case, hemlock, old South church, Boston, built, 1609,die.)p rs*I AliTi*• ^Mu 311,eve ry old byit. Eyonths;eve ry it mat-KKKLYited la copy, i tbreo ni^t belisenn-epaid, ovs. A at tbn a newWe verjr seriously doubt the pro-fmety of commemorating the anniversaries of events in the late civil war. We know that men like Rob* ertToombs in the South, give the North ample warrant ior keeping alive those memories. But we can, nevertheless, afford to bo Christians an I patriots. The late amnesty debate gave us, of the North, amplewarrant for congratulating ourselves,t hat while the South treated our prisoners of war like dog.?, wo treated theirs as became a great nation Jjwith claims to civilization and humanity. Lotus keep, and continue our advantage.V- *SPOOKS.JO.,•l,ul* IArwantrif ' -1 »■Card Prom .liiinlt;*8 Hook 1). IK.*7lt;;TEA HIM* TO lUKUKS Tllfc HASE IMjEHEIAN RAI'-if youel ofI' 9mit-diipvery i ulu-!IUjE,Who Pronounced the Matoriali zations at Pence’s Pande-niouium a Mere Fabrication.ILK DECLARES THEM A SET OF 1M FOSTERS WHO CAME HERL TOlandfish-craticworseMake Money as Mediums end NotSpi-nd it as Sweaters.dined n col-snra-Souie Ill» Roaring nntl Red Hot IUornairo,The following note was receivid at this office yesterday, but, too late for publication in the Gazette of that clay. It explains itself:ad her :y in Newhigh,ng. It let itTerre Haute, Feb. 2nd, 1870.Editors Gazette:You will oblige the Pences hall clique by publishing the inclosed manuscript in answer to the article innot only of this community but the hundreds of trusting but dreaded souls that might have been drawn into this vorter at Pences Hall from the several States that the immortal eleven so nobly and ably represent.Hlngirby thethat n“P.”drous As t“P.” made The w have s manyinclucplacewhictthe it:stitue mask i other'of the As 1 mask ouslytempi the s can h tu res made but t! is bar In lt;the nwith bo bo by thIf thisequc pen v whos feedwag ] bis cl profe likewThat your readers may have sonro idea of the noble band of public benefactors, wo will give in brief what webave learuod of them, or at least a few of them who seom to be the most inspired and highly gifted among them.J. David S. Caldwalder, the representative of the State of Delaware, is of small statute, effeminate in appearance, with long hair hanging down his back like a female, with sufficient assurance in his manner to make up for the lack of the physicue, and with asuitable change iq apparrel, would readily be taken lor a female. Professes to bo a medium and.lecturer,expected something ol the Pence Hall crowd, did not seem to bo pleased with hU reception, anti want of appreciation seemed to displease and irritate him, and he shook the dust off his feetagainst this place, particularly Pence’shall.2. Mrs. II. Morse, State lecturer for Iowa, (she says,)uni of course repre sonts that State; is a woman ot rotunda proportions, ruddy face, features well marked, with oxpressive countenance marking individuality largely, as much as to say when I f.have a husband, we are not entirely absorbed in one. Rathor vivicious inclined to loquacity, and at times when under influence difficult to keep still. I should say not over fifty years old. She is al-sa lecturer and as many of that class are exacting, wishing cepacial favors, and of course are not happy if not received. She came in that attitude. Soon after her arrival she was made happy by sight of her daughter as she said in a materialized spirit form that daughter being deformed in life by what is termed hump shoulder was a marked case in which there could be little mistake, and for the first day this remarkable woman was in ostatic joy from having seen and caressed her daughter, but oh! the mulatility of human affairs, the stubborn relations of material lookingiCCVMhouse bills caused a charge to come over the spirit of the spirit of Mrs. II\s dreaines, and she suddenly discovered that tho hump was on the other shoul-dor of her Spirit daughter, and the whole thing was fraud.Anthe h ing U betwlt; stars’ ing li are v obser gin alwrif.K[Will tho reader just pass bia eye over paragraph 2 again, and tell us what he thinks about it? Has he words in which to fitly characterize the conduct of a mother who sheds crocodile tears over the materialized form of “what is termed a humped shouldered dangh-fai* «nrl vhon if. mm discovered that