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r "rl -?-" " . .. c ..ft i . VOLUME is Til 'M A rT $2.50 pf annua,-EykMefrtaiitlJ;, U mirmav t $3.00 if jBtdaiNHl ,Vr-T'r Jta lbsi Uttiii Will Wldljr kaiTttradX&1 -3T By saUterlt ; Ua raaUfy f tt Traawi taa andarsigvad baa aaanmed iba General Sfeertp tioa Agency for tha tale of United States Traaanry. Notea, baarinMTan iad Uirea Untlu" p?'nl. in taraat, par aanani, known aa tba - SEYES-TniBTY LOAN. Tbeaa Hotae ara issued under data of Aogast I5fli, 1864, and art payable three years from that time, In Wrteacyjtt afa iBYartIble-al tbaptlea aClba balder iato - ' ' ' i It. Sk 5-ao Six per cent. P,0D-2323islZ2TO S0XT93. - These bolide afe now worth a p rem ism of nine per cent, tnclndin gold inerett froai Nar.t wbfob makea tbaaetnapndt atttk;y.3lW ioat current rates, laeladlag Interest, aboat ten per cctsL per annun), baaUaaJta rmgV9rm Stat tt mulnteipnl ttuca-tfesafctarfAjSa awe Zjnr twiisiw,' t- eordtnt; to tha rata Ieriee? on otber property. The 'interest is payable semi-annually by coupons attached to each note, which may ba cat off and alM , any bank or banker. The interest amounts to One eent per day on a - : . -'.: $30 notcO; Twe eeatis 01OO Ten $500 20 S1000 hi $5000 Notice of aall the denominations named will ba promptly furnished upon receipt of subscriptions. r Tbis i ' THE OSLY XO A2T HI II ARKET special tbai Ua ayVrtor adranUga willmaf U the threat ropniar Loan, of t&8 feopie.'t Iers thaa 4tw.amiiaiiiVa4(14Vwbicb rUl probably ba dispoaad of witbia tba next 6( or 9ft days, when the notea willnnsloabtadly oonuup.4 p paaaiiasi, aabuanifonbly ieasi tba csae oa-closinr tba aabacHpVoat to tha dtbarlana. . - ti.U Ja order that f itliaas of erery. town and tha. Joa the Natfonal Banka, fiUU Baaka.aaa Private Bsnkert" throngboat tba country- havavsaa- a rally agruea V raoatve sabscrrptions at par Jsub-aerrbers will select their own agents, is whom they have eonfldanea, and who only are to ba responsible for the delivery of tha notes for which they receive orders. " JAY COOKS, . . ; r5W 4a, Pkita. AaV Subscriptioas received by tha Firtt National Bnmt Joavtiaet. " ab. 25, 1865. f The Ninth National Bank ' i OF THE CITY OF NKW YORK. . CAPITAL $1,000,000 I'AID IX, FISCAL AGENT OF UNITED STATES. Ad Special Agent for Jay Cooke, Suoeeription Agemt, "ITriLL DELIVER 7-SO NOTES, FREE .07 If Cll A RUE. by express, in all parts of tba country, and receive in payment Checks on New York, Philadelphia and Boston, current bills, and all fiva per cent, interest n.tea, with interest to data of sab-scriptioa. Order seat by mail will be promptly illM., ' ' - . . This Bank reoeirea tba acooants af Ranks and - Bankers on favorable terms; also of individual kaep-inasXaw York acconaU. J, U. 0RVIS.VeWa4. Starcb4,SS i J. T. HILL, CtasatV KNOX COUNTY BANK. 7-30 7 Of BONDS, larga and small denomination, 'J.' constantly on baud aad for aala -th Knox County Bank. II- OQ LEVER. Marco 18 -ml Cashier. Certificate of Authority ; " fo Ma 'A-Y- TIT A 0 a I'-'aT- -'- . ivauonai lianii, TREASURY DEPARTMENT. V OMce Camptrelter of the Cirreney, WAasmaTO,:Marcb 17th. loSf. yj T H bRbTAS. byatiifactory SHdetiea ptaaaated - I V to the underifnel, it has been tnsde to ap Mar tb-t-Tha First NaUonal Bank of Mount Ver- oa,7ia tba City of Mmat Vernon, In tha Coanty of ami, ana, otat or tiaw, baa been duly organised nadef, adl ocorJUix to tha requirement of tba Act of Conraa, entitla i "An Act to pruri-le a National Cdrraoyf aacarad by a pledge of United State bonds, and to prwri'le tor tba circulation and redemption thereof," approved June 3,1861. and ha complied with all tba provisiona of said Act required to ba compdel wHU before commencing Me butiasw of -ag amtr said Act: : The office of Comptroller of Carranv beiflr TscStft. 2low taerefnre. X. 8mael T. Howard. Difputy Coin pi "uu" " mi vimirancy, ao ncreky eertiry that-MTbe Prt Mati aa. Bank of Mtant Vernon."" id the City ef M aat Vernoaia tba County of Knox, and State er'aio,iauiansad to commence tha businass of Makiagnalar th Act aforesaid. . In Tastisanny Whereof, witnans my band and seal of omca.tbe Seventeenth dav af 'Karen. 1805. ' .- - fSlznad) SAMUEL T. IIOttARD. j- V-ss lepy Cora ptroller of the Currency. ' "T " J' - e ' jtaaaneaai ' .---'' - Under the aathortty .above giraa this .Bank will e-tmnsenM buaiaess, Saturday. April 1st: g& at it offlia In tha BlacV earner of Main A Vine Straatavvr-.-': .': V fT --VJ .i r t- i y.;rr i x Moaat Vernon, , '. ' 221; IMS. - ) ;yr x-- C. rj3LAW0.Vatea.v Sfcv;-' wi-' -".PI . 3. STUROES:Coaaaarv-''-:lta9caz9,'i8-C I : ojaht A .ItowiVi.. o.; lLuc . ." -b a. .hall ba iacidaat tKihs1 sionsr or ui m. : - i . r All checks. Certi3Wlji It r JTote of this BankVwuTba i DepoaH and eirewlatia ! i"roa-rprasefl UttoTfii WU Viae 6tr"a: PKD- f. rVTV ' w I IKaI . .WrtiUmfor tU jaWrfVn"Jffaae.' LAT HE TOEC3T. :f-;"u Ob, y bi Wrwt vbea tk i TV. Iniilir tholl tark jmtik Im ttelr H! Adaww yfaTOWBa w.ywajii 0b1ay atoraai, w.naaUBia iabar W&Bing, l Aiad brtat, nttfa.Bd wteiba Jan rosea blow, J a 4ta yjtTabat wbaa,wiatry blaaUbawUsg Carer aajrjraTa Wita taapaatttifal aaaw. iJOb Jay Wt raat, wbeaaa-ialfaa-ara fallias. . Ptia aTabaana taKaaatkey apj Brina w flosmVot; balaty e'er mtnUTi ta "Ba.t eorar at f grmrjkSk tba tlfaXttM. Ob, lay.1 wbaa tba aawtera jEsJlinr I (Whan hoarse, chilly and cold tha north -braexe blow, - ' . ' ' And puise'fcsVnty por: baart torara, i. i 3 I 0 ! corer nay grara with tba baantifal snow. ' tONE STAR. ; Mt. tiiEnrrO., Feb., IMS. ' - -r ; r THE PAST JbNPTHE PRESEOT. A True Story of a. Great Chanjfe Arlington and it Proprietors. J The Wahinsan Ijitf Hixner; alVr.foU lowing description and narratire : . A visit to the Arlington Mansion and'sur-roan Jing c:sue,-a . few dmjs . ioe. fi)J us Willi oppressive n nil melaneboiy1 rflec4ionaj.-i Four yt-ars ago'Robert E. Le. ibmt Tieuten-mt coJonel of Cavalry in tba Union Jtrnay, Jlnd toow cornmaii.ler-in-chief oi the 'rebel army, wan with bia family in tbe ,. happy posaewion of that magnificent inheritance. More than one-half ot the estate, consisting of a thousand acres, was covered with a aplendid forest of oak and other timber, and the rich and pro ductive fields adorned with the hands of culture. To-day what a change! The venera ble ancestral mansion erected by the honored on by adoption of the Father of hia Country, and for ball a century his cultivate! and rie- liehtful home, is now in the centre of a vast cemetery of those who have fallen in the - ser vice of their country. Two hundred and fifty acres of this estate surroundinnthe;ijmansion have been perma- niUlypprof ratei for liurial parpooes by tue goveiaitnen.t,ncloaed":by substantial and hwlww)'fencejsSejfcJrTjBve tboanand soldiers have' already beeV iherti-bwried. and the hum be,Ha"daiiy i growinf; - arger. In 1853, Mr Cusl fU the irrothr-of:Mrs. General Lee, diei i Iu "Arlington 3Ioionfl was buria l in A a'etws'efe"! ntt"-Jeligbtfor)ryov near the mansion ;rid i Ur. Custis dieI, and his remaina were lepoiil OySerside. a vastcon-Cuune pf ernaJBf erery' rank testifying their reverencevrorue tieparwa Dj tneir presence at the oten?ift ' . T -T Lr. thiseleete by 4tti Tht"8etfe!'terJ 'raiWUnf, aetlono1rnrrr1JeJtJ-- field of the ilMli and the two marble eoluntn marking the reraaiaa of . Oeorge w aiUington Parke Ourtia anl itary Lee FiUbagh. bui wLe, now rise in the mid-l of more than - four thousand patriot soldier' graves. Nearly the whole of the timber and wood has been ewep from the entire estate and used for war purposes.; The Freedinen's Village is eatab:isbel upon one portion of the land thu cleared, and it is all being put undar-caltivatio.B by coiiira-band negro laber. - - MrCu tie inherited this estate , from hia father, who " was the son of Mrs. General Washington by a former husband. Soon af ter .bis mother died in 1802, he. then about twenty -.fl-e years of age. came here from Mbtnt Vernon, and with bis young and accomplished wife took up their residence in the . t . ' . m i i .i . Arlington axauaioa, wum-q nc sua men jum erected, ftoil which evermore was their beauti ful and cultivated hme. The fruits of this union were four daughters, ail of whom diei in infaniv, except MarjU t.nstia, the wife of General Robert E. Lee. Mr. Cutis's , father, John Parke Cutia.was' an aid-de-camp to WaMhinoiin. audilicvL of a camo fever iu 1781. contracted at' the trtege of Yorktown, at the age of twenty seven years. He bad marrieil, at nineteen years of age, Eleanor Calvert,' of Mount Airy, Md., Adeacendant of the second Lord Baltimore, when but fifteen-years of age and at twentv-three she was tbnmad a wid ow wi:h fonr children. General Washington hastened to Ellhani, MdJ where the husband-was sick, only to see blm-in. his dying moments: This was the Only surviving child of Mm. Waahinct&n, the daughter having died soma":'-yeairq befof:; He"'wjaavdeeplj atfecte!. and. weeping, said tO tb lisru. '1 adopt tbe Iwoyonnpr eniuiren as my own." 1 hese were Eleanor Casus, (hen two and a half years of age, vtied -at Seventeen; ofennanhiption, and George Wasbingtoa Ptrke Custis, then six months old. ' Genera' Robert Elmnnd Lee is the sod of General Henry Lee, 'of . Reeolntiotiary memory; and known as "Light Hotve Harry." whose mother was the beautiful Miss Grimes, General Washington's firt lova, and whom he" celebrated as Hhe lowUnd beauty.".-.JOen-eral Harry Lee. was twcitjnsrrid,x-Bythe firt m .rriage he had two children, Uerry (an officer in t he war ot 1812) and Ldcy. By the srKtnnd wife a Mias Carter, of Shirley he had five chiNren, two daugfftera, Anne and Mihlred. ami three aona. The sons were Char- lee Carter, Kober Elmnnd (the ganeral) and nianey omiin. ine la-tt namei an omcer in oor .. i .1 . ' - . ami ""w in inp rvei nary. - - - t General Biert R. Ie was born ib 1808; bid is. tnquently;1 fiftyeven years of aee. fit yradttaleil MW1 in . bis class, ' in lsz, .inde Charles Mason, of' this ertv jand ' for- merlv Oomiuiaaioner of Eatenta, atamllng first in that clasa) and was aaaignd. to the Ettgw Mi I'n.iu mm m Tiri.i I IUm...iI . in 1 01 A a' siatant AtMneY. ffxing the honndarj bfil I ween Ohio and Michigan ; itt 18.10 promoted first litn tenant; captain in 1838 : Chief enei-: I beer Under Scott, in Mexico, and xreatly dia- iingjiiMrjy7 T,n& ' prorooiea pucccboi veiy . iy nril."mjoiv lieutenant colonel and ctfftfneL for his gallantry ; in 1852 superintendent Military Academy ; ia1855, transferred as lieu' tenant rolotiel of l be new regiment of cavalry; March 16 1831. promoti colonel of the First Cavalry ; resigned April 25, following, and re lildantly embarked in the rebellion. . j , The following are t he children of Gen;' Lee: George Washington Cnstia"Lee; about 33 yeati of age ; MsryCnatie Lee; a I oat 30, Wm Henry Fitxlrttgb . LeeJ abcot 27 ; Annie Le died at Berkleys priage in 1863. and wonK bavaJbenJtowsJat S itArnea Lee,Eaboc lJ J, l?rtf lldxett L about liv, one of them hareUfrarria.1 wr Wro. ..Hefinr . ritxiajh. wboaa wife, Utf ChsrlottO'. rckbaanv'ified ai dch nxrod i t the head of hia rhm. aU.'. . e-t r.r-':.t.' j IIH, Cr,J vrs a tret lieutenant in tieecrj cfjer.; u:j i! . '! i :..!! e-l Lis fxther into tl o nan en. .- II a araa mnm CreoneJ econtt. lieu tennt in the ixtVlpfahtry" in lM7,Tnr jre- MhlA'Viririnia.r:TikaAna.'iti-wall kwowii.".-' " ---rur-a .a vivtng danhtera ra witb tbew motber, wlio, it n believetl. has llUtrly beehkt "liViJchVQrgi . "lCoatls?-. tBe tirrraorhli -esUh.wimf some 200 alavea. who,' by aaiiOLrrre; t6x fc frejtt At,be terja?intion of (ve yearf front 4riI- deatbj whteft penod f ptreoucoher itVess. Tb'moat of'lhwalavea.-'were kept "oh the w ime uouse estateramt ail trie valnabl boi a a . . ' . -', w. -an.. k , , . 1 . . tion weTe amel Soolb;axta2a or jaaare i old metk and.aronjen abd, vouna? childrea . were 4eft tUrUnso. MrCustia'ti mother oWpe4 the White House estate. and restded ' there when Coraoe GreelerTleadi foi Theti.' ;n'thK7W&tmaMr. Cireeley pleads lor, fitness tv4be leaders f b nbeilioau lie detlaree that he feel Jeer abtrpatby ? ta tht ordinal aphoMere of "the. ReeoJttthxns-bf o the dUctplee of Calhoun and McXufi3e4- tothe Nnllificrs .of .1832 mod the 8tate filgbt men of 1850 than to the John Belhv;:IIm. Iarej MarsbUs hnd.AJekfHlII.Stuaitawip, were schooled in; the. National faiih.iancLwho.. im-becoming Disuaioniate r .and Rebels, tra nr. pled on th professtotis of a Vifetioie and spurn ed )be logic wherewith they had eo often nn-aaswerably demooatrated that Seceaaion ; was Treason. And Mr. Greeley evcfh goes to far ao say be considers onraon Uavis a le?a culpable tnatiwhaa John Bell. He oppoaee eVen tbe execution of a single man, and winds if. A single Confederate led out to execution would be evermore .enshrined in a million hefrts as a conspicuous hero and martyr. t cannot realize that it would be wboleaome or safe -we are sure It would oov be niagnaai rmua to give tbe overpowered disloyalty of ihouth auch a shrine. Would the. throne of the House of Hanover Stand more' firmly bad Charlen &1 ward been eauirht' and execu- tf after Cutloden ? Is A uatr Ian domination irf II angary the more i stable to-day for the hahgtnz of iNagy handor and his twelve com- pMiot Generals after thi surrender of Vilagne? j a pieii airaiqat pasaions certain K mis WO-ment to be fierce and intof rant : but : on bar5' aide are the A'jrea and voice of History.--We plead for a restoration, of the Umon against a policy which would afford a roomenfarv gratification at the cost of years of perilous; bate and bitterness ' ti r;-. !.-; - -. - .. .- . The Ifext HorementA-StAte Beligion. Xpome titus t-inee we.wvreen .to, taak by sv. contemporary in th'te city for the expression oltour belief that the next move of the war party would be the iaauguratiou, of a t$te, Of Established Religions Events axf ontiUaUyU,d happening to rearthen that- beUeThericli nrghtipor " nc We rw k-onrfTTewiwhairrWnixiR; I fat agitate fof.be- 4nfPrPAbtip,n ofj : eeligk.ua I sraa l jal aa aa Mam lVtli-k s ka fsa ! n I test or decbtratioo into the fundamental law of this country, to" consider once more, and thoughtfully, the late decreev'of Maxiiniliad, eetabJifhing and defining the relations betweeu religion and bis Mexican Empire.'- . - r - ' We thought all of this .'ground had ' been fought over, and the contest' fought out.' -by our grandfathers, so that no controversy regarding it would hereafter arise; ' Twenty- five years ago we had as little apprehension of ever being called to oppose the establishment Of a national religion as of an imperial monarchy. But on rs is a restless age, and sems ready to take long strides backward rather than to let well alOi e. V; We have got a huge national ..debt, a huge standing army, fastened upoo u. and, fn or der to have the trinity of monarchy complete an established church is next in order. All of the heads of tbi trinity spring from tbe same spirit. G Eq. . f i A Horse in Spectacle. The Philadelphia Worth America of th 16th. ult., s ya : . . ; A well known resident of the Twenty-second Ward has an old family home, that for- twenty years Has done him service. . Tlry animal has always received the tenderet care, is in Sood oonditidn and vigor; and can perform the uty required of hint as well as man v a road ster ot but half his years. For some time past tbe qnadrupt evinced a tendency to stumble, and to strain his sight at ohjets close to. him, in a manner that set the kind hearted owner to devising a remedy. : .The gendenln judged the animal by his own case, and satisfied him-Sel that, with a pair of spectacles, the. horse would do as well as when in1 his prime. Ah optician grou ad to order pair of pebble glas sea xif a large"1Iz6rgnefi.-rliejr werer x etl in a frame over the horae's eyes. The animal is now a horse in spectacles, and - not; an elderly gentleman 'ever yet showed greater appreciation ot the convenience. Whan in the stable the spectacles are taken off. One day a servant rn.m' driving the; horse forgot the perifocal ;in question. " The horse very plainly indicated tbe deficiency before he had gone the first quarter of a mile up the lane oni which the stable is situateL Wa saw tbe I sleeK old animal jogging up York Road 'ves- terday with his gUe on. looking as content ea ana nappy as nis excellent owner. ; , - . u' Mia ; J- "':." '," 'A- Conceit Without laurel. Ifpr should these Ab1I louists.fiatter thenY-selves thai if they ean ettcceed. in fiieir object oXuBfang7 thojdftf of the free States the will witer the contest with nnmertcaj sunertor. AMlt S'VZ ussaiaanu .uncertain ij.oiwar.i Ana we are almohishetl bj the holy writ that th raca is not to the aiilCoQr, the fate to Jhe, strong But if theetetdnqner,w1tornswuhl they eonq.oejrf ,A foreigfl foe one who had jnenU ted our-flap;, inradeil our shores,' and laid-oar coatry wae - e t fid s?r. It would be a conquest without laurels," without glory self. a oicidak KwquesWa 5onqneey( brothers. over brothers, nchiaved by one-jbrrr another portioWvrbe dendants oextmmor. ancestors wbo;"nob6dpiedging' their-zlives thk.fonne.arheh' iouxhtand- h edLsiife be side, in m.A a- mrS t nr:ii i -vi('. -."J tatiooii inttrjenegBa:4-wV fXgfs:"cA ' I' ' mm. --mm- ' ' ' " ' cSNwfe- .s4Rncihfiatl5 ?diirakin'- -ef ties. ,fvftiir;?l!5jr?t- ljf' . shcn'l t; !-.y C"?s,'t er po; ; e " . - "r -1 and ,h.?-'rs; ci.,tr ?clie?ir-V 1 -: -r' ' .A' . . f .... - ; ,4, g-i. rj;yg vj ;--5ecV Ul A'a jMIi 4 Waahlneon diat5atch. f tae lith". aitvat ,Tti-ii,iEeitiTt ipartJoe&UltncIading JBe Trl UmVMAnaionwM il"!nated to-night 4 E 'jnous o peraona repmi ei 10 .iue ,cj(ecu-ti'rt Mansion, and ihe Preil 'ent responded to oallon of teteiaurg'atvillr ihmonand'the es aw jl a awaat aa wujw -v su.rrehdrof4hpriaicrpSj4n' Irgfent, gijr ejropet o! rrlghtso4U pead r;ac,w OHarsxprenuoaa cannot bur itralned. 'In be mrdst of tbis.-howeTef y firom ; whorn, all Ueisings flow . maat ot be j'Drgotten; y-AcaU for ja National ; ThankegiTijri ia being prepais ed:indlvUlJbefiBlgaiWj1 'AJIor mdetlhosi.wbe iarer..partg;iv us eauae of rejoicing be orerlooked. Their honors must not be narcele tout with othera! I royaclf was near'lhe front, and bad the bub ..ill . J '-'----. 1 Jr . pleasure ih wanem 11 ung n;uco 01 tne ooq news to you, but no part of he honor for the plainer execution is niine. -To Gen.' uq rant, faia skillful ofHeers and. br&ve ; men it all be longs T.he gallant navy sf cid ready but wu not in reach to take ab cte par(. By these recent successes, the' rerlcsnguratiob of the national authority; reconstruction; which-had a-large, share ot thought . otn the first, s frees ed much wore cloefypo"our attention. i is fraught w it h - great - ttaeuhy urlik rsj case-of war; bet ween independent nations there i no authorixed organ for ua to treat with. Nitf one man has aut liority'Ho give ' up rebellion lor any other nian; --e aimply must te gin with, and-, mould. froradtsorganizeuV and discordant elements,; nor. sinaJi mlduiouaJ etnbarrHsaiuent, that we bpyal people differ atnorig ours Ives as to lbs1 tode manner! and measure of construction A i't a' ganeroHS futt, 1 abatain: from Teadi4g reports'of attacks" upon myself, -wiahihg not iO'be;"fovoked b thatiotwtfich t caiut -proper 1 -off rnn-wr-. In spite 01 Uii,s.)rec nf iojis however, It cOmrt well to niy know 11, e 'that1 Tain tnuch ceusured for some su pp ddr a geucy ' lif fitting up; and seeking - to siutain he newtate govern men t iof Loniaiana; fhhis, I- ha ve done jut as much- and no morihan tbe public knowsVi-:-r-;?"i - $'!-'t&itz-ri-y&h&v:t ;'J nrj annnal messsge (,Dcfnber, 1863 and accompanying proclaitiion, I presented a'plah of reconstruction wuith f iroiiiwei, if aqopten oy any oiaie,won.. I be acoeptablarto arid sustained t y the Esec;utive.-Govemment. not only a plan tecepi ed knd alnQ Kxecuue clainv- Wbeilier members aucb lita.Uak! itiav -plait- was in advance aub- I rbitted and bpsved- try-eretT-5xnberjothe. KsT1 t ? r a . t a. a-. a sa Cabinet. One of Xheineuggestad hat 1 should Uien, and iniba enneauaBvappiyjthe Eman cinarjon ProcJamation to heretotore excepfed parts; of .Virgini and. Lbnis.ia.na; that I eboul-j -drop the suggestion of apprenticeship for. the freed people, and that;!; should omit prbtest againat my o n powef' in regard ta rh e admis . io of member ot" (Jongrs Ihi t;he approved ojevery part of the plan which has since been employed ortOHeheMyitie-aciooiIioui8i-atoa.i iTbanewu' conaitution-LoHaianale clsriag eiuaocipat ion . for the . whole dr tbe State, practically applies, the proclamation' to the part previoualy exepf eit It does hot adopt apprenticeship for 'the freedpeopler and is si? lent, as it should 'not be. otherwise aliodt the admission of members of-Conress. As it ap plies to Lonisiana, every -inetuber ot tbe .Cabinet fully approve! tbe plan.. , r v'( jrThe' mewsire; went to' Congreas.'and I received many coinmen ations bt the pbin.J Written snd verbal, aud l6t' a singla ofjertidrt 6 it, -from any professed etnanciimtioniyt. had come to my knowIe.ttre hntil after -the news reach ed Washingtbn th at the people' of Lohts ana bad begun to movetn- acooriiance witntit. From July. 1802. .I ; hsd correapondeit with different persons supposed to be int erected in seeking reconstruction '- of the Stat Government of Louisiana, when the message of 1K63. with the jd an belore mentioned, reached Nw Orleans.:: : . ... . . , V" Gen. Banks wrote me that, he was confident the people, ..with his military co operstioft; -savyvsi 1.4 aAnat aaeaMtr1 - attw li taar-wAft Im t mm ja S a J j T " I. arrote to hin" and 'solinS 'ot them , to; try. it; tbey trieI it, and thefesult is' known.: J Such has been my- only '; agency in getting rtp;ihe; MMueiana movement, A" .to .sustaining it, nay promise ta but, as oeiore, stated. . but as bad promises 'us beWrh-ok'eu "han ; kept, 1 shall treat as "a . bad; pfornUe; and break to wuenever t soaii oe convinces nat Keeping it Is adverse 4o the public interest, but' 'J. ,-have jiot Tetlbeeaiw coMyrneeil.;; ,.f ' naye Wen shobjetteti ?brthWts6bjelt snppoKeljo bekbleo e4j ;in ..wiiiclf a wifer Jex presses regrettha t iny. mind - h as 6ot seemed , to be drfinitrly fixed on, jbe qfetiOfi whether ;acrurM cjwaii.'r, v-cbiic, ore iu ine .Union or but of: iC l ' would" .'perhatM. v ail.f' astonish". -.otent t.o hia r profesael. Uioo menndeavoring to answer I hat question LiSTe purpoaejjr rorliorne any, public expr; afiidri rtport ik as it api&rs to Vne J that question .has not been, Vnor yet ' is.'-prNe : i tiesflv a materialore;, that 'any diWionO ii wniie ii mua j-cmaina practically im ma tens! could have no ejfect othjfr than a micllievdn one Of lividiDg ut frleiMleC As yet. whatever. mayT become that'qiifHiion ..U bid as. a basis Of eont roiers brat eobf for :hbthin ar all. .We" jf agree fthaC 'sereilcl State.. e called, J are out or tneir proper practical relation am b 1 he UnnV? and hatlhe: ole!;obj'ctr-of the Govvyment jriyitant niititary;W'Tegmrrtb these75tsf fo galri gel ihetri td 1 hat pntfp- er braetieal relation. 1 Mieve that it'is not bnly rxbleV'Jbn in: isct; essTei' tbdo thia without dding.r even conMderiri,wleihef those:8i ales nave aver been'out of-theTJnion. Tbe.' wi'h finding' theSaelvetrssfely at home it vrould be fittetirifinfnaterial 'whether they had jfi;Uer'tfaU M6idvid tln-acts n eceasarr 6 restore -proper practical relations between hese Sattes" and; UnlabJrani! chtforevef kirinbntiy-i opinion wJieUief. in dain: ci St a teC frofil"wit hon t, tn to the UnTon? br ba I 5ve Jhera proper as iij:as.cethey never ha loberf ernt" cf it.'. -V J 4 1 - e- J i u v.iioiel x tr !r on -rth v4!4! t, ; a :. re a ii , - - ar..' tbe ttihcr t on- i.rrLA s t j; th iJi, 'TI. war U fcii.j'tCl.i; iZii Ciir 4 -- a. A. J-!. is .61 :a-.-c- tamfv!trr! SHtJraro!. AonT 16 Yc tarda v mora'; ing Attorney JQeneral SpeeJ waited Upon Hon; An erjf oh nsb. ViVe President 4tfs thsAUai-fjed States; antolciallt7m formed him of; tbe fud 'ea-an npenpected- deceaseiafPresident Llr coin, and stated that an early hoar be ap- tni ted tor tne inauguration or Ms successor Tt i, following is a copy of the cotnmunicatloti l rejcrreejwa.ui -t. .s!n?s ?.n' JLir tH presi.leo4 the United was frfctt bjEv af assassin, last, evening, at.. Ford s Tb ater.Jh this city, and diedat the hour'of 7&2 6-clock'tl? uwtaorntti:'" Aoout the eam4 firr a ar whkh thePreskUnt was shot an-? ns ai iai.enJeracttha alek chai-nKtp,nf Hnn- W ill SewanfSecretary of.Sitste, and stabbed nu,t tw aevraf piacrs in mr inroat, necir, and 'face,' Severely, if nbf mortally woahding bin. Other members Of the tteeretary's famtlyl were ngeronBly wounded by ; theaasasfcin while tnskinp: his. escape. .. . , r .By th death of President' Lmcolri. the 'of. nm or President nas devolved, under the Con- atuBtion. upon yon. The emergency of the Government demands thafyon should immediately qualifr; MCoord4tO) t&e jrRirrmebts ofJhe Const itutioa..nd .enter upon the.datiea ofPresident of the United .States. If you will pleMse.make known .your pleasure stich "r-rangeraenta as yrG deerri proper will be made: ft-.-- or"Pnii MTTRnui, TSigned t HUG II McCULLOCG H. ; ,.- 8ecretsry of the Trescury. ?H , i D.WI2I -M. STANTON. ' " Secretary Of Wsr. GIDEON WELLES, s-Serrrtarv of tha Navy. WILLIAM DENNISON, j:-' Postntssfer General. V" : 3.Y. USHER. Secretar of the Interior. ; JAMES SPEED. . Attorney General. . fi:-ft ' Tcr'Awnmaw JoflMsox, Vice-President of the United Slates. ' ; ' ;;;';;;" '; ' s 'tMr. JEohntMon requested that" the "ceremony take place' al Ms trtorhs; at rirk woo! House, in' tnis ritv. at 10 o'clock in the morninf. lon. S. P. Chase, Chief Jnetice" of th Unite States Sn prrmninn.TwaS; .notified of the ffltct end desired to le lu attendance to admin-, ister the path of office. At the alove named bWir the following genfienieTraasambled'in'ihe L Vice- Ptesiilew t - room . to pa rtiei na t e in "f b e -eremonyr Hon.-S P, Chsse. Hon, II, Ko-Clilfoch. Ayorney-General Speed, F, P. Blair. Hon. Montgomery Blair. Seiator-''Foote.':.bf Vfrmont, Yates, of niihoia,sTlsmae,'of""Mih-nWota; Stewarf. b? Nevada; and Farnswort h. of r Illinoiaia. After the- -presentation of - the alibve letter the Chief d uatice administered the, following oath to Mr. Johnson ; " , ;kI do solemnly swear that I will ' fiiifhYnltT execute the offire ofPreeMlenr Of the United State, and wtll; to tba best of my abili'ypre- arevroec,aad -.fefead ibe. CouttitUUua of V a United Slates.'? " -' ATieirff1hfhtT Pi eaident bt the UnitejStates-. Mr. Jobasdff remarkeil: - . . '--:-i , -r uisiTLxwef v. jr'mnaT te"periiiU'ed to say ttai I have ketii almost vwheliet, Jf .Ihe annoacemeni oflhf snd-ewent which .hs.S9 recenilv orxumlfljfrel iacompelent to per- . j... : : . 1 j " i wuii MMiu-ii u. iinpormni ani-ref ponfioie tboae wuicb have twen so nnex thrown npbrr ttie.' As to aii Indication 6f any pdlwy- whieb mtr Jbe .ib4fbyfn is-vtbe administration of the.Goverti.iaent, jhaye ' to asty that that must, be leiifor. development ' aa OittlAdrn'mirhUon:1 predrreaBnea. -.The. ntea sage or decUirsUon ,niuet.be made by the acts as tbev transpire.. "r' " vi ,Af4iThe onlyAaas"dra'nceithaV f ciftltow give of Lie rut re u reference to the pU The eonrte 'which 1 havetaTcen, in the pnk in. connection f ilhv th In rebel lion must be regarded s . a gQaranteeortkefoture: --Mypsat pab4io liiay Whreh haa brn long anal laborious, has, -been tended a I: itr-,good ronscieoce lelieve, upon b great prineipls of right. b&h lies at the lut-4is of a 11 things, - rhe beat energies of ray life tave been spent in anlea)airlng4to:-eitabl!sh nd perrjetuata AKe.ptmci4..lar4f .free gvern-letu. I believe that Phe Government in p s-fragbnough its, preaent perils. Will eetOe dowi p pon'rjrincipte .more consonant with, pd'pular f igh ts, " more ; permanent and 1 endori ng . thm heretofore: .:' . .. ; v '"" 1 v ' . ' ;sr ' - - jV.m st; he permltte! ' to say; i r f nnderrtanf I be feetinga of my' Own heart,1 1"have long la-' HreF to ameiidrate and elevate the -condttrcrti jof t he'great' m ass "bf the' 'A rriercililr, people. Toil and an honest advocacy of tbegreat riiH Oiples of free got ernment haveven rflfy lot.- The duties baveeVnGod,S.;This has been Vheibdndation'bPvny -plifleatrbreei-Ifeel i h at Jn fa e end f he Gnyern men t will -l riaea ph. kx&4 heareat prr&cipleJ wi be permanently eataW ihe I, I n . con ci uion geiitlenien', ",)et ?ne say I waiavour encouragement anl coun-ieranre,vJ shall ask and rejy flpon .yolfaod others in darrytpg, the, Govemmen) tbrotigh ita preseat periU'. X feel, in tnaklnz. this- re- I. quest, that it will be hesrtilv esp0Tided to bt f . J -11 . I . m -II - ' . ' ; juu wiiij rr vinet ymtwmmm slim -vv-ra ,01 VUB rights andiHrerean'of aretiple3''A AOb.cpncluaion o(lis remarks the- Preai-lent received the kind wialiea of Jbe"frierifo V whom he , was snrrounifef 'Xfe 'mmates -were "devoted tovrnvTsallont Alt were deeply ifnprWaed'wit'h the'sofemnrtyn' the'oona-sinh; arwl'the recent savI'rjRftrfnee that cavs el the heeeaarry ff'theTspeedyMnangnyratioai 5rf the President wssjrraverr discussed. - Mr. "Joh nson is' it, j&rie hen ftfiV nfhae an earnest 1 Mnse opbe riirpdrtsnt'trUfit JKifSfldkf'ln him. j Wniv Ifnnfer. Cliief Clerk of the Kuite i De"; part mcnt," ha becn afrpoinfed Acting- 9eers taryJDtSKJue.u i--i.?a.'isii xxtih -. .-j- A apecial ineet ing pfiJieCabinet, was rheld at the Treasury Department at 10 o'ciock th i : morning. - ? iI.lX. .-VitLST.'- l-.X-v, 1.',,.. M At ;the,Trde ISxhildtion in Paris, the pretty Oiin are plenriml, and therollectlon fnclales bn e'.' br I w o a m'bsl n jr" i ndden t ? ' Foweoet among 4heae ia a atf pert ear. drawn' by? silver aarane.of ghranti rportionSVThecar ia .ia-tended fiw faif-bsahers. j In ju fair , net . w.brk they mayicetdioe aLjjbejir: esseand float non the water, tT?rjBl np- by he i out gs Ilant ; si I-ver.ewanaiho Hwrlparl.iheTnv safely upon the gentle swell of summefseast At the1 fair bathers eTliOw ia a handle that arorksT acre w and tf t7ii rewshe'may drive the; rd heTsanamt;.-kexjwnj rwejee-Ul,.;Tbia h luxury enough; -on rbald imagine, for:ever. a Parsian .Conntees, at Biarrita ot.,Trtrme. Bat the inrevitor isrtsiafiVL-lls knowt the izM' tot rwhoni h daters and nl itht e -a . . a a rstics. eitnewus nira ne oas accrmnea t liqacr esse, toov an.ir,--toifi. . - v -a -.a erii,, -iunt r.rsh??,i?d. in'-cor rr ten m..ji trcn , j , j -at i ;;t9Ty-ndjr- .kc tST,trV i 1 "aaWaaaaaaaaaaaa ''' ' ' -. -; . U;i Xtatifcmie' AfXlL Elictiow The Democrscv fertnville electedihe!r ttwnshtpvtii:kef ly a" bar; isobie-mijorite . -it Seniles, t i Tbe Bluffion'iMr'HnjsvKhe.towishlp' -ejecttoo th rough t the) county paased off;in"iev, an a"!a generauyin motracj. lb Doehea, from ixty to1 One' hundred ?anil twebty majority. l.r a ?jH,fv,:,4.-ft'-Tha election ia Sulllvaa passed ff quietly end Democratically. . f ; s . .r ; -. -The Democratic tickets in Covington and Wbaah Townships, ' Franklin County were elected without pppoehioA.- ' : '-'5 e '1- ";.' ' n-Lauftl :ndrookville,Townshi'p Fribklrt tJoanly1, thVre was nO' Oppoaltian txy ibe.Denwali;ticket. -'. - . :ij .-,. !.The ? Democracy 7 of. Rochester, Fulton, Ccfunty, carried their ticket by ten majority.; ?fThe election in ; Logansport resulted ia a Democratic victory." f I Ttar - - - ' . -A fraud has recently been perpetrated near FrAnklin; Pa., that involves the sum of '75,'-000 "An oil well was evidently jumping one hundred barrels per day, and was sold for $75-OOOt cash. On the dav that tbe new owners took possession It was found that the old employee of the concern had left,' but others witre promptly installed and the pumping Ye- Biittid. Judge the astonishment of" the purchasers ujoti discovering that not withstanding the eon tirtuel pumping and Dow of oil it dd not rUe in the lank l--in ..other-words i here-were "surface indications'' of a Lig leakage. ? The pump wajj stopped and an excava-tionconinienctd st the hide jof the lank. A few tWrlielow a smaller tahk'waa found, commn-htcaiing with the npper by a small tube thro' which the oil was conducted..-. ,From llie lower tank, another tube decen. ed djajronally Jo the welt," af tout "80 ?cet below the surface and St a st'.ll lower depth the weir was :ptoggf. ' The d trice fbf securing an inexhsnctiUa well could "ntt-eaeily be improved pn..- : You pumped, and there. was your oiL and you kept on pumping aid no more tanks were, required I .But the tefims couldn't see it." " They went back td: Franklin in search of tha harpers, but the Utter were sum ssC-j Tire police detectives of tb city and couiity'hve leeu brought itito re qainitioo, but thus far without success. "The rascals having diepwed ot tlielr Sit, greased.' 'ii ." Dressing Ladies Hair. 'The'Taria 'cbrretipondeut Of "" the London -.mmg 7of thns d.scoufsesnis irnr - mi ir i - mm ' . t -9W&Z iSL!fS?m.iiU v? f1 :f iain- hsjrdreeeer of ..the soldi me .schooL hoi sf y Abattbif .winter he.bas. oerrcom menctd n drk atJt P M so that h Udy- niustemaln' s ins ten h on rs ifrfulV toilet, with her hair. I nhed, bofd, stretched, flowered" Jeweled j ih fully uncomfortable. J- It la only as a great fa vbr -tharthese fahveil haiejanists eane bad at all; ladies dariagrtbMasoBKare obliged. 10 i aplore thm to attend. , Well, be declares fllat you may! wear' tour liair .in' an v'iantastic , taanion.. rsome innies at cotrt nave adopted -the classical Oreelsh attlet the" hair "drugged e ST the face, and a bunch of .clustering ringlets it the back of the beadL- Others have gone in. for a series of S'all curls all over the . fore head, and little imj-rjinent l wintibg" locks' found about the ears babv curls, jttst begm tring l whilst the mass of bir is gaihereil fp oft tbe top of the bead, arxi there aluded, with.flowara. or butterflies orren-Ratidy in-acta. And what ssked T, of f his proud d-pbt and disposer of the htiman 'liabrr what haa become of the hair in nets, which made jbnt yesterday aucb sensation t on ;ths:. male tbuth V - The indignation of the French artltt about thee liopaes was . souicthing.. pnlnfully Serious. . It was an ugly Engfwh fashion from, the first'now quile abandoned." V r---" -. - . - . L; - Brownlow's Prayef. i . - Z The following is a prayer recently deli vered by the famous blackguard, tdrfon Brownlow: Impoverieh the villainsj Take all they have I Give their effects to . the. 1 Union men iley have crippled and imprisoned, and (et them bava their- Southern', rights.. Tb'ey swore-they: won Id carry pu the war until .they--loet, their lands. .. Put it to them, is; our -sj!-. ytoe.j Most-, religiously fleece them, and let" i Wm know, how other men feel jehen robbed of all ibey have.. ,,, 't : - 'U r .. : y f Lt them be punished I ' Let them be ' im-poveriabed l.;;Le. then? bt slaiq,l ."And Rafter !aia.;Jetf4ieni beamnedi' ;?v... ,. s', V.'. ",5 ;.. l-?rn JfBL Datit ti t Prophet -: . r.In the sprftig of ."61. -inVipeech in Stevenson", Alabama.' Jeff. Davie, ntterei the; follow-ine bit ofjprophesy : ' Your border -Staiee Will gladly come into theutreroreoiifcder-aey within aixrydaysy as wV-aill ba your on-yVrienasT Englaml wilt recognixa uUnnd? a gHmimni futara is fcrfore im, Tit grtiM ai) jrrowin the NortheTrLcities. where the-pave-rnenta have leen worn bythe, trea l of con-mercav We 'will carryaf where it is' easy fb Hilvaneewwbere fixxf for the aworil and tweb J awaiVkfeartniea"4n the denselyt populated cities 'n-i!:i:-yMsii-; WaV-. Uv' Cotioiu -Co&ibuttUoa ! of jC7oraav , I ' 3aa;yo eqaarp tbe.circls Tatsfhe problem 1 that ia now paaftng round amoag cmathemat 1-dans ATh'la th;y afe at work npon-lf th following will, answer .fon a curious aswell 'as ..-.vU aeo rrtir follQWuig. , whia twet a;e tiom sJaie purni WjoVha 1 ndianajpo bficans cist the jpemocralio party dead it exhibits ite "nost unntabieaipns of V.ArtIL ELrcriow Tha Democrscv Of Je.ft I "The Democracy of Col nm bus elected their J whole ticket iihont OppoehW. ' - j 1 "' Th e en tire Dembera tic" ticket1 was eTeciey the aidess - i - f : " r "lj " -WiH ATwriter in the CWrjOfntWan'or V?i i'.-a.3 : t C fB' .twivi;- r.theultarof inrafp: - exclaims s FortOf-ai v -v- ai 5rj ji es; -ii is he -mhfi lives nsra-pigeoo rooid This r.,of 4i4:3i ..raR U DEITT r-iia s-; I valasble manoreiai prodaoed fa flJchiran-jr liK 15 at S Iff v ;t?u fsp 8 T fi E SI i" 1. I T-..TMjii ai nv.-i ?aST-Fbnya t a8htnft'ChrrmieIe 'Of April hSjktf'joTTe'racnatiou of JUch- rrad and. sarai!i Jthat fh war and rebel- l!catr?gndprri -S.-itA riU ;1 -' ! Ia ea'r.'bnnVa Pn01 i eult ef th? r?t '-ttrt wilbe ta JnculcAl3- r - a esc' c: ft - -r rer. Terect?-;for t?:s'CtL:r." ' ' '-- -- t""' i,jn y. I: r r " t an t -,rai.? ' r - '. ; !:v v r- I -"sr ''-'' - :i . ff t ' "TbaIjsyjlbJcja f ton" physician, has disoovered that goli Is " metjcinal rirtties. "Igd the' yellosr' iueulj ' c dee, is to' become a drtrgl i 5 .wss -?J c a a ign new w m. u. ueisncey, the t u : . 1 r . k trr . . ... . , CS' tan aMS59 . . j . ji i cni.vwiujt oi ne vesrn uioeeee.oi n. . Yo; ?; Ofthe " Prbte?tsntv Epmcnal 'Church; diei? itt h ia residence in UenevAiNi-Yi? a feK r : The hohiejy,!.! pro vrh declares that"", tfie r Ibhgesf pole khbeks t he TBinmbni,t-i h. Thitmtb has bnwellarntralelin tlllseci twt ai conllict from ihas aanoke and . diutici ' whjfth. arfc,now wering,;. V.f.jytc.i!s'4f br'A VritirH one: of the a 'cnltnfaf paV" ; pe safe thestarflsncdbfefna -wacsr in ai4-;'" . terrs, which sometimes became .yery; 0oy ipg, may ie remedied inafew, oars by pattii .. - v ""'to v (..wniiy c-v. call AIIQ ' t3T The ChrHMian1 CommisSibn- has a near 5 machine in the hspeof,a larga oofies boiler oa ,:,,.' wjfeels". with boxes Jor-sngsrxnilk. and 'other - :j aufplies nttachf!, which is very convenient in'4 f-distributing Rupp'iiies to the armv.- A ' ' '-i -rh -i ' ' ' : : vfrrr'i --.."9T To eet the weight of a divssed.sheetW .i1 divide the live weight by seven, or get weight ofpach quarter that is, of a sheep whose live 5 weight is 140 pounds, each'quarter wift weigh !- Se-ponnds;'- - . : -a J Moaehy has sent a mmmw to CoioneT-. " v ...fiv, unimii uuiuill 1 VI nitwit I1V 9l-atca thai he does not care a J n a bonr.t he surrenderor Leennd that he ia determined to fish't i - . ss aa tong as be lias a man left. . . - . v p-- t- ?T-, . : . , , .-- CQr Game is having a holiday downi Sonthf Dear and hears are reported to have reappear ed, in districts where they hail; nt beettaeenwi for many years prior to tbe war.- Qualia .and, rabiis literally swarm in the deeoUted settle " li; nrentsof Virginia.' .; "': v 4 ?tf. . ' ".... ",. ? V " The Resents of thaSemtlmoniaa Insti. . tute have decided to; rtbuild thoae portions of : the. building destroyed by tire. and. to make V ? thm re-proorat a coat o(:t I2aOW, which"1 will be paid from fhe surplus fundbf lhe'lnetif:"ti ttrtlon; r"-' ? f-.'.rr--: i-U, .''.. . - . t f6T.The Rocky. Mountain News of March If-safa: " From prrsent" indicatiohs- mining fi bpefatTons in Colorado wil will be pushed fbr-:?Jr,I ward witlrrenewt vigor the coining numroef iri-. : Thjere is good prospec't "for.,"ao. a-ivaniageousJ working reason. 4- -- St Some tnrers are ad viaihff farmers" ta( cfiltiyate onions to a greatextend. There ia:.': no'donbt but this has been an exceedingly pro- j fitahle crop durhig the wsp, ami, will con t inns-to be so long as we have a iHrgeannv in the ' fifeld. " But but hav yon"he.rd tbe'newsT f ft 1 1 ; . wado not Know. ..It m a curious facttliat in s&cred bistorv "the agf." death anl nitriT of onj4- i . oiva.,wonian..earrfv; tut -wiie oi Anrausm. e -- " Mrf iaer sveriaince 4pi- pr not to have beta a suhject foiy history; ov-" J fiSrrTh AlbanVEvenrne Jourt.araTsf Lfee-reiwt of Ge-imd Butler's reiernatian ir -w l a How long Eve. thefirt woman,; IiyedVaT11 tf Isll tfsrknrfltvr sainjaaa It IJI fainAvu 1 I. irM aAaa a tor Philadelphia l y Major Adams in I8lt3, sndr -IrVi Cincinnati y Jftctinlas Lonffworth ; The-' t . f vjr' "v sjiwvv V ciii'vajj . i r re wH- . - msnd'ehows him 'unlBrorthy of 'public- honOrs " Let him go into n we!-arnel rreitrsr'y. alAi4!. 1 w b other explodl fniT-tea, who. have bewsul i biirst and jaid aside xliiriitg the last--A-" ' M - - ? -'-'-.j.;- !- - - - .w-ie- sn- Ali-'. : BJ- " "" 1 , r - i.Ctgr The eid Of fhe Catawba proincf fhV Diana, and Vheaeed of tie Diana proilu' ed tba-Io"wa.grape.. The Catawba who found frrowinjt,: t wjld. in North Carolina iu 1861. introduced in- r Diana was produced in Milton, Maachustta-i- j in 1844. ri. . :-,.iv-" - i :, , : y - : v.t,t 111: gtStF' The North American Quarterly Heviey": says that the Delaware grape was discuwed. i.i eondemned artd praif 1 more than-any species" i. j-recgrdetl in tfv slonuy aiKiaUot vineculiHre'' trtiri' prejudice jvnd howilny Jiave yleldei) at r last, and the IM a ware" aland now. wh"ere",ii ' Lefonz of rightafthe head of the 1nf of out-5 oof grapes' . -. - ; . '-a - A immense iron nnne baa. been disco,--. jtl at3arnia, Canada,' cropping out io'Torm of st back sand, brr the feach atretching from that 1 that city to Bosaoquet 1 1 Is eom paled tbai4 . in one bank there are 370.000 tone; worth .$23 per ton, and John McAvoy. of r Port Edward,' i baa secured iVheiarniaOanadian,ia' of the sf opinion thfit the uiewoverv" 'will enrich the ed' tire country; ' tisi iP----.tr- "mmW - avvrv-t iiouj rsiB -so earivwiipr Srf C Jf coveries. Jt is an' in vent tori of a nttrt ehefter. jf, Yi; flh'd he :lsims ty: this S IS. Condensed ale is amomr the latest die ' f . r it wrn oi txi is method ' ii the brdmanrextracf of lli malt "and hopahf f redaced sevenigluh in uantityartLto- tb A cansiatency of .sugar-boutie ayrsps, wilitput I throwing off any of I be volatile,, triatfer or aro't nia wbich brewers seek to retain, if posriti e ' " bOtalwaysVith sficce.' - ' - t. tmm& An oil . well, has 'baen bored near D.. Iroit. and when the drill ,iadjreached a depth ' of seventy leet a current of ens escaped whih". blew ont the' "drill'-awl tool, welehihir eiit hundred nemoda.'Hew off the abed maf ot- tha derrick, forty five, feeidrieh, and herlexi loirth a ttrearau of -water, irravel and large stones. The workmen narrowly reaped with -their rta. The water was5 etrongly 'imprecate! wtth petrbienm. " " '-- - .2 u ; u-'.- m ; 'i'hwi j ii .;. ... iy - tSf .Waahlnglon,, the rspital of thia.rVrat Hepul lie haaMt'"Ane, rail way." cbnnectinz it with the thirty sir States, 'while Lo&don baa ten rairroada, extending butvvardvas taeana "of support and naililary protection Pans seven Uer 1 1 n fl ve4 - v ten nn four. . and - Rich moniL il i late rebel capital, oaa five,and theae have been atlehded Under the b" ensure of a defensive war; and without one tfthe-of the Yast'resdarces tf immense qnanlities end,woo, l' '" "fr farmjo ooitii a nouseior lame ieo" ? nuantittes,for the sale' of pigeons ninr. ' a a a . 4" r turn the" coflt of- building, jeav 3 -7 - ? f.There are aSoat ftn I." clerks errt)bTe! in tb. Treirv 4 seucfed f.-ort Sin t v !. ff t r u.e r Uriion Itany rf lb erenow pc;-. - &r. "re is"r'- ' ! ' ' .a. riaI. . "i utt c..i i car'"- - r - J -" r-" i tvVi J, ..V - -v?e fsrr -so wiLcs Us v.. V..-r'-i.'-'T w-- - - v -, i.ere tc;,.l r - r-h c f r -. r r-- i rT 4 . lixail C C-J isLi.. r d ;
Object Description
Title | Mt. Vernon Democratic banner (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1853), 1865-04-22 |
Place |
Mount Vernon (Ohio) Knox County (Ohio) |
Date of Original | 1865-04-22 |
Searchable Date | 1865-04-22 |
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 | 1865-04-22 |
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 | 8002.04KB |
Full Text | r "rl -?-" " . .. c ..ft i . VOLUME is Til 'M A rT $2.50 pf annua,-EykMefrtaiitlJ;, U mirmav t $3.00 if jBtdaiNHl ,Vr-T'r Jta lbsi Uttiii Will Wldljr kaiTttradX&1 -3T By saUterlt ; Ua raaUfy f tt Traawi taa andarsigvad baa aaanmed iba General Sfeertp tioa Agency for tha tale of United States Traaanry. Notea, baarinMTan iad Uirea Untlu" p?'nl. in taraat, par aanani, known aa tba - SEYES-TniBTY LOAN. Tbeaa Hotae ara issued under data of Aogast I5fli, 1864, and art payable three years from that time, In Wrteacyjtt afa iBYartIble-al tbaptlea aClba balder iato - ' ' ' i It. Sk 5-ao Six per cent. P,0D-2323islZ2TO S0XT93. - These bolide afe now worth a p rem ism of nine per cent, tnclndin gold inerett froai Nar.t wbfob makea tbaaetnapndt atttk;y.3lW ioat current rates, laeladlag Interest, aboat ten per cctsL per annun), baaUaaJta rmgV9rm Stat tt mulnteipnl ttuca-tfesafctarfAjSa awe Zjnr twiisiw,' t- eordtnt; to tha rata Ieriee? on otber property. The 'interest is payable semi-annually by coupons attached to each note, which may ba cat off and alM , any bank or banker. The interest amounts to One eent per day on a - : . -'.: $30 notcO; Twe eeatis 01OO Ten $500 20 S1000 hi $5000 Notice of aall the denominations named will ba promptly furnished upon receipt of subscriptions. r Tbis i ' THE OSLY XO A2T HI II ARKET special tbai Ua ayVrtor adranUga willmaf U the threat ropniar Loan, of t&8 feopie.'t Iers thaa 4tw.amiiaiiiVa4(14Vwbicb rUl probably ba dispoaad of witbia tba next 6( or 9ft days, when the notea willnnsloabtadly oonuup.4 p paaaiiasi, aabuanifonbly ieasi tba csae oa-closinr tba aabacHpVoat to tha dtbarlana. . - ti.U Ja order that f itliaas of erery. town and tha. Joa the Natfonal Banka, fiUU Baaka.aaa Private Bsnkert" throngboat tba country- havavsaa- a rally agruea V raoatve sabscrrptions at par Jsub-aerrbers will select their own agents, is whom they have eonfldanea, and who only are to ba responsible for the delivery of tha notes for which they receive orders. " JAY COOKS, . . ; r5W 4a, Pkita. AaV Subscriptioas received by tha Firtt National Bnmt Joavtiaet. " ab. 25, 1865. f The Ninth National Bank ' i OF THE CITY OF NKW YORK. . CAPITAL $1,000,000 I'AID IX, FISCAL AGENT OF UNITED STATES. Ad Special Agent for Jay Cooke, Suoeeription Agemt, "ITriLL DELIVER 7-SO NOTES, FREE .07 If Cll A RUE. by express, in all parts of tba country, and receive in payment Checks on New York, Philadelphia and Boston, current bills, and all fiva per cent, interest n.tea, with interest to data of sab-scriptioa. Order seat by mail will be promptly illM., ' ' - . . This Bank reoeirea tba acooants af Ranks and - Bankers on favorable terms; also of individual kaep-inasXaw York acconaU. J, U. 0RVIS.VeWa4. Starcb4,SS i J. T. HILL, CtasatV KNOX COUNTY BANK. 7-30 7 Of BONDS, larga and small denomination, 'J.' constantly on baud aad for aala -th Knox County Bank. II- OQ LEVER. Marco 18 -ml Cashier. Certificate of Authority ; " fo Ma 'A-Y- TIT A 0 a I'-'aT- -'- . ivauonai lianii, TREASURY DEPARTMENT. V OMce Camptrelter of the Cirreney, WAasmaTO,:Marcb 17th. loSf. yj T H bRbTAS. byatiifactory SHdetiea ptaaaated - I V to the underifnel, it has been tnsde to ap Mar tb-t-Tha First NaUonal Bank of Mount Ver- oa,7ia tba City of Mmat Vernon, In tha Coanty of ami, ana, otat or tiaw, baa been duly organised nadef, adl ocorJUix to tha requirement of tba Act of Conraa, entitla i "An Act to pruri-le a National Cdrraoyf aacarad by a pledge of United State bonds, and to prwri'le tor tba circulation and redemption thereof," approved June 3,1861. and ha complied with all tba provisiona of said Act required to ba compdel wHU before commencing Me butiasw of -ag amtr said Act: : The office of Comptroller of Carranv beiflr TscStft. 2low taerefnre. X. 8mael T. Howard. Difputy Coin pi "uu" " mi vimirancy, ao ncreky eertiry that-MTbe Prt Mati aa. Bank of Mtant Vernon."" id the City ef M aat Vernoaia tba County of Knox, and State er'aio,iauiansad to commence tha businass of Makiagnalar th Act aforesaid. . In Tastisanny Whereof, witnans my band and seal of omca.tbe Seventeenth dav af 'Karen. 1805. ' .- - fSlznad) SAMUEL T. IIOttARD. j- V-ss lepy Cora ptroller of the Currency. ' "T " J' - e ' jtaaaneaai ' .---'' - Under the aathortty .above giraa this .Bank will e-tmnsenM buaiaess, Saturday. April 1st: g& at it offlia In tha BlacV earner of Main A Vine Straatavvr-.-': .': V fT --VJ .i r t- i y.;rr i x Moaat Vernon, , '. ' 221; IMS. - ) ;yr x-- C. rj3LAW0.Vatea.v Sfcv;-' wi-' -".PI . 3. STUROES:Coaaaarv-''-:lta9caz9,'i8-C I : ojaht A .ItowiVi.. o.; lLuc . ." -b a. .hall ba iacidaat tKihs1 sionsr or ui m. : - i . r All checks. Certi3Wlji It r JTote of this BankVwuTba i DepoaH and eirewlatia ! i"roa-rprasefl UttoTfii WU Viae 6tr"a: PKD- f. rVTV ' w I IKaI . .WrtiUmfor tU jaWrfVn"Jffaae.' LAT HE TOEC3T. :f-;"u Ob, y bi Wrwt vbea tk i TV. Iniilir tholl tark jmtik Im ttelr H! Adaww yfaTOWBa w.ywajii 0b1ay atoraai, w.naaUBia iabar W&Bing, l Aiad brtat, nttfa.Bd wteiba Jan rosea blow, J a 4ta yjtTabat wbaa,wiatry blaaUbawUsg Carer aajrjraTa Wita taapaatttifal aaaw. iJOb Jay Wt raat, wbeaaa-ialfaa-ara fallias. . Ptia aTabaana taKaaatkey apj Brina w flosmVot; balaty e'er mtnUTi ta "Ba.t eorar at f grmrjkSk tba tlfaXttM. Ob, lay.1 wbaa tba aawtera jEsJlinr I (Whan hoarse, chilly and cold tha north -braexe blow, - ' . ' ' And puise'fcsVnty por: baart torara, i. i 3 I 0 ! corer nay grara with tba baantifal snow. ' tONE STAR. ; Mt. tiiEnrrO., Feb., IMS. ' - -r ; r THE PAST JbNPTHE PRESEOT. A True Story of a. Great Chanjfe Arlington and it Proprietors. J The Wahinsan Ijitf Hixner; alVr.foU lowing description and narratire : . A visit to the Arlington Mansion and'sur-roan Jing c:sue,-a . few dmjs . ioe. fi)J us Willi oppressive n nil melaneboiy1 rflec4ionaj.-i Four yt-ars ago'Robert E. Le. ibmt Tieuten-mt coJonel of Cavalry in tba Union Jtrnay, Jlnd toow cornmaii.ler-in-chief oi the 'rebel army, wan with bia family in tbe ,. happy posaewion of that magnificent inheritance. More than one-half ot the estate, consisting of a thousand acres, was covered with a aplendid forest of oak and other timber, and the rich and pro ductive fields adorned with the hands of culture. To-day what a change! The venera ble ancestral mansion erected by the honored on by adoption of the Father of hia Country, and for ball a century his cultivate! and rie- liehtful home, is now in the centre of a vast cemetery of those who have fallen in the - ser vice of their country. Two hundred and fifty acres of this estate surroundinnthe;ijmansion have been perma- niUlypprof ratei for liurial parpooes by tue goveiaitnen.t,ncloaed":by substantial and hwlww)'fencejsSejfcJrTjBve tboanand soldiers have' already beeV iherti-bwried. and the hum be,Ha"daiiy i growinf; - arger. In 1853, Mr Cusl fU the irrothr-of:Mrs. General Lee, diei i Iu "Arlington 3Ioionfl was buria l in A a'etws'efe"! ntt"-Jeligbtfor)ryov near the mansion ;rid i Ur. Custis dieI, and his remaina were lepoiil OySerside. a vastcon-Cuune pf ernaJBf erery' rank testifying their reverencevrorue tieparwa Dj tneir presence at the oten?ift ' . T -T Lr. thiseleete by 4tti Tht"8etfe!'terJ 'raiWUnf, aetlono1rnrrr1JeJtJ-- field of the ilMli and the two marble eoluntn marking the reraaiaa of . Oeorge w aiUington Parke Ourtia anl itary Lee FiUbagh. bui wLe, now rise in the mid-l of more than - four thousand patriot soldier' graves. Nearly the whole of the timber and wood has been ewep from the entire estate and used for war purposes.; The Freedinen's Village is eatab:isbel upon one portion of the land thu cleared, and it is all being put undar-caltivatio.B by coiiira-band negro laber. - - MrCu tie inherited this estate , from hia father, who " was the son of Mrs. General Washington by a former husband. Soon af ter .bis mother died in 1802, he. then about twenty -.fl-e years of age. came here from Mbtnt Vernon, and with bis young and accomplished wife took up their residence in the . t . ' . m i i .i . Arlington axauaioa, wum-q nc sua men jum erected, ftoil which evermore was their beauti ful and cultivated hme. The fruits of this union were four daughters, ail of whom diei in infaniv, except MarjU t.nstia, the wife of General Robert E. Lee. Mr. Cutis's , father, John Parke Cutia.was' an aid-de-camp to WaMhinoiin. audilicvL of a camo fever iu 1781. contracted at' the trtege of Yorktown, at the age of twenty seven years. He bad marrieil, at nineteen years of age, Eleanor Calvert,' of Mount Airy, Md., Adeacendant of the second Lord Baltimore, when but fifteen-years of age and at twentv-three she was tbnmad a wid ow wi:h fonr children. General Washington hastened to Ellhani, MdJ where the husband-was sick, only to see blm-in. his dying moments: This was the Only surviving child of Mm. Waahinct&n, the daughter having died soma":'-yeairq befof:; He"'wjaavdeeplj atfecte!. and. weeping, said tO tb lisru. '1 adopt tbe Iwoyonnpr eniuiren as my own." 1 hese were Eleanor Casus, (hen two and a half years of age, vtied -at Seventeen; ofennanhiption, and George Wasbingtoa Ptrke Custis, then six months old. ' Genera' Robert Elmnnd Lee is the sod of General Henry Lee, 'of . Reeolntiotiary memory; and known as "Light Hotve Harry." whose mother was the beautiful Miss Grimes, General Washington's firt lova, and whom he" celebrated as Hhe lowUnd beauty.".-.JOen-eral Harry Lee. was twcitjnsrrid,x-Bythe firt m .rriage he had two children, Uerry (an officer in t he war ot 1812) and Ldcy. By the srKtnnd wife a Mias Carter, of Shirley he had five chiNren, two daugfftera, Anne and Mihlred. ami three aona. The sons were Char- lee Carter, Kober Elmnnd (the ganeral) and nianey omiin. ine la-tt namei an omcer in oor .. i .1 . ' - . ami ""w in inp rvei nary. - - - t General Biert R. Ie was born ib 1808; bid is. tnquently;1 fiftyeven years of aee. fit yradttaleil MW1 in . bis class, ' in lsz, .inde Charles Mason, of' this ertv jand ' for- merlv Oomiuiaaioner of Eatenta, atamllng first in that clasa) and was aaaignd. to the Ettgw Mi I'n.iu mm m Tiri.i I IUm...iI . in 1 01 A a' siatant AtMneY. ffxing the honndarj bfil I ween Ohio and Michigan ; itt 18.10 promoted first litn tenant; captain in 1838 : Chief enei-: I beer Under Scott, in Mexico, and xreatly dia- iingjiiMrjy7 T,n& ' prorooiea pucccboi veiy . iy nril."mjoiv lieutenant colonel and ctfftfneL for his gallantry ; in 1852 superintendent Military Academy ; ia1855, transferred as lieu' tenant rolotiel of l be new regiment of cavalry; March 16 1831. promoti colonel of the First Cavalry ; resigned April 25, following, and re lildantly embarked in the rebellion. . j , The following are t he children of Gen;' Lee: George Washington Cnstia"Lee; about 33 yeati of age ; MsryCnatie Lee; a I oat 30, Wm Henry Fitxlrttgb . LeeJ abcot 27 ; Annie Le died at Berkleys priage in 1863. and wonK bavaJbenJtowsJat S itArnea Lee,Eaboc lJ J, l?rtf lldxett L about liv, one of them hareUfrarria.1 wr Wro. ..Hefinr . ritxiajh. wboaa wife, Utf ChsrlottO'. rckbaanv'ified ai dch nxrod i t the head of hia rhm. aU.'. . e-t r.r-':.t.' j IIH, Cr,J vrs a tret lieutenant in tieecrj cfjer.; u:j i! . '! i :..!! e-l Lis fxther into tl o nan en. .- II a araa mnm CreoneJ econtt. lieu tennt in the ixtVlpfahtry" in lM7,Tnr jre- MhlA'Viririnia.r:TikaAna.'iti-wall kwowii.".-' " ---rur-a .a vivtng danhtera ra witb tbew motber, wlio, it n believetl. has llUtrly beehkt "liViJchVQrgi . "lCoatls?-. tBe tirrraorhli -esUh.wimf some 200 alavea. who,' by aaiiOLrrre; t6x fc frejtt At,be terja?intion of (ve yearf front 4riI- deatbj whteft penod f ptreoucoher itVess. Tb'moat of'lhwalavea.-'were kept "oh the w ime uouse estateramt ail trie valnabl boi a a . . ' . -', w. -an.. k , , . 1 . . tion weTe amel Soolb;axta2a or jaaare i old metk and.aronjen abd, vouna? childrea . were 4eft tUrUnso. MrCustia'ti mother oWpe4 the White House estate. and restded ' there when Coraoe GreelerTleadi foi Theti.' ;n'thK7W&tmaMr. Cireeley pleads lor, fitness tv4be leaders f b nbeilioau lie detlaree that he feel Jeer abtrpatby ? ta tht ordinal aphoMere of "the. ReeoJttthxns-bf o the dUctplee of Calhoun and McXufi3e4- tothe Nnllificrs .of .1832 mod the 8tate filgbt men of 1850 than to the John Belhv;:IIm. Iarej MarsbUs hnd.AJekfHlII.Stuaitawip, were schooled in; the. National faiih.iancLwho.. im-becoming Disuaioniate r .and Rebels, tra nr. pled on th professtotis of a Vifetioie and spurn ed )be logic wherewith they had eo often nn-aaswerably demooatrated that Seceaaion ; was Treason. And Mr. Greeley evcfh goes to far ao say be considers onraon Uavis a le?a culpable tnatiwhaa John Bell. He oppoaee eVen tbe execution of a single man, and winds if. A single Confederate led out to execution would be evermore .enshrined in a million hefrts as a conspicuous hero and martyr. t cannot realize that it would be wboleaome or safe -we are sure It would oov be niagnaai rmua to give tbe overpowered disloyalty of ihouth auch a shrine. Would the. throne of the House of Hanover Stand more' firmly bad Charlen &1 ward been eauirht' and execu- tf after Cutloden ? Is A uatr Ian domination irf II angary the more i stable to-day for the hahgtnz of iNagy handor and his twelve com- pMiot Generals after thi surrender of Vilagne? j a pieii airaiqat pasaions certain K mis WO-ment to be fierce and intof rant : but : on bar5' aide are the A'jrea and voice of History.--We plead for a restoration, of the Umon against a policy which would afford a roomenfarv gratification at the cost of years of perilous; bate and bitterness ' ti r;-. !.-; - -. - .. .- . The Ifext HorementA-StAte Beligion. Xpome titus t-inee we.wvreen .to, taak by sv. contemporary in th'te city for the expression oltour belief that the next move of the war party would be the iaauguratiou, of a t$te, Of Established Religions Events axf ontiUaUyU,d happening to rearthen that- beUeThericli nrghtipor " nc We rw k-onrfTTewiwhairrWnixiR; I fat agitate fof.be- 4nfPrPAbtip,n ofj : eeligk.ua I sraa l jal aa aa Mam lVtli-k s ka fsa ! n I test or decbtratioo into the fundamental law of this country, to" consider once more, and thoughtfully, the late decreev'of Maxiiniliad, eetabJifhing and defining the relations betweeu religion and bis Mexican Empire.'- . - r - ' We thought all of this .'ground had ' been fought over, and the contest' fought out.' -by our grandfathers, so that no controversy regarding it would hereafter arise; ' Twenty- five years ago we had as little apprehension of ever being called to oppose the establishment Of a national religion as of an imperial monarchy. But on rs is a restless age, and sems ready to take long strides backward rather than to let well alOi e. V; We have got a huge national ..debt, a huge standing army, fastened upoo u. and, fn or der to have the trinity of monarchy complete an established church is next in order. All of the heads of tbi trinity spring from tbe same spirit. G Eq. . f i A Horse in Spectacle. The Philadelphia Worth America of th 16th. ult., s ya : . . ; A well known resident of the Twenty-second Ward has an old family home, that for- twenty years Has done him service. . Tlry animal has always received the tenderet care, is in Sood oonditidn and vigor; and can perform the uty required of hint as well as man v a road ster ot but half his years. For some time past tbe qnadrupt evinced a tendency to stumble, and to strain his sight at ohjets close to. him, in a manner that set the kind hearted owner to devising a remedy. : .The gendenln judged the animal by his own case, and satisfied him-Sel that, with a pair of spectacles, the. horse would do as well as when in1 his prime. Ah optician grou ad to order pair of pebble glas sea xif a large"1Iz6rgnefi.-rliejr werer x etl in a frame over the horae's eyes. The animal is now a horse in spectacles, and - not; an elderly gentleman 'ever yet showed greater appreciation ot the convenience. Whan in the stable the spectacles are taken off. One day a servant rn.m' driving the; horse forgot the perifocal ;in question. " The horse very plainly indicated tbe deficiency before he had gone the first quarter of a mile up the lane oni which the stable is situateL Wa saw tbe I sleeK old animal jogging up York Road 'ves- terday with his gUe on. looking as content ea ana nappy as nis excellent owner. ; , - . u' Mia ; J- "':." '," 'A- Conceit Without laurel. Ifpr should these Ab1I louists.fiatter thenY-selves thai if they ean ettcceed. in fiieir object oXuBfang7 thojdftf of the free States the will witer the contest with nnmertcaj sunertor. AMlt S'VZ ussaiaanu .uncertain ij.oiwar.i Ana we are almohishetl bj the holy writ that th raca is not to the aiilCoQr, the fate to Jhe, strong But if theetetdnqner,w1tornswuhl they eonq.oejrf ,A foreigfl foe one who had jnenU ted our-flap;, inradeil our shores,' and laid-oar coatry wae - e t fid s?r. It would be a conquest without laurels," without glory self. a oicidak KwquesWa 5onqneey( brothers. over brothers, nchiaved by one-jbrrr another portioWvrbe dendants oextmmor. ancestors wbo;"nob6dpiedging' their-zlives thk.fonne.arheh' iouxhtand- h edLsiife be side, in m.A a- mrS t nr:ii i -vi('. -."J tatiooii inttrjenegBa:4-wV fXgfs:"cA ' I' ' mm. --mm- ' ' ' " ' cSNwfe- .s4Rncihfiatl5 ?diirakin'- -ef ties. ,fvftiir;?l!5jr?t- ljf' . shcn'l t; !-.y C"?s,'t er po; ; e " . - "r -1 and ,h.?-'rs; ci.,tr ?clie?ir-V 1 -: -r' ' .A' . . f .... - ; ,4, g-i. rj;yg vj ;--5ecV Ul A'a jMIi 4 Waahlneon diat5atch. f tae lith". aitvat ,Tti-ii,iEeitiTt ipartJoe&UltncIading JBe Trl UmVMAnaionwM il"!nated to-night 4 E 'jnous o peraona repmi ei 10 .iue ,cj(ecu-ti'rt Mansion, and ihe Preil 'ent responded to oallon of teteiaurg'atvillr ihmonand'the es aw jl a awaat aa wujw -v su.rrehdrof4hpriaicrpSj4n' Irgfent, gijr ejropet o! rrlghtso4U pead r;ac,w OHarsxprenuoaa cannot bur itralned. 'In be mrdst of tbis.-howeTef y firom ; whorn, all Ueisings flow . maat ot be j'Drgotten; y-AcaU for ja National ; ThankegiTijri ia being prepais ed:indlvUlJbefiBlgaiWj1 'AJIor mdetlhosi.wbe iarer..partg;iv us eauae of rejoicing be orerlooked. Their honors must not be narcele tout with othera! I royaclf was near'lhe front, and bad the bub ..ill . J '-'----. 1 Jr . pleasure ih wanem 11 ung n;uco 01 tne ooq news to you, but no part of he honor for the plainer execution is niine. -To Gen.' uq rant, faia skillful ofHeers and. br&ve ; men it all be longs T.he gallant navy sf cid ready but wu not in reach to take ab cte par(. By these recent successes, the' rerlcsnguratiob of the national authority; reconstruction; which-had a-large, share ot thought . otn the first, s frees ed much wore cloefypo"our attention. i is fraught w it h - great - ttaeuhy urlik rsj case-of war; bet ween independent nations there i no authorixed organ for ua to treat with. Nitf one man has aut liority'Ho give ' up rebellion lor any other nian; --e aimply must te gin with, and-, mould. froradtsorganizeuV and discordant elements,; nor. sinaJi mlduiouaJ etnbarrHsaiuent, that we bpyal people differ atnorig ours Ives as to lbs1 tode manner! and measure of construction A i't a' ganeroHS futt, 1 abatain: from Teadi4g reports'of attacks" upon myself, -wiahihg not iO'be;"fovoked b thatiotwtfich t caiut -proper 1 -off rnn-wr-. In spite 01 Uii,s.)rec nf iojis however, It cOmrt well to niy know 11, e 'that1 Tain tnuch ceusured for some su pp ddr a geucy ' lif fitting up; and seeking - to siutain he newtate govern men t iof Loniaiana; fhhis, I- ha ve done jut as much- and no morihan tbe public knowsVi-:-r-;?"i - $'!-'t&itz-ri-y&h&v:t ;'J nrj annnal messsge (,Dcfnber, 1863 and accompanying proclaitiion, I presented a'plah of reconstruction wuith f iroiiiwei, if aqopten oy any oiaie,won.. I be acoeptablarto arid sustained t y the Esec;utive.-Govemment. not only a plan tecepi ed knd alnQ Kxecuue clainv- Wbeilier members aucb lita.Uak! itiav -plait- was in advance aub- I rbitted and bpsved- try-eretT-5xnberjothe. KsT1 t ? r a . t a. a-. a sa Cabinet. One of Xheineuggestad hat 1 should Uien, and iniba enneauaBvappiyjthe Eman cinarjon ProcJamation to heretotore excepfed parts; of .Virgini and. Lbnis.ia.na; that I eboul-j -drop the suggestion of apprenticeship for. the freed people, and that;!; should omit prbtest againat my o n powef' in regard ta rh e admis . io of member ot" (Jongrs Ihi t;he approved ojevery part of the plan which has since been employed ortOHeheMyitie-aciooiIioui8i-atoa.i iTbanewu' conaitution-LoHaianale clsriag eiuaocipat ion . for the . whole dr tbe State, practically applies, the proclamation' to the part previoualy exepf eit It does hot adopt apprenticeship for 'the freedpeopler and is si? lent, as it should 'not be. otherwise aliodt the admission of members of-Conress. As it ap plies to Lonisiana, every -inetuber ot tbe .Cabinet fully approve! tbe plan.. , r v'( jrThe' mewsire; went to' Congreas.'and I received many coinmen ations bt the pbin.J Written snd verbal, aud l6t' a singla ofjertidrt 6 it, -from any professed etnanciimtioniyt. had come to my knowIe.ttre hntil after -the news reach ed Washingtbn th at the people' of Lohts ana bad begun to movetn- acooriiance witntit. From July. 1802. .I ; hsd correapondeit with different persons supposed to be int erected in seeking reconstruction '- of the Stat Government of Louisiana, when the message of 1K63. with the jd an belore mentioned, reached Nw Orleans.:: : . ... . . , V" Gen. Banks wrote me that, he was confident the people, ..with his military co operstioft; -savyvsi 1.4 aAnat aaeaMtr1 - attw li taar-wAft Im t mm ja S a J j T " I. arrote to hin" and 'solinS 'ot them , to; try. it; tbey trieI it, and thefesult is' known.: J Such has been my- only '; agency in getting rtp;ihe; MMueiana movement, A" .to .sustaining it, nay promise ta but, as oeiore, stated. . but as bad promises 'us beWrh-ok'eu "han ; kept, 1 shall treat as "a . bad; pfornUe; and break to wuenever t soaii oe convinces nat Keeping it Is adverse 4o the public interest, but' 'J. ,-have jiot Tetlbeeaiw coMyrneeil.;; ,.f ' naye Wen shobjetteti ?brthWts6bjelt snppoKeljo bekbleo e4j ;in ..wiiiclf a wifer Jex presses regrettha t iny. mind - h as 6ot seemed , to be drfinitrly fixed on, jbe qfetiOfi whether ;acrurM cjwaii.'r, v-cbiic, ore iu ine .Union or but of: iC l ' would" .'perhatM. v ail.f' astonish". -.otent t.o hia r profesael. Uioo menndeavoring to answer I hat question LiSTe purpoaejjr rorliorne any, public expr; afiidri rtport ik as it api&rs to Vne J that question .has not been, Vnor yet ' is.'-prNe : i tiesflv a materialore;, that 'any diWionO ii wniie ii mua j-cmaina practically im ma tens! could have no ejfect othjfr than a micllievdn one Of lividiDg ut frleiMleC As yet. whatever. mayT become that'qiifHiion ..U bid as. a basis Of eont roiers brat eobf for :hbthin ar all. .We" jf agree fthaC 'sereilcl State.. e called, J are out or tneir proper practical relation am b 1 he UnnV? and hatlhe: ole!;obj'ctr-of the Govvyment jriyitant niititary;W'Tegmrrtb these75tsf fo galri gel ihetri td 1 hat pntfp- er braetieal relation. 1 Mieve that it'is not bnly rxbleV'Jbn in: isct; essTei' tbdo thia without dding.r even conMderiri,wleihef those:8i ales nave aver been'out of-theTJnion. Tbe.' wi'h finding' theSaelvetrssfely at home it vrould be fittetirifinfnaterial 'whether they had jfi;Uer'tfaU M6idvid tln-acts n eceasarr 6 restore -proper practical relations between hese Sattes" and; UnlabJrani! chtforevef kirinbntiy-i opinion wJieUief. in dain: ci St a teC frofil"wit hon t, tn to the UnTon? br ba I 5ve Jhera proper as iij:as.cethey never ha loberf ernt" cf it.'. -V J 4 1 - e- J i u v.iioiel x tr !r on -rth v4!4! t, ; a :. re a ii , - - ar..' tbe ttihcr t on- i.rrLA s t j; th iJi, 'TI. war U fcii.j'tCl.i; iZii Ciir 4 -- a. A. J-!. is .61 :a-.-c- tamfv!trr! SHtJraro!. AonT 16 Yc tarda v mora'; ing Attorney JQeneral SpeeJ waited Upon Hon; An erjf oh nsb. ViVe President 4tfs thsAUai-fjed States; antolciallt7m formed him of; tbe fud 'ea-an npenpected- deceaseiafPresident Llr coin, and stated that an early hoar be ap- tni ted tor tne inauguration or Ms successor Tt i, following is a copy of the cotnmunicatloti l rejcrreejwa.ui -t. .s!n?s ?.n' JLir tH presi.leo4 the United was frfctt bjEv af assassin, last, evening, at.. Ford s Tb ater.Jh this city, and diedat the hour'of 7&2 6-clock'tl? uwtaorntti:'" Aoout the eam4 firr a ar whkh thePreskUnt was shot an-? ns ai iai.enJeracttha alek chai-nKtp,nf Hnn- W ill SewanfSecretary of.Sitste, and stabbed nu,t tw aevraf piacrs in mr inroat, necir, and 'face,' Severely, if nbf mortally woahding bin. Other members Of the tteeretary's famtlyl were ngeronBly wounded by ; theaasasfcin while tnskinp: his. escape. .. . , r .By th death of President' Lmcolri. the 'of. nm or President nas devolved, under the Con- atuBtion. upon yon. The emergency of the Government demands thafyon should immediately qualifr; MCoord4tO) t&e jrRirrmebts ofJhe Const itutioa..nd .enter upon the.datiea ofPresident of the United .States. If you will pleMse.make known .your pleasure stich "r-rangeraenta as yrG deerri proper will be made: ft-.-- or"Pnii MTTRnui, TSigned t HUG II McCULLOCG H. ; ,.- 8ecretsry of the Trescury. ?H , i D.WI2I -M. STANTON. ' " Secretary Of Wsr. GIDEON WELLES, s-Serrrtarv of tha Navy. WILLIAM DENNISON, j:-' Postntssfer General. V" : 3.Y. USHER. Secretar of the Interior. ; JAMES SPEED. . Attorney General. . fi:-ft ' Tcr'Awnmaw JoflMsox, Vice-President of the United Slates. ' ; ' ;;;';;;" '; ' s 'tMr. JEohntMon requested that" the "ceremony take place' al Ms trtorhs; at rirk woo! House, in' tnis ritv. at 10 o'clock in the morninf. lon. S. P. Chase, Chief Jnetice" of th Unite States Sn prrmninn.TwaS; .notified of the ffltct end desired to le lu attendance to admin-, ister the path of office. At the alove named bWir the following genfienieTraasambled'in'ihe L Vice- Ptesiilew t - room . to pa rtiei na t e in "f b e -eremonyr Hon.-S P, Chsse. Hon, II, Ko-Clilfoch. Ayorney-General Speed, F, P. Blair. Hon. Montgomery Blair. Seiator-''Foote.':.bf Vfrmont, Yates, of niihoia,sTlsmae,'of""Mih-nWota; Stewarf. b? Nevada; and Farnswort h. of r Illinoiaia. After the- -presentation of - the alibve letter the Chief d uatice administered the, following oath to Mr. Johnson ; " , ;kI do solemnly swear that I will ' fiiifhYnltT execute the offire ofPreeMlenr Of the United State, and wtll; to tba best of my abili'ypre- arevroec,aad -.fefead ibe. CouttitUUua of V a United Slates.'? " -' ATieirff1hfhtT Pi eaident bt the UnitejStates-. Mr. Jobasdff remarkeil: - . . '--:-i , -r uisiTLxwef v. jr'mnaT te"periiiU'ed to say ttai I have ketii almost vwheliet, Jf .Ihe annoacemeni oflhf snd-ewent which .hs.S9 recenilv orxumlfljfrel iacompelent to per- . j... : : . 1 j " i wuii MMiu-ii u. iinpormni ani-ref ponfioie tboae wuicb have twen so nnex thrown npbrr ttie.' As to aii Indication 6f any pdlwy- whieb mtr Jbe .ib4fbyfn is-vtbe administration of the.Goverti.iaent, jhaye ' to asty that that must, be leiifor. development ' aa OittlAdrn'mirhUon:1 predrreaBnea. -.The. ntea sage or decUirsUon ,niuet.be made by the acts as tbev transpire.. "r' " vi ,Af4iThe onlyAaas"dra'nceithaV f ciftltow give of Lie rut re u reference to the pU The eonrte 'which 1 havetaTcen, in the pnk in. connection f ilhv th In rebel lion must be regarded s . a gQaranteeortkefoture: --Mypsat pab4io liiay Whreh haa brn long anal laborious, has, -been tended a I: itr-,good ronscieoce lelieve, upon b great prineipls of right. b&h lies at the lut-4is of a 11 things, - rhe beat energies of ray life tave been spent in anlea)airlng4to:-eitabl!sh nd perrjetuata AKe.ptmci4..lar4f .free gvern-letu. I believe that Phe Government in p s-fragbnough its, preaent perils. Will eetOe dowi p pon'rjrincipte .more consonant with, pd'pular f igh ts, " more ; permanent and 1 endori ng . thm heretofore: .:' . .. ; v '"" 1 v ' . ' ;sr ' - - jV.m st; he permltte! ' to say; i r f nnderrtanf I be feetinga of my' Own heart,1 1"have long la-' HreF to ameiidrate and elevate the -condttrcrti jof t he'great' m ass "bf the' 'A rriercililr, people. Toil and an honest advocacy of tbegreat riiH Oiples of free got ernment haveven rflfy lot.- The duties baveeVnGod,S.;This has been Vheibdndation'bPvny -plifleatrbreei-Ifeel i h at Jn fa e end f he Gnyern men t will -l riaea ph. kx&4 heareat prr&cipleJ wi be permanently eataW ihe I, I n . con ci uion geiitlenien', ",)et ?ne say I waiavour encouragement anl coun-ieranre,vJ shall ask and rejy flpon .yolfaod others in darrytpg, the, Govemmen) tbrotigh ita preseat periU'. X feel, in tnaklnz. this- re- I. quest, that it will be hesrtilv esp0Tided to bt f . J -11 . I . m -II - ' . ' ; juu wiiij rr vinet ymtwmmm slim -vv-ra ,01 VUB rights andiHrerean'of aretiple3''A AOb.cpncluaion o(lis remarks the- Preai-lent received the kind wialiea of Jbe"frierifo V whom he , was snrrounifef 'Xfe 'mmates -were "devoted tovrnvTsallont Alt were deeply ifnprWaed'wit'h the'sofemnrtyn' the'oona-sinh; arwl'the recent savI'rjRftrfnee that cavs el the heeeaarry ff'theTspeedyMnangnyratioai 5rf the President wssjrraverr discussed. - Mr. "Joh nson is' it, j&rie hen ftfiV nfhae an earnest 1 Mnse opbe riirpdrtsnt'trUfit JKifSfldkf'ln him. j Wniv Ifnnfer. Cliief Clerk of the Kuite i De"; part mcnt," ha becn afrpoinfed Acting- 9eers taryJDtSKJue.u i--i.?a.'isii xxtih -. .-j- A apecial ineet ing pfiJieCabinet, was rheld at the Treasury Department at 10 o'ciock th i : morning. - ? iI.lX. .-VitLST.'- l-.X-v, 1.',,.. M At ;the,Trde ISxhildtion in Paris, the pretty Oiin are plenriml, and therollectlon fnclales bn e'.' br I w o a m'bsl n jr" i ndden t ? ' Foweoet among 4heae ia a atf pert ear. drawn' by? silver aarane.of ghranti rportionSVThecar ia .ia-tended fiw faif-bsahers. j In ju fair , net . w.brk they mayicetdioe aLjjbejir: esseand float non the water, tT?rjBl np- by he i out gs Ilant ; si I-ver.ewanaiho Hwrlparl.iheTnv safely upon the gentle swell of summefseast At the1 fair bathers eTliOw ia a handle that arorksT acre w and tf t7ii rewshe'may drive the; rd heTsanamt;.-kexjwnj rwejee-Ul,.;Tbia h luxury enough; -on rbald imagine, for:ever. a Parsian .Conntees, at Biarrita ot.,Trtrme. Bat the inrevitor isrtsiafiVL-lls knowt the izM' tot rwhoni h daters and nl itht e -a . . a a rstics. eitnewus nira ne oas accrmnea t liqacr esse, toov an.ir,--toifi. . - v -a -.a erii,, -iunt r.rsh??,i?d. in'-cor rr ten m..ji trcn , j , j -at i ;;t9Ty-ndjr- .kc tST,trV i 1 "aaWaaaaaaaaaaaa ''' ' ' -. -; . U;i Xtatifcmie' AfXlL Elictiow The Democrscv fertnville electedihe!r ttwnshtpvtii:kef ly a" bar; isobie-mijorite . -it Seniles, t i Tbe Bluffion'iMr'HnjsvKhe.towishlp' -ejecttoo th rough t the) county paased off;in"iev, an a"!a generauyin motracj. lb Doehea, from ixty to1 One' hundred ?anil twebty majority. l.r a ?jH,fv,:,4.-ft'-Tha election ia Sulllvaa passed ff quietly end Democratically. . f ; s . .r ; -. -The Democratic tickets in Covington and Wbaah Townships, ' Franklin County were elected without pppoehioA.- ' : '-'5 e '1- ";.' ' n-Lauftl :ndrookville,Townshi'p Fribklrt tJoanly1, thVre was nO' Oppoaltian txy ibe.Denwali;ticket. -'. - . :ij .-,. !.The ? Democracy 7 of. Rochester, Fulton, Ccfunty, carried their ticket by ten majority.; ?fThe election in ; Logansport resulted ia a Democratic victory." f I Ttar - - - ' . -A fraud has recently been perpetrated near FrAnklin; Pa., that involves the sum of '75,'-000 "An oil well was evidently jumping one hundred barrels per day, and was sold for $75-OOOt cash. On the dav that tbe new owners took possession It was found that the old employee of the concern had left,' but others witre promptly installed and the pumping Ye- Biittid. Judge the astonishment of" the purchasers ujoti discovering that not withstanding the eon tirtuel pumping and Dow of oil it dd not rUe in the lank l--in ..other-words i here-were "surface indications'' of a Lig leakage. ? The pump wajj stopped and an excava-tionconinienctd st the hide jof the lank. A few tWrlielow a smaller tahk'waa found, commn-htcaiing with the npper by a small tube thro' which the oil was conducted..-. ,From llie lower tank, another tube decen. ed djajronally Jo the welt," af tout "80 ?cet below the surface and St a st'.ll lower depth the weir was :ptoggf. ' The d trice fbf securing an inexhsnctiUa well could "ntt-eaeily be improved pn..- : You pumped, and there. was your oiL and you kept on pumping aid no more tanks were, required I .But the tefims couldn't see it." " They went back td: Franklin in search of tha harpers, but the Utter were sum ssC-j Tire police detectives of tb city and couiity'hve leeu brought itito re qainitioo, but thus far without success. "The rascals having diepwed ot tlielr Sit, greased.' 'ii ." Dressing Ladies Hair. 'The'Taria 'cbrretipondeut Of "" the London -.mmg 7of thns d.scoufsesnis irnr - mi ir i - mm ' . t -9W&Z iSL!fS?m.iiU v? f1 :f iain- hsjrdreeeer of ..the soldi me .schooL hoi sf y Abattbif .winter he.bas. oerrcom menctd n drk atJt P M so that h Udy- niustemaln' s ins ten h on rs ifrfulV toilet, with her hair. I nhed, bofd, stretched, flowered" Jeweled j ih fully uncomfortable. J- It la only as a great fa vbr -tharthese fahveil haiejanists eane bad at all; ladies dariagrtbMasoBKare obliged. 10 i aplore thm to attend. , Well, be declares fllat you may! wear' tour liair .in' an v'iantastic , taanion.. rsome innies at cotrt nave adopted -the classical Oreelsh attlet the" hair "drugged e ST the face, and a bunch of .clustering ringlets it the back of the beadL- Others have gone in. for a series of S'all curls all over the . fore head, and little imj-rjinent l wintibg" locks' found about the ears babv curls, jttst begm tring l whilst the mass of bir is gaihereil fp oft tbe top of the bead, arxi there aluded, with.flowara. or butterflies orren-Ratidy in-acta. And what ssked T, of f his proud d-pbt and disposer of the htiman 'liabrr what haa become of the hair in nets, which made jbnt yesterday aucb sensation t on ;ths:. male tbuth V - The indignation of the French artltt about thee liopaes was . souicthing.. pnlnfully Serious. . It was an ugly Engfwh fashion from, the first'now quile abandoned." V r---" -. - . - . L; - Brownlow's Prayef. i . - Z The following is a prayer recently deli vered by the famous blackguard, tdrfon Brownlow: Impoverieh the villainsj Take all they have I Give their effects to . the. 1 Union men iley have crippled and imprisoned, and (et them bava their- Southern', rights.. Tb'ey swore-they: won Id carry pu the war until .they--loet, their lands. .. Put it to them, is; our -sj!-. ytoe.j Most-, religiously fleece them, and let" i Wm know, how other men feel jehen robbed of all ibey have.. ,,, 't : - 'U r .. : y f Lt them be punished I ' Let them be ' im-poveriabed l.;;Le. then? bt slaiq,l ."And Rafter !aia.;Jetf4ieni beamnedi' ;?v... ,. s', V.'. ",5 ;.. l-?rn JfBL Datit ti t Prophet -: . r.In the sprftig of ."61. -inVipeech in Stevenson", Alabama.' Jeff. Davie, ntterei the; follow-ine bit ofjprophesy : ' Your border -Staiee Will gladly come into theutreroreoiifcder-aey within aixrydaysy as wV-aill ba your on-yVrienasT Englaml wilt recognixa uUnnd? a gHmimni futara is fcrfore im, Tit grtiM ai) jrrowin the NortheTrLcities. where the-pave-rnenta have leen worn bythe, trea l of con-mercav We 'will carryaf where it is' easy fb Hilvaneewwbere fixxf for the aworil and tweb J awaiVkfeartniea"4n the denselyt populated cities 'n-i!:i:-yMsii-; WaV-. Uv' Cotioiu -Co&ibuttUoa ! of jC7oraav , I ' 3aa;yo eqaarp tbe.circls Tatsfhe problem 1 that ia now paaftng round amoag cmathemat 1-dans ATh'la th;y afe at work npon-lf th following will, answer .fon a curious aswell 'as ..-.vU aeo rrtir follQWuig. , whia twet a;e tiom sJaie purni WjoVha 1 ndianajpo bficans cist the jpemocralio party dead it exhibits ite "nost unntabieaipns of V.ArtIL ELrcriow Tha Democrscv Of Je.ft I "The Democracy of Col nm bus elected their J whole ticket iihont OppoehW. ' - j 1 "' Th e en tire Dembera tic" ticket1 was eTeciey the aidess - i - f : " r "lj " -WiH ATwriter in the CWrjOfntWan'or V?i i'.-a.3 : t C fB' .twivi;- r.theultarof inrafp: - exclaims s FortOf-ai v -v- ai 5rj ji es; -ii is he -mhfi lives nsra-pigeoo rooid This r.,of 4i4:3i ..raR U DEITT r-iia s-; I valasble manoreiai prodaoed fa flJchiran-jr liK 15 at S Iff v ;t?u fsp 8 T fi E SI i" 1. I T-..TMjii ai nv.-i ?aST-Fbnya t a8htnft'ChrrmieIe 'Of April hSjktf'joTTe'racnatiou of JUch- rrad and. sarai!i Jthat fh war and rebel- l!catr?gndprri -S.-itA riU ;1 -' ! Ia ea'r.'bnnVa Pn01 i eult ef th? r?t '-ttrt wilbe ta JnculcAl3- r - a esc' c: ft - -r rer. Terect?-;for t?:s'CtL:r." ' ' '-- -- t""' i,jn y. I: r r " t an t -,rai.? ' r - '. ; !:v v r- I -"sr ''-'' - :i . ff t ' "TbaIjsyjlbJcja f ton" physician, has disoovered that goli Is " metjcinal rirtties. "Igd the' yellosr' iueulj ' c dee, is to' become a drtrgl i 5 .wss -?J c a a ign new w m. u. ueisncey, the t u : . 1 r . k trr . . ... . , CS' tan aMS59 . . j . ji i cni.vwiujt oi ne vesrn uioeeee.oi n. . Yo; ?; Ofthe " Prbte?tsntv Epmcnal 'Church; diei? itt h ia residence in UenevAiNi-Yi? a feK r : The hohiejy,!.! pro vrh declares that"", tfie r Ibhgesf pole khbeks t he TBinmbni,t-i h. Thitmtb has bnwellarntralelin tlllseci twt ai conllict from ihas aanoke and . diutici ' whjfth. arfc,now wering,;. V.f.jytc.i!s'4f br'A VritirH one: of the a 'cnltnfaf paV" ; pe safe thestarflsncdbfefna -wacsr in ai4-;'" . terrs, which sometimes became .yery; 0oy ipg, may ie remedied inafew, oars by pattii .. - v ""'to v (..wniiy c-v. call AIIQ ' t3T The ChrHMian1 CommisSibn- has a near 5 machine in the hspeof,a larga oofies boiler oa ,:,,.' wjfeels". with boxes Jor-sngsrxnilk. and 'other - :j aufplies nttachf!, which is very convenient in'4 f-distributing Rupp'iiies to the armv.- A ' ' '-i -rh -i ' ' ' : : vfrrr'i --.."9T To eet the weight of a divssed.sheetW .i1 divide the live weight by seven, or get weight ofpach quarter that is, of a sheep whose live 5 weight is 140 pounds, each'quarter wift weigh !- Se-ponnds;'- - . : -a J Moaehy has sent a mmmw to CoioneT-. " v ...fiv, unimii uuiuill 1 VI nitwit I1V 9l-atca thai he does not care a J n a bonr.t he surrenderor Leennd that he ia determined to fish't i - . ss aa tong as be lias a man left. . . - . v p-- t- ?T-, . : . , , .-- CQr Game is having a holiday downi Sonthf Dear and hears are reported to have reappear ed, in districts where they hail; nt beettaeenwi for many years prior to tbe war.- Qualia .and, rabiis literally swarm in the deeoUted settle " li; nrentsof Virginia.' .; "': v 4 ?tf. . ' ".... ",. ? V " The Resents of thaSemtlmoniaa Insti. . tute have decided to; rtbuild thoae portions of : the. building destroyed by tire. and. to make V ? thm re-proorat a coat o(:t I2aOW, which"1 will be paid from fhe surplus fundbf lhe'lnetif:"ti ttrtlon; r"-' ? f-.'.rr--: i-U, .''.. . - . t f6T.The Rocky. Mountain News of March If-safa: " From prrsent" indicatiohs- mining fi bpefatTons in Colorado wil will be pushed fbr-:?Jr,I ward witlrrenewt vigor the coining numroef iri-. : Thjere is good prospec't "for.,"ao. a-ivaniageousJ working reason. 4- -- St Some tnrers are ad viaihff farmers" ta( cfiltiyate onions to a greatextend. There ia:.': no'donbt but this has been an exceedingly pro- j fitahle crop durhig the wsp, ami, will con t inns-to be so long as we have a iHrgeannv in the ' fifeld. " But but hav yon"he.rd tbe'newsT f ft 1 1 ; . wado not Know. ..It m a curious facttliat in s&cred bistorv "the agf." death anl nitriT of onj4- i . oiva.,wonian..earrfv; tut -wiie oi Anrausm. e -- " Mrf iaer sveriaince 4pi- pr not to have beta a suhject foiy history; ov-" J fiSrrTh AlbanVEvenrne Jourt.araTsf Lfee-reiwt of Ge-imd Butler's reiernatian ir -w l a How long Eve. thefirt woman,; IiyedVaT11 tf Isll tfsrknrfltvr sainjaaa It IJI fainAvu 1 I. irM aAaa a tor Philadelphia l y Major Adams in I8lt3, sndr -IrVi Cincinnati y Jftctinlas Lonffworth ; The-' t . f vjr' "v sjiwvv V ciii'vajj . i r re wH- . - msnd'ehows him 'unlBrorthy of 'public- honOrs " Let him go into n we!-arnel rreitrsr'y. alAi4!. 1 w b other explodl fniT-tea, who. have bewsul i biirst and jaid aside xliiriitg the last--A-" ' M - - ? -'-'-.j.;- !- - - - .w-ie- sn- Ali-'. : BJ- " "" 1 , r - i.Ctgr The eid Of fhe Catawba proincf fhV Diana, and Vheaeed of tie Diana proilu' ed tba-Io"wa.grape.. The Catawba who found frrowinjt,: t wjld. in North Carolina iu 1861. introduced in- r Diana was produced in Milton, Maachustta-i- j in 1844. ri. . :-,.iv-" - i :, , : y - : v.t,t 111: gtStF' The North American Quarterly Heviey": says that the Delaware grape was discuwed. i.i eondemned artd praif 1 more than-any species" i. j-recgrdetl in tfv slonuy aiKiaUot vineculiHre'' trtiri' prejudice jvnd howilny Jiave yleldei) at r last, and the IM a ware" aland now. wh"ere",ii ' Lefonz of rightafthe head of the 1nf of out-5 oof grapes' . -. - ; . '-a - A immense iron nnne baa. been disco,--. jtl at3arnia, Canada,' cropping out io'Torm of st back sand, brr the feach atretching from that 1 that city to Bosaoquet 1 1 Is eom paled tbai4 . in one bank there are 370.000 tone; worth .$23 per ton, and John McAvoy. of r Port Edward,' i baa secured iVheiarniaOanadian,ia' of the sf opinion thfit the uiewoverv" 'will enrich the ed' tire country; ' tisi iP----.tr- "mmW - avvrv-t iiouj rsiB -so earivwiipr Srf C Jf coveries. Jt is an' in vent tori of a nttrt ehefter. jf, Yi; flh'd he :lsims ty: this S IS. Condensed ale is amomr the latest die ' f . r it wrn oi txi is method ' ii the brdmanrextracf of lli malt "and hopahf f redaced sevenigluh in uantityartLto- tb A cansiatency of .sugar-boutie ayrsps, wilitput I throwing off any of I be volatile,, triatfer or aro't nia wbich brewers seek to retain, if posriti e ' " bOtalwaysVith sficce.' - ' - t. tmm& An oil . well, has 'baen bored near D.. Iroit. and when the drill ,iadjreached a depth ' of seventy leet a current of ens escaped whih". blew ont the' "drill'-awl tool, welehihir eiit hundred nemoda.'Hew off the abed maf ot- tha derrick, forty five, feeidrieh, and herlexi loirth a ttrearau of -water, irravel and large stones. The workmen narrowly reaped with -their rta. The water was5 etrongly 'imprecate! wtth petrbienm. " " '-- - .2 u ; u-'.- m ; 'i'hwi j ii .;. ... iy - tSf .Waahlnglon,, the rspital of thia.rVrat Hepul lie haaMt'"Ane, rail way." cbnnectinz it with the thirty sir States, 'while Lo&don baa ten rairroada, extending butvvardvas taeana "of support and naililary protection Pans seven Uer 1 1 n fl ve4 - v ten nn four. . and - Rich moniL il i late rebel capital, oaa five,and theae have been atlehded Under the b" ensure of a defensive war; and without one tfthe-of the Yast'resdarces tf immense qnanlities end,woo, l' '" "fr farmjo ooitii a nouseior lame ieo" ? nuantittes,for the sale' of pigeons ninr. ' a a a . 4" r turn the" coflt of- building, jeav 3 -7 - ? f.There are aSoat ftn I." clerks errt)bTe! in tb. Treirv 4 seucfed f.-ort Sin t v !. ff t r u.e r Uriion Itany rf lb erenow pc;-. - &r. "re is"r'- ' ! ' ' .a. riaI. . "i utt c..i i car'"- - r - J -" r-" i tvVi J, ..V - -v?e fsrr -so wiLcs Us v.. V..-r'-i.'-'T w-- - - v -, i.ere tc;,.l r - r-h c f r -. r r-- i rT 4 . lixail C C-J isLi.. r d ; |