HARRISBURG LETTER Ilptitsnuno; March .80870, ` The interest in the Treasury investiga ' tioithuts 'been revived by the refusal of General Irwin to be sworn, or to make any further stateinent concerning the, operation 'of the ,Treasury during Lis vterm., At the meeting of the comthit teo_op Wednesday night, Mr Irwin ap pearedtaild stated that itt was impossi --blc for him to make monthly statements; as he had not now possession of the Treasurer's office, or of the books and papers neceSsail , for that purpose,. bUt that the accounts of his administration were in . possession of the State and•open to every ono. He also presented a writ: • ten communication addressed to the Sen ate Committee, iii - which ho denied its right or the right of any tribunal its the State to call bins as a witness and exam. toe him on any question connected with his official and personal integrity, and that he defied any ono to make any charge against him for malfeasance in office. After• several •morn questions from the. committee, Mr. Irwin again. denied ' to he further interrogated and retired ; On Friday Mr. Mumma offered a reso_ lotion qirdeting the chaiiman of the com mittee to report the facts connected with Mr. Irwin's refusal, to the Senate. This • resolution gave rise to a very heated dki cussion, principally between Senators Mumma and Billing,felt. The Lancaster Senator spoke with very .considerable temper and irritation that some of the other• Senators inqingned his motives and conduct: Altogether the debate on Fri - day morning was the liveliest that has oc curred since the question of the Legisla tive record has been disposed of. Before auy' final action ori l tihe resolution was ta ken the Senate adjourned until this morning. • . This may be considered as practically . theOnd of the Treasury investigation, except what debates and discussions•may spring out of it. It isqloubtful . whethet: the Senate will compel Mr. Irwin's at tendance by process, and, of course, if he is not examined his predecessois will not ' be. There is a manifest propriety, in every respect, in closing this show busi rmss at once. As stated in a-former let ter, it develops every thing, except, the real point at issue.* In Mr. Mackey's ex amination that gentlemen made complete and satisfactorfi>tatements of the Mire_ operations of the Treasury ; the amount of money deposited with different banks ut the State, and every detail that it was posse o or inn o give. But when met with the direct question, "did you re ceive, any compensation from banks, or Mdividuals fur the use of money," he - squarely declined to answer. Everybody knew atbnce what that meant, and all. affirmative answer would not have been more convincing than was the silence of the Treasurer. General Irwin's ease is precisely similar, so far as the main issue is concerned, although his refusal to 'tes tify may give his enemies the pretext to say that something more than -mere banking with the State funds, is at LllO bottom of . his reticence. There is, bow ' ever, no reasonable probability that -- any State Treasurer has ever made ally more -serious-prostitution-of-his-oflicial-Powers than receiving compensation for the use •of funds. .They have doubtless all of thein regarded the balances as their own for the term, and profited accordingly. This, we think, is• about as patent to ever}• one as any investigation could make it. Now, if our legislators can de vise some means to prevent this, or to — mak e - some - provision'brwhich - the coeds of any loans may go into the cof fers of the State, instead of private indi viduals, they Will he doing an innuenso service, not only to the revenues, but to the reputation of the Commonwealth. It will certainly be an employMent quite as productive of good as the fruitless in vestigation of the present session. As this subject is beset with many practical difficulties, it may be that the investiga tion is merely done for the purpose of perfecting the necessary measures of re formation, or for the purpose of worry ing through the session without doing anything ill the matter at all. The border thimagebill still hangs in the! ComMiGbe of Ways mid Means. Colonel Parsons, of Dauphin county, has introduced a bill declaring the National Government responsible for the payment of the losses sustained, and constituting -the Governor, Attorney General and Au ditor General it commission to lay the matter before Congress, and urge their payment,. Tho bill is doubtless intended to prevent the passage of any act makintr • any appropriation from the Stitte for the payment of these claims, and it will be a cousiderable,obstacle ill the way of thii•bill introduced Dip. The delay on tlP• 4 tli'st bill is 4ntirely unac countable. The vote on suspending the - rules) when it was introduced, developed the fact that 'there was a clear majority in its favor. It was also gen6rally sup posed that the Senate was favorable to' llow it has been possible, un der the circumstances, to liavo Mid the measure slumber Guts long, is a matter of Some surprise. ilreqicensti bill has been .tunended in the house, in such a manner as to be un satisfactory to the temperance people, and to be; practically, a nullity. It is to be hoped that the bill as originally in tended will finally:pass. The license question should be, put in such a shape that its practical workings shall have a direct and fair test Whilst we aro by no means sanguine that it will accom lish' what its advocates claim for it, but still it cannot do any harm ; and may be 'the means of directing public opinion 'in the right way, on this important question. ITukriNmrox,' PA., March 4.-LThere was qU n ite an excitement among our cit izes:4.4s morning, caused by Gottfried Bohncr, minor the nin-derers of the flint ily of Peightal, attempting to escape jhil. At. seven o'clock this morning, the keeper, Mr. David Long, was entering Bohner'S cell in order to streop it ; the latter, Who during the night had some how wrenched his handeuirs oft; struck him on the Side of the head with the end of the iron-'and stunned hiM." Bohner then went to the prism door, and as he did Long followed and caught him round . , the hotly,. at the same 'time calling for help:One of the prisoners; named Syl vester Butler, .came •to the mitotic, and seized a Poker, with which_be..stritck BolMor several times on the left arni and inflicting a clangorous wound on the (131.• Mum. Bohner sill struggled th.grefroo from Long,t and ;in the struggle they reached one of the windows where the cell keys wore lying, which Bohner throw to Bottenberg's gellph u t the latter failed u to make use of thd.. Bohner. is now re- ; ceiving medichl attention.' . A. yopthfill conple lately eloped' from a MiSseuri town,. and the editor. of tho local•paper expresses the hope that they' "will.loeate somewhere whom the hus-1 band will hare a chance to finish his cd 'nation." • , • OUR PITTSBURG • LETTER • PITTBqrIIIHG; March 8,,, To the Eqiibr of the Carlisle Herald: -'Vulcan, if he had been Iticlog out of Heaven in this nineteenth century, would undoubtedly_ haie:_reached the. earth somewherd in thejneighborhood of Pitts burg. His shrine is erected there, and _whether ignorantly worshipsd; or not; hd is the tutelar divinity of that place. If he:should receive au order to make a Shield for some. modern Achilles, ho would find them all, the tools anti mate riale to execute the work, to hiSiheart's content. The worthy citizens of Pitts burg will not consider this alhision as at all uncomplimentary, for Vulcan,. not withstanding his shortcomings, was ono of the most revered of the ancient heathen gods. .. We .cannot look at Pittsburg in any other light than as a great workshop, a huge " Vulcan's smithy." In every di rection the tall chimneys, dimly visible amid the thick smoke, are striking evi 7 deuces of the assiduity with which, the people ply their vocation. The area Oc cupied by the different iron works can to meiisured by hundreds: of acres. They aro to be seen in'all directions, excdpt in that central portion of the city which contains the warehouses, and dweliings, The south side of the Monongahela, for a distance of two or three miles along its border, seems almost ono continuous fur nace. , AVitilable land for the erection of buildings is very scarce, as the high bluff . ; which is actually the river bank, comes within a few hiindred 'feet of the wafer's edge. The reeky base'of the hill would seem to defy all attempts at 6.1:- leavation. But this Mcation, notwithstanding its contracted limits, has great advantages for manufacturing purposes. The high hill abounds in coal, and by means of cars, and inclined railway tracks, the coal is conveyed from the openings of the mines, near the Summit of the hill, to the furnaces at the base. This easy connection, between .the coal and the manufactory, is the great secret of the success of the iron operations of Pitts burg, This, and the immense, and per fect machineryMmployed in the works, will, for a long time, enable Pittsburg to hold the supremacy she Inns gained as the leading iron producing city of the °Mtn try.- The principal amount of, the iron used ic brought in the crude ore from Lake Superior. It is smelted, and ir • - , p iniu-1, olir•ip,ha, n _ ean ,_b ; Idone in the vicinity of the iron mines. The greatest economy prevails in the operations of these works. The . most complete system has been 'established. The 'Mon seem to be a part of the um chinery. Nothing is lost, nothing wasted:- Every movement is made to produce a result. The gas from the coal iv saved and consumed as fuel. If some inventive genius could discover a like method of making the smoke avlilable, not only would another sonyoe , Of profit be attained, but one of f -Elie chief dis comforts of a residence in Pittsburg be removed. In the way of iron, everything is man ufactured, from mammoth steam 'engines -- dtwn Uzi a carpet tack. Irti this lino, tho manufacturers have reached a proficiency unequalled elsewhere in this country. Soule of the cutlery seemed equal, if not superior to the best Connecticut nranu- facture. The Pittsburg' steel and glass works have also a deservedly high reputation. It would be almost impossible •to epuin- Wiiire — tWiiiiielyiitiiiiiererfliiit - Eigei the attention of the manufacturers hero. Almost everything that can be wrought by steam power is produced by this ac tive and enterprising community.. The bridges across the Monongahela and Allegheny rivers are likely to attract the attention of strangers. They are remarkably fine structures. But it would hardly be expected that such grind modern works would be dis , ced by a toll house like the' woode man traps of tivoor three generations 1 st. This is a sort of petty gouging hard up with the progressive character f the liberal minded citizens of Pittsburg. The principal architect Ural ornaments . of Pittsburg are the churches, and the railroad depot. This latter building is spacious and convenient, and its exterior is highly attractive: The cathedral massive, and well proportibued struc ture. It has an elevated location,. and . rises conspicuous above the dingy build ings with which it is hemmed in, al though the two tapering spires designed to be prominent, and which extend up ward, like the tines of a pitchfork, are usually ofiscured by thick 'cloud of the prevailing smoke: Most of th 6 churches are of 4cMe; and their Gothi6 style, and dingy aPpearanee make them look an cient. One might suppose that they had been erected long before Port Dugnesne was - tholight of. • The city hall, now partially completed, is alarge and well_ arranged, building, and had it.been properly located would be au ornainont: to the city. But it has been placjd where its size and appeiii, once cannot be ri3cognized. It is stuck down, on :a narrow _street, :Junoog the warehmises,. ' as if US projebtors feared 'iatit might be blown away. The press of Pittsburg is it credit to the intelligence, and enterprise: of -the city. There are seven or eight daily newspapers, and they are all well con- ducted, •arid prosperous. Their broad columns arc 'not onky,invariably occupied with topics of an attractive character, but with such. matter as tend to advance the local interests of the city. The Ga zette, and The'Pi.ess have each puichahed valuable property, in central locations, to be occupied for their respective business affairs.• This ovidohco of success Is a certain indication that' communities rarely fail to reward well directed, and - long continued efforts - iii their• behalf. The Clommereial, though the youngest of ilia Pittsburg . .. newrspapeis, 'is the best of • , all, and ,Justly deserves to lead van. It is not too nuielcto s:4,.that its ability' and comprehensiveness must soon laiso it to the leading journal of the State. This papor• manifests an enter prise worthy of New Yoric, or Chicago. As "The, Conantercial is about changing its present spacious quarters, to a Moro cam rinodious office, in 'order to meet the do- Inaiuls'of increaAng business, we may infer that its exertions aro meeting with a just compensation. Its are the right men. for, their 'newspaper posi tions. Mr. C.'D. Bingham, in (Margo of the editorial. department, - and kr. R. D. Thompson, as hu - siness manager, are gentlemen, of experience, 'sagacity, and industry ; make first class newspapers has long been iheir„vocatiop, and they arc using their present resources with unrivalled tact and judgment.. W. L. A . • Mr. DurlingsmOvnt3 commissioned en voy extraordinary 'and minister: plenipo ytentiary, or in, Chinese, :''Poo-an-chow (BuriliOgMne Anson) Chipg-eld-choOng jon:taeiron,( minipter of heavy rdsponsi ' • • N EW S ITEMS Latuaizal The days 111.;elicyvv;i1 hoius in length. They x..ent houses auetion , ...inOton. The Patent '- ofOe'e has issUe4 09,991:1 r4tept6. , - Missouri eats venison at four cents a pound., The peach trees in Georgia are in full bloom. - Unpreccilontly -rich silver mines have been discm;Cred in Grayson cOunty, Ken tucky. The New York Cathedral is to cos $2,000,000. . , • The damage by tho' San 'Francisco earthquake is estimated at - $1&••• Indian suffrage has been proposed by the Missouri Legislature. ' . Oranges can be bought at retail for 80, cents a bushel in Sbutb Carolina. - Council Bluffs has au $35,000 hotel, • eik , but no one rich enough to keep it. Drunkenness is called "suffering from wet groceries," in Chicago. The coal fields of America aro esti mated to contain 3,500,000,000 tons of coal.. • A Schenectady firm watts to exchange 300 velocipedes for Confederate bonds, The first prisoners put in the now jail at Eldora, lowa, leaped out the first night. The first pair of handcuffs made in Now England are on exhibition at Hart, fOrd. There are, in the United States, 659 Young lilen's Christian Associations, with over 100,000 members. Four hundred now money offices will be-opened by the Postoffice Department, on the first of July. They have, a ; pair of Cardiff giant rub bei in Syracuse, New York, which brought $3OO at a church A Stinday school teacher in New York gave a meerschaum pipe to one of his scholars as a reward of merit. A National Convention, to secure the recognition of God in the Constitution, is being held at Pittsburgh. . An ice house, in Lee; MassaChusetts, is said to contain a quantity of ice packed in it 17 years ago. A " fith shower'; is reported, in a Cali prnia town, in which the hsh varied from si inches to three feet in length. There are about 50,000 bushels of wheat n store at Mankato, ➢linnesota, await ng the opening of - navigation for ship- ME There is saatolau2 , ll4lopounds-ster ling lying in the Bank of England, de ptited there by some zealous botanist as -a reward for any one who shall pro . duce a blue dahlia. • • he cold has lately been so intense at yittoria,-in Spain, that several farmers were frozen to death on their return home froth the market: • There is no longer any doubt'that the I vessel width went down, with, all ou ,board, on the night of December 0, off Skibbareon; Ireland, was the American 1113 Santee. ne hundred and-eighty-seven lowa soldiers are buried in the National Como 'tory at Chataiiooga. The names and military history of 185 of these aro -known -and recorded — in the Cemetery register Civil marriages have only recently .Leon made obligatory in the Grand Duchy of Baden. At Bruchsal, the hrst bridal pair who were mari:i4 under the regime of the new law, were insulted by the populace, excited by some fanatical priests. But in other parts. of the coon try-the-newlaw-lms-given-rise-to-no-di orders whatever. The tea traffic over the Pacific Rail road is increasing, and destined to be a sourie - or greit revenue in the future. One thousand packages of tea, cargo of the ship Benefactress, at San Francisco, have gone forward to Chicago, by rail, the remaining 10,000 packages are or dered to be shipped to Now York by the consignees,. A.A. Low , Co. While a party was going on at Rich mond, Virginia, the other evening, at gang of six men climbed over the front porch, and entered the house through a second story window, and gathering up all the ladies' wrappings, etc., mtde off with them. They were discovelL how ever, and 'pursued, when flndi g they could not. get off with their booty, they dropped it, and made good their escape. PERSONAL Pere Hyacinthe is living quietly with his sister i.O Paris. Cheyenne juries call delirium tremens "mixed collaterals." Napoleon and Ettapic quarrel on the subject of infallibility. John B. Gough was assaulted , by a ruffian in BlobiningtUU, the other night. , A Pennsylvania gentleman broke his arm in pulling oil his,boot. Cornelius Vanderbilt holds $7,000,000 of the bonds of the Harlem Railroad. Miss Kellogg. earns more Clan $l,OOO a week singing. . _ The women in Bristol, Tennessee, take their knitting to church. Chickens are taken at the box office of Brigham Young's theatre, and amigo is . . appropriately made with eg,ge. The eicpcnditure for the English army is'estimated, by Mr. Cardell, £13,000,000. Rosa Bonham; frankly confesses she is growing-old and lazy, and will not paint much lenger. A young boyin Illinois, a few days ago; laid• a train. of , powder through tho kitchen, and then ilrod it, "just ,to scare ma." It is suggested that. Livingston Is out of t pOseagre stamps, the reason* he doosn't write. . , It took eight „clergymen to marry , a Fond du Lac (Wisconsin) girl, the other day. Liilao girls not so Fond can be married by one parson. Thal obnoxious fly basin= the cause of a murder. Aulndiana man-. shot an other for whistling "Shob Fly.' • . Gen. Scetl, when ho took the -City of Mexico, levied $lOO,OOO for the establish naentof,a Soldiers' Home, and -that was tli6 first . ono-litablished on this cond.. neut. A :Tonnesica, love•, managed to writs his:aweetheart2oolMlers in given years, and now is having them read aloud in court in a bicach of promise case. And now Maine brings Out ilryoold lady who will malocaffidavit that ISLO refused to marry Daniel. Webster becatao ho was addicted to tank. . , • • A Irian who picked up a woman; who had fallen Orono street in Reading, loon after found his' money gone, and 'eon.; eluded that she lad-picked him up.' • • A prize fight took pluee on.Wcdnesday 'between Sam Collyer and Billy Bdwarde. gain . was whipped very badly in. forty one rounds which occupied forty .seven , minutes. A large cioWd of the." fame , participated in the:ailltir,lat 'there were no rows. • . A nonyor man,' whoge wife hung, her_' - deli in Ns. presOn'oe,' being asked why be 414 niit'iirdvotii the triigedy; replied ; " I.dut her down,throo times last-week,, and 4 can't bo always Cuttliv her ;Thn Rev. lj.r Schenck, of Brooklyn,- rather needlesidiwti should su_ppose; ud vises peoplel4 Ile in bed an hour or tvvo longer than ufialson!unday tita,ving maiAcid a wife because she celled iii juniplig over a fence . o.fudgck Breekinridge - Maylave many broken legs to answer for. It is said that all the' dairymaids note keep an eye out for car= riages with male passngers, and having' espied one, make for a.fence.. What a ' Prancer Obolcnsboy, chia diiCetor of the customs, was recently arrested in Warshw, 'besides ten ' other 'officials. They are charged with being .concerned in the plots against the Imperial Govern ment-that were lately tlicoVered. Last week a man namod Dunless pur- Chased, at an express sale in Milwaukee, a package of unelaitheir gtuals for . the slim of four dollars: -.'Onf-opening it he found himself. the owner of twelve plan ing =cla, knives, each valued at ton dollars. Another gentleman bought a package which contained a soldier's over coat, in the lappel of; which fifty dollars iit givenbacks were deposited. An English editor indulges „in _sonic veryamusing reflections On the fact that a "poor hawker of Blyth" is the father of thirty-eight children. Tho inconven iences of such a formidable numbei of pledges of affection, he says aro obvious. To express a hope that they are "all quite well" would be assurdly to ignore the law of sanitary averages. Even the christenings of such a progeny may well have taxed the invention of sponsors. Seventh sons are sometimes called " Sep timus," tenth sons "Deeimus," and so forth; but "Dtiodequadrogesimus" , would undoubtedly have an ugly souod.. The Philadelphia . Evening Star says that a wealthy lady of that city has of fered a young man $30,0!10 to marry her daughter. The strangest part of the story is that the young man never saw the young lady, and is required to abandon her forever, immediately after the mar riage ceremony: DEATH OF LA MOUNTAIN THE AERONAUT. John-La Mountain, the famous aero naut, died at South Bend, Indiana, on the fourteenth of February. La Itloun- tain's life Was full Of daring' adventures aid of incidents which were. frequently more interesting than agreeable. 'He was among the most fearless of this or y_countvy-,-and-pursued-his-chosewpra fession with a higher object than to merely make money by exhibiting him. self. Ho was compelled to make bal loon ascensions--for the amusement of the public as a moans of .support, but he hoped to make his experiments useful in the advance of science and the develop ment of meteorogical theories. He fin ally died poor at the age of forty-one. A pet theory of La Mountain was that there Was a 'attrrent in the atmosphere corresponding with-the gulf stream in the ocean, and flowing steadily from West to East. He was ambitioUs to bo the first aero naut to cross the Atlantic, taking advan tage of this current. He built the fam ous ballitcin Atlantic fel:this purpose. It was one of the largest and strongest bal loons ever mado. The aeronaut deter mined to test his theory by a; land voy age first. Ho started from St. Louis for the East, accompanied by J., Wise? of Lancaster, Mr. Hyde, of the _Republican, and Mr. Gager, a scientific man of Bos ton. - he - party - werein--the-trii- 'over-nine hours, passing over Lake Erie and over into New York State. Up to this point they had enjoyed what appeared to be s calm, though their motions must have been very rapid.. While crossing Lake Ontario a tornado seized the balloon, and it was left a wreck in the woods of Jefferson county, New York.' The At lantic had traveled 1,180 miles in less than ten hours. This disaster ruined La Mountain's plan of crosing the ocean the first time. He was saddened, but felt that the trip had important results in showing the velocity of aerial motions, and also demonstrating the fact that a balloon might cross large bodies of water. A small balloon was made of the wreck of the Atlantic, and he started on a, trip from Watertown, Now York, with Mr. John A. Haddock,,editor of the Reform ' sr. This trip was a remarkable 'one. The voyagers, who expected to return in a few hours, were not heard from for a week.) Public, excitement become in tense. The mystery was at last •ex plained. Haying no compass, the aero nauts had lost theirway, and were car ried far into the denii woods of the Ot taw,kt reservation, near .Canada. After watidering many days, subsisting upon loaves a berries, they were accidental ly discovered, in the - last stages of -Star vation, by-some Indian scouts in the em ploy of a luMbeiman. Their story lwas widely 'published and illustrated by the newspapers. When the late war began, La Mountain turned his attention to military balloons, and wad-the first aeronaut engaged In dieser yienq The adv ? antages gained:in 'war by ballooning-was - very Uncertain, - lioWevor; - and the entire system was soon given up. The last serious adventure of TalMoun tdin occurred in Michigan, and probably hastentd his death. An impatient pop ulaco,east him off before he was ready, without an overcoat or instruments, and the valve rope tied several feet above the basket. lie shot like a rocket up into a heavy. cloud ormist and sleet, which froze the valve bard fast. Ho climbed, with. frost bitten ilngers, 'up the net w:ork, and tore ,the hallooiropen with his teeth. The opening extended so far that the balloon collapsed, discharged • its gas, and fell with great velocity from 'a bight of two miles. The'aeronaut was picked up be- , 'limbed and insensible, though riot dan gerously injured: ';'. " • The masculine opponents of women suffrage evidently do not' take li4o con sideration the introduction of s most 'de licious incident-when the, noW: order of things is established- , —kissing. • An elec tion washeld in Boston yesterday,. Mind wo arolold that atone of the polls about fifty of tho strong minded presented selves and claimed the right to vote:. ,Their vacs wore received, though not counted; but •• the influence of their Movement was -each as to secure, the election of the' Belief which they' had put 'nomination. This was effected through kisses. The despatoh says that , qbere was' considerable 'confusion dur-' ing the balloting, •and kisies and:. cheers_ wore numnrons:"" — Trthat , is, the aronm ,nition with whit. It'the 'charmers propose to condeat mpaign, wo apprehend an ,easy victory. • Tho will be a general' surrendering 'at discrotiori. Yip With the batittliOlag--adriss for a vote I , . %wattle, last of Pobruark $7;250,000, ourron4.bavo boon paid out of the Twasury on amount 'of ponfiiima. , OBITUARY= :,/ , , , rirtcaenv.-aciliti.ne I tzenoctt, D 4. , . C • The Rev. Ds McC li ntock; President cif7ther Drew !PheohigiCal Se4iinarY, It NevOorsey t dicd'leat'•7o o 4';', of tYplibid• feveiYafter. nrilllneStr Orli* than two weeks. Holed, however, been in failing health for nearly a year, and a trip to England last Suminer,.tindortaken rn thalrespe -of a restoration', of his ix hansted physical •pin Vere, -resulted in no decided -benefit. Ho, neverthelesiss, con tinned' the performances of .tho' his position, and his usual' literary tasks until disabled by this recent fatal attack of disease. . • ;Dr, Meglintbck was born in the.city . of Philadelphia in the year 1814, andgrad uated with honor at the University of Pennsylvania in the year 1835. Among the Professors in the University at that Period were Adrian, Wylie, Bache,. and Re,od, from-whom young McClintock re ceived a thorough training, the effect's of which were felt throughout all his after., life. . Iminediately after his graduation Ireivas sleeted Professor of Mathematics in:Dickinson College, Carlisle, Pa: — After a brilliant career .of several years in this position, he 'was elected to. the. chair ; of Greek and Latin languages in the same institution, the duties of which position, ho discharged until 1848: In- this year he was,elected editor. of The Methodist Quarterly Review, which he conducted for eight years with distinguished suc cess. In the hands of Dr. McClintock The Methodist. Quarterly became one of the loading exponents ef Anuirican thought: It rendered especial service by its exposition of the Positive Philoso phy of Comte, mid the detection of the errors of that brilliant but mistaken sys tem of thought. ThesS3 expositions at tracted the attention of the French Asir losopher, and led to some ccirrespondenco .between him and - Dr. McClintock. In 1837 Dr. McClintock became pastor of St. Paul's Methodist Chinch; New York. There his preaching attracted large cuss gregations, and he speedily took rank as one of the foremost pulpit orators of the time. In 1860 ho accepted the charge of the Americal Chapel at Paris, where he remained during most of the years of the. late civil war. No American in au offi , cial position did more in Europe for our national cause than Dr. McClintock. In May, 1861, immediately after the London Times began its attacks upon our Gov ernment„lie_prezentpd rite—claims-of-our country'ro the sympathy and support of the people in England with overwhelm ing power. Through his agency pamph lets, elucidating _the true • causes of the rebellion, were prepared and circulated among the English people. His home at Paris became a rallying centre for pa triotic Americans, and so wide spread was his influence that he was recognized by his countrymen. tas an unoScial but most effective representation of- the American people.'.. Returning -home -at the close of.the war, he resumed again his-literary labors, which had been - sus pended for several years. In 1866 he, was made Chairman of the Central Cen tenary Committee, which gave so much Spirit and success to the Centennial Conimemoration of the history and origin of American Methodism. In 1667 he, was selected to organize the Drew Theo logical Seminary upon the munificent foundation provided by Daniel Drew, of New York. In this pdsition he closed his laborious and useful life. Dr. McClintock's literary activity was •-incessant ; and•thir in numerous volumes. Bvides frequent contributions to .C'ke Meithodist Quarterly Review and other periodicals, he pre pared, in conjunction with Prof. Blu menthal, a translation of Neander's "Life of Christ," and, ,in conjunction I with Prof. Crooks, of Dickinson College, I a series of Latin and Greek elementary text books, on the method of "imitation and constant repetitiOn:" Thieve latter volumes were the first published in our country in which this method, of teach ing the classic languages, now' so gener ally practiced, was thoroughly carried out. A series of Jotters in answer to a speech delivered in Congress by the Hon. Joseph B. Chandler, on the Roman (kith olic question; was afterward collected I into a volume entitled the "Temporal Power of the Pope." But Isis most int. ' portant literary laborwas the well known "Theological and Biblical Cyclopedia,' on whichlie had been engaged for many years in association with Dr. James Strong. .Of this great work tinno vol umes have been published. It will doubtless long remain a document of Dr. MeClintook's breadth of scholarship and unflagging. industry. Intellectually, Dr. 'McClintock was dis tinguished by his versatility, and his rapidity in the acquisition of knowledge. Every department of learning interested him. 'Yet his attainments wore by no means supei ficial.; they were accurate and thorough, as well as varied. As a college professor he- was noted for his easy mastery of the subject matter of every department. embraced in the col legiate coarse. He shone equally well, as a biter, and' as an orator. Gifted with a fine presence and reeled ionS voice, and a 'quick sympathy, he could both Convince and ,away the audiences that listened as lie spoke from his pulpit or the platform. His social qualities made for him troops of 'friends, while his'un bending integrity secured to •him the confidence of the Church and the com munity. 114; religious lice was free from all affectation, but uniformly consistent, , and perfectly sincere. A large circle of friends and - it C . hurch that was over ready irilionor him will feel his'deatlho be' an irreparable Evening Bulletin, 'History, says an exchange, furnishes no parallel to tlie.experience of Mr. Bur lingame during the last decade, and' we 'sit* have to turn to the Arabian Nights - to-match it. Writers on the • possibili ties open to , American ambition have often cited: the appearance .of Franklin, in his plain suit, sereno.to his 'simplicity, at the -glittering - court of Versailles. But there was nothing in tholdstory of that shrewd, lucky Beaton boy- of the last century to compare ip romance and bizarre splendor with life of the' 'cool, eaey, ! self poised.young •man of our own day; Who, losing his seat hi Congress pretontly found himself the representa tive of the oldest and greateat of nations, accredited to see{ courts 'of tho world, traveling. in Style of. Imperial magni- Beene° through hiS own country and through Europe, 'redeiying%'tlio courtesy of Kings . and mporors, - ..eoping with the Wildest of .veteran diplomats, and speaking .forthe first tinth.aftor scores, of centuries of silence the voice of. China. Perhaps there,:vias noman Hiring whose' death cOuld•haire in its possible cense.. qiiencos a graver influence on. the. des tiny of millions:amen. . The poPulatiea hia Mated at 849,000 people, who 120,000 hemp. ' , -same' gentl4nan wni:ssnetio State prh.oh, at Sing sing, for:lfve y4 - Ts., for n r , - 4ikrgery of a yeti'movelfe.ilaractel.. Employed-fh 'printing ,offiCe . wherirthe direetors..c4 bank were in the habit of bringing their plates to haVe bills struck off ,he acted as pressman. • ‘He,and,his employer con spiiOd to get a fad snide Of a live dollar plate. withont going to the „expenso,, of having it engraved. Ono day when the two, directors came in with this fivedol ltir plate to have some impressions taken olr, the propritor of the presses tools the directors toHie window to sfi r ow what-ho supposed some defect in tho paper. This pc course excited a discussion and exam ination. In the-meantime the plate lay ow the press, worked .by ,liand, where stood , this great forger. Watching- his Opportunity, ho placed- a prepared .plate on the genuine, gave the handle a turn, :took an impression or transfer of the plate, and 'quietly pocketed ,the — same witheitt being seen. Tldis mpression was..elect iotyped, and found. to ho-an exact fao • Simile of the gemiine plate, and the bills 'struck off, were as good as - those that came from,the bank, with the exception of the president's and cashier's - -signa tures, which' were imitations. A hun dred thousand dollars' worth of these bills were stricken off and passed .before the forgery was discovered. It was a great puzzle to, the hank folks how these bills got out. They said it was no for gery— they , must have been printed from the genuine plate. . But who got ')the plate; which lay always in the vault of the bank excepting when taken out to be used? And how could the printer do it; with two directors looking on while the press evas at work? It puzzled them sorely for a long time, but the New . Tork police finally solved the mystery: • The journeymen printer, !dated with his . . portion of the spoils, squandered Ids money,. was arrested and. convicted of Isssing the money. The man who swindled the Government, not long ago, of $70,000; and the - man who helped to get up that $lOO,OOO in this novel 'man ner, is the same. The arrest in 1800 was made by the late Inspector Leonard ; the man arrested was William B. Rock_ away ; the bank victimized was the Now Haven, County Bank. The Philadelphia Day says : We have frequently met persons, within a week Mist, jingling silver in their pock ets, and proudly producing it before our eyes by the handful ; and wo find that, even so far from the United States Mint as Cideinnati, the shops aro payini out this lately too precious metal in change. Numerous storekeepers in this city are doing this, and all appear to believe that the good old timoirof specie currency are about returning. And so, unquestion ably, they are. They will soon be upon tie. Soon our people will prefer green backs to specie, as they preferred &st rafe bills before the war. It is pleasant to notice the feeling—the fullness of con tidence—inspired by resumption of spe. die payments, oven in the present small way. Those who have received it appear to have forgotten that we have just passed through the most bloody and- ex pensive war of modern times.. Some of them, indeed—those who were children when the war began, and who had for gotten, if they ever know, what silver coin 'looked like—are as greatly surprised and "tickled'? as they-were with , their first "rattle," Coin is a new thing to 'these;'" tAlreTiTre ha littlemore sur mised and pleased than their fathers seem to be with the 0-cappearancb of spe cie, the jingle of which strikes their ears like a half forgotten air heard in their youth—perhaps in connection with their first love dream—reviving memories of happy days in the .past, and inspiring hopes of yet happier ones to come. They gaze upon the face of the coin as upon that of an old and long absiSid friena, or as a father looks upon the, face of a son who has been absent for‘a decade ; but they see no alterlitionln the appearance of' either the American eagle or the Goddess 'of Liberty. They, and the stars surrounding them are "still the same." A' Richmond sage says thlit saw dust. pills would effectually sure many of those diseases with which mankind is afflicted, if every indvidual would make his own saw dust, Ulu taxilizb avinliti VOL. " 70. NO, 10 NEW HAMPSHIRE ELECTION Returns received at Concord, up to 1 o'clock, a. In., March 0, from 164 towns, foot up as followS: Stearns, 27J86; Bedell, 10,420; Flint, 5,114 ; Barron, 999. Net Republican loss, 1,853. The other towns to be heard froin have been thoroughly canvassed,. and kith Republicans and Democrats, .agrel, that their votes will not mittorially affect Gov. Stearns' ma-, jority, which will probably be about 500. Both branches of the 11,01ature bo largely Republican,' Mitt a p - rominent member of tbat party will, of course, be chosen to the United States Senate. NATIONAL BANKS AT-THd SOUTH We have seto . ral times referred to the extraordinary deficiency, that, exists all over the Southern States of these banking facilities so essential for the transaction of any business of ordinary magnitude, and the subject has boon earnestly pressed upon Congress, by the last as well. ad by the present Administration. Both branches of that body seem to be deeply impressed with 'the inip‘bctance of the subject, anti the most earnest and deter mined efforts have. ham made to - niatme and pass the requisite measures, although •thtrs far whin:int, .effect. The enormous banking capital piled up, in New York and Nov England is nlung to as tontac lously by the . numbers representing .those States as-if their own fortunes de pended en,it ; and some of them, :who have:, boon clamorous for:. specie,. pay melds, and opposed ,to the 'greenbacks as au irredeemable curreu . cy, have been oven willing.; to Stijl further inflate the currency : . bye a, .large additional issue of bank „papoy,. witlieut., any attempt at reducing tho'genbral yollime of circula tion: Tbero iA nomimunlorstandingthis spirit; It is pure unmitigated, section alism and selfishness, .and ,is .folly to 'expect any. coacossion from; it..,,-What is to be,dono,at all : will have to be dope by, the sheer power pt tho rest, of the'rep.ub.-. die . ; ana.as l!ennsylvaniais.relatively as deficient hi bank capital -as eitherlim. „West or South, it behooves ourmemberi 'of PongreSs.,in : both yeuses to, stand up with their 'Southern and, ',Westerninoti.; ron resolUtelY fer'a:roine'dyi - 1 I 'Already .. .we find the Southern members, assembling together from . , a'.feeling ;Of necessity, and voting, in a, body On this and other, qucietions, because they .find that_th can _Olitain_justice in-ne-Oth way. And whe'ean blame thern? :We find, on roadinglho debates in The con dressional G 106 6,4 that some of the Mom beYs from the' i reconstructed, States aro earnestly fookinglbrward to tho increased representation that. will bo given. the South by the next, apportionment, to enable them to obtain the rights of their section in this matter of banking capital 'eine - fig - other Ornior them - given the following statement The very limited sliare of currency, as at present apportioned among the nine cotton States of the . South, is a niatV,l that cannot fail. to arrest the attention of ; every unprejudiced observer. The fol lowing table in relation to national banks , and currency is compiled from compe tent and reliable authority, dated Sept tember 30, 1860. The figures do not vary much from those of the same date in 1867-1868: Whole number of national bunks In the United Slat es al.d 1 errltorles 1 017 aplo.l %trek $126,399,161 Oie, plat on 21,2,693,64 r, Th.- c It' n .S tat es - 314 Capitnl stock. Ore alaiha.. -Remainder-of-the country,. ....... Capital eta-k Ct. relation Population of the whole country eat! mated Cirenlatlon per capita Population in cotton State., Circe per °KAM ropu , nt on in tiro remainder of the coin try Nye ulatl por cnian The cotton States aro North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Ten nessee, Ar)mnsaiMigissippi, Louisiana, Texas—nine States; Florida, which has no national bank, but a population of 126,100, which is added to that,of the nine States, She city of Providence, Rhode Island, has twenty-five national banks, with a capital of $16,646,800, and .a circulation of 0,872,006, being more than double the capital and nearly double the circulation of the cotton States." Philadelphia, with a million of inhab itants and allutlisand millions of dollars , of realized wealth, has no more banking capitalthan this little city of Providence. But the comparison of the south with Providence is still more eloquent. Some of the ingenious commercial writers of New York and NoW England, who write in the interest of this banip,inonopoly, have got up a theory that currency flows' like water, according to natural laws ; and that it cannot be governed by Con gressional enactments. But banking facilities, not currency, are what the I South is after, and these , do not flow according to natural laws. : The power • of• issue carries with it the power of accommodating business men ; and al though a bank can rO --- urigh without it, yet it can flourish much more with it. The Northern cities hold on to their monopoly of banking facilities, and re fused to let the south have its shard. They sent money south "to move the crops," expecting, Of-bourse, that'in duo time the money would conic back to pay • for Northern goods. But it did not. The crops were moved, find the money that paid for them remained in the hands of those who sold the crops. The planters were poor,' and, warned' by . sad expe rience, they were economical, prudent, and did' not launch out. They had no. lamp in which to deposit their money, and so, through the shortsightedness of the . North, they were compelled to be their own bankers, and to hoard their money until it was needed. This is now 'admitted by the best commercial writers in New York. The Financial and Com 7118rCial Chronicle, for instance, says that - 'TM 7f-r" ,fie am outirra f currency South is fully one hundred millions' of thfilars, and it assigns the reason we have just given for-its absence from the active business of the country. Now if the South had these banking facilities for which we contend, theseone hundred millions of dollars of currency would be deposited in banks, and would be, the basis for a bold, enterpiising, commercial, and industrial policy at the -South, which, under the present ho:ird ing system, is simply---inzpossible. The Southern mei-cif:tuts and business men are cramped in all their movements by_ the want of those banking facilities to which we are all so much accustomed here at the North. Ono result of this.is to prevent their buying as liberally - of us 'as they would do. There is no basis of creditomr is any possible under existing circumstances ; for as capital is deficient at the South, 'and banking facilities all most a nullity,. any attempt at credit must fall upon the northern jobbers, which, in our judgment, ikould be an unhealthy state of afrairs.—Yorelf, icon. ONE YEAR- OF GRANT Last Friday was the first anniversary of the inauguration of General Grant. Pile year just finding is the best we have had in the country since the war began. It took wino time, it is true, tmclear the rubbish aivay with which Andrew John son had filled the various departments, and the public oftleeS ; to eorrectextrav agances ; to - reduce expenditures, and to put the affairs of the nation on anew ba sis of honesty, fidelity, and economy. But as soon as the work of filling the 0111C00 with worthy mon was completed, the ad ministration wont earnestly ,to 'work to fulfil the promises made by the Republi can party in the campaign of 1808: One of the first- cheering facts in this . fulfilment was a reduction of the public debt, - which* had bgen continued steadily, until at the end of February it exceeded eighty-seven millions of dollars. A more rapid rednction.than this is hardly dui-. Another result of the good ad ministratiokofProsident Grant is seen • in the price of geld at home,' and of Uni- . tpd States bonds in the European mar kets. One year ago to-day .gold was quoted at -182 ; price to-day is I.llla— tlip premium having &lion fifty . fier cent. One year aav Unit'td States' 11-20's, of 1862, were geofeil. in London at 84 and in Frankfordat.'Bo ; to-day' the quotation,: at London is Dn.' add and •Friiidcford ' The 'lo9nefleial effects Ora gradual .approaeli to specie payments are felt in nearly all.departnaentsof business. It is quite certain that if Andrew Joinison had remained in office, .Or if :policy had been 'Cent:Dined, there . would • baiie, - been no reducqd debt, decline in the gold premium, and ne_,adiance in .United States securities. • . . • The first year of- Grant's administra:. tlon hai virtually brought ,reconstruction to tihrippy tonclusion. All the once ro bellidus Status are again, represented in Congress, except Texas and Georgia, and, their reprosOntativos will wog ho admit-' ted; The Fifteenth .A.inendinent.to Constitution lids been adonted,hy. the ro quired.nunabor OrEitate . ,s; . and it will ; soon be remind& preelainicrlatiin't.4,o o 4 ll a : ' amentd . la* 6f tho'lapil,; . This!will bo. the' ei'ownizidek the edifice of ieeonstrua-, tion. IliMOofer* neniero noun ;Vatienshy a ivist4ifed ariatooFaey r., aii , nbitballichis' against the paiamount au lhorit:y of the' 'Union,' 'PreSident Grant htis been an earnest advocate of ' tare loaf--. teenth Amendment,• and its JidePtion,is . Worthy be signalized as one ;of the great eients of lice first year in the Pres- Tdency.:% r; . The Close of thdfirseyear ban also wit- Inossed.the most triumphant vindication of the President's character against the only serious charge that has boon brought against him : we mean the attempt, to connect him with the infamous transac tions of tho Now York gold ring. This' attempt hiriingighorniniously - failed, it is not likely that the gamblers, or the con upt newspaperd of the opposition par ty, will, ever makeouoh another assault upon the personal or public character of esidont Grant.' I:hiring the throe re maining yoars"of his term lio will have an easy course to pursue, and ho will be sustained by the people and their repre sentatives in congress in the heartiest manner.-.—Evening 73ultctim. • e. THE WORTH OF GREENBACKS. The New York Evening Poet, in view of the fad that nearly one thousand mil lions of our bonds aro held abroad, and the steadily appreciating volume of our paper'eurrency, in direct proportion to the determination shown by the Govern ment honestly to redeem its entireindebt edness in real money, gives a statistical table of the fluctuations in the value of the greenback Since 1801, from which we abstract the following : ;‘ f 47,(7f1321,5400 - 1,578 $418, ^ 86.801 278,862,608 422,095 • 7a4 i 7,703, 0 OJ 30,0'29150 9 4 .8 1862 1863 1861 18(5 .72 1 % 1806 .80 1807 .74 18.18 . - 5% 1863 1870 (2 m.mtfke).B7 The actual appreciation in the value of greenbacks, since the beginning of the present year, will be beg under Stood from the following table, in which is shown the highest 'value in.gold of one' Mindred dol lars in, currency for each day since Jan- - nary first : January. ' February. ~.....45 50 '9l OC., ...81 p 4 ....82 00 ....80 80 „. : A3 qo_ ....52 30 And at 115, the openht „Price in the Gold Room on Tuesday, tale hylvest . re corded since September, 1862, $lOO in greenbacks represent it,real value, of $B6- Off in gold. . The Governor of Kentucky has refused to receive the resignation of Representa tive Golloday, saying that Gollo4ay's duty . requires him to submit to a full Rl vestigation of the charge against him, of selling a cadetship. SPECIAL NOTICE. .COYLE BROTHERS inse-retnoved-their—lorge—stocir—or—NOTlONSand FANCY iStY GOODS to tho new stpro room or tho GOol Will Dogma Ilona.. NO: 21 Soilth Llauoior .treot, O.rtisle, Po. .a Thoy he pleasol to 111,) thole oil Wanda and merchants generally. *VISTLE TO THE " TRADE:" You can by all your Ororerfee. Queenertre, wore, Ceilarware,lobaccoe, Salt Fhb, Coal 011 and everything else in their line, FROM WM. BLAIR & SON., WHOLESALE AND SET %IL DEAL ViI.S,C IRLISLE, and mate mono) by vetting the n,ma nt %heir retail priceo. Try It. 3nth r4D—DRAPNESS, BLINDNESS end VSTAItItII 'treated with the utmost success.), J. InMies. Ms D.. and Pron(inter of . Dbreases of ihe . Eye and Ear (Id speciality. in the Medical Colleye of Binntyitionia, 12 years experince, (formerly of Leyden, Holland.) No. 803 Aren Street, Ithlta can he seen at his noire. The medical faculty are !vetted to no cou.patirthelr vatiyhts, an he ban no secrete In his prarligni. A.tilluial eyealneorted without pale. No charge For UX.lllFiAtiOll. • oJuly 60 ly A Iml.ll nice Farrel k Herring Iron 9 Ife, nearly •re, for sale at the %I:Meanie notion and rarluty =1 COYL Wharf Elt , , 11 South llunor, r .trot, Corhola THE FOLSOM IMPROVED FAMILY SEWINGIIACHINE. Thesemachlnes make u ageng, dumbfound elastic alitab will 21. V Willi OM livery Yariery of rag., wo• lon, noon tied 'llk pods, from the finest to the coarsest, end of any acquired Ode:maks at grouter epood and with leas power and nose than any other eechin, = Agents wonted In every town. Liberal iMinalasion allowed. Fur tern:sand circular address A. S. MOULTON, No 700 Chestnut et.. I hiLdolphia, Po;, 4 Solo Agont. LA JUNG, WILE GUALDS, for Loo f•rauts, Asylums, Ac. Iron Wire Web. binge for &beef, aod.pooltry yards, 'lmre and Iron wire loth Sieves, Fendori, Seinen. for coal, arena he., Heavy Crimped Cloth for spark arrester. Ganderape Wire for Windows d'c , Paper Makers •{ lees, Oro nuirntal Wire Works. Every itifin ma• I lon by adds cooing the men yin• t uror's,'Sl U. %VALI{ EH 1;1 /NS' No It North Sixth .srrrot Philadelphia. 24f01.70.1y. ~ • - ALLCOqi.'S POROUS.P,L‘STERS. Sore and Dry Throdt . cured by , ball a Plaster usually lu two or tlicaa Lowe; Dr. Ore.; No. 903 Broadway, Nt w York, Informs us ho soh! on Monday, June 22, 1862, two PhistMs to n boning woman suffering vety severely from Donbago. On Titorsdny File called to got tyro more for nftl..ine, end then ',Wed how the two she hod purchased on Mopday.had ',Hayed line imroettlettely after puttltig them on, and cured her in Iwo days of a moat distressing pain In her back and Ailed , 10 . 6 Porons Plnsterti hi obo n found specifics for Rheumatism of the Wrists. IMMO-1m BOTTLED PARALYSIS Tide Is the - proper title .of the horrible metallic j; Jr dyes. Worse then the fate of Absalom may be taw into of those .who tittle. One wholesome preParation for chatmlog the Itipr to any desirable Olinda from brdwn .to Jot • black ',may ho tirocurod . everywhere, viz: Crietadoro's Excelsior Heti-Dye ! After ear..fol anal; ale, processor Chilton, the distill. gulOted - chemist, has entlwrizi d tho pioprfotor to 'declare, Quille behalf, tlizi it cootafrot oothlog dole , terlous to health. No other hair dye in the, world lion the like platautee, Crlettidero's Ilnir Pretterva. boos a dretaltm, after d) el og. ;try it. , 10101,70-Iro 'tuts, like a. oboem on the bats' "WHO WOULD SUPPER?" t is now 22 years L eta 'o Dr. Tooke fire( introduced the ;;Veuedan Liniment " in Lite United States', and 'never in a single instance has ins medicine Mod to, dr , 0 11 ,. 16,„t. warp than, to 0,10104 in his.panyidet. As an external temody in Yews of chrome ,a.p,..fidnoo, Toothache, hrultres, ' Marna, guts: Sprains,' Stings of Insects and Palm in limbs, Slack, end Chest, its wonderful mire. • tire powers 'ate rultaculoae. Taken Internally , for the cuts CYCholeta. Cholla, Diarthsea: . pysotitory, Sick Bomb - toile, apd Vomiting, its soothing and pen, `tit rating nut - dines ate . felt Almon as taken. Tits:oath ttrith!Wltttli• each bottle its,accompatittel . will show that there is nothing it furious in Its composition?' • Thousands or cartificatee bavolnen received speaking of 'the rare virtues 'of this valuable .ertlcie. Any person after having used it once will, never bo with= out it. of." of the gsteeind hes the.signee tiara of." I. Toblea" on the oUtiltleWtepper. Sold by the Druggistk 'end StorekCopors throughput the, - United' States. I Pried, SO cede 'Depot, lb Perk Pla,ll4lv.Y9tk. , • 101'470.1m uighoac .Day, 81% 'Lou eat. 72% 63% ca% 424' ODY, 68.4* 66 61% EMI CIO 83 50 3 F 3 10 4 EIEEI 13311 83 60 82 30 17' 83 76 81 64 18 84 03 82 38 19 ' 86 12 83 16 21 84 12 82 64- 23 84 33 82 64 24... ; ...... 85 92 IMII3 N 2 64 25 82 30 26 lIIM 85 02 80 87 IZEI Ell OEI !., • For restoring Gray Hair to its natural Vitality and Color. • A° dressing . which If at oiled' agreeable, healthy, and effectual for preserving the hail • Farlai . or , gray , hair is soon 're , stored ro ue original color With the gloss • .and,frcaliniss of youth. Thinimiris thick ened, fulling hair i•hecked, and baldness often, 0°64 not alv,rays,, cured by its use. Noiddi g eon - restore the hair whore. the follicles 'aro destroyed; " or the glands iitrotphiedtind decayed. But such ai re. main Can be saved for usefiilness by this application. Instoiid of fouling the hair ,i , ' ,with a , pasty seilimient, it will keep it cleat). ~,,, and' vigorous Its occasional' use will prevent, tho blur from• 'turning gray ox falling off, 'and consequently ~ prevent Mildness.' I :Pris-from those deleterious eabtitanceS which intik° Some preparatiens di rigorous and injurious to the hale. . the Vigor can only benefit but Ascii. harm it, If tvOntol 'merely Tor a •.: . , , II A •I• 11:., D it X 8"8 I N G, nothing elso can be found so. desirable. Cobtainiod neither oil or dye, it 'does iot soil whita cambric, ,and yet lasts long oh the hail., giving it a rich glom , Itsotro find and a grateful perffinte.. . Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer, , co., PRAONIAL: AN N. ANALTTNIAL CH 411N1T3 JACOB ScuriazDeat /hr.:. I haat, bean afflicted for the Idet ton, years with the Rheumatism and Ooot. Your Bitters was recommended to me. I hive used It, nod I am glad to say It has effected a perfect cure In a very abort time. Therefore I re. couintend It to all persona .aillicted with the some [lsaac.. I consider It the best Cure to use for any disease the human body Is subjected to. DEYOUNO Philadelphia. . TO CONSItMYTIVE 'The Advertiser, having been restored to heal to a feu' we eke, by a very almple remedy, after hair log suffered several years with a severe Imegaffee tlei, and that dron4 dibone,i.7oneumpti,n te - oualoua to make knOwerto Ida fellow.sufrerers the means o cure. To .11 wli . n der.ire it, he will send a copy of tho pi . ..script!. well (free of ,hurgej, With the direction for prof..log/Ind using" the mine which they will end a SURE CORI: FOR CO.I4,I3.IIPTION,AstnmA RitoNclirhs, eta. The ohject of the advertiselin !coding' O; Preseriptir is to benefit the' afflicted aild'aproad information Which lie conceives to Do in• valuable; and he hopes every sufferer will try iota remedy,eo it will coot them nothing nod may prove n blessing. . Forties wishing the presdription 'will please ad dress' -• REV. EDWARD A. 'WILSON, Willlairlsburg, Kluge County Now York hloy7 ERRORS , OF YOUTH gentleman who efiffered fur y e arn from Nervous - Debility, Premature Decoy, and all the effects 'of yonfli In' indiscretion, will for the ;eke of suffering humanity, Fend free to nirwhe need li, the recelpt for tnakint, the simple ,remedy by which Ile was cured f.ufleiers wishing to profit by the advert's or's experience con dose by addressing, In perfect confidence, JOHN D. Otlfik:N, N 0.42 CedarSt, New Yolk. !flay 7-60-Iyr. MARKETS, CAILLTRIE PRODUCE DIAIMET Corrected Weekly by It. C. Woodward (lAuusu . ., 11lare11 9, 1870 FAIIILY FLOUR, SUPERFINE FLOUR, SUPERFINE RYE FLOUR, • WHIM WHEAT, - RED WHEAT, - RYE, • CORN, - OATS, - CLOYERSEED, •- THUoTHI'SPED, - - FLAXSEED, - • BARLEY, - CARLISLE PROVISION MARKET. Corrected".Wveldy by TVilliaat Washniood. Oututscx, March 9, 1570. $ 35 BUTTER, .acs, I.A RD, 'TA LIOW, BEESWAX, - BACON HAMS, BACONJUD BACON SIDES, WHITE 1111 OiS, = PA , ED PEW DRIED APPLES, RAGS, DIED lIUSTON.—On the third instant, iitargarrt,.dangh ter of Samos! Huston, of Penu township, in the thirty-third year.of Jo, age. . _ NEW 10-DA F OR SALE OR RENT The Tonnory of. 3liehael 31inicIL now occupied by ,Levi Elitiirh, is lot: Hale or rent. Apply to S. 1.111.1'13U.RN, Jr. EMCEE EXECUTOR'S NOTICE, Lstters 'estamentory on the relate of Mary Myers, late of West Per 'mho,' township. deceased, have been granted br.t.ho Register as Cutoberrand county to thu eubncr iber. molding Ravenhlp. All persons Indebted tolls. estate itte'requested to mike iMutedlato imp - tient, end those low,ing claims to present them, duly authenticated'. for settleMent to DANIEL - 111YERS, k:recutor. 10mar7013t pROTHONOTARY•'S NOTICE Notice in hereby given that the following necnunte hove been filed In the Prothonotnry's office for count tout lon, &c.. and will be presented to the Court of Common. Pleas of Cunt bet l and courtly. fur con firma- On Wednesday, the thirteenth _day..ofApril, 1870, vie: I. The final aceoaorof John , timrt. moueitrator .of-U" a.ll.nutiver_and_Callhda_T.uutplke_Coniaot •2. The partial nreount or Dimlgl Miller, assignee of pr. 9 E. under deed of volutitar . , assign ment for tlio bonnet of ireditora., W. T. CAVANAUGII, ltrothenotary. MEM REAL ESTATE AT PUBLIC SALE! Wednesday, March 30, 1870 By virtue of a Fl oriel u. dor of sale, issued by th• O plaids' Court ofDinnherion i comity. I will expose to solo, on the p. enamel., the followiiig de ivribed real estate, situated in thd rill lye of I .1111, 11111 , in E,, s t, ponnaborough township, adjoining lends of Dim ro, Job SF If David B uliaker, and the nubile. road, ro.ttaining about orio.fourth of au mire of ground. Tho improyenieute consist of a TWO STORY FRAME MOUSE, Frame Stable, Blacksmith shop, and other necessary outbuildings. The lot contains ripples, noddies, and grapes, with n good riders Intro in, Salo to comet en e at ono irclock, p. tn., whoa at toudance will be &Lyon an I terms mans known by 0. W. entsw - rr,L, Executor a Isww Millard. lOcnotrio 4t ROWERS COIIPLETE MANURE, iLit mod u from Sopor Phosphatx of Lime, A [limo- mm“! mum. m- nm by ml landing dvlflorfl =3 .011 account of cite reduced. coot of !Ulla Malariala I am enabled to ,o I •' Complete Ma men," at a loom price, and by the aid of new machinery It la improve t In rondhion, oleo iu quality. et IFarradted free frwm adulteration ) litNitY ItOß'r It, Malud.cturing op o pth.t . . 11.ay . 8 Ferry Road, Philadelphia. This manuro c ,nt dns all the elonlonts of plant food in a 01,111111 e farm, roatlinin; as wal, food for giving laying fta UM' to the .Eop Hence in the urn of •• Complete Manure" by the best tarmom of Ponnsyhmilla Now Jer.ey, De awate, Mary‘and, and of the New England States, running throu.th a period of three yea e' trial, has resulted in confirming is to he TUE BEST FERTI• LiZEIt NOW OFFERED FOR SAult. SIIMIPLES k CO, 40 South Dtt!aware avenue, Philadelphia WILLIAM lIEYNOID:4, 105 South alreet, Baltimore, Md. • 10marT0.3rokuep3in List of unclaimed letters remaining in the postoffice at ,Carlisle, Pa., for the Week ending March 9, 1870: LADIES' LISr. My o n , 11110 Moll, Mina Annie E Eara4 Ore !Jim A Tobias - dr, )1 eh Mary E Mre Emma C :wartz, )Ire Sallie !}oar, Mice Mailer) T..en, hill, etra'Elli Meapyst { O , Yato. TC -..- Mop'ely, Mies Margarot Zook, Mice Annie GENTLEMEN'S LIST. . • es Ilezlln, James • If yori4Joale 2 Baker ' I algal v - c. NI illmvm, John'D Bear, A tiarow Neff, Samuel Black, Itlchard IV 2 . Nlckry, A Coalman 1."1 Orer, Wm S •.. ClMlller, homes (itt„ A - COrrualm, 13 17 rAul,l3o K forutV, CJ Itam. , 0, -A Claris (1111, Leo - Bey ualtla, J mare 11.41, Andrew SUM, on; ,Inn Kauffman, Daniel Swart; M. churl =IV2M3 11311131121 It. hely, J ho , Sehroolde,'Tno LI ndA .y Jno A Swaruer, flea Lack y. Jno , Snyder, s:.rnuel.. ll^ I elle, .L . 51811 'rho.uni,Jolnva L.- litnau Aksan der Walkor, Iticaard . Mlller, John Ze lg or, A odr.nr or Wm NI urr ,y, Henry, A. K. MIMI, P. M.' AtEß's - LIAIII VIGOR !Milt VIGOR lIAIR VIGOR HAIR VIGOR' PRICE - lIAVERPTIOR BROS., Ationtg, CfrHoke, Pik 101131404 y • $6 25 4 00 00 I 10 106