1 I 1 ' v r VOLUME 7. tRECTonr. LIST OF POST OFFICES. p0,t Oficet. Pott Matter. Vtttriet. Carolltown, Steven L. Evans, Carroll. Cliess Spring!, M. D. Wagner, Chest. Coucm&ugb, A. G. Crooks, Tajlor. Crtaon, It. II. Brown, "Waahint'n. Ebeasburg. John Thompson, Ebensburg. Fallen Timber, C. Jeffrie. White, r.jirmau's Mills, Peter Garraan, Susq'han. CJallittin, J. M. Christy, Gftllitiin. Hemlock, Wm Tiley, jr., Washt'n. Johnstown, E, Roberts, Johnat'wn. Loretto, M. Adlesberger, Loretto. M inster, A. Durbin, Munster. FUtteville, M. J. Piatt, Susq'ban. St. Augustiue, Stan. Wharton, ClearBeld. Scalp Level, Georpe Berkey, Richland. Souman, A. Shoemaker, Wasbt'n. Summerhill, B. F. Slick, Croyle. Summit, Wm. M'Connell, Washt'n. Wilmorc, J. K. Shrjock, S'merhill. CHURCHES, MINISTERS, &C. Presbyterian Riv. T. M. Wilson, Pastor. Preaching every Sabbath morning at 10 o'clock, and in the evening at 7 o'clock. Sab bath School at y o'clock, A. M. Prayer meet iufr everv TliursJay evening at 6 o'clock. Methodist Episcopal Church Rev. A. Baker, Treacher iu charge. Rev. J. Persuing, Ap istant. Preaching -every alternate Sabbath morning, at 10 o'clock. Sabbath School at 9 o'clock, A. M. Prayer meeting every Wednes J:j rvening, at 7 o'clock. Welch Independent Rev T,l. R. Powell, litor. Preaching every Sabbath morning at : -j o'clock, and iu the evening at 6 o'clock. Subbntb School at 1 o'clock, P. M. Prayer imetinp on the first Monday evening of each month ; and on every Tuesday, Thursday and Friday evening, excepting the first week in each month. tdriiitic Methodist Rkv. Moroas Ellis, rWur. Preachine every Sabbath evening at 2 and 6 o'clock. Sabbath School at lf o'clock, A. M. Pinyer meeting every Friday evening, nt 7 oVlock. Society every Tuesday evening m 7 o'clock. Disciples Rkv. W. Lloyd, Pastor. rrcach i.nr every Sabbath morning at 10 o'clock. Particular JioptistsUnx. David Evans, l,.tor. Preaching every Sabbath evening at 3 o'clock. Sabbath School at at I o'clock, P. M. Catholic Rev. R. C. Christy. Pastor. SVrvices every Sabbath morning at Cth o'clock ud Vciptrs at 4 o'clock in the evening. KUCXSRL'KG 91 AILS. MAILS ARRIVE. K.tst. m. through, daily, at 0.33 P. M. V.'-.-.urti, wj-.y. 4 ut 9-l"' P. M- V,?itru, through, at 'J. 25 A. M. r.ii-ttrn, way. " at y.25 A. M. ' MAILS CLOSE. Knsterii. Jailv, at P. M. Western, at 8.00 P. M cjjuThc m.iili from Carrolltown arrive ':iiiy, Sundnys excepted'. The mails from J'l.itfevil.e, CSrant. &c, arrive on Mondays, Wednesdays ar.d Fridays. Mails fJr Carrolltowu leave daily, Sun (i iys excepted. Mails for Platte ville, Grant, ic", leave oa Tuesdays, Thursdays and Sat urda vs. RAILROAD SCHEDULE CRESSON STATION'. VwVst Bait. Express leaves at " 1'hila. Express ' 8.25 9.23 9.52 9.54 7.30 4.15 XAO 2.30 7.10 1.55 1.21 A. M. A. M. A. M. P. M. P M. P. M. P. M". A. M. A. M. P. M. P. M. New York Exp. " Fast Line Lay Express 44 Altoona Accom F:t l'hil'i. Express " Fast Line ' I'ay Express " Cincinnati Ex. " Altoona Accom, COt'A'Tl' OFFICERS. Judges of the Courts President Hon. Geo. Taylor, Huntingdon ; Associates, George W. E-isley, Henry C. Devine. I'rothonotary Geo. C. K. Zahm. Register and' Recorder James Grifiin. Sheriff James Myers. District Attorney." John F. Barnes. I'nuntu Commissioners John Campbell, Ed ward Glass, E. R. Dunnegan. Treasurer Barnabas M'Dcrmit. Poor House Directors George M'Cullough, Coore Orris, Joseph Dai'.ey. Poor House Treasurer George C. K. Zahm. Au litort Fran. P. Tierney, Jco. A. Ken r.fdy, Emanuel Brallier. County Surveyor. Henry Scanlan. Coroner. -William Flattery. Mercantile Appraiser John Cox. SujU. of Common School J. F. Condon. tnnsni'RG bor. officers. at large. liurcjess James A. Moore. Justices of the Peace Harrison Kinkead, Ejmund J. Waters. School Directors D. W. Evans, J. A. Moore, b; ciel J. Davis, David J. Jones, 'Villiam M. Jones, R. Jones, jr. Porough Treasurer Geo. W. Oatman. Clerk to Council Saml. Singleton. Street Commissioner David Davis. EAST WARD. Tctm Council A. Y. Jones, John O. Evans, Lemuel Davis. Charles Owens, R. Jones, jr. Constable Thomas Todd. Judge of Election Wm. D. Davis. Inspector David h. Evans, Danl. J. Davis. Attestor Thomas J. Davis. WEST WARD. Toxrn Council John Lloyd, Samuel Stiles, fl rtison Kinkead, John E. Scanlan, George Curie v. Constable Barnabas M'Dermit. Judge nf Election. John D. Thomas. Inspectors. William H. Sechler. Georrre W. Erown. Attestor Joshua D. Parrish. SOCIETIES, &c. -4. 1". M. Summit Lndn V ai A. Y. M. meets in Masonic Hall, Ebensbure. on the uu luesaay oi eacu montli, at 7 J o ciock, . O. Ci V T v., A to T r F. mitii in CAA rstlnn..' tfnii r-i V very Wednesday evening. of T. Highland Division No. 84 Sons of mperance meets in Temperance Hall, Eb tusburg, every Saturday evening. fPERMS Of SUBSPRIPTION- TO "THE LLEGIIAXIAN -." $2.00 LN ADVANCE. Au Old Hand. Blue-veined and wrinkled, knuckly and brown This good old hand is clasping mine ; I bend above it, and looking down, I study its aspect line by line. This hand has clasped a thousand hands Tha long have known no answering thrill; Soma have jaouldered in foreign lands Some in the graveyard on the hill. Clasped a mother's hand, in the day When it was little, and soft, and white Mother, who kissed it, and went away, To rest till the waking in God's good light. Clasped a lover's hand, years ngone,' Who sailed away and left her in tears ; Under Sahara's torrid sun, Its bones have whitened years and years. Clasped the hand of a goodman true, Who held it softly, and fell asleep, And woke no more, and never knew How long that impress this may keep. Clasped so many, so many 1 so few That still respond to the living will, Or can answer tt.is pressure so kind and true! So many, that lie unmoved and still ! Clasped, at last, this hand my own ; And mine will moulder, too, in turn. Will any clasp it when I am gone ? In vain I study this hand to learn I A SUNDAY A CENTURY AGO. An old brown leather-covered book, the ieavca yellow, the writing scarcely legible, ftom time and decay : evidently an old, neglected MS. To the lire or to my private shelf? Which? Those were iny reflections as I looked over the p.ipers of my late uncle, the rector of a Somersetshire village. I liked the look of the book and decided for the shelf; and I had iny reward, for I found in the crabbed characters a simple story, evidently written towards the close of the writer'a life. This story I now transcribe into a modern style. "He'll be fic for nothing," said my father ; "an awkward booby who holds his awl and cut? his food with his left hand."- . So 6aid my father, and so, alas I I felt. I icas awkward. I was fifteen ; thick set, strong, but terribly clumsy. I could not make a collar, cor sew a pair of blinkers, nor stuff a saddle, nor do anything that I ought to be able to do. 3Iy fingers seemed to have no mechanical feeling iu ihem. I was awkward, and knew it, and ail knew it. I was good-tempered ; could write fair ly, and read anything ; but I was awkwrard with my limbs; they seemed to have wills of their own ; and yet I could dance as easily and lightly as any oue of my neigh bors' sons. "I don't krow what he's fit for," said my father to the rector of tho parish. ''I've set him to carpentering, and he cut his linger nearly off with an axe ; then he went to the smith, and burnt his hands till he was laid up for a month. It's all of no use; he spoils me more good leather in a week than his earniurs pay for in a month. "Why cannot he, like other Chris tians, use his hands as the good God meant him to 'i There ! Look at him now, cutting that back strap for the squire with his left luind." I heard him ; the knife slipped, and the long strip of leather was divided iu a momeut and utterly spoiled. "There, now ! look at that. A. piece out of the very middle of the skin, and his finger gashed into the bargain." The rector endeavored to soothe my father's anger, while I bandaged my finger. "You'd better let him come up for that vase, Mr. Walters; I should like a case to fit it, for it'a very fragile, as all that old Italian glass is ; and line it with the softest leather, please." And so I went with th rector to bring back the vase, taking two chamois leathers to bring it in. We reached the house, and I waited in the passage while he went to fetch it. He came back with a large vase, tenderly wrapped in the leathers. Alas ! At that moment there came from the room, against the door of which I was 6tauding, the sound of a voice singing. A voice that thrilled me through, a voice I hear now as I write these lines, so clear, so sweet, so pure, it was as if an augcl had revealed itself to me. I trembled, and forgot the. precious burden in my hauds ; it dropped to the ground and was shattered to pieces. How shall I describe the rector's rage? I fear he said somethiug for which he would have blushed in his calmer moments, and she came out. She who had the angel voice his niece came out, and I saw her. I forgot the disaster, and stood speechlessly gaziug at her face. "You awkward scoundrel ! look at your work ! Thirty pounds ! Fifty pounds ! An invaluable treasure g3ne irreparably in a moment. Why don't you speak ? Why did you drop it ?" - "Drop it," 1 said, waking up. "Drop what?" And then it flashed upon me again,' and I stammered out, "she sang I" "Aud if she did sini,', was there any occasion to drop my beautiful vase, yov doubly ttupid blockhead ? There, go out of the bouse, do, before you do aDy farther EBENSBUB.G, PA., THURSDAY, AUGUST 9, .1866. mischief, and tell your father to horsewhip you for a stupid dlt." I said nothing, did nothing, but only looked at her face, and went shambling away, a changed and altered being. There was a world where horse-collars and horse shoes, tenons and mortises, right-hands or left, entered not. That world I had seen; I had breathed its air and heard its voices. My father heard of my misfortune, and laid the strap across my shoulders without hesitation, for in my young days boys were boys tiil eighteen or nineteen years old. I bore it patiently, uncomplainingly. "What is he fit for ?" every one would ask, and no one could answer, not even myself. I wandered about tho rectory in the? summer evenings and hoard her sing ; I tried hard to get the old gardener to let me help him carry the watering pots, and when I succeeded, .felt, as I entered tho rector's garden, that I was entering a par adise. O happy months, when, after the horrible labors of the weary day, I used to follow the old gardener, and hear her 6iug. My old withered heart beats fuller and freer when the memory comes back to me now. Alas I alas ! my awkwardness again ban ished me. She met me one evening in the garden, as I was coming along the path with my cans full of water, and spoke to me and said, "You're the boy that broke the vase, aren't you ?" I did not, could not reply ; my strength forsook me. I dropped my cans ou the ground, where they upset and flooded away iu a moment some 6eeds on which the rector set most especial store. "How awkward, to be sure I" she ex claimed. . "And how angry uncle will be." I turned and fled, and from that time the rectory gate was closed against me. I led a miserably unhappy life for the next three rears ; I had ouly one consola tion during the whole of that weary time, i I saw her at church and heard her sing there. 1 could hear nothing else when she 6ang, clear and distinct, above the confused, nasal sounds that came from the voices of o:hers, hers alone pure, sweet, aud good. It was a blessed time. I would not miss a Sunday's service in church for all" that might offer. Three good miles every Sunday there and heav ily plod to hear her, aud fe'el well reward ed. I shared her joys and heaviness. I knew when she was happy, when oppres sed ; as a mother knows the tones of her child's voice, to the minutest shade of dif ference, sol could tell when her heart was light and when sad. One Sunday she sang as I had never yet heard her. uot loudly, but so tenderly, so loviugly ; I knew the change had come, she loved ; it thrilled in her voice ; and at the evening service, he was there. I haw him. A soldier, I knew by his bear ing, with cruel, hard, gray eyes; and she loved, I knew it. I detected a tremble and gratitude in the notes. . I felt she was to suffer, as I had suffered ; not that I sang. I had no voice. A harsh, guttural sound was all I could give utterance to. I could whistle like a bird, and often and often have I lam for hour; in the shade of a tree and joined the concerts of the woods. One day I wa3 whistling, as was my wont, as I went through the street, when I was tapped on the shouldcr-by an old man, the cobbler of the next parish. I knew him from his coming to my lather for leather occasionally. "Sam, where did you learn that ?" "Learn what ?" "That tune." "At church." "You've got a good ear, Sam." "I've nothing else good, but I can whis tle anything." ' Can you whistle me the Morning Hymn ?" I did so. "Good; very good. Know anythiugof music, Sam ?" "Nothing." "Like to ?" "I'd give all I have in the world to be able to play auything. My soul's full of music. I can't sing a note, but I could play anything if I were taught." "So you shall, Sam, my boy. Come home with me. Carry these skins, and you shall begin at once." I went borne with him, and found that he was one of the players in the choir of his parish, his instrument being the vio lincello. I took my first lesson, and from that time commenced a new life. Evening after evening, aud sometimes during the day, I wandered over to his little shop, and while he sat, stitch, stitch, at the boots and shoes, I played over and over aain all the music I could get from the church. "You've a beautiful fingering, Sam, my boy, beautiful, and though it does look a little awkward to see you bowing away with your left, it makes uo difference to r0u. You ought to bo a fine player, Sam." I was enthusiastic, but I was poor. I wanted an instrument of my own, but I had no money, and I earned none, I could earn none. My parents thought, and perhaps rightly, that if they found me food and clothing, I was well provided for, and so for some twelve months I used the old cobbler's instrument, improving daily. It was f trange that the limbs and fingers so rigid and etiff fox every other impulse should, under the influence of sound, move with auch precision, case, and exactness. "Sam, my boy," said the cobbler, one day, "you shall have an instrument, and your father shall buy it for you, or the whole parish shall cry 6hame upon him." "But he don't know a word of this," I said. "Never mind, Sam, my boy, he shall be glad to know of it;" and ho told me his plans. At certain 'times it was customary for the choirs of neighboring churches to help each other, and it was arranged that the choir of our parish should play and sing on the next Sunday morning at his parish church, and that he and his choir should come over to our. parish for the evening service. "And you, Sam," said he, "shall take my place in your own church ; and please God, you dd as well there a? you have done here, it will be the proudest day I shall know, iSam, my boy, and your father and mother will say so, too." How I practised, morning, noon and night, for the great day ; how the old man darkly hinted at a prodigy that was to be forthcoming at the festival ; and then the day itself, with its events, all is as vivid a it it were yesterday. The evening came; and there, in the dimly lit gallery, I sat waiting, with my master beside me. "Sam, my boy," said my master, "it's agreat risk ; it 8 getting very full. There is the squire and my lady just come in. Keep your eyes on your book and feel what you're playing, and thiuk you're in the little shop ; I've brought a bit of leather to help you, and he put a piece of that black leather that has a peculiar acid sceot in front of me. The scent of it revived me ; the memory of the many hours I had spent there came back to me at one, and I felt as calm as if I were indeed there. She came at last, and service began. O that night ! Shall I ever forget its pleasures? the wondering looks of the fiiends and neighbors who came and found in me, the despised, awkward, left-handed saddler's apprentice, the prodigy of which they had heard rumors. O it was glori ous ! The first few strokes of my now gave me confidence, and I did well, and knew it, through the hymn, through the chants, and on to the anthem before the sermon. That was to be the gem of the evening; it was Handel's then new anthem, "I know that my lledeemcr liv eth." It began harsh, inharmonious, out of tune I know not why or how ; but as it progressed, a spell seemed upon all but her aud myself; one by one the instru ments ceased and were silent; one by one the voices died awa and were lost, and she and I alone, bound together and driv en on by an irresistible impulse, went through the anthem ; oue soul, one spirit teemed to animate both. The whole cou crHiiation listened breathless as to an an rel ; and she, self-absorbed, and like one in a trance, sang, filling me with a deli cious sense of peace and exultation, the like of which I have never known since. It came to an end at last, and with the last triumphant note I fell forward on the desk in a swoon. When I recovered I found myself at home in. my own room, with the rector, the doctor, aud my parents there, and heard tho doctor say, "I told you he would, my dear madam; I knew he would." "Thank God !" murmured my mother. "My dear bov, how we have feared for you." What a difference ! I was courted and made much of. "Genius !" and "very clever !" and "delightful talent!" Such were the expressions I now heard, instead of "stupid !" "awkward !" and "unfit for anything !" My father bought a fine instrument and I was the hero of the village for months. It was some days after that Sunday that I ventured to ask about the rector's niece. "My dear boy," said my mother; "the like was never heard. We saw you there and woudered what you were doing; but as soon as we saw you with the bo, we knew you must be the person thcre'd been so much talk about. ; and then, when the anthem came, and we all left off sing ing, and they all left off playing, and ouly you and Miss Cecilia kept on, we were all in tears. I saw cveu the rector crying ; and, poor girl, she seemed as if in a dream, and so did you ; it was dreadful for we to see you with your eyes fixed on her, watching her 60 eagerly. And then to look at her, staring up at the stained glass window as if she could see through it, miles and away into the sky. O, I'm sure, tho like never was ; and then, when you fell down, I screamed, and your father ran up and carried you down and brought you home in Farmer Slade's four wheeler." After this, I had an invitation to go up to the rectory, and there in the long winter evenings we used to sit; and while I played, she sang. O, those happy times ! when she loved me, but only as a dear friend ; and I loved her as I never had loved before or could love again. I do not know the kind of love I had for her. I was but a little older than she was, but I felt as a father ight feel to bis daugh ter ; a Bweet tenderness and love that made me pitiful towards her. I knew she loved a man unworthy of her, and I think, at time?, she felt this herself. I was perfectly free of the rector's house at last, and we used to find in our muic a means of converse that our tongues couid never have known. Ah me, those days! Alas! they are gone. She left us at last, and in a few years her motherless child came back in her place, and as again I sit in the old rectory parlor, years and years after my first visit, with her daughter beside me singing, all the old memories flood back upon me, and I feel- a grateful, calm joy in the openly-shown respect and affection of the daughter of her whom I loved so silently, so tenderly, and so ljng. I sit in the old seat in the church now and play ; and, once in the year, the old anthem; but the voice is gone that filled the old church as with a glory that day. I feel as the sounds swell out, and the strings vibrato under my withered fingers, I am but waiting to be near her under the old yew-tree outside, and it may be, nearer to her still in the longed-for futuro. A Wonderful Cave. About one mile southeast of the village of Hillside, a station on tho Pennsylvania railroad, in Westmoreland county, says the Blairsville New Era, there is a natur al cave, called by the early settlers tho Bear Cave, which name it retains to the present day.. Why it has received this name is more than we can tell. We were fortunately one of the party who visited this cave some four years ago, and its features are indelibly impressed upon our memory. The party consisted of six per sons, all of whom were provided wih hook lamps, twine, fire-arms, and each an old suit of clothes for entering. Taking the train at Ulairsville, we alighted at Hillside, and after a refreshing walk of half an hour up the gradual slope of the Chestnut Iiidge to the south and east, reached the mouth of the cave, which at first sight appeared to be nothing more than an opening amid a large mass of towering, mos-covered rocks, into which the most timorous were reluctant to enter. Donning our old clothes, lighting our lamps, .and tieing the outer eud of the twine firmly at the mouth of the cave, we entered the subterranean passage carrying the ball with us, unwinding it as we pro ceeded. After traversing a straight but narrow court or alley for about three hun dred feet, you come to a room out of which lead a dozen or more passages, each one to a different point iu the cave. We selected what appeared tabe a most capa cious one, and entered to the end of our twine some 1,400 yards, or over three fourths of a mile. The explorer is at once reminded of his insignificance, as he stands amid such wondrous works of. nature, those massive rocks on either hand being capable of crushing him to death should a sudden earthly agitation cause them to quit their places. Or, us he leans tremblingly over the verge of a deep and narrow cham, listening to the f'uiut sound of the gurg ling water below, he feels a chill or hor ror as he contemplates his tragic end should a misstep hurl him into its depths. This cavern is of curious structure, being so formed a3 to admit of exploration eith er way you wish to go, to the right or left, up or down. Streams of pure spring water course down through rocky ledges, and nestle in artificial reservoirs at their base, giving an air of comfort to the dirt begriniuied explorer. The rocks forming the sides and ceilings of tho differeut rooms and passages are set with stalac tites, sheddicg off a strange lustre when brought in contact with the light. The sandy rocks are literally covered with names from all parts of the country, and dated early as 1820. A number of years ago a lady from Pittsburg lost herself in this cave, and being unable to regain the course to the mouth, perished ; her whitened bones were found a few years afterward by an exploring party ,.-being the only vestige left to tell of her unhappy fate. She had probably entered the cave unguided, and thus unthinkingly subjected herself to au awful deaih by starvation. Nothing can be more striking to the lover of romance iu nature, than this truly historic cave. The discoverer is not known, and it may be this was one of the accus tomed haunts of a savage band of Indians, and more latterly the rendezvous of a den of thieves, who infested this couuty in 1852. It has never been explored to its fullest extent, but it seems to cover a large area, as our party crossed their twine two or three times. For some dis tance, perhaps a rod or more iu certain places, it. narrows down to a small circular hole, perhaps two feet or more in diameter, and then into a large, spacious room. Shaped in the rocks are to be seen the outlines of snakes, lizards, and other curi ous shaped reptiles, and occasionally the marks of human feet and hands in the sol id rocks, once supposed to be soft clay. Bats, both'wfiite and black, are found, which set up a terrible screeching upon the approach of the light, a thing to which thev are unaccustomed. It is aptly remarked that the Prus sian needle gun has given Austria a stitch in the sid. NUMBER, 42. HBHBp The Atlantic Cable. Subjoined are some of the coDgratula tory dispatches following the completioo of the great Atlantic Cable : FIRST ANNOUNCEMENT. "Heart's Content, July 27. 'We arrived hero at 9 o'clock this morning, all well, thank God. . The cable has beeu laid, and is in perfect working order. Cyrus W. Field." MR. field to president joiinson. "Heart's Content, July 27. " To Jlis Excellency, Andrew Johnson, " W'ashinijlon, D. C. : "Sir : The Atlantic Cable has been successfully completed this morning. I hope that it will prove a blessing to Eng laud and the United States, and increase the intercourse between our own country and the Eastern Hemisphere. "Cyrus W. Field.' PRESIDENT JOIINSON'S REPLY. "Washington, July 29. "To Ctrus TK FMJ, Ueart's Content: "I heartily congratulate you, and trust that your enterprise may prove as success ful as your efforts have been cersevering. May the cable under the sea tend to pro mote harmony between the Republic of the West and the Governments of the Eastern Hemisphere. "Andrew Johnson." mr. field to secretary sewabd. "Heart's Content, July 27. "To Hon. Wm. II. Seieard, Washington; "The telegraph cable has been success fully laid between Ireland and Newfound land. I remember with gratitude your services in the Senate of the United States in tho Winter of 1857, and recollect with pleasure the speech you then made in favor of the telecraph bill. That you may never have reason to regret what you have done to establish communicatiou across the Atlantic, is the sincere wish of your friend, Cyrus W. Field." secretary seward's reply. "Washington, July 29. "Cyrus 11. Field, Ileirt's Content: "Acknowledgments and congratulations. If the Atlantic Cable had not failed iu 1858, European States would not havo been led in 1861 into the great error of supposiug that civil war in America could either perpetuate African Slavery or divide this Repuhlio. Your great achievement constitutes, I trust, an effec tive treaty of international neutrality and non-intervention. "Wm. II. Seward." QUEEN VICTORIA TO PRESIDENT J0HN SON. "Osborne, July 27, 1866. "To the President of the United States, 44 Washington : "The Queen congratulates tho Presi dent on the successful completion of au undertaking which she hopes may serve as an additional bond of union between the United States and England." THE PRESIDENT'S REPLY. "Washington, July 30, 1866. 44 To Tier Majcs'y, the Qiieen of (lie. United "Kingdom Great Britain and Ireland: "Tho President of the United States acknowledges with profound gratification, the receipt of Her Majesty's dispatch, and cordially reciprocates the hope that the Cable which now unites the Eastern and Western Hemi.phers may serve to strengthen and perpetuate peace and ami ty between the Government of England and the Kepublic of the United States. "Andrew Johnson." mayor hoffman to the lord mayor cf london. "Mayor's Office, New York, ) 'July 30, 1866. J , "To the Lord Mayor of London, : "The energy and genius of man, di rected by the Providence of God, havo united the Continents. "May this union be instrumental in se curing the happiness of all nations and the rights of all people. "John T. Hoffman, "Mayor of New York." the lord mayor's reply. " Heart's Content, July 28, 186C. "To the Mayor of Neto York : "May commerce flourish, and peace and prosperity unite us. "Mayor of London." In Memoriam. The Rochester Dem ocrat proposes to erect a monument in honor of the defunct Democracy, and offer the following as an inscription : Hie Jacetl The Democratic Pautt, a kind husband of SSlavert, an indulgent father of KIOT3, and a firm friend of REUFI.I.TOX. The tender plant that north winds chiHed",. Has drooped and withered in its prima j But what the enowy ballot killed, ilay flourish in a warmer clime. Says the Bedford Inquirer of inst.. one James Buchanan, who. " 3d asserts that he was once Pres: j'1' 1S8a'd, United States, arrived at t?eaoi.'b Springs one day last we' ' 12? ?-eFor& ual in question u vet 0Jd and his hZ t cination of wind aaj attribatej tage, ' Vrt'rS;.1 : ) 1 i f