4ieratti. • ..: - ...2:44:' t,...... ,t..14 ' !-•••Jr:,1-1-q0.- ' ':.-.Je-i 444 `'. -.4 A11R1. it- , 4 ,'-,,,..,„ , CARLISLE, PA. FRIDAY, NOVIEIIII3EI3 3, IS6 S. M. PETTEINGII..I. & CO., V() 37 Park Row, New York, and ante St. Boston. are nor A ite ate for the II EItAL o , h”on el fan, and are nuthj.:rlzed to ~ alo• Ad cart in an to and 4 ahs.,lptionil for us at nor Inlrost rater • THE PEOPLE'S REPLY TO DEM OCRATIO SLANDERERS. The orators and editors in the pay of the Democracy !oust feel particularly pleip-ed with the overwhelming refutation given by the people at the lute election, to their shin dors of the party in power. it Nether or not they will learn decency from it and hereafter keep themselves within the hound of trial . and fairness . , we can only tell when we mei them in future campaign , . IVii have, ever, but little hope for their improvement --They have been receiving custigation, at the hands of the people annually for tin last five years, but. without any perceptible change in their behavior. Durinig the bat canvas, they circulated slanders that hod done seri, lee during nt least a dozen of pre ions campaigns with as much eagerness and delight if they wore hut nem, ly coined and had never been i-ctittered illiroad en any former oc,:nsiiins. They denounced thei opponents with a vigor that cwt duly L acquired ht men who constantly thou- minds for furiou , word , to frkhun those who hear them into the suppor of wen and rneastrres that calm rcasm would tench them to avoid. They nlan tiered the: , upporters of tie (4overnment with a persi,tenee that men , Only can acquiro di-cardingall com-ciem , and t leterninting t. In:eon - 11,11,h their de:ign ,,, by mean , : , tich who regard honor and truth wool, never dream of u-ing. branded ii uu•li\ (1 ,, 111i111111t 11:111:: 11 , illilllll , lll iwymid ceolleeptit , ll; thoc den nnuccl it• 1,., icy ith,lll'd Mid d,•,•1•11, Lion, mid thpy \\ it u, knit ,:. , 1111(11 ,. 1 , nll Lc Mice N.2 . ,; , r(1 Ilu 111 int,,,•-t. of society ,)r tho \Ve tiro Itql into thin ri.tr, , iwet the In Lirtl nl n ~ i nn•oh dolivor tl (luring tho cat raign by .11.11 ,Icromi:111 S. 111111 k,n1,11%, 1 11 is iii>crutal,lt. ri•n-,ni Doupwratie j.eumal,,lnee the Judge si.Cllll to 01111 k dint 111 0 r, being the in Stilt , 1 in l>n - Llcti•nt 1.. t. luni. :.nd Ito lilun r. I,,,tiihmg ii h, 1 ,111 1 ,d .1, I, It , %%111 th , •l'l. ilik• rct,t.1.1 . “1 I I/Ill'ly 11112,111 hi• 111 llit, liii zllct•i•-, upoi Ir lit, oppo'nE•lo- ,Itio• Ow ,h, ,•I,\ began. We vurin Isn't IL in , a u ' I IS .4, and :0111 IN 0,1(.1 IL 11 l'e 11.11 \ furs (li.• 4'llll, n. 111,1“.1441 li•Il it \\ .1/iii. and ed Os r. 5.,:d.• .1 , ?, the ten w wh,•lo, 11.• MEM 13y , Ll,ll th, •;11,11111,41 ilii -,•11_111, ( ~ . 11-1111111. II 1.1“• ho,t n),•1),PI I „ Ili, 111r1111.1 . % id 11 1. , 111 1 1 4111 1111 —I/1411111P OW 11 1 II io,\ ,a• 411 . 1)11 , 11:111 1 /11 111 111 11 V 1111% , 1 111 11 111 . y 1 / 1 _ 1 .111 ,11 11,11 1 11 1 . 1 11 111• p l ll past. ' l'hey caw. , int.. r, an , l el\ il t\ar anal, spoliation 21,14111 . 4 kith it- alt V. T . Illi II luel pi, ilicted it would. Nohod . .. that it tin I)enio,rat , had tuft!: ,ithei of th , ir eandldale- . th , • ..areer country would 1 ell 1 , 11 \lard ate' II Ward. 11 , * II Wit , tor ev,lit ;our years fore. It i, equallt that if 111 Aladitioni-ts, or any party, had e.ot ermil, tit thitty forts year., earlier public ruin would but: , been the con-cqii,•nee." In spite of the authotitv nam, of a cli•tin2uisllvd meat; of tc lli, II I i . e . li', - 4 , but eelleiliTin 11101,1,1de hit thew The men who dared a d V4W,W• the t freedom to all. ll' hell the lirti-ierilitili• bigots, Id whom Judge. 13lack is a fair typ, d 'maimed, shincleretl, znin nnnLl 'Mee de prived them uflife and liberty, , ttaial est in the estimation of the people. 'l' term “AltolitMnis." has lost it, terror.q. friends of liberty to all itimiltittd now boldi avow the sentiments for Mild) tl.ey vrrre persecuted in furnter dins, the pvoldt . • gladly accept their principles ar.d trust trieir b''-t intere-1, in their The ulieulpt to Imtkc them r.Ton,ibli , fur tho .1\616 that the direct treatem or Dem ocrats, aided by the criminal connivance el Judge Black and his eelleague, er the Bu chanan Admini.dratien, brought upon the country, has MOtit They have been triumphantly vindicated and their accusers .poll to oppri bhame. = THE REPUBLICAN PARTY We hear it frequently said that the Re publican party has liccomplished its mission, and it is therefore immaterial whether its organization is preserved and its ascendency maintain e d. We know of no better refuta tion of this fallacy titan the speech of,llon. HENRY WILSON, lately delivered at Troy, New York - Read this paragraph It is sometimes said the litepubliean rurty has dime its work and had bettor he resolved back to its original elements. It' it were possible, is it desirable'? Whither shall those brave and loyal old Whigs return ? Shall we send back those brave and patriotic le an Democrats to consort with theltandi g . hams, Seymours. Woods and Longs ? That vast host of intelligent young melt who have connected themselves with liberty and jus tice, when e else do they belong but just where they are, in time Republican party ? Let, trio rapidly sketch its achievements— It _came. into being eleven years ago to maimain the cause of American and uni• ersal liberty, to — re - sTs - rthe encreachments of Slavery, which claimed more than CiAtbriiiimare miles of. the public lands. It denom:ced the infamous decision of Judge Taney, that "the negro had no rights a white man wits bound to re spect." In Kansas it repelled the bloody ruffians intent on enslavement—in Congress it rebuked the Lecompton swindle. It chose for itastandard-bearer the sainted Abraham Lincoln. [Applause.] It received the Gov ,ernrnent from the hands of the corrupt Dom-, ocratic party; with its armies scattered 'and 'debauched, and its navy crippled. With three little vessels and a few skeleton regiments of Regulars to begin upon,,it raised two . hens of men; six hundred ships of war, three thousand millions of, money, to meet the -most'edlosSal rebellion the world ever. sow. Its every individual was llredtivith lev._t at liberty and a love of Union: [Cheers.] Vo Republican was ever found thing at has flag,. or qiiiooti ng 'down' its 'defenders. Of all the swarms tit rebel gray, most'of them wore , Democrats ; their lead, rs were the leaders,' of the Detime:utic Party,' and the num NOM ...elung to the party were the ones to demand a cessation of hostilities, and proclaimed the • war in behalf of the Union a failure. All graves, on fields red w;t l '. r blood, are the victims of the trefv:ll - - shonesty. and the folly of Detooewata,so called. Well, the Ilepublican Purtyjyts saved the Union. 'de feated its onetnies,"and they are no\v crawl ing up the steps el the White House I'M• pardon. It has Mth! the nation feared and respected and admired abroad us it never was before. IL Inc: , Jjolle for.Arnerica ,what. Cromwell did for liti!shind. Is thisa - record that it should be ashamed of? What has it done that d it should die? .W hat has the DOW ocrlitic pl‘rty done that it should livd ? [Cheers.] No, gentlemen. it has a bright and glorions future. It has wrought more wash to the world, and in los.: ti me, tl)thtlian tiny organization that leer existed. YOU ~.,,n to be proud of it. It will con tinue the ‘Nork. It will protect all men. of whatever race, in their lives, their labor, their homes, and their persons. It will for the widows and families of its fallen he roes. It will noctime the sacred fulttl!monetif that dolit incurred for the safety the coun try as tt religious obligation. Do you think you can tru- their men, who are in favor of taxing the national bonds, to I'l,mbint . with Rebels, who are in favor of rkpu diming- lib , whole, w eke adding their own to it Y 1; or re construct. or restore Ile. ! -, [nt,..-; but it S110111(1 inn dime on such a basis that the peace of the nation can never again be dkturbol by the sante f.auses. Indemnity for the past I‘e cannot have. ,31... e cannot revive the slain darlings 4 , l ' nlll''' ' ille-sides, nor bring back the lament ed patriots. But we can demand security Tom the future, and this, after all we have ila! , Pecl through, we ought 1.0 do. Beldam has anything of the kind been bet ter :odd. No panty that ovt-t: existed has it it" , " '.;i"riotts record than that which made the brilliant campaign of 18.)1; under Fre t otut's lead, and which, with the sainted Lincoln at it- head. achieved the glorious victories 18(1 )811:1 '6 , 1. it has stopped the Slay. , ry it has 41 , 1 i \ , •1' , (1 our country f l oat the rule of the-e wild did tine b.tl ling if its cilenlies in urchin that tli y might rotain theirsower; it ha- redeemed II -at the hot rot s civil war, and t a hli ha d u ',Val, un fouuduUon= too lira to aga:n by Mind of t re y-,,,, Why, that. diould it not remain intact as aft .uvrinii.•tii.,n, notottlvremain intact, but tititrt to v. iold the .de,tinie- of the IZepuldic For hat party it be dis plm•ed I Carl a arts one do More ? Are loiy existims now that will -cry , our int.a ISIII ? Wlll thr fb 11),wrat i.• par •! It tlt, !fl irts (It' the 1'0 , 111.11i,i1. It .1,- I . a th.• , 111111 , ,rit•r or the io4til , iti , )ll thnt tf, the 10 , hellitm. It ,upplied the l: , •1” I ti un 111(11 t , iiit!t`l , 1111.1 111,11. II 11 (.:11 1 / . 111 , 1.1.111 , 1 (011 , j1 , R" "" 1 ud ith "w" zi" (1 with :u(1 r t p.tr•- t‘ t 11o• ti,•• . It ttil w• tch . 7i thOy zitutr( hy k•riHtilli I 110 , 11 , 1%;1 \V/LI to pl , k-p , lily RH 11 , .11 , .1 . ,II ti ME What the Party for the Union ha MI 11 1111- - 1 1 1 1 1 , 1,, .I 11 14,1 1 „1,111111, rt 1 1 .'111101. 11 111, 11.1.11 111. 1.11.i11,0 ill 111.•..1; /114 111 =II 01 dttra It h.. , NI —11 , 11 , • , 1 .•e C.•1 , l in 1) dn\c:irr• and it with I lit lV„11. : , (1111•• th 111,1•, „ \t% I ir2,lillll TIM.] :11Li II 1.“111.111 t th, 401 I. II I I (LI It h.t. gi-14 , 1•11 nu 1,111,1,1..1-nl,l d , incdit• loy td a pr., 1 lilit 1 I,k. lir,t tint ut i.i hi-tor . % . a uinl .11(I :•••Liblv I.lllll,ing iii-1111,.4 n g,..t,,lcurcht•\- with! Lit rink ttlIV anti II Jul- ' , Lit' otzti ri , •,l!; v. iil 1111 1 I.lw II 11A , I. V re-miic. ,- t,, tin 1•X- =NI Withmit It tr, ;,11,; lu e eieNt4 I I I:mi./11g 1,1 , .\ t., .41,1 411p:wily tvar lilt . 1 , 1 ally It VI II It I,pll Iri IC a pr. ,t1;2:.• ahrolt, II .;111' k% 11,11 111 , I i it Al =MEM I: tio• Ns,•lN't v lii Ii ha , lnilit \t ill 111(1 r , hl , • ing r r•% thitq; t a la•nta.l4lili :111Ik t•I'.•,11 I t ht• h:•th- n.c. , 2,n Itior of the I.•:2,ltlity or '!irt 111111 con,titittiottitl I iovi,iou, 1,11..11,L It 111 coltitt the th•ttt of I v.initt ..; 11 Illllllull of dollars Nyitlt- MIMEO Po,I tI. \I ATTEIts Inch 11215 lw,tl 1” , :i1:11 a ttir,, yt.t a grout ui Lily -.01:111 II) have rend ul' du 1111(l r:(111Iti it. l't•k• griph gtvc, tt fow of Ow , ro;tuldtioni we trati,l%.l. to our 1 . .. r 50110111 of such of ytir I'l'adt . ,•3 71, 111'1' 11 ,, t. \vs : Q Ito a [turning - of' letter, are put into the letter box at the punt (dike without the pay ment of pi,..tage. In bottle iiiht.•tiee, the ,tainp from a ,taiiiped envelope. hat rat oil' and at 'molted to the, eolninon en• which it t•ontra.y to law. Per , ons should be ell Vl4lll vi ng all letter, lire paid with at hqe-t one three rant po,tage stamp, or inclosed with a tit roe eetitstampeci envelope : othenvi,.., letter, will hat sent to the Ihead Letter tHile,, and from there VO tUNICI to OIL! writer. Sbunps out from a stamped envelope and reattached to a letter. are unitiwful, and any pursuit Collr/LA:iid of this misdenuauure is UMW.' 10 a tine of not 10-s titan fifty dollars. Peistins senilit‘k money to places where money order othees arc established will do well to send it by money order. by which n o loss can occur, the money hying paid to the Postmaster, who is4ovs his order to the Post master at the place to which the 'money is remitted, and it will there be paid to the tOrsoll. Rates OP comibisMon charged for money orders are as follows: On orders not exceßlidg 7-Xll5 Over $lO and nut exceeding $2O, 1 Over $2 ) and not exceeding $3O,- 20e. -No money is received Joe orders except coin, United States notes and notes of the National Banks, and orders cannot lie paid in any other currency. Tut ATLA:mc MoNTuLY; for November, is a bplendid numb, r, with a 'noble table of contents. It, has more talent employed upon it jthan nily Magazine in America. and is fully up tb'the 'standard of the best leading British periodicals. Its political articles are thoroughly loyal, progressive and devoted to the came of human rights. Its sticoess, we are glad to learn - , is commensurate.with its rare . deserts. / In: the December aumher will appear the firaCciiiiPt4s of a new novel by CII4.pi t ES"P,EAD.t . , entitled ." Jealousy," to be • coati hu'ed ' thikigh: the v ear . lBlll3.L Terms $4 a year, or 85 centaur Ticknor Fiplds„l'Oliehers, 130§tun., " W - ergtii and Le tional Debt: James Fair, the calculating prodigy," has made the following calculation of the, wikight and mensurd':rof the national dolk taking ni , i!'preinit:a that , its aiMotMt in round numbers. four thousand millions drs : A siler dollar melisittles lk inches in a 1..; ameter. Hence 8 dollars . , laid side by side, wake 1 foot, 21 one yard and 7 1.21 r an Eng lish mile. The circumference of t r glob is 51.00) miles, and therefore $912.e.8.10„0 tab] in one line would girdle it. But even this enormous sum; twins loss than a quarter part of the debt, the whole 111110Uht of t h e !alto!' would encircle it four times and over• lap by 8,64..1 miles. Now estimating the weight of a silver dollar it one 01.111 CO, of theta WOUld make a pound, and reckoning 2,0;.0. pounds to the tun, tho en tire delft would weigh 125,00 J tons, awl therefore 125 snips. of 1,1 00 tuns each, would be required to forward it. by water. Again allowing two tuns for the burthen honey tm .gg . g p (i2, , i i 0 d wagons woul be.needed to convey this monstrous mass of indebtedness in silver. Now, an (Alija:cal circle formed of these wagons alone, ranged lengthwise with their Mains, would eneircle the three cities of NCW York Alhai y and Troy. Still another interesting gunge of this huge amount : Were it possible for man to (saint, ;sum per minute,- and continuo I. work ,t , •thily without inter1111,:4011 for 11 , itch duty for I 1 days in the week, it. would cost hint 365 weeks to complete the i•ion potation by single silver dollars. Thus, it would employ 365 men more than one year, 1,380 own one month, 113,830 men oar hay of ten Mims. and 1,138.300 one of this' , hours to finish the job. NEW S IxEnru.tTE sYLrm. -- Up t.o !Sig, Ihwre had been 7,245 npplica- Lion, 1•, , r place, in this ox.colivlit. institutivn tutu ;ivory suite in the 1:111 , 11, and 1 . 1,111 E.w,pe, Amain,,, nnil the: 131•04.-1; 5.M 01 whvin w;•re opium e;it , ;;• , . There vc , •l! 39 idergyin"en. S judges, 11;7 'lawyers, 221; pliyiciall4, 2;0 intirchanis, 44;41 iiieuluinie4, 40G lam) er-, 140 p•ntlernon, and 8 5 wot»en. ()ne of the opitttn eaters. a lallyer, \vho had tilled a highly respnsi hle oiliee, in one year drank 3.:bal bottles of' :\leMuntC, preparation of opioni. In one dal he drunk twenty bottles, equal to ten fleue•and drop, landantre. l'atienl , at itri• ntl I..ss than arc wl,t(lwd.colitt,ll,•ll, and nxvliralii troiw is th:it i;ty pc.r irt. will rhdically rh, fact v,:t- itt tho recriit „ t NnPal r u, th;tt tho loon of 1.:3 t) i i,•11 tilo;•.' daughter., :ire on the li.t .d . .p r iiennts for 10111 . 64 , 1 , n to this attlutu. Thk• 1,/tinct/ rop,,ri , tlt ~11,.1 a , iistHp2;tli-11 , ..1 „tutu., Li t 11.. N , rt h. a, •11 . v; nq =IEEE •• W,. tll,ll • , 111,1 14/ I: HSI. 11 , ' , ha" Y"" "" ~ro \ I,•-1 1,1111 HIP I: \V,• , I11.1:1,1 hnt,• W:II' 11 , 1 p•I In t\ th, 1., t • ht. ••iil . I, I r II -WS 11.`(•1, , I, ..-1.111.4 11 , 111111 , 1- N'llll tutu :11111 Hi•II1 it W ! 11.•a;,•.1 ; Ih, \' ii I ill•v,r(•11,;it \ 1111 , 1 nit 11,1. irtl-t lilt b,•-t. uI I a.•, ,, trii in vari..tt , wnys 11...11' ;:t L 1... L10,1.411..11. Lit :.11 -t;.t.•.1 .1,, t:1.• 1.111 04,, 11;. 1.0:1• 1,11 "it “ttctutill tiatir rl'et (11.11 111 g 1110 1, al' :111,1 ,1110•. (1 IN :1• twt, ty.ttity, but tli-tzti-t :ilOl pfltlit,tic wlh , Lc th , .11,1i.1, 11;.‘,. 1,11 Ow r(014.11 Tilt. Haim. highly 111 thii 114.V,i'111.1.0 hi' thi• riding It 111/11t,t l).•rliri- Crat` ut Clllllb..rblll.l , •111 It t 11'10111 the CHIPCHWItiI 11111't .1111di.,111 Till'y 1 , 11 •411 t t.. 11,1VI` h trit qi by till-. that IL it) , ,dcrti :till Iwthity 111 . 0 cirri, or a I vallwr -an I. that it trill 11111(11 Or IL Its g :ko• ;tr, t.. liar .f hp •I 1 (._',,,i.p,e ht•ad 41 . 11'1112; II) , li••;”•111“11, ai II) )11.ti'V t1:11 11 , I).1,t1 • thoir chhl,ln•u Inc tirlcui to It parts s,) tri_nironithle and tillp:ttriottc Tht!eotititerroit.. r of unintitortable foreign iu.i flllllCl , ‘ f iny beta p1,t,1• C01111)11111 , 11E, 1 ,, rho ty :111,1 t,I,Zt . 1)f American •Itidie. , , it they exiwet thew to hut' their 'inn' itted extritt•t, , , - t blur Yhalun s I't ht 13Inoni ing the line,t article itt . its kind in any country, t, ohLtotittl,l,: t.vt:ry‘vot•ro. NE ,MS ITEMS — , :rite white ~ t ilphur Bpringb of Virginia arc t,, re6o,ritatv.l pupuLtr waterlog liiut r. liulr l' cutleti is being shipped by rail direct from I.t.tuidlis through Lynchburg and Wa,hington t i New lurk. • One hundred and ten tneti have gone from Nev York to Georgia to rebuild rail ---.1 tlietise similar in character to diph theria is proving faint ainor.g the horses in tentrAl New York. —On Monday evening an Italian opera was ',Clewed in Detroit for the first time in the hi,tory or the city, by ti full corps of ar ti te.;. the :ittakosch troupe enacting Ern l td. —The jailor of .Nlourot county lately ett tertatued au old prisoner who had recently L•erved out all imprisonment in the peniten tnry. the morning -the old bird withdrew with the jailor's pocket book com ortably filled with (lreenbacks. —The entire govetnincutal expenditure for the coining year will be S21;5,000,000, which, Recording present appiintin ces, will he quite covered by the income from intern I revenue alone. —While the e.s.;. enditures of the goVerm tnent will be greatly 'diminished during the coining yea? in nhuost every Department the expenses of the Pension Bureau of the Intertbr Department will be, increased from $5,000i000 Ao-$8,000,000-av-erthusoor—th-e presertVyear, which will be abort $5,000,- 000. —A party ut Italians, resident in Ne.w . York had an inrview with the President mi -Mon d ,y, fur the purpose of up tai 1. lag executive clemency for Jetferspn Davis. - They were charged with the delivery of a petition from' the citizens of Italy. —The parties ehargeti with attempting to' 'abdt et George N. Sunders have hied another .trial at .Siontreal, resulting in a second di.- agrmment, •: —The Jackson (Miss.)' News, of PetOber 10, 'announces the death o Col. UreenWood Leffure : the last chief`_sof the Clioctaw tu diiues., It was nniihly by his, influence dia!: the bet portion of the State of Mississippi was ceded by the treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek to:the United,§tates. ; • very light. vote, wits, poliod.ip on the 10th iust:, the day for election of tittle, glass to the • State Coneption. T suc cessful . candidutes are mostly of a strong tfliton'enicracter, and indorse the policy in diCatet lir-Govenor Marvin. 44 . . r • • ~AI army officer in , writing td a'.'friend in Witshingtoni.,:reinarki that many eases liavecome‘nntler,his observation in . ..which -the freedmen - iii,Ant State' were •-novalloiveci to testify in corn^s, notwith standing the prptintmition of Gov. Simi-key, directing that theiC testimony shall be receic ci in accordance with the ordinance paseed by t he late convention. --I'he Washington Chronicle states that on the summing up accounts of the Post °nice Department tin• the f cal year endin: Jimmie 30, 1865, the excess of receipts over expenditures io found to be more than 5850, 000. ['his isthc.first. ibne in th,t history of that tleptirttnent that so favorable a financial exhibition has been ma C. —The citizensofSdn Antonio, Texas held a public meeting Aug. 16 , ISGS, for the pur po:r of inaugurnting n subscription by the people or the St .te to provide 11 home and n competency for Gen. J. B. Hood, he being so disA . bled by wounds nod injuries rer.eived during th lnto• wnr as to be mottle to pro vide snenns of living for him e f. —Ctotnsus returns I. ,f 1801 ; ..bow 12H c. 1.113- lishineets for the manufac , ore of silver-pla ted and Britannia ware within the Uni ed States in that year, with en invested capital $1,537,640, employing 2172 maleand 327 reunite hands; paying fo,r, raw material 7:18,80G; for labor, 5932,756, and yitlding ttnnnally products amounting in value to 53,676,460 —Tile retnai ns of United Suites soldier who were borriell smith nt.lhe Potomac. du ring the organization Of the army in 18(31 aro Iwing exhumed and reint,..rrea iu th. n Itton.il cemetery :it Arlington, ender th.. suporvi,ion of Cul. Ludington, Chief Quar term i ter's DepArtinent uf Wash ngton.— Thu, fin• the remains of sixty-four hare be•eu tr.tu.-tel red. —A. few days ngo, It gentleman in Peters- 13-.1 . 14 . , employed lot. the purpose I, the .kutho ilir., ra:o..ssed the city to user. tai❑ the number of houses by dui g the re,:ent Si , ge. Is Investi„.;:ition deveiopod the tit that there %vas over eight tinilred houses struck by hole shells. L - I,rge numbers of others which received rude touelle , from Iragnie, —An plo, , ion took pl.ter a few d.wys ince it) a.,Atovt. a lire had keen newly liinuled, inn housr belon,-,ing to \;r. aa , l e \Var. en .• N.. 1. The explo• lirokt•tin ‘in ] . hory thy veiling :;111,1 Id 0 10• r 11 81'f2 111 111111 pnw.lel had 'peen ',hued in the n 1.0% u fur sale keeping try tme vl 1111 fatuity, 1111,1 fur,4olltol. At • 1i.12 [line 01 110, ten were Hi Illy Slr,Higc lo S iujnn• , l wozilwy Ihr I t urit.u; tin (Id\ ri iu t', I ui,il I\ h t‘p f• oh! out 11l ht‘or of nt.gi4, ,nll . l,lge. in .)r,lvr to gel ahead tkr tilt. It puldie,n, is l . t••', r thr c, , •oreni dill to :1 SI.LI eillellt i 4110 th, -Him! [its •haul id . Chi the :uuii• 111 . 1'it,1111 1 8 61. lion• 111,111111z5) morc Ilkiu 12 miliitooi Act lu tar in 18.;5, ,E1,1111(hlioti : 1,1411,1, , to Choi., .E. 1.000.000.-1- l a n nillrl' , 1,1111j1,0;h1111 pi.Lk lIIV ximrt, puar. bettli :14“1/ v(ilial hit of 1.1,1 w.• .1,11.1111 CL, LIII• 1,6./11 ill II Ply 1)1' Lunty hem) cif (),) ,) and I r•c , .). (I)v,rlaild A1“:1 Cotop,in).) thrt•t• thy.; and svvc,itoeil huts Iron) S.)11 Ft,ti) S. - Fll 111,1,1. IL ~n', Ibis is the 111,10S1 11'11. l'Vt•F 111111 e from tile ttr - ttlt anti u'll•r Itkoly to h,• be;tit.il by stageliit.; any \vilvre —'l'he rt pair, or b , •twveil l'ort.rilmr4. Vt. .trid 6. U.. bare been aml tile railway rouie r...(vel is 111.11 V oi(uu through from tio. l'ffluk(r L. tilt . 1 Lltur Ctly. it 11'rIdou ugtuu, N. (2 , : Ito( I lurrucc, S. C., ll.'n •-1 I) g ~tEi rc,t 11,k1 iruni NewVt.ik Irp sit•Ail)e;s dacct,or IQ rail NIA \Vii,liukk!toli Frclicrick-hilrg,lll,l From thpre is a rt•gtil.tr litre of iittiatners and trum the I fitter place Ai4 Linn be reached by rail II r cer steamer,. The roads from .111gusta. via At lanta am! \Vest Point to Mniiii4otnery, .\ la bium'. are now also in operation. —The Georgia State C onveotion it , sent bled at .lilledgeville and organized on the 24th. Provisional Govenor Johnson called the member.; to order, and made it few re m irks. Mr. Herschel' V. Johnson. who was a candidate for Vice President on the ticket with Stephen A. Uou4las, iu 140, was ch sen President. Subsequently a message was received from Govenor Johnson in whiclr he depicted the per fectly exhausted condi tion of the State finance.s,and announced the entir • State de' - ‘t al over twenty millions.— That portion of the indebtedness contracted before the war, he said was honorable, nod mitt i c .lischarged, but t incurred to aid the rebellion must be ignored. •''l'Le rebel, c::rrency and the rebel cabse, - lie remarked •'flourished together in lir., and must be buried to ether in one grove.'• —The state of Mississippi has already, under the pressure of the'tesult of the war, bY her own solemn net, abobshed slavery._ It would be hypocritical rituditoprotititide to attempt to : el.:made the world that site has done so willingly. It is due, however, to her honor to show by her future course that she has done an in good fait ~ and that slaver, shall never again exist within her borders, under whatever name or gui-e it may he at-: tempted. Tho sudden emancipation other slaves has devolved upon her the ,highest responsibilities and duties. Several hundred thousand of the norro race, unfitted for po litical equality with tiles-m:ll4e race, hiive been turned loose upon society, and is the guardianship she muy_assunitt_uver this.raco, she must deal, justly with them, and protect th op qalt i r_rigitt.Lut pursct.u.l3d . pr. T-4, erty. —One:of the greatest engineering, scien tific and mechanical teats in the counter now being performed at Cornwall; iu Leba llOn county. It is no less than the building of a spiral railway around and to the top of the great Iron ore mountain. It starts from the level of the Olornwall. railroad, fled re volve,. around the mountain, at sonic places over tre-eel Work,'Lit others over high em bankments, mid again 'et" others through ponderous cuts in the Pohl • bodies of Iran ore, until, it reaches the .very_to . p of the inonottain.._A feat part of the waYls comr pletedot greeter port is ready , for the wirile. the rest is .progressing actively. A. poWerfUl 'locomotive has been obtained to . do tbe work of moving the tr ins, which is alrendfiat'' COrmiall ready 'for Work.' The 'spiral road; when completed, will be over two miles in lengili,,and.4 of which cannot be found in. the AYOri . A c,“ c , ptuor•nt of the ny 01 he I.h.rnot-rd. tO. 1i- The TolegrAph. a the L u sh PERSONAL —Tho Hon. Caleb Cushing, leaves for Eu rope on the Ist proximo, on en important goiNrnment mission. • tS V i,:rarwell. chit igilq With tbeini? , doWnf - his mistress, Harriet Wells, in ,Wits.ll- wag arrested in New York on Thuil, duy evening. —Harry Kelly, the elnuopion oarsman of Englnd, Ithqnecepted I he (Thal lenge or.J ernes 111101 mill. of Pi tt•burg. for a rowing. match next spring; the slakes tq be $25 0 a side. . . &tighter 't i tr - Charles 4 Colesworth aged seventy, is receiving rations at Charleston. There are fifteen thousand person, in the city who, like her, are draw in their daily ?mpplies of rice f'Fittn the Fed eral authorities. —General A liner Dnu led ay, of Fort Sum - ter, has been brevetted brigadier general in the regular army for gallant and meritorionii conduct (luring the war, to date from Mat eh 13, 1865. —The delegates to the Alabama Conven tion have memorialized tint President to or der a speedy trial of Clement C. Clay, of their State, who was ()pea tint reputed rebel agents in Canada during the war, and who WIN suspected of implication in the plot, which resulted in the tet-assination Presi dent Lincoln. —Miss Ifnrris, whose trial ith-orbecl so much of the public interest to Washington is now making ail houor•ablu livin g in it millinery eiltablishment on Broad sa , tit, Richmond, tinder tin it,suined nitine -.Millage L. 13iiiiham, an ex-t-loverniir of carormit, was amon g thiii-e pardoned by the President on 11'edni•sduv. 13onliam WaS a GVllUrill thou rate) army, and was at one mini at ntrmb•r ,11 . the U. S. L10tt., , ,, or RepresenCitives trom his State. Ile also r,-presented South Carolina in the rebid Con gress. —(4eneria W. S. Liancoek, United States Army, is now ahAerit on leave on a visit to St. Lnuis. tvliere his iamily have been tem porarily residing until the Suceeed tal in the procurement of a suitalde dwelling in Baltimore. This he ha: at. last