VOL. VII TEM PEOPLE'S JOURNAL. rritLislinn EVERY FRIDAY MORNING, BY HASKELL & AVERY. Terms—lna•arlably In Advance: One copy per annum, • $l.OO Village subscribers, /.2.5 '.11:1019 OF ADVER'rISING. 1 square. of 1:1 line's or less, 1 insertion, $0.50 : 1.511 o every sub=erptent insertion, .25 Role an d r i gor.. work. per sq., 3 insertion-, 3.00 en' ‘101,Villtql: insertion, .51) 1 column. one yell. '25.00 1 cebonu. 15,00 Adminiitrator.' or 1: eetilors . Noticeß, 12.00 I•lietill's Sale:• per trod, 1.50 Profession it Card: nU, exceeding', cigitt lines fir inn per on business, to secure at ten•ion. dionid be addre , sed (post paid) to the Poblidiers. THE TISIES, THE ISANNERS, AND THE HMI. The time , 4l.•ln'lna new Ineasnres:ind new men; The ‘v,rhl adcanrc a:.(1 in time outgrows 1)n• lao. th it in our father.' were he.t ; A n d d„ n iol e , alter '4llllO purer • , ehenie 'Will 1 , , -113 p e.l eat by voi.er men th in \ye, Made wi,er by the .teady growth of truth. \Ve rAti not brinz Utopia at once iihno,t be at work in 'Flinn in a lirtr.o itiae , ion drow4e and sleep. to !:1;o1 i. horn into lilt' world. ‘rlio4e work 1- not born with hum: there itlways work, And tool; to work withal, for tlto,:tt w Ito will; And ble , sed ari , the horny hand, of toll.' Th e 1, 11 . y %N , Orld shove , angrily aside 'l' e man who stand.: with arms akimbo set,- Int wea. , ion 'elk him what to do ; Ih. od lie who w.dts to have his ta4. , marked out, . halt die, and leave hi, errand unfulfilled. r tune is one that calls for earnest deed., Reason and Government, like two broad seas, Yearn for each other, kith outstretched arms, Across this narrow istlnutis oldie throne, And roll their white slur higher every day. The field lies \vide before it: "here to reap 'Tlw easy harvest of a deathless name, Tho' with no better sickles than our sword. My %Mil i,. not a palace of the past. IV lIP re NV o rn- o tit creed , like Itome's gray Sen. • ate quake. irite• ;tl.tr tha Vandal': trumpet hoar , e, Thar. -y bleu' , with a thunder tit. 'n. mit,. 1, ripe, and rotten ripe, fur elumge; I tom I.t it I`llllle. I IrlVenn dre:al ut ‘‘ . ll..tt 1- t..kilvd 1 - ‘,r by the in.tilict of mankind. thdtk I tlitt God's world fan apart, Ilecrot.e tt e tear a parchment more: or less. 'Truth i , eternal. lon Iter effluence, N'i;6 rude ell.i-ge„ i 4 tilted to the hour; i- turned forward to reflect The prtni.e of the future, tint the past 1 do not I;Ntt toTo!liyiv out tilt troth, Albeit “I.,n_ the precipice's edge. Let it: =pt::ik plain; there i. Inure force in EMI Tl.;:m too.; mon dream of; and a lie IlinV keep It. 'lawnn a o lude :ego longer, if it skulk The .121112• fair--eeming name. I.ct u. clll Ivrant , 71'T:1 , 1'5,1111d mainain fieetioni ['Mlle , by gr of l;m1. And ail Mal come: not Iry his grace must fall; Jar nom in earile , l hat e 'inie to waste In ratrhi le reshr thr nul.rd truth. .1 I\I' , SEI.I. LON% ELT.. WHAT SHALL I DO I [Abrid. , z,ml from a Tmmmrance Tab! by T. S Ardour.] • In a few short weeks after he had signed the Pledge---4 or he had been a very bard drinking man—everything, ah, it the person and dwelling of Simpson became remarkably changed. Il e w a s a good workman, and could yarn failieNw4e , at Instead lit idling half his time. and spending in.e.e than half of whet he earned in think, be worked all of his time, and placed in the hands of his prudent wife every dollar he made. This acimunted for the change. This meters went on fin• nearly a yvar. %Olen the excitement of experi ence meetings, and a variety of other means of keeping up an interest amon g the rethrmed men, and occu pying their minds having subsided, .'niisou begin to feel restless mid lonesome, and was often strongly tempted to drop into some of his old Places of resort, and pass an evening in good fellow:4l'lp with former asso crate,. state if dissalisfactiontin creased, Simmon became more and more unhappy. He wanted !tome thin to :surtain him—sometlib-t extra to his nmre pledge. Deeply conscious of this, :old com.c ions that he NVll.!i iu 111 11111:W1a danger of falliwz, he became anxious, uloomy, and dr,ponding. One evening, alter sittintr, at home for an hour, and readin2 - over the newspaper ccl the dity, even to the adverti:.ements, he took his hat and " I believe I'll walk s out for awhile ; 1 feel su dull." • Hi s _ N vir e looked up and tried to smile. But she felt troubled; fur she had noticed, fur some time that he was nut alutgether hitmelf. What the cause was, she did not know. But a wife is never far wrong in her con jectures. When .Simpson left his house, he walked away, with his eyes upon the. pavement, undetermined where he should go. He had gone out be cause he felt too restless to stay at home. Now that he was ' in _ the street, he was us dissatisfied as ever. Moving on with a slow, meas ured tread, he had gone a distance of two or thr ee squares, when his ear caught the sound of music issuing from a noted 'drinking establishment, a short distance ahead. Quickening his pace, he was soon in front of the H 14] PE I LES JOUR\ AL. house, when be paused to listen. The music was from a band organ, the owner of which having been em ployed by the . rumseller 3s a means of drawing custom, and succeeded ad mirably, Simpson came near being enticed within the charmed circle of his bar room. But just as lie had placed his foot on the threshold, his better sense came to his aid, and be tore himself away. • Walkin g on IN•itb his bead down, he felt still more wretched: Tlie,dan ger he had just escaped, made him fearfully aware of the dangers that beset him on every side. So wrought up in mind did he become, under a sense of his condition, that shuddering from a vivid picture of himself again an abandoned drunkard, which his imagination had conjured, up, he stopped suddenly, and said aloud : God help inc ! Matt slrall I A?" A. hand \vas laid upon his shoulder, and a voice that he had heard before, said in surprised accents: "Simpson, is it you? What is the trouble now?" -It w;i: Mc•rrill, who had encoun tered him again, just at that critical moment. Simpson turned quickly, when be felt a hand-upon his shoulder, acrd looked into the face of the in truder half sternly. " What ails you now, my friend ?" resumed Merl ill. "A good temper ance man should never be troubled in mind." " You think so. Wl2ll, perhaps not." "You're a good temperance man." "I am not so sure of that." " What !" in quick, surprised voice, " you have not broken—" " No, 110. :Not yet. Btit heaven only knows howsoon I may do so. I an) beset ,e - th temptations that it seems impossible for iml.• to withstand." " It was not so at first." "No. The excitement of meetings and concerts, and the. relation of experiences, occupied my mind. But these have died away, and I am thrown hack upon iny,:elf ao - ain—iny weak, weak self. • If 1 do not fall it will he a miracle. I see every tavern I pass in the streets, and think, spite of all my efforts to keep such things out of my mind, of the mixed liquors that would thrill my taste like nectar which are there to he obtained. What shall I do? I feel as if spirits were leagued to destroy me, and that un less I . receive mom', than human strewth, I will inevit:Lblv tidl." " And so you will," was the sol emnly spoken reply. ".Ntervill! why do you speak so?" Simpson said quickly. "You will chive me at once to • destruction. I want encouragement, not a prophecy of ruin. You saved me once—cannot you do so a ga i n ?" -"Do you remember what was said to you, on the nig-lit you signed the pledge, by our President? asked Mer rill. "No. What was it? ,‘ Look up and he strong! They who are for you are more than all who are against you." "I had forgotteh." . "You havenot looked up then?" "How up? I don't understand you." . to Him who can alone give power to every good resolution. If you have be . en striving in your own strength, no wonder that .you are on the eve of falling. External excite ments and reasons of various kinds, may restrain a reformed man tOr a time, but; until lie place his cause in lin: bands Of the All-Powerful, he is . in itinninent clanger." But how shall I (.15 this? lam not a religious man." Why have you refrained from drinking'?" Because it is a debasing vice; a vice that, if indulged, will her;ar my family, us it has once already done.'' '.V6u must abstain from a higher 'motive." "Can there be a higher one?" " Yes. To refrain from doing an evil act, because it is a sin against God, is a much higher motive, and one that will give a striving spirit power over all its enemies. You acknowledge a God, and that he is ever present; and a rewarder of them that diligently seek him'!" "Oh, Yes ! So the Bible tells us." "It is all true. Whatever power We have to oppose evil, is from Him. If we look to ourselves, and the little strength we possess as our own, we shall soon find that We are weakness itself. But irlve strive to act in all things from a religious principle—and fear to sin against Him, we shall re ceive all the strength we • need, no matter how deeply we may be ternpt ed. From this hour, then, my friend, resolve to put your trust in him who careth for you, After all, this is the .reformed man's only hope. The pledge is a mere external, temporary DEVOTED TO THE PRINCIPLES OF DEMOCRACY, AND THE DISSEMINATION OF MORALITY LITERATURE, AND NEWS. COUDERSPORT, POTTER COUNTY, PA., OCTOBER 6, 1854 safe-guard, that must be superceded by . a deeply grounded religious prin ciple, or he will be every hour in dan ger of falling. We must be supported from the centre and not from the cir cumference. The pledge is a hoop, that is liable to break; but obedience - - to God is a strong attraction at the centre, hhlding in perpetual consist ence all things that are arranged in just order around it. Will you not then look up 7" f - "I feel thatit is my only hope." "Take my solemn assurance that it is. Go home, and carry with 'you this truth—that if you will try to act from the higher motive I have gixen you, all will be right." It was perhaps a half an hour from the time that Simpson left his house, that he reentered it. His wife looked up with some concern in her face as he came in. But a first glance dis pelled the fears that had stolen over her spirit. Before going to bed that night, Simpson got the family Bible, and read a chapter aloud. In doing so he felt a sweet tranquility pervade his mind, such as he had not experi enced for a long time. On the next day he tried to elevate his thoughts to' to the power above, in which he wished to put his trust. He found it much easier to do so than he had ex pected. It was not long befbre, in addition to the reading of a chapter in the , evening, before retiring, a brief prayer was said. From that time, a deep religious sentiment took posses sion-of the ntind of Simpson. Light broke in upoit him. He saw clearer the path before him, the dangers that surrounded him, and the way to es cape. Some years have passed, and he is still a sober man. He does not think of his pledge, .nor of the.degra dation of drunkenness•as a reason for abstinence; but deems it a sin against God to touch; to taste, to handle that which would unfit him for those du ties in life which, as a mall, he is bound to peribrm. . _ Let every reformed man look up to the same all-sustaining source, and he is safe from all danger. "TILE SAME LAW-BREAKING, SEDITIOUS , BOSTON." "Treason rotors in Boston, and has its pe riodical eruptions. Boston now is the Boston it was in the last war with Great Britain ; that it was when Shadrach was res cued: the same -law-breaking, seditious Bos ton."—Richnunul ( Examiner. Yes—the bad habits of the Revolu tion still cTing . to Boston, which now is as much hated by the Aristocracy of Slavery as it was by the Aristocracy of England when Lord Grenville at tempted to enforce the Stamp Act, 'and Lord North shut up its port, account of its seditious. The preju dices of education are not quite over come in that "law-breaking" city. 'Much allowance should be made for her unfortunate training in revolu tionary times, under Hancock, Otis; and Adams. They bad a way of re- - sisting authority and speaking evil of dignities, which savored somewhat of sedition; indeed. it is safe to say tliA, ° treason" began to "fester" in Boston at,far back as the year 176 . 4, when a town meeting of its citizens protested against Grenville's scheipe of taxation without- representation, ;bid recom mended a combination of the Colonies in defense of -their common interests. It broke out into an "eruption" the next year, when stamp's - prepared in Great Britain, by order of the central power, were sent to Government of . finials in the Colonies, to - sell them. There was a great elm in Boston, •Which the seditious opponents of the Stamp Act styled "Liberty Tree," under which they concocted their treasonable scheme, and on whose branches they sometimes hung effigies of persons conspicuous for their Ad ministration zeal. Inflamed to des peration, one - day; by the seditious harrangues of self-styled patriots, the Liberty men went straightway to the house of Oliver, Secretary of the Col ony, a stamp-distributor for Massachu setts, pulled down a small building intended for a stamp-office; and ened the official into a resignation. The pestiferous preachers were also of work. Jonathan Mayhew, a con gregational minister; .descended from his exalted place to dabble in the dirty waters of politics, and preached a ser mon against the Stamp Act, taking for his text, "1 - would - they were even cut off, that trouble me !" It is even suspected that Boston was the birthplace of that notorious order, called" Spns of Liberty," which every where buned itself in stirring up "se dition." Meantime "treason"- con tinued to "fester," and there- was an other "eruption" in 1768. Certain Government officials, attempting to enforce -some severe regula - tions of the Administration, on commerce, were obliged to seek shelter under cover of a company of British artillery, and a town meeting in Faneuil Hall de- mantled from the Governor the re moval of the ship of war froth the harbor. To put down this " seditious" spirit, the Government ordered two regi ments of soldiers from Halifax, and two from Ireland, but the People,get ting wind of it, sent out a notice for tr convention of delegates from all the towns in the Province, to be held in BostOn in ten days, advising all per sons not provided • with arms to pro cure them at - once. After this, the troops arrived, and General Gage undertook to have them "quartered" at the expense of the town people, in accordanqe with instructions from the Home 04werninent; but the " sedi tious" town set the instructions at de fiance, refused them "lodging, bed-. ding, firing," and the General was: obliged to support tbena as he could. The English aristocracy hereupon was as much incensed as the,,Examiner is now;und denounced Boston as "fac tious and rebellious." Franklin wrote home—" Every man. in England re gards himself as a piece of asovereign over America, seems to jostle himself into the ;throne with the King, and talks of our subjects in the Colonies." .The soldiery of the Government being stationed in the street and about Faneuil Hall, to overawe the People, they became subject to all kinds of annoyances; and at- last a collision took place, in which several "sedi tious, law-breaking," citizen were killed. Forthwith the misguided Peo ple assembled in town meeting, re solved that the troops ninst be re moved, and appointed a committee to wait upon the Governor and the Gen eral, and make known their demands. Strange to say, the treasonablci reifui sition was promptly complied with-7- 7 the troops were removed. " So treason continued so "fester" till the last great ." eruption",--when fifty "seditious" persons, disguised as Mohawks, boarded the tea, Vessels in Boston harbor, on the evening of De cember 16, 1773, and in the eour,64if two hours emptied three hundred and forty-two chests of tea into the water. Thus, Sur ten years; was Boston trained to sedition and law-breaking, and .what is very -curious, Virginia admired her deeds, and responded to her appeals, and pledged the lives and property of.its citizens to sustain her! The secret of this _ was--Boston was committed to the death against the exercise of. arbitrary, unconstitutional power by the Administration in Eng land. It was loyal, willing to obey just laws, but determined to maintain its rights against .- usurpation. •This was why the Virginian!, of that day loved tier, and stood shoulder to shoul der with her. Patrick Henry. was himself as " seditious and law-break ing" as Hancock or Adams. There was no time, during that whole period, when a repeal of the unconstitutional laws of they Government would not have allayed discontent, suppressed sedition, proved a complete remedy fOr treason. Grenville vindicated' the Stamp Act, as the Government 'officials now ,"vin dicate the FugitiVe - Act. The noble Pitt denounced it, and denied its Con stitutionality. Grenville retorted, by charging upon• the opposition of Pitt and friends, the tumults, and violent resistence of the. Americans. in the spirit of certain Pro-Slavery Senators of this day, he exclaimed—" The'se ditious spirit of the Colonies owesits birth to, the faction in this House." What said': the fearless Pitt:-Lwhat were his opinion of rite agitations mid tumults aroused by unconstitutional and odious acts of Government? "A charge is brought against gentienien sitting in this Irtom:e of gi.ying birth to sedi tion in America. Thei freedom witW which they have spoken'th: it sentiments against this unhappy act t's . imputed to them :is a crime. [Grenville, doubtless, had his Court Jour s nal, tom-4;d. Era.] Bht the iniputatimi b shall not diseonra ,, e, Inc. 111 e are told Amer -lea is obstinate—America is; almost. in open rebellion: , f rejoice that America has re sisted. • Tliri millions of People so :.dead to all -the fedlings of: liberty as voluntarily .to submit tot be slaves, would have been fit itistroments to make ;slaves of all the rest. The Americans have`l been aroused.' They have been driven to madness by- injustice. Will,you punish, them for the maditesii you -have occasioned? ! Let this coumry be the first to resume its prudence and wittier ; I will pledge Myself for the q olonies, : that, on their part, mumositi and - resentment will cease." He He who! runs may 'read. Unless the Oligarchy of Slavery be given over to destruction, it will not-emulate the Aristocracy of England; which persisted in its odious exactions till it compelled Revolution. But one thing, we - repeat,preients the resort to tins extreme remedy now; and that is, the conviction among the People of the Free States that they have a peaceful mode of redreSs through the 'ballot box, and that, till they have tried the full power of this, they themselves are responsible for the odious burdens imposed. upon them by the Slave rower.—Nationai Era.- ' From - the St. Louis Democrat, Sept. 18. FEIST BATTLE DI BEHALF .OF POPULAR • BOVERIiaGRTY IN KAICSAS. A gentleman related to us the fol " Owing incident. He 'states that while he was in Weston, he went into the Store of • a Well-knoWn merchant of that place, who was engaffed at the moment in selling to tine of his cus tomers, who was a Kansas settler, and aid to be a free-soiler. While thus enffaged, a person en tered the store and" walked up to the customer of our friend, the merchant, and said to shim : "'god a-n you!' soul, did n't I tell you never to show your face in West4n again ; clear yourself, and never skow yourself here again, unless you want a coat of tar and feathers." . The person who *onounced this 'ferocious harangue ,;was one of the "Self-Pefensive-Asso,'ciation of Wes ton," and he had barely finished before the. merchant jumpedlover the counter•, yard-stick in 'band, and commenced Pleasuring him with it, as'if lie had been a bolt of domvf,tic, and with as much facility. The measured indi vidual 'forgot that he belouo•ed to tie self-defensive association, and took to his heels. The Weston merchant, however, in administering the castigation which be did to the impudent "scamp'vkho was .endefiToring to frighten off a good customer, was acting in self-defense— in defense of the intercOurse and com merce by which be lived,-and which it was his interest td encourage. He acted, too, in defense of the in terests of Weston, for it is quits prob able that the Yanke i e freesoiler, by his thrift, industry, and enterprise, will add much more to the wealth of the country than . the lazy fanatic Who spends his time ini trying to save it by 'keeping away the .mint energetic claSs of people intim Union. The merchants and other business men of Weston who recently assem bled in mass meeting and denounced the falsely called "'Self-Defensive As sociation" and its conduct, understand this, and did but unite In 'a self-defen sive measure on their part. The slave bully' was too ignorant and too much blinded by his-fanaticism to compre hend' the true interests of his own community. It Jo be hoped that the wholesome . thrashing he received enlightened him oil this point. - Our C6didates for Prt4dent and Vice President -As several friends have expressed a, desire to know eur preference for President and Vice President, their curiosity having been excited by some retharks in the. last 117Lig, we shall. not' withhold fromlthem the fact that we are in favor of rI'HOM AS IL BEN TON, of I\l;ssouri,', - for President, and ROBERT T. CONRAD, of Philadel phia, for Vice President. We are in fa or of these gentle men being run bylthe People, without regard to old party ties and attach'. ments,-as Free and Independent can didates, without Convention or plat forips, ' without pledges, without na tional party organizations, and without the aid of political wire -workers, old :hunkers, traders and schemers in poli tics; or office-holders. We desire that they be taken •uP and elected by the People, untrammeled by faction, and only responsible to the People for their acts, and determined to restore the administratiOn of the government to its original olect, purity, and pur pose. We are in fa l vor of Benton and Conrad, becauseiwe know them to he "honest and capable," and Ifrorthy. of the confidence Of the nation. We never expect to see aPresident elected with whom we shall entirely agree on all questions. But we are acquainted with the abilitie4, public services, and prominent charaeteristic:l of these gen tlemen, and we, believe they Ivould attract the admiration and receive the votes of a large Majority of their Coun trymen. Col. Benton has rendered long and valuable -service to his .coun try, 'and Judge Conrad is extensively known and highly popular, possessing all the requisites for the second office in the gift of the People. We are opposed to all national Con ventions, or other party political or ganizations, thrOugh the machinery of which the people are trammeled, and unworthy ,and incompetent men are thrown into, public stations _of great responsibility, and assume the control. of the public mind by political action. We are oPposed to all such political jugglers and jugglery, and believe that the substantial portion of the peo ple of all parties are of the same feel ing: They are prepared to cut loose from all caucuses and conventions,- from President to the lowest offices, as the time seems to have arrived when they al. , e ready to spurn all in termediate agencies, and go for the men they think free and untrammeled, honest, competent, and worthy.—Lan caster Independent Whig. • ACQUIESCENCE riow and then 'hear, the pip of some little fellow here in the North trying to batch himself into notoriety by expressing opposition to anti-slave ry sentiments, and recommending "ac quiescence" in the repeal of the Mis souri Compromise, on the ground that. what is done cannot be undone, or better not be undone because of !the diturbance it will create. Once In a great while this little squeak • is heard through the columns of some intense, Hunker Whig sheet. On the part of some portion of the bogus Democratic press which resisted the repeal in question, and was apparently as reso lute in opposition to it as th`e Turks at Sili:tra, we hear it. oftener and in more distinct tones. Now . let us come at once to close quarters with this idea of acquiescence in the repeal of the Missomi,Compro mise, and see precisely what it meros and where it leads. Kansas/rnd No, braska were free territory. This pres ent COngress has legislated Slavery into both. The slayeholder•, are ma king powerfUl efnots -to establish it there permanently, and will !labor day and night to succeed. Now suppose by dint of persevering efrqt, backed by revolvers or bowie-knives, they do succeed in establishing a slave consti tution' flir Kansas and Nebrtiska, Or liu• either of them. Do the men who suggest acquiescen . ce mean that those Territories are to be quiii'tly surren dered to, slavery, and admitted into' the Union as slave States ? Is this' what they meat' by acquiescence ? Or do they mean that if one, and not both should propose to come into the “nitin %vial a constitution establishing slavery, that that one is to be admitted I This is a question .upon which the people haVe not yet spoken, upon which Con gress has not yet voted, upon which Northern Representatives have not yet been called to express judgment. It is a question to he decided' by a Con gress yet to be elected, most probably by the Congress next to be chosen. Now we wish to know of the bogus. Democratic journals, and of the little, feeble voices on the Whieside, which once in a. great while talk of acquies cence, whether they mean by it that Kansas atrd Nebraska should be admit ted as slave Stites ( This. is t h e prac tical question which covers the whole grinand, goes to the root of the matter, and which must be answered yea or nay. Tlic admission of aVebraska or KaPVIS as stare States. a•oald be the . ratification • ? 1 ti,e act of -re . i.ocalitt , ..r thy Illissouri Compromise. The rejection of butte or either, on the ground ofil.the establishment of slavery therein, win)d be a refusal to ratify that act. N(w we desire to know of themen i \V m talk about acquiescence, whether ttity mean the ratification of the infamous act they have so loudly Condemned 'I I)o they mean to iolvocate the admis sion of Kansas as a slave State, if it comes with a slave cMistitrition l , This is the point fur decision, and the only one that is touched by the idea of ac quiescence. Let Mi have a fair under standing and no dodging on this point. And it is the proper question to ask of everyman who is-a candidate ibr Con gress from the free State. , —are you for or against the admission of Kansas as a slave State, should that Territory. either through fraud or ' knee, or i any other cause, solicit • ssinn with a. constitution establisl 'lig slavery 1 ( v - , Let no nominal Anti-`e raska • Ibe allowed to worm his way 'ittl.) C n gess to cheat his constituents and . b tray the cause - of Freedom, ihr the want of a question like this to test his sincerity. Let usshave no treachery this tin. Let the line be drawn be v tween tl e man and the doughface. If! dough • ces are to he elected, them he ch :,eil us, ruck. If ti,, 7 .ro 0,..., t 4. kind n cattle that any portion of the people want to represent them, let them r and\be known in their -true character. Let every man be unmask ed, and show the face at home that Ito intends to wear at Washin _!r.u.—. 4 .lT, y. Tribmire. ..SnAttri *AND FLAT.—A green, slab siikd Yankee; who lives somewhere in . Yermont. saw an ative, isement iu the Boston Hrrald, that n:y one who would send $1 to J. Ber!roonnt, should in return be told how to nnke lots of money. So Gree - ney up .•'d d;d it, and received in reply the f(.!lowing : Bnsroy, Sept. 5, 18:4. Mr. , Dcar sir: Yours of tho 31 s: of August, po,d-tnarked the of September, I.:m.11.1a; and in reply, if you will take n lior.-e and v.aggon and 'wade' seggars you can do %veil a, 1 told you 1 made some suven hundred dollars in 7 month last year yours truly J. BCri.LESIOUNr. - "One hour-in the bath," Napoleon used to say, "refreshes me more than four burs of sleep." NO, '2l