ALBANY REGISTER. limits Hflfitifaifif .The Itrf.it m Party. Horace Gheklit Convicted of fa voring the pensioning of lvliel soldiers; of a plot to restore the Southern rebels ro power, and votetl for by the South j in the hope of forein" the payment of ! the Southern war claTius. B. (iKATZ BKOWJf Governor of: Missouri, under whose administration the State expenses have largely In-! creased, and murder, robbery, arson and riot uurebukcd in certain Hnions of the State. His withdrawal from the ticket is demanded by the spring field Republican, because he can carry more whisky and less votes than any other man in the country. Recben K. Fkntox Biography by ' the New York Tinm 'Started In life as an honest clerk ; lias been Intimate ly associated with Fisfc and Gould ; is known to liave extorteil large stuns of money from the Central Railroad ; connected With every dirty. job in New York politics ever simv he ha been in public life; repeatedly charged with taking bribes for signing bills while 'rovernor ; one of the most reckless and anscrapitlous politicians in the j entire Union." ('ari. 8cttCHZ Convicted of having I -windlcd and mined several of his 1 ountryinen in a land transaction at Wavertnwn, Wi-con-in : of keeping rive relatives in the office ofl 'oiled or of Revenne at Chicago at one time : and i if charging $200 to $230 per sjieech : for his advocacy. I.vman Tiii Miit i.i Took $10,000 from the United States Treasury in vi- olatiou of law for no service, or else was bribed as United state- Senator by that amount : secured the aptolnt- ment of his brother as attorney of the Illinois Central Railroad by his ser vices In pushing a bill lor 3.000.000 through Congress in favor of that cor-1 poratiou; secured the removal of a one-armed soldier from the Springfield j Pension Office to make room for a brother-in-law. Dr. Jay lie. Tames R. Doouttle Convicted of itTering to liarter his influence a United States Senator to Thomas ). ' onatty for a slian- of the proceeds ot an illicit cotton speculation. Thomas A. Hkxhkh ks Secured die appointment ot a convicted thief to an important office in the New York i 'ustoiu House; procured the pardon of a noted revenne swindler of Vmeennes. 1 Indiana, from President Johnson, hereby defrauding the Government out of thousands of dollars : kept seven relatives in office while United State-. SaBator; offered to pay $2060 out of; his own pocket to stop a suit against the Indianapolis Water Works Com 'pany, In which some ot bis peculiar tricks as a stockholder and attorney would be developed ; while Commis sioner of the General Land Office, j charged with having by an ngentfcca red a large amount of land for Ins jkt--ona! benefit before it wa- surveyed. - ,'H A BI.KS K . Bcckat.ew The friend and confident of Dr. Blnckbuni. who -out infected clothing into the North from Ouinda and wIk iliipHl a box of clothing to President Lincoln. Ilt was the "Reform" candidate for Governor of Pennsylvania. ArsTiN BtAtH Kx4fOeruor of'i Michigan; defeated for. Ibe United; State; Senate by lion. T. W. 1'crry : turned ills attention to Reform." particularly the Post Office depart-1 nent, on account of his -on being dis- j barged from the service for neglect of liKv, and other improper combat. , Branded at Jackson. Michigan, by General Cresswed, a - a "ifcir and slan derer." John M. Pai..mki;-1!.i;i away from before Atlanta while a (5eeral in the ! army ; intrigued for the Republican j nomination ror Governor of i!ii ;oi. , declaring that Grant would carry the State by 89,0(10 majority, and that lie would stump it for him against Mr. ! Trumbull. John F. FAtfSWoirrii Bei-eival $1,500 trotn the agent of the Pittsburg, Fort Wayne and Chicago railroad to secure the transportation ot IrU regi ment overthat road; was a candidate for Republican Congressional nomina- i tion at Elgin and defeated; asserted le- than a week before the convention met that he was earnestly for the re-election of General Grai t. Jf. 1. BASKS Author of the Red River expedition, ami the great friend of the speculators in cotton. .'- The Earthquake ( nun Ischea?- ino. There is said to be a steady in crease through the eeutnricx in the number of earthquake.. According to ' the liest authorities, in the fourth cen tury there were 12 : in the, fifth, 25; in the sixth, 31 ; in the seventh, 10: in the eighth, 11 ; in the ninth. n the tenth. 17 ; in the eleventh, 51 ; in the twelfth, Us : in the thirteeth, 55 ; in the f'turteeiith, 68; in the fifteenth 41; in the sixteenth. 110: in the sev enteenth, ISO ; in the eighteenth. 830; in -the nineteenth, 925. , How to make good puffs send the publisher fitty cents a line for them. They W 111 He Kept at the Helm. A few days over one year ago, at a State Convention lield at Springfield, ill., Lyman Trumbull was one of the leading spirits, taking an active part in forming the resolutions which were adopted on that occasion, by offering one, drawn up by his own hand, af firming that the Republican party was tnpial to tlie correction of all existing abuses." After the adoption of the resolutions, Trumbull made a speech the closing paragraph of which contained the following truthful pic ture : 'The ship of state, ten years ago. was crippled it had been running on the quicksand and rock, and was falling to pieces. The Republican parly took possession ot her. They have been s;iiling her for the last ten years, not only over the boisterous ways rf polit ical commotion, but through the ter rific tornadoes of civil war. and they have brought the noble old ship upon a peaceful ocean, strengthened mail her part, magnificent hi all her propor tions ; and there she now rides in peace and prosperity ; and there is outside the Democratic party, beating around among the seas, driven for ten year hither and thither by every wind of passion, taking a new departure, and seeking to find tile old ship. If you think that they can man her better, and sail her more safely, put them in possession of her; but it you think men who saved her are the best to steer her safely hereafter, into the haven of peace and prosperity for the American people, then keep them at the helm. Applause. Since Trumbull made the above statement and appeal, he has turned against the party that guided the "no ble old ship upon a peaceful ocean." and to whom lie owe hi present ex alted official position ; but his ingrati tude and betrayal will not influence the party to put any in custody of the ship of state, stive "the men who saved her" Grant and the Republi can party. POLITICAL. The Democratic papers of Tennessee i are still railing at Andrew Johnson ' for hanging Mrs. Surra tt. Speaking of a Greeley and Brown rally" in Minnesota, The St. Paul j l'rr-x says the people of that region don't "enthuse" very extensively over i the Chappaqna Philosoplier. Great i effort- were made to get out a crowd to the meeting, but only 125, by actu al count, entered the hall, 'The Gree ley wave is a dead son water through out the entire district. A large num ber of prominent Democrats have, de clared themselves; for Orailt. In the State ot Georgia there are sev enteen Democratic papers opposing Greeley. There is not a Republican pajier giving mm support. 'The Chicago Ma' boasts that I). ! Grata Brown opened the campaign "with the largest and most euthusia tic stomach ache of the season. No minion ot the depraved administration : ever had anything like it." Some time ago the Democracy wen I abusing Grant neewc he cannot make ' a speech. They have carefully perm- i ed tlie returns from Vermont and Maine.; and now wish that Greeley ! wa- In the same fix. Judge Stallo of Cincinnati, says of; Greeley's logic : "He has a form of syllogistic reasoning entirely his own. I his syllogism consisting of a broad as-, sertinn of the thing to le proved as the j major premise, a ringing imprecation as the minor, an ' a liold charge of ve nality or Idiocy against his .antagonist as the conclusion." Robert Toombs calls the KuKlux 1 "tlie noblest band of patriots seen on the earth since the days of l'onida" ! and his three hundred Spartans died tit i Thermnpyla." 'That is a bloodless j opinion to entertain while asking Re publicans to "shake hands auras the bloody chasm" by voting for Greeley A ;ii:i.l'fU.OKNEK.ni..Auoth- ergirl full of needles! Truly, there j is n,, limit to the marvelous, it is only necessary to start a peculiar kind j of pheimiiiena, when a thou-awl simi- larcas&s spring up all over the bind.! Me til pill' has a girl so full-jpf needles ( that jf a crank were attached she would make a capital sewing machine. The rate of .Speed With which they travel: from one part of her body to another j i- wonderful. At night she felt them ! in iter ciM ci;. aim ai nve o i iock un next morning they were in Iter arm. A bountiful application of liniment brought out three steel point- upon her arm, and with the aid of pincers three neerUos were extracted. The nibbing wa- kept tip with uualmted zeal, ami -ix more needles came to the surface. 'This exhausted the supply, for, despite the most prodigal use of liniment, not another needle would apiiear. A little girl described a snake as a 'tiling that's a tail all up to the head." rmyn Without Might. Dr. Bairil. in liU lecture at the con ference room, gave some interesting facts. There is nothing that strikes a stranger more forcibly, if he visits Sweden, at theseasou of the year when the (lavs are longest, than the absence of night. Dr. Baird had noconceptioti of it before his arrival. He arrived at Stockholm, from Gotteiibiirg, 400 miles distant, in the morning, and in the afternoon went to sec some friends had not taken notes of time and re turned about midnight: it was as light as it is here half an hour before sun down. You could see distinctly. But all was quiet in the streets; it seemed as if the inhabitants were gone away, or were dead. No signs ot life stores closed. 'The sun in June goes down tit Stock holm a little before Ten o'clock. 'There is a great Illumination all night, as tlie sun passes round the earth toward the north pole, and the refraction of its rays is such that you can see to read at midnight. Dr. Baird read a letter in the forest, near Stockholm, at mid night, without artificial light. There is a mountain at the head of the Both nia, where, on the -1st of June the sun does not go down at till. 'Travel ers go there to see it. A steamboat goes up from Stockholm for the pur-)ki-c of earn ing those who are curious to witness tlie phenomenon. It only occurs one night. 'The sun goes down to the horizon, you can see the whole lace of it, and in five minutes it begins to rise. At the North Cape. Int. 72 degrees, the -un does not go down for several weeks. In .bine it would lie about 25 degrees above the horizon at midnight. The way tlie people there Know it Is midnight, they See the sun rise. The change- in these high latitudes, lroin summer to winter, aie so great that we can have no conception of them at all. in the winter time, the sun dis appears and is not seen for weeks. Then it comes and shows its face. Af terwards, it remains for ten, fifteen, or twenty minutes, and then descends, and filially it does not 86' at all. but makes almost a circle around the heavens. Dr Baird was asked how they managed in regard to hired per sons, and what they consider a day. He could not say. but supposed they worked by the hour, and t welve hours would be considered a day's work. Birds and animals take their accus tomed rest at usual hours. The doctor did not know how they learnt the time, but they had, and go to rest whether the sun goes down or not. The hens take to the trees about 7 P. M. and stay there until the sun is well up in the morning; and the people get into this habit of late rising, too. The first morning Dr. Baird awoke in Stockholm he was surprised to ;-ee the sun shining into his room. He looked at his watch, and found it was only three o'clock, the next time he jiwoke. it was five o'clock ; but there were no persons in the street. 'The Swedes in the cities are not very In dustrious, owing, probably, to the climate. A Queer Community. A correspondent has discovered a community numbering at present about seven thousand souls, which has flourished for many centuries, t ough no woman has ever been permitted or known to set foot in the country. Few of the iiihabita u U, he says, have any definite idea and sensations ordinarily associated with tip words mother, sis ter, wite and sweetheart are to them unknown, and. what is equally singu lar, crime is also unknown, or nearly so, while oil every side are lo be seen evidences of temperance, piety and good Order, The home of this eccen tric but happy people is on the cast ermost of the three peninsulas which project from the north coast of the Greek Arelilpelage. It was anciently mllisl Acte, now Monte Sancto, and is about forty miles in length and from two to nine miles across, ft termin ates in Mt. Athoos. a conical mass of limestone rising abruptly to a height of six thousand five hundred teet Between this bold headland and the coast is a licantiful plat.au. clothed throughout with woodland, which is gay with flowers, rich with odors, merry with songs of birds, and can opied by the brightest of all blue skies. The cultivated fields are all diversified with groves of oak and uhesuut, while olive and fig-trees are there indigenous. To this secret para dise the sons, but not the daughters, of Eye are admitted, and such has been the custom as far hack as History reaches, the peninsula lieing religion -ly guarded at all Kiuts against the approach of woman, no matter how saintly she might he. 'The inmates natives ot every part of the Turkish empire where the Greek language is spoken and are consigned to tlie socie ties cither in infancy or in early life by their fanatical parents. The first years are spent in tilling the laud, tending tlie vines, helping in the house work or engaging in some liaudlcraft. For three year,-, the candidate is a pro iBitioner ; then, if lie has proved him self able to keep tlie monastic vows, he receives his first tonsure ami be conies a monk. The discipline is se vere ; ordinary church service seven Iwiirs a day, extraordinary fourteen, and sleep five. One hundred and flftv- nine days in tlie year they have one ; meal only a day, and at this eggs. I cheese, fish, wine aitd oil are tormd j den, The prohibition against women extends to the sex universally. From j time Immemorial no cow. mare, goose, j duck, hen, or female ot any kind has ever been permitted to make acquaint I ance with hill or valley, farmyard or I kitchen, in tlie Mt. Atlios territory. ! In selecting meat for the table the j greatest care is taken to have it of the male variety and a body of soldiers is ' employed by the societies to keep the ! sacred shores from being desecrated ! by the tread of any female whatever. ! Yet. in spite of all these stringent reg I illations, the birds continue to unite, j and feminine Ilea and mosqiiltoe to 1 rear their young, to the everlasting I scandal of all the pious old bachelors ! on the peninsula. 'There are in the j convents some good libraries, coutaiu- ; ing about fifty thousand volumes in 1 all, and manuscripts seven hundred ! years old are by no means uncommon. Altogether these venerable male nuns I have a jolly time of it. Really IIahu Times. One of our i subscribers, living at Dix, Illinois, says that he has heard and read a great deal about hard time- in these days, but avers that they do not com pare with the times ot twenty-five I years ago. He gives the follow ing in cident as proof of his assertion : "In Jeftttrsoil comity, in this State. , Mr. Coly Babcock, in 18-15, w ishing j to purchase two pair of shoes, went to his country store, and found that tlie keeper had the shoes that he de j sired; one pair at SRlcenK the other ' at 75 cents. ThU was considered an exorbitant price, w hich he declined to pay, but would go to St. Loni-, the head market.; This was distant SO miles from bis residence, but heshoul licred Ills rille, put some "eorn dodg er" and silt in his shot-bag. .and start- ! ed on foot, killing bird- for meat, and lying at night by camp tires of niitr i keters, which were plenty at that time. Arriving at the Mississippi at tlltiiolsu town, now Fast St. I.ouis. he found that it would cost him live cent- to cross the river. He was mortified to , find that he would 'hen he obliged to ' break in upon his shoe money, but , succumbed at last, went over to the S city and made his purchase of two ! pair of shoes at a cost of 40 and liU cents. On returning home, he found he had cleared 60 cent-, less the. fer riage, by his trip. ; Walking eighty miles to stive this amount may look absurd, but dollars ! were scarce, markets distant, the laud ! covered with forests, labor without de : maud, and pork worth one dollar and , fifty cents per hundred pounds." Prafrie Ftrrf'. Wuri.n Nor Tell a Lie. Two i boys were in a school-room together when some tirewoiks, contrary to the masters prohibition, exploded. 'The one boy denied it; the other, liounie Chris tie, would neither admit or deny it. and was severely Hogged for his obsti nacy. When the boys got alone again ; Why didn't you deny it:-" asked j the real delinquent. I "Because there were only we two, and one of us must have lied," said Bonnie. "i'iieti why not say that I did it!-" "Because you said yon didn't, and I i would share the lie." I Thcboy's heart melted: Bonnie's moral gallantry subdued him. When school resumed, the young i rogue inarched up to the master sdesk ami said : "Please, sir. I can't bear to be a liar ; I let oil the squibs," and burst into j tears. j The master's eye glistened on the self-accuser, and the unmerited pun- Ishinelit lie had indicted on bis school j mate smote his conscience. Before j the whole school, hand in hand with the culprit, as if they two were paired I into the confession, the master walked down to where young Christie sat, and said aloud, with some emotion : "Bonnie, Bonnie, lad. he and I beg your pardon We are both to blame.'" I ' The school was hushed and still, a- older schools are apt to be when some thing true and noble is being done so tili they might have heard Bonnie's big-boy tears drop proudly on his book, as he sat enjoying the moral tri umph which subdued himself as well as all the rest, and then for want of something else to say. he gently cried, "Master forever.'" The glorious shout of the scholars filled the old man's eyes with some thing behind his spectacles, which made him wipe them before he resinn ed the chair. 'They are again iigitating the dis tillation of spirits from the garbage of cities. Alcohol, it is well known, can be distilled from anything that fer ments, no matter whether the ferment ing matter be a loaf of bread ora reek ing garbage vessel. In this new pro cess the garbage is gathered from the houses of citizens, dumped into water tight vats, boiled far several hours, the grease is carefully skimmed oil' for soap making purposes, and the pulpy mass fermented and distilled. 'The philosophical and chemical mind may know that whisky distilled from gar bage is as pure and cleanly as that winch comes from corn but for a steady beverage the ordinary drunk ard will doubtless prefer sound Bour bon or Old Rye. A'. Y. Sm, PIANOS ORGAN.' BILLET, DAVIS & CO.'s CELEBRATED PtAHOS Tuke iIk- Utahm! Rtuik. H UXET, UAVI.N A PJAHOS bnvebeen se;,vi,. t tin- Kxiviulve Committee of the VVorl I s Ju'iliw a- '.lie i Boot PitiiMM, Nn other I'limo will lie usCiL ji'fiiiz; 33exi.c2.ely The (twtatcsi living I'lanist, who wan hi Uoston, atteiulliiff the Jubilee, usj "The I ale;. On vis A I'o.'n I'hno j ee Is, in every jmrHciilar, nil oltui I'lun.is ' Caff an 1 examine and nee for yotirselven, I or tend for Price List an I i 'in ii ars, W. K, UAlxihH, sole A rent, at sum,- A Rons An tiallery, Vi First strew, Portland, REV. J. W. MOV t'HLVIIJIMJ IX i iter of tii.' Met hi i !W Clctreh, Sua Francisco, says : ln inyophitoii,iii oiitv v. no.-. A I'o.'s OrH'atls have cipial I for richness mid fwivtneN! ot : one, with I great power. I aui fluuiUar wiih nil the most prominent Orans in tlie riinrket, ! huve owned tour ctlitotvnl kin, is. mi I an hesltnilnnlj say I prefer those of Ueortte ! Wen Is to nil) ol le i'." I Send tin' Price List an 1 Circulars for the i llncsi i irirtin in ' he wnt'id. W. K. B.VIKJKI5, sole A .rent, at Snow ,V U us' Art Uallerv, Kirs; nrreet, Port tan d,'tr. AlllllSl 'J.t- !, llll i s;-: is iNii MAt iiiNi: V ttUi VKTOIIY ! Fob tiu: low Wilson (luderfeed Sewing .afliine ! TT WII.I. nxUtillT THE HAS 1 friends of the x i: v.' Mil I To know t Inc. in tlie stubborn content for j su)X!rlorlty in sampleHof w ork,ui t livareat Northern Uliio Fulr, their favorite hn I etiri'leil off the Ui'tf xivai premiums tlie i Modal for l est -w upeelmeiisi luaebine I work, and tuu lilploum for hjjst einhrohl, cry. AstliCKi',n'i'i.iiiii'iini.ii wlll Mies,' -twriMIUNHM, it Will JV Seeu lha! the Wil : son s vlotory is com)iie',e, We knew this i would lie s(, : it could me I Ilini-u-l-., There is no tnlkina down tliefitel tluil tlie New Wilson is the hest ratuih Sewina Machine now manufactured cursihlt) of dohi the best workonunj kind of fjooils, under all (Ireiimstiiiices, This award of tlie highest premium should and will silence the tulk ot that law elns of sew-bitf muelilue men w in liave made ibis nmehinetlieo'.iloe of tlielr snuclal enmity. slniph liciansv U l mod. prate priced iimeliineinip mi lersells their exnensiveoni'sj. j I." and ;( the Premimii N'ev Wilson Newtim Maelilne, the best in tlie world, now on exhibition at Snow Jl HoosAn i Ciiilery, 78 Kiist dtruot, Portland, Oit'iron. iimi ii'iiii'inncr oiuiin imv ;!ii- i icinimn iiiiuliliie for f 'lO. 6r AirentN waute I. MIXK1I A PKAUS41N. July hi, '72-48 BLACK SMITI I ING ! -AM) General Repair Shop. rpi!H t'XDKltSKi.NKfl ItAVlMI UK L turned to Allianv. and taken his old simp on comer ot Kilownrth and Second streets, announces !ii readiness to attend toall kindsof DLACKSMITinXH. Mll.l. A MACHINE FOJtG'.Nt;, KTC. Also, has on himd and for sale, tllu COQCILLARD WAGON, Straycr Forcc-leed GRAIN DRILL. STAR MOLIKE, and other PLOWS WOOD'S RE. PER & MOWER, which in. . iii sen on the most reasonable terms. HORSE SHOEING- -All vonnd,$2: Resetting, $1. li: !WE A (AM, All work entrustod to me will receive prompt atlentioii, and be executed in tin: hest iiussiiiic imihner, with (food material, A share of pnhlip patroimxi taoJicUod. 5"Shopon comer Ellsworth and second streets, upposite Pierce's Hurry. tOvl V. Woill). Albuii) Cnllcirliife liixtltuU, AMlWY, OltlCUON. fiurrs ixsTiTiTtox wn.i, itKOl'KN on 1 Monday, Soolcmlicr 1, 1871, wlthaeornH of teachers capable and earnest. Instrur tion will be tliorouKh and practical, anil tlie sj -stem of order unsurpassed. For pur tlenlars address It. K. WAItKKN, A. M Pre.sldfint ; Or, Key. K It. UKAHV, I). t., AitNUiy.