately conduct to the citadel of Magdebourg, and place hirn in the hands of the Governor of that fortress." - Upon reading this ministerial injunc tion, the director of the Spandau prison at once had the unfortunate Kinkel awak ened, caused him to be securely ironed and placed in the post chaise, which set off on the road to Magdebourg, accompan ied by the Colonel and four dragonswho rode with drawn sabres. All night Ion" they traveled at-" a rapid speed; fresh horses were instantly furnished at each relay, the Colonel's demand being accom panied by the magical expression, "the King's service." The uuhappy prisoner, crouched in a corner of a vehicle, cared not what might be his fate Germany had forgotten him, aud nothing could be worse than the noisome dungeua at Span dau. Morning came at last, a irray win ter's dawn, and the carriage stopped The Colonel himself opened the door, and bade the prisoner alight. Without a Incident word, poor Kinkel obeyed, and found himself standing on the sea-shore, a boat awaiting a few feet from thespot where h ttood, and a ship, with the English flag at her mast-head, lying t y within sight. The prisoner uttered a cry of mingled hope and despair. "Do you not know me, my master?" sobbed the pseudo dear old Colonelj tearing eff his false mustache, and clasp ing Kinkel in his arms. "I am your friend and pupil, Carl Schurz. Let us embrace each other oucemoreon German soil, and then away for England !" Kinkel could not rely, but burst into tears. In a few moments more they were in the boat, ajyLowing lustily toward the vessel in the offing, which had now hoist ed the German Republican flag, in token of recognition of weenie. As they reached the ship's side, Kinkel, pale and trembling, leaned upon Schurz's shoulder and murmured : "My wife, my children where are they ?" lie had time to saj no more, for, in an other moment, Mme. Kinkel was in her husband's arms, and his children wero clinging about his knees. "My mission is accomplished," said young Schurz. "I had sworn, dear inas- ter, to restore you to liberty and to your family. My duty is done." Upon their arrival in London, the pat riots were received with transports of en thusiasm. The rich German residents of the British metropolis took upon them selves to provide for tho brave young fel lows who, in the disguise of Prussian dragoons, had aided Schurz in successful ly carrying out his noble project, and Prof. Kinkel himself commenced giving lectures on German literature, which met with immense success. . Carl Schurz soon afterwaid parted from his old preceptor and set out to seek his fjrtunc in the promised land :cross the broad Atlantic. His career in tho United States is well known. He had left in Germany an. aged father, who had longed to see again. his favorite man to visit awaits him son ; but it is not easv for a a country where certain death if detected. Still, fortune smiled on Schurz. Hisen high in favor with President Lincoln, the German American General was appointed Envoy Extraordinary to the Court of Madrid, and fifteen years after his flight with Kinkel, he quietly revisited his birth place. No Prussian gendarme dared to lay a finger upon the condemned felon, now a diplomatis representative of one of the most powerful nations on the giooe. 1 1 Provost Marshal's Bureau rrt 1 xue report o; f Provost Marshal General Fry, which has just been forwarded to the Avar Department, states that tho Bureau began its operations in March, IS63 ; that the military strength of the loyal States at the close of the war was 2.254,063 men able to bear arms, not including 1,000,516 soldiers then actually under arms ; that during the war 5,221 officers and 90,8GS men were killed in the action or died from wounds, and 2,321 officers and 182, 329 men died from disease, making a to tal of 230,730 deaths. The tables of wounded are not yet completed. 1,120, 621 men were raised for the army by the Bureau, at an average cost of 50 84 per man, while the average cost of raisins: the 1,856,093 men recruited before the Bu reau was established, was $34 01 per man. This calculation d je3 not include the bounties given even before or. after the establishment of the Bureau. From com mutations paid by drafted men, for exemp tions, 2S,30G,313 76 were obtained, out ot which sum all the expenses cf the Bu reau were paid, and on January 1, 1866, the sum of $9,800,105 64 remained to the credit of the United States. - The Provost Marshal General says the success of the Bureau was du? to "first, the hearty co operation of the civil officers of the differ ent States, sustained by the elevated loy alty aud earnestness of the masses of the people; second, the judicious legislation of Congress." A TVetv Mania in Iaris. . A Paris correspondent writes that f new sensation has taken possession of the inhabitants of Paris that of collecting the portrait3 of great political" criminals murderers, etc. The photograph of Booth, the assassin of Lincoln, is obtaining a very large sale, especially among. the wo men. The carte de visitc of the man wh is supposed to have strangled tho Presi dent Poucct enjoys also a very great suc cess. Another ohotogranh much sought after is that of Philippe, the murderer of the Ru ue la Vile l'Eveque. This crim inal, whose trial will probably take placo in May, is accused 6t having committed seventeen murders similar to the one ho perpetrated in the Rue de la-Villa l'Eve que, and which led to hi arrest. The documents connected with this case al ready forni a large volume of four hun dred pages. Tho prisoner seems to be so well aware of the fate which awaits him. that he has already attempted twic? to commit suicide in his cell at the prison of La Force." 3?Mis3 Thompson says that every unmarried lady of sixty may consider that she ha passed the Capq ot Good. nop0. ir 1 -A