CONTENTS OF THIS NUMBER. 
seem to be any purpose so to reduce the amount 
of this description of coin as to inconvenince the 
public. 
Semi-official advices received, show that owiDg 
to the energy of President Ospina and Gen. Her- 
ran. director of war operations, and to the pat¬ 
riotism of the people, the revolution in progress 
in the Republic of Sc w Grenada may by this time 
be considered at an end. In the decisive action 
of Oratorio, fongbt by 3,500 men, COO were left in 
the field, and in the combat of Manizales General 
Mosquera lost 300 out of 2,600 men. It is men¬ 
tioned as a noticeable fact, that no revolution 
commenced in New Grenada has ever triumphed, 
and that the present one, which seemed likely to 
be the largest and most fatal in Its results, Is the 
soonest repressed. The principle which tbe rev¬ 
olutionists have been fighting for, was the ex- 
Punch has a leading picture, in which he is in¬ 
troducing the Prince of Wales to his pretty Miss 
Columbia, with the assurance that he don’t get 
Buch a partner every day. 
Franck. Count Persigny, the French Minister 
to London, had gone to Paris on summons of the 
Emperor. It was supposed that he would sood 
replace M. Thouvenel in the Foreign Office. 
The Times’ Paris correspondent says that the 
departure ef the Pope's Nuncio from Paris was 
considered the forerunner of the Pope’s quitting 
Rome. Tbe same authority says that Beldom has 
the spirit of hostility been so general in the 
Church of Prance, and never has it been more 
boldly displayed. TastoraU, circulars and ser¬ 
mons denounce, and all but implore the Divine 
vengeance on the invaders of the Papal States. 
The whole Prelacy is aroused from one end of the 
country to the other. The French note of the 
Federal Council states that independent of the in¬ 
sults offered to the French flag at Biona, a French 
subject waa maltreated on tbat occasion. France 
therefore claims tbata searching inauirv be ins*!. 
£l)e IScvos (fioitbenscr 
AGRICULTURAL. 
Pack. 
Agriculturists Appreciated,. 
kjiiuiries and Notes,. 
Fermentation in Manure Heaps,. 
Thorough pin,... 
Potatoes for Seed,.. 
Care of Calves,.... 
TUirih' Stmrip Elevator, in Operation, [Illustrated,]... 
Sorghum and Fairs,. 
Protection for Farm Stock,.. \\\ 
Kngliah Dairy Cheese..... 
More about Egyptian Corn,... 
A Good Pump Wanted,. 
The Potato Ilot,....... 
Mural Spirit af tht I'rcst yield of Cretin and Milk 
Isickjavr in a llorse; Scurf or Mange on Cattle; Part 
Milk; battening Cattle ni-oo Hn.v; Why Hungariai 
Grass Injures Stool. Training Colls to Walk ami Drive 
Peaking Uuttci; Feeding Hen» in Winter . 
/nquiritt and Antutrt Corn She Her; Hominv Ma 
thine,....... 
Jnrtrvllural Altrcellant Our Twelfth Volume: The 
Agricultural IVesa—Eew Recruits; paving the UnloD 
Ron* Manure: Wool Glower and Stock Hegigter, A Na¬ 
tional Circulation: Water and Warm Feed in Winter 
Boda Alii for the Wire Worm; Don’t Know, . ‘ 
HORTICULTURAL. 
Picking and barreling Apples,. 
Deglructive lusecls, lUlustrated,]. 
Every Man Hig Own Nursery Agent,. 
Diapree Rouge Plum, [lllugtrnttd,]. 
.A'rtirullural Ao/as.-Northern Spy Apples; An En- 
gh g h Appie; (r.ljiwba Grniies The Rochester Nurse¬ 
ries, Genesee Valley Horticultural Society. 
InQuiriti and Annctrt Diana, or Anna Grape? Sa- 
v.ug Ion \\ eels Mock Seeds; Plants and Grafts; Chang- 
r.Store V'K" r rV t U ''’ tyj’dia; of the Dark; 
Culture ol the Grape In Houser, ... 
DOMESTIC ECONOMY. 
Soda Biscuit; Bunns; Crullers; Jireckinri-ife Cake; 
Apjde I ickles; Hop Yen*t; How to Cook Carrots: Car- 
if nut five Representatives to Congress. She now 
sends but two. 
Coal oil bfts the remarkable and very valuable 
property of never becoming rancid. Ail other 
oiD—vegetable and animal—absorb oxygen and 
decay; but all the neutral oils derived from coal 
are permanent compounds like water, and do not 
experience corruption or change from time and 
exposure. 
Tuk effects of the frosts of the latter part of 
week before last, upon the tobacco crop in Ken¬ 
tucky, have been most disastrous, involving the 
loss, perhaps, of about one-eighth of the crop in 
tbe tobacco growing region of the southern por 
tion of the State. In consequence the price of 
tobacco advanced one dollar per hundred in tbe 
Louisville market. 
On the river Ouelle, in Kamonraska, Canada, 
the late earthquake wna more severe than any¬ 
where else. The buildings on both sides of the 
river suffered considerable damage — chimneys 
were toppled over with the shock, the cross of 
tbe church fell, and pictures were thrown from 
the walls. 
A tbaik on the Staten Island Railroad was de¬ 
layed half an hour Tuesday morning by the 
Top total valuation of property in San Francisco is 
$ 313 , 806 , 639 . 
The provinces which remain to the Pope have 326,- 
504 inhabitants. 
— Mo rain, says a traveler, has fallen in Sweden ft>r 
several months. 
— The break bone fever is prevailing to a great extent 
in Memphis, Tenn. 
The population of New Orleans, by the late census, 
is stated at 170,T66. 
— Tbe New York New sails the Great West the “ bread¬ 
basket " of the world. 
— Upwards of one thooFand troops are about to be 
sent to California and Texas. 
Nearly sixty locomotives are on order at the works 
of a single firm in Philadelphia. 
— Commander John L. Sanders. of the U. S. Navy, died 
at Norfolk, Va., on Friday week, 
— Rev. M. McNeel fell dead in the pulpit while preach- 
jyiug souse, uut me victorious party are now 
urging a revision of the Constitution in a mors 
conservative spirit 
Borne incorrect statements have been made in 
regard to the temporal protection given to the 
city of Panama by the American and English 
mcn-of war. The Intendaute of that State, w hile 
employing the city troops in pursuing the negro 
insurgents therefrom, requested the joint landing 
and services of both squadrons, and 
they were of no further use, orders 
ing, on Sunday week, at Selma, Ala. 
A statue of the gallant Gen, navelock is about to be 
placed in Trafalgar Square, London. 
— A movement ha* been started In New Haven for a 
home for aged and indigent females. 
— The Sisters of Charity are making arrangements to 
establish an insane asylum at Buffalo. 
— The early frosts in Massachuseets have done great 
damage to the grape and crauberry crops. 
intelligence has been received from the Hayes Arctic 
expedition, which had reached Upernavik. 
The Emperor Napoleon is about to build a palace for 
the Prince Imperial, now in his fifth year. 
— Minnesota farmers are much frightened by burning 
As soon as 
were conse¬ 
quently given for the withdrawal of the forces. 
At the latest dates only Hix British marines re¬ 
mained in the city by the authority of the Intend- 
ante. 
Tbaddeus llyatt, previous to leaving for Boston, 
for the purpose of obtaining relief for the Kansas 
Bufferers, laid before tbe President of the United 
States, documents under oath, to show the de¬ 
plorable condition of that Territory. 
Two hundred thousand copies of the 300,000 of 
the Agricultural part of the Patent Office report, 
ordered by the House of Representatives, have 
been printed. 
From the Pacific Hide. 
Brthc arrival of the Northern Light at New 
York, and the Pony Express at St Joseph, Mo., 
we are placed in possession of the following in¬ 
telligence: 
California.— Ban Francisco markets are slight¬ 
ly firmer, and demand improved. Quotations gen- 
accu- 
malation of leaves which had fallen from the 
forest trees alongside the track. They had formed 
a slippery bed, aod causing the wheels of the 
locomotive to slip, detained the train until the 
track could be cleared. 
Tns Druid Hill Park, just opened at Baltimore, 
contains about five hundred and fifty acres. One- 
fifth of the gross receipts of the passenger rail¬ 
way’s was damnnded by the city for the charters, 
and the amount has been appropriated to the 
Park, it will amount to an annual sum of over 
$50,000. The trees on the Park are primeval, and 
a full view of the city and the Chesapeake is 
obtained. 
A Weary Time.— John Bateman, a resident of 
Chatham Center, C. W., returned home on Thurs¬ 
day week, after living for twenty-three 
mained in office on account of the popular de¬ 
monstration and the expected arrival of Victor 
Emanuel. 
It was reported thut a fresh attack by the Roy¬ 
alists on the Garibaldians had been repulsed. 
The movement of the French upon Bilcrbo and 
other places within fifty miles of Rome, caused 
great dissatisfaction among the inhabitants. Peti¬ 
tions to tbe King of Sardinia and Napoleon on the 
subject were being most numerously signed. 
It is reported that Austrian troops were largely 
concentrated on the frontiers, and there was an 
unconfirmed rumor that LOGO Austria™ fmm 
years a 
convict’s life in Van Dieman’a Ixind, whither be 
had been sent for participating in the Canadian 
rebellion of 1837. Bateman is now 04 years old. 
The people of the United States are the health, 
iest on the globle. The deaths per year are one 
and a half per cent of the population. In Eng¬ 
land the ratio is nearly two per cent 
The New Orleans Picayune states that the emi¬ 
gration of free colored people from Louisiana to 
Hayti, since the establishment of President Geff- 
rnrd’s government, has assumed such an impor¬ 
tance that a stenmer has been placed for the first 
time, in the line between New Orleans and Hayti. 
She will sail for Haytian porta on the first of No¬ 
vember, and continue making regular trips, until, 
as contemplated, she will be bought by the 
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS, 
Stump Extract™—G. D Han in. 
Premiums for Subscribers—L, Bangs. 
1 lie Oporto Grape 10. Ware Sylvester. 
Rich ami Ksey -Williams .\- Breedv 
Durham Bull Wanted- John Francis. 
Moulh-Dpwn Bucks Thomas Bailey. 
Ericsson a Caloric Engine* - D. B. Logan. 
Turkeys and Ducks—.1. R. Page 
A Farm Wanted William Wood. 
* uc j m j-acne Bays mat as soon as the annex¬ 
ation of Naples and Sicily ia proclaimed, Garibal¬ 
di will resign his political authority and assume 
tho title and function of Commnnder-m-Chief of 
the land and sea forces of Southern Italy. He 
will exclusively occupy himself in preparing for 
war next spring, and will make an appeal to all 
Europe for volunteers. 
- It is confirmed that a French merchantman, la¬ 
den with stores, had been captured by Garibaldi’s 
ships, but as the blockade is not recognized by 
France, sbe will probably be restored to avoid dis- 
[ agreeable consequenccs- 
The Turiu Gazette says that Prussia has simply 
made some remarks against the entry of Sardin¬ 
ian troops into Naples, but Russia made no com¬ 
munication. It was reported, however, iu Berlin, 
that the Russian Ambasador at Turin had been re¬ 
called, and that the Sardinian Ambassador at St. 
Petersburg had received his passports. 
It was stated that 14,000 Piedmontese troops had 
already reached Naples by sea. After Victor 
Emmanuel reviews them, they will march to Caser- 
ta, where they will be joined by those entering by 
over 81 years old, has seated over 400 shairs within a year 
past, 
— The fig harvest at Smyrna, this year, is said to be 
much better in quantity and quality than for several 
years. 
— A Washington cent gold recently in Philadelphia, at 
a sale of coins, for $59, and a silver dollar, of 1794, Tor 
$26.50. 
Jbtrey is about to return, and will briDgwith him 
the most unmanageable of his trans-Atlantic steeds, the 
Cruiser. 
— American merchants at Shanghae, China, complain 
that their interests are not properly looked after by our 
Minister. 
— Arrangements hare been made for tbe establishment 
of monthly steam communications between Jamaica and 
New York. 
Shakopee, Chief of the Medawak&utwan, or Spirit 
Lake Sioux, died, last week, at Red Wood, Min. He was 
90 years old. 
— Timothy WoBSel, while whittling a stick, near New 
Madrid, Mo., on Friday week, cut a vein in hia left hand, 
and bled to death. 
— On Tuesday last, the mother of Rev. Dr. Kennedy, 
of Albany, died at Broadalbin, Fulton Co., at the advanc- 
IlOCHESTER, N. Y., NOVEMBER 10, 18C0. 
DOMESTIC HEWS 
Washington Matter*. 
Tdk United States Court of Claims has resumed 
its session after a long recess. The number of 
cases on the docket is small. Renewed efforts 
will be made to procure an amendment of tho 
law establishing this tribunal, so that awards 
not exceeding$3,000 maybe final, instead ofhav- 
ing, as now, to bo definitely acted upon by Con¬ 
gress. 
The Executive Committees of the four political 
parties are closing up their business, having 
ceased to issue any more printed material. It is 
estimated that the aggregate number of documents 
circulated by them since the commencement of 
the Presidential canvass, is between 0,000,000 and 
7,000,000. Nearly all of them were folded at the 
of principles seems to be more in name thau in 
substance; aside from partizun politics, we are 
satisfied that Col. Baker will prove a wise, able, 
and prudent Senator, and will reflect credit upon 
the State, which is more than can be said with 
truth of our Senators, hitherto. 
Panama.—A difficulty has arisen in Panama 
between the. United States and British naval for¬ 
ces, owing to the arrest of an American officer 
for refusing to respond to a challenge of the 
British guard, which had beou stationed in the 
streets since the recent disturbances. Commu¬ 
nications bad passed between the flag officers and 
the British commander. The result not known 
A fresh alarm occurred at Panama on the night 
of the 22nd, in consequence of the report that 
Tacliio was coming with a party of negroes to 
sack the city. The troops were under arms all 
! night. Nothing happened, but new rumors con¬ 
tinue to circulate, and the city was kept in a state 
of excitement. 
Nicaragua. — Advices from Nicaragua state 
that the news of Walker’s capture reached there 
Sept, 30th, causing much rejoicing. Martinez 
was again at the head of affairs. Mr. Dimi try was 
pressing the government for a Convention to 
settle the American claims, but was unsuccessful 
Martinez had, however, consented to call a meet¬ 
ing of Congress for the lath of December, so that 
tbe ratification of the Lamar treaty might be ef¬ 
fected within the specified time. 
Peri*. 
when occasion requires. After the battle of Me- 
lazzo, he took it off, washed it in a brook hard 
by, and hung it on the bushes, ate his lunch of 
bread, fruit and water, smoked bis cigar bare¬ 
backed, and wrapt in thought, sat apparently con¬ 
templating the drying of his garment 
Census Items. —The net increase in the North¬ 
ern District of Ohio during the past ten years is 
166,059. Iu the Southern District the increase for 
the same time ia 197,G65. 
The partial returns from Wisconsin already 
made indicate that the State has gained about fifty 
per cent in the last five years; and, according to 
this estimate, its entire population at the 
the Roman frontier. 
Mazzini has refused to leave Naples. 
The diplomatists at Grata had protested against 
present 
time is 800,000. 
The census of Michigan showM a population 
there of 750,000. This is a gain upon the popula¬ 
tion in 1850 of over 350,000, and upon that in 
1854 of 250,000. 
FOREIGN NEWS 
— C, McKnight, of Truxton, N. Y., died, week before 
last, of h sore throat, caused by the use of corn-solvent, 
purchased of a peddler. 
— The New York Saturday Press places under the dra¬ 
matic bead the account of the reception of the Prince of 
Wales in Trinity Church. 
— Mr, Surners, United StateB Marshal for Iowa, reports 
that the population of the State is about 600,000, a gain 
of over 46,000 since last year. 
— One thousand barrels of cranberries have been sent 
to market this season from the town of Carver, Mass. 
i rusaia should have support, in reviving at no 
distant day the question ol the Danish Duchies. 
Spain.— Judicial proceedings had been com¬ 
menced against Rodriqne Bervia, the man who 
fired at the Queen of Sixain. He has confessed, 
and says he was employed by Herurore Prode, a 
deputy of the Cortese ally. 
China.— According to the Paris Patrie, the 
English Minister to China had received an inti¬ 
mation- that the Emperor would be disposed to 
conclude peace if the allies captured the Peiho 
forts. 
Advices from China state that the allied troops 
reached the Peiho, August 1st, and established 
camps at Pebtang. They found the northern and 
southern ports evacuated, and attacked the Tartar 
camps on the 10th, when the Chinese lied in dis¬ 
order. At the departure of the mail tbe allies 
were opposite the Taka ports, where the Chinese 
were preparing to resist. The grand attack was 
to take place August 15th. The Rebels attacked 
-The ultimatum of the American gov¬ 
ernment had been rejected by Peru so far as the 
Lizzie Thompson, Georgiana and Sastoria claims 
are concerned. This refusal would compel the 
American minister to demand his passports. 
A frightful acoident occurred on the loth, on 
the dry dock at San Lorenzo, involving the en¬ 
tire loss of the Peruvian frigate Callao, formerly 
the Autermnc, and a great loss of life. She waa 
being docked, with all the crew on board, when 
some siancbeons of the dock gave way, causing 
her to pitch over, when she rapidly filled with 
water. A great number of people, including men, 
women and children, sick in tbe hospital, all 
perished. All the particulars were not known at 
the date of our adviceB, but it is believed the 
number of killed would reach 150. The number 
of wounded was very great. The Callao was a 44- 
They sell at $8,50 per barrel. 
— The salutes fired in honor or the U. S., by the Eng¬ 
lish fleet, on entering Portland harbor, were distinctly 
heard at Paris, Me., 50 miles off. 
— By the bursting of a camphene lamp in a house, in 
San Francisco, a whole family was burnt to death, and 
the house and furniture destroyed. 
— In Madrid, Spain, recently, an aeronaut, in attempting 
to ascend in a balloon, hanging by hie feet, fell at a height 
of half a mile, and was dashed to pieces. 
— The estimated average weight of Americans ia about 
0 lbs. more than men in Belgium, 10 lbs. more thau 
Frenchmen, and 4 lbs. less than Englishmen. 
— The Galveston (Texas) Civilian auuounces the igno¬ 
minious failure of the K. G. C.—Knights of the Golden 
Circle—filibustering expedition into Mexico. 
— There is a memorial before the Yermont Legislature 
asking, for the Troy Conference Academy, authority to 
confer the degree of “ Mistress of Literature." 
— Mary Dietrich, of Philadelphia, died recently of hy¬ 
drophobia, produced by the bite of a dog, three months 
ago; the wound had been cauterised and healed. 
— Recently the powder mill of J. Carkln, of Bennington, 
N. H., was blown up. The workmen were absent, and no¬ 
body injured. There were six tuns of powder in tbe mill- 
