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... ., -.1 it. Vcfnca Republican: fi'fi VfVi in A li iL. J ,t ,n CI ';,n i y t WDKUraO AalctfUt,f to til lITaaiaia Of KNOX COtTNXY. $250 PER TEAE- i fin ; jiu AAvAlie WM. TJASCOM,, raoraiaroa, rorii.)aaaB jjri'into, . omci i u kkkmi.in jti.ocK, iu stcmr. kind ion prempUr, I anparlor t;I, to be jrl4 All fctOB fl.Mft . . Th Winter aAraigai been Ized, iod the tam 1 Ttlmloono kuui n. Hell Ut.i.1.a. Accommodation-teat. apnea learai nt on the 1. M. .'i. 11 R. ha for leirttig tit. Vardtrla're M J. Vat. learee. Aafiommotlifoa)-vavee, ftoiva 'ofty, ;....m r. .... e:0 1-. ....10:11 r. .-. I'M P. V. .. .... t:41 A M. ....I,.." A M. CI,' IT Can Job th Central Ohio Road Itin Newark i follow: I 1 t Ooing kit,l..LM..J. 1. .....:0 A. a. Li.... .L ami Ooinr weetA..,., I J..........1! 00 m. ...if.li A, Ob the P.I Siawark,., Oolaf Wait a aoova. . A O. road toln Hit. the can leara ...... a:J A. it. .. ..X ..12:00 at. rstitfr on via Central Road, Uiajfileaae PISCTPtKUCHpRCfi, aten-enitej i rRHSnTTldRIAlj'URCII, corner (?a- and Ch ant- ant atreeti iiKTHODifit Knscor. Chaatnot Street. , PROTESTANT Kngcoiai, ana nif a areata, . METnODI! IRE) tsa Streel between Oar nd r Bar. .HKRVKY. It, CnURCH, AorwH' HfTiajo Bar. ay H. BUSH. CHURCH, Vornrr" Her Rot GEO, B. RKfcSR,. CATHOLIC 'CHPBSH, ''Jornar High 4 lftFtcnt'f., HOT. JUJ.iUSBKi.Ni. CRUUCR, Meehanloa 5 J, . . ' 1 - ' ' DEVOXJSM TO POUTIC8, LITEItATUllK, THE MARKETS, AND OKNEIUL IlfTKIJL.iaENOIS. VOL; XI. Mount vernon, onio, tttesday, juke 20, i8C5. NO S3, iees. l ESXSILyAKIl CENTRAL K. B. rhiSUUEGH TO rillLADELPHIA - Front nil porrtona of Uie Weat North. Weat and Uiit1-t -rt, tlila line and lta armnvetinna farm either the Bhortmt or the beit roule to PhlladeW pbla,Mew York, hnrt m, DnlOmore and Waahlngton The trareller nia.wlt.h eoofliJiince roljr npon oura cob. nctlon. high anted with perfect eafetr, and arerjr appliance for comfort that can bo procured. Mew and elegnnt puaengcr enrn, for tjar ah5 night aervlca, bare recentlv boon arithd to tha eqnipinvnt af thv F annajt rania Central Rail Hoaft I ' , At Wltaborgh, trainafrow tha Went ran diraet to tha ttnioa Depot, wbero pnaaoAgara are trannrcrred to tha Tralna of tha Penn'Tloanla Crntral Kalloof, which lra Plttaharirh ant afrlfa atotber poinu aufntlowo 'AfT MAHj Leaeea PlttabnrKh at 3 A M., atop- ?lngat Principal atatinta, and arrlrei at Alloona at 6(1 A. U., Harrl.lH.rnt.tl.IO P. Mm ftalllitMret at 5 46 P; M , New Yoik na AHentown, atlO 10 P U., Pblla. iDilnhlat at 4i 1. N , kn Naw Yotk, lie Philadelphia, at hM P. M. ; . . f.,!' hahhimiIi cm Areata noo.xrt o ff iiyj l.pavea J'ltlnburgh at M t all ri-(-.r.r fltatloaa,. Altoona at ANT atraet hatfaak litaia nrgS.' -;J APTTJfT iVtrnbH lHnt'TreeUnf BAPTIfT and Meehahtca. between Mnlberrr J. rr-JVEHBAKUBK. CONOREOATIONAI, ClTrttCnA Mnlnerrr at., between Bngaraad Hiintramis. U J ReOJ. K. MONBOK. UNITED rRESBTTERIANreorner Main and Snpir atreete. Rot. s. H. UUTUHISON. METnODIST WESLEYAN berrr and Wooatcr. CHURCH, corner Mat Rev. MR. TRAVIS. iays Cawlt , for , , BUTTER, EGGS, RAGsJ OATS, ETC. holuale And Rotll Daaleralo , BOOTJ&rSHOES, . LRATnift. Kit xxo KIdivos. b-in.it r. - .'-'- "', S. Ii- TAm-JiOK, 5c CO. DaALiaaiir Dry Goods and JVolions, BUTTER, EQGS, RAGS, tC. ATTORNEY COyjfSELLOR;AT LAW. DUNN & SNOW, ' , ' , PLAIN AND ORNAMRVTAti V,' PAINTING, GRAINING t i JA I ,. . ti ti : . . - AND PAPER iiANQINtl, 5 . Misa, EL A. DOIfNELLT, v'u! V. 'MILLINEB ;. MANTATJMAKBR, Mt. Ve-non, March 31, 1885-ly. Ira A ., aionalna at all rn-'iHr Hlilloaa. 11H0P. M..f antarrircaat )ur.M.iuha4B M P. at t aintBlJlt.lll AMI t:.PHVH-Learea Pittabntih at in.) P. it. Mlnnnln nt iarl allKUtiona Arrlvra at Allnona aid .00 P. U.tTvn. 6,M P. M . Lock H tven P. K . Harrlabartrh a. 11. 15 P M.. Fhlladiili.hiaat4.3ll A. If . and New York nt I HII.Altri.PlII t EXPl?rnI,..Tea Pitta. irariru atlofip. M... ntofiplrlgonly e,t Principal SUtlona Arnvea ai AiiDonn m vn r. m.,x riarnamira at a ao M. (Wtlmor at 7.l A !. New York. l Allentown. at)"") A.M. Milladelphla pt 7.0D A, H. and New Yoik via PliiliV)ihla, 12 IX) U.f .Rlrtpiug i tnrj rnn through on tul tmin from l'lttibnrfrh to Baltimore and l-niiaoeinnta. anuto new via Allenttiwii. 'ATI,IIMK LfKT PUtHburcb at CM P. M. Arrirea ni altoona Baltimore at SHADOWS. . ,' u., ... ITbea th o1i!1dro Rra bunhed In th oarHrr, And tba p wallow lUept in th vre, - Aol tha biffht-wind Ii rourmuritg Hereto , Apmrt to the Unteniog Itatet ( , , Then I open b ianer chamber 1 ' ! ' Tauat wai alneed by the $ taring tkft And ffentlv undraw tba enrUin When m hoi lee t .reaiureille.' 1 Swtet iplrlti la, may not ilumbet Cool ehaiJowi from HprbU now goat Aoi the echo vf voire eouhdiog, All oiiBvlJng for to Anu, blendiag afnonx the otaera. 7 , 'V !J ' ' n.a. Brkn (at aiiftatP wnvt a J ' One ebadow It cooler, deep ; : ' J 1 And m-jr dJ naming ejes grvw wet. , Fortbe .mage 1 ran on Ion e it. "In what r said Minna "In poetry". : "Th la Dtose. . "Ob I" sold the discorofltod "reader" with a aigh. "Yes. a novel.' Wool The SnppiT The Demand - V The Price. From an article in tbe Ohio Farmer, writ ten by ono apparently thoroughly convemut Willi urn uujvci wi ouiiuciiaw uis loiiuwinjr in la tha Image that bleaaed rnj rettth 1 'J" TI. . .nn.l , l..l ti. ... l ' i or lore and troth. ... ntonnlne-onlv at ftrln,'(nAl Rltiiitit at 3.40 A. U Harrlabdrt it 7 i A. ll, 13 30 P. M..t KV York, tla AllM)lnn. at 2.A6 P. Philadelphia at i MP. X t and N-w York Tla PhCadel pnia. at s.w r. it.-' ' -' ; Prtakfait. Dinner, i t Swfper. TICKETS FOR SALE TO B.08T0N BY BOAT OR RAIL. boat thikbtb ooon oir amy 07 trb aouitn Lin-aa, PARK 0 AU POINTS A8 LOW A8 ANT ROUTB. 2 Br.BE3?JKfC3- CABS on ioht nun to pH'fAD'A NEW YORK & BALTIMORE, BAGGAGE" CHECKED THROUGH ' 'AJYD ' TRJrJYSl ERRED FREE. ' THE PENNSYLVANIA RAIL ROAD CO. Will not aaavirae any rlak for Bagtrage, except for Wear ing Apparel, andl'init thehr rqaponsibllity to Ona Huo dred Dollnra In ralue. All Bup eifeedinr thai amount in value, will be at tha rlak of the owner, nnleaa W. MORGAN, Attorney nt Xaa-vra OrriCE Orar tha Shoa 8 tor of Millar White, ' MOUNT VERNON, OHIO . Jfareh Slat, 1864-ly , MARCH 9th, '1864. .,. . WAilrJER FILLER, IS RBCEIVIN8 TREsn ' ' -" ' ". NEW.GOODS Paichaao'l t'nee the Great Decline la . Prlcea, , All that want Ckf tip Gootla, call at March.li.lW6. , . , .. WARNER MILLER'S. JUST RECEIVED AT v . a spiendid iMortment ot f READY MAM ttOt IiliVG! AND iv GWTS FURNISHING G00DSI Plana' call, and! I wilt anil jm aa low aa poaalbla. Mara, 186t-tf., .. . , . L MUNg. : CERTIFICATE 0t AtlfHORn'Y Or THE Khox;VonRt7' National Bank of P, p . . Mount ternon, ' CftttH kn COMPTROlaLKM Of TUB CVHrTCJrCT, v - - WiSHtnOTO. April Sfith. 18. - WftintBA, llr eatlsfSintory evidence preente4 to tht vndertitrned, if haa been made to appoar that (iThe Knos Coanty Katletwl Hank of Ifnnnt Vcrhon," in the CHf Noetr. Vernoa, In the Ooontr of Koov -and State of Ohio baa been dulr oryanised ander and a ordfnr tn the reqnlremfiita of the Act of CongteM, omitA "An Act to provide a Kational Onrrnnc, ae-nret. ftt a ptttttf of United 8tatei Honda and U pro ider the dronlatlow and redemptino tberttof," ap-- proTed Jane t, 1W4, and baa Complied with att tbe pro vlaton of Mid Act inquired to W eom plied with before wmmtvt..K tba tn.-.nM of Aabkiaganderaiid Art: . Kow therffora, L Preeman Clarke, Comptroller of the Currfttrr'. do frhr 0rtfr, that ,lThe Kax Conntjr NaUonal Dank of Mount Prrnonip the Citj of Muot vernoit, la the Covntr of Knox and State of Ohio, la ftnthoHfftd to eonmanee the buaineBi of BankiDf aoder the Act afotenaCd; ; : .' , . 4d8At.) In tnitim'onr whereof. wilnetiJi m'aatid end ' 8e af of offloe, tfli iwea tj-flah day of April, :;f - ! 'REBVAW. CLARRr V Mar It, tt-awtla. , ConiptroUer of the Cnironey. ;i Adnunistratbr Sale. -, IS pnriraaac of aa wnaeraf Ilia IV bate Omrt In and for Kama Onantr. Ohio, granted off the Mlh dajr of Mar A. U. 1 will offer at Pahlla Anetion on The 2SA day of jun? A. D. 1865. 't At 1 "'dock V. M.j npoaj th pramliee, the following deaerlhed real evtato, aitnat In Xnni Connkr, Ohio, amwrl:- aiaanitl.iiJed nne-eeventh parte of a part of the NrtH weatquarterof Hectlon SI In 8th Tnwnablp and 13th rUox. eooimenf-iiig t tb North-caat eoinerof " th Kait'a4a( tlie KanlalUr In the town f Amltr) thMmnohigaMoath V7et -rlj airretioft along th Eaet alley ot aald tnwrr AO frivtoo palao to a atone; thenew in aAonth-aalerlr direction, VI 0-IO9 pnlea U) a atawe; theneft North to th plaee of beginning, COD tatni4 7 acre ami 130 pelea nior or leaa. . Apprnlaed atl-HT ... Alao. eta eareath of Iota nnmberec! M and 91 la tba tow af tmltr In ald ooant. ' Arpraiaed ai 160 00. fKri'a'-t OF rtAl.r-. One thlrrl In head, one. third la a nd balanro in tw eeor fi-om th dar of aala with lav rait. Deferred paraienla to b aoi-turnd a paorMrar... -awiliO. M. BROWK, Hti,tHiJ.. i4aatf alBfoaraj.. !)ollnra In ralue.' All Bapi taken by apeoial contract. FREIGHT. Br Oils Route Freljrhtu of all dcfieriDtlAn can ha for. warded to and f-om Philadelphia, New York. Boetonor Baltimore, to and froih anr poiot on tbe Railroade of mo, nentucur, Indiana, liliooia, Wiaconito, Iowa or niHuun) vjf nutirvuu aurci The Pennarlrnnia Central Rail Road aluo connerta at Pitttburgh with 8teannrH, by which Oooda can be for waraea to anr ncoennibie port on tbe Uhin, Munkipgum, Tenner, Cumberland. Illinnle. MiMiMinnL MfuMnurt Arkaneaiiand Red Rirern:and at Clereland. Sandtnkv bdu vuicaiu witu oMauneri in rnru on D9 Aorta- weflteru JaKM. Merchant and pbinnera tntruflting the trannportatlon ftbeir Freitrht to thiaComoanr. can rolr with -nnA. THE KATE s OF FRKIGHTto and (rom anr nnlnt fa the Weat, by the PenQavlvaoia Central Rail Road are ai all times a favorable as an charged fry other Bail goad Vvmrar.wCaTe . t V Be particular to mark B ekaarea "tfa PaanA Central HB. . ,- For FrtsiKrhtCntrartiorShlpnlnff DIrectlona. aDnlf fj ur atuurou viiurr m in toiiuwing agenui OI IOC fjoi p"!. - - . . ....... a. o. nimtniiiri, r r reigni Airent. rbiiaoa. O. A CARPKNTER, Freight Agent, Ptttaburgh, r.1 inir. i. (in w r . : . . ' vu , irausivr ur u t, ribtaourgO. H. W. BRpWN k CO , Cincinnati, Ohio. R. C, HKI.PRUM ACO., Mailiaon, Indiana. . MOItF.HK.AD A CO., Looiarille, Kentucky. W. U. AIKMAN. Eranar lie, Ind. R. F. HASS ft CO. Ht. Loula, Mlamurl CLARKE ft CO., Chicago, Illlnoia. j. n. aicijiii.M. rortamoutn, o. . J H. LOVE, Mavavllle, Kj. HALL ft CO. Marietta. O. E AYRKH. Mu.kiognro Rlrer. 0. . , W. H ft E. I. LAN0I.EY, Oalllliolla, O. . H.S. PIKRCB ftCOvZanearille, 0. N H. HUDSON. Ripely, 0. , R. 0. MKLDRUM,reneralTraTlllog Agent. ' ' ' ' tlVESTOCK. Drorera and Farmer will end thia a moat adranr. geona route for Lira Stock. Capadoua Yarda, well wate.-ed and aupplied with erery convenience, hare been opened on tula lino and lta connection, and every .iiFaiion ii paiq w. iobt nnn, rrom namaonrg. where will b found every convenience for feedinr and reating, a choice la offered of PHILADELPHIA, NEW YORK aid BALTIMORE MARKETS. Thlawill alao be fnnnd the ahorteat,qnlckeat and most direct ronte for Stock to New York via Allentown and wltl fewer change than any other. KNO'H LKWIS.Oen'l Superintendent, Altoona. Pa. hknht w, nwiNr Kit. Hen'l Ticket Agent, Pblla H. II. HOUSTON, Gen'l Freight Agent, Pblla. 'an. 17-06. 1-y. A pamphlet directing how to apeedlly and give up apcelaclca without aid of Docl wnt by mall free on receipt of 10 canta. llltSTORB aiOHT of Doctor or medicine, .ddrcjf Dec, 20, lfW4-ly. B. Footh. M. D. 1130 Broadway, N. Y.' MOUNT VERNON tnrcoir brass baijd. THIS BAND la now completely organised, and In 'god healthy condition, It haa a choice ae lection of MopIo. and under competen instruction baaarrlred atprotTieienerln-ltamualcal execution. It ia ready to fill all ealla for in u ileal aerricea at borne or abroad, oo reaaonable term, either for Cotillion Partfoa or for Hraaa Mtme. Jv w. T. HlhUa.it, Prei". C. P. Orroort, 8eey W. if. TnoMrsoir. Leader. . (Dee. 13, 1804tt , I. CANCER DOCTOR. JnmesD. aJotinsona OF CLEVELAND. TLD in for all who mar be affifcted with that he la prepared to ear that formidable dia to hiraael eaae by a ttroceaa differina; from all o there, known oalr a nlatr. eomnot lng little or do pain. On ezaminatiea he will be able Ilia treatment conaijta In tha ann lira tint oi a mngie piaa wr, eomnoMn ni Eurnpean neroa, to say to the patient whether their caae la onrableor not and will guaranty a permanent nra of all aeun. aeriaaea. a mo, win gnarrantee A permanent tun la tbe worat eaae ot RhumatUm. rtirsitRiTrKa Mrm SamnelNer. Geo MastflTer. E R. Oantt, and David Morey, Mt. Vernon, O.; John pall, Centerbnrg, Kno'i Co Ohio. Orrioa At hla realdence .-Bedford, Cnyahojr Co., 0 12 mllea Sooth of CleTeland, v (July 2fl, JStH-ly . Howard Association. PHILADELPHIA, PA. " " ' ' Dlaeaao of tbe Nerwout, Bemfnal, TTrlnAry and Sexual Byatomn new and reliable treat ment In RenorU rf tb HOWARD ASSOCIATION 8eot by mail ib aoaled letter nrelnnaa, free of ebargat Adilreaa, Dr. J. 8KILLEN HOUGHTON, Howard Aaaa-aiatioa. No. Sooth Ninth Stmt, Philadelphia, Pa. Dacath, 1804-1 r. , , ' , KEWYOrj HOUSE, ; Cornar 'of Mala 81. and th PabUSqAra, :.'S.. .::, . '.MOUNT Vi?BNON. 61. HAVING UaiedlbU wall known and popular Botal, and etted It up In tuperior atria, I am prepared to aocomaaodaif traveler and all otkera who may give ma a eaiL Th patronage of th Public ia rmeectrnllv Boa Ue.ttd, - , JOSEPH aOABBROCOH, . Nay3,180-ly; --.: . - . MILLINERY.- 3Irs. Ilnrrlm Sc JToliiiason, 'On Wen Gambier St. near U Ward SehMl ATufMetf . - A prepared to do Work In the moat apnrovadatvla. A. either In Htntw, 811k, or Crape. They koepa good aairtment of Klbboaa and other Trlmlnge. Mar 1, 166o. L. R. DROVM, Ilomopopatliio hyajicJan. OFFICE-Woodward Building,' Mai Street, l MayW, IMo-ly, . "MT. VERNON, 0," AITAtil.Ut.Vf. , Pinkie A Wa'ti. PlalntllTa. anal oat denrri Tin Defendant. .' . . OKg Mile Peaklna, J P. of Brown Town.hlr,. aoa Gonntr, Ohio, an lha ad dar ot April A I). aalit Juatic leaned an order of atuclimrnt In the aiioT art oo tor too aum of aia Hi-K-fl. Brown"vliie, aa.ajisaw.iioa JKaC JSAd, aa P. PINKLEY ft. WALTS, amu or Wo travelled llfe'a Way together .. A little while aid by aide , ,. ,.' :ut And when I grow faint or weary, That light waa my atrejgih and gnlde. i ' 1" ,r- ' ' ' :; ia ' And dearer It grew how dearer ! . Till I watched it wane and fad ) : :' a on my ngei naa, aa wa parted, Be patient: be not afraid. And when 1 am alck and weary WI. h the heat and doit of the daw. How tha aenae of her word came o'ar 1 - Her word r ah want away. r :r 'O "Oh I a novoL; Of oonrao, I ought to hare regard to the demand for aod tht probable piivoui rr uwi yikiucr otn.iua tuna uuuug iiw war there bas been a great demand lor wool, and that waeU), to a greater or less degree. bos taken the place of economy; the writer oaya that prices now most be cputrolled by thoae laws oi .- trade rfcMirttto and lupplywmrM are superior to allnnactuieuta, except for short periods, and that legiolation can increase or donresa but for a abort time only, i j I i. War created an nnnsonl demand as rejr&rdf amount or quality, bat Peace, which hoi ro-turned, will restore to us former wanU and former means of proenring thoso Wants. " Ilia average consumption will be about, and per- Dans exactly toe same , ' In 1850 we had, aa shown by the census of mat year, 21,723,221; sheep and a weight or wool exceemuir 02,auu,uuu ibsfreiurni 02, 616,949 lbs.) and in 1860 number of abeep was only 23.317,736, and the weight of wool reported 60 811,343 lbs, the weight of fleece gnessed that" , "Mine is not a sensation novel a simple experience 01 me," f . "Very good." ' ' 1 "I think the style Is new and will take,1 "Possibly, If you bad a name" ; . ' .' "But I can make one." ' . ' ' "Very tree ;" and the publisher still held the manuscript, hoping the lady would hare tbe politeness to tuke it back ; but Minna was perfectly convinced she waa doing him it service by leaving it with him. ." " ' ' ' " ''VCe wilt not talk of terms now," sold she,' backing out with a smile ; "but you will read tbe manuscript, and then well, am sure yon will bf pleased. ' When shall 1 call I "Just when yon please," replied the pub' lisher, the moment Minna was out of sitrht he opened a bnge closet, and thrusting the man uscrlpt in amid a pile of others, consigned it to silent oblivion till she should come alter it acrain. for of roadinir It he had not the mnai D 130 being less than 21 lbs, and in 18b0 distant idea. '' only a little less than 2 6-10, and Increaslug Day after day Minna went about, her spirit arerage in the ten years loss than 2 os. -a I a! L .a a i.a I fin mtaan IiioMaeoil hattarfWtn 1 QAfl anr) 1 QK( And I atk for a patient windom, . : . . Aa 1 Journey the way alone ; 1 Till I tread on the golden tbreahold .'.':'. , . r. Of the heaven where ahe la gone. When the children are buibed in tba naraerr, And tbe a wallow aleena in the aavea. And the nirbt-wind is aflurmnring aecreta Apart to the listening leavei. IflAHUaA Law. Jlarrjing for a nonie.- snstuining her for some time, but at last even ber courage gave way, and sue sat weary and wretched in the little room, where Harry Smith and ber brother were anxiously watching her. "So," said Harry, "you have not been as Incky as you deserve to be, Minna T 1 ou look dispirited."' ; -' " " "I am. My novel has been reiected it is too moral and' too common place. I tried original Knglish tales for the magazines ; they nsnted t rench translations. When I offered Freuch translations, they wanted tales from tbe Italian. When I hunted np Italian stories I with great difficulty, (for there are none,) then everybody seemed bent on German. I have Onr sheep increased between 1840 and 1850 only 12J per cent, and between 1850 and '60 only 6 per cent, while the popnlation increased 33 and. a fraction in the first ten years, and 34 6-10 in the latter. : Our population In 1853 Is 30,492,137, not allowing for losses by tbe war, and allowing the same consumption of wool, we wonld re quire 6 2-100 lbs each, or 182, 460,689, or with the former sprinkling of cotton, say 160,000,- UUU the wool, allowing for compounding, 22,' 460,685 lbs of that article, . Although wo ev idently want and absolutely need 160.000,000 lbs wool, we have not the machinery to work more than 120,000,000, being the product of "My child, my child, I am going to leave V0LZ . ,bLe.dl8cT"e of bankruptcy Dear,y bHnded myself with that rile German KOOO seU of machinery at 100 lbs per day would be too much for me. . I i a j : v 1 . .'.u.. . . I ...1, ni.:. :. u : ri..j:l . ... . .v . , . ' 1 .-I cuaracttfr. ana vet a oare not aoia a Bino-in i a uu i vuw oniiumio ui nurvroi iniauiuK "Oh, father, do not talk thus : think of me. I akin. t . . . , hrnlrnra r tha soatnm oitio nri nrth fTmio .1.1. AMI L . I. -ll . . .. .... ui loe cuiiu wuora you leave, wuuoui a noroe, Her9 Minna, whose nerves had been over- atatea JEconomi.l, which is deemed good aa r,....u. . i.iouu, wtiuumrenuurvcs. , : nowered with fat rrne. la id her head rlnwn and woriiy. and wii nave the sanction of manu "roor Minna, said the dving man : "but k..hi.i..m , . .. - fntiirra Wa moot hnrniw imrwir ta tk.Vb. .kllJ. .1: T V..a. a...L. ""I" "". .. . ."","-- 'T --" ama, UIV 1.II11U, nuvu A WUO UUi UUriUVU 10 I . Tk.n t?..lk kA Wll.n. MAI nn r.MH kl. I All IHHI llllll ava imnnnt vnonnrnolneai In trnntia , - , ... n . .1 ' AUDU MUlUUl HC( UIU.UDI, .III UIJ 1 1 U UJ UIO I I "I " " " " " " .m Bwwua vnn.AHnnrl van wrtll flnl tmtanAa . Mnna ku.k. I . r ' . 1 I i , ' --"-' ...M , yur .uiuiu- .eat and oame over to her. and nntt ng l is msteaa oi wool arm round her, raised her head and laid it on The returns in Ohio show nearly 100 per bis shoulder.- cent increase in sheep in Ohio since I86O1 and "Minna, dear," said he, "don't cry ; I told Miohigan largely over 100 percent. ,If on yon woman should not work : I have some tbe whole we have gained 80 per cent ia good news for you. "uood news r ,: 'Yes, I have a situation in California.' 'Oh, Ralph r here Minna cried with joy.' 'Yes, and in a few years we shall be rich. and you shall come oat to see me, and er may be able to give you a home, and the bankruptcy will be forgotten by the world." So turning away from the siirht of his daughter's : weeping face, Ralph Kaotborne, who had been one of tbe most successful mer chants of Puilatlelpbia, ended with a profound sigh a life to which an unlooked-for blow had brought bitterness and sorrow. He left two children behind him. ' Balph tbe eldest, and his daughter Minna, whose resignation and endurance had proved the conitort or nis lasi days. - And they buried him, through many dil cutties. Ob I .poverty nevercomes with keen' er pang thau when death comes first Does it not senra a sacrilege to calculate even tbe price of tbe shroud that envelopes the being numbers with an increase weight of fleece of i Ib, we have now 41,971,960 sheep, with 31 lbs per fleeie, a weight of 136,408,870 lbs of wool, being 16.4U9.87U lbs more than the manufacturing capacity of the country. The average price in wool in Boston from 'In a few years and what will become of 1 1825 to 1860 was (in Currency generally, with- me till then ? ' I seem to fail in everything.' m one per cent in coin,) for fine woola 50 3-10 '1 never thought of the interval t why, for medium 42 8-10, and for coarse 351a Minna, dear, what is to become of you ?' r No year between 2840 and 1860 did we 'I'll tell you what will become of Minna,' have more than about three-quarters as many said Harry Smith ; she will marry me.' : - I sheep as inhabitants, and these rated only Miuna started up at once, her ' tears were aooui z 1 10s eacn, wnue bow we nave at least. - , , - - , , a l lUUBI OVni au tiu bij WMa taut aVatl o BVIS a wvavww aw j iv - v unv nw w w aaaav bbjw ( who is no lODger or earth, bat has passed into : . in.i. .a .v. a -,111, nn nnn anrl Ana-Airrhth 'ahaurtno Aaetalnlw thlrfw HW 111ow.llWUO WUU VI OUWUUWO . JUVUD UJO very ground in which we lay so many hopes, so much affection, has to be measured and meted out for so much money perhaps tbe last that love has to give the very daily nread ot tue mtum, fcttiii they laid him Quiet ly and respectably in his grave, and then the two orphans set down in the small, mean house in the suburbs, that seemed suddenly to have grown utterly empty, to wonder what they th2D 1 shall be free from anxiety, 8honld.do. I can get no situation in Philadelphia," said itaipn. -1 ou Know all 1 could do would be book-keeping, and with my father's name no one would trust me. "And I a woman what can I do and live we must 1 der from her brother to Harry. , per cent greater weights than former estimates 'Minna, said he, '1 have long loved yon, ras appears Dy me census 01 xtttv, ioau ana bnt I know I have very little to offer you, aod 1860. ' Kept waning out now mat you are without r rom me lact that never until now did we a home, such a one as I have I offer to you.' I have a supply, and now we have a surplus of 'Brother,' said Minna, 'do you wish me to fine and medium, we might artrae low orices. accept this offer.' I On the other hand tbe scarcity of goods new Ob ! Minna, It will enable me fd leave with I on the market and the probable southern de ft qnict conscience and to work harder; for J mond for goods may create and keep a lively market in.-- ; :. i. a.. ... If 40 cents has been tbe averege price for thirty-five years, while we were in a state of peace and witb a short supply, wby-sbould we expect that 40 cents would not now buy, while at peace and with a supply fully oommensn- rote witb, or in excess of our means to manu facture. Tbe wool clip of Ohio last year may WhatonrFrlcnilsln England tlilriK ' ., nhiiiit llAnrln jAtr Hnt'tu. ' ' war vwa ay-xrwau (a lug w V-tl aVM g mtJW 'Oh I Minna, you will never repent being mine. 1 do not ask it you love me,' 'I do not' said Minna. 'But love will come, must come ; I will make you so happy. Be my wife.' Vowe, Minna, you love no one else. 'No one but yon, Ralph, and to you I leave j Vat m 1 T"l 1 1 I VUO VUa IVUi AbBIMUi BUU IV IVU ItVBiV utviiuvi A uw aUvi Vnj VI WMIM inci itl Mini "You can do nothing, Minna, said Ralph. tne decision ; what yon say I will abide by- have averaged 83 cents in currency, but this 'A woman cannot work without degradation: no, you shall not work : that is decided." "You nave just said you could not get a situation : now then are we to live 7 Ralph did not reply ; he bad never been accustomed to this calculation. . It had been his father s pride to provide his children witb yes or no V Then 1 ftnv ves.' Then yes it be,' said Minna, and1 calmly, without ber heart beating one throb the quick er, she held out her hand to Harry. They were married. Minna, was taken to a very humble borne but it was a home, and was an outside arerage and lost money to op erators. .-.-, .. . - -' . ' With gold at 2,50, and this is below the average last year In wool season, wool would be 34 cents coin value, at 260 the price wonld be 32 cents in coin, and this extremely low price compared with all former years and with luxury end profusion, and Ralph could not yet (he ha B protector, and Ralph, all joy and other property was evidence of at least a suffl rvnr OrMii:rnina(t rr r ha irlaa ,. nnlna okn I . . . .a l a l . ... a rail 01 hope, went on bis way to tne land 01 1 cient qnaoiity ana contrary to any supposed -11 I .1 . 1 . 1. I . . ..'11 get accustomed to the idea that nnles she worked nothing would come to him But Minns had the strong common sense that woman-has when she is made self-reliant by circumst inces. At one glance she understood tbeir position, and she resolved boldly to face the battle of life. 'I can teach," said she the first idea that gold. I scarcity, sod this year we surely have a still '1 ou are happy, Minna, are you not r greater aounaaace or aomesuo and more tnan I have obeved von. I do Dot dislike Har- I eonal to our wants. ; ry, but I married him merely for a home.1 . I The question is still an open one What tint love will come,' said ttaipn. . win ne tne price 01 wooir as a matter 01 But was love likely to come when there opinion, we may venture to say thst the clip wrn nil lllnamn n.'h aa InvA eiaarai to hiriA I nr IHh'i arm mach th mnnrajrnrr nn a ha comes in these days to every one "yes, I can the ,0 poverty, the struggle of every dayf 1ft of 40 cents in gold, though early sales may . w na inv. iiirniv ui pumH wiiMn inn pimrann, i nn nmn nirrnHr. U., k. n.k!. k. -k.! Jl.. . . .. . . , I O ATu uuw aw shtuiuk au uw uutaiucu I I ..in hntvaan hrirla anrl hrtiltfffmnin onnaiftrpn T 1 .: 1 1 i I MWM wv..i ..... o.w . BUU -"wiwiug uy rroney. jn calculating hour far Are dollars wonld go. Minna had none : out she bad a few tnnk-1 w.. liboiw tn mmn arhan tha hoav vnrlr eUyetunsold; witb these she obtained money of the household destroyed Minna's health, and the necessary announcements were put Kave her rough hands, and poverty forbidding into tbe papers. .n 1 i. .. fpfim tlAl iliA ll.a-vK.KalW Answers came by the doren, and Minna s LpWance which bad stood her In place of feet grew sore in going from ooe part of the kfiiIlf. . . . . 1 ' , . city to tbe other. Now Minna bad great tal ents, and had received a most finished educa tion : yot somehow it seemed that she was always wanting id some requiremr nt. , bbe spoke trench and German : unfortun ately, everybody appeared to want Spanish and Italian. She was an excellent musician : she played both piano and guitar. . ((Didn't she play the piano f what a pity t" : :...,. "tvnat was uer name r "Eastbornei."' ' '' ' "Eastborne 1 Eastborne 1 any relation to Ralph Eastborne, who failed for Such an immense amount I" . ,1 , ... ..... , "Uis daughter. " ' : . Oh I why then they woald rather not. '-."I will try teaching no more. Ralph : rou know my father used laughingly to say tbst ooe day I should be an authoress, and that I bad talrnt that way. I am going to try and write: beaut. Harry s luck seemed to stop witb bis mar. riage. lie got no advancement, and one day, The Committee on the Conduct of the war, This committee has recently closed its la bors. It was constituted in the darkest period Of the rebellion, when the spontaneous patriotism of the people aod the vast military .. resources they nod volunteered to the support rKampwi5 rD!tLMuS'ate4 be tnrned ETTiSTaurr sr 'What fools we were to marry i I wonder why you married me.'. ' . -r Von asked me.' without the executive power that would com' maod respect Its office was in the nature of Yet, but you might have said no. What qoww'ti ceoor whpoui .na. power w . ' ... .. .. - I Anrnrra ila rBrilicta which wonld have aecured did von marry me lor, Minna !' 1 'For a home.' '' ' ' ' " ' ' 'And a deuced bad ona yon got and a miserable one yon have made for me,' 'Are yon sorry you married me 1 said Min na. " ' ' 'Vfy, said Harry, for your sake and mm.' The next day when Harry came homo, no Minna received him : she had gone out the neighbors said, hastily, and had left the key general homage to it .. , , ., .. Hence the committee has had abundant flings at it sod but little credit for its immense labors. Yet it has bad the confidence of the country, and by torus the parties aod cliques that assailed it have appeared to its evidence as proof unimpeachable. ' Intrusted with tbe office of censor of military operations, it has been distinguished for its moderation and for the impartiality of its ladguieat,v t has been -e-.i.. 1 . r... Lt. 01 .un mum .ur "- . .' -.',., ,ble to furnish to tha President imfornatioo So Minna ret to wofk. Ralph meantime .il int th .a. mi.M or letter to VttJ h,m in h." "n,llta7 P''c- seeking earnestly but in. tain for mum em- tbm kim .nr,h, 0w th.t nirrht went by with- To H the country it indebted, in a great moas- oyment, their, daily life becomipg q. actual ont Minna's returning, and dy", weeks and F? mmtbtitmotimsj to whicb 1 ... p,, r.y ' ... I lfrfT!u!)an hmet .nnlr ,ra anilitdrw lulwo. . Y ot atrugglft . ... r, . ,. months followed, bringing no tiding of her.' : Friends Minn bad none. All her assbci- 1 rw0 Jetin after she had left him, Harry re- aics uau urrju tn.u, laouiuunuiw girrn, iuh oi i eejreU a letter from the malrea 01 I nospiui, idle occupations : 8 to had no time for them. They had forgotten her, but Ralph had an in timate mend to wnom bis change or position mad no difference, aod who cam to tbe sordid, dark little parlor erery evening, bringing witb him the only ray or. hope and cheerful- McOlellan had sank its military power.) Yet soch wsa the moderation of the committee that tbeir report contains no denunciation of Mo-Clellan. -It is simply a record of evidence in themwteri '- v' Th labor of the committee has left on rec ord eight ponderous olnms of .testimony. which will be ooe ouna principal materials summoning him to the death-bed of ' patient nnder her care. . liarry ooeyea tne sammona, and there he found Minna, whose last hoar was evidently near. 1!' ! . ITT.. 1 aa.4 ataA T am aSnUat tV aUk awa rV-rZTntaVotlt' MrOtB Which B tm. hlt07 Of th WM wifl b. .1. . . . 11,. . . t. I " " .. ., .. . , anllao Tla lahoh kara hoan iMaaant uah uvea Mjatv.Di iwiirai .uwviav uuvturDuaiiB. i arm it I. ih. .n.m i. mi n .. nana na arraron. i Minna meantime closing her eyes to the .t r. ka amrld ha loft nn rnrnmi for a in. outer world, to the 'difficulties and miseries I rnan but marriage, and mSrriage without lot ) nohallowsd. Farewelli and pray Heaven to forgive me that I married for a home I around her, worked on with indomitable in- Harry smith used to langh at nor, and say that a van would be required to carry off her mahOfcripts ; but Minna only smiled, and continued her lubora, growing in love with From all the Stales and from Canada comes tbe word that tbe crops never gave a greater nrnmla. Tha wheat and hnV rrona in ' nar. them rs she went on, and fancying at last that ticular art represented to be greatly begond uor auiai wiw ut-nuiicu m reiriBTB ineir ior- the common average. ; ., -i r i , : m tunes, at last to give Balpn capital enough to begin something. At hit she completed her totk a novel, and innumerable other manuscriptsend one day, dressing herself carefully in ber simple moorniug, she stnrted out oo ber experiment of Ending oat whether she had been wasting her time in illusions. First the novel , , V Tl gentleman who-received her at a well nnwn publisher's was; but, dryly polite, and Its labors have been ineeasant teal Ofls and nrarw erred by good or evil report. W believe,that to it the country is largely In-dobted for the military vigor which succeeded the inefficiency of the first year of the war. Its labors and its character hare been greatly sus tained by the well known bolduegx, lodspen- dee, determination and patriotic? Eeal -of its chairman, Senator Wadb, of Ohio, who has left a record of his work which Taill b cited by the historian so long as America shall have a history. Cm. Gazett. ' ; ,' -Vr. Gntmlv, th Ne York comio paper l.i aannounced to appear July 1st Tbe enterprise is a formidable ene, -bnt it- start with a If rga capital, nq ought to 6 snccessruL , i Oo a very pretty girl saying to Lieign Hunt "I am very sad, ynu tm," be replied, "Oh, no, yoa btilong to the other sect; yon nr very Wr.Isee!-' ,. " ,.' " Oeueral Csnhy has bunted out and srreited fir mrt who, M winter in an Alahatna pa-1 A writer in Blackwood says: Whet peo-fit t-ff-TPtl to be one of a email, timber I of I pie waft to of a native of itollaod, they rr rt-nn to nsv (1.000.000 for the murder I call him an imstrdim dntcl.iran: but when as sl kudtired the manuscript ssU'O'hI to fiir. Lincoln, and he isou hit Tty,urid9r gnsrd, I they spealt of the Graut4 rr;o ju.nny tLy ejCfttim, "we r rer'ked jo thistctroo of tb eoon'y. - iev out th Aiuttr." . The Ciuciiiasti Gazette has an able and in teresting lector from Its London correspondent wherein the proper disposition of the rebe' chiof Is discussed. The views are j entitled fo consideration, and we give them that they may be digested by our readers. (j , (',, . If America wishes now to electrify tjit world she will try, condemn and sonUmce to death Jefforson Davis, and then take bim from the foot of thu gallows and bauiah him forever from the United Statot, The new world mast not be a duplicate of th old. It. may. wall leave the killing of traitors to Governments so weak that they need It But even Englnn learned - from, be experience, in executing Charles I, to ileal out exils only to John Mitohill and Smith O'Brien. The experience ...... or many countries bss proved that reaction sets in at the foot of every gallows which bears a man guilty of a political! or even treasonable offouse. It would be giving Jeff. Davis tbe weapon of John Brown to hung him. Those bore who nave the highest hopes In Ameneai wno oeuere that our eountry is in advance of their own: who mean ta see that justice is done as in questions that are rising oetweeo ns and jungiund ; tbe i oners, ifnghts, i ayiors, lawaons,- ixmthaur and otbors, who aretbe stones of onr fortress here, are, to man, as I believe, hoping that' America will show herself as fur ahoad of the Old World standard of magnanimity as in other regards. Of course, if it is shown that Davis is guilty of connivance at the assassination of President Lincoln, all will cry out for his execution; but pro-slavery reoeiuon is a thing wbicb can not occur where there is no slavery, and con seqneutly the argument of example which alone now lu.tines the death penalty in any civilized country, is absent in this - case. In saying tnese wings, i ao noi snow what ground the UAzrrrrs bas token in tbe matter: bnt I ex press the sentiments which oar truest friends here have uttered without an exception as far as I have heard. I do not know whether we are to believe the dispatch telegraphed to England, from the New York Express, that President Johnson has made a mistake charg ing uavis witn complicity m the assassination It is an ngly blander, if it is a blunder. One would think that a proclamation from the Washington Cabinet ought not to be ono to be revoked in any case, it it t a blander, President Johnson will be visited with heavy criticism throughout Europe. It will be hard to remove the impression of rashness which such a mistake will engender. The deopest anxietv and interest in the behavior of the United States is now felt; the Government with Davis in its grasp is as exciting as the lost act ot a now drama; tbe world watches breathless, and if he is exiled, instead of exe- cuted.such ojcheer for America will go through the world as no nation has ever yet received. From that moment Jeff. Davis will be consigned to tbe street ballads,; and boys will pick np halfpennies for! recounting how he ran from Richmond, and how he was caught in bis wife's clothes; ', Since in the American conflict John Brown died on the gallows it bas become too noble for Davis, and he is unworthy of a bullet since Lovejoy and Lincoln have died.. Let him go, a poor, disgraoed, hipped slave monger; a living lesson of what finally befalls man selling, blood guiltiness. treason and repudiation: and ajrandering tes timony to tne.orave self-reliance and fearless- ness of tba Government which needs no skulls for its authority and stability to rest npon. 0 ijnnr f lOliuea, ontljiii't!. a jl :i ' 0aUar t onlh,.... ...... ...... ! ; ji Ona rutrd 1 ...1 Sua i! Taae-iuar'a I si-iutlia 0 0 - ; TvoaijuarMl year.... OO ' W Column SniiiDlha, !.a 0 1 X Colnnin 1 yoar, ,.. 3 C H ColainhSmontha,..........., r. ........ IS pe H Colunia 1 year,.. ,. ...:.J... to 00 1 Column t month,.;...'.,, ..'.......,,..J... VI 0 I 1 Colonin lyaar,.., , ...j ... IK) 0 : " BnaineaaC'arda, notceedlogf llnaa per yea,.. f P i KoUcaa Ih local column, i iio.a and leu W uBU,nvev' , Sva llaaa, Vicaaia per llaa.. ' ' j' Adniluialratlon, roa4,; attaTimnt,lrorc, ani tinlia !, lent adrerllaauienta nmatb paidfothcriiralnantliia ' ': MaraMt'anKiaajnm The English Workfiigmen to Mr : Lincoln. , The following address rom the working- men of England to Mr. Lincoln, coogratula ting him nppn his re-election, appears in the London Daily News of December 23. It has been forwarded to Washington through Mr. Adams: :' '"J To Abraham Lincoln, Frttidt.nl of tht United State of America. . Bib! We congratulate you and" the Amer ican people upou your re-election by a larga majority. . If resistance to the slave power was the reserved watchword ox your Jurst election, the triamnhant war-cry of your re-election is "death to slavery." From the commencement of the Titanic American strife tbe work- ingmen of Europe felt instinctively that the Star Spangled Banner carried the destiny of their class. Tne contest ior toe territories which opened the dire epopee, was it not to decide whether the 'Virgin soil of immense tracts should be wedded to the labor of the emigrant fr prostituted by the tramp of the slave driver? w nen an oligarchy or 3W,wo slaveholders dared to inscribe, for the first time in the annals of the world, slavery on the banner of armed revolt; when on the very spots where hardly a century ago the idea, of one great democratic republic had first spraug up, whence the first declaration of the rights of man was issued, and the first impulse givtm to the European revolution of the eighteenth century; when on those very spots couuter revolution, with ' systematio thoroughness, gloried in rescinding "the ideas entertained at the time of the formation bf the old constiiu-tion." and maintained slavery to be a benefi- cient institution, indeed the only solution of tb great problem oi the relation or capital to labor, "and cynically proclaimed property in man," the corner stone of the new edifice; and tbe working classes of Europe, understood at once, even before the frantic partnership of the upper, classes for the Confederate gentry had given its dismal warning, that the slaveholders' rebellion wa to sound the tocsin for a general holy crusade or property against labor, and that for the men of labor, with their1 hopes for the future, even their past conquests were at stake in that tremendous conflict o the other aids of the Atlantic.: Kverywhore they bore, therefore, patiently the hardships im posed upon them by tha cotton crisis, oppostd enthusiastically the pro-slavery Intervention" important ue or their f betters, and from most parts of Europe contributed their quota of blood to the good cause. ' While the worlr-ingmen, the true political power of thNofta, allowed 'slavery to define .their own republic, while before the negro,, mastered and sold without bis eoncurreoco, they boasted it the; highest prerogative of tbe whit sldnned laborer to sell himtnlf and ebons his own master they ware unable to attain the-true freedom of labor, or to support tbeir huiope.m brctbrea in their struggle for emancipation; but tin harrier to progress has boeu swept off by the fed sea of civil war. The workingmen of Eu rope feel sure that as the American war of independence initiated a new eas of sscende.icy for the middle class, o the American ooti- slsvery war will do for th working clnsr;s. They consider it en earnest of the epoch to come, that it fell to the lot t Abraham I.ir-oolo, the singM mioilotf son of the working class, to lead sis country through the foittc It-less struggl. forth fescoe of tin .enchained race and the reconttructioB of a socinl world. ' Signed on boSnlfof tbe Iotems'iopal Vo's- SaHptyonsconfJsa of Got, rier The letnndiitt Jonrnal says;, Gov piep pout has determined to call an eMta wwinin. of the Let-ialuturtt on Thursday next, and that for tills porpoeo confdei)!UI circiliir have' been sent to member of th body' which-liM berwfofore assi mbled in Alczaudriit, roritet- ing the lOyul elouieiit as ouutradinliii(rinlied from th late rebel Legislature ut Kidiii hud. The Journal is alarmed, for fear the ciil) 'Is ' made with a view of removing tha 'disability Imposed on those bohave been identified with th robellloiv and restore to theiri tli elective francliis aod right to nwur) held of- I Be, 'f'linrc js no certainty,, howovor, tliat such'1 is tlio object. Owingito the allegtMi -appoint.,. ment by tho Governor of evoril ex--lials to important positions, in violation of the L'orMti-tution, sevural mewling bare been hfll J 1.1 tho 1 loyal peoj)l of AJoxaudria t: device .'irirniiB 1 for self proteciion. On Saturday they perfuctod j their organication and adoptej a re'ries of resolutions, one of which affirms in ' strong terms the rijht of tlie colored man to vote. ' 1 -. , .,. .., . ,,, i ,.,, lo ti. .l The State Board of Agrlcu'liirc. 1 1 i.Th Ohio State Boori of IgricoltBre 'met l in Colarabui last week for the purpose of it-'-Viniug and oniending the premiurn list for tb ) next State Fair. The following members ; were present: NoUott J. Tnruey, J'resident, of , ' Circlevillej William F. Greer, Paynsville; David Taylor, Treasurer, Colambns; Thomas 1 0. Jones, Delaware; Jamos Fullingteu,, Mil I ford Center; William B. McLung, Troy; J.W Ross, PerrysbBrgf R, It Donnelly, Wooster; Jas.Backiugham. Zanesvile: Daniel McMitlen. Jr., iooia.; The Board made some) -Very im-portant changes,- increasing the .-aggreguto'if about 33 per cent. They will offor a sween,- stakes premium' of One hundred dollars. 1 ho j premiums on sheep nre iucreased more than,. 00 percent A eweeestakes Drtsmlum willba ' offered on Uie best buck, ot $50; on best pen' r ut uv wooiihq ewes, au; Dcst or Jong ) wool, n $25: bock the same. ( The increase in preou- . urns on grain 100' Def cent Oa choosa. th Board have made a new dais for the fceaofit" of large mauufactnrers. , lite bremium feeino-Tt tbe same an in domestics. A sweepstake a premium of a silrer n:adal is to do offered for the largest and best display of cheese.'' Tha whole list of fruits and flowers has boen chahg-ed as recommended by th Promolotrieal K! ti ciety, and the premiums increased: 100 pet,- cent. The Dremiumson rmiutinm and Annr. . Jean designs by Ohio artists,, aw doubled, v The Board are going to build a new Fine Art : Hall and erect seats around the track where horses are to be exhibited for the Bccomm dution of visitors. , In short the Board Intend to make the exhibition this year' the most ". interesting and important ever held in ' the' " State. ' The Fair opens on. the 12th bf Sepi'" i I Mdstbrino oot or Cavalrt. The .'Tri-.'T bune's Washington special says the csvatr and that which operated in the Shenandoah Valley,, Is. now , encamped on the Orange St , Alexander Railroad, and is being reoitrsnized . .. and consolidated, in' consequence of th$ mastering oat of those whose terms of service' expire prior to October 1st: About 4,000 !t nave already been mustered out Bnd but AOOP,. , of the same class remain to be discharged at rapidly as circumstances 'will ' permit It is believed an ordewfrom the War Ihspartment ) ' will direct the immediate disobarge pf alt whose term of service expires before January , , latvl86.' --' :" ' ' ,S . ...'.'' V... ' ' ...! "I i'it 1 Y: ' ! An arrival from Buenos Ayr brings' the - announcement that the Argentina Republic!' J bas become involved in the war which has for:: it some time been going on between Paraguay on tbe one side and Brazil and Uruguay ou the ' ' other. It is reported that the Paraguayans,'- without previous declaration of war, invaded "i Corrientes, one of the Argentine States, sar-'j i prised and captured two armed vessels, and , i Killed in cold blood all the officers aod crew,' Of cotinse this act compelled the Argentin'd Republic to take part witb Brasil and Uru ' V guay, and will change thecourse of sympathy,. which was setting in favor of Porairnav airaiiut that country. ' J'"' ' , - - i ' r , -njj.il')-.. - ' judgeUnderwoqd has Brrived' from ' Jfor-''" folk witb the indicments end evidence airriinet "n Generals Lee, Corse, EwelU LCngstmett' Eu ') Governors Smith and Latcher. A CCavmore.i and Newton McVeigh of Alexandria and v pouiioriyoiners.,. , .;;:ii, i ui.; ... .,.ii.u.Aai.';it ;;ii 'The Boston Transcript litis received intelli gence that Professor Agassis and his party of . naturalists reached xuo da Janeiro on the ila of April, and were most kindly received.. The Emperor sent a boat alongside to take them,,, on snore, and in th evening bad a long inter-' 3 view with Professor Acassizi 'U.voit i- it:i:.-j ;r .cu view with Professor Agassizi i i ... ... . , .' ..Tbanderbolt ., Vintnr Hncm avritrat? .Tha which bas broken on Washington ha shatter- ' aA th. . Tln.l.no.n. Ar,l,!k L.n4 ' - f .... " i ivj. uiauuow ui iuiq aviMu vrt.i;ui hi history. After the dawn the nigbU Bttt ! the American people is a colossus of Bronte i, . Traitors can scratch it tint, they .know, not,, how to destroy it If liberty should full in ' America, there would be a shipwreck in ha- '"' manityj Frightfal t deluge.. i,A c : f ,'-i-j iu v,i, ! 1 11 i 11 . : l r,wr CoirnriDRnMS.- Why cannot two slender ner- ions ever becmoe great frieoiisf Because thoy " Will alWaya be slight acquaintances. " " ' ' u" Why is a crow a brave tiirdT uecansa W never shews the white feather j, , j' Why is a person Who never lays a wager 4s ' bad as a regular garpblori riJecause be ii no t.A(M. "w.,, ! :) , . i t-, -i- Why is dongh like the suof Becans wlicl, ;. it rises it is light V1, ..anl:,:.;.frp ' What did Tot do wb.es bis wifn trwaed to , saltr . Oot a fresn .one. . i AnKrishmaB got out 'of the Caitl ail1 roif- Way station for om4 refreahtrlents and nhfiM-- iunately th bell rang and the train left befor he nal finished his repast, uouia oni cnea Pat as he ran like a mad man aW the enr; rhould on yeVe got a pateeoger aboard tfiat's '" joft beiindl" 1 1 Most of tb'rr.-'ir.fa -r ilahami ere frrnn tht w-Hw "! n.t Uuioni-t.h'tt t''S y,t, I'; ing W"" Asaocwtipn, tu xemMi.ct lu Fr vroia v. u-w t,v... Cenusl CvuicIL ' - I anndJalaU of t j eoc r?:: -.' A EcerEcply.- 'jfohn WesleyVfil' a'cdnsWerabfo fiirty, &H been mainlalnicg with frroat eutnejtness ' the doCtribf Vox Populi Vos Dei egainit Msn aister. avbose taleoU wei-i not 'Unworthy. ti.ev family to which slin, belon-ri'd.. At. last tlio., preacher, to put Ah end to tbcoutrovi,'r.-y,pnt his argnment in tun r'""n of dictmn u.i.I I ,aid: :i :l ! .-. IfMu) .v; fl tell yon, 'str. tb woics of tne pop:o t the -vriice of 0d." .. -. : ... . "Ye?, she Mp'if I nuldiy, "it e-":i cru.i:y - hioi, crucify hi j a tnore ati'-ai' ituiij ou given. ' rer wis per-'p m
Object Description
Title | Mt. Vernon Republican (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1854), 1865-06-20 |
Place |
Mount Vernon (Ohio) Knox County (Ohio) |
Date of Original | 1865-06-20 |
Searchable Date | 1865-06-20 |
Format | newspapers |
Submitting Institution | Public Library of Mount Vernon & Knox County |
Rights | Online access is provided for research purposes only. For rights and reproduction requests or more information, go to http://www.ohiohistory.org/images/information |
Type | Text |
Description
Title | page 1 |
Place |
Mount Vernon (Ohio) Knox County (Ohio) |
Searchable Date | 1865-06-20 |
Format | newspapers |
Submitting Institution | Public Library of Mount Vernon & Knox County |
Rights | Online access is provided for research purposes only. For rights and reproduction requests or more information, go to http://www.ohiohistory.org/images/information |
Type | Text |
File Size | 4626.68KB |
Full Text | ... ., -.1 it. Vcfnca Republican: fi'fi VfVi in A li iL. J ,t ,n CI ';,n i y t WDKUraO AalctfUt,f to til lITaaiaia Of KNOX COtTNXY. $250 PER TEAE- i fin ; jiu AAvAlie WM. TJASCOM,, raoraiaroa, rorii.)aaaB jjri'into, . omci i u kkkmi.in jti.ocK, iu stcmr. kind ion prempUr, I anparlor t;I, to be jrl4 All fctOB fl.Mft . . Th Winter aAraigai been Ized, iod the tam 1 Ttlmloono kuui n. Hell Ut.i.1.a. Accommodation-teat. apnea learai nt on the 1. M. .'i. 11 R. ha for leirttig tit. Vardtrla're M J. Vat. learee. Aafiommotlifoa)-vavee, ftoiva 'ofty, ;....m r. .... e:0 1-. ....10:11 r. .-. I'M P. V. .. .... t:41 A M. ....I,.." A M. CI,' IT Can Job th Central Ohio Road Itin Newark i follow: I 1 t Ooing kit,l..LM..J. 1. .....:0 A. a. Li.... .L ami Ooinr weetA..,., I J..........1! 00 m. ...if.li A, Ob the P.I Siawark,., Oolaf Wait a aoova. . A O. road toln Hit. the can leara ...... a:J A. it. .. ..X ..12:00 at. rstitfr on via Central Road, Uiajfileaae PISCTPtKUCHpRCfi, aten-enitej i rRHSnTTldRIAlj'URCII, corner (?a- and Ch ant- ant atreeti iiKTHODifit Knscor. Chaatnot Street. , PROTESTANT Kngcoiai, ana nif a areata, . METnODI! IRE) tsa Streel between Oar nd r Bar. .HKRVKY. It, CnURCH, AorwH' HfTiajo Bar. ay H. BUSH. CHURCH, Vornrr" Her Rot GEO, B. RKfcSR,. CATHOLIC 'CHPBSH, ''Jornar High 4 lftFtcnt'f., HOT. JUJ.iUSBKi.Ni. CRUUCR, Meehanloa 5 J, . . ' 1 - ' ' DEVOXJSM TO POUTIC8, LITEItATUllK, THE MARKETS, AND OKNEIUL IlfTKIJL.iaENOIS. VOL; XI. Mount vernon, onio, tttesday, juke 20, i8C5. NO S3, iees. l ESXSILyAKIl CENTRAL K. B. rhiSUUEGH TO rillLADELPHIA - Front nil porrtona of Uie Weat North. Weat and Uiit1-t -rt, tlila line and lta armnvetinna farm either the Bhortmt or the beit roule to PhlladeW pbla,Mew York, hnrt m, DnlOmore and Waahlngton The trareller nia.wlt.h eoofliJiince roljr npon oura cob. nctlon. high anted with perfect eafetr, and arerjr appliance for comfort that can bo procured. Mew and elegnnt puaengcr enrn, for tjar ah5 night aervlca, bare recentlv boon arithd to tha eqnipinvnt af thv F annajt rania Central Rail Hoaft I ' , At Wltaborgh, trainafrow tha Went ran diraet to tha ttnioa Depot, wbero pnaaoAgara are trannrcrred to tha Tralna of tha Penn'Tloanla Crntral Kalloof, which lra Plttaharirh ant afrlfa atotber poinu aufntlowo 'AfT MAHj Leaeea PlttabnrKh at 3 A M., atop- ?lngat Principal atatinta, and arrlrei at Alloona at 6(1 A. U., Harrl.lH.rnt.tl.IO P. Mm ftalllitMret at 5 46 P; M , New Yoik na AHentown, atlO 10 P U., Pblla. iDilnhlat at 4i 1. N , kn Naw Yotk, lie Philadelphia, at hM P. M. ; . . f.,!' hahhimiIi cm Areata noo.xrt o ff iiyj l.pavea J'ltlnburgh at M t all ri-(-.r.r fltatloaa,. Altoona at ANT atraet hatfaak litaia nrgS.' -;J APTTJfT iVtrnbH lHnt'TreeUnf BAPTIfT and Meehahtca. between Mnlberrr J. rr-JVEHBAKUBK. CONOREOATIONAI, ClTrttCnA Mnlnerrr at., between Bngaraad Hiintramis. U J ReOJ. K. MONBOK. UNITED rRESBTTERIANreorner Main and Snpir atreete. Rot. s. H. UUTUHISON. METnODIST WESLEYAN berrr and Wooatcr. CHURCH, corner Mat Rev. MR. TRAVIS. iays Cawlt , for , , BUTTER, EGGS, RAGsJ OATS, ETC. holuale And Rotll Daaleralo , BOOTJ&rSHOES, . LRATnift. Kit xxo KIdivos. b-in.it r. - .'-'- "', S. Ii- TAm-JiOK, 5c CO. DaALiaaiir Dry Goods and JVolions, BUTTER, EQGS, RAGS, tC. ATTORNEY COyjfSELLOR;AT LAW. DUNN & SNOW, ' , ' , PLAIN AND ORNAMRVTAti V,' PAINTING, GRAINING t i JA I ,. . ti ti : . . - AND PAPER iiANQINtl, 5 . Misa, EL A. DOIfNELLT, v'u! V. 'MILLINEB ;. MANTATJMAKBR, Mt. Ve-non, March 31, 1885-ly. Ira A ., aionalna at all rn-'iHr Hlilloaa. 11H0P. M..f antarrircaat )ur.M.iuha4B M P. at t aintBlJlt.lll AMI t:.PHVH-Learea Pittabntih at in.) P. it. Mlnnnln nt iarl allKUtiona Arrlvra at Allnona aid .00 P. U.tTvn. 6,M P. M . Lock H tven P. K . Harrlabartrh a. 11. 15 P M.. Fhlladiili.hiaat4.3ll A. If . and New York nt I HII.Altri.PlII t EXPl?rnI,..Tea Pitta. irariru atlofip. M... ntofiplrlgonly e,t Principal SUtlona Arnvea ai AiiDonn m vn r. m.,x riarnamira at a ao M. (Wtlmor at 7.l A !. New York. l Allentown. at)"") A.M. Milladelphla pt 7.0D A, H. and New Yoik via PliiliV)ihla, 12 IX) U.f .Rlrtpiug i tnrj rnn through on tul tmin from l'lttibnrfrh to Baltimore and l-niiaoeinnta. anuto new via Allenttiwii. 'ATI,IIMK LfKT PUtHburcb at CM P. M. Arrirea ni altoona Baltimore at SHADOWS. . ,' u., ... ITbea th o1i!1dro Rra bunhed In th oarHrr, And tba p wallow lUept in th vre, - Aol tha biffht-wind Ii rourmuritg Hereto , Apmrt to the Unteniog Itatet ( , , Then I open b ianer chamber 1 ' ! ' Tauat wai alneed by the $ taring tkft And ffentlv undraw tba enrUin When m hoi lee t .reaiureille.' 1 Swtet iplrlti la, may not ilumbet Cool ehaiJowi from HprbU now goat Aoi the echo vf voire eouhdiog, All oiiBvlJng for to Anu, blendiag afnonx the otaera. 7 , 'V !J ' ' n.a. Brkn (at aiiftatP wnvt a J ' One ebadow It cooler, deep ; : ' J 1 And m-jr dJ naming ejes grvw wet. , Fortbe .mage 1 ran on Ion e it. "In what r said Minna "In poetry". : "Th la Dtose. . "Ob I" sold the discorofltod "reader" with a aigh. "Yes. a novel.' Wool The SnppiT The Demand - V The Price. From an article in tbe Ohio Farmer, writ ten by ono apparently thoroughly convemut Willi urn uujvci wi ouiiuciiaw uis loiiuwinjr in la tha Image that bleaaed rnj rettth 1 'J" TI. . .nn.l , l..l ti. ... l ' i or lore and troth. ... ntonnlne-onlv at ftrln,'(nAl Rltiiitit at 3.40 A. U Harrlabdrt it 7 i A. ll, 13 30 P. M..t KV York, tla AllM)lnn. at 2.A6 P. Philadelphia at i MP. X t and N-w York Tla PhCadel pnia. at s.w r. it.-' ' -' ; Prtakfait. Dinner, i t Swfper. TICKETS FOR SALE TO B.08T0N BY BOAT OR RAIL. boat thikbtb ooon oir amy 07 trb aouitn Lin-aa, PARK 0 AU POINTS A8 LOW A8 ANT ROUTB. 2 Br.BE3?JKfC3- CABS on ioht nun to pH'fAD'A NEW YORK & BALTIMORE, BAGGAGE" CHECKED THROUGH ' 'AJYD ' TRJrJYSl ERRED FREE. ' THE PENNSYLVANIA RAIL ROAD CO. Will not aaavirae any rlak for Bagtrage, except for Wear ing Apparel, andl'init thehr rqaponsibllity to Ona Huo dred Dollnra In ralue. All Bup eifeedinr thai amount in value, will be at tha rlak of the owner, nnleaa W. MORGAN, Attorney nt Xaa-vra OrriCE Orar tha Shoa 8 tor of Millar White, ' MOUNT VERNON, OHIO . Jfareh Slat, 1864-ly , MARCH 9th, '1864. .,. . WAilrJER FILLER, IS RBCEIVIN8 TREsn ' ' -" ' ". NEW.GOODS Paichaao'l t'nee the Great Decline la . Prlcea, , All that want Ckf tip Gootla, call at March.li.lW6. , . , .. WARNER MILLER'S. JUST RECEIVED AT v . a spiendid iMortment ot f READY MAM ttOt IiliVG! AND iv GWTS FURNISHING G00DSI Plana' call, and! I wilt anil jm aa low aa poaalbla. Mara, 186t-tf., .. . , . L MUNg. : CERTIFICATE 0t AtlfHORn'Y Or THE Khox;VonRt7' National Bank of P, p . . Mount ternon, ' CftttH kn COMPTROlaLKM Of TUB CVHrTCJrCT, v - - WiSHtnOTO. April Sfith. 18. - WftintBA, llr eatlsfSintory evidence preente4 to tht vndertitrned, if haa been made to appoar that (iThe Knos Coanty Katletwl Hank of Ifnnnt Vcrhon," in the CHf Noetr. Vernoa, In the Ooontr of Koov -and State of Ohio baa been dulr oryanised ander and a ordfnr tn the reqnlremfiita of the Act of CongteM, omitA "An Act to provide a Kational Onrrnnc, ae-nret. ftt a ptttttf of United 8tatei Honda and U pro ider the dronlatlow and redemptino tberttof," ap-- proTed Jane t, 1W4, and baa Complied with att tbe pro vlaton of Mid Act inquired to W eom plied with before wmmtvt..K tba tn.-.nM of Aabkiaganderaiid Art: . Kow therffora, L Preeman Clarke, Comptroller of the Currfttrr'. do frhr 0rtfr, that ,lThe Kax Conntjr NaUonal Dank of Mount Prrnonip the Citj of Muot vernoit, la the Covntr of Knox and State of Ohio, la ftnthoHfftd to eonmanee the buaineBi of BankiDf aoder the Act afotenaCd; ; : .' , . 4d8At.) In tnitim'onr whereof. wilnetiJi m'aatid end ' 8e af of offloe, tfli iwea tj-flah day of April, :;f - ! 'REBVAW. CLARRr V Mar It, tt-awtla. , ConiptroUer of the Cnironey. ;i Adnunistratbr Sale. -, IS pnriraaac of aa wnaeraf Ilia IV bate Omrt In and for Kama Onantr. Ohio, granted off the Mlh dajr of Mar A. U. 1 will offer at Pahlla Anetion on The 2SA day of jun? A. D. 1865. 't At 1 "'dock V. M.j npoaj th pramliee, the following deaerlhed real evtato, aitnat In Xnni Connkr, Ohio, amwrl:- aiaanitl.iiJed nne-eeventh parte of a part of the NrtH weatquarterof Hectlon SI In 8th Tnwnablp and 13th rUox. eooimenf-iiig t tb North-caat eoinerof " th Kait'a4a( tlie KanlalUr In the town f Amltr) thMmnohigaMoath V7et -rlj airretioft along th Eaet alley ot aald tnwrr AO frivtoo palao to a atone; thenew in aAonth-aalerlr direction, VI 0-IO9 pnlea U) a atawe; theneft North to th plaee of beginning, COD tatni4 7 acre ami 130 pelea nior or leaa. . Apprnlaed atl-HT ... Alao. eta eareath of Iota nnmberec! M and 91 la tba tow af tmltr In ald ooant. ' Arpraiaed ai 160 00. fKri'a'-t OF rtAl.r-. One thlrrl In head, one. third la a nd balanro in tw eeor fi-om th dar of aala with lav rait. Deferred paraienla to b aoi-turnd a paorMrar... -awiliO. M. BROWK, Hti,tHiJ.. i4aatf alBfoaraj.. !)ollnra In ralue.' All Bapi taken by apeoial contract. FREIGHT. Br Oils Route Freljrhtu of all dcfieriDtlAn can ha for. warded to and f-om Philadelphia, New York. Boetonor Baltimore, to and froih anr poiot on tbe Railroade of mo, nentucur, Indiana, liliooia, Wiaconito, Iowa or niHuun) vjf nutirvuu aurci The Pennarlrnnia Central Rail Road aluo connerta at Pitttburgh with 8teannrH, by which Oooda can be for waraea to anr ncoennibie port on tbe Uhin, Munkipgum, Tenner, Cumberland. Illinnle. MiMiMinnL MfuMnurt Arkaneaiiand Red Rirern:and at Clereland. Sandtnkv bdu vuicaiu witu oMauneri in rnru on D9 Aorta- weflteru JaKM. Merchant and pbinnera tntruflting the trannportatlon ftbeir Freitrht to thiaComoanr. can rolr with -nnA. THE KATE s OF FRKIGHTto and (rom anr nnlnt fa the Weat, by the PenQavlvaoia Central Rail Road are ai all times a favorable as an charged fry other Bail goad Vvmrar.wCaTe . t V Be particular to mark B ekaarea "tfa PaanA Central HB. . ,- For FrtsiKrhtCntrartiorShlpnlnff DIrectlona. aDnlf fj ur atuurou viiurr m in toiiuwing agenui OI IOC fjoi p"!. - - . . ....... a. o. nimtniiiri, r r reigni Airent. rbiiaoa. O. A CARPKNTER, Freight Agent, Ptttaburgh, r.1 inir. i. (in w r . : . . ' vu , irausivr ur u t, ribtaourgO. H. W. BRpWN k CO , Cincinnati, Ohio. R. C, HKI.PRUM ACO., Mailiaon, Indiana. . MOItF.HK.AD A CO., Looiarille, Kentucky. W. U. AIKMAN. Eranar lie, Ind. R. F. HASS ft CO. Ht. Loula, Mlamurl CLARKE ft CO., Chicago, Illlnoia. j. n. aicijiii.M. rortamoutn, o. . J H. LOVE, Mavavllle, Kj. HALL ft CO. Marietta. O. E AYRKH. Mu.kiognro Rlrer. 0. . , W. H ft E. I. LAN0I.EY, Oalllliolla, O. . H.S. PIKRCB ftCOvZanearille, 0. N H. HUDSON. Ripely, 0. , R. 0. MKLDRUM,reneralTraTlllog Agent. ' ' ' ' tlVESTOCK. Drorera and Farmer will end thia a moat adranr. geona route for Lira Stock. Capadoua Yarda, well wate.-ed and aupplied with erery convenience, hare been opened on tula lino and lta connection, and every .iiFaiion ii paiq w. iobt nnn, rrom namaonrg. where will b found every convenience for feedinr and reating, a choice la offered of PHILADELPHIA, NEW YORK aid BALTIMORE MARKETS. Thlawill alao be fnnnd the ahorteat,qnlckeat and most direct ronte for Stock to New York via Allentown and wltl fewer change than any other. KNO'H LKWIS.Oen'l Superintendent, Altoona. Pa. hknht w, nwiNr Kit. Hen'l Ticket Agent, Pblla H. II. HOUSTON, Gen'l Freight Agent, Pblla. 'an. 17-06. 1-y. A pamphlet directing how to apeedlly and give up apcelaclca without aid of Docl wnt by mall free on receipt of 10 canta. llltSTORB aiOHT of Doctor or medicine, .ddrcjf Dec, 20, lfW4-ly. B. Footh. M. D. 1130 Broadway, N. Y.' MOUNT VERNON tnrcoir brass baijd. THIS BAND la now completely organised, and In 'god healthy condition, It haa a choice ae lection of MopIo. and under competen instruction baaarrlred atprotTieienerln-ltamualcal execution. It ia ready to fill all ealla for in u ileal aerricea at borne or abroad, oo reaaonable term, either for Cotillion Partfoa or for Hraaa Mtme. Jv w. T. HlhUa.it, Prei". C. P. Orroort, 8eey W. if. TnoMrsoir. Leader. . (Dee. 13, 1804tt , I. CANCER DOCTOR. JnmesD. aJotinsona OF CLEVELAND. TLD in for all who mar be affifcted with that he la prepared to ear that formidable dia to hiraael eaae by a ttroceaa differina; from all o there, known oalr a nlatr. eomnot lng little or do pain. On ezaminatiea he will be able Ilia treatment conaijta In tha ann lira tint oi a mngie piaa wr, eomnoMn ni Eurnpean neroa, to say to the patient whether their caae la onrableor not and will guaranty a permanent nra of all aeun. aeriaaea. a mo, win gnarrantee A permanent tun la tbe worat eaae ot RhumatUm. rtirsitRiTrKa Mrm SamnelNer. Geo MastflTer. E R. Oantt, and David Morey, Mt. Vernon, O.; John pall, Centerbnrg, Kno'i Co Ohio. Orrioa At hla realdence .-Bedford, Cnyahojr Co., 0 12 mllea Sooth of CleTeland, v (July 2fl, JStH-ly . Howard Association. PHILADELPHIA, PA. " " ' ' Dlaeaao of tbe Nerwout, Bemfnal, TTrlnAry and Sexual Byatomn new and reliable treat ment In RenorU rf tb HOWARD ASSOCIATION 8eot by mail ib aoaled letter nrelnnaa, free of ebargat Adilreaa, Dr. J. 8KILLEN HOUGHTON, Howard Aaaa-aiatioa. No. Sooth Ninth Stmt, Philadelphia, Pa. Dacath, 1804-1 r. , , ' , KEWYOrj HOUSE, ; Cornar 'of Mala 81. and th PabUSqAra, :.'S.. .::, . '.MOUNT Vi?BNON. 61. HAVING UaiedlbU wall known and popular Botal, and etted It up In tuperior atria, I am prepared to aocomaaodaif traveler and all otkera who may give ma a eaiL Th patronage of th Public ia rmeectrnllv Boa Ue.ttd, - , JOSEPH aOABBROCOH, . Nay3,180-ly; --.: . - . MILLINERY.- 3Irs. Ilnrrlm Sc JToliiiason, 'On Wen Gambier St. near U Ward SehMl ATufMetf . - A prepared to do Work In the moat apnrovadatvla. A. either In Htntw, 811k, or Crape. They koepa good aairtment of Klbboaa and other Trlmlnge. Mar 1, 166o. L. R. DROVM, Ilomopopatliio hyajicJan. OFFICE-Woodward Building,' Mai Street, l MayW, IMo-ly, . "MT. VERNON, 0," AITAtil.Ut.Vf. , Pinkie A Wa'ti. PlalntllTa. anal oat denrri Tin Defendant. .' . . OKg Mile Peaklna, J P. of Brown Town.hlr,. aoa Gonntr, Ohio, an lha ad dar ot April A I). aalit Juatic leaned an order of atuclimrnt In the aiioT art oo tor too aum of aia Hi-K-fl. Brown"vliie, aa.ajisaw.iioa JKaC JSAd, aa P. PINKLEY ft. WALTS, amu or Wo travelled llfe'a Way together .. A little while aid by aide , ,. ,.' :ut And when I grow faint or weary, That light waa my atrejgih and gnlde. i ' 1" ,r- ' ' ' :; ia ' And dearer It grew how dearer ! . Till I watched it wane and fad ) : :' a on my ngei naa, aa wa parted, Be patient: be not afraid. And when 1 am alck and weary WI. h the heat and doit of the daw. How tha aenae of her word came o'ar 1 - Her word r ah want away. r :r 'O "Oh I a novoL; Of oonrao, I ought to hare regard to the demand for aod tht probable piivoui rr uwi yikiucr otn.iua tuna uuuug iiw war there bas been a great demand lor wool, and that waeU), to a greater or less degree. bos taken the place of economy; the writer oaya that prices now most be cputrolled by thoae laws oi .- trade rfcMirttto and lupplywmrM are superior to allnnactuieuta, except for short periods, and that legiolation can increase or donresa but for a abort time only, i j I i. War created an nnnsonl demand as rejr&rdf amount or quality, bat Peace, which hoi ro-turned, will restore to us former wanU and former means of proenring thoso Wants. " Ilia average consumption will be about, and per- Dans exactly toe same , ' In 1850 we had, aa shown by the census of mat year, 21,723,221; sheep and a weight or wool exceemuir 02,auu,uuu ibsfreiurni 02, 616,949 lbs.) and in 1860 number of abeep was only 23.317,736, and the weight of wool reported 60 811,343 lbs, the weight of fleece gnessed that" , "Mine is not a sensation novel a simple experience 01 me," f . "Very good." ' ' 1 "I think the style Is new and will take,1 "Possibly, If you bad a name" ; . ' .' "But I can make one." ' . ' ' "Very tree ;" and the publisher still held the manuscript, hoping the lady would hare tbe politeness to tuke it back ; but Minna was perfectly convinced she waa doing him it service by leaving it with him. ." " ' ' ' " ''VCe wilt not talk of terms now," sold she,' backing out with a smile ; "but you will read tbe manuscript, and then well, am sure yon will bf pleased. ' When shall 1 call I "Just when yon please," replied the pub' lisher, the moment Minna was out of sitrht he opened a bnge closet, and thrusting the man uscrlpt in amid a pile of others, consigned it to silent oblivion till she should come alter it acrain. for of roadinir It he had not the mnai D 130 being less than 21 lbs, and in 18b0 distant idea. '' only a little less than 2 6-10, and Increaslug Day after day Minna went about, her spirit arerage in the ten years loss than 2 os. -a I a! L .a a i.a I fin mtaan IiioMaeoil hattarfWtn 1 QAfl anr) 1 QK( And I atk for a patient windom, . : . . Aa 1 Journey the way alone ; 1 Till I tread on the golden tbreahold .'.':'. , . r. Of the heaven where ahe la gone. When the children are buibed in tba naraerr, And tbe a wallow aleena in the aavea. And the nirbt-wind is aflurmnring aecreta Apart to the listening leavei. IflAHUaA Law. Jlarrjing for a nonie.- snstuining her for some time, but at last even ber courage gave way, and sue sat weary and wretched in the little room, where Harry Smith and ber brother were anxiously watching her. "So," said Harry, "you have not been as Incky as you deserve to be, Minna T 1 ou look dispirited."' ; -' " " "I am. My novel has been reiected it is too moral and' too common place. I tried original Knglish tales for the magazines ; they nsnted t rench translations. When I offered Freuch translations, they wanted tales from tbe Italian. When I hunted np Italian stories I with great difficulty, (for there are none,) then everybody seemed bent on German. I have Onr sheep increased between 1840 and 1850 only 12J per cent, and between 1850 and '60 only 6 per cent, while the popnlation increased 33 and. a fraction in the first ten years, and 34 6-10 in the latter. : Our population In 1853 Is 30,492,137, not allowing for losses by tbe war, and allowing the same consumption of wool, we wonld re quire 6 2-100 lbs each, or 182, 460,689, or with the former sprinkling of cotton, say 160,000,- UUU the wool, allowing for compounding, 22,' 460,685 lbs of that article, . Although wo ev idently want and absolutely need 160.000,000 lbs wool, we have not the machinery to work more than 120,000,000, being the product of "My child, my child, I am going to leave V0LZ . ,bLe.dl8cT"e of bankruptcy Dear,y bHnded myself with that rile German KOOO seU of machinery at 100 lbs per day would be too much for me. . I i a j : v 1 . .'.u.. . . I ...1, ni.:. :. u : ri..j:l . ... . .v . , . ' 1 .-I cuaracttfr. ana vet a oare not aoia a Bino-in i a uu i vuw oniiumio ui nurvroi iniauiuK "Oh, father, do not talk thus : think of me. I akin. t . . . , hrnlrnra r tha soatnm oitio nri nrth fTmio .1.1. AMI L . I. -ll . . .. .... ui loe cuiiu wuora you leave, wuuoui a noroe, Her9 Minna, whose nerves had been over- atatea JEconomi.l, which is deemed good aa r,....u. . i.iouu, wtiuumrenuurvcs. , : nowered with fat rrne. la id her head rlnwn and woriiy. and wii nave the sanction of manu "roor Minna, said the dving man : "but k..hi.i..m , . .. - fntiirra Wa moot hnrniw imrwir ta tk.Vb. .kllJ. .1: T V..a. a...L. ""I" "". .. . ."","-- 'T --" ama, UIV 1.II11U, nuvu A WUO UUi UUriUVU 10 I . Tk.n t?..lk kA Wll.n. MAI nn r.MH kl. I All IHHI llllll ava imnnnt vnonnrnolneai In trnntia , - , ... n . .1 ' AUDU MUlUUl HC( UIU.UDI, .III UIJ 1 1 U UJ UIO I I "I " " " " " " .m Bwwua vnn.AHnnrl van wrtll flnl tmtanAa . Mnna ku.k. I . r ' . 1 I i , ' --"-' ...M , yur .uiuiu- .eat and oame over to her. and nntt ng l is msteaa oi wool arm round her, raised her head and laid it on The returns in Ohio show nearly 100 per bis shoulder.- cent increase in sheep in Ohio since I86O1 and "Minna, dear," said he, "don't cry ; I told Miohigan largely over 100 percent. ,If on yon woman should not work : I have some tbe whole we have gained 80 per cent ia good news for you. "uood news r ,: 'Yes, I have a situation in California.' 'Oh, Ralph r here Minna cried with joy.' 'Yes, and in a few years we shall be rich. and you shall come oat to see me, and er may be able to give you a home, and the bankruptcy will be forgotten by the world." So turning away from the siirht of his daughter's : weeping face, Ralph Kaotborne, who had been one of tbe most successful mer chants of Puilatlelpbia, ended with a profound sigh a life to which an unlooked-for blow had brought bitterness and sorrow. He left two children behind him. ' Balph tbe eldest, and his daughter Minna, whose resignation and endurance had proved the conitort or nis lasi days. - And they buried him, through many dil cutties. Ob I .poverty nevercomes with keen' er pang thau when death comes first Does it not senra a sacrilege to calculate even tbe price of tbe shroud that envelopes the being numbers with an increase weight of fleece of i Ib, we have now 41,971,960 sheep, with 31 lbs per fleeie, a weight of 136,408,870 lbs of wool, being 16.4U9.87U lbs more than the manufacturing capacity of the country. The average price in wool in Boston from 'In a few years and what will become of 1 1825 to 1860 was (in Currency generally, with- me till then ? ' I seem to fail in everything.' m one per cent in coin,) for fine woola 50 3-10 '1 never thought of the interval t why, for medium 42 8-10, and for coarse 351a Minna, dear, what is to become of you ?' r No year between 2840 and 1860 did we 'I'll tell you what will become of Minna,' have more than about three-quarters as many said Harry Smith ; she will marry me.' : - I sheep as inhabitants, and these rated only Miuna started up at once, her ' tears were aooui z 1 10s eacn, wnue bow we nave at least. - , , - - , , a l lUUBI OVni au tiu bij WMa taut aVatl o BVIS a wvavww aw j iv - v unv nw w w aaaav bbjw ( who is no lODger or earth, bat has passed into : . in.i. .a .v. a -,111, nn nnn anrl Ana-Airrhth 'ahaurtno Aaetalnlw thlrfw HW 111ow.llWUO WUU VI OUWUUWO . JUVUD UJO very ground in which we lay so many hopes, so much affection, has to be measured and meted out for so much money perhaps tbe last that love has to give the very daily nread ot tue mtum, fcttiii they laid him Quiet ly and respectably in his grave, and then the two orphans set down in the small, mean house in the suburbs, that seemed suddenly to have grown utterly empty, to wonder what they th2D 1 shall be free from anxiety, 8honld.do. I can get no situation in Philadelphia," said itaipn. -1 ou Know all 1 could do would be book-keeping, and with my father's name no one would trust me. "And I a woman what can I do and live we must 1 der from her brother to Harry. , per cent greater weights than former estimates 'Minna, said he, '1 have long loved yon, ras appears Dy me census 01 xtttv, ioau ana bnt I know I have very little to offer you, aod 1860. ' Kept waning out now mat you are without r rom me lact that never until now did we a home, such a one as I have I offer to you.' I have a supply, and now we have a surplus of 'Brother,' said Minna, 'do you wish me to fine and medium, we might artrae low orices. accept this offer.' I On the other hand tbe scarcity of goods new Ob ! Minna, It will enable me fd leave with I on the market and the probable southern de ft qnict conscience and to work harder; for J mond for goods may create and keep a lively market in.-- ; :. i. a.. ... If 40 cents has been tbe averege price for thirty-five years, while we were in a state of peace and witb a short supply, wby-sbould we expect that 40 cents would not now buy, while at peace and with a supply fully oommensn- rote witb, or in excess of our means to manu facture. Tbe wool clip of Ohio last year may WhatonrFrlcnilsln England tlilriK ' ., nhiiiit llAnrln jAtr Hnt'tu. ' ' war vwa ay-xrwau (a lug w V-tl aVM g mtJW 'Oh I Minna, you will never repent being mine. 1 do not ask it you love me,' 'I do not' said Minna. 'But love will come, must come ; I will make you so happy. Be my wife.' Vowe, Minna, you love no one else. 'No one but yon, Ralph, and to you I leave j Vat m 1 T"l 1 1 I VUO VUa IVUi AbBIMUi BUU IV IVU ItVBiV utviiuvi A uw aUvi Vnj VI WMIM inci itl Mini "You can do nothing, Minna, said Ralph. tne decision ; what yon say I will abide by- have averaged 83 cents in currency, but this 'A woman cannot work without degradation: no, you shall not work : that is decided." "You nave just said you could not get a situation : now then are we to live 7 Ralph did not reply ; he bad never been accustomed to this calculation. . It had been his father s pride to provide his children witb yes or no V Then 1 ftnv ves.' Then yes it be,' said Minna, and1 calmly, without ber heart beating one throb the quick er, she held out her hand to Harry. They were married. Minna, was taken to a very humble borne but it was a home, and was an outside arerage and lost money to op erators. .-.-, .. . - -' . ' With gold at 2,50, and this is below the average last year In wool season, wool would be 34 cents coin value, at 260 the price wonld be 32 cents in coin, and this extremely low price compared with all former years and with luxury end profusion, and Ralph could not yet (he ha B protector, and Ralph, all joy and other property was evidence of at least a suffl rvnr OrMii:rnina(t rr r ha irlaa ,. nnlna okn I . . . .a l a l . ... a rail 01 hope, went on bis way to tne land 01 1 cient qnaoiity ana contrary to any supposed -11 I .1 . 1 . 1. I . . ..'11 get accustomed to the idea that nnles she worked nothing would come to him But Minns had the strong common sense that woman-has when she is made self-reliant by circumst inces. At one glance she understood tbeir position, and she resolved boldly to face the battle of life. 'I can teach," said she the first idea that gold. I scarcity, sod this year we surely have a still '1 ou are happy, Minna, are you not r greater aounaaace or aomesuo and more tnan I have obeved von. I do Dot dislike Har- I eonal to our wants. ; ry, but I married him merely for a home.1 . I The question is still an open one What tint love will come,' said ttaipn. . win ne tne price 01 wooir as a matter 01 But was love likely to come when there opinion, we may venture to say thst the clip wrn nil lllnamn n.'h aa InvA eiaarai to hiriA I nr IHh'i arm mach th mnnrajrnrr nn a ha comes in these days to every one "yes, I can the ,0 poverty, the struggle of every dayf 1ft of 40 cents in gold, though early sales may . w na inv. iiirniv ui pumH wiiMn inn pimrann, i nn nmn nirrnHr. U., k. n.k!. k. -k.! Jl.. . . .. . . , I O ATu uuw aw shtuiuk au uw uutaiucu I I ..in hntvaan hrirla anrl hrtiltfffmnin onnaiftrpn T 1 .: 1 1 i I MWM wv..i ..... o.w . BUU -"wiwiug uy rroney. jn calculating hour far Are dollars wonld go. Minna had none : out she bad a few tnnk-1 w.. liboiw tn mmn arhan tha hoav vnrlr eUyetunsold; witb these she obtained money of the household destroyed Minna's health, and the necessary announcements were put Kave her rough hands, and poverty forbidding into tbe papers. .n 1 i. .. fpfim tlAl iliA ll.a-vK.KalW Answers came by the doren, and Minna s LpWance which bad stood her In place of feet grew sore in going from ooe part of the kfiiIlf. . . . . 1 ' , . city to tbe other. Now Minna bad great tal ents, and had received a most finished educa tion : yot somehow it seemed that she was always wanting id some requiremr nt. , bbe spoke trench and German : unfortun ately, everybody appeared to want Spanish and Italian. She was an excellent musician : she played both piano and guitar. . ((Didn't she play the piano f what a pity t" : :...,. "tvnat was uer name r "Eastbornei."' ' '' ' "Eastborne 1 Eastborne 1 any relation to Ralph Eastborne, who failed for Such an immense amount I" . ,1 , ... ..... , "Uis daughter. " ' : . Oh I why then they woald rather not. '-."I will try teaching no more. Ralph : rou know my father used laughingly to say tbst ooe day I should be an authoress, and that I bad talrnt that way. I am going to try and write: beaut. Harry s luck seemed to stop witb bis mar. riage. lie got no advancement, and one day, The Committee on the Conduct of the war, This committee has recently closed its la bors. It was constituted in the darkest period Of the rebellion, when the spontaneous patriotism of the people aod the vast military .. resources they nod volunteered to the support rKampwi5 rD!tLMuS'ate4 be tnrned ETTiSTaurr sr 'What fools we were to marry i I wonder why you married me.'. ' . -r Von asked me.' without the executive power that would com' maod respect Its office was in the nature of Yet, but you might have said no. What qoww'ti ceoor whpoui .na. power w . ' ... .. .. - I Anrnrra ila rBrilicta which wonld have aecured did von marry me lor, Minna !' 1 'For a home.' '' ' ' ' " ' ' 'And a deuced bad ona yon got and a miserable one yon have made for me,' 'Are yon sorry you married me 1 said Min na. " ' ' 'Vfy, said Harry, for your sake and mm.' The next day when Harry came homo, no Minna received him : she had gone out the neighbors said, hastily, and had left the key general homage to it .. , , ., .. Hence the committee has had abundant flings at it sod but little credit for its immense labors. Yet it has bad the confidence of the country, and by torus the parties aod cliques that assailed it have appeared to its evidence as proof unimpeachable. ' Intrusted with tbe office of censor of military operations, it has been distinguished for its moderation and for the impartiality of its ladguieat,v t has been -e-.i.. 1 . r... Lt. 01 .un mum .ur "- . .' -.',., ,ble to furnish to tha President imfornatioo So Minna ret to wofk. Ralph meantime .il int th .a. mi.M or letter to VttJ h,m in h." "n,llta7 P''c- seeking earnestly but in. tain for mum em- tbm kim .nr,h, 0w th.t nirrht went by with- To H the country it indebted, in a great moas- oyment, their, daily life becomipg q. actual ont Minna's returning, and dy", weeks and F? mmtbtitmotimsj to whicb 1 ... p,, r.y ' ... I lfrfT!u!)an hmet .nnlr ,ra anilitdrw lulwo. . Y ot atrugglft . ... r, . ,. months followed, bringing no tiding of her.' : Friends Minn bad none. All her assbci- 1 rw0 Jetin after she had left him, Harry re- aics uau urrju tn.u, laouiuunuiw girrn, iuh oi i eejreU a letter from the malrea 01 I nospiui, idle occupations : 8 to had no time for them. They had forgotten her, but Ralph had an in timate mend to wnom bis change or position mad no difference, aod who cam to tbe sordid, dark little parlor erery evening, bringing witb him the only ray or. hope and cheerful- McOlellan had sank its military power.) Yet soch wsa the moderation of the committee that tbeir report contains no denunciation of Mo-Clellan. -It is simply a record of evidence in themwteri '- v' Th labor of the committee has left on rec ord eight ponderous olnms of .testimony. which will be ooe ouna principal materials summoning him to the death-bed of ' patient nnder her care. . liarry ooeyea tne sammona, and there he found Minna, whose last hoar was evidently near. 1!' ! . ITT.. 1 aa.4 ataA T am aSnUat tV aUk awa rV-rZTntaVotlt' MrOtB Which B tm. hlt07 Of th WM wifl b. .1. . . . 11,. . . t. I " " .. ., .. . , anllao Tla lahoh kara hoan iMaaant uah uvea Mjatv.Di iwiirai .uwviav uuvturDuaiiB. i arm it I. ih. .n.m i. mi n .. nana na arraron. i Minna meantime closing her eyes to the .t r. ka amrld ha loft nn rnrnmi for a in. outer world, to the 'difficulties and miseries I rnan but marriage, and mSrriage without lot ) nohallowsd. Farewelli and pray Heaven to forgive me that I married for a home I around her, worked on with indomitable in- Harry smith used to langh at nor, and say that a van would be required to carry off her mahOfcripts ; but Minna only smiled, and continued her lubora, growing in love with From all the Stales and from Canada comes tbe word that tbe crops never gave a greater nrnmla. Tha wheat and hnV rrona in ' nar. them rs she went on, and fancying at last that ticular art represented to be greatly begond uor auiai wiw ut-nuiicu m reiriBTB ineir ior- the common average. ; ., -i r i , : m tunes, at last to give Balpn capital enough to begin something. At hit she completed her totk a novel, and innumerable other manuscriptsend one day, dressing herself carefully in ber simple moorniug, she stnrted out oo ber experiment of Ending oat whether she had been wasting her time in illusions. First the novel , , V Tl gentleman who-received her at a well nnwn publisher's was; but, dryly polite, and Its labors have been ineeasant teal Ofls and nrarw erred by good or evil report. W believe,that to it the country is largely In-dobted for the military vigor which succeeded the inefficiency of the first year of the war. Its labors and its character hare been greatly sus tained by the well known bolduegx, lodspen- dee, determination and patriotic? Eeal -of its chairman, Senator Wadb, of Ohio, who has left a record of his work which Taill b cited by the historian so long as America shall have a history. Cm. Gazett. ' ; ,' -Vr. Gntmlv, th Ne York comio paper l.i aannounced to appear July 1st Tbe enterprise is a formidable ene, -bnt it- start with a If rga capital, nq ought to 6 snccessruL , i Oo a very pretty girl saying to Lieign Hunt "I am very sad, ynu tm," be replied, "Oh, no, yoa btilong to the other sect; yon nr very Wr.Isee!-' ,. " ,.' " Oeueral Csnhy has bunted out and srreited fir mrt who, M winter in an Alahatna pa-1 A writer in Blackwood says: Whet peo-fit t-ff-TPtl to be one of a email, timber I of I pie waft to of a native of itollaod, they rr rt-nn to nsv (1.000.000 for the murder I call him an imstrdim dntcl.iran: but when as sl kudtired the manuscript ssU'O'hI to fiir. Lincoln, and he isou hit Tty,urid9r gnsrd, I they spealt of the Graut4 rr;o ju.nny tLy ejCfttim, "we r rer'ked jo thistctroo of tb eoon'y. - iev out th Aiuttr." . The Ciuciiiasti Gazette has an able and in teresting lector from Its London correspondent wherein the proper disposition of the rebe' chiof Is discussed. The views are j entitled fo consideration, and we give them that they may be digested by our readers. (j , (',, . If America wishes now to electrify tjit world she will try, condemn and sonUmce to death Jefforson Davis, and then take bim from the foot of thu gallows and bauiah him forever from the United Statot, The new world mast not be a duplicate of th old. It. may. wall leave the killing of traitors to Governments so weak that they need It But even Englnn learned - from, be experience, in executing Charles I, to ileal out exils only to John Mitohill and Smith O'Brien. The experience ...... or many countries bss proved that reaction sets in at the foot of every gallows which bears a man guilty of a political! or even treasonable offouse. It would be giving Jeff. Davis tbe weapon of John Brown to hung him. Those bore who nave the highest hopes In Ameneai wno oeuere that our eountry is in advance of their own: who mean ta see that justice is done as in questions that are rising oetweeo ns and jungiund ; tbe i oners, ifnghts, i ayiors, lawaons,- ixmthaur and otbors, who aretbe stones of onr fortress here, are, to man, as I believe, hoping that' America will show herself as fur ahoad of the Old World standard of magnanimity as in other regards. Of course, if it is shown that Davis is guilty of connivance at the assassination of President Lincoln, all will cry out for his execution; but pro-slavery reoeiuon is a thing wbicb can not occur where there is no slavery, and con seqneutly the argument of example which alone now lu.tines the death penalty in any civilized country, is absent in this - case. In saying tnese wings, i ao noi snow what ground the UAzrrrrs bas token in tbe matter: bnt I ex press the sentiments which oar truest friends here have uttered without an exception as far as I have heard. I do not know whether we are to believe the dispatch telegraphed to England, from the New York Express, that President Johnson has made a mistake charg ing uavis witn complicity m the assassination It is an ngly blander, if it is a blunder. One would think that a proclamation from the Washington Cabinet ought not to be ono to be revoked in any case, it it t a blander, President Johnson will be visited with heavy criticism throughout Europe. It will be hard to remove the impression of rashness which such a mistake will engender. The deopest anxietv and interest in the behavior of the United States is now felt; the Government with Davis in its grasp is as exciting as the lost act ot a now drama; tbe world watches breathless, and if he is exiled, instead of exe- cuted.such ojcheer for America will go through the world as no nation has ever yet received. From that moment Jeff. Davis will be consigned to tbe street ballads,; and boys will pick np halfpennies for! recounting how he ran from Richmond, and how he was caught in bis wife's clothes; ', Since in the American conflict John Brown died on the gallows it bas become too noble for Davis, and he is unworthy of a bullet since Lovejoy and Lincoln have died.. Let him go, a poor, disgraoed, hipped slave monger; a living lesson of what finally befalls man selling, blood guiltiness. treason and repudiation: and ajrandering tes timony to tne.orave self-reliance and fearless- ness of tba Government which needs no skulls for its authority and stability to rest npon. 0 ijnnr f lOliuea, ontljiii't!. a jl :i ' 0aUar t onlh,.... ...... ...... ! ; ji Ona rutrd 1 ...1 Sua i! Taae-iuar'a I si-iutlia 0 0 - ; TvoaijuarMl year.... OO ' W Column SniiiDlha, !.a 0 1 X Colnnin 1 yoar, ,.. 3 C H ColainhSmontha,..........., r. ........ IS pe H Colunia 1 year,.. ,. ...:.J... to 00 1 Column t month,.;...'.,, ..'.......,,..J... VI 0 I 1 Colonin lyaar,.., , ...j ... IK) 0 : " BnaineaaC'arda, notceedlogf llnaa per yea,.. f P i KoUcaa Ih local column, i iio.a and leu W uBU,nvev' , Sva llaaa, Vicaaia per llaa.. ' ' j' Adniluialratlon, roa4,; attaTimnt,lrorc, ani tinlia !, lent adrerllaauienta nmatb paidfothcriiralnantliia ' ': MaraMt'anKiaajnm The English Workfiigmen to Mr : Lincoln. , The following address rom the working- men of England to Mr. Lincoln, coogratula ting him nppn his re-election, appears in the London Daily News of December 23. It has been forwarded to Washington through Mr. Adams: :' '"J To Abraham Lincoln, Frttidt.nl of tht United State of America. . Bib! We congratulate you and" the Amer ican people upou your re-election by a larga majority. . If resistance to the slave power was the reserved watchword ox your Jurst election, the triamnhant war-cry of your re-election is "death to slavery." From the commencement of the Titanic American strife tbe work- ingmen of Europe felt instinctively that the Star Spangled Banner carried the destiny of their class. Tne contest ior toe territories which opened the dire epopee, was it not to decide whether the 'Virgin soil of immense tracts should be wedded to the labor of the emigrant fr prostituted by the tramp of the slave driver? w nen an oligarchy or 3W,wo slaveholders dared to inscribe, for the first time in the annals of the world, slavery on the banner of armed revolt; when on the very spots where hardly a century ago the idea, of one great democratic republic had first spraug up, whence the first declaration of the rights of man was issued, and the first impulse givtm to the European revolution of the eighteenth century; when on those very spots couuter revolution, with ' systematio thoroughness, gloried in rescinding "the ideas entertained at the time of the formation bf the old constiiu-tion." and maintained slavery to be a benefi- cient institution, indeed the only solution of tb great problem oi the relation or capital to labor, "and cynically proclaimed property in man," the corner stone of the new edifice; and tbe working classes of Europe, understood at once, even before the frantic partnership of the upper, classes for the Confederate gentry had given its dismal warning, that the slaveholders' rebellion wa to sound the tocsin for a general holy crusade or property against labor, and that for the men of labor, with their1 hopes for the future, even their past conquests were at stake in that tremendous conflict o the other aids of the Atlantic.: Kverywhore they bore, therefore, patiently the hardships im posed upon them by tha cotton crisis, oppostd enthusiastically the pro-slavery Intervention" important ue or their f betters, and from most parts of Europe contributed their quota of blood to the good cause. ' While the worlr-ingmen, the true political power of thNofta, allowed 'slavery to define .their own republic, while before the negro,, mastered and sold without bis eoncurreoco, they boasted it the; highest prerogative of tbe whit sldnned laborer to sell himtnlf and ebons his own master they ware unable to attain the-true freedom of labor, or to support tbeir huiope.m brctbrea in their struggle for emancipation; but tin harrier to progress has boeu swept off by the fed sea of civil war. The workingmen of Eu rope feel sure that as the American war of independence initiated a new eas of sscende.icy for the middle class, o the American ooti- slsvery war will do for th working clnsr;s. They consider it en earnest of the epoch to come, that it fell to the lot t Abraham I.ir-oolo, the singM mioilotf son of the working class, to lead sis country through the foittc It-less struggl. forth fescoe of tin .enchained race and the reconttructioB of a socinl world. ' Signed on boSnlfof tbe Iotems'iopal Vo's- SaHptyonsconfJsa of Got, rier The letnndiitt Jonrnal says;, Gov piep pout has determined to call an eMta wwinin. of the Let-ialuturtt on Thursday next, and that for tills porpoeo confdei)!UI circiliir have' been sent to member of th body' which-liM berwfofore assi mbled in Alczaudriit, roritet- ing the lOyul elouieiit as ouutradinliii(rinlied from th late rebel Legislature ut Kidiii hud. The Journal is alarmed, for fear the ciil) 'Is ' made with a view of removing tha 'disability Imposed on those bohave been identified with th robellloiv and restore to theiri tli elective francliis aod right to nwur) held of- I Be, 'f'linrc js no certainty,, howovor, tliat such'1 is tlio object. Owingito the allegtMi -appoint.,. ment by tho Governor of evoril ex--lials to important positions, in violation of the L'orMti-tution, sevural mewling bare been hfll J 1.1 tho 1 loyal peoj)l of AJoxaudria t: device .'irirniiB 1 for self proteciion. On Saturday they perfuctod j their organication and adoptej a re'ries of resolutions, one of which affirms in ' strong terms the rijht of tlie colored man to vote. ' 1 -. , .,. .., . ,,, i ,.,, lo ti. .l The State Board of Agrlcu'liirc. 1 1 i.Th Ohio State Boori of IgricoltBre 'met l in Colarabui last week for the purpose of it-'-Viniug and oniending the premiurn list for tb ) next State Fair. The following members ; were present: NoUott J. Tnruey, J'resident, of , ' Circlevillej William F. Greer, Paynsville; David Taylor, Treasurer, Colambns; Thomas 1 0. Jones, Delaware; Jamos Fullingteu,, Mil I ford Center; William B. McLung, Troy; J.W Ross, PerrysbBrgf R, It Donnelly, Wooster; Jas.Backiugham. Zanesvile: Daniel McMitlen. Jr., iooia.; The Board made some) -Very im-portant changes,- increasing the .-aggreguto'if about 33 per cent. They will offor a sween,- stakes premium' of One hundred dollars. 1 ho j premiums on sheep nre iucreased more than,. 00 percent A eweeestakes Drtsmlum willba ' offered on Uie best buck, ot $50; on best pen' r ut uv wooiihq ewes, au; Dcst or Jong ) wool, n $25: bock the same. ( The increase in preou- . urns on grain 100' Def cent Oa choosa. th Board have made a new dais for the fceaofit" of large mauufactnrers. , lite bremium feeino-Tt tbe same an in domestics. A sweepstake a premium of a silrer n:adal is to do offered for the largest and best display of cheese.'' Tha whole list of fruits and flowers has boen chahg-ed as recommended by th Promolotrieal K! ti ciety, and the premiums increased: 100 pet,- cent. The Dremiumson rmiutinm and Annr. . Jean designs by Ohio artists,, aw doubled, v The Board are going to build a new Fine Art : Hall and erect seats around the track where horses are to be exhibited for the Bccomm dution of visitors. , In short the Board Intend to make the exhibition this year' the most ". interesting and important ever held in ' the' " State. ' The Fair opens on. the 12th bf Sepi'" i I Mdstbrino oot or Cavalrt. The .'Tri-.'T bune's Washington special says the csvatr and that which operated in the Shenandoah Valley,, Is. now , encamped on the Orange St , Alexander Railroad, and is being reoitrsnized . .. and consolidated, in' consequence of th$ mastering oat of those whose terms of service' expire prior to October 1st: About 4,000 !t nave already been mustered out Bnd but AOOP,. , of the same class remain to be discharged at rapidly as circumstances 'will ' permit It is believed an ordewfrom the War Ihspartment ) ' will direct the immediate disobarge pf alt whose term of service expires before January , , latvl86.' --' :" ' ' ,S . ...'.'' V... ' ' ...! "I i'it 1 Y: ' ! An arrival from Buenos Ayr brings' the - announcement that the Argentina Republic!' J bas become involved in the war which has for:: it some time been going on between Paraguay on tbe one side and Brazil and Uruguay ou the ' ' other. It is reported that the Paraguayans,'- without previous declaration of war, invaded "i Corrientes, one of the Argentine States, sar-'j i prised and captured two armed vessels, and , i Killed in cold blood all the officers aod crew,' Of cotinse this act compelled the Argentin'd Republic to take part witb Brasil and Uru ' V guay, and will change thecourse of sympathy,. which was setting in favor of Porairnav airaiiut that country. ' J'"' ' , - - i ' r , -njj.il')-.. - ' judgeUnderwoqd has Brrived' from ' Jfor-''" folk witb the indicments end evidence airriinet "n Generals Lee, Corse, EwelU LCngstmett' Eu ') Governors Smith and Latcher. A CCavmore.i and Newton McVeigh of Alexandria and v pouiioriyoiners.,. , .;;:ii, i ui.; ... .,.ii.u.Aai.';it ;;ii 'The Boston Transcript litis received intelli gence that Professor Agassis and his party of . naturalists reached xuo da Janeiro on the ila of April, and were most kindly received.. The Emperor sent a boat alongside to take them,,, on snore, and in th evening bad a long inter-' 3 view with Professor Acassizi 'U.voit i- it:i:.-j ;r .cu view with Professor Agassizi i i ... ... . , .' ..Tbanderbolt ., Vintnr Hncm avritrat? .Tha which bas broken on Washington ha shatter- ' aA th. . Tln.l.no.n. Ar,l,!k L.n4 ' - f .... " i ivj. uiauuow ui iuiq aviMu vrt.i;ui hi history. After the dawn the nigbU Bttt ! the American people is a colossus of Bronte i, . Traitors can scratch it tint, they .know, not,, how to destroy it If liberty should full in ' America, there would be a shipwreck in ha- '"' manityj Frightfal t deluge.. i,A c : f ,'-i-j iu v,i, ! 1 11 i 11 . : l r,wr CoirnriDRnMS.- Why cannot two slender ner- ions ever becmoe great frieoiisf Because thoy " Will alWaya be slight acquaintances. " " ' ' u" Why is a crow a brave tiirdT uecansa W never shews the white feather j, , j' Why is a person Who never lays a wager 4s ' bad as a regular garpblori riJecause be ii no t.A(M. "w.,, ! :) , . i t-, -i- Why is dongh like the suof Becans wlicl, ;. it rises it is light V1, ..anl:,:.;.frp ' What did Tot do wb.es bis wifn trwaed to , saltr . Oot a fresn .one. . i AnKrishmaB got out 'of the Caitl ail1 roif- Way station for om4 refreahtrlents and nhfiM-- iunately th bell rang and the train left befor he nal finished his repast, uouia oni cnea Pat as he ran like a mad man aW the enr; rhould on yeVe got a pateeoger aboard tfiat's '" joft beiindl" 1 1 Most of tb'rr.-'ir.fa -r ilahami ere frrnn tht w-Hw "! n.t Uuioni-t.h'tt t''S y,t, I'; ing W"" Asaocwtipn, tu xemMi.ct lu Fr vroia v. u-w t,v... Cenusl CvuicIL ' - I anndJalaU of t j eoc r?:: -.' A EcerEcply.- 'jfohn WesleyVfil' a'cdnsWerabfo fiirty, &H been mainlalnicg with frroat eutnejtness ' the doCtribf Vox Populi Vos Dei egainit Msn aister. avbose taleoU wei-i not 'Unworthy. ti.ev family to which slin, belon-ri'd.. At. last tlio., preacher, to put Ah end to tbcoutrovi,'r.-y,pnt his argnment in tun r'""n of dictmn u.i.I I ,aid: :i :l ! .-. IfMu) .v; fl tell yon, 'str. tb woics of tne pop:o t the -vriice of 0d." .. -. : ... . "Ye?, she Mp'if I nuldiy, "it e-":i cru.i:y - hioi, crucify hi j a tnore ati'-ai' ituiij ou given. ' rer wis per-'p m |