’•■ * : '] V. " i: r ; ‘ *■'■■ ; ',K'; vc: ? |-;4\ f 51%; i ■ .' ; notice :: - V ! 'V: KIA A ' ; A7’T?T? jJP&kg&t : A T' Q :: : , -tj JCj il_ T ■ j_J_EX J-J-XI)V T 1; IJiSI '” ! ,b»!I haTC prompt attention- '- ■ ' -tt. i AH. ~ICT~ '«>yl' ' • ' I'-' 4 i! ■ ! '■'''' ".’xi'f" J-' ’ ! ■•• I i' : s -i!^ ! .?"' •, ! ■ 1 ‘.~'■ \ ! ‘ ''" " ; I'm.' ~ : = . TSeentii a linff par' by-'- miAY tRUTAN, Eds. &. Pro’rs. v 01 *- o. 04, j iJeavep, -%|igust 30, kl-865. . • ■ 1 fti R'■ w*«*“ *«*!>»&*■ Religion,; Poiitoli; Q UHI , “•• •• '•.••'• ■ -4- ■ * ' I ' ' --T ■ * ~k ■■' -' • ■ ■:■ - -■'. . .1 ;; .. ; .--■ 1 JV. . ■:: 4 ... «i T^f,J-V -*-V. 4nd other-Jfotinrt of */feublio natr free; Micella neons. tS b record op the dbm« CBATIC PAETY: 1860-IB6E . •, ; ■' • tl > ' . . vs - fob BREAKING UP THE UNION. y r , Buchanan, bad YqVitially declar. fj in lus -Jlcasago of December, 1800, right Of fusion.' His party Otorenpon-oom geibed to agitate plj*>y which tic jSoatbVould. be «ottp||. bite*'-Into h I'iiion whereigJgTright to secede sjiotihi beSegaljW-j'tfhe most noto ‘rioas-of these schemes ynti o jn ’ ct ,j'iiito Congress;-by Mr.* Yailand j ham, proposing a' constitutional a mendment'- by. which ilia Unijt eh6iri eratic Central Club.of. ijliiladolp nm only did rdst hesitate, to giv Ms heartj - approval, .but declared it or some- similar -schpnie,- was alternative. to oternaj sep; (ion! "Tim, plan*.suggested sntno yi aip? Rj'-Sfr. ’ V allatidigliani bears i Msmp 'of Ips fllfiir sagacity uilii s»a like fmeeiirt-—dividing tlio couri into four largo s-wiiomor ti. treses, .requiring a majority of. the icpre; tali on froni each t(J) consent to a nr, tiro li-i'orn it should, becomea lay -Mr Calhoun, nouVitjistanding the deferred obloquy n ( ow attaching ■■lds name, was to rnjj mjnfL.tbo n Inmost aoj! comprehensive stalest who grappled tfithpiational proble ■tuiji. I make bold here to say tbalj -jyiscr, purer, patriotic statesman i; lived.. It may be that-.the So tsighl be willing to ‘return upon adoption pf some suolr system ofj tfinstructjon as this If thisplar twmeiliatio'n and’teconstraclion f ■ then a separation 'must bo the ‘ nality./: , ' ' Mr;' ypllandigham’s .scheme breaking-.up the Union having : -rejected by .Congress and the pe °tlie r plana; were agitated. A Confederacy was freely ken of,.and for a long while the r - r j S J, - • s « Uf-i confident hope “Ot the succe Ihcir agents in that direction,, v ,| n g *n Co-operation with their Di eratic allies, It'was pot difficu Hint -party to find justification- for °c any other destructive plotv - Judge Bjack, Mr. Buchanan’s At< '°tpcy G.eneral, even went 'so, fir as declare that war made by' C^ngross Upon a seceding State' would legalize and dissolve the union of the Remaining States. In an official opin- p"ernber 20,- 1860,, oily -a •.ortniglit After Mr. Lincoln’s election, P n 'vliieli. through tho'truitors in the & met was of course made known to' • c .traitors organizing- rebellion l,hro’- be Bay6:i^ Qet!Jr!. l i* ,C tl ' Uo , hat War cannot bo tiidSPfi l’ IU^ r , a Of general hos ornmen, - d 0n b .V Gov lo kZi g ;-u’ St a Stat *> Ikon it seems would 1,1 an attempt so siL'h Vtni* S acto - aft expulsion of S t fT 7 Ue Vnion, being ireat ' w ould h»- a ien ' on eks 16 dpelaro or. to makd war upon a s>tute. After much Seri ous reflection, I [hiv 3 arrived at-the conclusion that, rio such power has been delegated to Congress or ip any. other departmen t of the Federal (fov ernment... , ] , V- Without ‘ doscchiß ing to paniculare, it may safely bo asserted- th it! thc : power to war against a State is,at rariancc with the whole spirit |6f itlie Constitution. . J . Congress .possesses many rapans' of ptese: vipg if (the TJii;on), by co'ncili illion, but .tilni jawoi d was not placed in their hands to pre; erve it by force.” ( This direct -invitadon to; rebellion by a promise_of in munltyj was at o.nce.taken|nip hy these' who Imre ov-> ever since cjoiitrolled the policy of the >^o^pgtTcL Hartv- • ' ai:U| ~. On luo ad ol :4J a. “Union” meeting held llie-.Uon. E lirf Lewis, iiifluonli.il Democrat, vies of, resell lUions, iti the [lie ini' was d oijsorth 1? of se.cessi blaming ll no- i;. a, i it .hat the jeedirvgs, i I. Tlml ill uid bo uiiv lional pro fierce SiaUsjshc mao t'joii .wards ;the be rilrfht pendente' strati of IC\ (hem.” ■ 'Southern ui aeUno'v iff. the • Soil rji,i>g atj Ji/i! ,ra- ?ars [the 1 !tos ky aiKl tjlio grca l ii|i Demoo Ami at Philadelp ;i - |t,lic Brin! ” jin Char ,jg on the ‘‘Slur of lepton -harbor], a nqpolnlion.i ctithusiastieaitly ; as v t'no following: ' | j " 'iliiiat wo conimlljt approve vy lii, a'ft the Wes Jens \v. i the [adopted y “ “Tc'Uh- \ to nost man Iho disavowal bj* the hist, am-.ual |message, for Congress, of :l w; against!, pi Slate of 1 y>uB reafl rrjtiing the oi two ojf itho great Con.stilurfoi), James (jxandor-.llamilton.'" * . t These yic|w3 -were by the { arty. ' On I’Military Committee I House jßepro.sor I'provide fop .tailing j when Mp. jGeorgi^ irns, no svcr >uth the | re- i of ails, i fi- for )een >ple> irth- posed it p y! do elaborate argument, in which; said: M “Now,i what force of arms can compel a Slate, tojdo that which she has agreed to do? What of arms can compel a State to; refrain from do ing thatiwhich her State State gov ern menty supported by the sentiment of her pedplc, is determined lojper. sist in . . J . Sir, the jwhole scheme ipf coercion is It is contrary to the genius and spirit of the jPonstitution. . .My voice! to-day ik for conciliation; my voice-ls for compromise. li beg you, gentle men, tdjhejar that yoico. If you will, not, if yon find., conciliation-impossi ble; ’if- yotir differences are jeo groat ‘that you cannot or will not compro mise 'th’gni,. then,Vpentlo“men, let the. seceding States depart in peace; let thorn establish their government and empire, and work |out their destiny' according !to the wisdom which God* has jjiv 311 them.”' 1 , ’ And, in the diyisiim which followed, the Democratic members;. with bat . ■ I I . ‘ •* : '• i , four registered their a greemejnt .With Mr. Pendletdn in a id body. I I ■ ! -I spo ■jbels S 3 of rjork- erao t fop this i, 1 _ 18 for such, docltinesas these 16 great .Democratic Party [sen Sir. Pendleton as its. standard, in the presidential contest of Th it these yiews were regard a f are' passpor t to Its tavor is fj when w© them advanced ■ It Wi that ih lected bearer •1864. ed as evidec by bo shroud “and iurrecrupuloUs'a politician aS Mt. William JjJ’.'Bead, wHd. On:; the’2Btb. w'March,j|lB&3’, in in address to ibe lso|pbcratic.Central Club of Philadelphia,.observed! ; , • “Had the 1 Government never gbne' beyond the limits of consent; had it rejected, as idl’d its fenders, tKe heresy op coEßcioMj as applied to any State or combination or States, it would have'bddtKfar stronger in the ele ments of republican ipbwer, than it is now in all the panoply and parade of war;”.: . ,j|; .[• • . ~ Even^thceo^yeaVsof war did : not suffice to the abandonment of this dogmal -The .Democratic. Con vention pf Kentucky, assembled June 28,-1864, to select { delegates to the Chicago Conventiori, adopted a series of rosolnlions, among which the fol : lowing :is the third;'! . | ‘‘Guided by thesarlights, we declare that the coercion and subjugation of eleven or Mr) sovereign States! was never.cppteinplated ms possible or au thorized by tile Constitution, but was pronounced Iby its makers an act of ■suicidal folly.• And Mr. William; ted his [views' in a I< thetic Marylander, 5, 1864; and publishi sound Demociatic to insure, will not ed froni their Fed ny portion ot the 'ibute .their moo arrjfori a contest iventioi£; in An* : lead of ill. Yal e same conclusion i ACS, ■ and openly tionary doctrine. .. , . it (the denied to sover itional rights, and r om fit allegiance," 13TICE©ONA-L r en Idf the South receive the sup. lent to the last' ht .have, success-. de~ of , secession] : o Gulf States it 1 861. ‘lp place of aoned to the ten-, n eating chivalry, I that there' was. onstitution to m on. , Thus, Mr. ssage bf Doc. 3, Philadelphia organ .of the party: •‘T deny os I hjdve ■ ever done pinco'' this experiment of civil war has. a wakencid me to truth, that the-Poder-. al Governm’ont hds any right under the Constitiijjon to coerce 'by force of arms ofce or more' groat constituencies;"' PRO SLAyKRY RECONSTRUCTION. , ”136 fsr<£tOi«Jfffu,intainin£r the indis soluble .'.-nature of *the Federal bond. the Democrdtic Party at an. early pe riod Jn 1 the ry that the dccossionjof the South ab j solved the bemaininlg States from all further 1 Obligati oh to the Constitution and that; they were individually'' liberty 'to separate and set. ' themselves or form flew connoc on such terms of alliance aai i might please* ;_Theri|cari be but doubt ijuary, ifcol, &. 1 in. Philadelphia, , i well known arid , introduced a fiJj which the jnied, but aftpr >r its unconstitu. concluded: Montgomery! Coii.sti, whereby | the old jenpromacy of,the alliance be tween slavery' and,-.dotnooracy might bo restored, apd the domination of the party be pet p6tuatcd. 'Tbo t kcy~tote to this wi|l be found in, one of the resolu tions.adopted (it the grcp,t J}otnoerat io meeting in Philadelphia, bold J an> nary 16,15G1. W 6 have the authori ty of William B. v ßeed, jibr the asser* I lion that “it was adop.tpd with enlhu if the Northern willing to recOjg ional duties Re states,* it would vfedgo the indo ! I hern States, in .lawfal war a'qainst siasticjunanimity.” ■)'. . ;‘ l ßesolved'. That, ip [the deliberate judgment- Inf the Ucnvjcrac-y of PbiU nflelpbia, ar.d, so far ns 1 we know, it, of Pennsylvania,'the dissolution of f the ;Unlon : hi- the separation %f the whole South, a.result, we shall most sincere-j ly deplore, may release,this Common- j wealth,..from, the bonds which'; now connect it with- the confederacy,, and would and re quire.its citizens. through a convention to bo assembled for 'that purpose, to--determine : with i whdm their lot shall be cast; whether j with the North and East whoso fa naticism has precipitated this misery iupon us, or with out brethorn of the South, whoso wrongs wo feel as oui* own, or • whether Pennsylvania: shall stand by herself;-ready, whoil occasidja offers, to bind tqgother the broken J Union.”' • ' I. meeting of fho racy, held Jainiu-* President, in his , lor himself and. ai-making posver Ihe Confederacy, express doctrine ,t -founders of the Madison and AU formally adopted January 18, the reported to 1 tho itatives a- bill to oat tho Militia, EL. Pendleton op« B. Reed reftera tter to a syrnpa-* dated November id November 7, os doctrine by the That 1 these Wej'e the views of the dominant men of |,he party is evident from the" fact that Judge Woodward at thalt time made po secret of sire that Pennsylvania should go ,with tho South- , ' i ’ So,|ip the spring, of 1861, ex-Giov ernor Price, of Ncfw Jersoy, in a let- 1 tor to 1 ! L. WJ; Burnet, of Newark, ar gued the matter thus: ' , : ; “1 believe thb Southern Confeder ation permanent. The proceeding I has been 7 taken with forethought and deliberation—it is no hurried impulse, but an inevitable act; based upon the sacred, was supposed, ; ‘equUity jof the Slates; 1 ’ and in my every slave State wil in a shonj_ time, be found united in one confederacj’. . . . Before that event happens, we cannot act, however much wo may ■suffer in our material interests; It is in that! contingelnoy, then, tbajt 1 an swer'the'second part, of your ques tion; *iV|bat positiop for New! Jersey will best accord with her interests, honor, apd, the patriotic instincts p.fi her people.’ 1 Say \ emphatically, they\ would go voith the.' South, from every wise, 1 prtidential and:patriot,ic reason.” : ; At of the Chicago Convent tion, tfioso views were not so ; openly Ventilated, bat they evidently were at the bottom of the reconstruction .cons templated by the “cessation of bostil* ities” and “convention of all the Stales” advocated in the platform.— One ; speaker, however,D. .H. j Maho-. neyt of Dubuque, lowa, was bold enoigh! to enunciate therp, and they were favorably received, ■'" “We must elect ojir candiijato.and ttfen, hbfding p^;onr' , .l|iwn r 'lto,. th,o I South, invite th'oiri- W eom'aV arid ■ sit! again indoor: Union circlp. voice —■Suppose they i won’t' Pomlw’J If they will not corne toj ua. am in favor i of going lo 'tbem?* i'TlioUd cheers.]i ■ |'|, - ’■'■■'llf-' j.,.j" ,-j 7 And the Yan Buren at PaW»jPaW, declared; ; ■ “If, the North jind Soothare ever le pnited, wcrprqdict it will he when the Confederate! | States- pdopl their, new (Montgomery,yoptistilu.- tipn, or something very it. There’s a good time coining i^jys.” ' [to Pe CONTlNpkriilS 7 • ■ ir_ ■ , rr* •* ■ i' A Flask Movement tJjion the National-Finanipes- 1 The well-known Washington cor respouaent of the Pbiladeljihia J’ms writes as follows : Washington, Angnst 4,1865 ... The hopeful condition finan ces, stated by Jthe Socreiaij of the Treasury, is the best news'-thut could bp given to the [American jpeppje., In other (fays, Ihoqueationoftiie’public debt and the manner of, giy/ngj.it, oc cupied the attention of of Ways andiAljians in.fhp'House,'the Committee of Finance in Senate, the Secretaryl'tfl the Treaiipiy and his agents, the leading bankers and capi talists', and the great [hiabafactarhrs oConr own and other nntibhs employ ed in the manifold occupations of skill ed labor. The numbef- persons holding odr bbhdp was collrtp'arativelyl small. J But ndwj the finapcial condiy tion is the concern 6f; : mafeon», The holders of our national securities in; elude rich and poor,Jir nd low the* millionaire and the nic^.the > ' > study of the money market' has be come as oonlraon, -is the reading p’f a morr.ing paper. The spirit' that prompted l Ims ;slr bilion ,wq£, in the beginning, the loftiest patriojio sacri fice: ami it,vitalised 1 find injhgorafed the government i;i all its arleries and Jsut, at the same lime, it cre ated a new, an|d watchful interest. It united iho'iblpment .of ajust/ogard for individual'; well-being to that of jealous.-yigilanbo :>ver the details lof th« administration of govcrnmenljand. in this respect, tiro national debt, .if not a “national bl issing,’’beca mo an aetivo and. unsleeping auxiliary of the j government iaj all its duties.. It,made 1 the agent feel jlhat the eye of his pri u ! cipal ,was upon hiin, and fjhp fastness jof the trust! gave ‘to’, the 1 pri hei pf\l a fresh obligation bi see to its faithful management. - • lienee jibe perfect! trust 1 : in tno|.mk st of oceans of; ex penditure. The. pooplcl .telt that they • weie lending !thei r' money for tho ho liest of missions, that it was being mistily expended, .and be hon esllyand promptly .Hence, alnO,| the success of our arms, the comfort of itie masses at hopie, who. lived, as it were, in the hot and bt< the consequent beil'igo, the ttchic' after peace 1 , the' in the publicjoutl cqrnptelienHive pi od of economy an It' was but) nal should learri fid “money, article” i ing to many | \vhi over, as the ‘'mi are to the good i etry'to the youh, or the politics t date for the Stat natnralj&lsOjthat the slightestj attempt to deprecate or < iscrcdit our currency, or bonds, our fit o-twentics or seven thirties, rshould be resented by. thous ands and tens of thousands.- For wha.t a sayings bank for tbedaborlng and irngal was in days gone by, [the. na tional treasury is. now. v ‘lf .that is healthy and solvent, pays Its in terest promptly, so v * wholo-communi ties are comfortid and in repose. Tb.e difficulty of spreading doubt as to the j intrinsic value and ultimate:redemp tion, ojf theseaecvurijtiek has been in creased by The North erd sympathizer witla'the rejbels —the local Copperhead who ibusras himsim in spreadin'g.ail forts of pamdatoiies: among the people whojhold the bonds oi.lhe national government—has hero ; ... ' j:. .- b --[I - , I ■ tdforo found 1 his arocii profitless one. But he, loss active for that real been, constantly on th< seizes upon every text i. excite dissection and d ■ The present favorite' Cc pedien t is to (demand the.' of j representaliv f ebel States, elected b i'€i var mens]. diskivcred that the ] Northern urea of-. Congress, especially • the odi- cp6d bejdcpendid on to do kw.‘, B«t|4v 4 when, the doors are thrown open, and Ablisbniat is;‘no koward, and will reo* the rebel' Congres-rne n are brought jy make sacrifices for principle. K’riow into tho Capitol in triunph.fAelrissWulf |d all thisj we kin work intelligently upon the'public credit ani pponlthenai- |%; h - . *A' v., , /!<,.!., ~i I It is the dooty now uv every Suth twnal financial terrible eataest. • There will ho consist- Jwunst, and be metemorphOse in 2 loy eucy in this. The Denuc'rhiticjldadCrV fdly- Then ]we’ve got em.|, {Demand, have been laboring for fourvydars tofP ° nl * v a :'Sathorner kin dem'and, that bring the bond&.and ci rredey of bo withdraw*! and that ■ ■ : 1 . ■ .. ■ | ' ; u ' ynr Representatives be admiUed.-rS government mtp _ disrWe. , Tlmy rjThen. ef we kin carrydnnff -deestriks] have,advised their followers v ref iso {North, yoo hev the game in- yur own \ the currency, and above alb net to in;' jhandf. But to accomplish jthis last vest in the bonds. The key-nlote wad I f ee Jiv “*} us ’ . . r i i «. : ;c.'- . \ i ,i , j 1; ;Wo hov bin unforchmt injoarpoluv. = ’ ■ • a' • - aDa T’’ ia i icTe;venefhers;aridat least w.un nv our afler no : -had .assisted to Replete tho jlypphcdieg must cum trdoj uthprwiso public treasury, to drag down the val-jjhow kin we go afore the peppier The; ue of n’ot one liimcfofl their idebt frill in wut. cum troo sets md jntoa deliri cver’be recognized, theV trill he com- u»f tremer.p uvgoy.; J t . • . ‘ cvemi , . -J i «;Tb©n immbjiily, yoor ; legislachers pulled tyhclp. to raise thpn.epdod iey«. mus t p’ass stringent laws jiagin a nigr. enuo for. the payment ofj ihc.interpst g e j. lehyin/ his respective’ county, and and ultimately .of the principal. They j then pass another law not allowin any ‘long,ihorkoro; to- gct;iri|to thp.jhekt; man to £lye■ thei.able bddied'wuns’ fo ‘ ! h ' ■ 11, ’ ° ... L r ,:u’rS-,,«k exceed So a.month. Tb s dun I have Congress, to unite with tbe.r Demo, faiih tQ bleove h l)()U Vands uv era will. cralie fo-ethreii to vote against all rev- be g t 0 bo agin enslaved]-about' mid enue or.appropriation bills: arid bold, winter.. Ef they persist] in dyin in ■ly to raise and fight under the flag-of freedom, we can, s .at least, 1 , pint 2 their Repudiation'. The , conspiracy, has L bod ls ,and say , , • j 'T j '• •. Li' niggers wus wuth 81,500 they wuz been duly organized, ajnd ">vplyes|, n^ b allowed dio thual-behold the more elements than the pebple would.| f rootft _. uv Ablishin- philanthropy;’’— at present readily believe. *l, regard Euhor way it’s capillo for us. __ it as the great peril elf itlid LRopublio] Yoo must inkulkate the dptrin uy i. 4 .**‘4:4 part from their own interests, to be np on that, wo'll' hammer away at ready to I meet it.. Under the , most Debt and Corupshnn, and sich dolitea plausible and deceptive' theories, this■ 'ful themes, arid once more wo’ll git infambtis demand will be ‘ made] - It the AbHshnist'under pur ; , . j .i. j ;! i ; t. > ; £ have mdikated.breefiy the giperah has already contrived to secure ( p otlt i; neB UV lb o polrsy we mnstpnrsoo sanction pf what are 6ppp|psed, t(>be 0 f vye wood succeed. Uther ijoes will groat names. It contemplates the 0 f coarse'sejest themselves to you—let cbfnpietost dts’graco and! tb(s us heV em.aird we’ll acljon em. : louriding■ ropudialiori in Ibiril history, iln conclusion: Be wary ; and nn- V. - , ... i jl u„ tirin.; jßemember on yu depends I do riot fear, that it. wij|tsucceed,. .» tbe p o unftii ß .:ft ( rchobnß; invxbe. thous causq it is only necesisury to expose and(J wb 6 wnjQßt hpld riffis] but who such a plot to bring it to sbanie : hey bin to grass far 4] long weaty , ; i 1 OccksiojlAii, years. We must succeed now or h6v» 1 ! cr. ] Peteolkum Y. Nasbv, LaitP ; the Ch ’eh' • thoNoo ; My beard but one idea' i o. It is not so As be sat do'v js asked the blessing, in these ] wolds:' ■ '‘For what we are aborit to reteive, Lord make ns duly thankful.”. And added in, ibo,samO breath— “Salt that steak is burnt to crisp.’\ || I >n a tranquil, island ody vortexi of war,; ion qaeet df the re- remontiof and' rapid retrenchment, ay, and tho \riae and reparation' for a peri d mdderate taxation. rural that the people \nce, and that the (hould be] as interest. > hereldftire passed it images and 1 deaths’ ousdkeeper, the po- lady of the family, the youthful oandi- Lcgislalure. It '.vus The Only 'Slave CcjuNii) iea- [only Wo countries, jvvhich tain slavery are'Spajin and; French journal stales that be the 'first ; to .{albo^ U have already Been prepa Senate .looking to this ol terrible war in the'United the equally terrible debt trying to Upheld, jthe' “ii gtyp '.considerable iuneasiti countries which legalize question, is being asked;, w hot better to try and get i other than violent? means, like this is likely to bring one means or the oth^r. \ V ' | • - r_ I.- w*fc,“Ftn gotting said ,whjei» ho was sleuiin ■ Nasty Issues an Address to the Southern Democracy* a /raost hpt been Ho las jive. -.ld i retest to idoncy •head et i'ssjo'n into in the late 'ter ~' i Saint’s Best, (which is in tW;Stait) iiv*Noo (Jersey,) July 31,’C5: ) the. Bimocrisyof:the Southerk sfatesj t Beerly Beloved, 1 salpdbyou !' . The evenee uv the past 4 years hev i in momCliebus. The war Ibez ended j r —to W:aooperfishel observer' it : wood seem disastrously to yoo and ns, but ;if A better rebels i s in Richmo id,. :at! rnission of ■a r Ttfey ate >us motives.— i* will the :racy, fashion band Bucban i plfrngad the 'hey will help -..uudireasiy lo yoo and ns, (a him whoseeagle eye kin fierce the misty iucheri gellqrasly. f J I !Troo, we lost,' the orfises, and bev Dint for, four longhand .wceryyears on 4ter;l gdound, wsose fruits jwns \vop«- toy and whose waters wn.s hitter.. So i the childien of IzreJ wandered forty: years wilder nis, but tba finally 1 muiid a Canan, fall av fatnis, rannin milk aiiVf honey, and eich!, and so Miliil, wo emerge into onr Chilian, ere !%• • . r - i The war"hez bed it« uses. We hev aj' •5 '"l'7 ‘ T ; bid, party, to ries.t—vthc now mam Brazil. J A Brazil wjll Measures red in i th( iject.* The States, anc caused by istitntion*’ 1 >css in. the ythe hether jit in •ic( of it by A question it 'about by eafHow long Eve, ti e first woman, livedi 'Wevpo aid not believe in.tmd earnestly praetieej of btosb* /here ■ Is ; sbarcety a - not mote br.leaa inenp d ecidedlyin, fevor afra - and., f % unpre ■ flhristKn j—i-At ? tle lay i t|ig of the'corner stebe of the new.'Roman Catholicchurch of, * St. 'Joseph, Sto./ at which npwards'hf 20,000 peopfe present/it is re poried’ M, the St. Lbuig JRegublicaK, that}wKen : the hop imsed his handj to sign htpiself witb/the sign it acted like olbetripTiy/20,000 ; hands were simultaneously ’raised-I.| cross their foreheads with tbe sign'd? . redemption.-,'’ 1-: ''v/J/- ah hrticie io • the i lit2(fA«r'ar,;. / on tbe question ■ I'Whap Afj«| _, - the baptized children of the Church; apd How are they to be treated?! jr-| , two points""are discftssea. ’ it. ; Baptized children of chnstrsln pafehls . are members of the Christian Church | and [truly and really Christian^. Tjhby are trained i n suchl.it' manner a* nover to be oij think themselVes any thing else thaotßUßobnstiatfe. | -At the in nuai meeting of the Society for the Propagation of the (Jospel in Foreign parts, held in Iron* don,l[the report shows the fcr the year amounted to, £102,997.-- Tjhe Soeiety’s missionary list now, in* eludes 601 cergymen ' maintained wholly or in part, and a large body>9:! catechists, school-masters, and divipi-* - ity/students ’l ,V S „ ‘ I-i - W—From Cite fiUy-seventh Annual ijtepbrt pt the Pennsylvania Bible So-; Cjiety we learn the number bflbboki , issued from their Depository make a total of .85,667 volumes. The total/ r eceipts of the Socijely, from all-sourh ees/ lof the same period, has been $44,354,38. - V ' Vj *. j r-r —The Wesleyahs have, jasi oponlf ed seven new chapels in- neglected dis trict s in Londorf.:Ehglahtt,for-the hae of tba-masse:.. Each of: ihesoohapaU : will] aecoir,mQdtt|.q u. tboosac^j***^*-? A.grionltm?al< i ■ • Wash for Fruit; Trees.' i, ' The best wash for the tranks.'ahjd. branches of Fruit trees is made, .by dissolving bill a pogad of pbtashyii, iwo gallons >f water. This is applied i with a brasi at any season, but, per-i paps, with-most effect in.spring. One <|ir, most3wo applications will rid'* the stems of trees of the bark'louse, and render the bark smooth and glo ( s- , 1 ayJ i It is far more efficacious than whiiewash.ds,. aj’ppesef vatyvd against the! attacks df insects, while it pi-6- . motes the growth of the tree and adds i,o [the natural lively color of the if7 .- 'V ? ’vU-'. f; The .wash of sofhsoap is also a very ■ ■ good’one for many purpose's.-though i hot equal fqr general purposes to fljip ~j potash Wash. The soap wash is best, j forjbld truhkW.withthick and raggo’d ■ gortioivdf.U romainsrupqn 7 ; the surface of the.bark.lot some time] ,■ i and .with the - action of every riai his ■[ dissolved, and thus penetrates into all i , thei crevici's whera insects may : be / : i jodged; destroy! hg the m and soften- , i |hg the bark°itselt, r*i I- .- I | Another [wash may be made by i hbating one pound, of sal sbdaito Wpd > nespin ah irpn pot, apd idissolve it; in • a ghllon of. j water. ;Tnis, wash, iwilt- . lake off allrtho moss and dead bark, iy= r and kill in spools.or. all fruit trees,and. ' 1 grape, vineq gnd make thein as smooth ” I as though; polished, and make did Wees bear anew. . ; •' p | In usingitbe waab pf soft. soap, it is ■ beet to reduce about one half with . water, as injury may bet demo if ap plied in Wrbngth.. ‘ For young trees ft is better tb useaweaker sotutio,no£~ potash—say one-third to one-Half as strong. i - i /, Thistles. - ‘j:-'-., ■ ..■*••• \'» _ -■ <- ; j!. * We Copy thfe following fireman Irish journal': ■ | ,j' , / v V ; j. '..'sTrarap dn the.buflß qf a> goodly '; number of-the largest “plants in the spring, and> place on the , buds ateaw spoonful brsilt; then turn your Kdgs lon them. They will eat the roots and | the salted j plants first. They will thus acquire a fondness for them, and will continue, to eat them daily ms lona as they can be found,.? If bubooe hog :be educated in this way, he will teach* the whole herd to eat and they will exterminate all oh the farm." 'e often • • ™ b • . Good Cow 8» ; The bhsli fcowe formiik- tlufcboned, especially abo&t ,the legS abd tail. A thin neck irf a good pointji A, ijuietand good-natured disposition is hnother lexcelleht (Jdality In a 00w. . f A >lbecb of 78 poinds was abearwT from a fill blooded Silesian oiwned by Aabury Strubble, of '4>wn, Pa. fleece was of tihrafl yeara growth. , . i ; mre, M ME I ‘*-; r ' ’L f I t : .]