MM l.v mTTniiriinv n.iMo . . nnl iSITTCIIItfSOX, Editor. I WOULD RATHER BE RIGHT THAN PRESIDENT. Heuet Clay .V r. IltTCIIIIVSOX. Iublltier. VOLUME 8. VriLLIAM KITTELL, Attorney at W t tr-i t v. ...riary 24, 18C7.' Ofl-Y PKNLON, Attorney at Law, I.J iUCUUUI L i fit onice opposite tLe Bank. jan21 pEOKGE M. READE, Attorney at I tinw, r-oensourg, a a. a'fT. TIKRNKV, Attorney at Law, Elicas'ourcr. Cambria county, Ta. y-Ofict ia Colonnade Row jn24 bUNSTON & SCAN LAX, Attorneys nt Law, Eoensonrjr, i a. Office opposite 'the Court House. jonssTON. pn24 ff. E. SCASH3. viE3 0. EASLY, latorney at Law, CarroIItown, Cambria county, Pa. T-hitectural Drawings and Speciu- f4 Law, Ebeusburg, Pa. Articular attention paia xo couecuons. p&" Office one door east of Lloyd & Co.'s .nkinz House. yan4 V Mil EL SINGLETON, Attorney at ) I.avr, Ebensburg, Pa. Office on High 'cot. west of Foster's Hotel. U'ill practice in the Courts of Cambria and fining counties. r- Attends also to the collection of claims soldiers against the liovernmem. , Uan- 1 KOliGE W. O ATM AN, Attorney at J Law and Claim Agent, Ebeusburg, ctria county, Pa. Kg Pensions, Back Pay and County, and Military Claims collected. Real Estate VU and sold, and payment of Taxes at Book Accounts, Notes, Due Bills, '.';. --M. Recollected. Deeds, Mortca- freemen ts. Letters of Attorney, Bonds, neatly written, and all legal uusiness 1,-,'liIy attended to. Pensions increased, :i I'.ualized Bounty collected. jan24 DEVEREAUX, M. D., Physician la and Surgeon, Summit, Pa. Office east of Mansion House, on Rail si street. Night calls promptly attended . at hi3 office. may23 DU. DE WITT ZJilUIiJJiU Having permanently located in Ebens- 7. offers bis professional services to the izms of town and vicirity. Teetb extracted, without pain, with. 2Titrov$ :ide, or Laughing Gat. ;t- Rooms over It. R. Thomas' store, High :eet. f.epl9 DENTISTRY. 1 Tfce undersigned, Graduate of the Bal- tiwore College of Dental Surgery, respectfully .ft'.vtis professional services to tne citizens f Kbcnsburtr. He has spared no means to Loroughly acquaint himself with every ini- roTiment in his art. lo many years 01 per il eioerienee. he has sought to add the parted experience of the highest authorities i Dental Science. He simply ask3 tuat an -portunity may be given for hi3 work to its own praise. SAMUEL BELFORD, D. D. S. R'f'.rence: Prof. C. A. Harris ; T. E. 3ond, :., Y. R. Handy: A. A. Blandy, P. II. Aus- en, of tie Baltimore College. if YTill be at Ebensbure on the fourth !iouUy of each month, to stay one wjek. Jaauurr l'-i, jaUi. T WYb & CO., Banker Li Ebensbcbg, Ta. Gold, Silver, Government Loans and o'.'-tt Securities bought and sold. Interest Cmi on Time Deposits. Collections uiade !s;J accessilde points in tne Lnited States, 'a General Banking Business transacted. inuary 24, 18G7. ir M. LLOVD k Co., itiU-cn IT Altooka, Pa. Drafts on the principal cities, and Silver itlold for sale. Collections made. Mon ' receive! on deposit, payable on dcuiand, bout interest, or upou time, with interest fair rates. jau2 . LLOYD A 1 rc t. JOHN LLOYD, CtitUtr. ;iliST NATIONAL JiANK Or ALTOONA. G O VERK.VEST A GEXCV, AND SIGNATED DEPOSITORY OF THE UNI TED STATES, lr Corner Virginia and Annie 8ts., North rd, Altoona, Pa. TnoRizr.D Capital $300,000 00 su Capital Paid in 150, oOO 00 All business pertaining to Banking done on " --ratjie terms, lu'tioal Revenue Stamps of all denomina tor alWAVtt - V tA AA It UU 10 rrcbasors of Stamp?, percentage, in j'M iriil ht allowed, as follow? : $50 to it) j 2 per cent.; $10C to $200, 3 per cent. v - J'J ant , . . r:,o. J. LLOYD, Sucr.ttioT of It. S. Dunn, Dealer in RE DRUGS AND MEDICINES, PAINTS, WLS, AND Dl'E-STUFFS, PERFUME RY AND FANCY ARTICLES, PURE INES AND BRANDIES FOIl MEDI AL PURPOSES, PATENT MEDICINES, &c. Also: Uer, Cap, and Note Papers, Pens, Pencils, Superior Ink, And other articles kept . 9 r f i....t- i 3 ruggisis generally. tWdon,' prutriptin, carefutlu compounded. vce on Jiam Street, opposite the Moun--We, Ebensburg, Pa. fjan24 P BIIARBBTTS DYSEUT, 7W, H. Ulan, nnrl f irr.. i ri . ' . ' h Glazing ami roper Hanging. fca? Work done on ehortnnt; a : tUon guaranteed. SIiod in hBPmnt nf Hall, Ebensburg, Pa. my9.Cm MUEL SINGLETON, Notary Pub- lie. Ehpnahnror P Off ,T. . ' . -.vb on Align street, west orFoster'i Ho- Uan24 JTAVE YOU SUBSCRIBED FOR EBENSBURG, PA., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1867. After. After the show er, the tranquil snn ; After the snow, the emerald leaves Silver etars when the day is done ; After the harvest, the golden sheaves. After the clouds, the violet sky ; After the tempest, the lull of waves ; Quiet woods when the winds go by;. . Afier the battle, peaceful graves. After the knell, the. wedding bells; After the bud, the radiant rose ; Joyful greetings from sad farewells ; After our weeping, sweet repose. After tlie burden, the blissful meed ; Afte.t the flight, the downy rest ; After tae furrow, the waking seed ; After the shadowy river restl X2LJEtSOfi3. "Kisses," says Sam Slick, "are like creation, because they are made out ol nothing, and are very pood." They aro also like sermons, requiring two beads and an application. As to their inveotion, it is well known that they began with the first courtship in the most beautiful of gardens. The old Puritan poet has told us concerning the kiss imprimis, with which the pioneer lover saluted hia blush ing bride amid the bowers of Eden " In delight Both of her beauty and submissive charms, Smiled with superior love, as Jupiter On Juno 6miles, when he impregn the clouds That shed May flowers ; and press'd her ma tron lips "With kisses pure." Some ungallant writers assert that, in the desire of the ancients to test the so briety of their wives and daughter?, who it seems were apt to make too free with the juice of the grape, notwithstanding a prohibition to the contrary, originated a practice reprobated by Socrates the phi losopher, Cato the elder, and Ambrose the saint, and lauded by lyrists and lovers from the beginning of timo. The refine ment of manners among the classic dames and damsels before mentioned was proba bly pretty much on a par with that de picted in the Beggars' Opera, where Macheath exclaims, after saluting Jecny Diver, "One may know by your kiss that your gio is excellent.'"' Kissing, which means in LTebrew sim ply adoration or touching with the mouth, was always one of tho essential parts of heathen worship, without whiih there was no possibility of either piety or virtue, and people were branded as atheists who neglected to kiss their hands or the stat uea of the gods when they entered a temple. Indeed, the feet and knees of the gods were often quite worn away by the constant touch of worshiping lipa. Among the early Christians, the kiss of peace prevailed, and was a moat Facred ceremony, observed on solemn occasions. It was called sijnaculum orationin, the soul ot prayer, and wa3 a symbol of that mutual forgiveness and reconciliation which the Church required as an essen tial condition belore any were admitted to the sacraments. Roman civilians at length took the kiss under their protection. Their code defi ned with great accuracy the nature, lim its, and conditior.a ot the rijlit of 1ci&inj. They were very strict, and only near blood relations might kiss the women ol a fam ily. Tlie kirs had all the virtue of a bond granted as a Bfal to tho ceremony of be trothl. in con-cqueuce of the violence done to the modesty of the lady by a kins. If wc are to credit Scandinavian tradi tiou, kiting was an exotic pleasure intra duced into England bj' Roweua, the beautiful Saxon. At a banquet given by the British monarch in honor of his allies, the Princes?, after pressing the brimming beaker to her lips, saluted the ustonUhed Voltigern with a pretty little kis, after the manner in vogue among the Saxons. A Greek traveler yclept Chalcondyle?, who visiicd our British ancestors tome five centuries sincn, says: "A for En glish females and children, their customs are liberal in the extreme. For instance, when a visitor calls at a friend's house, his first act is to kiss his friend's wife ; he is then a duly installed gueot. Persons meeting ia the street follow the same custom, and no one sees anything improp er in the action." Another Greek trav eler of a century later aUo advert to this osculatory custom.. lie says : "The En glish manifest much simplicity and lack of jealousy in their customs as regards females; for not only do members ot the same family and household kiss them on the lips with complimentary ratutations and enfolding of the arms round the waist, but even strangers when introduced follow the same mode, aud it is one which does not appear to them unbecoming." Another commentator on this subject is Erasmus. Writing from England to a friend, in 1499, he says : "They have a custom, too, which can never be sufficient ly commended. On your arrival you aro welcomed with kisses. On your depar ture you are sent off with kisses. If you return, the embraces are repeated. Do you receive a visit, your first entertain ment is of kisses. Do your guests depart, you distribute kisses among them. Wher ever you meet them, they greet you with a kjesj ia hort, whatever way you turn, there is nothing but kissing. . Ah, Fau? tus, if you had once tasted the tenderness, tho fragrance of these kisses, you would wish to stay in England, not for a ten years voyage, like Solon's, but as long as you lived." So widely spread was the osculatory reputation of the English, that when Car dinal Wolsey's biographer. visited a dis tinguished French nobleman at his chateau, the mistress of the mansion, upon entering the apartment with her bevy of blooming attendant damsels, thus accosted her husband's . guest : "Form much as ye be an Englishman, whoee custom it is to kiss all ladies and gentle women without offense, . and although it be not sv here in this realm, yet will I be so bold as to kiss you, and so shall my maids." Puritans, Independents, and the like, sternly reprobated the custom ot kissing. Here is what worthy John Bunyan had to say on the subject: "The common salutations of women 1 abhor; it is odious to me in whomsoever I see it. When I have seen good men salute those women that they havfa visited, and that , have visited them, 1 have made my objections against it, and when they have answered me that it was but a piece of civility, I have told them that it was not a comely sight. Some, indeed, have urged the holy kiss; but then 1 have asked them why they have made balks why they did sa lute the most handsome, and let the ill favored ones go V But notwithstanding the efforts of the inspired tinker, kissing continued in vogue under the reign of William and Mary, although we find Rustic Sprightly complaining in the Spec tator that since the unfortunate arrival in his neighborhood of a courtier who was contented with a profound bow, no young gentlewoman had been kissed, though previously he had been accustomed upon entering a room to salute the ladies all around. From the Greek anthology down to our day, thousands of lines, good, bad, and indifferent, have been written on the sub ject of this chapter. A volume of the dimensions of Webster unabridged would scarcely contain them. Shakppeare alone has above three hundred allusions to kisses .in his sonnets and dramas. Per haps the best description of kissable lips ever written are by English and Irish poets. Sir John Suckling paints to the very life the pretty, pouting mouth of a beauty, in his "Ballad on a Wedding "Her lips were red, and one Tas thin Compared to that was next her cb.in , Some bee had stung it newly." And the Irish singer hyperbolically li kens the lips of his charmer to "A dish of ripe etrawberries Bmothered in cramc." No young reader will, we suspect, be willing to plead guilty to ever having acted like foolish Robin, whose stupidity has br-en immortalized iu tho followiug half dozen liues : "Come kiss me," said Bobin. I gently said "nol For my mother forbade me to play with men so." Ashamed by my answer, he glided away, Though my looks very plainly advised liim to stay, Silly swain, not at all recollecting not he That Iiii mother ne'er said that he must not kiss me.1' How differently the same thing may be described. The great English poetess fays : 'First time he kissed me, but he only kissed The lingers of this baud wherewith I write; A nd, ever since, it grew more clear and white, Slow to world-greeting ; quick with its "OU, list !" When the angels speak. A ring of amethyst, I could not wear it plainer to my 6ight Thau that lirst kiss. The second passed in night The first, and sought the forehead ; and half missed, Falling upoo my hair. Oh, beyond meed I That was the chrism of love, which love's own crown, With sanctifying sweetness, did precede. The third upon my lips was folded down In perfect purple state ! Since when, indeed, 1 have been proud, and said, "My love, my own I" Ilcrr Hacklander, writing on the sub ject of osculation, says : "There are three kisses by which the human race are blest; the first is that which the mother presses on the new-born infant's head; the second that which the newly wedded bride be stows on ycur lips ; the third that with which love or friendship closes your eyes when your career is ended." After which rhetorical flourish, he adds : "But I, more blest than other mortals, have to boast of a fourth kiss of bliss, that of 'Father Radetsky !' " Hacklander wrote a description of the battle of Navarro, which brought him, among other distinc tion, a Jci from the old field marshal. The first lesson which the infant is taught is to kiss; it ia at once the lan guage of infancy and the currency of childhood. The little passionless face as it rests upon its mother's bosom is mould ed into smiles by a kus, and thus by love's fruit sweet echo is prodoced. Who shall tell the mystery, the deep love and ear nestness, the quiet joy, the proud hop of a mother's kiss ? and what brow or cheek, of all who have gone forth into the wide, wide world, but wears this heavenly jewel, as imperishable as the glance of a dia mond f Then there is the Jover's kiss, the first offering h& maks upon the. altar where he worships, and no maiden ever yet un locked her heart, but a kiss was the first prisoner that flew out. En passant, that was a wonderful kiss which Fatima re ceived from ber lover : Last night when some one spoke his name, Frnm my gwift blood that went and came, A'thousand little shafts of flame Were shivered in my narrow frame. Oh lore I oh fire ! Once he drew With one long kiss my whole soul through My lips as sunlight drinketli dew. "Another variety is the kiss universal. It is a charming salutation common among Indies, and occurs generally upon any en counter, whother in public or private, and is excessively violent at times after an absence of three days from each other. Tfiere is no particular form insisted upon in this off-hand inoculation: it is simply fire and fall back. ' - The electrical kiss is performed by means of the electrical etoo). Let a lady challenge a gentleman not acquainted with the experiment to give her a salute. The lady thereupon mounts the glass stool, taking hold of the chain connected with the prime conductor. The machine then being set in motion, the gentleman approaches the lady and attempts to imprint the seal of affection upon her coral lips, when a spark will fly in his face, which effectu ally deters him from his rash intentious. The kiss sentimental is too delicate to have very much character. It 13 careful where it settles as a butterfly, and is ren dered with a sigh and upturned optics. It occurs most commonly by pale moon light, in grottoes and shady retreats. A hot sun or a boiled dinner is a perfect ex tinguisher on the kiss sentimental. It would also be inappropriate in a thunder shower or upon a high road. Beautiful . and sometimes sad are the historic kisses scattered through our liter ature, and that of other lands. The Bi ble abounds with them. There was the kiss of peace which David gives to Absa lom that wayward favorite, who was for ever paying back his father's love and mercy with rebellion and violence; tho kiss with which Jacob received his blind old father's blessing, and robbed the gen erous Esau for the second time of his birthright; the kiss Mary Magdalene gives when she washes the loved feet with her tears and wipes them with her hair. Turning to secular history, there is the precious kiss which Margarida gave her troubadour lover, when "she stretched out her arms and sweetly embraced him in the love chamber," which coming to Jier husband's (Raiuiond de Roussillon) knowledge, he gave her the troubadour's heart to eat, disguised as a savory morsel. And there was Francesca's kiss, so sweet and yet so sad, so guilty and so pure, when trembling Paolo kissed her and they read no more that day. And there are the kisses that Antony wasted a world so gladly for "on a brow of E-zypt;" or rather, we suspect, on lips of Esypt; and Othello's farewell kisses, which, tender and heart-broken as they were, had no magic iu them to redeem poor Desdemo na's life. Who does not remember that grand kiss of Coriolanus "Long as my exile, 6weet as my revenge 1" which exhibits such a world of character and passion ; and sweet Romeo's dying kiss in the vault of the Capulets, and the famous, kiss of Bassanio ? Then there is the kiss Marie Stuart gav Alain Char tier, the memory of which is still fresh after three centuries have passed away. Do you remember it ? He was a poet and tho ugliest man in France. The last of his race died in Paris in November, 18G3. The Queen with her maids found him asleep one day, and bent over him and kissed his dreaming lips. "I kiss uot the roan," fhe said, "I kiss the soul that sings." Then there ia the kiss which the fresh cheek of young John Milton re ceived during his college days from the lips of the hih-born Italian beauty, and the kisses of Lawrence Sterne, concern ing which he says, "For my own part I would rather kiss the lips I love, than dance with all the graces of Greece, after bathing themselves in the springs of Par nassus. Flesh and blood for me, with an angel in the inside." What kind of a kiss was it that sweet Amy Robsart's friend Leicester placed upon the lips of Queen Bess, and which, according to a chronicle of the time, "she took right heartilie V It was certainly a bold proceeding "before folks," consider ing who the parties were. Tho kiss that Chastelard asked of Mary Beaton was a notable one. Said the gallant French man : .' ' ; ; Kiss me with some slow, heavy kiss, that plucks The heart out at the lips. WThen the Cardinal John of Lorraine was presented to the Duchess of Savoy, she gave him her hand to kiss, greatly to the indignation of the irate churchman. "How, roadaoze," exclaimed he, "am I to be treated in this manner? I kiss the queen, my mistress, and shall I not kiss you, who are only a duchess f" and with out more ado he, despite the resistance of the proud little Portugese princes.", kiss ed her thrice on the mouth, before he re leased her with an exultant laugh. The doughty Cardinal was apparently of one mind with Selden, who thought "to kiss ladies' hands after their lips as some do, is like the boys who after they eat the apple, fall to the paring." "When Charles II. was making his tri- j umphal progress through England, eertain j country ladies who were presented to him, j instead of kissing the royal hand, in their simplicity held up their pretty lips to be kisied by the king a blunder no one would more willingly excuse than the red-haired lover of pretty Nelly Uwynn. Another poet, the countryman of Char tier, hud two centuries later, the honor of being publicly kissed in the stago box by the youusr and lovely Countess de Villars ; but in VoUaire'a case, the lady gave the osculatory salute not of her own f ree will, but ia obedience to the commands of the claqueurs in the pit, mad with enthusiasm for the poot's 'Merope.'" Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire, a3 our readers will remember, gave Steel the butcher a kiss for his vote nearly a cen tury sicce, and another equally beautiful woman, Jane, Ducbes of Gordon, recruit ed her regiment in a similar manner. Duncan Mackensie, a veteran of Waterloo, died at Elgin, Scotland, Dec, 186G. He delighted iu relating how he kissed the duchess in taking the shilling from be tween her teeth to become one of her re gimeut the Gordon Highlanders, better known a3 tho Niuety-second. The old Scottish veteran ot eighty-seven has not left one behiud him to tell the same tale about kissing the blue-eyed Duchess in the market-place of Duthil. Tho late Daniel O'Connell hit upon a novel mode of securing votes for the candidates he had named at a certain election, which test, considering the constitutional tem perament of his countrymen, is said to have proved effectual. He said in refer ence to the unfortunate elector who should vote against them, "Let no man sneak to him. Let no woman salute him I" Gil bert Stuart, the portrait painter, is said to have once met a lady in one of the streets of Boston, who accosted him with, "Ah ! Mr. Stuart, I have just seen your likeness, and kissed it because it was so much like you." "And did it kiss you in return V "Why, no." "Then," said the gallant painter, "it was not like me." All admirers of Goethe will remember the passage in which poor Margaret says to her lover, "What ! you can no longer kiss 7 so short a tine away from me, my love, and already forgotten how to kiss ? Why do I feel so sad upon your neck 7 when in other times a whole heaven came over me from your words, your looks, and you kissed me as if you would smother me! Kiss me, or I will kiss you! (She embraces him.) O woe ! your lips are cold are you dumb? Where have you left yourlove ? who has robbed me of it ?" And again, seated at her spinning wheel, she utters her deep grief in a simple song. My peace is gone, My heart is sore ; 'Tis gone forever And evermore. For him doth my bosom Cry out and pine ; Oh I if I might clasp him And keep him mine ! And kiss him, kiss him, As fain would I, I'd faint on hi3 kisses Yes, faint and die! Some of our readers who are not so joung as they have been, may remember the famous Yankee kis, and kiss of the last King of England beforo he came in his estate. While in New York, the Prince called at n barber's shop to be shaved. When the operation was com pleted, he stepped up to the barber's pret ty wile, who chanced to be present, and giving her a kiss, remarked, "There, now, you can Fay you have been kissed by a member of the royal family." The bar ber, greatly incensed by what he chose to receive as an insult, seized the Prince, and helping him out of the shop with his foot, exclaimed, "There, now, you can say that you received a royal kick from au American freeman." The Land DcparlnicntofPcnu sylvania. The operations and duties connected with tho Land Department, or Surveyor General's office of Pennsylvania, one of the most important departments of the State government, arc but little under stood by the people at large. The system ot disposing of lands inau gurated by William Penn and the Pro prietary, and of necessity continued by the Commonwealth, is one surrounded by many objectional features, as the lands, instead of having been previously survey ed by the authorities, and their location definitely ascertained and afterwards sold, warrants for vacant land were granted, the surveys on which were often made years after. In many instances, for tho officers of the land department could not know what land was vacant, conflicting warrants were issued, so that in some lo calities several sets of warrants were laid upon the same land. This has produced much litigation throughout the State, and,, although titles in the older counties have been generally settled, there are and will continue to be for years to come, cases for adjustment by the Courts; and in order to establish titles, innumerable copies of applications, warrants, surveys, patents and other official papers are required from the Land Department. Under our land system the application and warrant are the inception of the litle NUMBER 4-3 and parties desiring information in regat r. to any tract of land, shouU give the nan: : of the warrantee, date of the warrant, an 7. -; county in tehuh it was located, aad then al. subsequent proceeding-, as whether sur vey ha been returned, patented or not, and the amount due the State, if not ps- ' tented, can be ascertained. Now that the real estate of the Com- -monwealth is no longer taxed, effort should be made to increase the revenues from all other proper sources, and as a very large sum is due the State on account of unpaid purchase money for lands not patented, public policy demands (lie prompt payment of these claims, and tlie comple- icvt v ituta. a ne jegisiaiure nas irom time to time within the last forty years, ' parsed stringent laws for their collection, but owing to the herculean task imposed ' on the department in getting out these, claims, nearly every account involving the closest examination of application, ' warrant, 6urvey, vouchers, blotters, day books, journals, ledgers, and maps to as certain the location of the land against, which the lien is entered, the several acts were never carried out according to their spirit and meaning. The last act on this subject, passed in 3Jay, 18G4, re quires these accounts to be made out, and liens therefor entered up in the several counties ; and it would be well for those interested to make a note of it, for Gene ral Jacob M. Campbell, of Cambria coun ty, the present Surveyor General, and who is a thorough business man and most efficient officer, military and civil, has nearly completed the calculations of tho amounts due on unpatented tracts upon which surveys have been returned. When completed and entered up as liens in the -several counties, an additional fee of fit dollars in each case will be charged . Many persons seem to labor under an er roneous impression that when the liens aro entered up they can settle them at the respective county seats. But this is not the fact ; everything relating to them must be transacted through the land depart ment the object 'in entering them up being probably to prevent alienation of property until this just debt is paid tho Commonwealth. The laws relating to this important de partment of the State government are so numerous, in many cases conflicting, and' in others their application so obscure, that the next Legislature should pass a care fully revised act, covering the necessities that have grown up, and more clearly de fining present laws. In doing this the law-making power should avail itself cf the suggestions of the Surveyor General, as it requires much experience in the de partment to make one acquainted with its uecesities and yet protect existirj rights under rcrincr laws and citterns. In the same department are many old, rare, and curioua document5 seme older than the date of the first colouy under the founder of the provinces nd many have on them tho "stamps" that formed one of our grievances against the "Moth er Country." Much to connect the past with the present is here found ; much to remind one of the hardships and perils of the brave pioneers who first made homes in our dense forests, and paved the way for the high state of prosperity and civili zation enjoyed by their descendant.". A regular set of books, consisting of day book, journal, and ledger, have been kept from the year 1719, and are found to bo in a remarkable state of preservation. These, together with large folios, in which patents have been recorded, fill the greater part of the shelving of the second floor. From these records we ascertain that among the quit rents imposed beforo tho lands were declared allodial was in one in stance that of one "red rose" annually, and that the "father of his country" was at one time the owner of land in Penn sylvania, having located a tract in West moreland county. A small circular room up stairs is nearly filled with papers of John Nicholson, Esq., at one time the owner of nearly one-seventh of this State, and also a very large land-holder in the Southern States, and yet who was always harrassed with debt and died a poor man. The development of the State by Rail roads and the consequent impetus given to cur lumber, coal, and other mineral in terests, has so greatly enhanced the value of lands, a few years ago scarcely worth the taxes assessed upon them, that tho vacant mountain lands are being rapidly taken up, and the people are having their titles perfected by obtaining patent?, and adjusting in the courts of the Common wealth contested rights. This involves the Surveyor General's office iu a heavy correspondence, and the furnishing of a great many copies of official papers. General Robert A. McCoy, late private Secretary to Governor Ourtin, is the effi cient chief clerk of this department, and to his courtesy am I indebted for tho above interesting facts. Correspondence Philadelphia Press. An aerolite fell at Gardner, Me., one evening last week. It looked like a large globo of fire, and hissed like a rocket in its descent. Upon examining the spot where it fell, a substance resembling starch was found.- . It is not probable that the investiga tion into the affairs of the Prioting Ba teau will be concluded before the first of January. r t it II