THE ISACIFSJ!ID., 0° I coupon!' midnight drceri,•whilo I Rendered, L nook And 1 1 1117 o .„ the Tar of the • RebOlften, things that werejteretii--- Whil44 sit ebiorbed In'tfdnktt:--breedy cock kh slow* , flrinlclng, „ 0 ,1,,,gi epen , kllaki,it, one-eyed. figure at Joy deer— • c ti e crone -eyed, rdikog, Woking' figura at my ei4auber doo-f; s w ain Mere, and nothing More. • .. • . Ab ! I noror skill tarp! it, bow in glancing -sonLlPet St, , And over shall regre t OUT - le - Argot !award . that doarl ' 'bur I as* a munidrpus figura, Oa a g i an t, on l y bigger , And thgn itoo d c_ nigger leardn o f ap agabotrmy door— „, • Stood a powerful big Mink. nigger, with his back againstm door-, „ Leaning thorn, and notbirif more. S'lMigidin s t and egg s w ere the firei-p ere Jryleiss sp ing ying, where my h ,• I beheld the icsket tylag, near the.heatth upon She Boat Theif with most detesSainao7 , wier, Straight I burled RA OM Own ao Aulik r yas eakhgAiggic, that mused I , issal t ind stsdielt tI th nt does— the gger ' head completely, and fell harmless on the floor— . Struck him heel, and nothing more. into tlfo fire-phs , So loolcing, wh i m, my h am and eggs ware ii9ohl ; 3o r'tirkilig, Oink/Op.-Al ncirlottal ever shook or quaked herons.— I then beard ibis ugly signer mutter but these worde-n•liome dinner 1"' 'Teas the only word timid spoken, 'twits thepnly words, I'm sure-- When I picked, up pick an answered, "I shall feed you nevermore." This I said, end nothing wore. r , non Ijle lOpudenen be,, ,, lnning,- and file ,gutne ,shooed in grinning, With a ;mile by no means winning, did he view me from the door, Anti cooly said, "Your treat, ruin—lll O'er go In the Ante, man, 'IA I get some to eat, men, ne'or leave your deur; er quite your chamber, though you beat trio till 1 roar. hot or leave you—nerernitiro " I ien r tntl'arJ thu fi.c roosehingiarbAra-my coffee Wel a parching. stalked tbo saucy nigger boldly: stalked acremo tho floor ; sir—then I know Bur I n:nde n nOletian . row. sii,he should gn bank to ths.door Then I Ifitked him from my hhoniber, and lie wiii s tkpOk to the door, osnesl against it—nothing more. Then this Blackbird, for awhile:lir, really did COMM me to .mi le, stir, Though a iarenous, rabid, hungry look his this v lage bore; "Though," sold 1, "thou art a Freedman; thou haat gone an much to wed, man, I hat gite a little feed, loan, no you Poem to be nu poor. horklotl yoo will work for me a half an hour or more' (1.1 , ,di t l ii algger, "Nevermore?" Plneh I marveled this ungainly nigger rhould ten:re ro•plainly, 'f., do littlejoh, 'twolihl take half an hour or 11 ore. .'r We ennin,t help agreeing., that no to ing ha men being, hold I•Yrive , to labor, geeing that he was no .'apted poor earn a dinner he .rtir cooking - I my ilmtr - 1 liaagli hr ale aim, .'nevermore I r" ee're're.l In musing, I;lllltlre'rgie.tall I's ti::, n 4 I 11..4) hez . nn ithusiug this 1.4 g nigger .1 ' k:,01 T, oyou must be crazy to be so 1 . 111 , 1'.1 I 11) , :•. awful lazy ns to whnt to work nu 14nre you ere; duck for wagaq - tell me, 1 im plore ." • tbe nagger, nNovermore • "N+tgejr,' • raid I. 'horrid demon 21 nrP or troonto.o— Think again licore you 1111.111 W Odd one .ice- Win, I implore e )ou yot nn suttee or reeling--'lo on mean to live by Plialing. Cr by w. k• and law dealing---101l me, tell me, I implore; 0e your hunor, as u nigger, will you labor, ne before! " foottt,tho nlggei--.'Neveritiort !" 1414 " 1 . 1 c 1 air the stillness bruk,u liy reply so Oat -Iyepulteit, "Dontitle's," sold 1, "this big nigger would oat enough fot four, euna specious rice plettation, he „ trpttld out-cat all creation— ' evar made a calculathm how• much cash It oust,„ I'm sup, I or Uja . t6sfiter hart the rituals in 4he good ald ilaya of yore," Noe bell heel yell “Nevermore!" "Niliapw,' l,3 ' 1 4 "tti l ivig °Cern, quit my room, the Or if yq g o u say you'lT work, I'll bring your sap- Illor to tile doot Tull we truly,: I robjure you, for the last time I Implorer" • Quoth ttru idggor—"Novetmore!" • „ Eo tbit word oikfign of priding. n'gger man!" erte,il thjqnrting— 'Clet thee beck to where thou r finest from—let me sea your face no mere; ruin thh army--go W Texas—never come back here Co Vet itc'er return again to vex us—never lot us ace yen more; Take your gale from off ainyoe4, and take yddi carcaistfrom my diair"" tluoth the nigger—"Neverinere ! " ee r End the nigger still is stumling in my entry on tho lauding, /pretty butly picture, with his back against my door • And 64 pypt aro stet spying at t ham as it is frying, And my pokor still is 13414 near rhmsd upon the Door, But•my viotuale to the .0y .trap" of that nigger by' my door, stain bo lifted—. Nevermore!" =-7 i ho treat Sanitary Fair lately' hold in Chimiii Was the most stupendous swin dle 'S , et'clinoeived. Less than three thous and‘.deihiri were left for soldiers after the 16 :151gbitts hid stolen their fill, and partici' are quilt - 411Ni over this. The csboMtion 1J444:1!;',:91,‘ Tribune and ioitrata, °soh ra ce ivi4 About fire thousand dollars• for their titthsente I Oil wall the contributions kit . 4 4 14 1 }r Aliifitirtstoleu from them by these lave. missisow . Plow •up ain't* I/an of hell. erUtis o phiow it and raNY ii Atli finlAgolit Miptlet nplit im all,the,d;pths of sterna{ dassaaltenteantidt be bound' a big iter "let trim. robbery amp hentilit Wreaker. ,fat*ng on the MIA tathilf sthelr -... ... -,....6-ThaTios :—.'A ., Ogle ; . lianofthli edtr, who took oodattion oil "sit Sabina to diente4..aorao older to ,keep it aiirair.,Anaitakpaita tail to: hie good wife toe , labliiing ow, the Sabbath.. 1.00 troll.f Was,.that no gOod Shriation ought to ' pd IPA vitit MI weilit*titat. day, as be al bast . kbri vis i a, kiroti4 his 'is sr team' workinis.-0-- , 7 .71 1 f : • o oarussiondents In turripe t's littllied, 'more rolin.blib lie tbepheyer mica ht utolikitiftem - - -0- . . . he 4 -- tim e li, r ru m qT4i Pr .- a %I 4 Vol. 10% CorniePtwasoce of the OJI.IIOI7IIIATIC W.A.zczatArs LETTERS FROM THE WEST, Couscu Dr.arre, lowa. • October 28d, 113415., Dr Art:Waienuaa proposed in my first letter to conclude my story of Council Bluffs in letter No. 2. 1 doff has ten to make good that proposition. One of the most remarkable features in. the history of this city, is the finit, that, from • its earliest settlement until 'the' present time, the greater bulk of the bUsiness, commkr dal and meehenical, has been, and still is conducted and enceessfully carkied on by young men.. And *e And by looking over the business list of the city, young, active and energetic men engaged in almost every vocation, and this fact alone speaks volumes for the future proetvrity of our City of the Bluffs." lac •havo no i'4lc'a or 'droned hero; everybody are busy, and every body no matter what Weir calling, or nituation may be, 'are perfectly satisfied with and contented with that situation. You may travel from one corner of the oily to the other, from centre to suburbs, and question every—man, and you will not hoar a dispar eging,word !Token of the pada ; but on the other hand you will hear the universal . opinion of every one that Council - Tuffs is going to ben great inland city," and 1) is opinion fastens itself upon the mind of the observer nein coining fact, when all e surrodevling and present circumstances are taken into consideration. The country for many Milee around is well adapted for agricultural purposes.— The farming lands in many places In this manly equal the best in the Slate, having an abundance of timber and run ning water,. and if the geological surveys prove as correct in this as they hate in ad joining counties, coal of a stipeilior quality will yet be found in abundance- AL pres ent wood is lbe only fuel made use of, and thtpeople seem so well satisfied with Its use that they have never made en effort for any other fuel, but this does not lesson the fact that immense coal beds may be found un derneath the sand and lituestede strtitas of those neighboring bluffs. Our markets, at presant;are ktgiter than usual for this season. Wheat (spring) $l, 15 to $1,20; corn 73 430 cents ; oats, 65 toil) cents ; potatoes, 40 cents ; sweet po- Catoes, s`2,i)o; green 'apples 53,00 per -bushel; flour from $5 to $6,75 per sack of 100 pounds; butter, 50 cents; lard, 23 *lts per potted ; eggs, 21 emits per doi• zen ; white beaus, $2 to $2,25 per bushel ; wood, $0 to $7 per cord ; hay s'l per ton ; and groceries, illy goods and clothing at about the same prices as in Bellefonte.— !tents are high—arty ordinary buildings on Broadli.ny for busit!,esit purposes, will rent for 111 to $23 per month, according o size otuflocation; atid dwelling houses, one sto ry: with three mins, will rent for $8 to $l5, per month, and very tis‘rce at that. Still building lots are plenty, and offering very low; and buildings cou r be bonglit at reason: able prices, and upon ,reasonable To make a long Atory short, Mite candid ly, that I do not know of any place in lowa that offers better inducements to the pur °Meet; thaii Cotidell motley jtidi ciously invekle4 here'in town ire:pert, 101 yield fourfold iii four yetiii=there 1. no dtr- NUM on that. 'l 4 lie same can be eaidr of farm timber—good pkrie and timber lo4sds can be purchased in rottowattomie county for $6 to $l2 per acre, and well Improved farms may be had for $l6 to $BO per acre, according to looation. For good rolling prairie rich soil, plenty of ti bee and run ning water—Pottowattomie remnty bolds rank with the beet 111 EP be. 11"foines valley or Missouri SlopMf. eo Much then, for the county, now for the people. We have all classes of society here—goad, bad and in different. In this respect we gnu suit the mos, fastidious and the most reckless. -nigaer still We have nn aristocracy that can ape---the alms of the Broadway fashionablos of lqw York, and We Have a democracy; t'll'at in point of intelligence mid reSuenient, plays second to pont in America. We have a re ligious and moral class that will compare W favorably With an - eastern orthodox coin &until,' and 5. 14 hare a "free and easy, Chide" that can o 15 , be docile(' in their recklessness and d extravagance by the ffen hens qf Oil city or Boston, dor chdrches are well attended, our p'estors p'reach the gospel, anlottr sabbuths are respected by al clasbesof the immunity. Our city .b ols are well attended and efficiently conducted. So in educational interests we lank but little, all'if thtit little time will soon supply. • We have a lodge of 250 Good Tednpi are, Maeonie lodge of 70 memberaid I?dge.e.f I. 0. s:f Cr. F. of 80,mainber* • :Cleietta' s n TuVortn Impiety: We I faalt bargee B`, 'can make their mile In 2 10, ~ and 2 20, and bongos races are doll, engine:ewes. We have mulls, arelportit from $5OO to I,lw porLatian,glom $l5O to s§oo joifyik:: , lfsare ems too on the clog. Wilis P i'e's pork pasittng _establishment In • the ski Na l Ai:lighters rover 80,000 head' ier swum: dteunoll Bltilfs le a 'fruit cfrf fir ain't:Ni r o, ' a nk A that yonitimin ' Who dishes selelb:- Beh himlelf favorably and fretitabli citVhare find every facility for , e n d. .Acurrect life, a business twot, a nd en ener getic effort will . carry him safely And pli,e anilyt.hrough to the ever tranquil harbors erf—anci4toftinit happiness. , But I promised-to touch • the Morin question" in thie letter: I shall now a SO. • nos saikAtim age! toot • titc bexcila NOWDZII TWO BELLEFONTE, 021., FRIDAY, iITOVEMBER it, 186. lire blutil to a beautiful groin near Park's grill to title*a Mormon oonfortmoo, in whiehJoefluiitti, jr., the son 14 Joe Smith• the hiornion martyr of Nauvoo, Illinois officiated ad the grand master of ceremon ies. I found on my arrival, about fifty oovered 'waggons in .which, and .under which as many, Nented out for a few days or more!' Upon the coven,of one was idieribed (I• suppose by some inspired pen) in large and humortiuslY shaped letters of charcoal the words, "Young Joseph, the Sheither'd of Israel.' t, of course, was all curiosity to see this Acne. sleep teen—well, lily curiosity was soon Satisfied, for soon.upon the 'stand apf peered a plain, pleasant countenanced, dark featured, black. whiskered, brown 'eyed individual of five feet ten inches in height, who addressed the'people from the Maud for one hour, in plain language, with tt:(Cti common sense,, ltik!nl es his text, "Christ's sermon ( 5 ,i; the Mount." "Young Joseph"lid nobly, and if all his doctrines correspond with his then teaeLing, I eau see no difference between a Mormon con ference and a Methodist camp meeting— save that the former imp Fetter order, make less tioh3c,'Ker4 the gospel As they find it recorded, believe in prophecy and immerse their converts. It is a simple ac of justice to say of Joe Smith's branch of the Mormon church, that -they do not be. lieve i,n nor practice polygamy. In another - RT. the gsvuud f C.:LA as---eld—wrinkle faced, silver-haired Antiquarian, who claimed to be a resurrectionist, and upon whose forehead was written with Indian ink in roman letters, "Photo Christ." What that exactly means, Ido not know. Suf fice it to say, fib *as prophecying - great lhiH s ; i'esicrebting folks, and -casting out ilea; generally, and hearing him until I was sick of the twaddle, I lett, as did the Jews, vowing, If he was the exact image of Christ, I, for one, did not care to see the Original. More anon. oIIAWKEYE." WHO SHALL BE &WITTED TO DON- GRESS The .Constitution of the United States settles this question clearly enough—and the President of the United States has also setteled it, in his own mind—though not a power to act officially or effectively upon it. The supreme law of the land requires Con gress to receive inemtters constitutionally elected, whi!c 0. 1 6 President+as Jeclareti- 7 - ilde his iffienin words to Gov. Perry; of Smith C.troliiia, that— y t, "It is the intie - rative duty of thaolerlr. to call the roll of the members of the Southern- States whose credentials have been exhib ited to him and shown lb it they are reg ularly elected lfe hos rid mot eright, tie der this act, to exclude the Members elec ted from South Carolina than he has to ex clude those front Massachusetts, The Fed eral authorities thi - ie maintained If it the Union carer was disolred, and' that tlie Southern States have always been and still ire members of that. Union. The Coustittition Cf the United Slates Piescrilies an ilkih for airuiars of Congress to ' P take, and they cannot be re quired to take any other oath constitution by. There may have been some show of propriety for. exacting this oath [the oath of 1862] when it was enacted, amidst the the war between the Southern States and the United States; but there can be none now, unless it be for the patron; of milli& fag the Southeolo4le from all office with in theft. FreCtirMlajes, and still heading then) Sates in military subjection. know that { hid not the policy oj? the President, and I cannot relieve that it will be the avowed polio" oC the Federal Congress. If the Southern members are present when the" roll is called by States, they will take a part in the organization of the House, ante may vote against the oath being tend.. to the memberp when they are sworn." This would seem to be clear enough as to the ireeldenl's idbas - tnid the eMndiitution obligation. All, tb:orefore, who are con tent with the policy of the President or with the supreme law of the lent), and all who desire to see the Union restored, will tote againit the r.nlicals, forth° Union, and iti . stain the President, The Tribune, which undertakes to speak for Congress, deolaresthnt=_ , “Those quasitoetobeis of Congrose who cannot or will not take the oath of loyalty cannot vote for Speaker, he may feel per fectly easy on that point. It is settled.— "As to those alleged members from re. tiocistru L oted Mutes flio can take the oath, the case •is not so clear; ytit de hold it morally certain that they will ke allow ed to vote until the House, fully apVetituted shall have passed on the ir chums. 41,/d de cided that the bodies claiming to be koyal Legislatures of choir iitspeotive Btetea have been reeogaisetlAs each by (' c ongress." ,This, thug, I,s, dcoyed- 7 neither the Men who can and wil; take the oath, nor those who , ctannot, are to be admitted WI members! To oat end, then, has the President made his pledges and administered his pardon s? Why King Henry, during the civil' wars which threatened his kingdom, And 'cams near overthrowing it at Yorkshire ands .lAssolusitirei, Nam si.tleir m d times more ilbifuti t ,ll4 lll , tit* Is. Ha ,perddtae theß,,Jilt ra. tfleit ' and great and, at; offence lierlmporteutt point. to the pimple in rebelliou. When peace wa made, so far from exulting vengeance, pun ishment and,upwrepresektaion, he set to Rork deliberately to make Mends of those who hathtakett up arms agelkstkim seeding fur-theta to meet him in Londen. instituting mtmmiislonst to correct abuses, and proving himself a father of hie people. The Pres ident of the United .Btatea I. disposed to cultivate the same spirit uf fraternal kind, nose ;AM, as we see, he Is thwarted by the•fanatios au& Tadictals, who seek both to ritteithil ruin the litia.—Expreer. "SW= anima AND WiLD74DAXA,UNION." Where the Money Came from to Elect Mr. Lincoln—Contractors Levied Upon For His Eleetloneerihg Fund-Amqut of Contribution "to Correspond with the Patronage Received.". The Cinoinnitti Gazatte publi#hes the full testimony in Mb mule of Cole J. C.' Crane, an inspeater of the Quartermaster's Depart ment, wliowas tried by oourt martial, in July last, upon numerous charges of die honesty in office. The fifth charge watt att' follows : Conduct unbecoming ad Officer and gentleman. ,Speci‘cation.—"ln this : that Col. John C. Crane, Inspector, &rt., having beenduly assigned, &0., did write, cause to be writ ten, issued and sent, and caused, to. be is-, sued and sent, to Wm; Semple, A. B. Sem ple, and others, whose names are unknown, the said Wm Semple and others being engaged in furnishing supplies for the list of said military railroads, a circular and letter a port ion of which circular and letter is in the letter and figures; and of the tenor following: "Te xec•dre the election in every Stale bcyon4 the pdssibll4 of a doubt, not only dbes it require the patriotic effort; of every man, but it also requires money for campaigning purposes. It in ex arid Tlintyou thaffhilie patronage of the government will willingly lend your means to the attainment of the ebjeCt "t an thithorised to say, gentlemen, to those who respondoheerf that the patronage heretofore extended to them, shall; without doubt, be ocintinuett. hi the transmitting or your subscription it is impeded that the amount will corres pond *hit the patronage you have reeeiv. o,~This ohiiie was spshijnod dyed the trial Vdireet eiidenoe of parties ,yrlfo• had eon tributed to the Idneolti fUnd raised by Col. Crane- • Brie witness, Archibald P. Cochrane, tec tified that, CoL Crane purchased supplies from (heir firm about the let of November. 1864, and at °thee times before, whiob were ftirnished afterward; that Col. Crane silicited money From the firm to pay elec tion expenses. Witness prndiiced a cired lar from Col. Crane, asking for contribu tions, the genuineness of which the accused admitted. Cochrane further testified that the firm gave $l,OOO in response to this Question by Judge Advocate—Please state tlip eir:eurnstanoes of the payment. Answer—l had conic ter tho militirj rail road tlefariineri froM home, for the purpose of Settling our accolints,-nad I stepped into Col. Crone's dram ; he told me he was just on eve of sending 'a circular to us : ho than picked up the circular, signed, addressed. and handed it to me f.r perusal ; at. 4 the time he banded it to me he said ho had tCo sanction of the Secretary of viar ti collect this fund, I told higi I would consider upon the matter the next day I met nt hie office, and responded to that amount, I responded under the full conviction that it was a prop. er Object, and I did it cheerfully ; 'Colonel Crane had no Ilesitanoy in handing me the circular; it was done publicly ; there werb several parties in the'room at the time.- - (Witness further testified that be'•had, at the time, vouchers in his possession to the amount of thirty — four thousand dollars, for which he expected to get the money; at that he received payment in full for all the vouchers in a cheek op oertidoates of indebtedness. less the amount the firm contributed.) be Ma cross-examination ltJr. Cochrifie said : ' I Wroth regard to the one thousand ddllarl a ;obeained f election PUrposes, witness did , not, tinow t was done with it; saw Crane Vet it into' n envelope and heard him say it was fur Mr. Lincoln. -- _ J. M.l!ltteb, Superintendant of military railroads, being duly sworn, testified 'bat ha "contributed one hundred dollars td the election fund." After the trial had prefeteded far enough to indicate the conviction of Col. Crane and to endanger the divulgence of some War Department secrets, it was postponed by ordei th . e georetary of War. A BRACE or BEAUTIRE.—SOOretary_ C gni, in his slavering eulogjim' . ef hie Cab., .4",,A. coileagues— past and•preseet—says of Ex deciretitry Cameron, that he is ;:in all things honest, earnest, zealous, patriotio." Think of that, people of Pennsylvania— Cameron' liglel and patriotic! Atter this yhiloeophcra i.nhy confidently 10,4 for blood in turnips. Of the Illustrous Edwin—the successor ct the paired of fiooto i Lale and red herring speculators—Seward • ow, "I_ have never known him to expres s or even betray a tho f ught in regard to our Apuntry which was not diviiie,m, Mr. Idarasd.-must really be dealing. Id - sairoalra. Mewls have been thinking of that(' "d ivinity which shapes our eLds, ffrou'gh-beW Own as wwwilt t ') through the terrible per,ened hi*l di Military (mumbler - ins, :Old Col.. tole, d filft dungeons I that dilinjt * ioVinfligary, Staiche AO des. talsoill4-Isieking metoftinl / tiudbm. eano , wore; "honest." and "fit+lici . :, an h . than. ton ..divine!" ri is top. M'uoh foil the feeille risibles of tiis eery' iia"vest of the grate. —The following error In pimoLpation goo& illustration of the use of de oomms. At a banquet this tout was given: . - "lironptn—without her, man is a braid. The reporter hatkit printed. "Woman--without hec wan.'—ir a brute.' errma A WARD "STRIKES ILE SALT BRIM / 3 04 111 0. --- *IC, My dearest Beery Yane.—Elere,),46 cum, as slick as Grease, our of the. "slings and arrears of contra& forohune," as the Poit Gm Ef.ilybody enquires to Daldinsrille, about'Artemus Ward, that weed to be some in the Show Disnes, say to them with a tear in thy I, Artemis (that's the clpqla spell of my name,) lb. great s plin'Onn, in ded”-that is, tq ignoble persoots. Tell tgrq 4t icisu. is more Artemue, but "a bodily corporated ; Elk tell 'em Betsy Jane Waid is no more:the wife of the coptSin of the Bahlinsvillernilisliy, buts Indy. Betsy Jane I"re struck Ile I I'pn as rich tilr Creases. Ilfy lie will spirt up in e &resin 2 bundred feet hi, andse thick as the snafu mast of the irunsides. O Betsy what a .site of "mean work I've dun in my peat career ! To think that I used to handle the Bo Constrictor, and other reptile anaiks, in my shim and all for no nee. 1 goc ,pool• and poor . cr, while the snaika and tigcss got fat ; 1111 a at last the •pesky rebs confiscated my show, and' "011ielly's" occupation was gone. This is a kohl world. lietsy—perticularly where there is no ile. When I got p o or sails:loW I was lu good natured like father Abraham, and let the boys into my shoe without payin) even my monkey made mouths at me, and I war a wax figger myself —that is I was patients oila thonuthent. But licob4A "saw ro.e. Now it is aleatoric', aed some I born grate, some win gratenesa by a intok of cards era horse race, and the rest git big by axideni, Now I didn't •win'it, or git it thurat MILO me, bat I bbd i 4 del df the shins of Salt Air et, with go - tart:n(lot orgur. Bonin is of two kinds—borin for the cor poration (that is for the money) and after wards for the He. Val, you see I bored myself out A Ward into a grate Company, called the Oleaginus &dine Carboniferous hatUoilion MikAufacturipc, Company." I tell you privitely, that napie took splendid. We—that's nie anci .i.rtemus & Mr. Wani— SPitied ELL:: ods add from Afondy morn till 811114 dawn we bookt the shares. Our company was organised to wit--it had 17 millions G f Omaha at 3 Ole a share & 1 sent. reserved for working oapitaL We garrantied every thing. We tole the nods. boys and other conterbans that we had, the "royalty" -and ',lee simple" , of the ile on Salt River. We 430 vi e Aas opposed td arietookracy and big shear.. We tile 'em the shears was 'limited"— so they was to our treasury. Oar shears went up to 17 dollars and 141 (swipe in 4 , We sold oti. a;r:d another, and this ryas the way we went on, till the vale of Salt Itiver was bored like a pepper Belay Jane Eve guy you the motlius op crawly of striking ile• Tho man not got rich on wet 8 Inters guy him, an inscribed, pstriotickally on his Buggy, Nine Tillers Made me a man," was a fool along aide the Wards, lin cumin to Baldineville loon to close up thine undistinguished oareer, and open in Boating a establishment wurthy otl Betsy Jane. Tell Zeke Make a Conch 4 and on the Rader a 0 - rger as a main meet of a ship. I intend to make the ood fish I-lulu's pale there ineileolocal fires, as the postle says. The Artemuti corporation sends the a oleagenius kiss. No more at present. From thy dearest luy. 4nyzxus Governor Ilshow - ; of Tennovsee, in a re cent lett4 to t, Knoxville draw, expreses the opinbin tha idleness, starvation and disease will remor'e from the sphere or mortal existanoe,:)o3 majorityif , tlie ne groes of this gcnrktion, ttiat. the whole rsee, in this oot4tyll gradually melt away awl befdihe not, like the Indiana. • , This has boon the onion of till sensible men who looked at the •iuestion from a conservative standpoint for the last two or three years, and our only marvel is that Parson Brownlow, who has been so sadly afiliefrd with "nigger on the brain,"thould have got his eyes open at last. ThAlt the poor tiegtoerwill be the greatest sufferers tl2 the long ton, from forced emancipation. is just as Certain as that nigtftfollows day. Incoptible of taking oars of themselves, their rac'e'is destined to dwindle and'per ish befoltAlNe . superior civilisation, ,utelli genes and e A tiergy of the white man. This 'has beta the biatcri:ocman if all ages if the world, aild it troXiCely possible Fr • the Amer3atin nogro to fcrct ad exception to the genert4 rule. • 7 As confirmatory of this view if the probable extinction of the tlglo . bj dis ease and starvation, we may give the following it:6lthe Nevrrok Tritoute in re lation to th 6 nefrolirifi the District of Col umbia .Thi; Most frithemortality n et: se raitny , er.ility co . 'zia pet creek A tar 44filfji ihe cloartoricknoleee. 011111 . 4, d ill Wilt of II a are fee ehiklrr i . p. la il , pinion o shysleinaa prackintaieess then, an „at 'Other elm oh,Worl, !fiji three fovrthe of these c►lWren cii.o let, ne• glee end want. In the family off ectiliar *OR lost his life u ball* the out of the ~ ;, children have died ulnae march, 188 k be above eattsia t iitodter, tone o ems chilliteti of $ ',tidier drafted 1 4ijialre "erred' to death do ring the 'obi- fair weehe." esamot sleaderwrints rx be comegreat Mew& Beweise 'they will siintis be alight r:MM A PREDICTION El E=FMI No. 4g. N 'MO E NIGH • MAN LMT. Ah.l don't be eonnwful, darling, And doll bi notroirfkil PM.; Taking the year together, my dear, There isn't more night than day. Vie rainy weather, my darling. Time's waves and' heavily Tun . ; And taking thi jesr.all rona;lny,doii, Tltere'e hot a cloud more taturann. WO' are old folks now. my Our head, are growing gray; • And taking Ole year all found; my ilear, Yon, pill always end a Mlky We have had oar May,m,y,darling, And oar tO , e/h.ionS oard; • • Ana the time or the'yeAr is pomieg, my Jeer, For the silent eight of loom. . And God is God, my darling. Of night as well as day, , • Add we feel and know Skit we can go Wherever lho loads the way. A gr i the f ath n t l iff h i t eti fo a g i i n itt: Thin gate that leads to lira, good o de, Is the gate that loads to bin.. THIS, THAT-AND THE OTHER --- A Mortal Coil—l Mat of a rattlesnake —Habits of Extravagance, Ladies' dresses —Peat fur feel ban been euecennfully tried ohs New York railroad. --Tho cost of a horse is the work of nature —that of an au is often the work of a tailor. —A short fttiteiito with a lohg asaiSg yOu tie liai3ged I —The (harsh' Coaveatloa has repealed the —The game Not to the French radiate annually boats six Winos of dollars. —Barrels are so seam in the wine districts 'of Finis° thiiit theyleteh atiece. ' —.Embrace as many opperfanities u you please, but only one woman: —Aroostook, Me., it opertrni as enjoying late strawberries and Aileen inches of snow. ~—A now daily Tidies: Republican paper, with $500,000 capital, is talked or at New York. —A young lady la New York took anomie and died because her lover b 4 fornaken her. —Many people in Parte themeelvea by using alcohol se a preventive of Oleic's- —A man to opeak Me mind must hare one to speak —Keep your eyes wide open Ilelat riage, half shut afterward. —The tomb of Daniel Welbeter hal lately been opened end the remain' found in perfect pnumrvation • --The people of the tgo eti.ins of Pittsburg and Allegheny are aglie:ting a preposition to copeolidate. =--Cutriparatirely spasicing A lady's gait is a pretty l4kng , ,,but . all laud, siy, iluit a lady's gaiter isyrtttleal, ty tar. —Nur.lT*2B,ooo,ooo worth of Js)o4s entered in the New fedi custom house to Sep- lowlier —All-el-Bader bought several thousand dollars worth of dull babies for his wires while in Paris —Southern &Woad companies bare pur. *mod two hundred million dollars *oil of rpourdativelL —lt has been decided lately that a boy oand on a man's doorstep may necessarily be Id step son. —Mr. Henn ham started • new paper in lowa. Ile eve he hopes by hard soratehiag to make a liring fur himself end Little chickens. —There is a yard in this tona enit4il,l7,g a haltdozon nglydoirj )1 1 a ark all tight. The °wrier of slush a bark mill ehoold be pun, imbed. —A little boy, returning- from Sunday Reboot, said to nis mother: "Ma, ain't there kitty-ehish for little boys t . This eatechisth Is too hard for me." —Quilp, ribose little boy.,bas a. penchant for travelling on the roof And getters of bi t e house, nicknames the little Jetlew "Gutter 'Peraer." —,Ards. L. Orr him been elected Gotenor of ,?iiauth Carolina by 500 majority. aovernor Perry has been chosen &tabor for the long term. —A treaty bah been concluded' by the government commissioners with the Araphoe, Cheyenne, Camanche, Hiows, Caddo and Apache Indians. - . 7,4 4-4- irPlktarn pliPer thinks there would be, plenty of Wethcfor paper settierOke prohibit°. ry tariff were repealed. Tioteio is • World of truth in the reitark. —Last week a Cleveland jutioe of the Peace sumdioned a negro as a Juryman, but had to back down, Its the whitejtindio refused to serve with him. —The lowa 'City ileplibikne is advising its 7 , 94F11 to "hold on"to wool It says, "No good wool ought to he sold here Ws year for less than fifty ants a pound, or eve? for that. —Them are 126 establishments for tb. MAR amine. of buckskin gloves In the United States" employing 453 amity and 916 hamlet. —Tbdilabiat atlas Liberal's at Mataarbra4 Is oodAtmed; Thai last 600 killed and` *tit dot including `earl. --,-4,eirachan4ralp446 sec.& deal aeon britithis , ap. , Nor WAIT" a sun who hamla , oppottap 6, do polar *Soft laird wit w. 4:- ihA OrrW:owasio;l welabwor hp t]yew .4 i hoop the Mated tar: reS at OtionstowariPlie Aver* waolot from A;oerViit ~A . ~.. —Alma I. whourigjidir bank" OR the Ater larkweek, Sisowrocall fr allir ma' Islas tsioaw uotothe or 14. Papist ; *AA Ala Wa" .. Wit wrdtawaw wig* he bid ha &Nog euei t w pars Whit , ~,,,, •-•,-, MooiS, Thy . by AZ )1 4 2 . 4 iteftwarato, That en * fur /kiwi .w,, the troi bar proPla wobril , J. hi* ' s, Poolbsiagli hilwaddli, SO AO. 11)a* I flu 'illiii.-''' mat i Eland toiimiltp; ilk( t^g Diiiit *ROI f9r. illia; • /Ma Ihribkleld'ftwaMp4i3 for tt hiiiiiiiiiit: MMX2=I TH oo E 'pte rgiaWgG l N , JEFFEI*A - hAVIS. 11 MAIM L it, 0 , Oretobor &kb, , • Ai• eciellerefa‘ Amino Janson, Presi ding of Me bnised Mau; The delegetee of the Mate of Georgia. in oontentlan assiimbled, do earl setly• Winkel the ExeentitVelenieney In bittalf of Jeer-- ' son / MTh ' 4 0 4boou4detrlai A 3 / 4 4616,4 em et James A..4taldon, of Virginia,. A. Q. McGrath, of, South Carelinii - Williato — AF - Seen and David L. Wee, of, -PtiWidth, and 11. W. Mercer of Georgia; now eltifiestl - fie prisoners at fort Pulaski, and of all prisoneen:almilaily eirennistansed. Year TIVeNII O II. I IAs been pleased to restore, Alf, grateful people of his Stetti t as ariel44-7 pledge of the magnanimity *hies r f tee the L public (marmite, salts greet name Onence will bapotent be revive the amity of the Inuit and fo fructify the wild dud gen-- Germs policy...which year staellenc. basin auguratid. Emboldtneil by this example, impelled by Ibe parity of Our Motives, and stimuli t ° ttl*PlWlT'ittn:::llnmerotat • people. 4l}t/° w/e~lmlmey . ( s;bebitlf of the ulattigaie act pdreons we hard nappd. Restore them to liberty and. to the umbra - oils of their fitmilies, Untwists them from captivity to the light of freedom and of • hope, bad ,the gratitude of the prisoners will be mingled with the joyfulecelinnottiont which shall ssetiggi to beaten from the , hearts of this people. Mr. Davis was elevated to his high po•i lion by our suffrages and in tesponie io our wishes. We imposed upon Lim neegihek- • which he did not, seek. Originsily opposed - to the sectional policy to which Public opinion, with Irresistible power, fin, f ally drove hint, habecame the eeponent of our principles and tbe,lesder of our cause. lie simply responded to the, united voice of then,.?,gotitcy ware Vie werelhlpr e inpjp#4,irt t er Ogg: attel itilliebtenw# trbl4,„statitil be ' , Wei/A upon hie berad A we. who urged laho he his lissidosi ere audited to escape. 1114 Sorg elsomet of the viv has been extended over us. ire breath the air . aim sac - ~..-• eigis l -- of freedom. We therefore aek that tl) lila r . der, who, is response ISA ' 4 ins etin•pof, his lid.tiffli. , the . nlYniPill,'°i_.ll4 par t 4, and the solicitation of his section, bete bead and boat of oar effendialg aim *One* be braised fee oar ilirasidsrAi Pun ihw cute traiwitimsbmw litr. . , . vie was not the leader of a feeble end Ismer: porary insurrection; he was the . reprrairati-r tat We of great ideas and the sepontat Ist principles which stirred and consolidated a, numerous and iutelliger:t ferilAit. ,., Audi people was not his 'dupe. They krapiintd the course which they adopted of tb* mini' free will, and he did not draw thergint, but followed after them. It is for ther.ttAtet ; sons that we invoke the lixecutire clebiency, in hit behalf. His frame is feeble, by health is delicate-ell broken by the storms opittO, ,He languishes out in captititxdt tittf i rlous. , - punishment for tif.Cts of ,his t people..--, Thousand; of lip' *Lure touched with, his. distres . Thous/444 - 0f prayerra , posed to Heat , i or his relief. ,We ,ittptike iii his . belialf lie generous "espied of the prerog-, alirVi to pardon which tfurfornf and pried., pies q the constitution offer as a beastliest ' Instrument to a merciful Brectutiire. ilf.9 . ask the coutimianoe of that career sez Afrepri emu which your excellency has gegtin, eta ' which alone we earnestly believe can secure the true unity and the lastieff-ffrentscraff . 4 the nation., liispeuelint that morel' II01,10: is inculcated by the extrannie of ratni great Master on high„pfrar.pipap !till .be trans., Olted to your countrymen as one of the benefactors of mankind. The Constlintion - , of our country, renewed and fortified ittp;„ your measures. will once more se o k. . protection over a contented distr a tappy, people, founded, ss it will be, upon consent cud affection, and "resting, like [ t the treat iiitat df the heavens, equalio% noon 'alt." A SOUTHERN VIEW OF NEGRO SUE- lf, freedom has an tiWaliti . g miff slavery a degrading inkeetti, 14011 Ay negro mind, ' the Neetkernriegro mustopOthtsehily be far ,better; fir more fatelleettalkihr more In foriiied, and of course far titer o vote thin the Southern tieigiiei, iriti Yet the Northern fariatlys, though they might not let aid?. (moaner negroes vote, would ram negro suffrage down the SoUthern throat for the express and expressed purpose ?i-avutimi. Southern polities and SouthertWo4s9 be controlled by the negro—the negro himself,.. of course, to be controlled by the .North. Such mom are worse, viler, more infainous rehels 4 sphrsttlie ‘ trinti th,an, tbe Sus& ISfat r a that got up Pio Asti rtiultitip&.• Nobody ieso low down ia intelligeure,44 ' to suppose that ignpiel'of the south would poiktivegAnd quiet citizens the 0911ditlen of things supposed: t* wouldn't be It to Jive at all it the; 4 4 1 2 They could afford to dkii, big there • nre, things Which they could not afford. Thom political ewil-doers of the North yilkeetpkto ompel Southern eubstieetot,tit,ltry# jock thugs would gladly; dee sifititit in tho itptekk, randerre Its bad , as possible. They wadi& 41.4 ,freft to see tie Beath driven.ffijitigr imam4hat in Inir dasporstinit; la* • ' uP amis. order.llo.4 oppoinunf toi.,o4Alpsvisetmo • and dew/Nina Welk% ill* ARF wont. bribes' ilia. pnileisibsiM.4oolk , -; , • w:eireseadelsSWlM wht• ii/8"..410* vet 4": 1 4 0 -1 41 • ; •• it .1110‘1 1 111P 1111 *•' - ' be nag "014 UNA isielpliwwi— time. 6 1 07wOlpifketforlinewfedwie ,., we bee. eljp..beeneese%44l imiremp4 tie to le 4,1110.•• Arfrear 4b40 1 1. assr#l 4o 4 oo toy 143 inekn.Aollol.. , mitS*44. paltialts4 • Abif"*.,oo,4lo, 4/4„ •wmgi id . 4 1 144114W Aillit4,W9ol4 OSISLISimL tenpiti 0 01141*rotibligli;r'''1 shots* +llil*o9lotlollrornol* , i tt.-ji'tCitaoai r 404 4 . km.; e • r Mil _,_~ FRAGE EM==2 Mil