1(,(t. J4llOlll 70a/ft-Walt,. VOL. 7. 'Cy iatithigSuit ttiatt' IS PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY, By S/-etic) , LlZ .gateeS., AT ONE DOLLAR PER ANNUM, PAYABLE IN ADVANCE P UBLICATION OFFICE In the second sto jry of CAVIL'S Row, on Front Street, five , doat a East of Mrs. Flury's Hotel,.M.QuErre, LANCASTER COUNTY, PENN'A. Rf suiscriptions be not paid within six months, $1.25 will be charged, and if delayed until the expiration of the year, $1.50 will be charged. Any person sending us FIVE new subscribers shall have a sixth copy for his trouble. Die subscription received for a less period than six months, and no paper will be discontin ued until all artearages are paid, unless at the option of the publisher. A failure to no tify a discontinuance at the expiration of the term subscribed for, will be considered a new engagement. ADVERTISING RATES: One square (12 lines, or less) 50 cents for the first insertion and 25 cents for each subsequent insertion: Profes sional and Business cards, of six lines or less at $3 per annum. Notices in the reading columns, five cents a-line. Marriages and Deaths, the simple announcement, FREE ; but for any additional lines, five cents a-line. Having recently added a large lot of new JOE AND CARD TYPE, we are prepared to do all kinds of PLAIN AND ORNAMENTAL PRINT- mro, at short notice and reasonable prices. A liberal discount made to quarterly, half-year ly or yearly advertisers. Xjtabs of Pepartntents. NATIONAL President, James Buchanan, of Pennsylvania. Vice President, John C. Breckinridge, of Ken tucky. Speaker of the House, Wm. Pennington, New Jersey. Secretary of State. Lewis Cass, of. Michigan. Secretary of the Treasury, Howell Cobb, of Ga. Secretary of the Nary, Isaac Toucey, of Conn. Secretary of War, John B. Floyd ,of Va. Secrs'tary of Interior, Jacob Thompson, Miss. PoStmaster General, Joseph Holt, of Ky. . Attorney General, Jeremiah S. Black, of Pa. Chief Justice, Roger 13. Taney. Associate Justices, John M'Lcan,.Jas. Wayne, John Caftan, Peter V. Daniel, barn') Nelson, Robert C. Grier, John A. Campbell, and Na than Clifford. STATE. Governor, 'Wm. F. Packer, of Lycoming co. Secretary of State, Wm. M. Hiester, of Berks. Attorney General, John C. Knox, Tioga. Surveyor General, Wm. H. - Kelm, of.Berks. Auditor General, Thos. Ti. Cochran, of York. State Treasurer, Eli Slifer, of littion. Superintendent of Public Schools, Thomas H. Burro yes, priLtikagfir. . Judges of the Suyreme Cow t, Walter H. Lowrie, Chief Justice, Geo. W. Woodward, James Thompson, Wm. Strong, John M. Reed. COUNTY. President Judge, Henry G. Long. Assistant Judges, Alexander L.Hayes, Ferree Bri nton. District Attcrrno, Emlen Franklin. Yrothemotary, William Carpenter. Recorder, Anthony Good. Register, John Johns. County Treasurer, Michael H. Shirk. .Vheri,/, Benjamin F. Rowe. Clerk of Quarter Sessions Court, Sam'l Evans. Clerk of Orphans' Court, C. L. Stoner. Coroner, Levi Summy. County Commissioners, Daniel Good, Joseph Boyer, Levi S. Rei.,t, Solicitor, Ed. Reilley. Clerk, Peter G. Eberman. Directors of Me Poor, Robert Byers, Lewis Sprecher, Daniel Overholtzer, John Huber, Simon Groh. David Styer Solicitor, James K. Alexander. Clerk, Wm. Taylor. Prison Inspectors, R. J. Houston, Day. Brandt, John Long, Jacob Seitz, Hiram Evans, H. S. Gera. Solicitor, Dan'! G. Baker. Keep er, Jay Cadwell. Auditors, Thomas S. Collins, James .B. Lytle, John Mecartney. County Surveyor, John C. Lewis. BOROUGH Chief Burgess, Samuel D. Miller, Assistant Burgess, Peter Baker, Town Council, Barr Spangler, (President), John Crull, Thomas Stance, Ed. P. Trainer, Henry S. Libhart. Town Clerk, Theo: Hiestand. Treasurer, John A uxer. Assessor of Taxes, William Child, Jun., Collector of Taxes, Frederick L. Baker. Justice of Me Peace, Emanuel D. Routh. High Constable, Absalem Emswiler. Assistant Constable. Franklin K. Mosey. Regulators, John H. Goodman, E. D: Roath. Supervisor, Samuel. Hippie, Sen. School Directors, John Jay Libhart, Presi dent, E.'D. Reath, Treasurer, C. A. Schaffner, Secretary, John K. Fidler, Aaron B. Grosh, Jonathan M. Larzelere. Post Office Hews The Post Office .will be open from 6 o'clock in the running until half-past 7in the evening. The Eastern mail via Silver Spring and Ilempfield will close at .2 p. m., and arrive at 11 a. in. every Tuesday Thursday and Saturday. The Eastern mails will close at 7a. M. and 4.1 b p. m., and return at 11.21 o'clock, a. and at 6 28 p. m. The Western mails will close at 10.50 a. m., and arrive at 4.56 p. in. Railroad Time Table: The mail train for Philadelphia will leave this station at 7.56 in the morning, The mail train west will leave at 11.21 in the morning. The Harrisburg ac commodation east, passes at 4.56 p. m, and returns, going west, at 6 28 p. mr Religious Exercises: Service will be had on every Sabbath at 10 o'clock in the morning and at before 8 o'clock in the evening, irethe Pres byterian church. Rev. P. J. Timlow, pastor. Every Sabbath at 10 o'clock in the morning and at 1-4 before 8 o'clock in the evening there will be service in the Methodist church. Rev. T. W. Martin, pastor. Beneficial Societies: THE HARMONY, Cassel, President; 'John Jay Libhart, Treasur er •, Barr Spangler, Secretary. Tun PIONEER, John Jay Libbart, President; Abrm Cassel Treasurer ; Wm. Child, jr., Secretary. DR- J. Z. HOFFER, DENTIST, - Or THE BALTIMORE COLLEGE Or DENTAL nvitosny, LATE OP HARRISBURG, PA. OFFICE: Front street, fourth door 0T:-=-- from Locust, over Saylor & folcDon-troar;;; ald's Book Store, Columbia. Entrance be tween the Drug and Book Stores. (3-ly DANIEL G. BAKER, ATTORNEY AT LAW; LANCASTER, PA OFFICE :—No. 24 NORTH DUKE STREET, opposite the Court House, where he will at tend to the practice of his profession in all its various branches. [Nov.4 2 '69.-ly LLI NGER'S PHOTOGRAPH GALLERY, .Near Spangler Patterson's Store, Ittarket-st., where Photographs, AtnhrOtypes aid, Melain ootypes are taken at very reasonable prices.' JCall und.sce:yecimens. glebnith ta OltttcS, c fittraturt, l A,gtittilturt, .I'jortittilitirt, 'gilt Arts, Otntrai Retllo At 174, Notal nformatign, 44. II My days pass pleasantly away; My nights are blest with sweetest sleep, I feel no symptoms of decay— I have no cause to mourn or weep ; My foes are impotent and shy, My friends are neither false nor cold, And yet, of fate, I often sigh— I am growing old. My growing talk of olden times ; My growing thirst for early news ; My growing apathy to rhymes : My.growing love of easy shoes; My growing hate of crowds and noise ; My growing fear of taking cold. All whisper in the plainest voice— . I am growing old. I'm growing fonder of my stair; I'm growing dimmer in the eyes; I'm growing fainter in my laugh ; I'm growing deeper in my sighs; I'm growing careless of my dress; I'm growing frugal of my gold ; I'm growing wise ; I'm growing—yes--- I'm growing old. I see it in my changing taste; I see it in my, changing hair; I see it in my growing waist; I see it in my growing heir; A thousand signs proclaim the truth, As plain us truth was ever told, That even in my vaunted youth, Pm growing old. Ah, me ! my very laurels breathe The tale in my reluctant ears, And every boon the hours bequeath. But makes me debtor to the years. Even flattery's honeyed words declare The secret she would fain withhold, And tell me in, “Ilow young you are PI I'm growing old. Thanks for the years ! whose rapid flight My somber mese too sadly sings; Thanks for the - gleams of golden light That tint the darkness of their wings; The light that beams from out the sky, Those heavenly mansions to unfold, Where all are blest and none may sigh, growing old P, A LADY OF THE OLDEN TIME Under this title, Whittier, "the Quaker poet," supplied the following clever copy of verses for an agricultural association, at its annual fair, somewhere in New England : One morning of the lirst sad Fall, Poor Adam and his bride Sat in the shade of Eden's xvall— . But OA the outer side. She blushing in her fig-leaf suit For the chaste garb of old ; He sighing o'er his bitter fruit For Eden's dupes of gold. Behind them smiling in the morn, Their forfeit garden lay; ' Before them wild with rock and thorn, The desert stretched away. They heard the uir above them fanned, A light step on the sward, And lo! they saw before them stand s The Angel of the Lord ! "Arise !" he said. "Why look behind When.hope,is all before, A patient mind and willing hand Yoiir loss may yet restore ? "I leave with yore* spell whose power Can make the desert glad, And call around you fruit and flower As fair as Eden had. "I clothe your hands with power to lift The curse from off your soul t Your very doom shall seem a gift, Your less a gain through toil. "Go, cheerfully as yon humming.bees, To labor as to play ;" While glimmering over Eden's trees, The angel passed away. The pilgrim+ of the world went forth, Obedient to the word, And found,'where'er they tilled the earth• A garden of the Lord. And thorn trees cast their evil fruit, And blushed with plum and pear ; And seeded grass and'trodden root Grew sweet beneath their care. We share our primal parent's late, And in our turn and day Look back on Eden's sworded gate, As sad and lost as they. SLIGHT DRAWBACH. Enchaating&l! thy form so fair / In playful &earns around me dances ;• Thy smile so bright), so free from care, Thy dimpled cheeky-thy jet black hair, My heatt entrances. But oh ! those eyes, thoselovely eyes, With joy and innocence gleaming- The winged light scarce swifter flies Than do the glances from those eyes, With pleasure' beaming. Pa woo thee, maiden, were•it not That wooing thee might prove bewilderin' Pd won.thee, maiden, were it not For this one thing—a wife I've got, And six small children; A MID • Am. • ' k Of• ' ar I AM GROWING OLD I= But still for us his native skies. The pitying angel leaves, And leads.through Toil to Paradise New Adams and new Eves.. F. L. Bakery Editor and Proprietors An Awful Case of Itydrophobia. We published recently an account of a case of this horrible disease in Roxbury, Mass. The following statement will be read with interest. It is from the pen of Dr. Windehip, the father of the young American "Samson," Dr, Geo. B. Wind ship : "The disease termed hydrophobia," is . of so rare occurrence and so appalling a, nature, that I have deemed it proper to comply with your request, and that of many others, to .submit to the press a brief account of the case which has so recently occurred in Roxbury. "Mr. Thomas Dascomb, well known to our citizens as the proprietor of the hat and bonnet bleachery in Webster Block, was bitten Jane the Bth by a fa vorite pointer. On the day following he sent for me, not, as he expressed himself that he had any idea that the dog was rabid, but because the region of the wound (his wrist) was painful. The dog he said, was cross, the effect of a recent severe whipping, and had that very day bitten a young man who had previously inflicted punishment. The friends of Mr. Dascomb were very anxious to have the dog killed immediately. To this I remonstrated, unless he and his friends were fully satisfied that the dog was not mad, he and :they might..be in a fearful state of apprehension for a long period. "My advice to him was ,to put the dog into a secure place where he could have food and water passed to him , without danger, and keep and watch him a suffici ent length of thne to be satisfied as to his freedom from hydrophobia. This course was adopted, but the place of con finement—a dark cellar—was improper, both in regard to the health of the ani mal and for means of convenient obser vation. Within ten days the dog died, and, as Mr. Dascomb said to me subse quently, he lad no doubt from poison secretly administered, or else from the effects 'of the severe beating and subse quent cellar confinement "The wounds upon his wrist healed gradually under,the treatment indicated, and to me he expressed himself in no. fear of hydrophobia. "On the 11th instant, at G a. m., about eight weeks subsequent to the day on which he was bitten, I was summoned to visit Mr. Dascomb. I found him upon the bed in a half reclining position, his eyes protuberant and glaring, counte nance anxious, voice husky and tremu lous, pulse ene hundred and thirty, tongue dry, but not much furred. A first, glance convinced me that my patient's doom was sealed. To my inquiry re specting his case, he quickly pointed to the scar upon his left wrist, and said with emphasis, 'This, doctor, will end me.' I endeavored to modify his prediction by encouraging words and manner, and pro ceeded to interrogate him as to his symp tons. . He stated that the previous night , he felt some pain and stiffness in the wrist, and darting pains from the wound, extending up the arm to the chest 'I have now, also,' said he, 'a dizzy pain in the head, and, doctor, I have been per fectly unable to swallow since two o'clock this morning. "Wishing to discover how far the ex isting symptoms as described by him might be ascribed to what is termed ner vous excitement; the result of long ap prehensions, I said t'o him, 'My dear sir, I can hardly believe that you have really lost the ability to swallow. Supposing you should sit up in bed and take a lit tle of this tea.' Come now, said I, 'sit up and try with a will, and I have' doubt but you will snceeed.' "He did as I desired, seemed to sum mon all his resolution, and in quite an audible voice exclaimed, 'Now, Doctor, give me the'tea..- He received the cup, passed it rapidly to his, lips, made' a vig orous attempt to swallow, failed, the liquid was ejected,. and he sank back ex hausted. "I was now fully confirmed in. my, pri, mary opinion, and this immediately I im- parted to his family. "It seems unnecessary, and would be still more painful to the reader; to de scribe minutely the distressing sham: teristics of this awful malady.' Let i suffice, then, to state that- the progress of the disease was marked by the alter nation of drowsiness, spasms,. starting, shuddering at the sound or motion of liquids, frothy mucous expectoration, spasmodic groaning, not unlike the half suppressed bark of a dog, traversing the bed upon the hands and knees, accom panied with. a pawing motion of the hands• at the bed-clothing,, and hiding the face in. them. The expression of the countenance was such as I have never witnessed• before, nor can- language. por tray. "On Sunday morning at half-past eleven a violent convulsion occurred, which, at twelve M.—thirty-six hours from the primary attack—terminated in a happy release by death. "The treatment consisted mainly in administering anodynes by enema and subcutaneously, and with decided al• though temporary relief. The smell, or sight even, of ether or chloroform would instantly induce a spasm." "0, M. WIKDSHIP, M. D." "Daum HILL PARK."—Baltimore is to have a grand city Part in time, having purchased "Druid Hill" at a cost of 8500.000 for that purpose. The grounds have been for nearly 150 years in the Rogers family, and were occupied at one time by Col. Nicholas . Rogers of the 11. S. army, during the Revolution, an aid to General Du Condray and afterwards to Baron De Kalb: He was a man of great taste, and had a passion for land scape gardening, which has ,been pre served on the place and in the family.— Druid Hill is famous for its fruit trees, and especially for its pears. There are forty thousand trees, of which ten thou sand are dwarfs and all in bearing, and more than six hundred varieties of pears, costing twenty-five years of labor and an investment of $50,000. This old family homestead is to be preserved in its in tegrity as a:public park, and to be known forever as the "Druid Hill Park." A.ND Ho* IT is Mgt. Inquiry is lifter. made, "what means are adopted by counterfeiters to produce such perfect file similes of bank notes ?'' The modus operandi is this a new note of the kind to be imitated is procured and saturated with sweet oil. This is laid face downwards upon a steel plate, which has previously received a very thin coat of wax. The oil renders the note so transparent that itis easy to go ov er every line with a very fine needle ; this of course produces a faint tracing upon the wax. The wax beneath every line is then removed with a graving tool, and acid poured over the plate, which only takes effect upon those parts from Which the wax has been removed, thus trans ferring the tracing from the wax to the steel beneath. The plate is then-clean ed, and the engraving finished as in or dinary steel engravings. TRULY A GREAT MAN : None of our great men have held so many,offices, nor enjoyed such a long and uninterrupted official career as John Quincy Adhms. • He was minister to the icetherlands, un der Washington, 1794-96; minister to Portugal, 1796-97 ; minister to Prussia daring the administration of his father, 1797-1803; Senator, 1803=8; minister to Russia under Ma dison, 1809-13 ; com misioner to Ghent, 1813-14; minister to England,lBl6-17 ; Secretary of State under Monroe, 1817-24 ; President,lB24- 29, and member of Congress from 1831 to 1847, the date of his deaths Thus, in a period of fifty-three years, the in tervals between the laying down of one office and the assumption of another, amount, when added together, to less than twa yearn. DAYS 41ETTI4G' SHORTER.—The nays are getting shorter—perceptibly so—not only by tho' ordinary coarse• of nature, but the cool mornings make sleeping so exceedingly comfortable that nearly ev ery person feels disposed to lose half an hour in a comfortable snooze. Bles sed be the man that invented sleep, says Sanche Penn, for it is a glorious insti tution, and blessed be the man ; say we, who invented cool mornings,. for they enable ns to take a decoction of sleep worth nine hundred and ninety-nine times more than the dirty worm which the early bird is supposed to catch. STEAM ON akNALB.—The MOMS' of steam on the Erie Canal, this season; demonstrates still further the practibil• 'ity of employing this new agent in , jnland navigation to a large extent. Steam towing has already become a business of :erne importance. P STORM IN. LOUISIANA.--A violent storm on Saturday has causedimmense danang,l Louisiana. Froctoraville, the . termi nus of the Mexican Gulf Railroad„was 'entirely submerged. 'The water. rose 'over twelve ,feet, carrying away all the houses but one. Nearly forty livess were lost. A MILITARY Oancu The officer of a rifle cOmpany, out North,. Was guilty of an unheard-of piece of pleasantry, orr one very hot day repently. actually marched his men tothe very:brink of the canal, and thomeopily.eonmaxide&them to "fall in." I NEW-YORK IN 1856 AND 1860.—The following are some of the most import ant changes that have taken place in New York politics since 1966 Mr. E. R. Jewett, publisher of The Buffalo Commercial, President of Fill , more State Committee, and chief mana ger of the,Fillmore campain in 1856, and till very recently member of Mr. Crit tenden's National Union Committee, now supports Lincoln, with all the influence of The Commercial .which has ever been an able advocate of Whig and American principles. The Hon. N. S. Benton, appointed Canal Auditor by the . American State officers in 1856, an earnest supporter of Fillmore, and, the American candidate for Controller in 1857, now supports Lincoln. The Hon. George R. Babcock of Buf. falo, late State Senator ; a leading CI& Line Whig and American, a close per sonal friend and Supporter of Fillmore, is stumping Western Now York in sup port of Lincoln. The Hon. Daniel Ullmann, the Amer ican candidate for Governor in 1854, supporter of Fillmore in 1856, now sup ports Lincoln. Gen. G. A. Scroggs, President ;of the American State Council, candidate for Lieut. Governor on the American ticket with Ullmann in 1854, a supporter of. Fillmore in'lBs6„,delegate to, the Con- vention that nominated Bell and.Bver ett, delegate to the late State Conven tion at which Hunt, Duet., and Brooks,. proclaimeil the Donis§ coalitiee, now supports Lincoln. Goldsmith Demister', late itti Alter jean member of the Legislature and Anierican candidate for Canal Commis sioner in 1857, a warm supporter of Fill more in 1856, now supports Lincoln. Shepherd Knapp; a distinguished Old_ Line Whig of. New-York city, and a supporter of Fillmore in 1856; now sup ports Lincoln. Jas. C. Putnam, late 'American State Senator, and the eloquent advocate of the principles and candidates of the American party, the personal friend and neighbor of Mr. Fillmore, and the can didate of the American party for sundry important State and local offices, now supports Lincoln. In 1856, there were upward of fifty journals in New York that supported Fillmore. The number of those that support Bell and Everett does not ex ceed six. ' POISONED PAPER.—The Philadelphia Inquirer mentions the case of a young lady in that city, who _for years had a painful and loathsome disease which threatened to be fatal. Suspecting ac cumulative poison, her food and drink were frequently analyzed, without de tecting any. At last it was discovered that the paper on the walls of her room was colored tint% with the aid of arsenic; and that. the vapor from this was the cause of her illness. , This important scientific developement in relation to green paper was made known years ago in France and has been published every whefe ; yet 'many of our citizens still persist in its rise, regardless of its poison ous attributes, when the trims breath is notmore deadly in its effects. There are, about thirty species of tobacco, all posessing nearly the same prperties. It is said the plant was first found in iroucatan. It was taken to Spain, and from there to Portugal •; from ;Portugal it was carried to different Ea ropean kingdoms. Snuff-taking com mented in Paris, Catheriiae De Medicii, whose natio' has in unpletisant 'hietory from its c'onnection'icith the massacre of Pretestants,heing its first patron. Soon after ties Settlement of this countrs it became inlnaportant article of commeree, and one hundred and twenty pounds was he stipend paid for a wife by somas . of the early settlers of Virginia. V'. W. Eleline Was walking thrbrigh a street in Montreal with a girl, 'when three men reified out upon= hire; one of them thnrst a bowie-knife irr his abdo men; twisting it wboli after it was bur ied, and inflicting htlatiaWminit' Before he died he swore he did not know his sailants and coil-idiot suspect who should' thus, ciPs#949 hiP% t'o4 SuPPossii the murderer' was•ajealotis admirer ofllle girl, in his, company. There will be a meeting of tho mil - lets and diitillera of Ohio, Indlamv, 111- inois, New York, Pennsylvania; Mary land, Missnuri; I.na,tncky, ; at,-the Ohio White Sulpher Spvingtrien this 30th inst., for the purpose of Aensalting together, and to adopt such measures as would seem most beneficial to the* : inlarnots.—, A large gathering is anticipated/ MC>. S. THE WASHINGtOTT PEtNY : The cent of the United States of America, struck in the year 1784, and soon after the tree= ty of peace, is a very rare copper coin, and is the 'original Washington penny. The deCice on this coin is a iatireated head of Washington. Inscription: Wash ington and independenee,l7Bs. Reverse, a wreath inelosing the words, "One Cent." Inscription : United Steles tg. America ; 1-10 1 0. By a reference to the Journal of Congress, when Hof. gat/ McKeon was a met:Ober, atm% will be found a re•; . port df the United States Mint up to that titan, and it Is stated therein that theta Vete bat fourteen of the Washing ton cents lashed from the Mint. The rest were melted by order of his Rica leney George Washington. A token made of brass, and closely foseMbling the Washington Coin, *as duttutfacttited in England shortly after by a private' speettlation i and sent to America. This token has often been confounded With the genuine coin. REMOVAL 07 THE ANCIENT SARCOVRIOtR FROM ins 'PATE&T OFFWE : The old lime stone sarcophagus, which has so long been en exhibition hi the basement story of the patent office building, sti ob ject alike of curiosity and national inter: est to all Americans visiting that insti -1 tution, is abont being reirioved to the Smithsonian gronads, - to be placed a mong the 'many other collections thete of a somewhat sitallar chatacter: This Ber -1 etipilagiss was tile tepogitory of the Bor e t Alexander S'etetlisi waives br,onght to ,the United Mates in 1839, on board the frigate Constittttion, by Com modore Jesse D, Elliott, who intended it as a resting place for the remains of General Andrew Jackson. This distin guished inditidual, however, it will be recollected ; while eApressing his appre ciation of the kindness of Com. Elliott, . and acknowledging the bonot intended to he conferred upon him, declined its acceptance,as being inconsistent with his ideas of republican simplicity.- - -sVash: ivied Stdr. A FArrni.tss WIPE. —A matt Mid lett this vicinity for California some twa years ago; returned one day last week tolerably well supplied with lucre and hoping to find, ajoving and a faithful wife and the happy home he had koft— instoad of - all this, hoWever, He fotrnd that his wife had moVed into the city and was liting in open .infidelity with another man. The Californian remained a day qt two *4 his friends, aft'dreturn ed again, it is said, to the land of gold. Wheeling Intelligencer. SUDDEN' AND BINGIILA R Melt A physician named _Friedlawder i cited at his residence in Obioagcr i Ill. ; last week, after, a most distressing illness, camed i as was believed, from, being bitten in'. tire face by, a fly that brought poison 'corn- munieated from the carcass of it poison.- ed dog. No medical remedies availed anything, and so fearful were the effects of the disease that claw hours after the breath had ,left his body the friends were forced to hurry his remains into the ground... • SkINSH3LE FORA SOUTHERN MAx.--Coit-- gressman Hamilton, of Texas; said in a recent speech that Douglas men of that State are prepared to submit to tie aloe: tion of tinter; or anybody- elim who' may be cliosenb,y a majority of dee peo ple and - to haag all who awdirriako' treas. on btseac(se Utak'candidieter ate 'iiot'stro - - cessfal: sir eccentric gentletrare, Mewed kartitr, is gettingup a neW. aeneat on for` New York, Ile left 'Boston' lant 7 week : ronr-boat, alone, and determined' to tiaw elf the way to Gotham. Mr. Martino is a vegetarian, not having eaten any . meat but. once for three yearn. His weight isl4o pounds ; his diet is berries and fruit.- he carries no water : the berries answer all purposes for quench ing thirst. His outfit onleaving Hostou was two pairs of ptakt a, two. Ihreo shirts, two undershiyts for rowing s • st„lshawl, India-rubber coat; _four quarts whortle berries, sour° apples, coast chartepookst iCoMpass, note book-, pencil, Watch, and tiatches. Of court°, whew Will-rives iit` "the metropolis" there reception and teed. W '1 I T • Oor. G4iwaril •era* to *se e mu:actin' fWet'in tits hdESibeistopj, have- bi.en attended '4.i.ev titer3tai 41. =pliant succeset_ Some of the _brigist and costliest vessels pule been receverei uninjured ;.iagkor,s -tine been blown up and it-is thouFlill,ll4lbefore cold weath itir-onsues tlie-bay will be 4it4z•ely fret from obstructions,