44) st 7- -„ . v . . .-- :-.-,,....- .. . .. , V 1 J I -t)i Itc . 1 • arui,t an Pti ll3l6 to Volitits, Yittrature, ,g . rittlitita, (*rumba, Eildt Ate ;1.6 asefut arts, antral Etats of fly Pay, Fatal imfarmatiint, • P i Balmsor, Editor aaid_ Proprietor_ SEVENTH YEAR. ghe rctccJu rtrithittu. /L4llCllsl6ir COI* 1 / 411bSim 1°01)01 PUBLISHED BY erleolick..g..ake.,L, AT ONE DOLLAR A.-YEAR. PAYABLE IN ADVANCE QoFFIOE: CRULVS ROW, (SECOND STQIIT) nt-st., 5 doola East of Mrs. Flury's Hotel. If subscriptions be not paid within six months, 01.25 will be charged, and if delayed until the expiration of the year, g 1.50 will be charged. Any person sending us FIVE new subscribers shall have a sixth copy for his trouble. .No subscription received for a larperiod than Six months, and no paper will be disgontin tied until all arrearages 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) 00 cents for the first insertion and 25 cents for each subsequent insertion. Profes sional and Business cards, of six lines or less at 03 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. Ilaving recently added a large lot of new Jon AND CARD TYPE, we are prepared to do all kinds of PLAIN AND ORNAMENTAL PRINT ran, at short notice and reasonable prices. A liberal discount made to quarterly, half-year ly or yearly advertisers. ; DR. ESENWRIN'S TAR Sr. WOOD NAP THA. PECTORAL! IS THE BEST MEDICI:NE IN THE WORLD =I Coughs and Colds, Croup, Bronchitis, Asthma, Difficulty in Breathing, Palpitation of The Heart, Diptheria, and for The relief of patients 'IN THE ADVANCED STAGES OE CONSUMPTION, together with all Diseases of the Throat and , Chest, and which predispose to Consumption. It is peculiarly adapted to the radical cure of Asthma. Being prepared by a practical phys ician ant druggist, and one of great experience in the cure of the various diseases to which the human frame is liable. It in offered the afflicted with the great est confidence. TRY IT and be convinced that it is invaluable in the cure of Bronchial affec tions. fr:r-ParcE FIFTY CENTS PElt BOTTLE. Prepared only by Da. A. ESENWKIN & CO. ) DRUGGISTS AND CHEMISTS, N• W. Curd•Oth & Poplar Streets, Philadelphia. lym- Sold by every respectable Druggist and Dealer in Medicines throughout the State. April 7, IS6O-IY. 13 RE N N EMAN fiI To his MARIETTA Friends ! IT T_TE has romoved from Centre Square, to IL WEST KING-ST., LANCASTER, Op posite Cooper's Hotel, where he has the finest BOOT AND SHOE STOItE IN LANCASTRIL CITY. Ile makes fine calfskin Boots (the best) for $4 ,1 Calfskin Walking Shoes, $2526 Ladies flulf Claim's, (double soles) $2,00 Ladies Morocco Boots, (heels) Be has concluded to make the best work at somewhat reduced prices,and hopes by so doing to enlarge and increase his business. IQ— Mending of every kind neatly done. Citizens of Marietta.•--When you come to Lancaster, give BRENNEMAN a call and 3 - ou will surely be pleased with his work. September 15, MU, WINES eC LIOU - 011S.. H. D. BENJAMIN, Trine 4. Liquor Dealer, Picot Building, Front Street, Marietta. Pa. - — o _—_ 'DEM' leave to inform the public that he jwill continue the WINE & LIQUOR busi ness, in all its branches. He will constantly keep on hand all kinds of• Brandies, Wines Gins Irish and Scotch 7Vhishey, Cordials, Bitters, c., Ifenjamin's justly celebrated ROSE WHIS KEY always on hand. A very surerior OLD RYE WHISKEY ust received, which is warranted pure. la - .A.)l IL D. B. 'law asks of the public is a careful examination of .his stock and pri cesovhich will, he is c onfident, result in Ho tel keepers and others finding it to their ad- Tantage to make their purchases from I im. •, 41 q - DAVID +ROTH, Dealer in. Hardware. Cedarware, Paints, Oils, Glass, Cook, ihtt aa6otheh Sieba, MARKET-ST., MARIF.TTA. WOULD take this means of informing the Vl' citizens of Marietta and vicinity that he its prepared to furnish anything in his line, .consisting in part, of Table Cutlery of all kinds ; Building a n d Housekleoing Hard ware, in all styles, Cutlery, Tools, Paints, Oils, Glass, Varnishes, Cedarware, Tubs, Buckets, Churns, Knives, Forks, Spoons, Shovels, Po kers, Tongs, Candlesticks, Pans, Waiters, Cop - iier and Brass Kettles, Door, Desk, Pad and all other kind of Locks, Nails, Spikes and in fact everything usually kept in a well regula ted Hardware establishment. PLATED WARE: A Large and fine stock of Plated mare at H. L. & E. J. ZAHM'S, Corner of North Queen street & Center Square, Lancaster, Pa. Tea Setts, in variety, Coffee Urns, Pitchers, Goblets, Salt Stands, Cake Baskets, Card Baskets, Spoons, Forks, Knives, Casters, &c., &c., at manufacturers pates. REPLATING attended to at moderate rates. DANIEL G. BAKER, ATTORNEY AT LA IV; 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, '59.-ly pit . J. Z. HOFFER, DENTIST, OF THE BALTIMORE COLLEGE OF DENTAL bURGERY, LATE OF HARRISBURG, PA. OFFICE: Front street, fourth door 1' from Locust, over Saylor & McDon ald's Book Store. Columbia. Entrance be ween the Drug and Book Stores. [3_iy C NEW BRASS N W" LOCKS—Good Time • Keepers, for One Lollar. Clacks, Watches anti Jewelry carefully It:- paired and charges moderate, at WOLFE'S. ATOOD'S Hair Restorative, tit GROVEROTH'S WINTER CANNOT LAST FOREVER Winter will not last forever, Spring will soon come forth again, And with flowers of every color Deck the hill-side and the plain. Lambs will soon in fields be sporting, Birds re-echo from each tree—. " Winter's gone ! its days are ended ! 'We are happy, we are free ! " Hedge and tree 3vi,11 soon be budding, Soon with leai/es be covered o'er ; Winter cannot last forever! Brighter days are yet in store Sorrows will not last forever, Brighter times will come again, Joy our every grief succeeding, As the sunshine after rain. As the snow and ice of winter Melt at the approach of Spring, So will all our cares and trials, Joy and peace, and comfort bring. While the heart is sad and drooping, Think, though you be vexed ,ore, Sorrows cannot last forever! Brighter days are yet in store. $444/ 1 1 1 .014 10 UNNATURAL MOTHER.-Wl3\ the mail train from Pittsburg was coming east on Monday, a young woman with a small babe in her armes, entered the cars at Tyrone. After the train left Hun tingdon station, it was discovered that the woman had left the cars, and that the babe was safely stowed away in the ladies' saloon, to which the attention of the conductor was directed by its cries. The conductor was, of course, non pluss ed by the unexpected visitor which had been placed in his charge. The babe, a blooming healthy boy, about two weeks old was an object of great curiosity among the passengers. In all these troubles gathering thick and fast about the conductor, a genteel looking lady from Pottsville, Mrs. Lee, agreed to take charge of the little outcast. She stated, that not being blessed with children, after a, marriage of eight years, she would take it home, surprise her husband, and bring up the child as her own. The proposition was gladly accepted by the confused conductor, and the laly took the little stranger under her kind care and. protection, Before the boy • was handed over, however, he was regularly christened " ABRAHAU LINCOLN LEE," and by that name will hereafter be rec ognised. We can, however, readily im agine the surprise which Mr. Lee will experience when his wife reaches home with a little boy in her arns. A. 11. STEPHENS ; The New York Sun draws this unenviable picture of the late Hon. Alexander H. Stephens, of Georgia: He is perhaps in the most pitable position of all men on this conth nent. Beginning as a Chivalrous pion of the Union, in the debauch of frenzy and terroism called an " eleation," lately held in Georgia, the most flatter ing efforts were made by the conspira tors, after their triumph, not only to se duce him from allegiance to the Union, but to identify him with their nefarious cause, by the bribe of the first office in their gift. They got him cheaper. For the empty honor of Vice President of a " provisional usurpation," Alexander Stephens has set his name on the roll of treason and infamy. For others, there may be some mitigating considerations of misguided earnestness, or at least some such respect as attends upon un disguised and audacious ambition. But for Stephens not one poor excuse coupe devised. He is a self-degraded and self condemned man, judged out of his own mouth. His brave words were swallow ed before they were cold. THE U. S. TREASURY : The letter sent a few days since, by Hon. John A. Dix,.the new and efficient Secretary of the Treasury, says Forney's Press, to Eton. John . Sherman, chairman of the Committee of NA ays and Means, affords another striking proof of the deplorable condition of the National Treasury and of the terribly disordered state of the fi nances of the Government, notwith standing its repeated loans. Extrava gance,mismanagement, fraud, corruption and a failure to properly urge upon Congress the necessity of increasing the rate of duties, have done their legeti mate work, and almost ruined the credit of the great Government which,. when the present Administration came into power, stood higher than that of any na tion upon the.face of the globe. What a lesson does this afford to our states men,and how imperatively necessary does it render the change in our revenue laws, which has too long been postponed ! g o -The bust of Mr: Lincoln, which Mr. Jones, a sculptor of Cindinnati, has iv hand, is rapidly assuming form, and bids fair to be an excellent representa tion of the Presidtut Elect. IARIETTA, PA:, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1861. THE THREE NAPOLEONS Five hundred years ago the learned city of Padua counted among her . grave and reverend signiors a right worshipful podesta, or magistrate, Bonaparte by name. Two hundre'd years later the fair city of Florence reckoned among her good families of the San Miniato the Bonapartes—known, by the way, to be attached to the Orsini, and ready to draw swords in their quarrel, should hot words provoke cold steel. One hundred years later, the Bonapartes emigrated from Saranza, in the territory of Genoa, to Corsica, and settle` at Ajaccio. There they rose to softie eminence; and as there appears to have been a strong family in stinct to exercise authority, it occasions no surprise to find that Charles Bona parte (emulating the excellent example of the Paduan podesta) was a magistrate or judge in Corsica. But there was a wider field for the display of genius rap idly opening before the Bonapartes; the hour was approaching, and this hour brought the man, who was not only to exalt himself to the highest pinnacle of greatness—not only to shed luster on the family, but completely to overturn the whole of the then existing constitu tions of continental Europe, and to be queath to posterity a name worthy to be joined with those of Cmsar, Charlemagne, or Alexande.r. Charles Bonaparte married Letizia Ramolino, in 1767. Joseph, his eldest son, all unconscious of his future great ness, married a' merchant's daughter of Marseilles he was subsequently. King Of Naples and Spain. Lucien, the third . son, rose to be President of the ()tinned of Five Hundred. Eliza, eldest daugh ter of Charles Bonaparte, became Grand Duchess of Tuscany and Princess of Lucca. Louis, the fourth son, became King of Holland. Marie Pauline, anoth er daughter, became Duchess of Berg, and subsequently Queen of Naples.— Jerome became King of Westphalia.-- Crowns and coronets were plentiful, and the sons and daughters of the Corsican judge, whose ambition would probably have been bounded by, civic honor or magisterial dignity, were elevated to an eminent position, and taught to sway scepters or swords, or both, by the bril liant genius of their brother—second son of Charles Bonaparte—Napoleon by name. It is notfour purpose here to trace the career of this great man.: he began life under the patronage of Count de Mar biLeuf, who procured him admission to the military school at Brienne ; from thence he went to Paris ; he was hard pressed by poverty—a soldier who had to win fame and fortune with his own good sword and his own right hand; things were ripe for a change ; the op pression under which France had groan ed ever since the days of the Great Louis had become insupportable; the Quartier Rt. Antoine was fast breeding patriots of the red-cap and red-banded sort, who christened license Liberty, and shaved off "tyrants' heads with a ven geance. such a..man as Napoleon was wanted. When the ftrorc of the Revo lution subsided, France found herself in difficulties, out of which babbling advo cates could not rascue her without the help of some great military man. France looked for such a man, and found him in the person of Napoleon. Rapidly he rose to honor and renown—rapidly he extended the reputation of his name ; he performed prodigies of valor; every man under his command fought like a hero ; "q.hey came, they saw, they conquered." Their general, great at the council board as in the camp or on the field, soon turned his marshal's baton into a scepter. and on the 2d of December,lBo4, was crown ed Emperor of the French by:Pope Pius VII., brought to Paris expressly for that ceremony. But there was one European power which not only maintained its own inde pendence of Napoleon, , whose troops had overrun the Continent; but thwarted his projects and defeated his purpose. Eng land, by sea and land, asserted her naval and military power ; allied herself with the governments which the Napoleon policy 'he'd Overthrown or threatened, and et length after a long and terrible contest, completed the defeat of Napo leon on the plains of 'Waterloo. Brilliant as was the career of the First' Napoleon, the termination of MS reign was disastrous and melancholy. That termination was;the obvious result of the extravagant ambition of the man ; at tempting to gratify this passion, be over reached himself and fell to rise no more. Napoleon left one son. This young prince, at his birth (March 200, 1,H1,) uceiv: the title of of Home. In 1815 he was proclaimed Napoleon IL, but the reverses of his family precluded him from the exercise of even the shadow of power ; and, an exile from his native land, he lingered as Duke of Reichstadt till the year 1832, surviving his father nearly eleven years. The defeat of Napoleon at Waterloo, and his death at St. Helena, seemed to bring the Napoleon dynasty to an end. The star which had so rapidly arisen had culminated and set; and over-confident people predicted that it would never rise again. But the over-hasty are generally wrong, and their predictions in this in stance were signally incorrect. When the DIA% of Reichstadt died in 1832, the direct line of the family became extinct. There were, however, four brothers— Joseph, Lucien, Louis, and Jerome ; and three sisters—Eliza, Pauline, and Caro line. Joseph of Spain had no son.— Lucien of Canino had eleven children, including five sons. Louis of Holland. who married Queen Hortense, had three sons—Napoleon, Napoleon Louis,• and Louis Napoleon, the last the only sur viver. Jerome of Westphalia had two sons—Jerome Napoleon and Napoleon, and one daughter—Mathilde (Princess Demidoil). Of the sisters of Napoleon, Eliza left one daughter ; Pauline left no children ; and Caroline left two—Lucien Charles Murat and the Countess Rasponi. Of the brothers and sisters of the Empe ror, Jerome was the last. Of the sec ond generation, the descendants of Luci an would take precedence by right of primogeniture ; but Lucien was in dis grace when his brother fell, and he and his heirs were excluded. Louis Napo leon, the present Emperor of the French, is the only temaining male member of the families entitled by the laws of the empire to the succession. It is unnecessary to enter into any full detail.of the singularly-checkered history of Napoleon 111. Confidently believing that he was born to rule in France, he has steadily and perseveringly, labored to that end, passing through troubles which must have discouraged less de termined men, and facing dangers before which less bold men would have shrunk back ; a prisoner, an esile, a wandering outcast, he has never resigned the idea of sitting on his uncle's throne, and that object 'of his life is accomplished, not at the sword's point, but by the exercise of skillful diplomacy. Napoleon 111. haS shown himself the possessor of very great intellectual ability, and of no small share of personal courage ; and, unlike his un cle, he has thought it best to maintain an alliance with England. On the field of battle, and in the peaceful arena . of art and science, the English and French —accounted as natural enemies in the days of Napoleon—have engaged side by side'; friendly visits have been made by the sovereigns of both countries to each other's courts, and amicable rela tions have been maintained. DONATION TO SUPPORT "SPINSTERS :"- A benevolent and eccentric maiden lady, Miss P. Townsend by name, died recently in Boston. In her will she leaves $2O - to the Home of the Relief of Indi gent Females iu Boston, and $60,000 to be applied to the support of those fe males who, in legal phraseology, are called "spinsters," or single women.— She says in her will that she belongs to the sisterhood, and is is duty bOlind, as she has the means, to procure them a shelter from "the world's dread laugh," and a quiet home. The recipients are to be such as are reduced to poverty, not crime, to be Americans and born of American parents ; they are to be of the virtuous poor of this description, , who are single froM choice or necessity. She says the cumber will always be larger of those who are too old or too feeble to labor for their support, and have out lived their friends; and trusts they will find the home a happy asylum.• She also leaves $20,000 to another home for des titute females, and $20,000 to the Presi dent and Fellows of Harvard College, for the benefit of indigent students".-- Neither did she forget the•ministers, for Rev. 'Dr. Dewey is made happy by the receipt•of $5,000, and the same amount falls to Rev. Dr. Francis," Professor in the Divinity School of Cambridge. Tauchnitz, the celebrated Leipsic publisher, who has introduced into Ger many all the popular works of the best Auiei•ican - nud, English authors, hat been raised by the Duke of Saxe Coburg and the King of 3a,xony: to the rank of he reditary Baron. 'MIS dignity has been conferred as an acknowledgement for the exertions made by Tauchnitz to promote the exteution of English literature in or P rlier - r - Y - 1,---Ccas- Dollar a, Year WHAT IS A ZOUATE ?—Here is a pen portrait of one, by a reportorial contem porary, which is true to life : A fellow with a red bag having SUeves to it for a coat ; with two red bags without sleeves to them for trowsers ; with an embroid ered and braided bag for a vest; with a cap like a red woolen saucepan ; with yellow boots like the fourth robber in 'a stage play ; with a moustache like two half pound paint brushes ; and with a sort of sword-gun or gun-sword for a weapon, that looks like the result of a love affair between an amorous broad sword and a lonely musket, indiscreet and tender—that is a Zouave 1 A fellow who can "pull up" a hundred-and-ten pound dumb bell ; who can climb up-an eighty foot rope, hand over hand, with a barrel of flour hanging to his heels ; who can do the "giant.swiug" on a horizontal bar with a fifty-six tied to each ankle ; who can walk up four flights of stairs, holding a heavy man in each hand, at arm's length; and who can climb greased pole feet first, carrying a barrel of pork in his teeth—that is a Zonave ! A fellow who can jump seventeen feet four inches high, without a spring board ; who can tie his legs in a'double bow knot round his neck without previously softening his shin bones in a steam bath ; who can walk Blondin's tight rope with his stomach outside of nine brandy cock tails, a suit of chain armor outside his stomach, aid a stiff north-east gale out side of that; who, can take a five shoot ing revolver in each hand and knock the spots off the ten of diamonds at eighty paces, turning summersaults all the time, and firing every shot in,the air—that is a Zouave ! HOW TO MAKE A CANDLE BURL—To make a candle burn all night, in case of sickness, or when a dull light is wished, or when matches happeh to be mislaid, put finely powdered salt on a candle till it reaches the black part of the wick.— In this way a mild and steady light may be kept through the _night, by a small piece of candle, besides having a light so blue and sepulchral that if there hap pens to be a sick person in the room he or she will be likely to die from horror before morning, and a healthy person, happening to wake, will be very certain to go into hysterics. THE PRINCE'S NEWFOUNDLAND The Prince of Wales has been cheated out of the affections of his dog, present.. ed by the people of Newfoundland._ When on board ship, a boy was put to look after him. He got so fond •of the boy that he would not take notice of the Prince, and the boy was taken to Lon don. The Queen gave him Al 5 and a suit of clothes. He returned to Ply mouth, and was there but one day, when he had to be sent' for, because the dog would not eat. re- Elizabeth Schaumberg, a dashing young• German girl at Rochester,: desk ous to marry one,Salli, who had - a for tune of $lO,OOO or so, negotiated .with her intimate friend Zimmerman to bring about the match on a promise of $lOO in case it should be consuma,ted: An agreement was made, between them to this effect and signed, and the match be ing Made, Elizabeth wholly refused to remember her bargain'. She declined to pay, and Zin3merinan Sued her ; but the courts have decided that he cannot re cover on the note, as it was given with out consideration. Loret, of Louisville, Ky., revenged herself on Mrs. Parrott a few days - since, for enticing her husband away from her, by breaking over her head a bottle of vitriol, destroying one eye completely, and terribly burning her 'face and perscin. When 'arrested, she ackeoWledged that revenge alone prompted the deed;i and that 'she would rather die than live. William M. Stewart, of Washoe, has written to Representative Burch, of Cal ifornia, and enclosed the Caption of a memorial which is being : extensively signed by the citizens of Nevada Terril tory, praying for the organization:cif that Territory. Mr. Stewart is a ion-in-law of ex-Governor 'oote, and a lawyer of ability. ,Be says that Nevadals 7 unsuited: to slavery, but this makes no difference to the people. They must speedily lave a government to protect their increasing interests from Mormon rule. GB- Five spans of the long bridge . which-crosses the Susquehanna, river' at Dauphin,Were blown awayon Thursday night , span ,contains••2so feet ; making 1,0) feet of the bridge which las been destroyed. The less to the company is 540,000. NO. 32. " MASON AND DIXON'S LINE."-11l COM mon conventional usage, "Mason and Dixon's line " is the boundary between the Free and Slave States. Concerning the origin of that line, and its actual ex tent, the following are the historical facts : On the 4th of August, 1763, Thomas and Richard Penn, and Lord Baltimore, being together in London, agreed with Charles Mason and Jerimiah Dixon, two mathematicians or surveyors, to mark, run out, settle, and fix the boundary line between Maryland on one hand, and Del aware and Pennsylvania on the other.— Mason and Dixon landed in Philadel phia on, the 16th of November following, and began their work at once. They adopted the peninsular lines, and the radius and tangent point of the circular of their predecessors. They next ascer tained the north-eastern coast of Mary land, and proceeded to run the dividing parallel of latitude. They pbrsned this parallel a distance of 23 miles, 18 chains and 21 links, from the place of beginning at the N. B. cdrner of Maryland 'to the bottom of a valley on the Dunkirk Creek, where an Indian war-path crossed their route, and here, on the 19th of Novem ber, 1767—ninety-three years ago, their Indian escort' told them it was the will of the Sioux nation that the surveys should cease, and they terminated ac cordingly, leaving 36 miles, 6 chains, and 50 links as the exact distance remaining to be run west to the southwest tingle of Pennsylvania, not far from the Broad Tree Tunnel on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. Dixon died at Durham, Eng land, 1777 ; Mason died in Pennsylvania, 1787. STARVATION IN KANSAS.—lmmediate aid is needed in Kansas, and it is urged by the public journals that the various State Legislatures, should at once act for the relief of the sufferers, as it has been too long delayed by.individuals.— Contrasted with the worst condition of the poor in our cities, the suffering- in Kansas is terrible. The horrors of star vation in. Ireland were never half realiz ed in this country. Whole families lay in the public streets, bowling in the pangs of death for food, and others died standing upright against the walls of houses, looking from their glazing eyes for bread. Similar scenes are now be held in-Kansas. COMING ON.—Letters received in this city, says the Washington National In telligencer, from North - Alabama and some parts of Georgia, represent a great reaction in progress against the secession movement. So strong is this feeling in some 'sections, that they are said to re fuse to acknowledge the secession ordi nance, and keep , the stars and stripes flying. The same feeling prevails in portions of Mississippi and Louisiana, and the question naturally arises, will the Southern Confederacy use .coercion against its refractory subjects? A WEDDING INTEEEUTTED.-A young Polender married a fellow countrywom an of his in New York, eight years ago. All went well till some months since when Mr. I'. went to Chigago on business.— His wife learned from a friend that the business was another marriage, dressed herself and children for a wedding and followed him. She arrived at the bride's house-just in time. The children rush ed into the paternal arms, the bride fainted ; wife's.brother caned husband ; wife rushed to the kitchen, came back with a great dish of boiling soup and scalded husband so that he died two weeks after. CLIARITABLE OFFER.—The Kentucky Colonization Society, in order to relieve the free; people of color in that State froin3lie embarrassing position in which they have been placed by its free negro law, which went into operation on Janu ary Ist, 1861, offer to such of them as are willing to emigrate to Liberia a free pas sage thither, and support for six months after their arrival. Those having fami lies are offered, in addition, ten acres of land, as a free gift, upon condition that they will settle ou it. Five acres are of fered upon the same terms to every un married adult, male and female. @r Business at Haverhill, Mass., is still stagnant, very few shoe buyers hav ing made their appearance as yet. Up to a corresponding date last year about 15,000 cases were shipped from Haver hill. .Thllli year the trade is so far behind that very few goods have yet been sold co - The oyster-packing trade of _Balti more for.tlie year 1860 reached the sum of three and.a,.half millions of dollars in value. The home consumptionwas es timated at a million.