; ’ *' * *:■!;'■ T-' 1 : \^ pH PPJUTIO [froh the new roEK.Seai Id the gtttniner Loi i. BY 0. IRANfee'lt EBBBB.U \hl the days in which we wan |!y tbd river’9 quiet flow, , .Aid o'er Love's bright pages pi in the summer long ago. . UoiVfVa his strong arm" reelini j ltoim i our hearts,' who’ll eve bora's'sweet tendrils were enh In the summer long ago. -* Svnct is buds the soutbwind k ■ tVj’iitlic JuneVrcd-roses bli Vera each day’s unclouded ; hKi! In the summer long ago.- . Till lue Jews >“ starlight glistj Por.his footsteps, well I knot At tKc gate Jiotv oft 1 listened, - la i ho f ammet long ago. But iwio war the nation Btartei Into aims to meet the [ foe; Ain't,'in tears, with, him I parlt Tlitce Jong wearyyears ago. .it 'yy' the blood}- strife ist.over, , s jac fond hearts t nth raptui 'is if embrace of .hero-lovers, ■ As in simmers long ago. JtTii, ah me. I’m broken-heftrtei in.'lmv tears shallvcvcr flow For. tie hrato with whom I pat In tue summer long ago. ; M iscellane THE RECORD OP THE DEM PARTY; 186 ihr* 86 ■ 'ijjE amni;sty pooclam*.Tufcfel funnel ns lit ijo favor in the eyes dr ■De-inoffai-y, fls terms were so libe nul il niar.ifested^o 1 earnest a dq! |) restore the Uniorsthat 'waiic organs at onco set : Veisuade U»e South that I nnl, l iii .1 1 on or, avail theorist T'.ins v t!ib' J vlye of Dec. 11, 18 1 I'iij- -iVi. liincolri, Hi si the pejoplu of' fhe awyav ; y.;d they will ‘ahi .i'ah.lifiilir. tnppori all proc hkriiii'.ivfmiK’e to slaves,’-. iirhftntty and iinreasonabh I lorec. ylu in to jjive in their [about api f// ; ccinpliii(i'i'\vitli; \Vrtiil-j' '»t •irho yielJeJ of even die sen Sfl'-iroycrnmoriJ.” | * The Now York ; "■as even rfiore vehcrneiit. •' '^i c grotesque alisurdi fa at. oncu apparent, m - i!n( hii!" of t-(i6>o in re p«>t M lO “tviiioiir've lean ni 'ti'Mly ass-Tt that at 11-ast ii off ll’o-.people , pq ca •''.laie.s would refiisij'To .lake liilli muJ.-i- any eireumsttiiK ■'■or. 'flip recent illno«« of 7 J ' J lnir ' a *»»•>*«• afttei.ctl liisdj av'iV.-M/erat.s(; wp care no l j' Prsclhinalio*!. It car. Hyiai toreo uyljl it is issat'd 1 ''dil iail. tiai, as . <|; s t, -yvnt ! ' : vo 11 v;;;; c nt, contradictory, ■- i ,:; -i aiid( nullifies it Be If.” ’ll- I irovnsburg ('Pa.') A solicitous , fo|V tliu friends. Accor' ’■“i-. Proclamation to absolve treas in .'dlving cot only a'vtoi n j.,r TloN . jtbut ?lijo , h f ’| ull PossißltlTY OP MAN ■''.aiir.ij to sustain measure -sontivo not yet proclaimi 1 '(pder the specious pr a P' an Ifor the" re I u l “a L niotrrit adopta a plai >'KU defeat it." : j , . J h ' j New Haven Daily R, rC -11, it is trad, topic, a - T^w matter, which si which lust of pc hste pan go 1 1 ad vised ;i tu': submit to # tbc degi ;! Poised them the assii fwty in breaking their ‘anesty. ■■ . . - ! ,d P e 11,0 people 1 of tl repri^o B '. blood 7 «tnfe. W R: ‘linor at M ea nga 1“ Got batin' e ' on 8 : l< ? "Wlp.| !l0n 'stb i meaSUres of tfa: 51 %v; t 16 Constitution. ‘ (As On,.*/ ■ or *k rec <> ,\ , ■ IXCIAT io. NB °f the govi then; s 6 with , edlt tbe as daily W l<Ch the , A <3»nini ingth , a6Sailec3 throngh breadth of the lfoc I<?r «tioen t r tlnS St 4s el ‘fils the y , mpath y mat 'iti K ‘ 18 - In Mhe^ ; e f r r oh lnBtan co- jber ,Ur^r Bh adb'° n<orttloBe '• ea «lion i beon 6eck ' in g tC “‘otlhaA. V ° led ' toan „■ llat t ‘lio^i 1 . eo (:'j ~ = ,- ! 1 | I~ 1 j Unit«d States in thejreeerii elections’ “9'd.in Kentucky, Maryland, Missouri ' | atjd Delaware, was a 'shameful viola q I 1 1? of thc panßutution. and the Irep- V ,| eutiori of such jicts in the approaching ; . j elpd.ion will be held as revolution ary,; , and resisted with dll the means -and powar Dtideij onr control. | • ‘'Resolved,i That : the aim and object ’ I l o Demoeratic party; is to preserve •' I W , Union, and, the rights of I 1 i |b vtates uiiimpaired; and they hore- I by declare i that :they consider the [ . Administrative usurpation .of extra lord inary and dangerous powers ‘ not - gijaijted by the Constitution, the sub/ vdrsion of the civil by military law id , . Strips not in insurrection, thearbitra , 1 r J| jarresi/imprisonrnent'lrial and Of American citizens in ■ i wherjo civil law exists ih full '. ! force, the suppression of freedom of Bpee2h and.pl the press, the denialof the right bf asylum* the openl’ and avjpwed disregard of State right#, the e jbplbyment of Unusual teat-oaths,and ’'bp ijQtorleireneo witli and denial of fbp tight of .the people.to bear.arms’, asj ca lealated to prevent a, restoration ofiit.pe Union and the perpetuation of a government deriving its jnst powets ' f r 95P; the consent of the governed; . \‘Meso[ved, That; the shumefal disra . gdid of the Administration to,its duty in.jrespect tp onr fellow-citizens who and Ipng have been prisoners.of vvar in a suffering condition, deserves thh 83verosi|rqprobalion, on the score cf; public, interest and common din mini tv.” ! j?==s ■. Th . .i.jt Jt • CRY.] ig Aj IT. • ? dered! mdorod; ng, . r know, fining • ascsj oiv, ses,. ined, •e glow,’ rted, ' ■ i lis. howpver, moderate in com*' ion witfeliho', fierce abuse .lavished ■the Government by the orators e Convention. Thus the Rev. C. inefey Burr declared,, .rgumeht and iho timo clion l>dd come - He wonld.speak that, Jrbedoiii which had been the I of thejpeople of America for the three years.i Dating that - time, i ajjid informers had hcen do the ■ °t‘ tlMpeople." and, in point of wo had Jiped under a de&polism a than- .that of Austria. The ie to that despot ■o( .because of a want, of epurage, r y i °r pluck, hbt because they a : law;and order people. They aliently waited for a change ii lolicies. |of Tjincotn’h admimstra* >Utit hilll * arl paris upon of lb i Cfcan! US rp 5. the" |ral, istre mo- if> wior) hey ctj Ivtea of pejopi: ism; bi'iivt .wejre i hud pi | tliti -ji tioi; : .for lit; 63,argi •eforo, ! to Souilij to de by ijnd lamatjons s not'ij ■ thjin ill^giai np tTvr ibldruv;. ibss Is Anui 1 m- ÜBiirpi " ill Captain- iskcd, all inory wives bo. made widows more children fatherless, ,nr.d er halo, bo Stirred up- between f ll ° r f ; , ? m-sa me glorious Const!" i . If not, we must put bur foot ['■ [-3 rant s neck and destro3 - . it.— l ofuocraticgovehimon,t . mast be I to power, and Lincoln with his ;fet of rpgties. thieves and spies ivcnjto destruction” , 4 -.• S ini fact, was the tone $ the jraiic organs everywhere. Thus, Convention, Aug.' 18, one of iho resolutions declared. solved, 1 hat we offer our solemn if-agairist’ the usurpation and I despot ism-of the present "'Ad ration as'subversive of the Con-' on and ‘destructive to the liber .tho, people. It, ha* denied to tgn States constitutional rights, ■seby. absolved them from all alle . ~ | - •It .-I’as trampled down a na« j-°"j l t lial ' Lt may instal a military despoCsm upo,u the ruins of constitu, tioipllhberiyj It has stock do to freedom; ;of speech and of the P rc r tf vit has stripped from] the Ambnpan .ditizon his I cor signed him! to. the bastilewithout process OffaW, without charge, and wtthoijt opportunity of trial. Jt has, by the military, violently suppressed the frejedom of the and dicta- elections at the point of the bay. ? ohe <. It has annulledjiovery constitu tional guarantee for-the protection of ho citizen and subjected him to an -responsible tyranny Cf military vio snue;’'‘ - ? )■ ; -• J tie SfateiCentralCommittee lof ’etipaylvahip, in their address to the cockle luring the canvass of 1864, as ursd rs-H ' j , | ' ‘■Nor can hopofind areating-pkee i contemplating the men who now yi troj, opr Governmentand adminis" -T thekwa; and it tarns' sickened •nd saalys away .from the audacity, arrogance apd tyranny it finds in high places, Jvemin tbe very citadel of the naijipn. Sciolists in government; athe« jstsmßeligion;! men who are Ireoj levies ip ono pphere and free thieves in another; Renegades j in polities and seqffprs at-eyery well settled principle of public right and private virtue now sway the destinies of this Republic, amt iire crashing oat thj very life of Amoric in fi*eedijm;” This city was echoed everywhere, b^ii a f ngl ° &dditional 'example most suffice,' taken from the Philadelphia Age of Ocv. 1,1864. f • IjH* we review the long and fekrful joataldguo of j wrongs andinfa" miesj and crimps committed on these safferinlj orders frbinthe great primiijplgH at ’ Washington; we cannot jbeliey« that any one wearing Ahnman form and! having a tinman breast could idly by .J teli:'' 1 ■niij, a ■' 51 ana great' cbiJdr Doc. '/ . ■y of this AVlij: tp hellion a- j 051. confi. I roc fifths led loUll uny 6s whatr ; Mr. Liu.- rain. . j . tiling :’di ll :i Vo no .and tfypn er It- is r, no?) n sit it j tiUjon on ib( The = I raised Cabin, be dri >■ Utimo ilt She iscjv “I Re. proves: la wiles.; muesli fy.it ifyl sovcrei MEI rgus vri,s honor of! ng to it. am gia on by an -ATION OF (^surren rooD, by ft of the id. IflU Hondo ofi storation p which is | giskr cif different ic.ws the wor and South,ern tl radatiori, j 1 stance of ( ■ • I, ' oaths of e South ? is put anj ith tfreir gross, it >n J out thA C( 2 AboH* l( igain on a' By this a) servative >er power RNMENT. ; '"f ) sxt gen ii bitter- 1 stratiprj the I—a bit- 1 withl sated to- Chicago’ is no! who for| destroy; he res.| irraign-' fiterfdr. S 1 aniTriot give .ii phee'ringvdice and fx* i; tend ja herping hHnd to his Demodrati ic Whrejn : ofthej bowf m'the : face of despotic power figh'iPg this last giWt battle for- bn-: man freedom. . . Wehavewepk' ; with them when this standard of pivil and rdiiglons liberty has been troddeft i n the! d.asi by Mr. Lincoln's myrmid odB.*[ We have anspariDgly denohncad the. cowardly acts of; the base traitors.' ' at Washington who, have taken aiway tbeirdoarestrightSandlibcrties.V , DENUNCIATION, ... . Concentrated upon the( PjresideDt, this abase|beearop franticrrevUing.— These wild now' profess to 7 rovtif'o [ his memory could thcin find no words hoarse or j bitter 'enough ■ to’ express theirjhatred and coHtempt;of his per son ftnd pnolivea. The "Ghfeat Joker, ’* baboon; ape, gorilla, usurper, tyrant, monster, |widpw-maker, —such Were tbecpsEomary epithets applied to jthe Chief Magistrate of the , nation. Enough of this; perhaps,?h as 7 incidentally been given above, iland from among fifty 1 ! specimens of ribald dry which lie.beforjo nß< ive can Ifind space but for the I following;; which will exemplify their general tpneJ; It is from the Lp Crpsse (Wis',)2>«noib-at, and was largejy apd approvingly pop* ied by, other Democratic papers; \ ‘‘Yesterday wajs Fasl»l)ay, The wido'w-raaker cafled for half a mil lion of mob, and then ask;ed God to bless him for the crpel deed! Anti in this cpanection'we are lead to repeat: “ &od bless out nj)ble President! [ ‘•Bless, him for being the poorest apology for, a Chief Magistrate jthe world over sajr. j j ,/. i ; . i ‘•Bless our noble president for being the only clown,, stoiy— teller lover'elevated to a position of in fluence in ibis country. j * “Bless h|in for filling.the land with smutty jokjes—with foul-mouthed and, pbscehia stpries # wlvichl evbn biapkr guards! by profession are ashamed to repeat; • [ ' j". j • ' .l;Blf»bs him for overriding all iaiws, bplli human and divine. .■j ' » 1 him for tiisj inibecilo] jnctfm petency, and for his successlinrruining a gpSeatjjiation. i i J vßlom him lor robbing ihb A r oHL of its bone land ninejtv, for using the bpdiesjol those whose servant ho[ is to cnndb the soil of'rcbel territory. “Bless hiin for piling mountains* of taxes upon'as—fortbe siampswo bso —for the depreciation pt our i con pn cy~lor,thd poverty,irijm, and suffer, •hg-ip the land l —,lor the ot woonren he hits forced into houses' of prostitution-—for thp • thousands iof ofphapod children w(iO,will ciirso i|im forever——fqi the army’ef cripple’^— for the' corruption inihigh plajees—ifor the trampling upon t|io liberties of a free people—for freeing the 'negroes by a strpk.e of his pen—forj Pontihu mg this war till slaves are freed, thus! proving the foolishness of his proola-. mationJ--for of his armies’ for th£ deprivation :of rights which haa made America the home fib! ali Grpd s oppressed—for the depopulation of the land and the feeling of Undefin-! able dread, which thight "have been golden had he been more of a man and a statesman, and less lof a pliant tool in the bands of fanatics.” | ] The j promulgation! of these seiiti-4 ments naturally led to throats Of yeh gpancei Ipgal or illegal/ sucti as thbso made by 1 excited orators at tbo,Chica go Convention/whore 1 the Hon. WJW: O’Brien, of Illinois, asciired |his hear ers that, | ,i : f 1 ■ j') , “When. Abraham i Lincoln" retired from the Presidential chair, they : would renew triaf by jury and try him for tbe offences ho has committed a gamst the laws and the Csnstitution: He would bo - provided with counsel and protected by good Democratic lawyers. (Cheers.) They would try 'him as Charles I, was tried in Eng land, and the verdict of the jury might be the same, that he had been-found guilty of being a tyrant and a traitor Whatever they would do would behn der the law, and if they found him guilty, they would-find men 1 to carry out thej law. (Cheerii),’ 1 . : | And pie Hun. Ben{\ Allen, [of Nqw Turk, prophesied:- |i ;p. i ' . “Thai people will soon rise, and if they cannot put Lihcdlh out of power by the ballot, they wilfby the bullet.” The prime .of Booth Was this logical result of all this, ahd ; its sequence is to be found in the N. T ; . News of June 8, in which the oourt then tryingthe assassins was told: j - : ■ i j', “If they order any bql/td bpexe entedj they will bo syripjjf gdiltjk ev ery one, of them,„of deliberate'mur der, and when this pepplawakesalit tlo • out of- their oewildermbct/ihe members of that military commission will be banged, i J| • rj ■}" THREATS or RESISTANCE. ■ ■- - ’ J.' ■, ’ 1 1 f u ■ , The aid an d comfort afforded to're bellion j by" the Democracy j was pot confined to hfgdment and, tion. , Efforts worc cot to {. ' ' i- • K 1 ’ ..of Pennaylva btirthe P&jgjf .> id ; rfsi»Utscer*i letftyigifapceof attempt would: : made throughtl pretDemdßratii |of the Golden v fieaii;: ltuigiit«i” ifnik &■ *y 'iaefi. or' jess much lhat:htts .O, bo fourid"redaco tt pression iO'th’®o) “Lesson ■of thelFii »egt Or^(O>foi^^XVv “10.'; #|ttteiais/ to whom the people ha BAtruated the powers of the Gov# lent, shall: re tnse to ad minister, j W s|ruji accord ance with its ; tonsijf ip, .and shali assn mo,and >& or author, ity oof deJegated,7iL r ;fba mbbreiit right and imperative yof the peo ple, to resist f |andi'if need b <?, to expel tbairvby% mof arms %ch resistance is nato|evtoluiion, but solely the assertion‘j ; 11. It is incorapajbfe with the his tory and nature of oprpystem of go v. ment, that, Foderafaathpntß sbbutd coerce by arms a sdT e; and all intimations of saffh'powor ofright were expressly withheld in 'the Cod* stitution;- which dpoii th® Federal ; Gpvernmeol|iirfotB author.- ily " J -1 i : ■- «And, the: Grand Consm|nder of the' Order in Indiana, Dodd, of Indianapolis, who codfessed : his guilt by violating his pa?idjr- and ospaping to Canada | while udder his address to jthe Ordo. of i that‘State, Fohc ifi, |1864, thus igmrhApicales the the views of Yaliandlghktnon the ‘subject: | ‘ ' I ; ; “He finally jadgoSthatltVo Wash ington power will ; pot N-ibld up its power, until it. is iaJssn from by an indignant pr ‘o by if ■ ' He intiinati interests,! w and that a mastery.” The same ro cor. 11 fa' trm.i m ig cleci ion, ai of orph disarming o Indiana. I In tlib programme thus in- is easy Ito understand this threats- in which! Democratic dema gogues haibicually indulged. ‘ ' • Thus Mr. Max |Goapp, in a speech at! Lancaster,! Pa., Sept. 17,1863; told hjis Jiearegs: ! • , j- ■, . ! 1 . ;|‘ So loni as the fro'o exercise of the elective franchise is left uk t I stilt hope. Sl|.oifld that bo taken away, w;o have nothing left to live for, and may as' wen sell por lives; as de'ally as wo cap ”j ■ ! ; .-j •j.' j ■ , So Mr. SohatqE Wuli, of New Jer soy, May ,9th, ISO 3, enlightened the Democratic Central, dub of.the city of j Philadelphia, on their rights and ; dnjties.': ''j !■ ,‘l‘l do .not hesitate' to declare iq the eaps of the; Administration and of the LpyalLeagues, itsjainos, that if their whr upon the personal' hpettj' of the! subject, m defiance of the guarantees, of jtho Cpnstituilion, goes on, the time’ majy come| when ‘lorboarance ceases to be |a virtue,’ and ‘resistance to ty rants becomes obedience to God.’ Let ourcry bo, in the fearful contest which is approaching,.‘We will askjfor noth* mg! but whit is right; wei Will submit to nothing tbat'is prrong.’ ”y . ■ i Mrj Edward ingarsoll endeav ored to excite the passions of the same body, Juhe:l3, 18(53: \ ’ , : “Can- the Democratic people of America protect arid defend the insti tutions of this , country against the revolutionary assaults of abolitionism? Aye, pirs, and Whether the appeal be to thebailot-box; or i the hideous bat not |1 ess popular, apftoal to the cartridge' box| be forced upon tjio people, I hive notja particle o^ - dqubt of the result.. • •. Maintain ji our laws, peace ably >f you can,'forcibly if yon must. Your Constitution (provides that ‘the right of the people itorkeep and bear amp shall not bo!■ infringed/ That' clause has full moaning, and was not; tor youj without anxious 1 thought for | the future, founded on a knowledge of the hast I’f, , Jfor was there wanting aTyrtens to sing the wrongs [and threaten the, vengeance of tbq martyrs Who were crQ ®J|y- restrained from destroying their country. To relieve the monot ony *of prosaic treason, a few. lines may) be quoted, from “The Bastlles of America,’’‘.written ifof the Aax,” and printed therein, Sept. 23,1863, [ “A thoogand rnemories.if Wrong, which frea i.i ■«»’*forget, ••,{;* ; Are brooded o’er in Warren, and.the vaults . of Lafayette, ■'-/■! i Tbe shield of : law onr fathers garMheir chU dren’s sole defence; {■ Yon ve wrested on the ‘safety* plea/tho-ty. ' ) raht s old pretence; if «.* And pow, with daggers at ‘onr bieasts, yon I piu us hug our chains, • I - ---is ! • - • '. Hedfc.tEe nftiHibly ■ tho' -ab'-' “Knljihtp i r ‘VA-meri ‘‘Soria of •■■l;.;, -':V } ; : .tiore, will the ?J • - Irflf do*n; , . . r : lu jot be yonr wflliag slaves,■ while one -werm drop remains; •'v y .v. ■) :^j' v | ■rijfJyrant’g .nmnwesinidaunUeij freemen’s veins>*,,," : . V ■ ■'•'■ •., “ ■ : bf malignant folly wiis S9W|ojyntil.tba oy% i*-p.lootioii, r The National Democrat jExecative CjonrmiUpo, onOctobor W JBG4, issued ap addressJn which, theyendeftybred to inflame,the IpjjD the people by recounting the tyrabpical, excises ibL; tbp ment. and wound up by th'ieatenitg a , ro 9olntioif. in, case'bf St’Clellana do feat ht the poM • 1 i l’- i’ ; T 1-t _r .i. . ■ ■■; 1 ' : ■ • 1 -[ ; *-Theyrbelieve that the; American pepjfle, armdd with the 1 , raajestib au «*?i r P of Jf he 9 0n 5 , * and laws, Wll meet these beginnings of uaurpa tmn Jm the spirit and with tfio doter minJjtibn of their fathers; nor suffer Executive’ ambitidn so fai to corrupt .the constitutional remedies of Execu tive wrong-doing as* to'condemn this free people in the immediate /«<«rfe to the condition of tM remedies of told^ JeCt populatiow °f the Men 0«i the same day; tho'special organ of. tpe Peace Eefttocrtoy, the New York News } - carried out the propbsi- Uoti ito its legiUmite 'results, by de| elurieg that M’Clellan’s election 'was hopeless, and that;the time for ablion was at.liatd, ’1 , fj » j : * The|«un'ia notmore certain to rise to-morrow, than that the President, bf those Ujnited States for the next four will be Abraham Lincoln ! . .| refuge and hope off law, order and •Constitutional Government trini ■>lp end-- -'Sadi >- r > N« I; pf-whi-'' Ibki By_;*l And TJnc! , tiioro ba>is of po. ..jn tif it which ripened to do,- velbpmentwas the Chicago attempt-to* set Idoao the rebel prisoners! at Cahip Pouglasj ■ ; r ’ i ', - - " jTO BE CONCLUDED -ISOVEI NEXT.I An lEisn Woman in .Kansas.-^-A letter frbm Wyandotte' relates a VeL markable instance .of sdcfefesa difficulties as follows: , i ';*V :. ■ | l§fso, an Irishwoman—a i widow •Wbdi ‘ ' - -i' —jso only means consisted of four, hundred dollars.in money,: and somel half dozen children, 11 look [Oiie dred nod sixty .acres of th e Gorefh- I, ’■ t. ! M - r ) mcni land. , I ' i; -'-I f- Sine 0 then shcl has. increased tfiitf,- by the assistance of her cbildred, un ilil hcr=elf and children now 6w.nl,tklh iacresj ill jpaid f or. • This year she sbld- Nr btutcr.niade last roar,for 8900. Shi h 4& rebeijtlj- sold ithe balance of her. Inst-yeairfs born crop, .1,200 bushels! for 82,50 a bushel; which is $3,100.—- Last -week she sold twenty-two bead of oxen for 87breach, for $1,650, She sold- ner bacon and hams for some ss6oi; So that lhp; produce of the' farm; over and aboye beeping the family, has been - oV’oiri 86,000. ; She has , how on |ba Q< f 1.60 bead .of jcattle of,all sizes; for tw bnty-eight of Which shoreiusod $5O eaiih’.i She.- has, twenty. firkins of batter id the cellar, wh’ch average j 120 lbs. each; and which shCiSays will; bring 75 Icents peri pound, by takihg it to some ofHho United States postq,' higbei’i up. She has,, also,' hoga in abnodancy, and 65 herbs; of growing corn, and which will produce.Bo bush els to the; act e. ), Now this seems like but it ij literally true.” ■ Young Men, Think, of Tais-Wildr ris KetjChum, the father of. the groat defaulter in. Now. Yprk( is reported have said to his ..creditors ■ “If f il coaid have my; son back, with his good name, andyouwere all jiaid in full, 1 •iyould dis content." Such is the last ambition-of oar good finantiers. A' lifetijrae of activity, an ample for (tunc its reward; and now ,all would be g;vop for aeon’s goodpame: Yotuigi mfn —fast young men—think of this.! I Stekien (iiEABD's Rule —1 have; always considered advertising liberal*! ly and long, to be the great medium! of success in business land prelude to wealth . And I have raadelit an inva-j riablo rale, tpo, toadvertisu.in the dul j lest ,tirie,| experience jbaving taught! mo thai money thus spent is well laid i puij as, keeping my business cbntiuu. ally bobro the public.jit has secured die mary sales that I would otfiGrhbißO have loi‘t Gitard/ [■ .ij | h <<■ ■ V ;V !' : : • ; ; . ill *•' a< i.:'hi,Mj;rr!i •■-t'-ft" k'J. -.ii.ff;?. >*..0.1!'. - « .:*; t*«f* .tfe^ok.isMd:^> ?g r&v ;, r Sugar ■ : oised for: some:yekreever tbeintro duction of fcorgbam or Chinese cate-f -also tbo AJVican, imph|eeC Groat-word', the oxpeotatiqpe of, the its, fifst introduction,: When discovered; that' tt^¥^Bna(»r^^id : byrdpicoald: bo produced frdrrilpTriridr that; Jteo? at 'a wst.aadrevidcjiily ip a yory.Jbtfpelingt blnndering_munner,Vatid if fesmisTp TnaYvelibuPiy irappy aridCooipensritirig iollcrwpd the abovemriarierpf handling it.imapyconsiderateandpublic tripim!, ited. persons dhpugbl; what; will; bo when tbs plant is cbteplefely 1 climated) thoroughly cultivated,' arid our-scientific meh elaborate amethod. developing its imgar-pt oduoingj •Every one‘fidjy bolioved that sugail could be produced from it of oxqelSnfi quality,|and ip payjnffqnantrtiesn^his 1 was the general belieT for. artiraei but the modus was the, trouble. Schiio so£ our chemists assayed to test its quaji-1 t ' e » aB i a sugar-producer, but for wdnii 1 °* ?k|l! > to, manipulate as analytical, chemists. failed to drivelope its true*; character, and' thence arose some i doubt as to whether it would produce sugar,|soine Contending that it does , not contain [ariy cane sugar at all,noth ing bntrprape sugar.* • reports have been made npon| ’t oy sorghum conventions, manyar* .tides bavo boon Written on the sub- “ajbotw dfawpsat a Venture,” but Unlike' it, missing tbe mark. Its capacity for , producing a tolerable: syrup jwas established beyond a doubts spine Of the, states producing enough Jo supply the deficit from the New Orleans jiaai-kpt during the rebellion. ;® e State of Illinois 101 instance; ma king twqlVe Iniiilions of gallon?-in One year, of upon an average about seven gallons' to each 'man, woman and child in the state, a large average indeed for each.far more than would ;oQ3nmednatid as a consequence ' wpuld have some : to export, and filter,prize just in iu infancy, dis aged and met at! many' points by doubts and. distrust thrown over .those experimenters; who like Alchemist, tried to make gold oiit mietbirig else than gold (cane orit rape sugar);; If such wei-e the ds| under ,doubt and'discourages bp ibe; pQ.uit.-of sud-j hbidi >nyert into sugar seyeii to eight iftha of i\ll the syrup that could J \ade frbm ripe cade. It l'were to'' ... del the result; 1 would require'a. certificate; for sanity, but suffice to nay ;that she could sweotcij every 1 State in tho'Uaibn. )-i , ■ | I f ■■ In our, most snccessfril days of sugar | production of alikindsjwe wore large i impprters of sugarjeonsuming much, •vary much of .that made on theislands. The United states have not been - more than third or fourth class in : this pro* ! Auction. ■ ' I .’f'et all the Statos bolow the isoihei mal.iine produce as above claimed for IHjnois, pnd the result wcnld be most astounding, for we instead of’ import* ing could export jmore sugar than is prodncod.in all j the" islands, of the ocean.' ' > | ; * , [f And why should wo not do so-? for ij is pnorof the simplostj things in tho world, to ipako sugar from ripe sor ghum. If'yon treat it tight, you can hardly prevent its forming sugar v and fjfliy up to the proportions, above it cannot be prevented from crystalizirig without a*very spe cial effort to do so. f . ;Thri great trouble hitherto has been ;to, know what is contained in sorghum ; jnice, and the appropriate defector'and evaporator, to separate andl remove all foreign'mailer,jso as to bring within the reach of the laws of crystalizatioii jail the crystalizable sugar. | . ‘ j It has been ascertained by : a fine 'analytical chemist | that ripe I Chinese cane juice contains from; 15 to 16 per . icent. ,of tine crystalizable sugar. In its unripe state it contains grape au jgar, arid when lesaripe^—staich. .But |these are finally converted into,cane sugar ; in the process.ol ripening:. | Many persons qoriterid that the joane will not ripori as far north as [Pennsylvania,Ohio andjlllinoisl Per haps so by common .mode of cnltiva dion, but it most be remrimbered that in any and all of these states, it may !bo planted from two to three weeks .earlier than; oorn. '] I 1 , Brit, ah, says one, .“the frost Will catch it and cut it down.'> Well sup pose it do'esjust let it grow up again, ,for the root basl-so much - vital-, ity that it .will _ bear tho grPnnd ito be frozen ap inch deep, has age, vigor and wjll ripen its panicle before the .frosts, ijf the fail catob it.:, So experi ence teaches us. . •, . : j Pcmomber, ripe cane produces cane,' sugar and in amount snfficientjto sat isfy ■ the Biggest sugar tooth in the land: An acre of cane that will' produce two hundred gallons of syrup, in den sity oqual to twelve pounds to the gal lon, the writer.will take, .andi manu facture from twelve to fourteen hun dred-pounds of good sugar, and from fffty ; to soveniy-fivo palions of- excel lent syrup, entirely fr,ee from that pe i culirirl sorghum flavor. so common to Hhal now made... This, at Ihreo cents per pound for the sugar, and twority flve- cents a galjon for the syrop, yield moro- to the'acre than .corn .Ordinarily: does" 0 n the best!lands of. Illinois j'jj,; j’ Just for a moraentslop arid consider ixaggerationf ME 1 ' ■■. •;i.r : •- • '<-.♦•»- .* ' -.-f- ■ ';|&<rtf',-V> .<; 1-;f :'X'l' ‘ < 1; ity- .Vi s')’-- •;>• ;>- iSr-it •;-i r;-!-,- >■l v ; p|^v' OBE ri’-.S ME 4 - ir .., -: ife ,v JK • .-*• ■ 'Vr-.t, WWl= "{'■-utv. t- >nd ojh w »t ajmßlie n>tme,fe>s,.' bf »n invent)On .pt"tESTtind, tberich-l i ®s. wealthy comfort ~• that, mhfjii ,■[Spent- "in : apo6r* oa ai',,Jtfc % .venlibhfihddisdoyery Baja. b'eCnm'ade,' ** pnd thprqngbly Vp«ted;ft>rsiwo or morp yearBuby|one af tii<f- -jjift&i ; wlridetf & opoiv ailJthatihe I • WPMfitp avjjwpments fully 6aaldy ; . • ■’^ '°y Weetmo (eland iwnoa V fflr Pa.^^a^^(3j3nvedU6fl'and'in.i^r prise jshould head d»o £ ntpr^im&ruwi i .- iana : I torest in the common/good, thapi is 1 gotihrally allotted td fiionScrs fn I H that ad bntirely adcb vitally aflfcct (lie public; Welfare VMr,.' dvapbi-atprlupd bia juncts.-, ehodlcl b6dn';.u'se in bor'jood ifijlhe-Dn iteil Stated where v cane of any is grown, for it j*, now the only trno. practical and. pppi : n omi cinTn e t hod of making sugar, pio> : . duping , a greater per con t. ,to a g|vpo ]; aniquty. q(‘ .cane.. Ulan eyort ■ tbdsdgar J ... establishments ofLouisiana. i is' it:nr V Heturhe A Isjoldiera ' ill the JSiy- ■ •* . y \ y lv'Pipld^';,CX‘ ;. X / Wo clip.: the fallowing jof*,j of some of the trials .of’-a returned .-•■ . soldier, from;a letter pf Prich ard, 9th.Pa; Cavalry, to lb©. harre ßecord of'the Time* : \ |. • •: “Prichard,” the cider, hadn't finish- I’ £d haying when iheHoys” came bonne-: '. Two young linen, pt formerly war like '-. proclivities,! were importuned toassist in' industrial putsui.ts, of the mowing; . order \Tlie “boys” went ln; ‘‘Fnd to make bay,” above mcntioiied pro-' ' geiiitor, allowed. • ‘‘Soldiers--, should - endeavor id be steady," he observed. ‘[.Nothinglike agrici4lnrefor ! the form* , aii°n Of steady habits;' an excellent 1 ; ■ chance t,6 practice' learning bread; by the. sweat of^3’cuc,'individual brows].” Flattered'by this advice and stimuli (cd by adept hints pext Winter,” we wept' in. ! *Blistqjra-' - brs* day the size of | ive cent deuom- ~ inalion of shinplusters. Divers-cuts,, pyd lame .back tb< second day.“—, I '[Splendid courago. and -heroiclroso/if.; j ;t|mnayarc[ •yery impdrtanti desiderata ij | ip' tlra mitttsuy. life]V- ignn i man-flatterihgi}’ reinirkeJ “You ai.o‘, > ■ td nlaniicst sqcli onergetic c|f character on thej-hay fioldjas I ain, ■ sure you did jon the battle field,” he ' - lufarieatiiigly observed. “Hoys,” - lered yon know,, went in again. JWoit • sjiirts, blaspiitfiriyv-Tclative toihayirig,; apd. cxtraoif jiriary: ’-fatigue t : were -thd events o i the third day. ;i3ecs, of , iikprofred caivaliry'pattern, Ihg fotirui. M ne the i‘ ; .bbys'’_ mowed in],a beua ? npst; acted . brave and spunky, .and skirmished. Poos Hidden • change of tactics—a —fierce . demonstrations ■ ot. an aggressive , iy ic ; —brush I iu\ greatrdeiuand^rl-gr^^” ]on a ri-e—-bees active—downward tendency of \ by the “old gentleman" iyid dog, per- . > s 0“ ‘lying Blycher, .or Patterson—ah* I other faliof edllery—ii dlßmdnatrative' • \ made for an adjacent' hay cock— . [' disappearance ‘.of reouforeemenls—- y •!‘6ld gentlctnan” bee sieged-—certain mysterious jerks and .movements re* v presenting , the frantic agony of the! hay cook. - d| l i7ia|e:— Kolief of the gar«; rison and mispellaneoas tho[ laiterfot personal bravery ;and]unepn-, pnerablo fighting qualities.' flew he ;-,_l fvas nol afraid wlioh eomo wote, and how welh- thl dog did, etc.; 1 , buff'nary |- wprd for tbeWratpgy of the’ “boys” j . who laid back and, howled- - wilh de*'- - light; i | , v , ", .■ : r We have, finished haying.- ' , -i i v:, f i)OuA political economist, who wanW to] devise, a scheme lor raising the ■ ■greatest possible revenue, proposes to tax female beauty, and leave every lady to rate her ow.nr charms. Saco A, tax would, we . say,'be most L> ; cheerfully paid,, apd most productive. >j •' 4®“John Adafas, being called upopi ■} for a contribution lor foreign missions,' i remarked; “I have nothing to give for'Vj the canse,but there are in this vicin ity six ministers—not.onb will preach i ih the other’s pulpit. Now I will give as much, and'more than any one else,' to civiliso these 'clergymen/’ , i l®fMr. Maurice Filzgihbons, of;N‘ York .form orlyof Bridgeport,, has in- \ vented a, “pocket sewing machine,’/. \ which will, be plated in the market in: a short time, at a cost, of five dol-. | lark;apiece. They; weigh abogh foiAr ' ounces* ; Southern ,papor says,* that Hon. Fulton Anderspn and Cot-G. B. ECooker, of have made .>■, a tbnddii of for'Jeff. Davis. ■ ; yi_: d General{Gordon, who. figured so prominently iji tbo Virginia ''fdiphigns, is riow keopirig a grocery/ .store in Allan!a, Georgia;: - *'■ * .4.- -..-:.-•,- -.•... .i.j:: 4,,,, , - -,,,,'•:,,•-•::, --.1T..:',' ? 4,...f:'.,,,-,,?,:- I-.'- ,X\ . = '
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers