frill •VsiAkA.,, erotic litter. ,MIR. PA., JANUARY, 9, 1864. aw•aat VHFILABOIII IT tilt Plans Is vas Palau air ml .,, TrrTirrl'r'?•"-`, II O7IP I AI NA/Tit 111 TUE TVlttlitn. • The tendency of many. if not most mind; is to discouragement in relation to. au rational future; but the Albany Argus ~ i s arming those who do not despond. It muds our country's future greatness as she will pass through the gloom by which • the is at present darkened and emerge bright and glorious as unclouded May. The present is well adapted to alarm • the most sanguine,. but we shill emerge from our -present darkness. The people 'of this country. more intelligent and en terprising than any.that ever before lived, will pees through the present troubles and delusions and come out sound and sane. The tunnies= of the day will pass by. The folly.and the wickedness of the'policy 'punned by our rulers will become appa rent and they will be discarded. The .PrisWide+ of civil gOvernment; M vindi osted and eettiblished by our fathers . , will Jive, and the widen, which they founded, will flourish through yet unborn general , When the follies of this administration shall have reached a climax, and the de lusion which has veiled and defended Meat shall have passed away, the people will turn to the Democratic party for aid. 'and tract to its conservative hosts the de fesice of civil liberty and personal rights. Nothing but premature suicide on the part of the Democracy can prevent such a result.: That party has only to adhere ta.'l4 time-honored principle, maintain its, traditional devotion to the country, and be prepared to receive power, and a betrayed and deluded peoplo,will in•due _ time commit to it the destiny of the na- P - lion. Let the Democracy have faith in the fatigue, believe in its -destiny, confide Isslthe good.sense of the /tined= pea pleoend bide its time. It must have the • plitigtuogi and the self-relianeo to wait for, events. And it, will not have to wait Jong, for Ilu3y travel fast iu revolutionary times. • STA'rk 141Stil T 1111.14 The. State Legislature met at Harris bttrg, in pursuance of the Conatitntion, on Tuesday, the sth inst., at norm. The lower Howse staving a majority of Repub iicauft, MIA immedildely organized by the election of Henry C. Johnson, of Craw ford county, as Speaktir. The Demeerats supported Cyrus L. Pershing, of Cambric, an_ old member, and, ono of the ablest. • , .Laentlemen in the State. All the other -officers of the HO*, as a matter of course, belong 'to the Republican party. In the Senate there is a tie, owing to the `absence of Major White, of Indiana, who is s prisoner at Richmond. A number of balloting' have been had, without euc• odes, and it seems probable that a consid• arable delay will takei place in the organ.: fallen. The Democrats entiport• Heisted Clymer, of Berke, mid the Republicans John P. Penney, of Allegheny. Owing to the delay in orsinising the Senate, Gov. Cuitin had not Sent in his Annual liesiage up• to the hete at which we went to preil. • _ The New Coasalptlaa During the ream Senator Wilson has drawn up amendments to the _Conscrip - don bill, Which are nridesslood to embody the views of the government officials on _ the auhject. These amendments, in brief, strike out the second ;section of the pre sent law. which allows exemptions to only Nona of aidows,l fathers or mother less children, &o. In !fact, under the new . . no one is exemptbut judges of Fed era and State courti. All male persona . from twenty to tort Y-live years of age, with the exception of judges, are liable to the draft. No subistitutes are allowed. A drafted min must go or pay three hun dnikdollars. In thus lattei respect the nhaiiiench law is followed. It is very -,p .le that this bill will pass. Bacarrany Caul has appointed T. C. Gallica, of Brooklyn, as a disbursing agent of the Treasury Department in the Week This is the; same person who, fiecieci Democra t, ; was "loaned" $1,200 by the New York .Itepublican State•Cen trst committee, and consented to become the nominee of the party for speaker of Amentbly. Henan for tho Assembly this Wand was supported by liorace Greeley, but ao objectionable was he deemed by both Democrats and Republicans that he recelied only 224 votes out of 5,500 which were cast. If this is the sort of a man Secretary Chase delights to honor, it is no wonder the publio debt runs up so enor mously. Callioot will make an admirable "disbursing" agent. • ii.ceteuines Rawanr.—On account of the eaormous amount of work to be pre vkaisly done, General MeMilan's report cannot be issued for several weeks yet, 113 there. are to be twenty maps engraved for t. .' • The Administration, says the o,ltier, net* a great deal of sympathy in', the • aennution of this arduous job of getting net McClellan's report. The labor and . ierpiewity and embarrassment are con ,stantly magnified by tho radical. press.— New York publisher would have it. ' /out in a week. *. 1 . • • mums OP AMAIR-1115/11* swousts. AMMON> Hughes, t 4( New York • this most distinguished mime of " the tkitholle Church in Ameries,\ breathed hip - bat on Sunday evening at the advanced age of 66 years. He was born In the North of Ireland in 1798, and came to ' this country in 1817. In his death a great and-truly-patriotiC man Is lost to the na-__ 1 ,Sion; tad a divine, or illustrious piety, seal and talents to the church. PATIIIXT -OP BOIISTIZII.--T6ere is _but • little dobbt that, action will be taken by , which the time -fixed for the , expiration of poymetit of bounties; will be extended to•the lot of February. And probably lon ger. "Tbo Republican limier* iriiiinxious _ Nereid a draft, not because they awe for the Mares or =Aired of the people. but solely on aeoountol the political infiu • .IMea II wig-bine. Aioutheak is anticipated in Th ings. _ . ;74 whore a revolutionary manifesto has plecanhal, in the principal 'fawns. K. $b waa believed to be at the head of the 'movement; _ rsis COMIIVIATION WVND. The ocitiatrrutstion fund, derived from the late' draft, in amount upwards of $12;000,000, has already bean expended by the War Department, Aim:keg. account, rendered. It is suppesotthatit has beei used to facilitate recilitiiAng, by, the pay= ment of bounties, preinigenn, &o z. On this supposition Congress •frested when, remit. ly, the bill appropriating twenty millions for the same. purpose was passed at the urgent request of . the Secretary of War. But. will the people teat satisfied on any Such flimsy ground,? They..have anainte rest tartlet large fund, wrung from the toil of their hands and the sweat of their faces, and mo mere conjecture on the part of Congress that it has been legally and properly expended ought to prevent them from. demanding of their representatives a searching investigation. •Any attempt tp stifle inquiry will be eqnsidered an avowal of guilt, and the public judgment will add $12,000,000- more to the hundreds of millions which this administration has squandered amot_ig its corrupt favorites, or stolen and appropriated to their own benefit. It is instructive to read thealel-ate upon the $20,000,000 bill while undereensider atien in Committee of the Whole on the State of the Union. General Garfield— who has left the field temporarily to serve the Abolition cause in Congress—in the course of remarks intended to throw light, upon the subject, said he was irt dined to believe that the money already re ceived fOr commutation . has been paid out for the volunteering service ; he was not oat that it was so, bor would tie un dertake to decide whether the money has' been 'properly or kgally paid.. These are the remarks of a political partizan of the administration, a member of the Military Commit*, and • tiey'sbow the loovi way in which transactions involving The ex pehditure:of Millions of money are con ducted by the men in power. We have not room at. present for the whole debate —which we shall sometime endeavor to publish—and close with an extract from the remarks of Mr. Brooks, a representa tive from New York city. Replying to General Schenck and others, who inti mated that the intention of DemOcrats was to throw obstacles in the way of the hill, Mr. Brooks said : "If I winter to oppose the gentlemen on the other side 6 . 1 the House, and to 'break driwn their partY; I would give them full length in all of their appropri ations ; I would pour forth upon them millions upon millions, until commerce wan FO expanded that their Treasury notes would not berworth as much a 9 the assignats of Franco, or the Continental notes of the old Revolution. .* * * Here are $10,000,000 afloat, pronounced so to be by the Secretary of War. The amount known to be received an commu tation money is $12,000,000, and perhaps going on to fifteen or twenty milli ms. Where in it? Who. knows? Who can tell? In whose pocket is it? Who bai appropriated it? What representative of the . people 'has voted to appropriate it ? Where are those twelve or fifteen million dollars? I have not only a right to know, but every gentleman on the other side of the House bat a right to know where this money is.. • * * * I desire to know, and I mean to know, if- the' rules and orders of this House will permit it, where every dollar of the publio money is going." This is the right spirit, , and we trust that not only Mr. Brooks, but the people at large, notwithstanding the secrecy in which the administration seeks to cover up its frauds and corruptions, will be enabled, before long, to ferret them all out, and ascertain ""where every dollar of the public money" has gone. 'ME LIVE OF THE CONSTITUTION. "The Union line only In the Constitution."—Thus. As this sentiment has been-the key-note of all the utterances of the World since it assumed to speak for the Democratic party it must be difficult for the readers of the The to determine whether that journal has become Copperhead or whethei the World has never been disloyal, as it has so frequently and Wifely charged. The Eepublican theory of a Constitution recalls the answer of the English bishop to an 'se t tlers, seeker of religious truths: "Pray, my lord, ie it not difficult to trace the exact line between orthodoxy and heterodoxy I" "Not at all, nothing can be more simple. Orthodoxy is my dory, and heterodoxy is any other man's doxY', What is the Constitution ? asks the citi zen. Whatever we wish it to be, is the answer of the Republican party. Upon all questions of doubtful constitutional rights, says the President, we divide into majorities and minorities. But what con stitutional rights aro doubtful? asks the inquirer after truth. Palpably the answer must be, whatever a pariy wishes to doubt. Thins, practically,"as the law of England lapin the conolusions of the judges, the Coistitution lies in the will of the xtusjor ity. In other words, a written constitu tion is no constitution at all. This mon strous fallacy is ruling these United States at this moment, as it haii ruled them for nearly three years, and the people seem incapable of being awakened to the inev itable results of its continued rule.. Every now and then, a a sick sleeper opens his eyes for a moment and then relapses into his feverish slumber, some Republican pa per, leaving the beaten way of vitupera tion, attempts argument, and for a mo ment is alive to the great blessing it had once, and has rejected ; but it dares not pursue its own train of thought to a oon elusion, and abruptly turns off with an allusion to war powers which supercede all rights of all sorts. A =Limey be a very good man, and very sincere, self-sacrificing patriot, and a very bad reaoner. The British statesmen who undertook to tax the colonies believed; In the right to tax, in the expediency- if taxing, in the justice of taxation. They meant well for England, but they saddled her with a debt of four hundred millions of dollars; they sundered the colonies from her and awed great suffering and , loft of life. Their motives were pure, but their logic was bad, and political COMM. aisles always suffer' more from the atupidi .ly of goed-nse4 thzurfrom the wickedness of bad men. The reason is clear. Wick edness is soon seen and guarded again's*. ; I but stupidity,like's malarious atmosphere, potions goodness. itself. The fallacy which lies in the principle of the Republican party was 'not only dangerous In the beginning, is dangerous' now, but mast bo dangerous in All 'time. It is far more fatal than the principle of .just EIS . an absolute enacting power is far more hoitile to liberty than an absolute veto power. The path to peace liaS been dititinct and clear from the beginning of this war, but . it cannot be trod by thejlepublican party. Into it a R.spablican cannot enter. He may attain it as the Romans (Ad, "makes, solifu# and call it peacie,7, but in no other mannOe. So long as that Party insist up on not merely adthinistering the • govern ment,_but.upon determining the rights-of another section, so long inu..t.war go on to the - subjugation of flip one combatant or the exhaustion of both.l It cannot be avoided nor averted . -the dreams of peace which men havet : so chor4heil, hop ing against hope, for mouth after month", will vanish as do other] visions. From the three years past questions -present them selves to the people of the United States • . winch wilt be answered. and cannot be dodged. Will you have'a government la which minorities havono rights; or one in which they have ? If you prefer the tatter, how will you secure these rights ?—N. F. Work!. • Tag Ilarrisburg correspondent of the Chambersburg Iteposilory, writing under date of Deo. 28, perpetrates the following ingenious specimen of: sarcasm : 'Gov. Curtin wont Ito New' York lest week . to remain some days under the care of his surgeon. Ho I was much broken.. doWil by the late exluipsting tut brilliant con test, and he needs medical care - and repose before lie enters upon the incisscint labors 111-.. cident to the session cif the Legislature t I Ile is not in a condition of health that should necessarily create alarm ; but he sadly needs rest! ! ! " The italics and exel l ainations, it i=l pro per to say, pre ours. J Tux Tribune complains that the personal pronoun "I" occurrelsonteurh4 too ,often in a portion of General McClel bin's report, which has recontly bcjen pabliShr.4. The Boston Oruri,x • ha 6 [icon e.uri,tus enough to count the "I's" in' the 41neutnent crit icised, and to compare it with a speech delivered by Mr-: llor.iee (freely at Cooper InAtitute lately. It fihds tqat Mr. Greely uses "I" fifteen titac,i4 in sixty-lour lines, while General McClellan uses it, only elev en times in fifty seven lines. ;This, how ever, lan small husine's, Mr. 'Greely had hotter mind his P'a and • TIM severe -cold weather al the com mencement •nf the . I rtinears to have extended .over the whale country bordering nil the Rninhcrt I shore of •the Lakes, and nt mmt : plners was nt tendei by a considerable ran' of ,noty. In Mil. *ankh., the t liernifirn (ger on the . Ist stood at . :it tlttiiee, t.low zorlt. T HE e ,iii or o r our 11.1 , publipui euteittpor:triei Pays, '•I! there iv anytiiitt4 - meaner than Liolfoenism. wo stould Ilke to ewe atlii Tlu ed itor will "sce it" by lgoking 111 his,glitaii. CORRESPONDENCIS. -- fRn lonto cont;ibutions t i this department of the 01, server - front perrn4 of LTRIll" ithfult. of as, political or iitharwise,—lt beitrg , underatood, of rourso, that tho, F.:litror is In no way 14 be held responsible for the views orstAtements of his correspondent*. All art - tries, to smut, ingert inn, mast be accompanied by the real name of the author.] The Lecture of "Eilmoud Kirke." Written for the Erie Observer.] ' - . Abolition fanaticisni has many different. and remarkable phases. Without recap itulating the minor phenomena, wo may briefly name the Hypocritical, the Jaco binical, the Progressive and the gharissu cal. The admirers of psycologiftTpagme. mena have had an opportunity-of,wfiaes sing. the Pharisaical phase of this singular and alarming lunacy,' and the subject vvho, was employed on 'Tuesday evening, to give 'an 'exemplication of it in public, performed his duty in a manner hard to he excelled.. i The Pharisaic idee,i "Stand back; I am holier than thou," was personified in the" shape of 'a person who calls himself "Ed mond Kirke," and who. has added to the .valuable stock of Abc;lition literature one or two books in which the most egregious and palpable falsehoods are: told with a degree of unblushing impudence un. ecpialed before even by Abolition falsifiers. The book "Among the Pines" is a collec tion of the most absurd, monstrous and improbable stories to be found outside of those blood and thunder novels in which the characters in succession' shoot, stab and poison each other off the stage in total disregard of common probabilities, as well a; of morals.. As a, literary pro duction it is silly trash. As a pretended re lation of incidents ofi Southern life and of Southern manners,:it is entitled to as much credit as Gulliver's Travels or Mun thausen's Tales. Iv - His-lecture is an abridgment and re hash of his book, and 'both stamp him as one of those adventurers who having in time of peace partaken of Southern hos pitality, and filled his pockets with South ern gold, prostituted his - pen and his tongue to the higher bid of Abolitionism, and taking advantago of the excitement of-the public mind at the North forthwith •launched books and lectures upon the tide 'oft fanaticism. ,We should judge from the spirit of truckling subserviency that he displays, that Should Mr. Kirke's native Now England conclude during his lifetime to whip Pennsylvania into sub jection to her "moral ideas," this shallow scribbler might be expected to be - heard from in a book—perhaps "Among the Hemlocks," in which he would expatiate with his usual truth upon the - barbarism and ignorance of -the people of this State, and land to fhe skies? the superior holi ness and virtue of Nev; England. Mr. Kirke evidently; made a nice esti mate Of Abolition intelligence, or he would not have dared to stand up with brazen face and attempt to impose upon his' audience with such dis gusting false hoods. i . Such a class of persons as he calls the . "mean whites" exist neither in.the South: ern States nor in any other part of the civilized world. • In hii remarks upon the remaining classes, ho was, strange to say, candid enough to admit that they were the "rough material" for good citizens,. but they needed " civilizing" upon the New England plan. They needed "loyal" newspapers among them like the Nash ville Union, a most miserable Abolition sheet that does net circulate outside the - city of Nashville and the Federal armies. They, needed "loyal" publications to •be distributed among them by "loyal" so cietiee. This nice specimen of New; England ar- - . raganee, and Pharisaiem, had better bo told that the Northern people can no longer be deceived - by. thli systematic abuse of their fellow-enlzens of the South. The country that has produced a race of statesmen and patriots that ere the pride of the whole nation—that has produced hundreds of thousandsof brave soldiers, many of whom have fought ;side by side with their Northern •eouritrymen upon honorable fields—that I have: given birth 1 to generals that are certainly, skilful, and ', developed resources within it self that are the astonishment of the world—has made a record of fame that such paltry tra ducers as this Kirke, will strife-in vain to efface. We soggeet_to, this gentleman that be take a new subject for his lecture at wine of rinse; — for instance, f' The Mean Whites of Boston and vicinity." We be lieve that the humanitarians who drastic in an'd swallowed Ids! monstrous false- hoods concerning Southern society i would 1 erect with rapturous applause n truthful account of the recent developments in the Suffolk County,Messachusetts, House of Refuge. They would; b 0 "alternalely moved topityand. , intikeitlott as ho re counted bow yokiingVpilli'fited lads were forced to • batlielis .sine ofwedity in each others pteseascik And When-- he told how a young Imams (White) was whipped with a common 'Wagoners whip until the marks vrerer.drift - upon bei—shozdders, rie think they would immediately , organize an army _to carry christian cttrilization upon the point of, the bayimetdo that be nighted city BostOn—for thin, was the le gitimate nequeneerot 7 MPt Kirke's! And it was,,,a . a.2,l;tip,as,,if he_h3dtAblt in words that lie wished' the be nighted South, which he described civilized by muskets and reformed by cannon. The women rarely wear shoos and stockings this fellow asserted, therefore shoot them .or their husbands and.bro tilers t lie men use tobacco, that:fore shriet them ; they drink mean whiskey, therefore imprison !beim and steal their property-; they swear, therefore slay them ; they see proper to live in log 'Nausea, therefore burn them over their heads; they whip their; servants,•thereforc lake them away from them, put grins iii their hands end tell thein to shoot- their masters, or ho killed themselves. Oh, what Chris tianity, what Religion, what "civilise (intl.". what " progress I" • List of Traverse Jurors. Fir Court of Conamoti Peas to he h.ld !net Mon • day in 'fax , 1864. John 0 Baker, nose's Billings, Pldnene Crouch, Cha.s Lynch, Wtn V( Love, I' Ji Nor- Cross, 0 IV F Stierwin„Jobn,F Appletice, Wm 1. Catlin, It S Loomis, Timothy Butler, Ofin Chapin, Allen Janes, Jesso Trisciatt; Wm I' McCrea; Wm 1' Brown, E W Baoklin, Josiah Carter, Geo Cowden, Win Ihll , Wm Ward, Wilson Moore, Gilbert Osborn, Isaac C Thom as. Chas Billings, Robert Nesbitt, Edward Williams, Chauncey Mirble, John Beaumont, larsons Keep, Watson Porter, C 41 , Pelton; Ahuer Scott, P 1) Flowers. Edwin .IVbitiisireC 11 Allen. lAst of Grand Jurors. Ar a Court al Oyer and Terndne; 'lst !Monday •—. in February, 1 fiti4z.7 Wm S Brown, Geo lto - yee, .Jas'Orny, John Cook, Win Henry.J 'john ton, James llampso - n, J K Sirtfford, Jones, J M Jenkins, Nothnn Rathbun, Phil ander alitlor, Lrster Foot, Orval finrlbn, 10. lrinh Ilaytniver, Chat "Shaffer; L 11 1)eWolf, Geo CI ritley, Lsnal Silverthorn, Samuel \leClol -I•tnd, Townsen4 Webster, 1' Waxier, Ahner Luther. I.lst of Traverse Jurors. Richard Du , Hey, D P Ensign, JO9 lav LI Finch, • Jnn Smith, Silas E Teel, Olvincns - Ilitsick, John Ilerst,.N Clark, .4:leo A Nonh•llershey, Win DNiektiNcin, Geo FtrWon I, Sainnel E Zuck, A H BICCIN, Thotniti Elliott, Sylvester J Nash, Jared Fox, Edwin [(ltch, Win i 1 Ilulktiap„ P,rry \let;rea„ Cl.tr• Sho•rwoo4, Alex 8111)parC., Wni son, ralron Aetisr,n, .11in lienneay, John I,vtle, Calvin I: liayo.'lla - rxin Flo:fora. 11lIgh NiclV tni Henry \l tit :1,414n, Gent's' Yon. I).tn i 1. 1 110i4, Jus 1' Silverthoriy, Samuel II Wtshhurn, Win Er,ivrn, Adam ;Doi( z, (1 glins Itiett, DaniellWinelietiter, 11. L Deena., Clrirlrs Paul, J Ticknor, Zack Titoin.L4 Jr, Jai Weldon, I) U I; Juo Dunn, .Tai Palmer. • &mitres S‘1„;:a -=Chi Sheriff offer= ta sell, nt publics v.tr. , at, the 1:1111. -llousrt, on Saturday . , plan. 4otts., lho following property 'Farm of in°. S. lkivison, tp tontainial Ann , 7. neroi of land Morf or les4, and trtrio.; erected thoroon ono frame dwelling lions , ' and frump barn, out houses, shod:►, Sr.e,--Sait of Holden Church. Farm of Wm. and Itnaocll [towel'. in Ws- . terford tp., coutaitting 150 nerev, witlt - frame house and barn—at suit of Jo°. W. Campbell, Adm. of Eloazor . Allen. , Land of P.. 8. Woolley. in Greene Cp.-2 traoto,ono - 60 and one IS acme, the latter with finale , dwelling house, barn and other oat-bnildinga - -at snit. of Nailer & Warren. Tract of Isaac Frey, in McKean, 'containing about 11 acres—at ( suit of - Jared B. Morey. ! Lots and buildings of Jehn Marvin, in Wa terton' boro.—at suit. of llulbutt Thoutati, use of J. L. Cook. if the money In not pni•l immediately after the property is struck off, it. win bt Tut up again mail resold. awl the original par - chaser hehl responsible fur any loss, Law of Newspapers. 1. Subscribers irho do not give, express no tice to the contrary aro considered as wisbiag to continue their subscriptions. 2.. If subscribers order their paper discon tinued, publishers may continue to send them until arrearages aro paid. 3. If subscribers neglect or refuse to take their papers from the office to which they arti directed; they are hold responsible rintrl they have settled their bilis .and brdereditheir . paf pets discontinued. . • , . 4. If subscribers move lo'other places with omit informing the publisher. and pairs are sent to the former direction, They are renpon-, aiblo G. The Cotirta have decided that refusing to take papers from the office, or 'removing and leaving Mein 'uncalled for is ample 'evil: device of intentional fraud. C. Postmasters neglecting to Alto rnosoii: 7 , able notice papers not taken, Ipm thfir office, are liable,_to. the publisher for their subscription 7. Persons takinsfrom the post , office eds- era' numbers of e . nir papa' sent them by the. publisher, may bo considered subscribers_ 8. No postage nharged on papers within tte county. goa., The Atlantic Monthly forJanuary,lBq4, is a capital number,'as the following table of contents, with the names of the contributors, will show: Gov: John Winthrop in England, by George E. Ellis ; The Planting of the Ap ple Tree, by William Callen Bryant; Ray, by Harriet E. Prescott; House and Home Papers, by Harriet Beecher Stowe ; Three Cantos:of Dante's "Paratliie," by Henry,Wl Longfellow; External appearanCes of Glaciers, by Louis Agassiz ; Stephen Yarrow--a Christmas Miry —by the author of "Lilo in the Iron Mills;" Memorim PosituM. by James Russell Low 1; My Book, by Gail Hamilton ; The Minis er Plenipotentiary; by Oliver WentloSll Heim 5 ; The Beginning of the End, by C. C. 11 e al Well; Bevietts and ( Literary Notices. ' Tiis No: commences ;Volume XIII. - Boston i Tick nor & Piel.ds, Publishers. $3 n peat. 'psio copies fo r $5. RAVI= Ftsny.—A . person who signs hint. eelt "B. B. Gait," writes from this county. the rAffsli) Coukier the following. Will not gotio of our Edinboro friends let us hair's s little further information on the subject? Franklin, Erie Co.„,Pa., Jan. y. Tho ushering is of the year 1861, tolls me winter bowed, tin •this out of the war place, where King .40 Frost reigns withimta.riVal, both on land and in water. - Titers is a smell lake near Edlnhere, u few ninety (rota kere t covering about two hundred *ere* which froze over so suddenly, that. the fishes has not ;time to dire below, but were frozen in the ice, and the good peoplif of thw Borotigh are feasting on fresh ash.. Bush* of them hating been out froth the lee to -day.- This story may.sonnd - a little fishy, btft nerverthci: les sit Is literally true. Ifoplizgl-ci get out of th is frozen co g ; try on the fi rst 'indication of o thaw, Ire u, youra,respesstolly. Mr. Robert E. O'Brien -Me been, 4- pointed Resident Engineer: of this Divisimi of the Phil& $t Erie 11. IL. We le a pleasint, , ent7prising and talented - gezuJetnan, sttir nit who are iieviOnled ir4h hinr titled by his end -lack. t 800 Paragraphs set. /nip Lowrie, late of the Supreme beach, hap resumed the printlei of the bar in, Pittsburg. I i , 1 I. A-!,tne for* four yeir old Colt will take-plapwat Babbitt's saloon, on TuoidnY. the 14th laid. . ! ser 1115 reported that the membeis of Park church intend erecting a parsonage (Inv- ing the coming summer. .ger The name of Capt. (lilies, of (he 145th regiment, appears in a list of dismissed doers Published in' the rribtute;, but the cause girls dismissal is not given. . ,Nifr The most profitable. Position that a man ,can occupy in these days, is that Of a "War Democrat," supporting the Administra • !ion. They nearly all gee olficre or contracts. wid r tips. Curtin has aPpointed the follow- in* persons Notaries Public for this county : 8.8. Spencer, Erie; E. D. Snederlin, Union ; E. Foieman, Corry; Eugene Wright, Corry. gro"' The hat DitpateBl contains the vale dictory address of Mr. Young, who has sold the establishment to D. F. if. tynn, Esq., who has been connected.withi the paper as local editor ever "since it was started. air "Douglas Benson this city, has so-. Coptcd the Position of clOk toi Capt. Stevens, va hoard the monitor Patapsco, now. lying in front of Charleston. lle!left for the scene of iie duties on Thursday night; indr; We are pleased :to nbsorre that the Ladies' Aid Society has. taken measures to provide the poor families of the city with clothing and support.. !Pions 'what wo have !)een told, we - judge there Is Considerable Nur turing in the aommunityl - • mg. The Dunkirk Union rya the strike of `wpilditgmen In that village was "not, for higher wagc , t, hut because the Railway Com -pany.;gave employment Ito A couple -of men who did not belong to thd (workingmen's) Oar : . The Grand Unicin Ball and Oyster Semler to be given at NStioUal Hall, on Wed i2ettdity'tivisnlng text,' premiges to be . an un usuallypleasant. and largelY attended affair: The nanagers are men Who will spare no ef forts M make the enterteinteent an agreeable one flse . all Who, are present. ggrg„..Pred. H. Braggitts, Esq., has disposed of his interest in the Coitnealuville Record to Messrs. J: E. &W. Hopei:L. Mr. Bragging was a . courteous and enterprising editor, and we regret to lose him ;from the ranks. 'We extend our best wishes to the new editors in everything but polities. • ma,. We call attentieit to the time table of the Erie & Pittsburg IL IL ie another column. Trainterun regularly to lSharon, a distance of 62. maw( from this city. The road is now, under the management of B 1 N. Brown, Esq., Sulierintendent of the ;BuTolo & Erie road, one of the beat railroadlmee in the country. _ . gee' It is reported that three of the high eat engineers in the navy have reported in favor of the use of petrolettM in the place of coal for - the generation ;of steam in the navy. ' It is said that Astearner can be kept at sea, under steam, three time as long with an equal weight of oil, as compaed With coal. - stg9„, la,the State Seeate,lat Harrisburg, on tho*Lth inst., Mr. Lowry "proposed that a Committee be delegated 4,9 request Jeff. Davis to release Senator White, of Indiana county, in order to organise the Legislature, But as au amendment was substituted to make Mr. Lowry the Committee the' motion was With, drawn." • Da. During the stet* on Thursday nigh of last week, the dry 'dock of Mr. William Loomis was drifted from its moorings, and carried into shallow water. Considerable ex pease will be required to return it to its former position. Mr.. Loomis is one of oar most industrious and enterprising younimen, and deserves the encouragement of the public. iggi. Pensions, Bounties, Arrears of Pay, &eh, can be procured by the Widows, Orphans, and next of kin of those who have died in the service of the United States; also, by Soldiers and Seamen who are disabled by wounds re ceived er disease eontraeted,.upon application to G. P. Ostrenist, Licensed Military and Naval Cliim Agent. Office in the Common; Council Boom, Wright's Block, corner State and Fifth etc., (under the Dispatch office,) Erie, Pa. 7-y Nil - Thomas .1. Dunlap, of this city, has been appointed Ensign in the Navy-a posi tion ho was obliged to resign some time ago, Owing twill healtii. His! petition was signed by all the leading public 'officers of this city, and !pro strong testimony to his "loyalty," courage and mine as an ;officer. lie left for New York•on Wednesday,l, and will ba assigned duty on a seagoing vessel. We wish him. a pleasant voyage, and rapid promotion. gar. Reader, did you ;know that every col:. umn of a newspaper contains from tea to twenty thousand pieces of metal, the misplao: log of any one ofwhich would cause a blunder or typographical error t i With this curious fact before you, don't yon wonder at the gni oral accuracy of newspapers ? Knowing this to be_the tact, you will he disposed, we hope, to excuse rather than . magnify errors' of the press.—Cenncaut lirporter. lel. The Lyceum of thig• village wasyer- manently organized last Wednesday evening, under the name of the Corry City Institute, by the election of, S. Rockwood, Esq., Prost deat, .T.' E. Larkin, Sef 4 ; y and P. Colegrovo, Treasurer. • The sessiona are held on every Saturday, and on each alternate Wednesday evening. There are at Preeent twenty-two members, viz s sixteen gentlemen and five ladies. Thq subject to be discussed, next Sat urday evening is ""Resolved that Capital Pun ishment should be Abolished." The speakers selected on the affirmative are' Rockwood, Stebbini,. Wright, and Batas; on the negative, Mr. Back, Larkin, Sanders, Bowen and Os good.-.-Corry-Yetos. • ,! r eEr We call attention I to the fact that the next lecture in the course', will be delivered on Monday - evening next, by; B. F. Taylor, the printer poet of the West. Mr: Taylor's lecture labt year was adutlUedlyrhe best of the sea son, and the impression he left on the mind of the public is such se can hardly fail to give him a crowded house! His 'abject is one of the most interesting that could be selected, —"Lifb in the Anny,"--and we do not believe, from Mr. Taylor's well known character for fairness and just literary discrimination, that he will mix polities up with It in any way. gig. The Meadville Journal is, respectfully informed that neither Judge Pettis, nor say of his personal or political friends, suggested, dictated or bad anything whatever to do with the kw lines contained in the Observer, several weeks ago, referring to its denunciations of that gentleman and other officers of the Ad ministration We have nb aequaintanee with Judge Pettis, newer recoiled any other than a business letter from him; and are not aware that any of his friends have, ever spoken a word to us about his difficulty with the edi- Lori of the Jo;trttol: We have formed our im • preisions of Judge Pettis entirely from the attacks upon him in that" paper; and if the editors of the Jourial had the slightest vont, mon sense they would know that the public can see plainly the motives which induce their: violent personal assaults upon him, and glie - them due spresehAloii. • gee It is a subject of remark with \ all our eichallgos that neither Christmas nor Nea Year's was ever before celebrated Inge gaily and expensively in their respective localities. The dealers in holiday goods were especially auctaseisful ibis season, and claim t;o'have done a larger .trade than on any previouo year. No stranger wohid possibly suspect, from the extravagance which everywhere prevails, that we are in the midst of one of the Most ter rible wars that history has reaorded. Or At the regular meeting of the Ladies' Aii Society on IVedneeday afternoon of last week, a 'resolution 'was adopted tippro Print ng $6OO of- the funds- in the hands of the Trea surer for distribution among destiLato;families of soldiers in the city. A. Csmmittle con! siding of the following named indica, watt appointed for the purpose of distribui lug the money as it may, (rum - time to titn.t, ' be need ed: Mrs. I. II dira, Mrs. P. Mototlf, Mrs. Wm. A: Bruit's, Mrs. C. MoSparren, N r lrs. F. Itindernecht.—Ga:ttle. s a y- We hear it rumored ithout the street,4, that a mysterious meeting or leading Repute. lit= officials was held at the private room of Judge Scofield, in BroWn's' several days ago,, at which a programme Jur next fill's campaign was talked over and deobleir upon. t lt is commonly understoodi that the arrangement is that Judge Scofield is to go back to Congress, and Mr. Lowry to the Senate. BeL., The Warren Ledger, Democrittic, criL icises the 'educe of Rev. Dr. Porrster, re"-_ ,cently delivered in that village, with COli: siderable severity,, pronouncing it la violent Abolition production. The Mail, Rtipublican, on the contrary, warmly defends it, land says it met with the most general favor or any that. Whiten heard therb during the present ;Ma son% ipbr The Crawford Journal'says of Edmund Kirke's lecture in that place: "To those who have read 'Among the Pines,' and ()titter writ ings of the lecturer, it is needless tat say that he 111 1 a capital slaiy 61ei." Our co emporary hit the mark that time. air Our neighbor of the ette must have been in one of his wittiest moi)ds, when he wrote of the Buffalo Express, that it -one of the best conducted, most - i *eating and reliable of Union neisp,spers.' gralr;The Carriers of the-Obserr i r request us to return their thanks t& the public for their very liberal patronage on New Year's— a liberality which far exceeded either their or our expectations: fle.„ Col. C. li. Curtis, of Warren, having received-the appointment of Provos Marshal, in place of Col. 'Campbell, resigned, the office will, probably, soon he rpmoveil to Warren. air The Observer may alvNya! be foun for sale, immediately after publication, nt the news stand of Ny. May, in the Post office, and at the bookstore. of Mr. Ensign, Brown's Hotel. WAUNINO ro 13083IPIRS.—A case 11111, tried at the last session of 'the Court lield in this city, which, although it has been noticed in a local cotemporary, we deem worthy of still further notice, as a warning to that large class of every community whose especial delight appears to be in slandering and running down the oharacters of their neiOtbors. The action was one of slander, brought by John Murray against Joseph Boughton, for circulating a false and malicious' report about ;Miss Henri eUa Murray, the former's ifaughter. All the parties hail from Girard tp., and Boughton and the Hurrays are close neighbors. The former is an old man. The evidence showed that he had told a relative of Miss Murray's that she had been guilty of iMproper conduct and given birth to an illegitifnate child: The story soon reached the ears of the parents, and upon one of them calling on Boughton he is alleged to have repeated it in an offensive manner, adding that it "could be proved by half-a-dozen witnesses." troughtOn in defence claimed that ho did not originate the report, and only reiterated what had been told him by othert. Mr. Woodruffcondleted the case for plaintiff and Mr . Walker for defendant,— The Jury were oat less than an hour, when they returnect a verdict of one iltousand dol lars against Boughton." In connection with this case, wo chn make no better comments than the remarks of an exchange : As ITEM V/111CD IVEET MAN ..DOULD READ. —We have probably all of' us met with instan ces in which a word heedlessly spoken against the reputation of a female has been magnified by MaHelms minds until the cloud has become dark enough to overshadow her whole exist ence. To those :who are acFstomed—not necessarily from bad motives, but from tho't lessness—to speak lightly of females, we rec ommend these "hints" as worthy of consider ation: " Never use a lady's name in an improper place, at an improper time, or in mixed company. . Never male assertions about her that you think are untrue, or allu sions that you feel she herself would blush to hear. When you meet with men who do not :sikenile to Make use' of a woman's name in a Saltless and unprinelpied manner, shun them, for they,are the very worst members of soci ety, lost to every' sentiment of honor—every feeling 'of ,litimanity. Many ;a good and worthy woman's character haa been forever ruined and' her heart broken by, a lie. manu factured by some villain and repeated where it - should not hive been, and in the presence of those whose little judgment could not deter them 'from circulating :the foul and bragging report. A slander ie soon propaga ted and the smallest thing derogatory to a woman's character will try on the wings of the wind, and magnify m it circul ates , until its monstrous weight crushes the }peer, uncdn scions victim`. Respect the name of woman, Tor your mothers and sisteriare women ; and as you - would have their fair names untarnished and their lives unembittered byl the blander er's biting tongue, heed'tho 11l that your own words may bring upon the mother, the sister, or the wife of some fellow creature." COLD WlATalit—the weather on the Ist and 2d days of the present month was, with. out exception, the most severely cold we have ever seen in this locality: . Om the evening before New Year's a heavy wind, arose. driving the water in the Lake with great fury to wards its lower end, and completely clearing it of ice in Trout of this city. But little-or no damage, however, was done to the vessels' in our harbor. though a great deal of mischief occurred at Buffalo and' Dunkirk. On 'the morning of New Year's the, tlieometer stood its . one put uf the oily at - 2 egreei below zero, and in another portion a 3. The cold eon' tinned to increase daring the day, and in the evening the thermometer was 3 degrees lower. So intensely piercing I was the wea ther that comparatively few People ventured upon the streets, and the city looked almost like a pines deserted. On Saturday the cold• had slightly increased, and tbo thermometer stood 5 below zero in doors, aid from 7 to 10 out ordoors, according to the ocality. Busi iota was nearly entirely suspended,p the country people wisely kept at their homes, and everybody found as raucaa they could 11 , 40, in endeavoring to keep th mselves• warm. The workmen at our office endeavored to per form their, usual duties, but, although we generally find it eel, to keep the building warm, they could only remain at their places a comparatively) brief portion of the day, the rest of the time being employed in hugging the stove to thaw out their half frozen, bodies. Saturday evening .brought with it a slight mo , lviation, awl tlv! ~, rJ r&' uatti Monday foruuor,,, • et 18 above zero, a eilll4 , The oldest inirvhitant oc:t more thar..one ye ir bitter iu - tifte genttlem tn try] it, within the fast P 1 ye uy her the ex tol .1 g woe 20 elegreea before z••r on the eetne t 1 ty, it w , sympathize until' him i!I ia,• never wi , .per w 02r route avid, )•.•i. vc; .1 wo haVa ju , l p.1,.i.! , 1 I Courts.—Tiu, , Ileterding 16.5 p hu-ines:4 intere4%- •it "city." The plle,aanii e• ;7'2;1 It his 4., olifForeitt • c?lnprising 4 1tu,;e1.4. 1 1. L1,1,1:1 f , istoicm, 1 printing otlice, ,til of which is among dry goods, grocery; nhoc and 11%Nw l beside*.ntany others. " The miesse , l va!ur t $77,104, of personal proper . ; pition and manual labor $7,167 t 2tni. These tire the prozent fa,:• Negs," about. our 'busitiezi'. our friends not t) reuvernlJ:o. for any length of Gino, for tLy correct for over six mon.b4t population and business are two years and a-half. was but ono house in Corry." Te.]. further, "we expect soon Coal t• ~, in the county will equal our, ,o elements of proverity," an eN, 'which we fear that our friends ol belloomed tq dis►ppointrnent. ImroaTANT pisciosvitc.—The Mallory, rebel SeCretaiy of the Nav full confirmation of the statements pfiblished concerning the plot to rebel prisoners ou Johnson's Island. twig reports as follows : "During the months of July au sent twenty-seven commissionci forty trustworthy petty officers t Province's, with orders to organa. lion and cooperate; with army attempt to release .the Confedern. confined on Johnson's 1.11n , 1, i-: 1. From ttme to time J learned that :a ments made were such 11.4 to en tr complete success. A large amwm: had been expended, and just naval effmers were about to dition the English authoritie4 c. Lion to tho enemy and thu-; execution of one of the be , t tehri prises of the present war." - "CIVIL" failOWl , net. down for trial at. the Court r this city, commencirl; on the ! I , the month J. B. Caldwell, et ul, vs .I;:eagly. Commerce vs 'Marvin; Syne Same; A. T. Marsh vs. W. .1 vs Joseph Sill: Boa - r,iman v- 1,11!) Miller; J. Fritts v: A. Moore; 1-1 Silaißemis; L. .1. Griffin vs .1 Linastey vs V. Stein; Use et I ).ivcr Wing; Jacobi vs Vette; Aldermy, Jostlen, et ai; J. B. Bull & co. v, 11. Jolinson; McConnell S. Wife v itiite; Use of Gregory vs Kelley; L. Perry; G. Jameston vs .las. Sill: U.! vs Bennett; E. Gore vs J. Fieliinger: vs Suerken, et al; Isaac lie=s vs T4c McClure v PA. Central It. E. vs Fool; Caughey vs Ilall. No. EvaiTto) —The list:ef•thc nutulJer of this county, on the pre. of the sth trty of Erie, East Ward, Erie, Wog si Gael:111 tp Girard do 17 Fairview do Franklin do 4 Millereck dor, Union d 0:......... ..:. Waterford do North East do Total FROZE TO OSATII.—T-tiro bre.akinen Creek road, says the Meadville frozen to death on Friday night remained at their pos.t of duty ttut: 'fished. One of the men fell froze train. The other was found in a s Lure on the car, leaning on 4 titx 7 ,k. the train stopped at Corry; nn I few minutes after being carried ticin house. We hare not I eara , : of either of the unfortunate men. —The following remark by .I`o coin,' in his reply to the Chicag' who asked him to abolish slavery %; ation, reads qneerlyat the pres:::,t . "You remember the slave wh meter : "If I shoat call -a :11,,! leg : how many legs wail , ' "Five." "Na, only four, - I,r tail a leg would not mai,. s: N , men, if I say to the Ilve Vail they would be no more free il, r ''' -- ,•t;Opperlicadp The word `Copperhea , .l, ~ ,,s t the leading Republican r' York, and the imputation of .1 are bandied quite too freely. some people have of showtn,.. toward the men who don't ex .. with them upon some of ti: , touching slavery, or upon •••'t features touching President licy, It is a bait spirit, ati,l discountbnanced by evety 111, breadth of mind enowill to nn that the essential dt , tlnotio:: loyalty and disloyalty relste , to not to difference in I.o , ltion on side, until the constitution of tho k changed it will he i:nj•.)s,l: • Union men to ir• - e with rcsp„. , mode in tohteh the w,zr Men boWever devoted to COIIIII always differ about metliodi and they have a ,right to di' Pr, o will keep clear of factioni con 1. discussion is always not only but practicable. —The Confederate privateer had captured the ship Liv!ez Akyab for London, and relo receiving bonds. —We learn from Leaven of Phillips with the Indian 11:1,11 with Quantroll's force on t:lo 1 comber, near Fort Gilison, try, and gave them a gon , i • scattering them in every dirot dead. Rebels were found on tnr• —The Confederate Na%•, - cording to their own o!11 , •ili 383 commissioned &limn-, Psi cers, - and 577 seamen, or a bout' to every three men. —Gen. Burnside lin i', solicitation, withdrawn 11,- and will soon hare a coninvta , i , returnimrto tln; Detpartmont —The' rebel fore , edneet:tl . ' Jackson. 'Conn. for the :)prl - en: of a sudden attack uyon r , is estimated at 20.00 or : 2 : 0 Forrest, Roddy, and Chafru..:-• mont in progress" to t 3r. signs. =The Halifax Citizon says that a demand will he - ro English authorities by t h e Con' for the Surrender of the st ,- peake. The vessel is likely' 1.) lo ject of protrileted litigation. —An overwhelming fora".''" Jones, attucketl our forze. , iq: Va., on Sunday, eoroiming 0 ! :a men. After 'a desperate re-:o,a men surYendered, losing k i wounded, 1 gun and staall II ig2Z KZ OE fi r 11.. =I /Oil qv/ 1111111 scnt C ill. u ionnraui,b, Vit Li n