\rt. Published EveryWedftbdey, ,v MWIS’; ' - THIRD ST-i BBAViSB, PA* V -r At S2.QO per annum toAdvanjsjr - ■ ■' r' 1 - ■ - c - y'C'v' l ” jg= Letters- Wl . coutrilintjonaj) by mail, ,haif ha™ promptntten««r. ', QUAY 4 RUTAN, Eds.,& Ppo’w. Poetical. [from' the New |Tork Tribune.] « THE NEEDY ~BAHD.” -—p* ■ , by oboroe coopbe. ’I *’ i V yj soul is sad wtile wandering , ■ ’ fader tie Aiit jmn sty, , j' . £ ftreverylbingiM run to «se?d ” ... Ati.i so hare s !' =. a«ir soon the Sm&iner’B faded rpse ,'ji* selfijh year forgets! 0! how I wish the “golden” corn Wouldpay one’s legal debts ! Once, riclTand gay, were yonder banks,. Where merry birds bare nested;' Their notes now circulate s no mote— Like mine they are protested.) The ‘'Purple" Nature brings, t( The leaves in gaudy I hue, -. The leaves hare would at ■ “fine linen” wjith her too I ' ' They talk of Autumn's 1 ‘‘generis hand,” t 5 ; give me leave, 'l ' It these ripe nuts beneath my feet[ , .Vtcailshewiii : ‘‘sheUout, , .”j * O ltottU 1 take with Summer bi ,Io wings ami fly away 1 (Two wings of some nice juicy I’d ratter taie to-day .’ > ; lon scenllcse floircr, last of Us To'hrtb in sain would cling; ■ Time, like the “Revenue,” has || A stamp on everything ! To change the color of myfati ; Sfo gleam froth Nature’s Won,' •for every where I turn I meet v One vast, Inferfial “Dim!’’ Xovimber, 1864. 'I ■ Miscellan IV , - !'■ Batgp ,of Pittsburg Letter from Maj. Gen. IXakd’qbs, Military 1 op the Mrssissi Prof. Henry Cooke,. Philadelphia Dear Siii:—lntho; Juno THiinher of live United Stales Sarvico 1 Magazine,s 1 find a brief sketch of Lieutenant Gen eral U. S. Grant,in which 1 see yon are . likis br to perpotut te an brror, which General GranfTnay non deem of suffi cient , importance to eprreet. To, ‘General | Buell’s' noble, able, andtgal. ■ Jnht conduct, you attribute the tact : that the disaster of Apni.s, at,,Pitts burgh Landing, retrieved, and made the victory of thb following day. As Gon. Taylor is; kui<\, in bis' latter days, to have doubted whether he was at the battle of ilncna, Vista at all, on : account of the .many things ■ having’transpiredjt&oic, Recording to the historians, which’ lifti did not See, sol hogi!i tb doubt whether I was'at the battle of Pitts of modern description. Biit I, was at the battles ,ot April G and v, 18G2. Gob. Grant visited my division in. person’ about 10 a. m., when thoibatde ijagedi fiercest, Ideas then on jlho right.—’ -After soipo jgotieral conversation, he; ftmarkeJ that 1 was doing right in Bjubboltidy opposing the.|progress of tjie.enetny; and, in’ answer to my in- as; to cartridges, told mo he-had their want, and given or ■ ders accordingly; ho fTTen, said ids -'presence was more beetled over ju the left. About 2 :i*. m„ of the Gthtthe cnem y, materially slackened bis attack or me,and about 4p. in, li deliberately'., raidc anew lino behind jMcArtbuFa •■.'urill-field, placing Jwtefceriys on chosen ground, repelled .easily a| cavatry .al ‘hok, and watched the • cautious dp. proacji of the enemy’s infantry-, that - purer dislogcd-tpej there. I selected -tbat lino in advance of a bridge across ! j.nako Creek, by which wjo had all day ox poot‘ing the apprpeh of Lew. hall_ace f 8 division from Crump’s Lamb? 1 pg-. About sr. ml, before the sun eot . enoral Grant earao again to mo, and , ’ ter bearing, my report of matters, \ .Med, to me the i situation of affairs \, 0 w bich Wore dot] as favor. 0 i .still the enemy hag; failed to Mi tl, e i an( jt n g of thd boats. .We i wa“esfi i e puri loijs. and approximated onr o; when the entire lino., adyano* ed and recovered atf? the, grefiria w¥ haJ evor held. | I know: that, with the exception of one or twosevere-strug glea; the flighting of April ? Was easy as cdmpardd w r iin that of April . i I never wap disposed, nor ain I now, | toqneStion anything done by General Buell and bis ar ny,arid know that ap proaching] our fiald of battle from : the roar, ho encountere4ithat .sickening crowd oflaggard%-.«nd' fqgiUyes jhat excited hi? contempt, and that oif his army, who never gave full credit to those in front who did/fight bard, and Who hjad, at 4 p. M., checked the- enemy, and-wero preparing the to assume the offensive. IJiomembertho fact the better from Gen. Grant's anw ecdoto of his Don nelson baUlo.wbieh he told me then for the first time-r -tbat at a certain;period of saw that! either side was "ready to give way if the other she Wed a. bold front, and |he determined to do that very thing, to advance on the enemy when, as he prognosticated, "the ene my surrendered. At 4y. ic., of April S,he thought,the appearance the same and Judged, IWith Lew, Wallace's fresh division uind such of onr startled troops as ju»d( recovered their cquili i brium, he would be justified ; in drop ping the defensive and assuming the offensive, in the morning. .And, I re peat, I reosivcdlsuch orders before I kne w Gen Buell's troops were at the' river. I i dmit that I was glad Buell was there, because I know his troops w ere older than (oure.and bettrirpsystem-1 atized and. drilled,and his arrival made ; that Certain'which before Was uncer tain. 1 have board this question much I discussed, and must say that the offi cers of Buell's army dwelt the much on the starapado of so'rae-of our raw troops,and;gave us too little,credit for the fact for one whole day, weakened as wo were by the absence of Buell's army, long expected, of Lew., Wal lace’s division, only four miles off, and of the fugitive- front-bur ranks~we had .beaded off bur assailants for the time. Act the same time'oar Army of the Tennessee have indulged in severe criticism the slow approach of that army, which knew the dunged which threatoned'ns, from the .‘concentrated armies'of Johnston' 'BeanregrmT'arid' Bragg, that lay at Corinth. ' In a War like this*, where the oppiort uni ties for personal prowess are as plenty as those who seek (hem aftijc fi dot, ail such criminations down; and wore it not for the military, character ofiyour ; journal, I would? not venture to offer ! a coriectipn to a very popular error. I ? I Will also myself of this oc casion,, to correct an olher very corn mistake, in attributing to Gen, Grant j the selection of, that battle-field..: It was chosen by that' veteran soldier, Maj. Gen." Charles P. Smith, who- or dered my.division to disembark there, and strike for .the Charleston Bail road. This, order was subsequently modified, fay his ordering Hurlbut’s di vision to disembark, there, and mine higher up-tho Tennessee,at the mouth 6t Yellow Creek,to stiiko the railroad at Burnsville. 1 , -But flood prevented onr reaching‘the railroad* when Goa. Smith ' ordered mb, in person ■ also-to jdisembark.at Pittsburgh X-inding.and ifafco post woll as to make plen ty? of room, with Snake and Lick Creeks the flanks of upamp for the* grand army of invasion. ;■ It was Gen,:Sihith ; who selected that field of battle,, and it was well chosen. On the other we. surely shold have been overwhelmed, as both Lick and Snake Creeks forced the enemy’ to confine his movements to a directffront at tack, which new troops are better qualified to resist,-, than where flanks j arbexposed to- a real or crimbrieal I danger. Even yio divisions of that army were arranged in-tbatcamp by Gen. Smithh order, thy division form ing as it were, the outlying-picket.— While MoClernand’s arid Prentiss’ were the real line'of battle* with W . xr. t_ w_ii—- »i—tn'vno r gnv wmg, and'Hrirlbnt of the left; Low. Wallace’a division being detached.— All these subordinate dispositions were made by the order qf General Smith, before Gen, Grant. succeeded hiin to the command of all the forces up tlie Tennessee—headquarters, Sa vannah. If thorp were any error ip putting the army on the west side of the Tennessee, exposed to the super., ior forco of the enemy, also assem* bling at Corinth, the mistake] was not General GraritWbut Hhere was no, mistake. It jwas necessary that the combat, fierce and bitter, to test the manhood of itfco, two armies, should come off, ancijtbat was as good a place ■* 3 .® n y- not then a question of military skill and; but of courage and;pluck, and I am-convinc ed that every life lost, that day to tis was necessary; -ffor -otherwise at Cor inth* at Memphis, at Vicksburg, we Would have fpund • harder resistance, bad we not shownour enemies that rude anduntutorodas wo ' then were, we could fight as woll as they. " Excuse so long-a which is >ery > nnusnal. lirdm line; but .of coprSe my life Is liable to pease at any, mo ment. arid I happen to bp a witness to certain truths! which are now beg’in ning to gass out of memory, and from what is called|Efstory. clothe l ic hadtrought irds ’ . S** fowl ClOß', t t i isi-i ons. Landing Sherman.. 'IVIsiON ) •PI. j .|; :i:|Es.^lis3ae*roBted on & man sitting'hj r a stove at I snioljing a cigar. ■ V ; - !Whei|o am I'. ; ” risked Philander. ‘in ja Jilodical-Collogo,” said tho.ei g 1 pistpol-fcr. | . f*\Vliat| a doing there ‘ ' - Tfroiiig to bocutup 1” ' xCui up —hew comes that ?” f Wii} - /yoa died..yesterday, while df|nkj and wo have bought your.cai:-’ eats .Uij’hm'iv frioni yon wile, who had alight t) sell it, for iVs all tho yood hlfc coulc ever 'make out of 3-011; It 3 - (*i’ro| rot dead :st’s I no fault-oT tlio dJctork; inj they’ll cut you up, dead oluliyfe L’ ■ ’ j# ' J*-' You will*do itgoh ?” asked the old sot. ■ 1 ‘t‘To!be euro we' will—now—imnvc>- diat,e!j:,” was tho resolute answer. *Wall, look, o’, hero, can’t you let nslhayo n omething.to drink before \ r ou’ begin r* . t-: ~ I ■ . . Keep Busy.—Men 'who have half a dojscn I irons in the fire afo not itho ones tb go crazy,.; It is the man of voluntary or compelled leisure who mopes or pineij, and thinks biniself.jn to -thoj mad bouse or the grave, ilo tion is all Nature’s law/. Action is raan’sisavation,{physical and menial. And yet nine out; of ten are wistfully Lrrnm v* tu fcl«y CUWWIJ IjOUl* when th.oy shall; have leisure to'do nothirg, jor something, only if they feel like I it—the ycry siren that has Ihred |toJdeath many a ‘‘imceeWnl’’ man. | H» only is jtruly wise Who lays himself out to work till life’s latest hoar, hnd that is j ’the man wbowill live tho longest, and . will live to hidsf purpose. r .. Bffl»Sp loner • was once arrested for drunkenness, and waxed indignant thereat. Spooner is loyal|’ • ‘.‘Now, Taxes,’’jsaj-s ho, “ikit’s figh t to go anc arrest'd man for supporting the; truy’|neht,. -/Every drop of- iickcr I shallot fs is to support 'the j war, ■. S’poso all - us’ fol’siwas to stop drinjkin’ ? why.: the: war’d stop, and the . That’s the vei^’, tension, I dtfilks’’“i don’t like grOg; T Igor tally hates U. If I.folior edjlmy own inclination, I’d rather* drink].buttermilk, jor gingar-pop, or 8oda : , j But I'lickera for.the. good-of m»y];cpah’tßy,/and]to'setan’example of loyally yirfubu.s resignation ito’ theming . [competent' anthority icalca* Utcs that between. *120,000 rind $150.« POO, yearly is expended in-New York upon the religious music of its church es. | ■ - .. - ’ whatiapi the-Unioii alleged di question* coto-aud lativesroi lire:-And rnont of Bondman. ptitutional 9fe3t thatexistddiii ! The Times sa> , - ; | “Surely [there ci > no'rtiore radi cal treatment oft; curse than this, complete cjtcision ofiy a single stroke. iSfot ouly’Mr.; Wncolji himself is cora milled to the fartboranto of this work, but • the : entire Union party, by -its special' recommendation ip the Balti more platform.' j W$ have nowherio hjoard pi a single triurraer ,of dissent I from anyjperspn inftho, party. It id 'aj unariimpafiljy accepted measure—u 11 ' comprehensive, thoroughly- effective, I'rje.t nnlydikaily satisfactory, It ron-'. tiers utterly abburcPali further' at-. I tempts'tojlieop np/uio distinction of eonsorvati!s|n or radicalism in the Un- Inon party,! in reference to slavery; ji | “Mr; Lincoln hassHown’ that he so 'regards it.qy Chuso Chief Justice. Bo thereby buries!in obliv | ion all the past differences Iri the par ty CQnriern rig slavery, arid all the ef forts which hrivohueiymado to produce tborefrotn s aecial connections and iti- Vorcsts agai ist him. \Il is calculated to knit the of this Union lififow and firmoi concord,and to pro-1 pare il for tic grcatcivil work of re-, construction,- whith - *wiU soon devolve jripoo il. | Tiore basfboen no harder pi oblsra about the war than the; prob lW which is tofollow the conclusion of the war; tow soonest to reinspiro .a Iriyal spirit n th? Southern heart arid Restore the normalj working of opr constitutior alsystcni throughout the ! land. The first step ,to ward this bas| rilrcady-.boei-determined upon. The nbsolulb ar d’ filial dktinution of sla very by a cpnslitaftaiial amendment .will make a i end offwbat has been fhe ebief lot-bed of treason. Yoi tbis i is blit a 5 jworfC :of destruction. There most ' needs 1&. measures arid , policies. pQo .tivoly To nettle ayr»ri- mcti fWlnall he mOßtcfß (jicious wil tax ibo jest w'mdom of the party. Singlehoes of purpose and: in. harinoniot s spirit Will bo more' than ! ever i.pecssury-.’’ 1 1 1 ! Wo concu ■ in. these forcible ..word.-l. i Mr.'Lincoln having, placed' li 13 ad nit n» jutration upon a platform bn Which all' the opponents, Of slavery can 'siand riauwstoiulj- and* firmly, that matter' pught -to b i regarded- aS, at post.— Those who I avo|beon ; smpiUiont at the seeming slowness' of, the President, those who i ave wished events to pun instead of u arching, those, who in the face oT the Emancipation- Prpclama- >*■ MajorGonernl. lion could. i:sill • believe him id bo. fet tprod by th< artful cbkinsof} a bor der-state-po icy, 'should .fee ambng the inoat eager o ophbldand accelerate Itii course. ]Io slundsprecisely where the most rad ical anti .slavery itopubli can desires I iiu to stand, and;it would ■jid ungenerous as unjusttojsuppose him capable of a back ward stop. The people bsvirg expressed their wishes, the Ff.osidei; t, as a frank ajsd, honest democrat, i ccopts; and, wilj/ execute them to the bost'of his’jabdiiiy. • ■\ I Fat, let u ' add.. to , the , remarks of iho Times, t hat it is not;enough to so-' dure the ityi and ■ pqrpcthity of & pavty that' it hai| vsingle high aud coutroli ng aim. It must, agree in gormral'pHticiples, it isjtrub; it must agree as to hading measures; it must |lio animated by common par*, jbpt it toUftt alspiagroo ; it the methodsHjy which thosoprincipfes are ,tb bo curried out. Jlow wor Jo fly its .ends, Lowe ,’er gr'ancL ust. humane a|nd prajetj.C! bio its objlc s, if it propb- j spa to ijeael these by co'rupt, profii*i gate, morc< nary modes, or through I llhc venal tr cks and intr gucs of' lcg-j ifelation, or By the detestable jobberies: °r ttie lobby! it cannot expect tho sup-; port of bonfest mac, ojr. hold together for any length of time.. t Citizens whef; rejectithemsolves,, who are ani mated by a sense elf honor and truth, who iiesiro noble! ends biit only by noble v®. o^ ods.trip ndt fcoksent tokssdeiatei I with' tricksters; thieves; speculators The polities in which ithey symyatHizo, tho patties in which they engage, friust b/■ ' Prophecies.;.v I While the gallant men of tho couni*- ,tey are engaged withthe enemy in a 1 . dhath straggle, meeting traitors; faco ■ td fkcu on the field of battle, they aro ! ' fulfilling tho prophocioa of thcßopub liiian loaders,! by their blows ftp- the; J safety of the Republic. I Of 'course' | the traitor sympathizers At; ide North cannot,and will not aoo oradmit ‘the truth of.this assertion.' But it will be remembered that QMS of the main ar„ gaments made rise or to secure tiho ro election of Abrabnn wasf that such aVlndicationof the policy of bis administration, would. hasten the end Of the rebellion. RisroVoloc tion was clammed as being only necesJ sa.ry to; impress doubting! men in all the world with the strength bf our cahse, and nppalhtraitob aV.fil their friends with the, helplessness of the rebellion. Well, only a little more than amenthhas elapsed ainbothc rb election of Mr. Lincoln. What has been tbo result ? The first effect of the_n«wa • of |M’r. Lincoln's electron id Europe, depressed “Gonfcderatc socu ritros" to a degree rendering them en tirely wqrthless. There is not a Pe trolenm Company in Pennsylvania, ’ whbso stock is as, worthless aL hon.o sis are the Confederate securities in Europe, while this is sbjin refer coco to ■ Jeff Davis’ .‘‘due! bills, ’’ Unit tjed States securities aromorb sough! after in Europe than any load in thi mrarkote of the old . world; Such are tiro effects jri Europe of a Republican triumph at the ballot box in America!,- and such, ftoor are the fulfillments of Republican .prophecies! But there is a still mote cheering and invigorating of these propbcciosnoaror home, within the range of our own contemplation,twhoro ivolbabifool and observe its glorious and peace inspirl ing influence. While rwe wore con tending for the rc.clcction ofjMr, Lirf Coin, it was confidontly predictcd by the friends ofstho Government, that his triumph at the ballo s t bdji, : wpuijl boston the triumph' of ottr armies oh tho battle field. ! These! predictions Were ridiculed by traitor syrnpa thizorsin the .North, and scouted by afined ' traitors in the South. But mark tho result. Look over'the field’ pt action—rub ’ along tfio orilire line of our armies, and from one end to tbo other, nothing but Victory,i solid, territory wresting anil-traitor externi hating victnryjgreels theCyos and ih'o hearts of the loyal men of the land jWo 'brvo j the !Qrime& 6T treasoh sur» rounded ini fire. ; There is no; hope for ,iho rebel capital but capitulation or destructible 1 The traitor government is lijtcrallyon the lack, awailiug: only, a signs! to bo torn to pieces. l : j- Sucli are thd: iulliliiuentSxyßepahli can prophecies. In a little over !a raonlii from the time ol .Mr. jtjincoln’js rc-cloctiondiho iirflueiico of thatresirU has revolutionized Eur ope in bur favor I—has destroy oil the falsb credit Of the ■itidurgen'ts abroad—has .given victory ,lo our ai'mies and navy; ;]arid strength ,lo our Government.- Nor will tliituu fiucnco stop frere. Wei believe that bofore Mr.: Lincoln has served a ; yoajr : pf his* second term, the! rebel lion will. bo entirely crushed, oiit, roar! brave (Soldiers nndjsailors returned' te/.lhcir 1 {homos, anfi..Uie|whole.'land!restored t!o pifaCe'! Mark thfvpro(Bctra|a.J-4Cmc»/»- kafi'Gazette. j ; •] - . ! i a) Touching{ Pacr,—At; the Tenth ; ‘ I | f -l x ; .V. | Anniversary .of the Mmsbichusetts Sunday School! Teacher’s Convention, (held in , Boston' On the; l,tit:h ulfjimp,. jtho following touching fae‘j waaYclli-j {tod by* one of-; the. spcaktjr b, j Vvhitjjli | irvas'rcportcd in the N. York (Buptrsi.) j IChroiv.de- . ,"j • ■., '■ .j;'j ■ | Ji. “A gentleman, knowolb Jttre;! speak icr. liavipg recently, visited Washing' itbn bn buairioss with the President,; was, on jyavinif by jrti friend to ask Miv Lincoln wlitijia/t hk'cJ Jesus. .The business being com pjatodj the question was kindl3’ aske’d. The President 'buried his face in his b^bd'korchiofl'turned’ awoy (onfi woplt; Hb then tnrn’ed, and caid: ;;., j | ’ “When I left’ihomo' to take this,chair of statei I requested my country men to pray for mo; I was fipt then n Chris tian. When my sou diedj'thb,sever est trial-of piy I life, i .was'yot if Chris tian.j But when Ii Went 'to Gotlys burg, and 'lo«*kjot| ; upo» tbp graves of our dead heroes who, had fallen in de- : fence of their jejuntry, i then and' there consecrated rnjbclf to !Obrisf; I Jo love Jesus” H ' i . j_: J !_L_, t. * ’ ' ' V , A, funny fcjlqw hqfi at next door Ito a dodtofs ishop day, an elderly g< >ntlomanj 01'.t.l school, bln ndefod into the shop, :| “Is the doctor in : . | '“Do n’t live here, ■’ said thof who wfisitl full f dribble jiVer so docrinients. j • 'y| T“Oh, I thought.this washisi “Next door/’i; ; p ' ;i| bpray, sir, can you tellirao |h doctor jmany-pkfients r”-i 7 -“Not living;’’ ]-J t'-.j 1 1 The bid .gentleman told . the in the Vicinity, add the doctor enod the lawyer, With a libel. ]flTard, says s-f am drafted I Will resign. d grateful for the unexpected; thus conferred upon mo, jI j sha compelled ’to resign; the] poai favor of. some worthy person. { only is what alls mo. keeps me nn.dor.|_ ; >_ : [j| ? j ' , . i OReligioias [COSiSIL’NI%».TED v lanthropy in Wt jo present war is rosn jbilanthrby it haaawak tary Commission comp ga. viz: , j\ . The Preventive Service, ry lnspcdion;.-±Etnp]oying akil tul-: and experienced • ; brbi visit camps, Wspitiils pori s, watch the perils;' tre oxp jsuro to malarious influj mulching, active; campa inuc equate food orclothing 2, Bepartincnt bf 'Gmen. Supplying food, clothing, be icati.os for the.sick,'and fetin cordials for the wounded on fok. and in the. hospitals. : 3 The Department of Spc —I his department b'aafihai sixteen stations,- including bone, • lodges for .the or < ischargcd soldiers, by !i thg r. way to or from their Hci’o they are provided lodging, and, when" rieceel 'clothing. They.receive in ten lance when sick, and aii ingback v pay undibouniic; pro :ccted from the tricks bl and swindlers. To this d belong four hospital dlrei Was hrngtdn, and Louisville. Thoreceif pen ditnres of the Sanitary (_ are very largo, to between' four arid five dol are, and" supplies cxco mil ions of dollars; making neb r fourteen millions bt dpi the Westorp Sanitary Cami roc'ivcd anil disburscd.iii i stO'os, about $2,500;0U0. '1 are flip Stale Sanitary Conn Phio, Indiana, Illinois, lows cbnkin. which have cl, 100,000. | And. indopei mo’o local associations, lb gci: oval object, of which the drols.swpll the sum more th POOTo this wo may add 000 ipDOjicon Iribu tod spontal ' ter the various, great’ bait id in ( barge of some of tlio t dia ribuiidn- -Asylums aud boi ioS for .disabled soldisrs pht.ns have been erected-ax hd. jJ poll seven of these; i mp re' than 8500,005 have pCTcfcd. ■' r, . ."3lliO‘Clirml:an Commissio dpi 6 a most noble work; la both body and soul Their. 1 have preach ed.-in field and hop pi Laly distributed pane; bookstand fed jam) clothed i tj required,; ; This Comm bop i eminently for the privd Thr political or benevolent purposes. The followingj3cfsajtB\\vero ■ sited deU ega .6s ttillic Generaf Aisemfety: Sin-. mms-fPrincipatsi, Sfr-% B. qiark' j; 3); Slenn, JV ! ;K, Sfiarci; ' AlWiiniis, Tin mins, Sturgeon; Sliafer.rkLrisiisi iFloming, J?ortbr, iStcCandles j; 1 ■ i. • i. t{ -... t T ■. ■■ • - r| - | *-* w/ "s» , ■-/ k 1' - w'.T -; ■ «a.ljtjis proposed' by the.s o.W York td o-rgaptida; itfatid i&t36upi. oil of Ipp Baptist Ob niches, iipdn the play adopted by'the .Cjengrb .rational ists ; It is tbought .hyUo tfojptf tbe Sire ngt.h| apd: moral Iphwef q fibo jdo non inafion, tbpma pr/jetjea} iiiiity. i. Coming, fponv spoil' aii f l .ii in. liol Bplilibt .organ. tJjW. ms i| •• .vtH dou Hluss be OHi.siilcrod; by |tt at' boujv 1 offiec .' Oqe 0 fogy f\ '' ! lawyer, iino old bfllce,’’ I? I j ids the 1 story threat- -“If I Deeply ifHonbr ill.tool tion id Slop ’s M’liat i’ ; i I ' 1 I ' ERNE r v noticle to advertiser*. .; AdrartiMßMiU' inserted AI per"’ square eiok ’ subsequent liuwiflSft 60. eeqta;.l 'Ai liberal disfiitml : advertisers, and on long adTertisomenl*. , = : Aejiijoe equal to rtvatvaHncfiiiftUstypa measured ir a Sqilare; ' r .f’ '% ir ■ Special aoticSs 25 per eent/-ad(^Uoa ; the table,. Spme pCnjont prefer, the addition of swoot bream, whep served: This kind-of cheere it). quite sweet—the first described has some acidity from the ■ presence of| buttermilk,, and on this account is i frequently,preferred by. the eick.fifi’c, j change. .. ‘I ' -1 1 - rkablc ■ far Thb risiiff throb or Sanila- x (-orps of ihyjsicians, und trans : m climate, hard gbinej and ME lielief. —- ddiug, del ulants arid lh| batllo- raii; Relief, gapf bo mo ; soldiers’ ■wounded, olflibrfi on regiments, iritb food, sary, with nedical' at in obtain -15 and are l sharpers lopirtment (tones—at :«pw York, its land ox- pmipission ill money million bl .•ding nine a ,tot ah of laijs. Then n'sjsion has \ouoy; and hen there” nmsions.of , and'Wis a(S|d about dent, and ■ the same ■ea.ro huf.T af), $2,500,- ahout ?4,- ■.cpusly af i, imd sent iltxens for termanent xnd for or d endow rstitutions : been, cx- also atfving; for. X>elcgates (•amp and .tracts, isi necossi- A correspondent asks about the best method of storing roots stf as to prevent their rottipg. Says hb his dost his; prop two (or three seasons When stored in his eoliar j PcihajWl ibis cellar is damp. It may bejtoo warm; or it is possible he -put his roots in; itbo ecllalr damp and and in 100 .large it bulfe-. wltboi.t giyrng lhcjiyiibo ■proper;ventilation; Roots shbuid not bo.atlowodllo freeze latter they-Arc stored, neither should l lh.ey be allow ed ion hea|l. .Roots snoujd not "lie ' (thrown iti bulk on tho |eeiter ho'ttorh. Provision for’ the Circulation of raid .underneath them Sandr iip ; ..through 1 them should be made.’. If.put in a bin : the bottom ot .the; bijn M'ouhl. |ip <|iova |(tecl and” 1 open; and if' it is large’ tbo> : prabticio of scahtlinigs - throughthe hiti iis a means Ibf ventilation is a good one. .It.is |bdtt|r to bury pools 1 out of doors' .than ■ Ipiit 'lhcmliri ii’ tjbllar:, whie ii cannot be kept cool byventilation, ar d \yhjeh is ■ fjjipt hry.’ "3vi l ry farmey who' ; feeds, irppts to stock t-.hoalli have a root ce l ilar in connection wijh his barns.! Wb have been store-rooms lor roots. made ■ imthp yat or - begin s\to (stand? op t ii b sur face ptfbdtorei .ipott *iccay - ' -froW. being.stpred imajilthy ci^ltipp,' l They (will keep, better if ’ peWfebtly cl c a mar. dd rytir hohb to r P'd, amlifpat dug at the tints ■ | dpea.( not adhere lolhetn] they: should be 1 washed, spread and .dried beprg stor-., ihg(„| If vts‘ bad other roots for ’winter feeding'we Shohld let the' parsmps ri|» main in the ground for spring' feedipg. And wo r may say here that we think the parsnip one of the most profitable roots to raise for. feeding.-Wdfpore's Tiariit2(eid; Yortery,' 1 ' feipti has’ 5, soldier. ii_of the 11 it with re csti- IjTelicfo ■ reo n.iil-' ■lyl ■; UIC disjsion* Cu the fnoii" and them, o I than o£ugoos, sii a red he ain’t of Iref ho irnn :ig jvolohce riiordi (jlm'iinols dhu'rchos bts Jirivo Ofi havo of tho oKSotioiy ft,*) - , tii'o jfl loarn- V i ■ py is that n>.3inou of hospitals --roots-'.' Bppbirftutmß, The properwiy antrbooli on each = aide! : tree, .so as not to Cross a root. V n Tie«r, tranches ebooid he far eobUgh tfem iho treo to avoid ihe hiain ido^fofodr deep enough ■lo go below all, 01 wpi, a taproot, which pi ay be cut "il., 1 This being done,the tree.pay he i>ui i v ,i up with its (jutief. '’ ’ ' V r^' I== Cottage Cheese.' I How to Keep Robtd- 1 '-n' 1 C== U" . % * MEI ESE