.1 BY G. B. GOODLANDEE & CO. VOL. XXXi:-WHOLE NO. MEET AGAIN. Meet again t when fond hearts iifir, And our grief outpours in tears, 'Tii the thought that thrills ui ever, Through tne lapse of lonely years. , ' After absenee meeting's dearer ' i" artina; houre ere full ef pain ; but we bring the lured onea nearer, '- While we hope to meet again. . . , .( But alas ! too oft are parted Those on earth to memory dear, And we mourn them broken-hearted, , i Kerermore to greet them here 1 , Still, aBeotion lingering round them. Can it yearnings ne'er refrain And we aik i " In that blaet morning Shall we then all meet again X" - , , Meet again! 0, rapturoui greeting, When we're won that golden shore, Where the Tree of Life, all healing, Wavel ite clusters orer more. Buried lore regaini iti gladneii. Buried nope reriree its bloom r Meet in resurrection brightness, . Conquerors of the loathsome tomb. i , .' Meet again ! how sweet and blessed ' Is the hope to meet onee more, ? Where the friends we lore are deathless,.' Ahd our partings all are e'er . ,'l Father, mother, sister, brother, , , ) Bcund In lore's uncovered shaia t Tlasp each otber's hand's smraortal 7,.. , Most sgain, most again ! " itisttlhntaits.v " . - ........... .1 l l -: fTHE BATTLE OF FORT MOULTRIE, .-. . 1776. From Bancroft' forthcoming Iliptory of the tniled btates.j The month of May robed the catalpa jnd the oleander in their gorgeous mat. es oi uowers, auu tue peace oi inanenton as sttill undUturled except by gathering minora that the kimliah fleet and trans- urt destined for iti attack bad arrived n tape ieni river. - All the mechanic Inid laborers about town were employed in strengthening its fortifications, And a treat naruter or nogroes, brought down rout tue country were put upon, the works. The bloom of-the magnolia was inning yellow in the hot sky of early kunmicr, when on the first clay of June xprcssos from Christ Church Parish bio t iows to the President that a fleet of forty t r fifty sail lay anchored about twenty ihiics to me norm oi Charleston oar. ilsppily the colony had already organ ed an efficient government, and invest Rutledge, its chief executive officer, Villi large power. He ordered the alarm to be fired, and while the citizens were looking out for horses, carriages or Louts lo remove their wives and children, he mteueddown the militia from the coun try by expresses, and In company with Urtiiktrong visited all the falsifications. B arricades were thrown lipnuainsl th rincipiil streets ; defences were raised at liupoin'.s most likely to bo selected for anding; lend, 'leathered from tho weight if windows of churches and dwelling muses, wns cast into luiiikc.t-balls, and a opectublo force In men was conccntra ed in the cnpitol. Tho eyes of the whole country were nmed upon tho people of South Caroli- Ix Ibeir invaders at a niotnont when iiitsnt action ffit essential to their suo- t were perplexed by uncertainty of ounsel between Clinton and Sir l'eter 'aikcr. the respective commanders of the rmy una tlie naval force. Un tue sev nUi Clinton would have sent on shore a reclamation by a flag of truce ; his boat as fired on by an ignorant sentinel, but pxl dv Mnnlirin ollnrnl nn PYnliinn'tnn through one of his officers, and received lie trnrlamation in niliirn In this Mm i'ritish General declared the existence of I a most unprovoked una wickea rebellion writliin South Purnlina thn mirrnii)ii nf Wirues of its inhabitants, the tyranny of !s congress and its committees, the error, thus far incorriblo, of an infatuated and tnisguided multitude, the duty of pro- rctiditig roi tliwith ucainst all men in arms, iongruas and committocs, as open eueiuies si tue Mate t but tiom liumnnity be con tinted lo forewarn the deluded people, ttid to offer in His Majesty' namo free Vrdon to such as should lay down their rais and submit to the luwa." Having ione this ho consulted Cornwall is on the ttftt means of gaining possession of Sulli- tin's Island ; and both agreed that they . ould not more effectually' co-operate ith the intended movement of the fleet, ban by taking possession of Long Island, hich was represented to comronnicato Wh Sullivan's Island at low water1, by a rd, and with the main body by a ohan- isl nsvigable for boats of light draft. niiiounaa lour aays time to to j no vne or J, but he took the story of its depth on ust. . - . - On the morning of the ninth of Juno, Charles Lee, attended by his nid-dercarup nd Kobert Howe, of North Carolina, ar jmea at HoddreH'f Point. After examin Ing in fortifications, be crossed over to fralHvsn'i Island, where he found a good ftock ef powder, a fort of which the front land rneside were finished, and twelve fiundred men encamped in its re1 in Siuts und booths that were roofed with rslmotto leaves. Within the fort numer ous mechanics and laborers were fitting jjnd lilting pal metto log fof its walls. fie hod scares claneed at the work, when ! '9 declared that 'he did not like that post t sll t it could not hold out half an hour, md there was no way to retreat j' it was "it a slaiiihr rutn' anrl t.h irnrriaon l fc?u1' Mori Seed. On his way up to CharlMton Ta trtilntiA.1 ll.ltmu lalanri. jwhero Gadsden had the command.' I The battalions raised in South Carolina Mere hot ai yet placed upon the continen tal establishment! ani nUliniiirli Con vress bore the proportionate expense, the S p- '1 1630. disposition of the forces still remained under the exclusive diiections of the col. ony and lU officers- This circumstance became now of great importauce. To '""""""S . curumanu wuatever was conceded to rroitl,a tn.niiii: r rn i 7 r L?.'"tb0im,al,t M0f Charleston; g uuu illliu lu tin PTMnr. but General Lee was tna SeoOllU Officer i in the American army ; his military fame " " time very great ; be had pow. erfrom the genoral Congress to order, and he did order batallions from North Caro lina and Virginia j his presence was a constant pledge of the active sympathy of th continent; anil on his arrival he was invested with the military command through an order from Rutledge. . Ou that same day Clinton began his disembarkation, landing four or five hun dred men on Long Island. It was there fore evident that the first assault was to be attempted not on the city, but its out poBts ; yet Lee proposed to Kutledge to withdraw from Sullivan's Island and aban don it without a blow. Had he octed in concert with the invaders, he could not more completely promoted their : design. But Butledge, interposing his authority, would not suffer it, and Lee did not ven ture to proceed alone; yet on the tenth day his very first order to Moultrie, ex cept one which was revoked as soon as is sued, directed that officer to construct bridges for his retreat, and the order was repeated and enforced several times that day, and almo-t every succeeding one. Happily Moultrie's oournge was of thatpla cid kind that could not be made anxious or uneasy ; he weighed carefully his dun ger and resources ; with quiet importura bio confidence, formed his plan tor repel ling the impending double attack of the enemy by sea and by land ; and nover so much as imagined that, he could be driv en from his post. , Un the tenth of June, while the Conti nental CoLgress was finishing the debate on independence, the Bristol, whoso guns bad been previously taken out, came over the bar attended by thirty or forty ves sels, and anchored about threo miles from Fort Sullivan. In Charleston, from which this movement was plainly visible, all was action ; on the wharfs, warehouses of great value, ero room for the Gre thrown down to give . of cannon and nius - ketry fiotn the lines along East Bay S in-, ireuciiincius surrounded i tie town ; toe; barricades, raised in the principal streets were continued to the water ; snd arrow headed embankments were projected up on the landing places. Negroes from the country took purl in the labor; the hoe and the spado were also in ovory citizen's hands, for all persons, vithout distintion, 'labored with alacrity,' tome for tho take of example some as the best way of be ing useful. Neither the noon day sun nor the rain, which in thnt clime, drops from the clouds In gushes, interrupted their toil. ' : On tho eleventh the two regiments from North Carolina arrived. The same day Lee, being told that a bridge of re treat from Sullivan's Island to Haddrell's Point was impossible, and not being per mitted by Kutledge to direct the total evacuation of the Island, ordered Moultrie immediately to send four hundred of his men over to the continent; in his post script be added: 'Make up the detach ment to five hundred.' Ou the thirteenth he writes : 'You will detxeh nnothor hun dred men to strengthen tho corpn on tho other ido of the creek.' But tho spirit nf South Carolina had symppthy with Moultrie, and mechanics and negro la borers were sent down to complete tho fort: but hard as they toiled, it was not nearly finished before the action. On the 12th the wind blew so violently that two ships which lay outside the bar, lee re obliged for safety to stand out to sett, and this assisted to delay tho attack. . On the fifteenth, Leo stationed Arm strong at Haddrell's point, and Arm strong, as the superior officer, ever man ifested for Moultrie a heaily friendship. On that 8auio day, Sir Peter Parker gave to the Captain of his squadron his ar rangement for the attack of the batteries on .Sullivan's Inland, and on the ltitli he communicated it to Clinton, who did not know what to do. . The dilatory conduct oflheBritsh betrayed uncertaitty and a division or councils, and the Carolinians made such use of tho delay, that bj the 17tb they were in exceedingly good state of preparation at every outpost aud also in town. But Clinton intendod only to occupy and garrison Sullivan's Island. For that purpose, he completed the landing of all his men on Long Island, a naked sand, where nothinu crew except A few bushes that harbored myriads of mosquitoes, and wuere the troops suf fered intensely from tho burning sun tbe 'want of good water, and the bad quality and insufficient supply of provis ions. A trial of tbe ford wasmade, Clin ton waded opto his neck, so did others of his officers, and on the day in which he succeeded in itettioz all his men on shore, he announced through tughn to Sir Peter Parker that no ford was to be found ; that there remained a depth of seven feet of water at low tide ; ana that the troops, therefore, could not take the share they expected in the intendod at tack. His six full regiments, and com panies enough from others for one more, a body of more than three thousand men, thoroughly provided with arms, artillery and ammunition, had left the transports for a naked sandbank that was to them a erison. Yet, compelled to do something linton fixed on the 23d for tho joint at tack. On the night after tbe day appointed for tbe attack, Muhlenburg'i regiment arrived. On receiving Lee's orders it im mediately set out from Virginia and marched for Charleston, without tents, continually exposed to tho ' weather, It was composed chioftv or Muhlenburgs old German parisioneri and of the Vir - ginia regiments, and was tho Ecrt com-1 PRINCIPLES, not CLEARFIELD, PA. WEDNESDAY, NOV. 14, I860. plete, the best armed, best clothed for immediate service. The Americans were now very strong. . The confidence of Sir Peter Parker in an easy victory was unshaken. To make i"" "u" " "acicibcu a ooay 01 marines 'and seamen in the art of entorin forts A i i. A : I thpnnch m.r. silence Moultrie's battery, then to land bis trained detachment, and by their aid enter the fort. His presumption was jus tified by the judgement o f Lee. That gen eral, cominpr down to the Island, took Moultrie aside a jdsaid : 'Do you think you can maintain this post?' Moultrie answered, 'Yes I think I can.' But Loe had no faith in a spirited detence, fretted at the too easy disposition of Moultrie, and wished up to tbe last moment, to re move bim from the command. On the 2,'!i an unfavorable wind preven ted the joint attack. On the 25th, the squadron was increased by the arrival of the 'Experiment,' a ship of sixty guns, which passed over t he bur on the 20ib. Letters of encouragement came also from Tonyn, then Governor of East Florida, who was Impatient for an attack on Geor gia; he would have had a body of Indians raised on the bank of South Carolina, and a body of royalists to terrify and distract so that the assault at Charleston would have struck an astonishing torror and affright.' He reported South Carolina to be in a mutinous state that delighted him ; the battery on Sullivan's Island would not discharge two rounds.' This opinion was spread through the fleet, and became the belief of every sailor on board. With or without Clinton's aid the Commodore was persuaded that with his trained sea men and marines, he could take and keep possession of the' fort till Clinton should send a many troops as he might think proper, and who might enter the fort in the same way. dipt. Lamperer, walking with Moultrie on tho plattorm, and looking at the' Brit ish ships-of-war, all of which had already come over the bar, addressed bim : "Well, Colonel, what do you think of it now?" ....... "We aliall beat them," said Moultrie. 1 he men-of-war." reioined the can iin. "will knock vour fort down in half nll i,nni" "Tben. said Moultrie, "we will lie be- hind the ruins and prevent their men from landing." On the morning of the twenty-eighth a gentle sea breeze prognosticated the at tack. Lee from Charleston, tor the tenth or eleventh time, charged Moultrie to finish the bridge for his retreat, promised ban re-enforcements, which was never sent, ana still meditated removing him from his command ; while Moultrie, whose fac ulties under the outward show of lmper turuble and even indolent calm, were res trained to their utmost tension, rout to visit his advanced guard on the east. -Here tho commander William Thomson, of Orangeburgh, of Irish decent, a native of Pennsylvania, but from" childhood a citizen of South Carolina, a man of rare worth iti pnvito life, brave and intelli gent as an officer, had, at the extierae point, posted fifty of the militia behind sand hills and myrtle bushes. A few bun dred yards in the rear be guarded breast works that had been thrown up, with three hundred riflemen of his own regl, ment from Orangeburgh and its neighbor hood, with two hundred of Clark's North Caiolina regiment, two hundred mora of the men of South Caroliua under Horry and the raccoon company of riflemen. On his left he was protected by a morass ; on bis right by one eighteen pouuder and one brass six pounder, which ovelookod the spot where Clinton would wish Id land. Seeing the enemy's boats already in mo, tion on the beach of Long Island, and the mon-ol-war loosing their topsails, .Moul trie hurried back to his fort at full speed He ordered the long roll to beat, and offi cers acd men to their posts. His whole number, including himself and officers, were four hundred and thirty-five, of whom twenty-two were of the fourth reg iment of artillery, the rest ot his own reg imcnt; men who were bound to each oth er, to their officers, and to him, by per sonil affection and confidence. Next to him in command was Isaac Motte; the Major of his regiment was the fearless and faultless Francis Marion. The. fort w is square with a bastion at each angle ; built of palmetto log, dove-tailed and bolted together, and lain in parallel rows sixteen foet asunder ; between these rows the space was filled with sand. On the east em aud northern sides the palmetto wall was only sevnn feet high, but it was surmounted by thick plank, so as to be tenable against a scaling party ; a traverse of sand extended from east to west. The southern and western curtains were fin - ibhed with their platforms, on which the can n in was mounted. 1 tie standard which was advanced to the south east bas tion, displayed a flag of blue with a white cresent, ou which emblazoned Liborty, The whole number of cannon in tho fort, the bastion, and the cavaliers, was but thirty-one, ot which no more than twenty-one could at tbe same time be Drought into use i of ammunition there were but twenty-eight rounds for twentyssix can non. At Haddrell's Point across the bay Armstrong had about fifteen hundred men. The first regular South Carolina regiment, under Christopher Gadsden, occupied Fort Johnson, which stood on the most northerly part of James Island, about three miles from Charlestown, and within point blank shot of the chsnneL Charleston was guarded by more than two thousand men. Half an hour aftr nine in the morning, the commodore gave signal to Clinton that be should go on with tho attack. An hour later the ships-of-wsr wre un der way. Gadsden, Coteswortn, Pinckney, 1 and the rest at Fort Johnson watched all tbeir movement; In Charleston the wharfs HEN. and water-side along the bay were crowd ed with troops under arms and lookers on. The men must foil their adversary, or their city may perish ; their houses be sacked and burned, and tbe savages on the frontier start from their lurking places. No grievous oppression weighed down the industry of South Carolina; she came forth to the struggle from generous sym pathy ; and now the battle is to be fought lor her chief city, and tbe province. The 'Thundei bomb,' covered by Friend ship, began the action by throwing shells, which it continued, till more than sixty were discharged; of these some burst ia the air , one lighted on tbe magazine with out doi tig injury; tbe rest sunk in the morass, or were buried in the sand within the fort. At about a quarter to eleven the 'Aotive.'.of twenty-eight guns, disre garding four or five shots fired at her while under sail ; the 'Bristol,' with fifty guns, having ou board Sir Peter Parker and Lord William Campbell, the Governor: the Experiment.' also of fifty euns: and tbe 'Sole Bay,' of twentv-eicht. broucht up within about three hundred and fifty yards of the fort, let go their anchors with springs upon their cables, and began a fu rious t'unuonaue. livery sauor expected that two broadsides would ens. the strife ; but the soft, fibrous, spongy wood of the palmetto withstood tbe rapid fire, and nei ther split, nor splintered, nor started ; and the parapet was high enough to protect the men on the platforms. When broad sides from three or four of the men-of- war struck the logs at tho same instant, tbe shock gave the merlons a tremor, but the pile remained uninjured Moultrie had but one tenth as many guns as were brought to bear on him, arid was more over obliged to stint the use ot powder. uis guns accordingly were fired very slow ly, the omcers taking aim, and waiting al ways for the smoke to clear away, thnt they might point with more precision. 'Mind tue uommodore, rumd tue litty gun ships,' were the words that passed along the platform from oil cers and men. 'Shall I send for more powder?' asked Moultrie of Motte. 'To be sure,' said Motte. And Moultrie wrote to Loe -' 'I believe we shall wnnt more powder. At tho rate we go on, I think wo shall ; but you can see that. Pray send us more, ifyou think proper.' . , More vessels were seon coming up, and cannon were beard from the north east. Clinton bad promised support ; not know ing what else to do, he directed the bat., teries on Long Island to open a cannonade, and several shells were thrown into Thompson's intrenchmenta, doing no Oth er damage than wounding one soldier. The firing was returned by Thompson with his one eighteen pounder ; but, from tbe distance, with little effect. At twelve o'clock the light infantry, grenadiers, and the fifteenth regiment embarked in boats, while floating batter ies and armed craft got under weiuh to cover the landing ; but the troops never so much as once attempted to land. The detocumont had hardly lelt Long Island before it was ordered to disembark, for it was seen that the landing wis impracti cable, and would have been the destruc tion ofmany brave men without the least probability of success.' Tho American defences were so strong, and well con-, struct ed, the approach so difficult. Thorn.. son so vigilcnt, his men such skillful sharpshooters, that had the British land ed, they would have been cut to pieces. 'It was impossible,' says Clio ton, 'to de cide positively on any plan, and he did nothing. An attack on have been still naddreu s l oint would more desperate ; though th Commodore, at Clintous request, sent . i r..: . . . :,u .i. - uiruo iiigmcs iu wu-uijuihhj wnu in i.mv ims leisure in visumg irienus ana roia design. The people of Charleston, as ' lives, and in keeping alive the sympathies they looked from the battery with senses quickened by the nearness of danger, bo- held tho Sphinx, the Acteon.and the Sy ren. each of twenty-eight gum, sailing as if to get between Haddrell's Point and! the foot, so as to enfilade the works, and when the rebels should te driven irom ' them, to cut off! hoir retreat. It was a . r . H i. t..-i . i. 1 luuuir lllUl uuiiui, IUI ,UQ JVMV VII HUB sido was unfinished. But the pilots kept too far to the south, bj that they run all the three upon a bank of sand known as the Lower Middle Ground. Gladdened by seeing the frigates thus entangled, the people at Charleston were swayed alter nately by fears and hopes ; tlie armed in habitants stood every one at his post, un. certain but that they might be called to immediate action, hardly daring to be lieve that Moultrie's small and ill furnish ed garrison could beat oft' the squadron, when behold 1 bis flag disappeared from their eyes. Fearing that his colors hud ! been struck, they prepared to meet the invaders at the water's edge, trusting in Providence and prefering death to sla very. In the fort, William Jaipor, a seri ge'.int, perceived that the flag had been out dowu by a ball from the enemy and bad fallen over the ramparts. 'Colonel,' said ho to Moultrie, 'don't let us fight, without a flsg,' . 'What can you do?' nskod Moultrie; 'the staff is broken off.' ' 'Then,' said Jasper 'I'll fix it on tho hal bred, and ploco it on the merlon of the bastion next tho enemy;' and leaping through an embrasure and bravinj the thickest fire of the enemy, be took up the flag, returned with It safely and planted it as be bad promise, on the summit of the merlon. The day was exceedingly hot, the almost vertical sun of midsummergla red from a cloudless sky, and the temper ature was increased by the blase from the cannon on the platform. A 1 of the gar rison threw off their coats during the heat of the notion, and some were almost na ked; Moultrie and several of the officers smoked their nines as thev save their or ders. Tbe defence was conducted within ; sight of those whose watchfulness was to ;jy, TEAMS 11 lhT twf mov 3 "Jirlr' pN)fitubl- guns with the greatest oonstanor l.nll . 1. ' L- . 1 . . . - un j ! l- i wn wuiuu euiorea tnrougn an erabra-. Iittl h.M sure, wcfaniel cried out to bis soldier.: -I m j.:" 1; T! it I u..ofUlT;:5 E November. 'Tis easy to resign a tollsom i place, ' But not to manage leisure with a grace ; Absenoe of oocupatiea is not rest, A mind quite raont la a mind distressed. And turned into the park or mead to grate, jvxempwrvm ruiure eemce all his days, There feols a pleasure perfeot in its kind, Ranges at liberty and snuffs the wind ; But when his lord would quit tbe busy road, To taste a joy like that he had bestowed, He proves less happy than kia farored brute, A life of ease a difficult pursuit," Cowr a. The only period of rest in tho circle of the farmer's year is now at hand; a period of enjoyment, but also one of peril. The business of cultivation the appropriate occupation of the husbandman is done. He has passed through tho pressing cares of seed time and tillage, the joys of the early and latter harvests, and has wol romod tho last of Lis crops to the baru and the granary. His store-houses are full, and the flocks and herds now live upon the accumulated provisions of the summer. The last of the flowers has 'aded, and the frosts have turned field and forest to a russot brown. The leaves that put on such gorgeous coloring in October, are now" either chouced to a sombro hue, or fallen, leaving the forest bare and desolate. The skies have lost the roseate hue of summer, and begin to look chill and wintry. The weather is fitful, and every sunny day is succeeded by cloud and storm. In the olden time farmers accomplished very little after the potatoes an J turnips were gathered, and the cider was made, until tho opening of the Spring. At home, tho cider barrel had Its potent temptations, and abroad, the villago tav ern and grocery held out their allurements to drinking and dissipation. The country was new, tho soil fertile, and the farmer did not feci tho necessity of those im provements which prepare the way for sucicisful cultivation. Draining bad hard ly been beard of, and the muck mines had not been opened. He fed his cattle, pre pared his fuel for the winter tire, marketed his crops, and the rest of his time ran to waste. At this season be visited his friends, enjoyed their hospitalities, and too often contracted their drinking habits and prepared the way for debauchery and ruin. It was the most perilous period of tho year, because he had not learned how to improve its leisure. We are so constituted that we cannot enjoy idleness. This may satisfy the toil- worn brute, as be quits the yoke or the cart-ana regales lumseir in tut pastures He knows nothing better than the gratifi cation of his appetite for food. But man cannot be satisfied while the best part of rum, that which constitutes his manhood, lies waste. The mind must have occupa tion of some kind, and the release from the more pressins cares of cultivation at this soason, should only induce a higher antiV' ' ity of the mind. It is indeed well to employ a portion of '., - ,; and associations of earlier years. Some are so situated in their business, that this is the only time when they can return to the old homestead, to look again upon the familiar scenes of childhood, and to receive words of blessing from father and mother. These social reunions at the annual Thanksgiving, are worth all they cost, and more. There is a reviving in fluence in going back again to the old hearth-stone of childhood's home ; th old well and its oaken bucket, the ancestral trees gathering new glory with their in creasing years, the garden, the orchard. the fields, the forests where our eyes first opened upon the world, the farmer is made a better citizen 9Dd a better man by thus cultivating bis social nature, and keeping alire the ties that bind him to his kindred. ' These 'annual visits are also profitable tor his business, as they atlord opportuni ties lor observation, farming is no longer a stereotyped businoss. One can hardly visit the most limited and obscure rural district without seeing abundant evidence that tbe leaven of new ideas is at work. The tillers of the soil are getting out of the old tracks of tbe fathers, and are beginning to use mind in their hus bandry. Tbe barn is no moro a mere de pository of the harveslaof the field. It is a manufactory of fertilizers, the one thing needful in profitable tillage. It is the great hinge on which everything in the operations of the year turns. Barns are now a proitable study, to learn hew practical. farmers contrive to shelter all their cattle, and to make the most of their manure. The plow has become n tool constructed upon scientific principles. turning the furrow with the east expen - ditureof strength, and making u broad or narrow, deep or shallow, and laying the nee lint, ur luuru vuo sur face of tho field, at the will of tho plow man. Tools have become t prima neces sity of economical cultivation, and the strength of tbe ox and tbe horse is mare and more taking the place of human sinews. No man can observe the diSjerent methods ef farmer 'hi their business, 25 per Annum, if paid in adrancei NEWSERIES-V0I1. I.-NO. . . .. r '""s" pulverize them ilka tha f..t v. are using this soason for labor, much mora. IU si.... .1! I t I "" luey "ia mine olden time. Trenchea vralls. and stone fence, are ij v iuwa hi v built. Somo keep their full laboring force, , i i urrlngement much better lor the Inborer than four months of idlenosa, oi occasional work by the day. Many have muck deposit so situated that they can be worked this season. Muck thrown up in summer can bo carted, andi and the sties. Many improve th Iai'shta. to top diess their meadows with compost, from the yards, and whrre tlm UnA i;a level, and is not subject to washing, this is good practice. It is found by shrewd' calculators, that the labors of the next lour months, spent mainly in handling muck, digging, composting, spreading,, and laying up store for summer U6e, aro i no iijubi prouiauie or tuo vear. Whatever labors are attended to or neglected out of doors, reading and reflec tion should be carried on vigorously with in. The most successful farmer now, is tho man who applies tho most of thouafu to his business. The days of routine farming are numbered, and the man who. plods on in the ways of his fathers, is cer tain to be distanced. The nrol.l em In m. solved is, pot bow to grow crops not even groat crops but how to get them, economically. Wo want to get rich by larming, without selling off all the fertil ity of the soil under our feet. A rich, furm, giving a generous yield to toil, makes a rich farmer, whether bo bos much or little stock in the bank or railroad. Ho may be sure of dividends when banks fail.. We want to study, not only to get greater. crops of aorn and grass, but to make the crops pay for the labor and manure, and! leave the soil richer. There are manifoldi details of husbandry that require forecast and reflection. Now is the time to lay plans for the coming year, and for Ike distant future. It is a great work to bring up a long used soil to its primitive forUL ity, and to manage the old. homestead so. that every acre shall do- its best, making us richer while it enriches itself. To solve this problem will tax. the invention and: quicken the intellect. He who does this, will "manage leisure with a grace," andi grow a wiser and better man, and also, iucreoso bis wealth. Atoer. Agriculturist.. Innocent Flirtation. A flirt is always, innocent. Young ladies who skip about; from oue resort to another to engage the-' attentions of young men who are susoepti ble of beauty, little think of the danger which beset such a course. We say a flirt . is always innocent, meaning thereby that she intends herself no harm. Men tb majority of them are not so foolish as U . be deceived in tbe character of a vounp lady who goes about indiscriminately among male acquaintances. They readih perceive that a friendship, if it can so bin called, regulated by flirtation, iiasnoelaiou upon thoir honor, and consequently any advance towards intimacy on their pari can only be factious, leading them to takt any advantage when opportunity offers . The record is conclusive upon this point Criminality lurks beneath those innocent flirtations, boldly apparent to those who. can comprehend the unscrupulous nature of man's passions. Fathers and mothers, who have daughters will do wll togtvt this sulject earnest attention, and so ex ercise their control that sorrow may never fall at their door, on. account of " inno sent" conduot. Tjik List of the Atlantic Cabi.i. Cap tain Kell and Mr. Varley, who havo beeu, trying to raise tho American, end of thiv Atlantic cable, found it broken' every tw or threo miles, and have abandoned th attempt. Tho rock. weed and animalcules adheriog to some of the portions recover ed, prove that there are rocks at the bol torn, although mud is shown on theohsrl bnt even where it came out of tbe mudv the outer covering frequently parted while? it was being hauled in. In somo place ., tho iron wires were coated with copper, from veins of that ore in Trinity Bsy, J hi gutta percha and the copper wire were a. good as when laid down, and those por tions of the cable that were wrapped witl tarred yam, were sound end free fron rust. . - ; Im A KcTjrtLL. TheGilesbarg Obiervt presents the following comprehensive ami ondensed statement of Republican argu-.. ment and principle; ' - sErrratcAif ARotmsaTT. - . HAM I LIS .1 LTN MrrfucA ; HUM BUG COLN PRWCTPLl. BUG BEAR i The Secretary of Vsr, in his communi cation to General Harney, in regard U bis course in the San Juan affair, althougl, lofGeneral Scott t , . aMe gervcVar tfc hlB olukrftcU he censures him for disobeying the order i in consideration o. and of his high esti . cliaracter ss a soldier, b v d is nosed to be light in his censure. General llartey will remain in forme position in tho army." ' ' ' LrV8 1A0 riCEID CP AT SlV. Tins barque Augn-ltt Jesse, at Quen!toivii, n port th, Sept. 'Ml:, in lt. Ion. 2 V3, picked up s youuy dog alive.