t.cv. 
NEWS DEPAPTMENT. 
“ Let bells in every lower be rung, 
And bonfires blaze abroad: 
Lot thanks from every loyal tongue 
In thunder rise to God. 
The doom of Rebeldom is sealed, 
The conquering Bword of Mars 
Alone the patriot can wield — 
God bless the Stripes and Stars." 
ROCHESTER, N. Y., JULY 15, 1865. 
NEWS OP THE WEEK. 
A flairs at Washington. 
The findings of the Court in the conspiracy 
trials were approved by President Johnson on 
the5th inst. David E. Harold, Geo. A. Abzerott, 
Lewis Payne and Mary E, Surratt, were found 
guilty of aiding in the murder of President Lin¬ 
coln. President Johnson directed that they be 
hung on the 7tb inst. All lour were executed 
about one o’doc-h on the day designated. 
Samuel A. Mudd, Samuel Art old, and Michael 
O’Laughliu are to be imprisoned for life, and 
Edward Spangler for six years, for the part they 
took in the late dreadful tragedies. The Albany 
(N. Y.) Penitentiary was selected by the Execu¬ 
tive as the prison where they are to be confined. 
The State Department is informed officially 
that orders will be issued by the Captain-General 
of Cuba to deliver up the Stonewall (rebel iron¬ 
clad) to the United States authorities. 
The number of rebel prisoners discharge under 
the last General Orders, (No. 109, > up to July 1, 
foot up 42,7tK'». 
Gen. Hooker is to be quartered in New York, 
and will succeed Gen. Dix. 
Ex-Gov. Vance of North Carolina, has been 
released from prison, and will return home, 
subject to the President’s orders. 
Gen. Slough 1ms been relieved from his duties 
as Military Governor at Alexandria (Va.) aDd is 
ordered to Colorado. 
A number of wealthy merchants and others of 
Virginia, waited upon the President on the 8th, 
and endeavored to induce him to modify the 13th 
section of his Amnesty Proclamation, (the $20,- 
000 clause,) but w ere unsuccessful. 
A telegraphic dispatch says:—Now tLiat the 
conspiracy trial is over, and the sentences of the 
Military Commission are executed, there will 
soon be some definite action concerning the 
trial of Jeff. Davis. If it should be determined 
to try him for treason, the proceedings will, of 
course, take place before u civil tribunal. But, 
from present indications, it is more probable 
that he will be tried by a military commission as 
the leader or instigator of the conspiracy ; for, 
itis said, in Government quarters, there arc newly 
discovered proofs againsthim In that connection. 
A lumber wagon was lilted ever a large barn 
and set down behind it uninjured. A horse and 
buggy in the barn (the roof of which had then 
been torn otT) were lifted out and dashed to 
pieces. [These were some of the queer freaks of 
the storm—a “whirlwind.”] 
One boy twelve years old, was found one hun¬ 
dred and fifty rods from where he was when 
taken up by the whirlwind. He was alive, but 
fatally injured. 
A store in the country containing five thousand 
dollars’ warth of goods was swept away and has 
not been seen since. 
A mill-pond, six miles from Virogna, had the 
logs carried away, and the water nearly all 
scooped out. The mill was demolished. 
New* Summary, 
The New Orleans Times is informed that 
Northern Immigration to N. Carolina. 
Gov. Holden’s administration of affairs in 
North Carolina aims not only at the political, 
but also at the commercial regeneration of the 
State. His great desire is in the return of pros¬ 
perity to the State by the development of its vast 
resources. Few people arc aware of the extent 
and variety of those resources. Having no chief 
city for exporting her products, they have been 
heretofore credited to other States by being car¬ 
ried to the markets of Richmond, Petersburg, 
Norfolk and Charleston. Her climate and soil 
enable her farmers to cultivate with success the 
peculiar products (except perhaps, cane sugar,) 
of every State in the Union, while her mines of 
gold arc superior to any east of the Rocky Moun¬ 
tains ; her copper, lead and iron mines yield an 
immense amount, and she has the capacity of 
becoming, through her abundant water power 
united with the Argentines and Urnguans, XA*i of New Advertisement*. 
against Paraguay, and had commenced a cruel _ 
war. A revolution has broken out iu Bolivia, Btobenectndy Agricultural Worlm-G Westinghouse & Co 
and the revolutionists are marching against the A B Smith 
city of La Pas. The revolution in Peru is gain- K;; ^ Im!'tVm t.‘’'“ u “ * C °' 
big ground. A domestic war has just broken Agents"!Vuntn? T <-T _01Iv ‘ ,r nit8M1 * c ®- 
out in Ecuador. The Insurgents are headed by no A ere* unitVawberric*- VnuMirdy 
ex-President Urbina. It was expected the city Ke ‘ ecb ' 
of Guayaquil would soon be attacked. VrKJlfs 1 * *°- 
NEWS PARAGRAPHS. 
Delegates from fourteen Indian tribes who 
have aided the rebels, arc on their way to Wash¬ 
ington, to endeavor to make treaties ol perpet¬ 
ual peace. 
Trouble appears to be brewing among the 
Mormons in Utah. A train of sixty wagons 
ISO Fer Month—J s Pardee. ' 
SPECIAL NOTICES. 
Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. 
the rebel portion of the Cherokee Indians arc and coal fields, a great manufacturing district. have left SaJt Lake City loaded with Saints, for 
near starvation, and General 8taniey appeals to Her eastern counties, for 150 miles from the sea- 
Texans for relief. coast, have excellent corn and cotton lands; her 
Ecrgnson, the guerrilla, now in prison at midland counties produce abundantly wheat and 
Nashville, Is charged with committing no less tobacco; on her western lauds, besides grain, 
than one hundred murders. Ac., are raised the finest, stock, and rice and the 
Accounts from Louisiana represent crops of cereals generally, and all vegetables are cnltl- 
all kinds to be very promising. Guerrillas have vated successfully within her borders, while 
Backed the town of Franklin and murdered five 
’ treasury agents who went into the interior of the 
i 8tate after cotton. 
, Several thousand persons called upon Admiral 
1 Farragnt and Gen. Anderson at Boston on the 
Fourth. Their levee was quite informal. 
The Providence Press says that one of the 
citizens of that place has returned from Savan¬ 
nah, who gives information concerning the fam¬ 
ily of Jeff. Davis, to the effect that. Mrs. Davis is 
boarding at the Pulaski House, and has appa¬ 
rently plenty of money. That the has an exten¬ 
sive and magnificent wardrobe, he is certain of 
from ocular demonstration, and also that she 
spares no jmin3 to let the fact be known. Her 
little son seems to enjoy himself hugely. 
A Convention of delegates from the different 
Commercial Colleges of the country commenced 
at Chicago to-day, (the 11th inst.) The occasion 
promises to be one of much interest. 
Governor Pierpont has abolished the old Vir- 
| ginia Court of Appeals. The Governor expects 
to have civU government in the 8tate In good 
running order by the 1st of August. 
At Centre Harbor, N. H., last week, an attempt 
was made to destroy a steamboat by placing a 
keg of powder in the furnace. Part of the deck 
was blown off, but no one was injured. 
Queen Victoria and the Prince and Princess of 
Wales are to visit Ileese-Caesel in August, to be 
present at the inauguration of the statue of the 
Prince Consort. 
There were two balloon ascensions from Bos¬ 
ton Common last Saturday evening. One of 
the balloons took up six men and a boy. 
Owing to the dist urbance of the peace, martial 
law has been re-established in Norfolk, Va. 
Five hundred workmen in Buffalo, employed 
by the Central, Erie and Lake Shore Railroads, 
are on a strike because t heir wages have been 
reduced from 62 to 61.75 per day. 
From Wilmington, N. C., we learn that the 
yellow fever is now prevailing there. 
The Fourth of July was more extensively 
celebrated (wc should judge from our exchanges) 
this year than for many years previous, “ Inde¬ 
pendence Day” was not confined to cities and 
Her eastern counties, for 150 miles from the sea- t t,e Status - 
coast, have excellent corn and cotton lands; her A negko who was hung up by the thumbs in 
midland counties produce abundantly wheat and Raleigh, N. C., last week Friday, was allowed 
tobacco; on lu-r western lands, besides grain, to hang forty honrs, and died soon after being 
Ac., are raised the fluesf, stock, and rice and the taken down. 
cereals generally and all vegetables are cnlti- An invoice of English sparrows has been or- 
\ated successfully within her borders, while dered by the Philadelphia authorities, to be put 
her forests have inexhaustible supplies of naval into the public squares to destroy the worms 
stores and timber. and insects. 
her forests have inexhaustible supplies of naval 
stores and timber. 
In order to expedite the business of Northern 
emigration,and the accession of Northern capital, 
some organized plan has been thought necessary,’ 
and a general land and emigration agency has 
therefore been authorized at Raleigh, under 
the management, of Messrs. Battle, Heck A 
Co., well-known citizens of that State. Or¬ 
ganized efforts will therefore at once be made to 
introduce the hardy and self-reliant and indus- 
trione population of the North among the peo¬ 
ple of that State. The natives are gen erally desi¬ 
rous of extending the right hand of fellowship 
to their Northern brethren who may desire to 
settle among them. Even the most ultra arc 
entirely satisfied with the experiment of se- | 
®f)c Nevus (finnbenser. 
— The population of Auburn is about 13,000. 
— Dresses without Bleeves are the style in Paris. 
— The tobacco crop in Connecticut Valley will be 
— The French ladies carry sword-canes to protect 
themselves. 
— Emigration across the plains i»mnch larger than 
ever before. 
— Secretary Seward resumed his official duties on 
Saturday week. 
— A mule in the United States service is now called 
a "brevet-horse." 
The lake tnnnel at Chicago has now reached a 
length of 2,900 feet. 
The Maine friends of temperance are making -The annual fines for drunkenness in Nashville 
fresh exertions to enforce the prohibitory law’s Tenn., reach about $30 «00. 
which the papers of that State declare to be an - a Baltimore Assessor has lately detected revenue 
entire failure. frauds to the amount of $14,000. 
The rebel ex-Mayor Mayo, of Richmond, has — A Springfield paper nomltates Ben. Butler for 
avowed his determination to be a candidate for Governor of Massachusetts, 
re-election to that office, in defiance of the Na- — Tho graduating class at the Wesleyan University, 
tional Government. Middletown, Ct.. numbers 85. 
Admikal Dupont has bequeathed §175,000, 
the amount of his prize money, to establish a 
National Asylum in Washington for the orphans 
of soldiers and sailors. 
The Columbia (New Granada) Congress has 
issued a decree indorsing Juarez, President of 
cession, and arc ready to smoke the pips of Mexico, and ordering that his portrait bo placed 
peace and be friends again,—while her Union in the National Library. 
I'. I U ^ C ? ! | tlie a ' e The ship William Nelson was burned on the 
° “ va nc gh joru. Gov. llol- banks of Newfoundland last week, and it is sup- 
den, for manifest reasons, looks on the project , , , . . . ’ UI 
m , „ ’ ' ‘ i rojucl posed that about four hundred passengers, Ger- 
with favor, and will hall the advent of loval im- . . , ^ b 
. ... . «n«mwiwioy»i im- man emigrants, have per shed, 
migrants with joy. 1 
_A Chicago man' recently paid 6200,000 for one 
The Atlantic Cubic. sixth part ° f the Frazier weU on ™ HoleCreek, 
Pa., which soon began to flow more rapidly, and 
Last Monday, the 10th inst., it is supposed, three days after sold it for 6500,000. 
the Great Eastern sailed from Valeutia Bay, Ire- r, rT . , 
laDd, having on board more than three thousand , E .?' A J C “' a J; Cha f 1 e 8ton . detected the 
miles of cable, with which it is hoped t hat f* f' 01131 South Carolinians in several schemes 
Europe and America will, during the present f poor ^edmen m their contracts, 
month, be united in electric bonds. Should ^ ? * P ^ Pr °* 
the gTand enterprise prove a success, iu a few L * nKS ' 
days Uncle Sam and Johnny Bull will hob-u-nob A Minnesota regiment, the 14th, en route 
across—or rather under—the big water, through ^ or bome ’ numbered about nine hundred men, 
the interposition ol some successor to the mys- anc * nbout every raan liad a contraband, a dog, 
terious De Sftuty. a C00D and a S ray squirrel. The pets filled sev- I 
Thrmfrh fur mnpn nniatlr. * i. --- . CTal bOX CUTS. 
terious De Sftuty. 
Though far more quietly prepared, the present 
experiment is to be > vast improvement upon the 
one which prceeder, it, in the elaborateness and 
perfection of its details. Our British cousius 
have entered upon the matter with that decision 
and practicality which alw’ays mark them when 
thoroughly iu earnest. Advantage has been taken 
of the failure in the first attempt, to guard 
The inhabitants of Berne, tho capital of Swit¬ 
zerland, have presented an address Of sympathy 
to the United States Consul in that city for 
transmission to our Government at Washington. 
The number of signatures appended is eleven 
thousand. 
Newiiekn contains now a large number of 
Northerners; business is lively, and large quanli- 
improve, and a Cabinet meeting was held to-day 
for the first, time in two weeks. He expects to 
be able to resume his receptions to a limited 
extent next week. The President went down 
the Potomac on the 10th for his health, and it is 
conjectured that he will visit Richmond before 
ho returns. 
The subscriptions to the 7:30 loan on Satur- 
day, thfjBth, amounted to 65,251,500. The total 
subscriptions for the week were §20,848,300. 
Orders will shortly be issued mustering out of 
the services over one hundred and fifty Major 
and Brigadier Generals, most of whom have 
been In comparative pleasant positions in our 
Northern cities. It is the Intention of General 
Grant to substitute in their places officers dis¬ 
tinguished for gallant ry and meritorious conduct 
In active service dnring the war. 
Forty boxes of the archives of the Rebel Gov¬ 
ernment arrived at Washington from MacoD, 
Ga., on the 0th. 
I b.^uin&Lnim in IUfti connection, pendence Day” was not confined to cities and a S ainst the mistakes which made it inevitable Northerners; business is lively, and largeqnanfi- 
The Herald’s Washington special of July 8, large towns, bnt the whdU people of the land Fvery the cable has been thoroughly ties of cotton and other merchandise are being 
ys: —The health of the President continues to welcomed Sts advent in the manner recoin- testcd- A continuous electrical current is main- brought therefrom all parts of the State for ship 
iprove,and a Cabinet meeting was held to-day mended In the famous “Letter of Old John tained through all the coils. The most capable ment North. 
r the first, time in two weeks. He expects to Adams.” Here, in Rochester, “The Day we scientific men of Europe devised the machinery The new organ to be built by the Hooks of 
able to resume his receptions to a limited Celebrate” was not allowed to “come and go," f °r paying out the wire, and every prccantlon Boston, hr Beecher’s church in Brooklyn will 
tent next week. The President went down without, “thunders of applause" in the “real, wbicb reaS0D could 6U Kgest., bus been used to fill tho entire end of the church now occnnied 
“ potomae on ttlR 10,1) for bi» health, and it is old-fashioned way.” guard against adverse weather, or untoward aeci- by the choir. The base of the organ will rest on 
ujccturcd that he will visit Richmond before By uu arrival from England the 5*th, we learn dent ; So great confidence Is felt by the practical the lower floor and reach to the roof. 
Tornado In WiwcoiiHln. * rise In cotton and the immense inflnx of money 
Tub La Crosse (Wis.) Republican of July j to pay for it, had caused sncli a fever of gpecu- 
lst contains an account of a terrible tornado at la tion as the East had never known. All kinds 
Virogna and vicinity, in that State. It is a most of - ,oiut 8loek companies were formed, and 
frightful calamity. [Virogna village is 35 miles 9burcB which cost £500, went, up to .£15,000. 
“that the British Government are greatly re- ® r ^ s b mind there will be no failure this time, 
assured as to the friendly feeling and amicable tbat rieks upcm ,be cablc are taken at Lloyd’s 
intentions of the American Administration.” for twenty-five per cent. 
-- The tariff of charges for nse of the line has been 
Effect* Of the Peace In the East. already fixed, and is very high. To England, 
The close of the war in America, says a th e rate will be one hundred dollars; to the Con- 
London writer, has been a great disaster to lincn1, one hundred uud twenty dollars; and 
Bombay, In the East Indies/ It reminds one to Asia and Afrk ‘ a . on « hundred and twenty-five 
of the philosophical experiment of striking an dodars * or 1l,e drs i' twenty words, with five dol- 
ivory ball, and seeing another fly off from au l arB for each additional word. This high tariff is 
opposite side. Bombay, on the opposite side of pnrpoSoly d, ‘" iffIK ' d to I ,reverit an °vcr press of 
the world, feels the concussion of the sudden busine8S ’, Even at tbes » P ricR8 » the mercantile 
cessation of hostilities more than London. Of commnnity and the press will, no doubt, fully 
course, London’s turn is coming, for the failure tbe reBOurccs 01 <he cable. If it works, 
of half the commercial houses in Bombay cannot bowuvtr ' wil | hardly retain a monopoly of 
but affect their English correspondents. The oceaD communication, as Yankee enterprise 
rise in cotton and the immense inflnx of monev cannot fail soon to J oll°w in the path thus 
1 opened lor 
The Southern Ituilroad*. 
The Chicago Tribune recommends that ail 
ment North. 
The new organ to be built by the Hooks of 
Boston, f»r Beecher’s church in Brooklyn, will 
fill tho entire end of the church now oecnpied 
by the choir. The base of tbe organ will rest on 
the lower floor and reach to the roof. 
The last batch of rebel soldiers held as pris¬ 
oners were set at liberty at Point Lookout tho 
1st inst. The. Government now holds no mili¬ 
tary prisoners below the rank of Colonel, with 
the exception of a few confined iu hospitals. 
The people in Northern Georgia and on the 
line of Sherman’s march through South Caro¬ 
lina are represented to bo iu a most wretched 
condition, — in actual danger of starvation. 
Houses, furniture, cattle, fences and farming 
Implements were all dest royed. 
A DJ8COVBKY made by a blacksmith at Ver¬ 
sailles is much talked about among horse deulers; 
it 1 r a composition almost as hard ns iron, which 
can be applied under the hoof without causing 
the animal the slightest pain, aud costs 75 per 
cent, less than ordinary horse-shoes. 
A COLUMN, consisting of the Second Missouri 
Light Artillery, equipped as cavalry, and the 
Twelfth Missouri cavalry, passed Columbus, 
i — A Baltimore Assessor h«B lately detected revenue 
frauds to tbe amount of $14,000. 
s — A 8pringflcld paper nomltates Ben. Butler for 
r Governor of Massachusetts. 
— Tho graduating class at the Wesleyan University, 
Middletown, Ct„ numbers 35. 
, — A twenty-barrel oil well has been struck near 
j Middleport, Meigs county, Ohio. 
j - The Massachusetts Republican State Convention 
will meet at Worcester, Sept. 14th. 
s Gf 3,S19 substitutes credited to Massachusetts 
j. last year, only 1,552 reached the field. 
— Tho list of abandoned lands in Virginia already 
exhibits a total of nearly 40,000 acres. 
— A majority or the recently graduated West Point 
1 class applied for cavalry commissions. 
— The Paymaster General Is disbursing §1.000,000 
per day to discharged officers and men. 
— The iron manufacturing interest throughout 
Pennsylvania still continues depressed. 
— Coal has been discovered on the lands of O. B. 
Wheeler, near Oakland, Sullivan county. 
— Tho colored people of Cincinnati are going to 
give Chief Justice Chase a stiver pitcher. 
— Gen. Howard has satisfactory reports of the work 
of freedmen on the South Carolina coast. 
— A new mutual coni company is to be formed In 
New Haven, Ct., with a capital of $150,000. 
— A man in Milwaukee had to pay §400 Tor knock¬ 
ing down a one-armed soldier the other day. 
— A Miss Sullivan of Newport, R. I., was struck by 
lightning Monday week, and instantly killed. 
— Work in tho Pennsylvania coal regions has been 
resumed, tho miners receiving TO cents per tun. 
— Kv«ry Chinese house in San Francisco was draped 
In mourning for the death or President Lincoln. 
- The largest Bhcet of fresh water in Connecticut 
Is Bantam Lake, lu Morris. It cavers 900 nr-res. 
- Roar Admiral David D. Porter has been apotnted 
Superintendent of the Annapolis Naval Academy. 
— The receipts at. the San Francisco Custom House 
from January 1st to June 1st, were over $2,000,000. 
— The Jaly Interest on the Treasury bonds was,paid 
in gold on Saturday week to the amount of $9,758,902. 
— About 1,000 unopened applications for pardon, up 
to this time, remain to be considered by the President. 
— The local columns of the New Orleans journals 
do not show any improvement in the morality of that 
city. 
— The peach crop in the southern and middle sec¬ 
tions of Ohio bids fair to be as large this season as was 
ever known. 
— The wheat crop throughout Southern Ohio Is be¬ 
ing rapidly harvested. The yield Is said to be above 
the average. 
— Considerable property has been saved from the 
Nasville fire, and the estimate of loss has been reduced 
to $1,250,000. 
— Seventy-nine of the one hundred and fourteen 
counties in Missouri gave the new constitution a ma¬ 
jority of 2,959. 
_ I 
$ p c c i a t $ o f t r c ,$ t 
When you feel a Cough or Bronchial Affection 
creeping on the luugs, take AYER’S CHEUUY 
PECTORAL, and cure it before it becomes in¬ 
curable. 
Employ the Wounded Soldiers. 
south-east of La Crosse, is the county seat of Tka news of Gen. Lee's surrender sent down the Southern railroads should be taken charge of Nebraska, the fifth, cn route for the Powder Rive 
Vernon county, and contains about 1,200 inhabi¬ 
tants. It stands on high, table-land. J 
About 4 o’clock on Thuraday afternoon, June 
20t.li, two angry looking clouds approached each 
other from t he north and south, and bnt a short 
distance west of Virogna. When the two forces 
came In contact they whistled off at a tangent in 
an easterly direction, and passed through the 
very heart of the village, carrying death and de¬ 
struction in theirpatb. In a moment,about fifty 
buildings were demolished and scattered to the 
winds. Seventeen persons were killed and one 
hundred men, women and children injured. 
The. tornado continued in its course for fourteen 
mile*, mowing a swath from forty to eighty rods 
in will l b, destroying everything in its course. 
Tim value of property destroyed is estimated at. 
two hundred thousand dollars, We give some 
of the incidents : 
A school-house containing twenty-four chil¬ 
dren and a young lady tew-hcr, was entirely de¬ 
molished. Eight of (he children were killed, 
and every other occupant badly injured. Ti c 
building was lifted high into the air, dashed 
upon the ground some distance from 
dation, again lilted about forty feet and dashed 
bottom up to the ground, and the fragments 
Bwcpt away—the school-house la not to be found 
price of cotton one half, and exploded all those 
wonderful speculations. Tho parsecs are in 
mourning: their sun is darkened. Gen. Grant 
little thought that when bis artillery compelled 
the evacuation of Richmond, there was u city on 
the other side of the planet on which his but¬ 
teries rained ruin. 
Women In Colorado. 
Women are exceedingly scarce in Colorado. 
The average is about ten males to one wearer of 
crinoline. Miners, deprived of women’s society, 
grow moody, discontented and reckless, and are 
In haste to “ emigrant ” back to the Status. The 
local papers send forth a plaintive appeal to un¬ 
employed sisters in the West to come over and 
help them. They say that any young girl of 
passable intelligence und appearance can get 
immediate employment in domestic service at, u 
compensation of §100 a month, payable in gold, 
witli a chance of speedily marrying some young 
chap in prosperous circumstances. This is u 
rare temptation. The girl* of tho Eastern 
States, where the female element of the popula¬ 
tion is running over, crowding kitchens, facto¬ 
ries and all avenues of employment open to the 
sos, may make a good thing by following the 
Star of Empire in its westward flight. 
aud permanently held by the Government, on 
the ground that every one of them lias been at 
various (irncs, aud often ostentatiously, tendered 
to the rebel government, by vote of the direc¬ 
tors and by action of tho officers. By the terms 
of the Confiscation Act, they are as clearly for¬ 
feited to the Federal Government as the rebel 
cannon and war vessels. The stock of loyal 
holders in them was all forfeited at the outset 
[ of the rebellion, and any pretense of loyalty in 
the present stockholders, or any of them, is 
ridiculous. The Tribune thinks that the Gov¬ 
ernment should keep them und run them, or 
repair them as military roudB, till competent 
and loyal companies shall come forward and 
purchase them ut a fair remuneration. 
From Mexico and South America. 
From Mexico, wo learn that the Emperor 
Maximilian is taking strong ground against the 
banditti. Cortenas, In un interview with the 
Federal General Brown, informed him that ho 
intended giving up opposition to the Govern¬ 
ment of Maximilian. 
Dates from South America to the 1st inst. are 
received. Another effort is being made to gut 
up a revolution lu Punnma. The trouble between 
Chili aud Spain lias been settled. Brazil had 
country to co operate with two other columns 
now preparing to march from Laramie against, 
the hostllo Indians. 
A wild man has been seen near Shawnee, 
Niagara county. The Loekport Journal says; 
“ H the accounts we get are true, he Is one of 
the rarest specimens of humanity. Organized I 
bands of men have been out to tuke him; but 
hitherto, by his lleetness, he has eluded them. 
Great excitement prevails near his roving 
ground." 
The Western newspapers are in ocstacies about 
a young lady on Rock Prairie, seventeen years 
old, who drives her father’s reaping team and 
frequently takes a load of grain to market (fif¬ 
teen miles) and soils it. She plays tho piano, 
does the honors of the drawing room with dig¬ 
nity, cun niuke a loaf of bread or play “ Bridget” 
in ma’s kitchen with equal readiness. 
Tun planters near the mouth of lied River have 
decided on the following plan with regard to 
labor It is to lot land out for cultivation to any 
one, Mack or white, for a certain per cent, of 
the products, whatever they may be, Buy one 
fourth, if cotton, und if corn, such proportion 
as is charged in other parts of tho country. It 
is believed that the plan will work well and 
equitably. 
All rxHSONS in Rochester or Its vicinity who are 
disposed to employ Wounded Soldiers, arc requested 
to call at this Office, where a list of such Is kept — de¬ 
scriptive of name, ago, nativity, former occupation, in 
what manner disabled, reference, Ac. It Is especially 
Important that the returned wounded men of onr own 
gallant regiments have an opportunity to corn "hat 
they can toward the support of themselves and their 
families, and it is hoped our city business men, nnd 
farmers, horticulturist*, etc., lu tho surrounding 
country, will give them employment so far aslscon- 
Blstt-nt. D. D. T, MOORE, Mayor. 
Mayor’s Office, Rochester, June, 1865 , 
-»■» » - ■ 
GOOD READING VERY CHEAP. 
Wo have a few extra copies of Vol. XII or tho 
Rural New-Yorker, (1861.) stitched, and In good 
order, which we will sell at §1 per copy at office or by 
Kxpress—or #1,50 sent by mall post-paid. If you wish 
a copy, speak quick. A few bound copies of same 
volume for salo at §3. We cau also furnish bound 
copies of most of the volumes Issued since 1855, at #3 
each. Bound voliufies of 1804 , $4. 
Address D. D. T. MOORE,‘Rochester, N. Y. 
~ I »«-- 
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Will cure the Itch in 48 hours —also cures o'<n2 ilhcitn, 
(Tlcers, Chilblaine, und oil Eruptions of tbe Skin. Price 
60 cents; by sending 00 cents to Weeks & Potter, 170 
Washington 8t., Boston, will be forwarded free by mall. 
For sale by alf druggists. 791-2t>t 
