1 . " ,, ...... .. - :! .-n, -r, .- 1 "Tip It M2i j liftM hr T ITM 0 Ay ax Ay 0. B- GOODLANDER, Editor and Proprietor PRINCIPLES, not MEN. TEEMS :-l2 00 Par Annum, if paid in adv&M VOL. XXXVIII. WHOLE NO. 1806. CLEAR HELD, PA., WEDNESDAY, FEB. 11, 1866.'. NEW SERIESVOL. VI. NO. 30. i l T--r , r,v-:-rr, terms ov THE HnPUiu.lCAN. 'lh;ns I se in making a newspaper, pay for Sl.ftO expended for a paper. i(s hundreds of bonutiftil and Instruct- SILL ABPS ADDRESS TO HIS C0N XHBErcBLicAs I publifbed Tcry Wedneiday, ,17. Greene Why don't you raiso And I havo got lots of other hints ire engravings make it tho most vnl-J STITUENTS. ., M - BY GEO. W. SNYDEU. & (X)., - at II, CO per annum In advance. IT Tin If paid within ix mntha $2,50: and if not paid until after the tx- eiration of lix month. $3,00 will bs charged.-- o papericontinued 'till ill arrearage! ere paid. GOING IT BLIND. ?ep'ctuMy imcribtd to Mitt. I BT Q. O. C. flTTI. "Tou'rai tnndcit a wnui. I know it. but than. ;ltMnVyou advaticitii; m certain yonj cnai, i.uu juuftv irwiu um iuauuor imp ... jvur "'kind fheer," ."That tber are quite imitttn, and you -are too J "dear." i When I law more than one turn their feotitepi ID., " -J , I fancied your heart had a mmur to pay , Tbt ycur chalice cf lore muet be filled to the irim, VTaieh 10 amply ruppliei it to Harry and Tim. Vet while Tomy wai here, with his grace an4 tiil "tin," I noticed that "imiltrg enea" eouKlent "romt in;" Jiut when Tomy waa gonftben your "latch at ring out," And yuu ogled aume othen, who "horered about." When Jimmy ffcce orrr, ynu liitrned "all ean," ( And you leen: poured upon William encouraging ; I latched when I Lcrd It, that you were o kind, And I fancied that Tuny waa "going it blind." You teem like the fun, with ill orbi of ''dim iltbt," That ilerp on iti ditk, and that bank in iti light ; Tet not like the eun, yuu beluken a imile. Which keami with aipecial refulgence the while. Tbat brighten! the featurei of Johny and Hen, JUd tli row i ai rad luttrr on othen, but then. Your ray re-enkindled, and fall on the "Jewe," While Denny and Johny are i trick en with bluei. Oh ! I'm loft, in amazement, to know what you mecn, And lupgent tbat enmreWy Ii certainly "greon." 1 laughed wlwa I beard it, but jium never mind, Toung Torcy'll loon learn, he 'i "going It blind." A air tady'i heart If ai fervid and free, Ai the lunihlne which gladdcnt the bird and the bee ; Xutiti portali are clorrd to the rapturei of lore, Fate the pleaiuref enjnyed by the angel, above, Till the lout meela Iti magnet, concentred in c. And reiponda to iti feeliogi, "thU lutgnet or none." K you would be wiie, then, and worthy ai wiie. Tvu'll turn from yonr jilting, abandon your guiie! Ton '11 be true to tout Tomy while Tkmv i near, Anl you'll think of your Tomy when Tomy'a not here Or Tour fnendi will eontema tob for being loo And Tbomy'll loon learn, he'i been "going It blind." Jan. 34U, ISO. INTERESTING DIALOGUE. Whc a t Ifoat - Cabbage-Potatoes-Ap-ples-Grapei BeeU-Tomatoes-Bread Cake-And Some Other Things-And the Hoys ana uirli .Besides. Scene Join Smith's Country Store Time, Evening Spf.akkrk, Sumlry T iUagcr$,ani l armers who have 'hap fened in as usual.' Mr. Smith. Trado is very dull now- davs : 1 don t sell unit so much ns 1 idid five vears ago. Jilr. Jones. Good reason. Thing'src o high, wo can t afford to buy. lou eharge such awful prices, Smith. Mr. Smith.- Can't help it. I have to pay so much more. When I sold sugar at 10 cents a pound, I mado a cent a pound, and I only makoa cent now on 20 cents, and this cent profit don t go so lar to keep my lamily. Mr. Jirown.L buy just as niiieu as ever. I dt;nt see as thcro is much rhango. I used sell mv 000 bushels of wheat for 75 cents a bushel.or 8450 Of this, S2.)0 went for family store bills, and 200 to pay off my farm debt. Xow, when I sell for $1,50 no bushel, or $1)00, it takes about $500 for store biils, and leaves $400 to pay off the debt In fact.theso liigh prices suit me. I wih Mr. McCulioch had I kept out of the Treanry,for ho threat ens to make Greenbacks par, and knock down prices. Mr. Price. I don't see a,s it makes much differenco. If thoro is twice as much money going, and overybody gets twice as much for everything he raises, and pays twico as much for very thing ho buys, it all comes out square nt the end ; and there is this gain in tho operation ; thoso who save money, or mako a profit.mako double, fis neighbor Brown explains about raying his farm debt Mr- Butler. That's so. Mr. Greene So I think. Mr. jlfxrc So do I. i Mr. Bauer. There is a littlo draw hrck. I keep tho accounts of Widow Jiobcr.s, who has the mortage on Mr, Brown's farm, nnd the $4(10 he vnvs ' don't go only half so far in supporting! lir, and educating hcrchildrcn. Mr. Travis (tho School Teacher). ' Yesitdoes.for I only get $30 a month for leaching Mrs. Robert's and others' '. children, nnd I used to gct$25, with wheat at 75 cents. Kcv. Mr. Corey. And I only get ' $000 a yenr, whilo I always had $500 with whoatat 75 conla and augar at 10 cents. ' Several Voices. -That ain't quite eqnaro. Mr. Knox, (Editor.) And you only pay mo $2 a year for my newspaper, which you thought chenp at $1.50, nv years ago, though J havo now to fy throo time as mneh for very 'your prices, too ? Mr. Knox. icoplo won t static! it. bolter prohts on ray bed, port una iicnruiy wish every one oi my pnnsti-. I must keep along with no profit, or mutton, than any other man in tho oners would tako it for himself and ffesrECTriT. Vtv.vir. : 1 address you even p"H loss, hoping for bettor times, 'place. Now does this not coiuo from family. .'It' would awaken thought 0n Hits occasion with a profound ad or else lose my subscribers, and let the; any direct hint, like tho wheat, but and enterprise, give interest to tho , ,mrntjon for tlio great consideration paper go down. Why, w-ken I raised ifrom a good many suggestions that I town and neighborhood talk, stimulate ' an(i t10 njce diBcriiniiiation .which tho price from $1.50to $2 ayenr, a have picked up in reading the Agricul- improvement, introduce new and prof-jcnugcj y0ll t0 honor me t,y yonr vote good many stopped the paper among turist, and from tho course of reason- itnblo crops, animals and implements, ! wjt, ft Beat jn tie Sinatc cf Georgy. them Mr. Brown himself, though I ing that 1 have been led into.by read-; and add to our wealth. Take my ad- por two niomentus and inspirin weeks paid him double for hi s whent. j Mr. Brown. I didn't stop it so much : ' fnt- fliA TllnoA 'T irnf In fur' nnrinir for the price ; I went in for paying ' for mv lurm hv extra cconomv. - - - Isr. Knox. lcs, lie lollowcu mv advice for people " to economize and pay their debts now." But let ns sco if Mr. Brown began at tho right placo. On one Saturday I published in my paper that whent bad advanced 15 cents a bushel On Monday Mr. Brown went to market with his wheat, and sold CO bushels at one cent advance over the old price, .and thought he did 'all engaged for seed at $1.50 a bushel well, lie came home boasting about! when other kinds bring ouly .r0 cents. .. ... ... . . . - . - - . . , U, until be met neighbor Johnson, who ! got the 15 cents ndvsncc, becauso ho ixad my paper, and wns wide-awake, j Mr. Brown's loss on GO bushels would pay four whole years' subscription, .Mr. Hrown. Dont say anything! moro about that, Mr. Knox, and put mo down a subscriber for life. JAr. Knox. I have heard of several other 6iich losses by thoso w ho stopp- ed my paper. Xot to be too personal, as some ot theni arc here, 1 will call them A, B, C, etc. Mr. A. paid 4 per cent more fees on $71 taxes, because he did not see the collector's notice in my paper, and thus lost S2.84, to :. -Mr. li paid $3.b0 tho same way. .Mr. t. tailed to bring in Ins claim against an estate, because he j did not sec in my paper the legal no tice limiting tho time. I hat, cost him SIM, to save $2 subscription. Mr. V. sold 200 pounds of wol at 02 cents, because he did not scc an advertise ment of Mr. Smith,righthere at homo, offering 70 cents. That cost him $10, to save 82. 31 r. F'sboys went down to the village every night or two, to get the news and local gossip, because they had no paper at home, and one of them fell into bad company, and is ruined. I know twenty cases where people lot money for ,u'ot learning what is going on. I gather up all that is going on in business and society, and condense it into my columns. It is important for every man to know all about homo matters, and I doubt if thcro is a man in this w hole town who would not,in the course of a year, get some information, that would pay him back more than 2 a year. And then think of a household sitting down together 305 days in a J'oar, and hav ing nothing to talk about.cxeept their own affairs, and a few items ot gossip, gathered up by occasional contact with ' partmcnt is worth more than nil the other people. - fashion magazines in tho world. They Mr.Tnylor Lot me help Editor say, it is so full of good hints about Knox's argument. Wife read to me j all kinds of houso work. All 1 can an item he published about a humbug, say if, that we do have better brerd which he copied from tho American ;nnd cake ; and Wife says, tho cake Agriculturist Sew York City. Next don't cost so much as it used to. She day one of those same humbugs came has learned from the paper how a round with his article, and was so j hundred other house keepers do their pliinsiblo that ho almost persuaded J work. her into paying $.1, for his swindling Bcv. Corey. Lct me say, also, that receipt; but the editor's caution kept. Mr Crane and her daughters have her back. added a good many beautiful but Mr. Knox. Yes, and do you know j cheap homo-mado fixtures to their that tho fellow sold more than fifty of parlor ami sitting room, which ccr the humbug receipts hereabout, at i'i tainly mako their home moro attrac- 'a pieces J but not to any one of my subscribe! rs. Mr.I'otts. Put me down as a sub scriber, Mr. Knox, hero is your two dollars. ' Mr. Shaw. Andniotoo. ' Mr. Knox. Thank yon, gentlemen. I'll try to make a better pnperthan ever Every dollar helps; anew subscriber only adds to my expense the cost of paper. If everybody took the paper, and thus divided the cost of getting news, setting type, office rent, etc., I i could doublo tho value of tho paper to .each. Tlnase talk the matter over with other neighbors and sec, if it cannot bo dono. Several Voices. We will. Mr, Smith. And now whilo you are about it, 1 want to make tip a club for a good cw i ork paper. .nr. jsrown. no can tatlord to take bo m.inr nsncrs. Mr. Smith. You just seen that you could not nfford to stop your home paper ; let ns seo if it will not pay to! joiu our club. Mr. Ilich, you havo , tuken the American Aariculturist for ' several years. Does il pay f I Mr. Ilich. -Vav ? Yes fiftr times! over Why, I got two ten-acre fields rendy to sow to whcat,and put in one 'of them. That night my Agriculturist Icamc, nnd I read a simple reeommcn- dntion about preparing sood wheal, 1 called John and we put 15 bushels in I know just what to do, nnd how to soak for tho next day. It cost 50 cants 'do it well. Tho high moral tone4o for the materials. Well, tha aecond! tho paper, its common sense, the care field yielded 5 bushels an aero moro it takes of all parts of tho Farm, the than tho other or oO bushel extra, nnd bettor wheat too. Fretty good almost as profitable. Y on know I get iiiu in it " m. viuvio v, -y, ,.,.,., . m n 1 1 ... it n , n lap.,!,, w rt t h i n if and say. ' ' Mr"'.1?! i ' Mr'. ' Smith, You are 'anotlior sub- 'senber to tho Aancult unst. Al r. est; 1 doesitpnvr J I - ' i I Mr. nest. Pay ? Yes. You know what good cabbages and potatoes I had last season. Why, the cabbages were worth double any others in town, J for market or for homo tjso. I had '400 licads,worth 5 cents a piece .extra; 'and they only cost 20 cents extra for 'seed. Mv 250 bushels of potatoes arc' That's 5250 clear gain, for the $14 extra I pain for seed, and the 11. .W I paid for the Agriculturist. It was through this paper that I learned about both the cabbages and potatoes. Its editor are caretul, intelligent men, on the constant lookout for anything new that is really good, while the paper abounds in cautions nrniustthe poor and unprofitable. Mr. Smith. What say von, Mr. TayUr ! Does it pay to invest 8150 in the Agriculturist ? Mr. Taylor. Most certainly. A hint in the paper led me to look after certain insects at the proper time, and the result was, I had .100 barrels of splendid apples, which bronght mo a clean $5 per barrel.nnd this you know wns better by SI, than the average prices here, or $100. Then I have read so much about good and bad Grapes, tho method of trating them, etc., that I can boat the town in rain ing grapes profitably. My son, Will- laiti, got a kink in his hend about to matoes, from something the Editors said, and sent for fMimc seed, lie rr.ado moro money on the crop ratse'l In his spare hours, than was cleared by half th farmers in this town. Mr. Smith. Lct'a hear from Mr. Crano. . Mr. Crane. I only read in tho na per what was said about hogs what kind paid best, bow to feed them, and the like; bulifyou will call around and Bee my porkers, and my expenso ac count, I'll bet a pippin I can show fifty dollars moro of pork for the same money than any other man here. An'd this comes from rcadlmj w hat other men think nnd do. But "Wifn ought to bo hero to speak. She nnd the girls read the Agriculturist next to to the Bible, lney think tho household do , tivo. 1 hey told me, tno other oay , they got these up from pictures and descriptions in the Agriculturist. Mr. Travis. My salary has not al lowed mo to take tho paper; though I must squeeze out enough to do so thifc year. My school boys have brought me somo copies to look nt, the past year or two, and I find the Boys' and Girls' department of the Agriculturist the best thing I ever saw. It is full of items, etc., that amuse and at the same time instruc t the children. Why, I could pick out tho boys and girls in my school whose parents take the Agriculturist, just by hearing them talk they aro so full of new and good things they havo learned from the pa per. Tho paper lms many bcautitul engravings. Iter. Corev. As small as is mv sal- ary rv I would havo tho ianer if it cost1 - aI fij a venr. instead of 81.50. The fact is, it helps out my salary. My littlo, garden plot at the parsonage hnayicld. ed us almost nil our table vegetables, besides many beautiful flowers. The Agriculturist has been tny constant guide, I knew bnt littlo of garden - inrr : but this iai.rr is so full of infor - mation about the best things to plant' nnd sow. when to plant, mil how to caltivate all told in so plain and bo did behold it, ho directed, it to bo right for a nigger not to voto m t on practical a way, by men who seem to tumbled into the bed of the Potomno, nccticut, bckaus there aint but few of 1 talk from their own experience, that Garden, the Orchard tho Household work, nnd tho Children as well, with unblo periodical 1 have ever seen. I vino -tin nil oi vnn . irv inn Tinopr il vnr Thtl.f( tontitn.iaon v thrao . , - ' - j - j r i i . , . . ----- - ... v J cents a week, and it is worth that any wsv. nr in large aim dchuuiui engravingsare worth many times that. Mr. avis. 1 took-tho Genesee Farmer lust year, and as that has slopped, 1 thought I would take a . - Mr. Smith. Tho "Genesee Farm er" was not really stopped. The I'ub- Ushers of the Agriculturist Invited Mr Harris to join tho "Farmer" to 'the Agriculturist, and put ins whole Iforco into tho latter paper. They ..ii i - i -n:.... paid him a largo prico for his oflice, nnd moved it with evorythingeonnec tcd with it to their oflice. Sotho47- rirulturist is reallyetwo papers joined intoone, and of course better. J think wo better go with Mr. 11 urn to the Agriculturist, tha'. has been published for 23 ytnrs, and has a hundred thou sand circulation, which, as Mr. Knox has told us, supplies the means nnd facilities' for giving us a great deal moro for the samo money. Mr. Har ris carri?s on his large farm, and in his "Walks and Talks on tho Farm," and other things ho writes for the .47 riculturist, he tells us a great deal about all kinds of larm work. Mr. Davis. Put mo down for the Agriculturist. iMr. rMnitu. I am glad to do so. 1 know y on will like it. The January . , w hich has just cotuo to hand,! number, is alono worth the cost of a ycarwo, sink or swim, survive or perish, See here, (showing it,) there aro 40: thunder or litenin, we'd slip back, or, nnres. twice as large as the magarine! Bak hack, or fit. buck soiftehow or! pages, and there are thirty five engrn-j vings in It, two of them full page size and see how beautiful I Why, I'll give jwv man who take the paper a year, a dollar and a half in goods out of ray store, if he says at the end of a year he has not got many times his mou ey's worth. Mr. Bnller. rut me in your club. Mr. Greene. And me too. Mr. Brown. And me. Mr. "Smith. I have no interest in the matter, except to do a good thing for the place. Yon can join our clnb, or any uno who desires can get the Agri culturist fur n of lij.'i (Volume 25,) by simply enclosing $1.,, with his namo and post-office address, and sendinglt to Orano Ji pp k Co. Pask Bow, Xt.w YortK Citt. Tho paper always comes prompt and regularly, nnd, what is a good thing, it slops w hen your time is up, without you having to write about it. 1 predict that thero will be plenty of others next winter, to talk as Mr. Bich, Mr West, Mr. Crane and Parson Corey have done to night. AN ANECDOTE OP THE PRESS."! Tho JVe. has brought ont Genernl Geary as its candidate for Governor, nnd has been enumerating with infinite) nnaction the battles in which its war rior participated. We feci it to bo a kindness, therefore, to our cotempor nn" to furnish it with nn anecdote connected w ith the General's nstory which has not yet fonnd its way into print. There stood for many, years at thejunclion of two streets in Harper's Frrrv. nn old iron cntiniin f,f revoln. tionary date, ofthe kind we soo plant- opinyun that old Sumner aro crazy. ! glorious day. When that great and ed nlong our wharves. It served the 1 think ho has been gittin woro ever! j:0t,J ln:in was makin bis a (lectin purpose of a post, and ns the mouth ; since he took Brooks on tho brain, J speech, we all felt happy ; and Capon stood uppermost, it was used by the! and it do seem liko tho disease have Dodds, tho member from Polk, ro-pav;urs-W as a receptacle, forVigar proved contagus. If they aro for marked that he would like to (Y.o then, stumps and old quids of tobacco.w huh,! Peace it must be the Peace that pas.! for ho never expected to feel as hear, in the course of time.became compact- seth all understand, for we rant only agin. The tears rua down hi cd into a solid mass nnd fillod it. After fathom it in these regions. They , left eye like rain. His oUicr cyo wcr the breaking out of the war, some fut us to free tho poor nigger but in prison. Of course tie villen Avero m'aidn'cvom boys nt tho Ferry dug up didn't euro for tho Union. Tho Wes-' tried lor it, and hung, though I haint tho old field piece, mounted'it on a tern boys fout us for the Union but, r-d no mention of it iu tho papers, small wagon, amused themselves by ' dident care for the nigger. By double; Alas 1 poor W irz. trundling it nbout tho village streets.' teamin on us they licked us'iindwoj My fcllow-sitizeus, hi mo in con. Soon after this time. General Geary gin it up, but now tho one dont want , elusion fongratulato yea on bavin a bad a skirmish with tho enemv nt skirmish with tho enemv nt Bolivar lIoi"M. nnd after their re - treat there w - il ' lere was Pear the field the very of which wo have given tho cannon of which wo have L'iven tho history Somebody reported tho fact tothe Goncml.who forthwith announc ed the capture of a heavy field -piece, nnd in the flush of excitement incident to tho victory, apprised our city nil- ' thorities that he meant to donate it to 1 Philidelphia. Jt. never came. Tho fact is that when tho General mado tho tender he had notseon hisprize. When whero it Is now snugly reposing. Tho city can console itself with tho reflee- t ion that tho process of reaming out tho accumulated deposit of stmnpa 1 nnd quids would probably hnvo cost more than the vnbin oltno old iron In the frcneral's trophy. A yr m .g fl member of ihf Qcorqia Senate. inu AjtririMUiuru unv ucuu in uichi t . l. ... i ... i.. session, one of n Loju liuu proud to bo which. 1 or sovtraI days wo were engaged as skouts, tunic 'n rekonysanee to see whether Georgy were u State or Iniun lerrltorj- whether wo were In tho old Un-ion or out of it wheth or mo and my folks and you and your folks wcro soniohodv or nobody, and luKtly, but by no means leustly, wheth- nnf vinnr mnoccnt children, born during tho war, were all illegal, nd l had to born over again or not. This last pint are much unsettled, but our n-rimpn nr- mlvised to be kalm nud screen. My friends, our aim bar honestly been" to git you all back in trie folds of iho gloryous old Un-ion. Like the; J--xKuerue, r, out I tnustin- prodygal son, wo bad nuthin to live s08 bnS rcsiiektably discharged." on, ami feelin lonesome and bungry,! J t m3 s"t amid tho most pro have been bowin and sernpin and ma-Judest nnJ tumultuous silence vcr kin" apology for five or six months. .eed, Mr. Gibson remarked that We have Wen standin afar off for . 1,0 wouldeut imposo the llepublik on weeks and weeks, but durn the 'ealf rcipektable man agia Lis wjsbca. do they kill for us. They know we've o t,cn transferred mo to the Fiittnts got nothin, for they cat up our sub.; Committee and sed he hoped we would stance, and as f..r puttia rings on our take immediate action, lor the Stato fin-'crs, we couldent expekt it until had no money, as well as himself, and tliov bring back the jewelry tbev car. board was high and cat scteras fre ryedaway. 1 cannot say, in tie lang-1 quent- This may not bar been his widfce of ifee poet, that our labor have exaktual langwidge, but is angHn to been a labor of lov, for we bad mon-l ward ll- 1 bywC(1 n:J Leai aBti flaid arwis poor encouragement to bo "Ditto, exsep that I dou't eat seteras." shore; but we had all set our heads toward tko stars and stripes, and we ;intly determined that eomc wool como somehow else, or we'd stay out forever; nnd ever amen, and be hanged to em, so-called, 1 golly, i I Up to'this time It may 'have been an ui.hill business. The team was a. good rf one and the rnnr nil sound, and the warin creased, but the roads nrc.8'011 perhaps the ruffest, rottenest cordo-! K"i UP provisions ana prorwd Jor royinthe world. It's pull up and teller gejierally. I made up wy mind skotch, and pull up and skotch, nnd! that perhaps wc had icen hmnorin and anonymous tkeskotch slips out) Andy about long enuf. We had a and the taiugfcuts around and away. ucti right to a Governor as Alabama we go into tho gully. Andy Jonsin iV w South Cukna. Ho wants s back the driver, and be savs "Go slow," j 'l't bad as wo want to get back, and ho hollers "Wo! wo!" and hses ftd a littlo bad.ler, perhaps: iind ho the road, and then we have to go back I "cedent to put on so many umicccssa to the f.irk and wait till he blar.es the ; O" nirs al,ut Seualoclisiicss. If way. Ho seems to bo doin his best, bo fools with us nutieh, we won't elect but Ihcu thar is Sumner and Satan j "y body 1 golly: we'll tako tho and Stevens nnd Davis and like other studs and go backwards. I forthwith gentlemen, who keep hollerin at him ' returned to tho capitol, nnd strctcbin and crac king bis whip, and confnsin 1 farll t'"0 of my arms, ses I, "Mr. Gib his idecs, so' that sometimes we duu't! on- ur I'm the friend of your wife know whether he's gco-iu or haw-in. n d the children ; but if Mr. Jenkins My friends, about them fellers, I ; aint norgeratcd soon the tr.to will don't know what I ort to say. If you j collapse ; n bright and gloriotu star do, or if. my body does, 1 wish they I will be obliterated from off the striped would say it. I don't encourage cus- rag. and the President will soon lose sin in nobody, not at all, but if yon.' about nine superiors in Hk? Federal know of a man that can't be broka of it dnrin' his nateral life, it mout bo t an t git our Governor at nce, like a well to hire him by the year. It there '" '", we break up in a row is in all histry a good cxkuso and a nd depart for Mexico." Jt took liko proper subjek, it is upon them hart-! the small pox, and were e arryed lu less, soulless, bowelless, gizzardless,! niultuously. These proccodins wcro fratrisidel, suieidel, parasidel. sistersi-, telegrafed to Washington before tho del, abominnbul, contemptibul, dis- ink was dry, and wc rooejrei orders gustibul individuals. I sometimes forthwith to norgurnte our Governor j think of em till mv brain sits sorter addled, and 1 think of becunnn a vol untecr con vjcl to tho Lunatik As- luruin. Charity inclines mo to tho our niggers and tho other dont want our niggers and tho other dont want ' our Union, and its tho hardest skcdiile ! to please em both that a poor vanish - ' ed icepul ever undertook. Its tho : ed nccnul ever undertook. Its tho most hardest war to wind up that his - tory rekords. .Sumner, Satan & Com- pany are still a fussin and fuinin about tho cvcrlast in . nigger want him to vote and mako laws, and sunt on a jewry, nnd want to pcrhibit us rebels from duing tho samo thing for IfO years to cum! Jerusalem! where is the cussing man? They say its nil cm thar; and its all wrong for cm not to votoin Georgy bckau theres a heap of cm here, and they talk Logik and Kctorik amazin to prove how it is. Wen I aint got a whole passcl of sense like sum, oat ns snoro as l m two loot Mgh rigger l.' a niggtr, I d'lut kfrr where you smell him, and a voto is a vote I dont keer whar yon drnp it. I poll' ! they cant git over that. The truth is, my Jcller sitizens, I sometimes feel liko wo didenthave no Government. I felt that waj' sorter when Mr. Gibson appointed mo a coin, mitlco on tho State of tho Ilepublik. When the Sekretary read out my narao all mixed tip with this iiepiiblik, I felt that 1 wtis obleeged to renig. Ki sin inagcstikully to tny feet, sa)'S I, "Mr. President, 1 beg to re.speklybly exkused sur, if you pleyse. If thar is any IZepuUik on this side of JordonI cant pursevo it at this time with theso speks. Thar wns a )lacc in old Vir ginity called Port llepublik, but Mr. lieliel Stonewall Jack soil wiped ont its content generally tu 18(., and I La von t since heard of it in Northern literature. I have heard of a skrub concern over auoni , astungton tney call a Kepubl.k, but sur, il are likely - 0 FJ Hf grandest iwposre that ovur existed on a wntinoiitof frwdom. l suppose, sur, it arc to be moved to Boston or the infernal regions in a few days and I want nuthin to do ronitwiim leiegratea various gemio- ",on ,,,r a temporary loan, but they wouldent lend a dollar until Mr. Jen- kms wero norgoratcd.lur they wanted a,e to the note. Thiakstaysl, there's a tap lost about the wagiu. If wc arc ft $tjlto we fn. borrow money "S'iy. mm. ruuc, u,'"u U1 oar ucs 10 worry iiaiau. U'Audy wants u ruu tie jaacLiue lia ' ' lct '",n W ,1'18 ovrn expen- 'lt in the dickens is a i ro- Government for, if it aiat to Congress. I uiove, sur, that if we aud roll on our cart. T hen the mon- cy came, .i..r.i nnd we voted ourselves a .'hl-lllll apiece, and took a furlo. 'My friends, that were a proud and Governor once more, an is a G over viovcrnor once more. . ncr. Oh! there is life in tho on! land 'vet, nnd by nnd by we'll mix up with our friends at tho North, nnd we'll our friends at tho .North, nnd we a j transport thorn Black Republicans in. i '; AiriKan aesenc, ani ptu em 10 teacnin Jioueiuocs tno rtgni oi sui. frnge. Moro anonymous, BILL ART. P. S -Cousin John Thrasher so ho bay studied law a week, an I will be a enudydato for sum high ofliswhen wc meet agin, provided wo giv him time to sell his cotton seed. I'll say this art hay dono as much for him as some oflhocnndydnt.es, nnd naturo moro and his cotton seed ns good as I ever seed. A ro at Petroleum Centre, or tha 31st, destroyed seven wells and 20,000 barrels of oil. N i