VILLAGE RECORD, V6r43,r.NII3O2EiGIUELCOP. Friday, Allgood li, 0166. o tr ir an ELM s . trTtio lb!lowing are our terms fur subscription, shertising and job imirit, wa4lll strictly adhere whilst.the.present mom prices" continue : SUBSCRIPTION,. 'Per Annum, if 11. Ili —" -- e •ri eltra4 . ADVE " (SING,' Per Square of ten lines, r; tee times, •' eich subsequent insertion; Administrator's and Emma or's notices. 6w, 2.50 A liberal deduction made t• yearly. advertisers. JOB W I RIC ..to __Qualibr-Sheet Band-Bills, ( .• to 30) $2.00 Halt' ' " / 4. 3.50 Whole , " 41. . 16 . H , ' 6.00 110'For all job work and; local advertising terms invariably, cash. • W. BLAIR, ' Editor and Propridor. REAL ESTATE FOR SALE,—Attention is directed to the advertisement of real estate by Mr. SINGER, in to-day's paper. TEACDEPS WANTED.—See advertisemen of the School Board,.of this ,District, in an other column. Circus COMING.—It will be seen by re ference to another column that "DEERY'S lireat World Circus" will be in this place on the 16th instant. • NEW STORE.—The rooni jilting our of flee' down stairs, is now being handsomely re-fitted for Messrs. HOSTETTER, REID & Co. of Greencastle, who will open out in a day or two a large and welllselected stook of groceries, queensware, glassware, tobacco, cigars, etc., etc. Their advertisement will appear next week. THE FAIR.—The ladies connected with the 11.1. E. Church opened their Fair and Festival at the Town Hall on Tuesday after noon. The. [tall Lad been previously hand somely decorated. The arrangements gen erally were most satisfactory and, therefore creditable to the authors of the enterprise. We have not been apprised *of/ the amount realized from the sales, but learn the patron age bestowed was quite liberal. PIC-NIC EXCITRSION.-A Pic-Nic Excur sion front Chambersburg to Brown's Mill, on • the Franklin Railroad, seven miles south •of the former place, under the auspicies of the "Chambersburg Cornet Band" is to come off on the .16th inst. An excursion train will leave the Depot' at 8} o'clock and re turn the same evening at 7. A good time, generally, is anticipated. • MELON SAA.sos.—Our enterprising Green castle friend, Mr. J. HOSTETTER, now fur nishes our. citizens weekly with a prim© ar• title of W'ater•m`elons and Cantelopes. The "Greencastle wagon" has got to be quite an institution here, and is looked for among our "epioures" with more than ordinary solici• tude. In the absence of a railroad it could not well be dispensed with. Of the . many acts of usurpation commit ted by military commanders in the South, the recent order of Gen. Turner setting a side the election for municipal officers in the city of Richmond 'is the most glaring and monstrous Valley Spirit. CP" The most bitter traitors in the city were chosen over those loyal to the govern ment, and unfairly so at that, hence the General's "most glaring and monstrous" e dict, overturning the election ani the calcu lations of "secesh" generally. If Gen. Tur ner would not render himself very obnoxious to certain Pennsylvanians, lie should be more c. urteous and forbearing towards the ae funct Johnuies of the "Old Dominion" in the future. • TELEGRAPII. LINE.-Our town was visi ted the other day by one of the assistant Engineers of the great through line Tele graph which it is proposed to extend from the Atlantic to the Pacific ocean, connecting San Francisco with New York via. New Or= leans, Knoxville, Tenn., Harrisburg, Pa.— Wo understand the line is to pass through this place and that polls have been contrac ted for here to be delivered by the first of October. UNION MARTTns.—We haVe been fur nished with a list of the Pennsylvania sol fliers, arranged, who were bur: Tied at Andersonville, Georgia, from Februa• Iry 26, 1864 to March 24, 1865. Persons wishing to examine the list can do so by call ing at this office. TEE CORN Cuor.—Accounta from all parts of the country represent the prospects for the coming corn crop as unusually promis ing. From present indications the yield here will exceed that of any season for many years past. .MONTERET SOLD. -WC understand the Monterey property on the South Mountain has been purchased by Mr. JNO. KDIODE. of Ifageritown, for the sum ef.slo,ooo, posses sion to be given on the first of April nest. DEAD.—An old citizen of Hagerstown, Mr. Samuel Ronsknip, Sr.. died on Monday last, in the 81st yeior of his age. trAble bodied coatrabands are selling COW in Texas for about twelve cents a doz en. gather a depreCiation, that. , • bli'George Mengle,' kte .of the ray iSpirt7t; 448 purchased One half o'op Eeafoi 4'azeife. Tb ais literalry , Icapigg froi the pau into the foe. THE 800111 REWARD.—None of the re i,ard offered for the capture of Booth and hie assOokites has yet been paid, and it is not likely to be at present. The delay irises from she length of time ' necessary to hear nett decide on the claiths of the Multitude of persons who claim a share in the capture and demand a share in the reward, there being no less than one hundred and fifty applicants, The Secretary of War being unable to look into and deoide on the applications himself, has appointed Judge Holt, Adjutifit Geller= al Townsend and Aisistant Secretary Eckert to examine and pronounce on t . e 0 alms; an thottgn they have been at work at it for two months, there are many applicants yet to be heard, and the board will hardly be able td make their award before September. Toot "Luo .13..m."—"Capt." Clagett Fitz hugh, late of the rebel army, who was com pelled to leave town last week by • the vigil ance committee before be was "ready to do so," again ventured within sight of Hagers town on Sunday by visiting the residence of "Col." Hughes, on the Leitersburg pike just outside of the Corporation limits. It cam. ing to the knowledge of some, of our return ed soldiers that Fitzhugh was at "Col." Hughes', a delegation f the bays started out after the brave "captain," but he seeing them approaching took "leg bail,". and made his escape - by running through tile corn—fields.- -.Herald li6rln the recent elections throughout Virginia in many of the counties prominent officers of the late Confederate and Virginia State Governments have been returned to Governor Pierpont as elected. He has• re fused to issue commissions to such persons, and declares the offices vacant and orders new ,elections. He thinks the disrespect shown for the Constitution has arisen from a want of proper consideration, and quotes the section under which they are disqualified from holding office, viz :—"No person shall vote or heid office under the Constitution who has held office under the so-called Con federate Government, or any rebellious State Government or who has been a member of the so-called Confederate Congress, or a mem ber of any State Legislature in rebellion a gainst the United States, excepting therefrom " county officers. __ The favorable result of the Kentucky elections, particularly in Louisville, will be hailed throughout the whole North as a promising sign of the progress of truth and 'ustice in the Southern States. The full returns of the State have not yet been received, but enough is known to prove beyond a doubt that the whole tendency of public sentiment is fallorable to a free and unreservod recognition of emancipation with all its cousequence%, and to a sincere attempt tb commence a new career ou the industrial basis which has given such a mighty.impetua to the great free commonwealths of Ohio, Indiana and Illinois. Der The Daily Raleigh (N. C.) ProgreBB describes a man whom its editor met in that city a few days ago, named Cheeseman, from Cherokee county, in .the south-western part of that State, who was ninety years old, and he stated that he Was the father of 42 chil dren, He has 30 grand children, 18 of whom are girls, and 24 great grand children, He has had 6 wives, the last is now living, and boasted that his family was so intensely Union as not to have furnished a solitary rebel. We should think he was in favor of union with a vengeance, but in spite of his age he was hale, hearty and pleasant. UNION COUNTY TICKET.—The Union County Convention met in Chambersburg on Tuesday and nominated the following ticket: Assembly—Col. F. S. Stumbaugh. Cham- bersburg. Sheriff—Captain John Dcebler, Chamb'g. Treasurer—Maj John Hassler, St Thomas. District Attorney—Col. D. W. Rowe, Antrim. Surveyor—Emanuel Kuhn, Chamb'g Commissioner—Daniel Skinner, Fannett. Director of the Poor—Jasmes H. Clayton, Washington. Auditor—Samuel W. Nevin, Southampton. Coroner—Dr. Charles T. Maclay, Green. STRUCK BY LIGIITNING.-A barn On the farm of the Misses Beatty, four miles East of Chambersburg was,struck by lightning on Friday week, and destroyed, by fire with its contents. The barn contained the entire %limp of the farm just harvested. The loss will probably amount to 62,500. fter - A number of applications have recent ly been received by the President for pet mission to visit:Jeff Davis in his casemate domicil at Fortress Monroe; butnotie of them have yet met with any success. The Colleges of Washington and Jef ferson, in this State, have been united under the same head; and the distinguished divine, Rev. Robert J., Breckenridge, D. D., of Kentucky, has been elected by the Trustees to the Presidency of the College; acid has accepted. Stir Tbe Adams county Agricultural Fair will be hel4-at Bendersville, on the 19th, 20th and 21st of September. &The President met his Cabinet on Tuesday for the first time in ten days, and held a protracted session. Hay has fallen from $46 to $lO per ton is Connecticut. , , . „ Alabama lost !evenly thousand mien In the . war. PHlWEtsliktlA CORRES • e iVDENbEi, PHILADELPHIA, August 7. tditen—ls it not a little strange that, •whik. the sentiment of monarchical England is tending towards an extension'ef the right of suffrage, there is an effort being made, by some of the' leading politittians of ourftte America to restrict the same Esien President Johnson is reported to be not on ly noncommittal an the negro suffrage ques- tion, but says that "the sentiment of the. country at piesent , appears to tend towards a restriction. rather than an extension of the _right of suffrage generally." ' The politicians of the copperhead persuasion, and a number in the Republioah ranks "who crook the t-Itinges-of-t-he-kne- • follow fawning," aie attempting to mislead the workingmen of the North,.by infiuene-* ing them against free and equal suffrige.— Now, we warn the "bode and sinew". of the country against , the teachings of these men. In the South, the slaveholders were no soon er in the habit of justifying negro slavery than they began to :claim that all laboring men white and black — ought , to be slaves. At the beginning of the Rebellion this had grown , into a general conviction among them. Just so the men who now wish to deny the right of suffrage to the blacks will presently go a step further and seek to deprive also the la boring part of the white population of the same right. "The negroes ought not to vote," say certain men, but let them once succeed in establishing the general principle that the suffrage may be limited, and that certain classes may be excluded from the poles, and they will be able to extend its ap.:• plication, and by some property or other ivalification confine the franchise to a small part of the -community, "the most intelli gent," or "the property owners," or whatev er it may be: Even now, those who do not want the blacks to vote freely admit that a great part of the whites are as "unfit" as tliCirregiroes - to exercise the right of suffrage, What pretense could be more absurd than to deny a man this right on account of his color; next it 'will be lack of education,_ and next lack of property, and so on to the drea ry end. I will not trespass upon your col umns further than to warn the working masses whose prejudices are chiefly appealed to. Let the-motto of the free people of this country be, "Free and equal suffrage, now and forever!" Vote-for no demagogue who would deprive you of this right. • .It appears that the rumored arrest of the "chivalric" Moseby was a mistake. So this man, the murderer of hundred of Union men and fhe destroyer of millions of property be longing to tire (government and to loyalists, is permitted to practice his profession and live at ease undisturbed, .in Virginia. Mc- Causland, the incendiary and robber, it is said, is permitted also the. same thing This man ought to be placed in the . hands of the citizens of Chainbersburg, who would no doubt see to it that he was properly pun ished. In noticing the prevailing fashion of dress ing among ladies, a week or two ago, I ven tured to give my opinion of the "waterfall," which, you will remember, was not :very fa vorable. Some one has taken up the 'cudgel,' however, for the "puddin-bags" as Josh Bil lings persists in calling them, and says they are not only pretty, but conducive to health; that they are the best developers of the chest that are known of; that they keep the head back, and in consequence the chest is well thrown . out; that he dont know what the be witching creatures put in them, but they now•a-days carry their heads as erect as a soldier on dress parade, with a martinet for a commander; that instead of being scoffed at and made the theme of sport on the part of the masculine gender, the water-fall style of doing up the hair should be encouraged• un til every woman in the community shall have adopted it; that he doubts not the effect would prove most satisfactory, and that A merican women, now noted among foreign ers as being the most consumptive in the world, would speedily become as robust and athletic as the charming mountain fairies of Cireassia. He says it is not often that fash ions, especially those followed by the fair sex, are promoters of health; but id the pres ent instance there is an exception. He thinks the water-falls should be encouraged —the larger and heavier the better. Not withstanding this we adhere to the opinion that the "waterfalls" will die a natural, fash ionable death very soon. "The sooner the better•" says your correspondent. Some folks are .always predicting evil and meeting trouble halfway. The Asiatic Chol era has appeared in Europe, and, say, these croakers, it will soon visit us also. The cul tivation of a little temperance, regularity, and cleanliness would do no harm if, , the scourge should not visit us, and would. do a great • deal of good if it should. Let our cities and towns be kept thoroughly clean. We have had several very heavy rain storms here since 'Saturday last, add conse quently the weather is not as intensely warm as• it was during last week, but still it is quite warm enough. Yours, &c DISLOYAL PREACHERS.—There iti trouble among the parsons in Missouri. The new Constitution requires them to take an oath of loyalty. Otherwise they can't lawfully preach or perform any other ecclesiastical service. But a great number of them have been Rebels from the beginning. They can't swear to the contrary. Accordingly they. threaten to bid defiance to the law, and keep pulpits and their salaries in . spite of the Con stitution. We fancy this little clerical rebel lion won't amount to niuch. The people and authorities of the State cannot be safely tri fled with. The ministers must either take the oath or seek new fields of labor. Nor do we believe it would do any great harm if they were never to pray in.public or preach again. There has been too much Rebel talk in Missouri, and in some other States also, and now is as good a time to stop it as we can hope tor.—Clticayo Rtpublican, July 26. Tho constitution of Massachusetts contains the following article, defining the' tight of suffrage: . ART. XX. No person shall have the right to vote, or be eligible to office under the Con. stitution of this commonwealth, who shall not be able. to read'the Constitition in the English language; and write his name. Mr. George Straley, of paradise township, York county, has a cone which gave birth to six calves on , the 25th ult., but all of theta die'cl. The same. cow gave birth to three calves 'last winter, which are all living. .•• WESTERN ITEMS. . . Riedel ConesOedema of the Record. , DRAB RECORD :—lt is with Unfeigned pleasure I set &twit to-write a line to my na tive Keystone, acid'apeolally so; when I think Of the generous, kind i l and warm heartif •of her sons and daughters., No matter where I roam, myi, highest and 'most affeeticluate pulses of State pride, shall cluster around the glorious old commonwealth, and• my feelings, my hopes, and my aspirations, shall )e in harinony with her.—Well, whet - of Western life ? It is an anomaly to the most profound thinkers. Of course we eat, sleep, and breathe, very much like other people; , but • the modes of' , life; the distioiations eurround• jog, and the formation_of,society, are sa dif ferent from eastera habits that it, seems too radical to be natural, In the article of dress, we have every style and figure, from the gen uine "Bloomer" to the hideous "waterfall's"- of your friend "Ralph." Aside from dress and etiquette, we have swarms of speculators, and "land sharks, " who have not exactly "Ile on the brain," but what is tantamount, "greenbax." Corn. pork, drawing, music, and light literature, seem to be the staple productions, and ono or all of these engages the earnest attention of everybody you meat, Boarding school misses are in demand, and meet with universal favor, though, they can't spell "Tea-kettle." I me sorry to hear that the crops of Pennsylvania have been meter- , Tally blighted. It will prove a heavy loss.— The wheat crop of this state'atill be near -an average one • oats, and barley remarkably good, with fair prospects for a good corn crop. The extremely wet weather of the past few weeks has greatly retarded farmers kr the harvesting of their crops; and unless it - soon-becomes - bright and fair we may an ticipate heavy losses from this source. The cursed rebellion is over, oar -g lorious Lincoln murdered, and our brave boys are returning to their loved ones. No tongue can portray,-or pen-depiet,--the—surrow--and indignation everywhere manifested upon the receipt of the news' of the murder of our mar tyred chieftain. As Washington was loved, when be had snatched our young life from the gory steel of tyrants;, so - Lincoln was mourned, as his life blood mingled with the consummation of his hopes. The war is o ver, and yet Rebels are as defiant as ever.— Criminals, the worst ever allowed to breathe the free air of heaven with their hands crim soned with the life-blood of our young re public. come to our authorities and demand pardon for their crimes, and get tit, If this suicidal policy continues, our country is ru ined. • We are in more danget of annihilation now, than when Lee's 'igloos bristled around the height's of Gettysburg. What we want now, isl hemp for every traitor. The crimes of these Rebels remind me of Madame Ro -1 land, a martyr of the French Revolution, who turned to' the goddess of Liberty as she was ascending the scaffold for execution, and ex ' claimed, "Oh Liberty what crimes are cons. mitted in thy . name." Think of it. The very men who shot down our brave boys, tore down our bullet torn and' blood stained flag, starved our soldiers by thousands and hun ted the living with revolvers and blood hounds, murdered the garrison of Fort • Pil low, Aid blew out the brains of the greatest man who ever breathed upon this continent; they, are pardoned, and sent forth on a • new career of crime, as fiends, fresh from the pur liens of the infernal regions. But la day of reckoning will opine. The finger of God, the Infinite and Eternal, has written "ven geance" upon the head-boards of the sixty thousand skeletons that sleeps at Anderson ville. ' Even in' the North we find a great deal of solicitude for the health and comfort of "petticoat Davis," though we hear nothing of his complicity with, nay, authorship of that infernal system Of torture, which sent the 'deadly bullet crashing through th e skulls of our poor boys, when maddened by despair, and thirsting from heat and hunger,_ they crawled toward the stagnant pools of their filthy prison 'pens. "Starved in a southern prison !" How sad will be that record; yet in how many a poor mother's heart will it be indellibly engraved: Are those the crimes which call for lenien cy ? Humanity and eternal justice may well stand agast; for if the preient policy be right, in its application it would make Arnold a he ro, Burr a reformer, and Judas a saint.— Long Eve the "Record," and may its future be as prosperous, as its past has been manly and 'sincere. M. S. N. POLO lll's Aug. 4th 1865, The Boston Post says it is 'reported that a monument is to be raised on the s4p of the dark prison pens at Andersonville, in com memoration of the victims who have perish ed within its precincts. The idea is a capi tal one. Those who there died as much de serve monumental honors as those who fell in the red conflict of battle. They constitute the true martrye of the war. Victims either of neglect or infernal malice, their: memories should be doubly consecrated with us for whom they died, of loathsou.e diseases and starvation. The historical portraiture of the. war would be incomplete though every battle-field and every hero of the late war had each a monument, it the victims of Anderson ville had no monumental mark. In pain and in sorrow they pined and languished; ant lan guishing, they dies. But their memories will perish not: The whole region around the Anclersonville Prison shoulbe consecra ted to their memory, that all hereafVr, to the latest ages, shall approach it as holy ground. • Peace to your ashes, all ye who there lie in the repose of death! Man's inhumanity to man ye keenly felt in your lives; but in your deaths shall be illustrated how grateful a gen erouti nation can be to its benefactors!, "RALPH." Burning of an Oil Well. PIT HOLE, (Pa.,) August• 3.—Well No. 19 on the United States farm, ou Pit Hole Creek, was destroyed by fire about seven o'- clock this evening. The well was finished yesterday, and was flowing about two hundred barrels, .but there being no tanks up, the oil was allowed to flow on the ground. Some twenty persons were standing in and around the derrick, , some of whom, it is feared, were unable to escape, us the ground for forty feet around was . in one sheet of flame in. a moment. Three men are -known to have been seriously burned, and they only saved themselves by jumping into the creek.' The well is still flowing and the oil. burning. John Perdue, of indianispolts, who has an inoome of $107,00 0 "(the largest in that city) foimerly taught school for a' living at $lO pet:month, and was' once warned out of. township because lie•wis ao pox that it was feared he• might become a town charge.' NEW YORK TREASON:' • The Jeff Davie Meeting. '' New York 'Evinitig Post of last night has the affidavit of Mr:' Robert &Vivo . , who oniintitation; participated in the meet ing, of the, friends of Jeff , Davis, on : , Broadway on MondaY last. He says there priiient at the meeting Messrs. , gideen J„Tucker, Sur rogate of the county, Theodore Mortice, Peter Y. Cutler, Clancy Douglass, Robert M. Livingston, of. Mobile, and many others.— Mayor Gunther bad said he would attend if business did not detain lath, and that he was "entirely in union and sympathy with the ob • aof the meeting " Southern friend• - side were admitted, when the , doors were closed., The object of the meeting was to raise funds for the defence of Jeff Davis. It was said that "the celebrated trial of Warren Hastings would sink into insignificance oom pared with that of Jefferson Davis." Mr. Cutler declared the Declaration of In dependence to be the Magna Charta of hu man liberty, and quoted it to prove that the Southern States had the to secede. A Now Yorker remarked that "the State of New York refused to enter the Federal Union except the right was assured to her to withdraw if she thought proper." Livingston, of Mobile, said he, had, read the constitutions of the different State, - and found in several of the constitutions of the free States the express right to secede. In running conversation it was said that "the effect of the trial of Davis would be a revolution of sentiment everywhere in favor of the South. It would be proved on the trial that the Secession cause was right and entitled to the sympathy of the world." Liv ingston, now wrought up to the highest pitch of enthusiasm, made the declaration;—"ln twenty-five years the man that now accuses the South of having committed treason will -be looked upon as a mad man and a fool." He repeated this statement, saying that in fifty years there would be this revolution in popular sentiment. A New Yorker denounced the execution of Mrs. Surratt as "a cold, deliberate mar-. der." Another declared that she was con victed upon forged testimony, Martine as serted that the Cotirt by which she was tried had no legal jurisdiction, and that the exe cution was a deliberate murder. Livingston then said that ha• conversed with a number of Englishmen with regard to this brutal murder. They told him that it would send a thrill of honor throughout Eu rope, and the howl of indignation, that will be sent back would so cower and terrify the American Government that it will borafraid t 3 bring Mr. Davis to trial. He believed that the intention was to-keep . him lingering in prison till he died, without bringing bim to trial. The friends of Mr. Davis must keep such an agitation of the matter stirring that the Government would be forced to put him on trial without further delay. Livingston was asked how Alabama would be likely to vote at the next election for mem bers of Congress? "They will return a solid delegation of staunch and true Southern men," . he replied. Working himself up into another fury of enthusiasm, he declared that 3,500 noble, lion hearted Southerners had kept at,bay for many months, an army of 75,- 000 Union troops. Mobile only capitulated when she was worn oit - and exhausted. He paid a glowing tribute to the "noble hearted women of Mobile." "They look down'," he said, "with scornful contempt upon a Yankee officer and suffer no advances from them, taking care, of course, not to give cause or pretext for arrest. The feeling is universal that no Yankee must be allowed a foothold in the South. "Gentlemen, you will want a great deal of money. lamon my way to England for the purpose of raising funds. Thia great work must go on; the Government must not be alt lowed to shirk the trial. I can promise'. you with confidence that I will furnish you with the requisite amount." A New Yorker said there would be no difficulty in raisingtthe money in New York city. The Southern men present were all of them open and avowed Secessionists. ' The Northern men were in the most perfect ac cord of sentiment and symgathy - with them. The affidavit of Mr. Brown is sworn and subscribed to before a notary public of the city of New York. Lynch Law. , Terre ITaute, hut., Aug. 4. Yesterday a paroled rebel prisoner, named Miller, who had induced a Mr. Gregory, proprietor of the Spencer house, in Louisville, to visit Shelburn, Sullivan county, twenty miles be , law this city, under pretence of selling. him some I.nd, attacked. Gregory murderously in the woods near Shelburn, beat him nearly to death, stabbed him several times and robbed him of $9O and his watch. The people turned out, caught Miller, had him identitiel by Gregory, and hung him on a tree near the spot where his crime was commited. Faint hopes are enterthined of Gregory's recovery. PAYNE'S FATHER.—The Florida Union says that the afflicted:fathcr of Payne, the would-be murderer of Secretary Seward, has been making a visit to lacksonville, in that State. The Union says: "The father of Payne . called on us one day this week. He esides on a plantation three miles from Live Oak station, on the Pensacola and Georgia railroad. He lost one son at the battle of Murfreesboro; another returned home maim- , ed for life. 'Lewis' was his only hope in his old ago. The afflicted father was a Baptist minister, as has been stated. We must ne cessarily pronounce ;just the terrible punish , ment•of.the son ; but we cannot withhold our deepest sympathy for the heart strieken .pa.. rent, or esteem him less as a worthy man and citizen." NEW COUNTEILFEIT..--A dangerous coon. terfeit of the one dollar Treasury notes, is sued by the General. Government; has made its apwarance. Excepting a few minor dis crepancies, the spurious note is an exact fac simile, of the bill. The general appearance of the bill is also very good. The green ink is of a somewhat lighter shade than that used on the genuine, and some parts of the note look scratched and blurred. The Sgures 1 on the scroll work on the lower ; right corner of the note are printed in green; in the genu ine they are white. ,The iace of Chase, in the counterfeit, is badl . t executed; but other wise. the 'work is well dope, and • the note well calculated to deceive. . • . A TEMPLE DISCOVERED . AT POMPEII.- Letters from Naplesdescribe a temple of Ju= nO, Just dislovered among the recent orroava- Mons at Poorpeil. 'ThrOO hundred skeletons *ere forlird!crorided within the sanothlrY, a proPitiafety servirpe having evidently • been hold in the !hour th ey were overwhelmed.— The statue the goddess With its attendant finlibook;lhe tripod in front of the alter, the golden censer, the jewebs, on the person, of the priestess, the rith Vessels holding the deposit of animal• blood, are the whin -parties ulars dwelt on. The eyes of Juno .were the most vivid enamel, .her arms and her whole person richly ',decorated, w4h gold. trinkets, her gaudy bird rosplendOnt With •& clnet •r of I litterin_ :ems. Aromatic icare. dients lay'ealeined-withm tie censer;. w e gorgeous lamps-and bronze ornaments strew ed the tesselatad pitveithen4.- In the imtintry here" ivy ecitroely:iave a concepticip of the value Of real estate in the large cities. The lot in Neir York on which Barnum i s Museum rebently stood, has -been bought by Mr. Bennett, Of the Herald, for $050,000. Mr. Bennett, it is stated; designs putting buildings on the kit that will cost 8300,000 more. This is quite a respectable investment for a poor newspaper editor. The income of the Herald; the past year, for ad vertising and subscription; was over a Mil lion of dollars. James Simmons, a seaman, who expressed satisfaction at the assassination of, Mr. Lin coln, was court martialed and has been sen tenced by Secretary Wells to two years' im prisonment, to forfeit of all pay and allowan. ties, to be dishonorably 'discharged_from_ the navy, and never again to be enlisted or per mitted to serve under the Governmenfofthe United States. / John Purdue, of Indianapolis, reporti an income for last year one hundred and seven thousand dollars—the largest incomain that. city.. Mr. Purdue was formerly a citizen of Ohio,•aud taught school in Plain township. for ten dollars a month I. When he first. went into that township, he was considered so poor that it was feared. he . might become a. charge thereon and was "warned out" of it_ under the provisions bf a law of Ohio. Now he is the richest mania indiantipolis. Parson Brownlow says ho', agrees with . : those who are horrified by the execution of Mrs. Surratt. But the , teriible thing is not merely that a woman, should' be hung, bus. that a woman should do. a deed. meriting, hanging. In ,should opinioay. she-devil is as. much to be dreaded, and as properly subject. to: punishment, as one of the other seat rEACRES BROM DELawaitiThe Phila— delphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Itailtoad, Company are now doing a large business in. bringing peaches to market from Delaware. During The past. six days, 45,000.' baskots were sent over, the road to New York,. and 9,0,000 baskets wore delivered in Philadel— phia. ' , Over forty clamant daily requiredler this• trade udone.. At Renville, N. Y., Itarb week, as Mr. James C. (dowdy was running et mowing ma chinel be failtid, to see his daughter s lave years. of age, who was-pieking berries just 'ahead o 1 him, and the machine out off, both her feet a, short distance above the. ankle , - One of-the confidence games practiced' at, Saratoga is, this:—A. lady entices some gen— tleman into her room at the hotel. While• there her hvisband (?) comes in, and there is. a scene. But to.settle the matter, the victin is 'required to give the. dishonored husband, and distracted wife. $5O, and. the. matter is• hushdd up. A father and son in.p,usiness : nenzt Fart fordhave an ingenious way of making mon-• ey seven days in the week. The son is a. Seventh-day Baptist, and keeping Saturday drives the business on Sunday, while the , father keeps Sunday and works Saturday.: lEMll2l== A guerilla, just hung in Kentucky, was. the only son of an aged widow, who had tti daughter poisoned by a ne,gro, a son killed by an assassin, and another lost in the rebel army, Moseby has paid a visit to Jeb. Staub% grave ' in Holywood Cemetery, Richmond,, and the Whig describes the ex.raider and horse thief to have behaved himself very sen timentally on the occasion. flon:Rebert Dale Owen is to have two years for writing the* life of President Lin coln, and his publishers pay him $3,000 when he begins his work and $15,000 when le ends it. A man in Chicago cut his throat last week because '(as he said) 'a man who had recently died owed him $7OO and he wanted to go after it. It is , said that Gen. Lee is writing a histo ry of the war in Virginia. He had better be writing a confession and his will. Hon. John Cessna succeeds ex-President Buchanan as President of the Board of Frank= lin and Marshall College. Major General John Popo has been bre veted Major General in the. regular .army, for gallant conduct. • A young man, named Irwin, brutally inur dered his father and mother," at Deertow4 near Himilton, Ohio, on Saturday last: bow. RETVANS:—In one district of Bol ton, the amount of silver plate returned is 17,000 pounds; or nearly nine tons, . A Cocnecticut farmer, aged eighty-ono years, cradled three acres of rye in five, hours: and a half hist week: Smart old boy. The rebel General Ewell is passing' - the slimmer at South Kingston, Rhoda The ex-rebel General Jubal Early is , in , Washington. . rrSPRING AND SUMMER STYLES 'FOR 1865. , • Are now ready at Updegrairs Hat Store a great variety of HATS and CAPS for Men, Boy! and Children's wear., Silk Hats, Ciesimere Mats, Cloth Hats on Fur Bodies, Platy Cloth' Hats; Fur - Hats, Wool Bate, in' Black, White, Gran' Brown. 'awl mixed colors, Guyaquille, • Panatua,'Legtimn, Can ton,Hrsid, Stravie suul . Pam Leaf ,Hats,. ago from :6 cents up. .."Cheappr than; thu:Atettpe4.777• Better than the Bent:" • • „. . . . WE:LC.II4eIe and' &Asir at UPDt dttA - FF'S'"Etif.' Makers, "' • '‘Oppositti Washington Ap 21 1865. ' ." 'Hagerstown. - '. •