democrat &,0cntiucl. a. X). UVHltAY, Kiiltor tud PnWlihw. EEEKSBURG. this, that the democratic party Is cow battling, j It is equally opposed to tho ultra view of certain slaveholders and to Seward and his fanatical followers. It is inextricably connected Jwith die Union and the Constitution, and if they are destroyed it will perish with them. ' imPOHTAWT DECISION. t ; The celebrated Allegheny County bond eas,the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania va the Commis sioners of Allegheny county was, on the llth inst., decided by the Supreme Court in favor of the complainant, and judgment entered comman ding the County Comtnissicners, at their next annual meeting for estimating the proVabla ex penses of said county, to make full and ample provision in their estimates for raising money to pay the interest cn the three thousand dollars ef certificates of loan cr bonds in the aforesaid com plaint of the relator mentioned and referred to which'shall at the time 'be due and unpaid, and that which shall become due thereon in the year next ensuing such meeting of the said County Commissioners; and to issue their proper war rants to the collectors of county rates and levies of the said county, "for the collection thereof, as in and by the several acta of Assembly in such $ases made ana provided they are authorize and required 1 3 do, and that they cause fo be pawiH out ot the Treasury of said county, the costs of th's suit. Judge Woodward in delivering the opinion of the Court, gave the following condensed but complete and sathdactojy history of the case : "Complainant claims to be the owner, in hia own right, of two bonds or certificates of loan, executed by the Coniniissione.s of Allyegheu county on the 15th day of July. 1853, under the seal of said county, for 1000 each, (part of the aforesaid issue of 100,000.) pay able to the Pittsburg and Steubenville Kailroad Company, or bcaier, cn the 15th day of July, 1S85, with interest at th9 rate of six percent per annum, payable semi-annually, on the fifteenth day of January and July, at the city of New York, upon presentation and surren der of the prcper coupons thereto annexed He complains that the county has wholly and wrongfully neglected to make any provision for the payment of the iuterest on said bonds t. Our alternative mandamus, founding itself on the matters charged by the relator, recites an act of Assembly of 1S49, incorporating the Pittsburg and isteubeuville Kailrond Compa ny, and a supplement thereto of 20th Febru ary, 1853, authorizing the county of Alleghe ny, through its Commissioners, and upon the recCRinjendation of one grand jury, to sub scribe an amount noi exceeding tr thousand shares to the capital ttock of said cGlspiny, to borrow money to pay therefor, and to make provision for the principal and interest of the money so borrowed, as iu other cases cf loans to said county. The writ further recites the recommendation of the grand jury of June term, 1853, that the county should subscribe un amount not exceeding ten thousand shares to the capital stock of said company the fact of a (subscription of six thousand share? and the issue of bonds therefor in the gross amount of 300,000, in amounts respectively of one thousand dollar each, and thot the two bonds of the relator, issued as part pay ment Cf ?ad subscription, were transferred by the Kailroad Company, ia coufortuity w ity the aforesaid act of Assembly 1853, as well as of two other acts approved March 2d, 1855, and May 27th, 1855. It charges also that a large amount of interest is due and un paid. The amount &f the subscriptions to various liailroad com pan es by Allegheny county is very large, and the tax whica is requisite to pay the annual interest on the bonds issued by the Com missioners are likely to become oppressive and burihensome to the tax payers of the county, In consequence of this a formidable party hat been organized in the county, whose platform is opposition to the levying of a tax for the pay ment cf a ax on liailroad bonds. The movo mcut must be a popular one, for we observe that none of the Pittsburg papeia boldly oppose it. The leader of the anti-Tax party it Mr, Thomas Williams, Esq., or.c of the abhat lawyers in Pennsylvania, who advocates its priuciple, for it has but one, with a zeal and pertinacity that amounts, we think, to monojjam'a. No other subject seems to occupy his thoughts or attcn- WeiVnESDAT? MOItNING::::::::::.:NOT- " H0N. WM. H. SEWARD, When the illuetVieus patriot and statesman, Daniel O'Concrll, commenced his efforts'. to' pro cure the Repeal ' of the Union between : Great Britain and' Ireland, he told his fellow country rccn that their only hone of success lay in agitation. v, We must," saii he. -'agitate 051 Uh." The' tactic of - 0'C. nnell seems to have teu adopted by the Abolition and Black Repub lican leaders if h country.' No political iscue hoevtr important, eari f.r even a moment drav? tlir attention f the Slavery question. They can ta'-k or think of ncthirf else. They seem determined to never cease agitating the question .'until slavery ia abolished in every State of the enfedcraey or the Union dissolved. Of the men of ability and influence who lead the anti-Slavery party, we have loi.g regained William II. Seward, of New York, as the most dapgerctis if ot the most fanatical. The insane rci.tinps of Lhyd,Garr:sn and Fi-h1 Douglas are probably only calculated to excite our laughter. hst.it i otherwise with the efforts of Mr. Sew ud ia the Abolition came. He is certainly a Ciin of giant intellect, and wields a powerful influence in every Northern State. Cut never-thek-s he is unworthy to bo called a statesman. No man, we care not how exalted his abilitis my may it, is worthy of that tit'.e, who allows his uiiad tj ba cccupiee' Vy one Ide3, and clinga to it with a pertinacity which amountsjto sbsoluta fa caticiiiia. II' speeches in and out of Congress are anti-Slavery, and nc thing else. It matters not what iubject he start out, he is almost always 1 .-re to end on the question cf Slavery. The evi'a which te agitation of ths qucsfion has in flicted on our country in the past, he seems to regard as nothing, and is equally iadlflerent to any efils that its continuance may dcvelope in the future. In a speech delivered by him a few weeks a;ro at Rochester, New York, he uttered e following sentiments : Hitherto the two aystoms voluntary and involuntary labor have axisted in different pla ces side by side within the American Union. This has happened because the Union is a con federation of State. But iu another aspect, the United States constitute onlv one nation. In ciease of population, which is filling the States est of their very borders, together with a new and extended t.et work of railroads and other avenue, and an internal omruerce which daily becomes more intimate, is rapid' y bringing the ritat iat'i a Liher aud more perfect social uni ty or consolidation. Thus these antagonistic systems are cctlinually c rning inte closer con tact, and collision results. Shall I tell you what this coU'.moq means? They who think that it ia accidental, unnecessa ry, the work of interested or fanatical agitators, and therefore ephemeral, mistake the ease alto gether. It is an irrepriksible conflict between vppekieg and enduriug forces, and it mean? that tt United SfarV mvsi end uill,sw,7ier cr later. le urme entirely a xlc.vholdtnj nation, cr entirely a fru lal'jr naiicn. Kithcr the cotton and rice t 1U of S uth Car.-llna and th suar plantations f Lo-iiana will ultimately be tii'.ed by free la bor, and Charleston and New Orleans become mart for Ultimate men handize alone, or els the rye and wheat fields of Massachusetts and New York must again be surrendered by tfceir farmers to slav culture and to the production of alivca, and Boston and New Y.rk become once more the market for trade iu the bodies and acu's cfratn. It is the failure to appithend this grra. truth ti:st induces so many unsuccessful attempts at final compromihO between the slavo and free State, ai.d it is the existence of this great fact that lenders all such pretended com- Br'imise, when niacin, vain and epliemeral. j You will I ell me thai the?e fears are extrava- ; pant and chimerical. I answer, they are so, hut j thev are co or.lj because theeiesigns of tiie slave- 1 Holders must and can le tieleatert. 15ut it is tjon for a Bjnsie moment. Of conrse we are not rjy tt.o j'tSsioiaiy 01 neifat itat renders mem Bogus Hint Broken up. Some three months or more ago, the Detec tive Police fell upon the track of an individual called a specie pedlar, 'whoso business it is to go from one place to another about the city ayd furnish broker, shopkeepers and others with Fpecie, either gold or silver; in large or small quantities, jas njignt'be required. This person,. it wassatid( was engaged in Tending brass coin, End was linked with a. gang of counterfeiters, who had their-mint in New York or vicinity. Day after day this specie pedler was followed, and iuquirics instituted by the police iu every direction in order to as certain to a certainty, whether he was engaged in a legitimate, or illegitimate business Many brokers and merchants into whose offi ces, the specie man was followed were visited by the police, but nothing to criminate him could be elicited from them. On the contra ry, they threw every obstacle in the way of the detectives. Cuptain Y ailing, assisted by Detective Sampson, Elder and M'Cord, took charge of the case, and eventually tracked the specie vender tD a fine lookjng Gothic hous: in Myrtle avenue, near Division aveuue. Brooklyn. Since then this place has been under police surveilance, uud fresh faots gained from time to time strengthened the suspicions of the officers that the house was used as a bogus miut, and preparations were made to ascertain' the truth of tha Bupt?ioi by ma king a descent upon the place. On several occai-ioua officers iu disguise bad applied at the nouse. on one pretext and another, but none of them succeeded iu gaining further admittance thau a foot beyoua the door sill. Ihe same man always answerd the ring at the door bell, and aeeua.iIy manifested great hurry to get rid of strangers. The house, which has an elegant exterior, is surrounded by about a quarter of an acre of ground, laid cut in garueus and graas-plats, the whole beiug enclosed by a wall. At 11 o'clock yesterday morning, Capt. ailing, with omcers h.lder. Sampson and M'Cord, met near the olace, and after arrang ing their plans, the two first named scaled the wall, and gained the rear door without obser vation. Officer Sampson entered the gate way, and, approaching tha door, rang the bell very gently. The same old man answered the Bumuvons, and the officers adroitly sue ceeded in gaining admission to the bouse The door had no sooner closed than, at a given signal, Captain ailing, with hlder and 31 -Cord, mounted the stoop aud rang the bell. Officer Sampsou pushed the man aside, and ooeuing the door, admitted his comrades The inmates of the house were seized aud placed under arrest. They were 31 r. aud Mrs. Edwards, Edward Cook and Samuel James. The prisoner, Luting been secured, the of ficers searched the hou8 from bottom to top. The Heart of a Living: Man Exposed for icspecnou. Some three years ago, our physician wit nessed the process of digestion through an orifice left by a gunshot woundin the abdo men of Alaxis St. Martin. But a greater curiosity was yesterday exhibited to the stu dents of the University Medical College at tbe houf or l'rofessor Mott s clmiquo. It was a case of deficiency of the sternum (breast-bone,) which enables the several movements of the heart to be seen It has excited intense interest for several years past throughout the cities of Europe. The subject of the dalect is a very intelligent gentleman, M. Groux, a native of Hamburg, twenty eight years of age, somewhat uuder tbe ave rage height, and rather pale, though he ap pears to be in health. He was introduced by Dr. Mott. who thought that tbe substance which occupied the place of the sternum J migut be cartilage Mr. Ilickmau took the corps by the feet to do as he was directed, when Gould dealt him a kick which doubled him up like a jack knife. The ladies shrieked, and Mr. Gould starting op, was beginning to upbraid Char lotte for her hardness of heart, but the arri val of u policeman interrupted his oratory, and he walked away "a sadder and wiser man." Cincin. Cazette. F0EEIGJT NEWS- The roycl mail steamship Asia, Captain Lott, which sailed from Liverpo I on Satur day. October SOth, arrived at New York yesterday morning. CUE AT BRITAIN. Juhn Bright on Parliamentary liejnri. The political event cf tho week had been a the peculiar conformity of his chest, and gave an excellent leature en the heart's ac tion, demonstrating his remarks with colored plates, an artificial heart aud his own body. The collar bones are not connected, neither are the ribs to their opposites, but there is a groove where the sternum should be; the skin is natural. Iu its natural state the groove is about an inch and a half wide, i-ut it can be extended to three inches. On loo"kiog at tha groove a. pulsatile swelling is discernible opposite the thud and fourth ribs ; if respiration be suspended it rapidly rises to an cnoroious extent and retnuius full and tense until the breathing is restored, when it soon subsides. This is the heart. Between the clavicles there is another pulsa tile swelling easily felt, which is the aorta, the great artery of the heart. The dilatiou aud contraction of the lung is also soon. In In coughing the right lung also protrudes from the chest through this groove, and as cends a considerable distance above the right clavicle into the neck. The tcc-huical details of these wonderful disclosures will iAerest professional men, and to general readers of physiology, the biirht will be extremely interesting. It would be well if it could bo exhibited in all public schools. 31. Groux remembers being taken by his family doctor to a medical society in Ham burg when about two years old, but he did uot know for what ; nor did the full import ance of his case occur to him till he was over tweuty years of age. In 1S49, while on a visit to London, he was attacked with cholera, and tbeu it was that his defect was made known to the profession. He was shown to several distinguished medical men as a great curiosity, and was advised to travel :hrough Europe for the benefit of the profession. Not long after, while attending . 1 : v..,: - i.:u n. Upon bursting open a door in the basement, , "V. thy found a moctel mint for the manufacture T , r Si ll"l-e lie then concluded to abandon his occupa- great demonstration at Birmingham, in honor of 3Ir. John Bright, member of Parliament M. Groux tbeu showed i from that town, end the delivery by that gen tleman or a tell'ng speech on tne subject ol Parliamentary reform. .Mr. Bright'? remarks wero regarded as indicative of the policy of the extreme radical, and as such attracted great attention. He eulogized the elective franchise as practised iu the United State?, the equal distribution of representation, and the ballot, and pledged himself to support a Reform bill providing for such a system in England. 31r. Bright s were not generally acceptable to the great bulk of the pre-8. The 3Ianchoster Guardian takes decided exception to his laudation of American institutions and the law and order which he contended prevailed under them. The Great Eastern. Tbe complete pro spectus of the Great Eaitero Steamship Co., formed for the purchase of the Great Eastern steamer, has been issuud, and a meeting of the old shtreholders convened for the 1st of November, to make the final arrangements for the transfer of the vessel. American lacket Stutivn at Fbync. A letter from Limerick savs : "Considerable THE CUP 0?OiUvi05 nigh to ray lips I held OLIivioa'a fCB Dr iak." .aid Despair, "this liquor c' And so for-et ail pain that l ate Las J All grief, all pleasure of the WU' r I raised the cup, I peered itLia iu d And whi5pered to myself. -Her. c i..ovcr k wacen: nover. mo To plague me with the memories of VUtr said a little voi ' That on my eint. rich as wmlM. VT Wou!dat thou forget Ff,Lr?' I looked utothe cup, and fir 12- rw that angelic f. and g, ever. oh uevor. ven ia ... i. ; Will I forget th2, oh thou he w.. nun most un That oft befon; had brf v ... . fwt reioM. 85 Came sparkling from the cf l And shot electric throbbing ,C , A .1 n A -7, , heav'n. rtoy ctv..r iaii rti a o. && cv J, trot, n Blazed Love cpoa me. "Be thy thoV,. But wilt thou, cLst thou dj thy sCuU..T" As to forget n:e, and my l)Vs dt,;j I turned awav my upa. recommeuaatious i r;,i t;,. Clti: ii t " lta 5l; e-rk liquor, creami-.y ov... "I wul not taste it; let my Sorrow IjT4 Linked with tbe vvthat IT.,. '. g:.v, I will not lose th-j memory of theet : . For ail Oblivion's wealth! It g-vf- ' And I will hallow all the f;.rrr.f iuk And love dear Memory for thtir 3IotKLLira in Wax I' pfcully, perhaps, of t; ew pe.v.u. ie manr v.v,.-.. I who rra'fici tu .i . J . I i-icvim artcr c ling Iruita, flowers, &c., in wax st -! ' t "-""si iu wuici lacy are tne poisonous nature of th of tue ?ax which tL, CO.'jlic? r handle j ulsl.-. disappointment was felt here on the receipt of intelligence that the deputation which pro- ' ceeded to London had had an interview with tingly. Th 3Ir. Cunard, and that he gave uo encourage- tains while mcnt except the enunciation of his opinion, ! yenow, chrome yellow; tho oratir ! that he had long thought that the Shannon j jeliow and vermiilton erron? Doi' 1 was tne ouiv uurt on t.ie weai coatt 01 xre- nunc land suited for a packet station, but. for the , ' . r .u;ie wax. ior tains white lead; the creen p-.tIV'. Of bogUS COIU In oue corner was a splendidly finished lathe; in another a press for makiug imprea sious, aud tcattered around were the various implements of the coiners craft. Id the clos ets were found fiuely cut dies for gold dollars, two doilar and a halt gold pieces, quarter dol lars, five aud ten cent pieces In crucibles, over the furnace, was a quantity of molten stuff used in making the coiu. In other pla ces were found bogus coin in a finished and unfinished state, to the amouut cf about 0500. Under the work benches were bundles of thm mtal, having the appearance of oreide. From these strips, which were four inches broad ani two feet in length, had been punched pieces exactly the size of a gold dollar, and so cut as to be ready to receive the impression. The gold dollars finished, were dated 1854; thcg2 50 gold pieces 1350; the quarter dol lar 135$, and the ten cent pieces the tatae date With the lathe, the counterfeiters manufactured their own dies, as pieces of steel, used for such purposes, were fouud iu the apparatus in a half finished state. The dies for tho coins above mentioned, were all cut, and some of the coins, gold and silver, so perfectly made, as to baffle detection The weights of the respective gold aud silver bo gus corresponded with geuuiue coin. Everj article fouud on the premises pertaining to this business, consisting of lathe , sledge ham mers, pres(, anvils crucibles, chemicals, dies, metal, fiuisbud and unfinished coin was col lected aud catted to nolioe headquarters. In a a well enough posted with regard to the questiou in issue to haaard an opinion a to which party is right or which wrong. We presume that the decision of the Supreme Court decides the ques tion, and that the anti Tax men will tiuietly sulmit fo ita fiat, which, if nt the "voice of God," is certainly the voice of tho Law. Consumption and Fat Mkit. Dr. Dixon in a late number of the Scalpal, iu an article cu "Diet," assumes that the "use of oil wo'd decreaec the victims of consumption nlne tenths, and this is the whole secret of the ust of cod liver oil," The fullowiug is a sum mary of observations on this subject, made by Dr. Hooker : 1 Of all the persons between the ges of fifteen and twenty-two years, more than one fiflh canuot cat fat meat. Ii. Of persona all the age of forty-five, all, excepting less thau oue in fifty, habitually rover back aain all the folds and all the castles-' use fat meat- which l.avo ben kit, and to confound ;.n i otst- '6 Of persons who, between the ages of fif (hrow, by one d:i;vo Mow, the betrajer of j teen and twenty-five, avoid fat meat, a few te Constitution and of freedom forever." j acqUirc an appetite for it, and live to a good Mr. Seward id an aspirant for the Presidency, old age, while the greater' portion die with and will probably be the OppoHii n candidate in j phthisis before thirty-live 18C0. How far Lc ia Worthy of the exalted libit, the above extract from h!a Rochester speech shows. He hold that Slavery is not a IjCuI but a national question, and ttait i;n agita tion must continue uctil the United States be eovnts eithr a 'slareholdirg nation or entirely a fr,e labor nation." The phiiu English of which U, that the majority of th citizenj cf the United Sutts are opposed to Slavery, . and will never rtt satisfied until Slavery is aboliei.td, and thist ha become entirely a free labor nation. Thu is insidu .iu atu?att to ovtrthDW the . i:.ty cancel to eitieateti oy inactivity. There ia no escape from them compatible with nan-rcs-ia'ance. How, then, ai d in what way, hli tho necessary resistance be ma le? There only one way. The Democratic party must le permanently dislodged from the Government. The reason is. that the Democratic party ii m xtriciUy s fi.i if .' to the designs cf the slave holders, trhicU I have dtscrihed. I know and you know, that a revolution has begun. I know, and .VI tho world knows, that revolutions ;o backward. Twenty Senator! and i hundred Representatives proclaim bnldly in Gdigrets to-day, foutiments and opinions and principles of freedom which hardly so many men von in this f:es State dared t utter in their tivu hvines twenty years ago. While the Gov rnmefct of the United States, uuder the conduct of tho Democfatic party, has been all that time furrendericg oue plrtin and cattle alter anothei to Slavery, the poDj.le of the L'enod State have b--"!! no less steadily and pcraev rinr!y gather ing together before- the f. toos, with wnich to ra tion ana loliow tne suggestion otten maae to to him. viz: to travel and show himself to the medical men of the countries cf Europe, Britain, aud now of America. He has an album of two volumes, which arc now nearly filled with tbe autographs of thn chief mem bers of all the important medical Societies and Universities of Europe, from St Peters burgh to 3Iadrid. aud from Vieuna to Galway, testifying to their great iuterest ia the case. The signatures of professors and celebrities who examined him number over two thou sand. At the close of the lecture yesterday, Dr. 31ott proposed a collection in M. Groux's behalf, though his regular fee had been paid by the faculty. Scarcely had he said the word when tbe silver begau to fiy iato the arena from the icat3 of the vast amphithea tre. Nearly all the three hundred students were present, and the shewer of quarters greatly jeopardized the lecturer (Dr. Mott) and his attendants, together with Dr. Alex. B. 3Iott, who seemed to ue a target for the innocent amusement. iV". Y. Eva Post. A Lesson for Suicide Lovers. Richard Gould, a journeyman harness maker of this city has himself been harnessed by Cupid, and driven to the very gates of desperation. His enslaver is a young lady named Charlotte Matthews, whosa mother keeps a boardiu-houss on Elm street, and genaral nature of the ssrvice he would prefer Cork; that there wore three requisites for a successful trans-Atlantic packet service, viz: a mail coutract, a firtt-class pa? senger traffic, and a goods tr-fie, and without any olc of these resources ruin would be the result of any undertaking cf the kind. "As to Shannou and Galway, he preferrod the former; but he considered Liverpool pref erable to either, and as be had got the mail contract for the term of five years from 1S'J2 the niaila would continue to be zent from that port. However, uotwiihttacdiLZ 3Jr. Cu nard's opinion, a meeting ia to be beld ia tLia city for the put pose of taking measures to promote a packet fctation." The Dublin cor respondent cf the Loudon Tivies thinks that Lord Derby's auswer, declining to have the Shannon nurveyed, ought to be a sucieut stay to further roceedi--g iu the ill-digested movemeut for establishing an American pack et station ut Foyno Laboage Garden La.vpatgns A letter iu MM fl 17 rt-.. 1- T - .3 . j viuci aiuus or vrax are e- p Jisonous, and, therefore danger : IU which VOUEi' era! cases are known havo b iiavo been attacked with partial r,,, the hands and arms, after huvi-?iV come time to tbe practice of moi i A Deskrved X RliSUTE Tb3 Llicw - an extract from a report made to the h lature of Wisconsin; it is a.' iruj, and i: that editors and printer are jae::a.C! predated : 'We arc nit aware that platers ni : Ushers of nowspapers arc a t'33 cfsj. us9 in the coruinuuity, as to receive h;i compcusaiion for the labor and sorties:; perform But your comar.Iitcs wo !-; that no class cf men perform tiiOra gn.r. services lor all general and local iuurcij are more actively and effectiveiv muz oisseminating lnformatiou, laakicg kac-t; resources of the country, inching :: ir; the energies of our people, thaa the yv proprietors au-i editors of nswpfcpe:s." the Dublin Keening M.iil, dated Bautrv, Oj- ! " C??J jaie1' aPFrea w itevn tober 'J6. savs : "i am lad to see that the aL.cuunoa, vv. s proposed landing iu j mi of armed men froai Eceninq Mail has directed th atteution the Governajent to the tliis eountrt et a reguuc America, commanded by Colonel lUaa. There are juht ground fcr the excrcue T caution in tu:s matter, as l aiu lorry to in form you that seditious societies hare been discovered iu this neighborhood, as well as in other .laces west of the county of Cork They ara also creeping iuland, and have made ; aome progress in tho neighboring county of Kerry. A ftrange peculiarity pervades this uioT-ment '"The members of the society bind them selvea not to divulge their plans to the priests and where spoken agaiuft from the altar, ttev denounce the priests aj despots, as bad f i thorities had hiui arre;td becaasd isia visible Cieans of support. Si On the niht of the 12th u.i.'t f ; births were reported in the faniiiyc'H .OJ C. Kimball, at Salt Lake Citv. Uu-: tory. There are cnnct call to mind with the dead of n. proltb.j more friends tu: ;, than amongst the li : 1 vely the uioit wcaierul A "Positi discovered in the uinetecnta cesiurj ;a fessnr Wood's Hair Ilestoratite. It r: perfdetly gray hair to its origital color, t it grow on the bald and will perte i: fectlv to any ac. if cnlv used lv tiie j as tho rest of the'w tvrauts I hey are saa- tvtice a week. Dandruff and disctsa posed to derive inspirations from America, j exist cn tho soalv where this IE u?ci d who seems to have made up her mind to oue room the police officers, iu tha course of some more brilliant alliance than that offered their search, round counterfeit bank bills to by Jlr. (jouid IJut as Kichard has a very the amount of 952, as follows: Two $1 bills upon the Bauk of Cayuga Lake, State of .New lork. Onu hundred aud ten dollars, iu $10 bills on the Hartford Bunk, of Hartford, Conn. Eighty one dollars in $3 bills on the 3Ie- chamos Bank of .New Haven. Two huudred aud seventy dollars in 10 bills on the Bauk of Charlotte, ('. And 500 in 5 bills on the Delaware Bauk at Delhi. good opiuion of his own merits and qualifica tions, he judged that Charlottes coolness was mere coquetry, believing that when it came to the scratch, she would cave in at a moments warning He resolved to melt at the artful nymph, and to an avowal of uer feelings he proceeded, about twenty inmates past five o'clock yesterday afternoon, to the dwell- ; mg of 3irs. Matthews, and stretched himself ; and inonev also. Ihey deciare tLer lot-u i tion to rise in arms whenever there may be ! any difference between Franco and America, j The government is, 1 believe, aware cf these i facts. At present the whole thing is very contemptible, but it affords fair grounds for preventing the gallaut (JOth from marching through this cuuutry ia arms, and encamp ing iu military fashion, t keep up the 'ropes i of Irish rebeis. A uo strange poiut in the j matter is excluding the priests, aud without once tho soul of i tbe,u, lhe"a do uhiug beyond producing i circular, and we defy doubt. ! Cal'tiox. Beware of worthless lai j as several are already in the market. : ; by different names. Use non uc. words (Professor Wood's Hair lies-" ! Depot St. Louis, 3Io , and New Yc:i j bl iwn in the bottle. Sold by all I'-'-' . and Patent Medicine Dealers A'--"; j Fancy and Toilet goods dealers iat'-'1 Se hJ Cuoadaa See advwwt-tf o surprise her into j mother cabbage garden eampaigu." . For this purpose Brk aneJ IS horse "tj, . v,:t i ci Pace. One of the ev-nts of the i HT See advTtisemett of Dr 5-: come of these bills are supposed to be new out upon the front door-stop, holding iu his counterfeits. They are poorly - executed aud hand an empty puial, upon wuicn ae baa printed on poor paper. Search was made for pasted a label of "strychnine. th tdatps from w hinh thov were printed, but "iNow tficre wul be an attectin scene they could not be found Nothiuc further when my captivating Charlotte comes out, being found, the house was locked up and I soliloquized 31r Gould, as he closed his eyes racing week at Newmarket was a match between 3Ir. Ton Broeck's horse Barbarity, and Couut Ballhyarig's Olympus, the owuers riding their respective horses. The former was the winner. FRANCE. Liver Invigoratnr 3!riii Slbufrtismmfe. iTILOTIIING! ! J & HUGHES would Tespectfa. vite the atttention of the citizens c: - ens our j and surrounding country i CLOTUiNG r.'.-t 4 Of persons dying with phthisis between the ages of twelve and forty-five, nine-tenths at least, hare never used fat meat. Most individuals who avoid fat meat also use littlo butter or oil gravies, though many compensate for this want, in part at least, by a fre-o use of those articles, and also milk, eggs and saccharine substances. But they constitute an imperfect substitute for fat meat without which, sooner or later, the body is almost aurc to show the effects of deficent calorification. placed under tho charge of the Brooklyn Po lice. The four prisoners were brought to this city and locked up in the cells at Police Headquarters, whero ihey were detainad last night. To-day they will be taken before the proper authorities for examination. 1 tit ev idences of the guilt of the parties found in the house are also at Poliee Headquarters, where they may be seeu by the curious. AT. 1". Tribune. It is stated that the iieuinity to be paid to i LARGE and EXTENSIVE stock if FA France by Portugal m the Charles-tt-Georges j WINTER CLOTHING which tl.v.- affair was at first fixed at 450.000 francs, I received from the Eastern cities, '--' '- iLuriiobilil y. 1 resotly 3Iis9 iiatthwR p- . . . i. i ' -i J - y . . i . f .1, Kfi will tfw wi.V-.or rtf v it utt. u ty,tvv n tu ov v tu niuun va Fabrication of Diamonds One of the most curious sights in Paris ia to be afforded by a visit to the vast work shops cf 31 Boureuiff noc. where the whole process of transformiue aud takiug it out f Gould's hand. a row c rains oi uirty, neavy looaing eauu iu- i uc ioo u cu oi.j-uuuc peared at the door, broom in baud, for the purpose of sweeping the steps. Oa seeing the incumbent Kichard, she uttered an ex clamation of surprise, and then tried to stir him up with the broomstick; but finding he did not me-ve, she called out, "31other, moth er, here's Dick Gould coiled up on our steps, and I don't know what ails him " "Dead drunk," I reckon," said Mrs. 3Iatibews, as she also came to the front door "No, I declare if he hasn't' kicked the bucket in reality," said Charlotte, spying tke bottle. opening at their store cn which chey propose to sell at t-e price. They have also received ar.i L" " A fine and large stock of G-tt..-. Tweeds. Trimming, &c. h'" Stocks, Cravats, Ihets of all Vin ; . tion, Umbvrcllas and Suspender?, t' " to order at the shortest notice. 1 -'- see us before you make a , "rf r .. . else, as we can guarantee thai 'e ' "'. in quality and low prices by a-.v " T. in the State. Terms Cash or Coa'-.v EVANS Ah-" Ebensburg, Nov. lo IS5S. PULC SALE. BY VIRTCEV der of the Court of Coinr.ion l -;. bria county.to me ditected, there to sale by public veudtie or outcry. - House, in the boroagh of Ebervrr. DAT, the Cth day of DECKMBb!. o'clock, P.M., the following p f Tt.-irou3 1 -, . Cambria county, known said borough as No. n w.-i d ii3 aiteiait to ovtrtii'd-.v the I t i ..t a , , - I'liiiiruAiiiAi, i rouiui. noinrr inau- r.ne mat ma ,-taici are sovereign, an l pus- , (-u.atical thenomt-non .... . . t r rion&.uij cor.:ro: i ver iu ir domestic allaus has appeared. His name is Meredith Holland, and he is a native th? powers not dulogsted in the ! of Munroe county, Kentucky. It is sail that be a:d that a! iv . ... .. .. i ft xAjn.v.niuo-.i 10 ir.e eiftusr.ii uovernment are rrhervd to the State. Th?e statements nre r.ot, it true, openly avowta in the above extract froru. Mr. Swrd'a speech but they cer tainly peep out" frt.m.overy word and line of it. Tho moment a rresidei.t of the United States t elected holding such sentiment., the days of iU -spu'cU" j: nTih-.r-l. It is to pvpr.l ean aniwer any mathematical nuestion without a moment's delay. He declares that he ia .conscious of no mental effort, tut the answer is presented to his mind almost sim ultaneously with the qucFtion. Aside from this wonderfvl faculty Le baa a very ordinary apd uncultivated mind. to a diamond of the purest water, is daily go ing on with the avowed purpose of deceiving everybody but the buyer. The coloring matter for imitating emeralds, rubies and sanchires is eutirelv mineral, and has been brourht to high perfection, by 31. Uourcuig non. Many operators are employed, whose business it is to polish the coloieu stones ana lino the false pearls with fish scales and wax; the scalea of the reach and dace are cuietlt employed for this purpose. They must be stripped from the flesh while living, or the Fina wrthr fr ThnnkHvii "fiee, "Poor soul 1" exclaimed th benevolent old lady ; how natural he looks . "He looks about as wall as ae am wnen ne was aiive, ob served Charlotte, "and that's not saying much for bis beauty. He never could hold a candle to Jiuiiay Hickman at any time This 31r. Hickman is a spruce young clerk who boards with 31ra. 31atthews, and who happened to come homo at that vry junc ture. Wheu he saw the supposed corpse. James offered to go for tho coroner, to hold an in w. .1 .1- -a clitenine hue, so much admired in the real quett over tne 'poor devil, as be calleu Mr, rl cannot be imitated. Goul l. "Htoll.l don t like tbe notion ol t I i - i : ru ' : v... . m,m , I naving corouci uuo juij icuuws po&iug aooui. A poor fellow being asked to produce here," said 3Irs Matthews "No, added bisinarnsce certificate in a Court of justice, Charlotte, -'just euag tne nasty creature on vr ;nr,nrntlv nuahed away tho hair froia o the cellar-door of the next house, Jimmy, --j r ----- -j . ,i , .... l t i. ...i : i his forehead, which exposed rather njiyian-i men 'n your uaou. ami como u ar not Yt hcaleiJ N"uf eed. enrp cr. the second officer of the vessel, who died in the prison of Mozambique. Prince Napoleon is said u hate sided with Portugal ia the dispute The Moniteur announces that the journal entitled the Correspondent has been seized for an article by Couut do 3Iontalembert. ou England and India, and that a prosecution is to be entered against the writer and publish er. The prosecuticu of so distinguished a man as Count Montalcmbert was expected to produce considerable excitement. 31r. Gowen, the American contractor at Sebastopol, writes to Galignani contradict- in tr tbe report that his efforts to raise the suukeu ships bad failed and been abandoned. He 6tate that bo has raited six vessels since 31sy last, whole aud iu good condition, aud removed a number of others. SPAIN. A letter from 3Iadrid says that all the ships intended for the transport of troops in the contemplated expedition agaiust 31txicj had sailed for Cuba, except oue, which waa dctaiued at Cadiz by bad weather. "A telegram from 3Iadrid, dated Oct. 25, says: "It is stated that a royal ordinance is bhortly to bo published, which will giva a I greater extension to tho importation into Spain of tobacco from tho Phillipine Islands, and which will give an advantage to tho plan ters in that eo!orT ovor thote in the United ! iii. oa th- 1 1 f- T '. I'-r 111 u - - t:r- the corner of Center and ll'Z1 outh alon Center street two rnr. r - . . -i l.:n two feet to a post; thence north -' , to a p.st; thence west sivty i.'-H tlienco north eire hundred and J .5V-?.:r:: High s-treet; thence west aioriu ' & r place e-f begiimlniZ, having 'jr a l.rs:e two storv brick llouw. - plank house attached, known Mountain House." an ice house, i- si Vole, rnd other oiitbn:iu.iiV. Vpgir , ' -JOHN' RBrVl . Novnm- - r IC JOHN i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers