H. H. FM.A.ZIER, Publisher. VOLUME 11. gusinto glaring. DR. C. J. DRLNKER, rpIiTBTCYAN Nfl STIRGEON, Ilootwee. Ps. nffice 10111 Ur. C.se over W. J &S. eIL Multortreestore, roNlcAmeone ito/.fen•e io,..ph 1, , u n a,„ . .outr.se, Nei", 1)R E. L. BLAKESLEE, y)FTY.Str I &It AND Stalin • loostad I q .na u-ty, la - 111 wad p'. minty to all =lt Le may oa •yored. Witco at L.M. Ualdsmaa , ‘mordYu. Jury ID, lota.—pt, Da. E. L. GARDNER, pIITSIMAB 4.17 D SUMMON, Iktoataatel,Ps. Otka oaar tr•hh . .Stnre. Board siftestlera Liottl. MotLm.. June 44 aus—it GROVES I REYNOLDS, VAKIIIONARLIS SAILORS. Eio a OrftniUrea ' Mic ♦•• arts. Ilortrns, Jurre 1f65. Du. CHARLES DECKER, fIi , ICIA.N ♦'NY eUnfl Co N. Les.ne locuttel himself at le. B ,l squehmina County. Pa_ snit et.end si/ the ptf.eur, sfhleh he may 'lse. wed prwohlutholhalatlsatioil. Chh, h, re h1.3.c hear °r.h,he fr..a Ihrch•rdrille..6o.uq. Pa M. ISMS —if. JOHN BEAUMoNT, VOL Otinntß, Cloth Dream., end %Sterol . ..tore; at the old I eland thoent as Sunth'a Oanltai l4c tame. Terms made r,Dowp .hoe the work Is hrOught, J comp. tlerrh SO, 1h63. • D. G. Z DIMOCK, PFIThICIA.N an SIJR:7EON. MONTROSE. Pa. OM. on • .treat. ooptaatte aartnurnax 01 Boazde ,e , r(e's Rxrl. I.l..pt.nnen, Febratry 6t4 .180.-.171) C. M. CRANDALL, 11" ANUFACTIMER of Llnen.whoela, Wool .beck. ac. &e. Wood torah:kg clone In order, and r Lot. unt.akirnanner. 'tuning Slurp and Wheal Facto:yin:Say - 1W rt. dry lltul/d‘na, wales. mow core, January 8044 1.5r4.41 B. 8. BENTLEY, JR., NOTARY PUBLIC, MOP , T Otrid. adk0 4, .. 41 4nd00t of Deeds. Montana, ad, for .y T maul th the Milted Stat. Pens., V.rbers .4 Par Cr, 14.4.Irdded Wore Idto do 001, require the c.a.. of the c,c. of the Court,t oo Ju, 9, IBM Da. E. L. HAND RICK, PIO3IOLI 811111.0.E.0.N, reepectfulle toode amity.te U Ones/ eervicem to the dUzteta of Fsrlexteevale aed Of. tc the otice of De. Leart. Boar& et J. nortforCra. fete.odoille.Jalystuus4.-tr R. W. SMITH, 7TORNST .t oomexu,on AT LAW azA Lionsed Man ta. tan! Oake over Lcs's otuttuolanna Depot Jotott.rs O. 1864. EL BURRITF, D ULU. La Staple sad ratio Dry Doodn,Onockery,BArellaure au, 0N , 16 Drag; Dila and Piga. Boars anciSborA tiatt run. Buffalo koMa, Groceries, Provialous. Ac, New Ilford, Pt, April 11. 1661.-It S. H. SAYRE BROTHERS, 31,,,,F (11118111 a I.lllKlastinga Castlno of all kind ~vrk, Tin and Sheet troll Ware. Apieultaral trtplement• •r Deal , rs In Dry Gooda,Oroccrien„ Crockery. &o. 7nlrose, Pa, February BILLINGS STROUD, FElms ANT LIFT IhISITRAZICE AGENT. Offet L. ow. ouLalarg.oan .d of Britt Hkek. In by atoeura bar' tiro up , “efice grill nehaneacted by C. L. BIOWiI. Ilartroor. February I. 11454.—al J. a O IL, M. D., ryome.,PATRIC PISTMICLeaI, has permanently local. I,:raaw_lf fn Montrnee, Pa, ...bete be *III prottylly attend t. r” hre prrnfeueior,erlih .4hfcb be tlity be ravvred. Ofte. lie,deitCP R.lll of the Court Rouse, near &male" V Fehuary I, 1864 -Oct.= 1861. A. 0. W.MIREN, 4 TT IRNEY AT Llt W, BOUNTY. BACK PAY and PLY. :A n 1 CLAIM AGENT. AU Peradon Uinta, carefully pr wed o'bet In room formerly oecnbled by D. Vali, P R -- fe helm. r,,,,ie• • Rob r l tn , sd, Tn.. Feb. 1, :1361.-febl7yl 1948. LEWIS KIRBY & R. BACON, d6f . ourently on thud o full enroll. of every ysriety IVol , Blllßiu and CONI r SeT/ONXBI ES, By strict orter uod ruhrecoolo d.-a. they hope to merit the 'then -no, the ou,ir en OYSTER and EATING ShLOPPN 1. rd to Lee rirnory where lalvileee in neuron, are nerved In ty c . rl, or Loe rare. verbs public demand. Remember rte plea. ~ 4 .1 Mott , roceru shold. on Maio street, blob," the Postofflee. ,o—oe \+u 17.19.6.1--mehri,6B—tf DR. CALVIN C. HALSEY, DISTSIvIAN AND qUEGEAJII, AND EXAMINING SUE K , .'S !or I'ENMONERS. °Mee over cne ...re of J.L9.- ?Wthc Ave Los Boards at Mr. ELbecldsts's. I.l,tarn.r. Irtnber. 19.511.4 f I). A. A TTOttli IL 1r ILT LA W, azttlPenten, Witt", and Bach Pap ti r,r Bend, Suehanna Connty. Pa. ores, Aarazt 10,1 usq .08.-1 y BOYD & WEBSTER, iIEA.LEILE to Stove. Stove Pipe. TIE, Copper, and Spa Cf.:, also. Window Sash. Panel noose Windos Snne.,, L. Pots Lutober,_stol al lunds of Dethlluu Mated&le •h , ; , tooth of -trade's HoteL sad Carpenter Shop ow tts fln•e.atio enured. ntersons. Pa.. January i , 1864.-tf Dn. WILLIAM W. SMITH, 3I'RGEOI9 LrICNT/S2. Office enth Booth:. item Zee: O W( 6 =r & Co. 6.11 opernuou v....-mr,a Remember, otßee fonU) , trEt. blettroinOt Yl* aor Hotram, Isnobry 1, 1864.—.tt R. J. ROGERS, 1r forjFacri,FCCß of el de_wriptio. ofWAG ob., . bibiIIAGEIS. SLE/GH3. lb theiiirO!!;? . . w wboabandip dor the beta matortolb, o to of E. U. ROGERS. • row rod, ...b.., tp,tal to ttnottnot. Where be 11411 be happy to n Mils of all wbo want saything. In do no*. 11'...,..crrne. loot 1,18113.-tf DR. JOHN W. COBB Prsim 87E0 EON. Atope=ttulty tender. Ms oervice , L tne cittsens of mosonetanrto County. He will o overroeb be ..art eel ciA mdlral tr,ozneLt of Olsm.eso' for an 2 Kar. 'm C 61,14 tat reialve to loorami open4lott. ut mt, J R 6 0 M.iro , a'A Su re. o Maple rreet. auC of J A.. r artell ' s Hotel. song. County. Po_ J one 29..1883.-tr BALDWIN & ALLEN, teLtr.dd lu FLAILIti, bolt, Port, Pith, Lard. Grain, Pen Clneee sod Thnoetir Reed. Alto OW/CZ/LID. S . teura tlolaseee. byruur, Tea and Coffee. Waft side o 4,enze. door I.elo. acherldice liottrune, January DR. G. W. BEACH, I:PTYLICIAN &ND , Ctifai BUN, [teeing permanently !nata l:lself o Brooklyn rlentor. Ye_ Louden hi. profekelonal Le o , to n/ 'kr citicons of Sneqn.hinna Oreitall.co term. corn__ toe Malec ocr.uplee the ofeee of th e tale DT, B. Luau, woo. sae no lo& kt Sirs. Klehardzon's. Brooklen Cont., Pa_ Nap 0.1814..1, • F. B. WEABB, 01.../10T1CALL HOOT £ND SHOE. .ISAK.F.B.. also Mtge? 1, ll Sw,ts. Shoes. Leathex.sed Shoe nadinen. itermirtue don' °Wham nod alepeteb. Two doors fibber. Searle's Hotel. ii.nicroee..rsapy L. /864.tf WIL & WM. a JESSUP, A ITORNETS AT W, Murarogre, P. Pawnee In fiaego• La.tunny Bradford. Wayne. Wyoming sad lamense Cauntla Montrose. Ps., Jammry ln, 11361. ALBERT CHAMBERLIN, Er lETHICTTuRNET AND ATIVDNEY .1.7 LAW.- office over the Store f mmedy occupied by Post Brotherb Montrose, Pl...uman. 1. 1860. J. LYONS & SON, DcaLCISS tN Lida GULILIS. cirocertea.C'sontery. liardwar Tinware, 'Roulet, `dnindcOns, Pianos, and an kinds of Nna al I astrumenen. Sheet V unit. tc. also cats) on the look lnq btalness In all ha branchsa. J. stun. Sienese.. January 1, 1814. T. t. LTO3II ABEL TIYERELL, flk CALEB. IN DRUGS. qEDIMPI ellEld/OALA. Palate, Olt, °Sagan. Vartinats, Wladose Glass, -ors. Orwasrles.Grockary. Glassware, Wall-Paper, Jpw. .7. ' rnary Goods, Pollan, ,ery Sareical Mammals. Trust es. Bunke Brushes. kr...-..snwl Agent for all of tbe local pop Wedielnes. Montrose,. January C. 0. FoR.pitAm, nvai - ow&W.Agntgii`d'.s.E:g=rl r. and teinalrine done neatly. Work done arllen prom. rd. lioutrose. AMU 2. /861-0 CHARLES N. STODDAHD4 nr.ALEE. to BOUTS & 5110E0. Leutber and Plod tngs, on Slain at. Wed door below varlet note.tmet s• . E. Work =vie to order. and repairing done Mantras,. Ps_ iteeenabet IR. 1860. H. BURNS, TTORNEY AT.LAIN. erine tilt pY LUlam J Totran. 1 ~o p-tte tierlep IMI . P..alen.and Ittnad7 COMA, mr.ful• I , Dr , Wed. Corteevons oromply made- - I:IL:aro*, Ploy. 21. 0f64. B. R. LYONS & CO n eei,ean luDl 0i0)1125, USol.llfal za. UnOTS,RHOEb Lawmwruatten, Carwde. Oil Cloths, Wall and Window 1 Points. Uthi. etc More on toe cut aide CSPDbIiC &venue. Z. D. Lifate W 001... January 1884.tt READ, WA.TROUS nzikLEISI IN DRY ^, JODII,, Deem lit — tßeitiee:itanta. Oretertee. Jeer-Item Do, Clock". Wattles, Jew Irv. 'hirer 4 e.eons. Yeeiumer7, &O n Drick Btxk. 4l oJyypac. .r. earn . a , 1111.03711 S. Rontrote. Jae.twry 1, O:PCIVaa WILLIAM W. slam, cAmsar AND Off-ent lif-ANtr -4-7--'l4; adorer, - Keeps dental:4,V Go hand all dada oflfeararr - Ftraarrttro, or fur rated at shod odic, Shop awl ; Ware Rooms foot af *lda SI klootras. Ps.. Sputa a. irse.4l, PHILANDER LINES; rinzante wt, iritarprifitn,,,g. ^-• e 1 , =din . _ : •.- . - tie! - i ss ‘lk = • • • • "•••• s.: TEE WATCH AT THE SEPULCHRE. From east to weqt I've matched beneath the eagles; From Pocket unto Gaul, Kept many a watch, on which, by death aturounded, I've seen each comrade fall, Fear! I could laugh until those rocks re-echoed, To think that I should fear—. Who have met death lo every form uuehriaklng To watch this dead man here. In Daclan forests, sitting by our watch-tire, I've kept the wolves at bay; Oa Rhetian Alps eseaped the ice MU hurling Close where our legion lay. On moonless nights, upon the sands of Libya, I've sat with shleid Ann set And heard the lion roar: In thin strong fore arm The tiger's teeth have met. I was star-gazing when be stole upon me, Until I felt his breath, And aawhislewel eyes gleaming: then lie seized me, And Instant milt his My weapon in his thick-veined neck I hi:Med, My feet his warm blood dyed ; And then I bound my wound, and till the morning Lay couched upcnti his Bide. Here, though the stars are veiled, the peaceful city Iles at our feet asleep; Round us the still more peaceful dead are lying In slumber yet more deep. A low wind moaning glides along the olives Till every blii-side sighs ; But round us here the moaning seems to mender And gather where Ile Lim And through the darkness faint, rale eleams ere dy- Teat touch this bill alone: [log Whence these unearthly lights? and whence the That move upon the stone? [shadows If the Olympian Joieamoke in thunder, His great. eyes I could meet ; But hie, If once again they-looked upon me, Would strike me to his feet. He looked as if my biother hung there bleeding, And put my sont to shame; As Very mother with his eyes was pleading, And pity kivercame, But could not save Flo who in death was hanging On the accented tree, Was the doe at God? for so in dying He seemed to die for me. And all my pitiless deeds came op before me, Gazed at me (tom his face: What it he r.a-e again, and I should meet him! How awful is this place! One of the lucky ones in New York the other day, was parting with his friend on Broadway, who, as he shook him by the hand, insisted on his company to dinner at the Fifth Avenue Ho tel at half past Bolt "Can't promise," said Petrolia, "I'm bound to hay.. a spree to-day, fur I must return to Oil City lomurrow.4 " Well, be it so," said his friend "hut don't Fpend all your money," "Spend all ,my money! ha ?" laughed the young oil prince. - ' " Why, Charley, I made six ty thousand cash on the last tract, and I hay, only got five hundred dotlara In: my pocltet. Spend all my money r' and the speculator laughed again, and his friend shook his hand, leaped into an omnibus that was passing up Bissid way, and rode off. What were his intention then; in regard to the "spree" is unknown, but in the rapid luco ; motion and expert dodging that in reneged of a pedestrian in crossing from Barclay street to the park, he came in sudden concus. , ion with a rage and confused urchin, coming from the ppoatte direction. the result of which was to throw the latter violently into the mud and al most beneath the wheels of a passing carriage. Petroliadragged the ragamuffin from beneath the horst feet, and placed him upon the side walk. "My money, oh I my money!" be:lowed the little fellow piteously, as he wiped the smouchee of mud fmm his face. "Never mind your money, here's more," said the oil man, but before be could suit the action to the word, the youngster hud dashed out to the paeement and secured fifteen cents in cur rency that hellcat dropped; and returned to the sidewalk, a smile of triumph on his tear stained little face. "I've got my money," said he, looking up at 'be oilman and holding up the mud-stained pa. per. His money I The oil prince looked down on the shivering little figure before him—a little boy of scarce six years old, in a tattered dress dint would have been scarcely sufficient for M.v, but 11,1 protected him from the chilly air Febrnary. No over carmen; a small faded c7ttton shawl, tied abont the neck, was the only .pparent effort that had been made fur extra clothinc, no stockings, one little shoe which bad come otf in the fail, was erasped in one hand. •nd the - bare foot, red with chilblains resttd un the damp pavement His money I As the speculator looked down o the shivering little wretch before him, a sud len thought seemed to strike him. "Come,' he, "I'll buy you. a new pair of shoes.' The little fellotv . s black eyes twinkled as a carriage was hailed and lie was taken into it by his new found friend. • . • Hallo, there!" said the driver, as the amide Climbed upon one of the handsomely lined seats, "I can't stand this yer now!" " Can't stand this?" said Petroleum, handing a ten dollar greenback to the indignant whip. "Just as often asyou like," was tins-reply, where will yon be driven, sir?" " Well, I rather guess a bath !sonic, will be the beet place " , replied the other, half musing. Before be had hardly time to think of it the carriage was rattling up Broadway, and finally supped at csrtaln doors labeled "Barns--Banos —Baths." Here the youngster was placed in iharge of one of the assistants, fur a wash, who soon returned to him saying to his plliNes 'Why, the boy is clean enough, sir; it's his :lathes that's dirty." "Bo it is; any boys' clothing store around here?" " Yes, sir," said the bath-keeper, pocketing a tire dollar grernback, and brgetung to give image. "just over here in Broadway, —'s em- "Good! Drive to clothing emporium." "A.nv boys' clothes to tit this boy ?" intid the •peratur, ao he strode into the huge gore, on the !.elves Of which were snits enough to clothe an Army of boys, with his charge still clinging to :,is, hand. •• sir," said the clerk, looking curiously it the urchin, "this way, sir." And in a Swink - ing half a dozen different styles, at as many I itteren t prices were shoWn. Suffice it to say that he youngster was soon Ond,tu LID infinite delight, n a warm. serviceable:suit,ilicluding even an wercuat and cap, and was Man a bright. pretty oohing vy, when his phitectorchanced to 'took town arid discovered ills badly protected feet which had firs attracted. his attention. " Got any stockings?" " At the other counter—hosiery department, 4r," said the polite clerk; and wee long warm ‘tockiugs, 'such as Filth Avenue mammas boy t or their darlings for wittier wear, were shown. , Petroleum didn't ask price, but , fitted charge to a pair, and'ilireply to the salesman. who wished to know if She would have an extra pair fora change, Rah', !ISM /ht's have a dozen." ['hey were expeditiously done .up, and taking them under his arm, be; preparad to leave the store, when the salesman brought forward the cost otimardrobe.of the youngster, tied up in the cotton shawl thaflikd'enVeleped his back. P NO matter about those," said Petroleum, "Come alone "Oh, no—no I" urged the little fellow • "Mum my's shawll lee ail shVe sto4-4.virant tizuggiy's lhaw11" The shawl Wait acebtdinaly:taken; and on, the way to the, shoe store, this - *cold blooded specu lator" learned from' his 'Mae companion that 'mammy"' lived in , poor neighhorhood a a tenement bower that there Was a- little sister .telto had, been sick a long dine, so that mammy couldn't 'work:that herlarge shawl was pawned, and the little One was all that mullet ; • drattlietif teen cents wattle-Whole stock'of cacti od hUnd, and that he had beea 4listestetto) to buy ; @ pate leath Cal THE CE 11717810211 A PETROLEUM SPREE, " Freedom and Right against Slavery and Wrong."... MONTROSE, SITSQ. CO., PA., TUMSDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1865. came over him that mammy would think he was lost. "Never you mind; we will go and see mam my soon. Drive to a dry goods shop, driver." It does not take long for a man to buy dry goods when he simply states what he wants, and pays the money without cavil respecting the price. So, when "a good warm shah I" was ordered, it was tossed into the carriage, and the change from a fifty dollar greenback returned, without the purchaser leaving his seat, " Where next?' said the now obsequious hack man. "Let me see," mused the Petrolean. "I guess we'll spend the fifteen cents for meal Drive to a tip top grocery and provision store." The carriage stopped opposite an establish ment in that line, looking, with its plate glass windows, many counters, and clean floor, almost too nice a place for such articles/ as sugar, butter, tiour and molasses. "Got any good tea?" "C'artaitily; prime article, air," said the grocer, displaying a sample, "a dollar and sixty cents a p, ,end." " Yes, well, I'll take a chest." " Sir ?" "I'll take a chest. "Got any flour?" "Yes, sir, very nice article," said the grocer, fifteen dollars a barrel, eight: dollars a half bar rel." "I'll take a barrel." "Mt right, air," said the grocer briskly, seeing that his customer was not a man who did things by halves, " anything else, sir r "Yea; got any sugar? „ "Yes, sir; prime coffee crushed, twenty-five cents a pound.' " All right, put in a barrel of that. Now how much is your hill ?" "Let me see—tea sixty-four, flour fifteen, sugar sixty-one, is one hundred and forty for the whole." The purchaser took out three fitly dollar greenbacks; "its a pity to break them, said he lookingabi•ut for something, else, when he Llt hi=coat tail khrugged, and his little port xe who had followed him Into the store said, "do lake me home, for its most dark and mummy's sick." "tJt amtny sick," the suggestion decided the fate of the ten dollars. "trot any prime old port ?" "Yes, Bif, excellent article, 1820, worth ten donars " Well, put in a bottle' of that for the other ten." " Thank you, sir, where shall we send the goralqr "Yon needn't send them, I will take them with me." " z , tr," said the grocer opening his eyes 'with REIVIZeMMIL " 11l take them with me," said the purchaser. you see that carriage at the door—well, hoist the flour upon the driver's seat, strap the sugar on behind, and pot the chest of tea Minde— n! take the wine in my pocket." It is human nature to be suriirised at unusual proceedings, but nowhere is busineas conducted on the ask no question style as much as In New York. A purchaser might buy ten barrels of whiskey—and after paying for it, request the seller to pour it Into the gutter and It would he done almost without a question; whereas in Boston, a - fierce discusion, and prohatity actual refusal would be the result. So, therefore, the worthy :mere...lima bade his men lift the merchan dise to the position required by the purchaser and hastened to watt on soother customer. but trc-re, pe+ek,•t thin. and 1...nd a hand there," said Petroleum." The driver's fingers closed over a ten dollar greenback, and in five minutes more the article were hoisted to their places, and he with leg!. over the flour barrel, was driving his team at a rapid pace for the lower part of the city. The unwonted sight of a handsome carriage with a flour barrel in front and a sugar barrel behind, at the door of a tenement house in a cheap neighborhood, natnraly et racted much attention, and it wa- not difficult to obtain a couple of stout fellows to e, a , r „ ry up the barrels and the tea eimat to the widow's room for a dollar each. Ile ascended, following his little guide, and found the mother pale and anxious at the prolonged absence of her boy and with care and watching fur the sick child. What nerd is there of telling the old story so familiar? That with the loss of husband and support, there in New r..rit, far from home, came poverty, sickness and &stress, and there the last penny was expended. Petroleum listened, while the little fellow whose acquaintance he had made, capered about or strutted to and fro, in his new clothrs —but he was on a spree, he couldn't wait. The widow's thanks—he laid down a geenback She solicited his name; he handed her out a Gilded paper and left the house. The foldrd paper was another paper for a hundred dollars "Drive to the Fifth Avenue Hotel, driver, or I shall be late to dinner." Away spun the carriage, and its occupants in a quarter of an hour mure dismounted at the " There's your tare, driver"—another ten. "Thank ye, sir! Gl.al to driv" you again, sir," said coachy; which wish, considering h r had been pai I at the rate of ten dollars an hour, was not at all remarkable. Petroleum' met the-friend he had parted with a ka , hours perions just as be going to din ner. "eh t" said the lamer, "baek already." " Yes —all ready for dinner. Hid a gtorio , t, spreel—spent four hundred and fifty dollars in two lours." " Disgusting!" said a fashionably dressed la dy, who overheard the last remark, to her cum panion, as they swept past arrayed in all their glory. When, however, we learned the story, as it was learned by our informant from the littl. fellow, who sought out his benefactor Bono days afiersvards by means of the hack driver whom be hunted up near the Park, and the poor little fellow wept bitterly in the hall of the great hotel that the oil prince was not there, and was sent home in a carriage, with the pet Guinea piir he had broug.tit as a present, we were also inclined to say, what a glorious spree. Mrlt has been decided lately that a. bo . ‘ fonud on a man's door-step, may nut necessarily be . his step.arm. A dissatisfied tax-pryer characterizes the rev enue laws as au imposition, and the the assessors as imposters. "31a0.ma," said a lad of six, if a man is a mister, is a woman a mystery? We rather vies- , she is, sonny. Tnat was a smart youngster who, hearing his mother remark that' she was fond of mu4e, exclaimed "Then why don't uoy buy me a drum ?" A rural contributor says he has enlarged his establishment, and now keeps a head of oxei,, a head of men, several herds of cabbage, while he Is trying to keep a head of the times. A cuuntry exchange says: "In the piece on our fourth page, entitled, "W. must not lag behind," instead of the line, "That moulds its dirty shirt," please read, "That w.aild Its duty shirk." : A cOnntrymiin going Into on Probate office, where the wills are kept in huge vorumes on the shfives asked if they were all Bibles. "No, sir," replied one of the clerks, "they are testa ments." Bit , 1301 e Roche, In one of the debates on the questions of the-Irish Colon, made a speech in favor of it which he c.nabluded by sayina, " That it would change the barren hil4 into fruitfuf ad /vs" On:titer quoting John Locke, that a blind man took his idea or wade' from the sound of a trumpet, a witty felloW says-that a hoop skirt hnuipug out of a Shop door reminds him of the peel of a belle. • farFrip.nd, imitate the Pxample of the tool. motive. Re runs along% winsales over his work, and yet never takes anything but water to wet Ids whistle with. 'From- the time consumed by ladies , hi 4 ' dying hp their hair," It evhimitothai .1., V111 . 3111111.10 4 .'140/unbdtimintsa . . INIZIE FROM THE RIO GRANDE Special Correspondence of the Pittsburyh Commer. WesinwaToN, D. C„ i Sepuauber 30th, 1805. c As the Monroe Doctrine is still a live topic, and as some of the C. mmereinfs readers may like to hear from our troops in Texas, and how the question of Imperialism versus Republican ism in Mexico looks to them, I send to you the following extracts from a private letter from Lieutenant Colonel Burritt, dated Ringgold Bar racks, Texas, August 28th. Ringgold Barracks was a military post li. fore the war. It is one hundred and twenty miles above Brownsville, and one hundred and 80y miles from Brazos, nt the mouth of the Rio Grande. A division of the Twenty-Fifth corps is now stationed there. From Brownsville we came threneb la sev en day., without resting. The revetile was sounded every morning a. half-past one, and we marched at three—an sour and n half before daylight, At eight or nine—sometimeslater, if there wax no water on th, road, we halted, rest ed, and sometimes slept till tour or Ave in the afternoon, then marched till ae reached water strain, usually till eight or nine in the evening, and bivouacked. The route, for the most part, was extremely uninteresting. Its principal charm wits nove/- ty—that it was in every feature unlike anything we had ever seen before—and that soon ceased to be a charm. We wire near and in sight of General Taylor's battle-ground of Palo Aito,riod encamped one night on that of Reatca de la Pal. ma. At first coming froni the treeless desert of Bruzos, the sight of anything green was pleas ing to the eye ; but at length the endless chap parel became wearisome Imagine to yourself a growth of thorn hushes, and stunted trees and prickly pears mingled together, every tree and brush armed with thorns, and some of them ex hibiting a fiendish ingenuity of torture; imag ine this growth spread over the whole face of the country, in many places so demo as to be absolutely impenetrable; not high enough to af ford a shade, and so C.10,e« as to shut out ev( ry breath of air, and closing in like a wall on both sides of a narrow, dusty road, where the son's rays fall with a furnace heat, anti the air of the scorching lands is like that of au oven. This was the character of much of the chapparal we passed through, especially below and about Brownsville. As we ascended the river, the land became higher and more rolling, and the chanparal more open. In some places, particu• larly in tsgtonis that are overtl owed at high water, and around the margins of the lakes and water-boles where our mid-day halts were usu ally made, it assumes a different character al together. The trees become taller— more like trees and less like bushes—the undergrowth dis appears and is replaced by a luxuriant green sward, fit for a moonlight dance of the fairies; and from being monotonous and unattractive. the scenery suddenly heoimes rarely picturesque and beautiful. Some of our mid4lov halts on the banks of placid wood ernhosomed takes, were perfectly charming; the more so Coming after hot and dusty (narehes, perhaps fur many miles on a road without water. The scarcity of water Is a great inconvenience in marching here. The great question is, *How far to water!" and everything is arranged with a view to it. Our march was made at a fortu nate time, shortly after a freshet., when all the lakes (which are nothing but clay basins where were all full, and we experienced but little_trou hle. But there are no creeks or springs as in the North, and it is nothing unusual to hear of stretches of roads twenty or thirty and even for ty miles without water. Save a few insi.mificant villages, there are lan few inhabitants on the Texas side in this region. I believe the Mexican tide is more thickly set tled ; there are, at least, several towns of some pretensions along the river. What Inhabitants Mere are, are mostly natives, known as "Gress i•rs," "Daps," atc. They are very dark com plexioned—but a shade lighter than the negro, in fact, many of them, show tionliattkahle signs of Indian descent, and indeed there are none of 'hem if pure Spanish descent. They speak only Mexican, and are a thieving, treacherous, con temptible race. Our present station is, I think, on the whole, the pleasantest place I have seen in Texas. Our camp faces to the Northwest, with the left rest ing on the bank of the Rio Grande, the head• quarters on a slight knoll, not more than stone's throw from the river Beyond the camp a little way are the old barracks, somewhat di lapidated now, hut showing how well everybody was provided for in those days. They are now occupied by division headquarters. About a mile no the river is the little village of Rio Grande City. and ace"-si and about five unms back is the Mexican city of Comargo, which has several thousand inhabitants The pincral aspect of the country ahont here is very slightly rolling. A range of low gravel 'ails extend armind the north and ens', at the 'stance of two or three miles, bounding the view on that side, and slightly varying the Len -cal monotony of the landscape, and far to the .vest, distant from sixty to eighty miles, when the air is clear, can be seen the rugged peaks of the Serabba mountains (a spur of the Sierra Ma dre chain) like a sharply muss of blue clouds piled up. in the horizon. On other must important leature remains to he noticed —"the Great river of the north," as the grandihiquent Spaniards somewhat ridien loindy named the narro tv,inuddv,crooked stream that bounds the dominions of Cncle Baru in tits direction_ I had expected to see a large and noble river, and was consequently much disap pointed. Where I first saw it, at its mouth, it in about as wide as the Itappahawxik at Freder icksburg; here it is probably a couple of bun ked yards wide, but the current is very swift, and it discharges into the s ea a great deal of wa ter. It is only navigable , as tar as Roma, and most of the season as far as here. It is estimat ed that five per cent. of Its volume is solid mat ter—in short, mul. Neetrilieles.a, it is our sole ',uppers, and we use it for all purposes—drink ing, cooking, washing—first settling it:--aud consider it a very superior article. A morning bath is very invigorating, as I can testify, and, sltbough it looks contrary to reason, I am in clined to think it promotes cleanliness, or, at toast, that one is no dirtier after than before the opt-ration. Two indispensible requisites to a comfortable existence here are shade and breeze. The first we secure by arbors of tottquit (pronounced ,nea.ked,) the principal and almost the only tree in this region. it is not very good, a mere crooked, scrubby bush—not a quarter as good as pine or cedar, but it does, Tne breeze - here is not quite as cooling as that at Brawls; occa atonally picks up from some treeless waste of sand a blest like the sirocco, hot and suffocating, and dashes it into your face; but without it I don't know how we should live here. It has some disadvantages, however; it occasionally blows too hard and keeps the air full of dust, and sometimes raises perfect clouds that cover and hide the camp and everything beyond as with a curtain. The insects and reptiles of Texas deserve es -pedal attention. If you ever come to Texas, shalke out your clothes in the morning benne putting them on, to effect any scorpions that may have taken tip their residence in their own right. Examine well your boobs to see that no itwantula has commenced a neat in them; and look 'sharp before putting your bare foot on the ground, lest von step on some wandering tarsi:t oils or centipede and bring yourself to grief Rattlesnakes also abound, and of fearful size and renown. The regiment killed one on the hist .day's march fuitsix feet long; nud I have heard of them nine feet. Mug. Then there lathe horn ed toad—a very curious, nundesccipt little ani mal—and there are chameleons, swifts, and liz ards innumerable. Of the anneals not much is to be said. , Deer and rabbits abound at no great distance. We promise ourselves venison when the season I comes ; and we have a pioneer del died to shoot rabbits for the headquarters men, -The tiavorof rabbits St this season. howeyer, is not especially 0,1.1131143 g, and we have.qiilatly eoff,etod the pote. *in ON% .•34 11411 !It4l ?, 7 , • ' ' cellent as to leave little desired in the way of meats. Packs of wolves occasionally come near the camp and make night hideous with their barking and howling. The men are afraid of them, and many a miserable straggler on the march, lam sure, hurried his fitiggiog footsteps Inward the camp as night drew near, impelled by fear of wolves. You may be sure we were at no pains to disabuse their minds by telling them of the cowardly nature of the animal. The Colonel, Major, and myself, yesterday paid a visit to Cur:largo. I have not time fur a description of the town; for that. I must refer you to diacriptions of Mexican towns in general, in certain of Capt. Mayne Reid's novels I can say, however, that there is nothing picturesque, or imposing, or beautiful in its appearance - it is only strange and noveL The houses are most ly only one story high, with flat roof; are built of adobes or bricks; and the streets are narrow, and ankle deep with sand. There is a sort of gathering of the clans at Co. margo; a convocation of the liberal chieftains; each one,wlth a wide lookout against the chance of assaesmation, attended by his partisans. Be ing anxious to see what they looked like, and to learn all we could of their numbers. prospects, etc , we called neon Brigadier General Espinosa. the highest officer in town just then, though Cortina, and Escobado had both been there that day. We were received with great empress ement., and yet very cordially; the General tine embracing and then shaking hands with each in turn, and expressing through an interpreter (scarcely any of them know any English) the extreme pleasure which our visit gave him.— Then we were introduced to halt a dozen or more colonels, commandantes, and majors, after which we exchanged compliments through in terpreters, expressing our pleasure at meeting them and the interest with which their contest was viewed in the United States. It was very novel and interesting; and Col. A., who is some times a good deal of a wag, could not resist the temptation to pull an occasional long bow two or three times in the course of the evening. We drank each other's health in Ms.val, a Mexican liquor made from the American aloe, and a vii- !minims, fiery compound, more like concentiated chain lighting than anything else I can imagine. Finally we had music—some of it exceedingly beautiful—from a band, or orchestra, from Es mbado's command, consisting of a earionet, flute, cornet a piston, bass horn, harn, and guitar. I noted particularly, than which I have beard nothing finer for a long time—the Mexican na al air, which they sang with great spirit, and Samgosaa'a hymn, which the band rendered in a style that would have done little discredit to Maretzek himself. ROUNDHEAD At about midnight we exchanged another vol ley of compliments and good wishes; drank more toasts, (or made believe to drink, for one gulp of their villainous beverage taught us the wisdom of dissimulation, and after that we only dared to wet the ends of our mustaches in it ;) embraced and shook hands again at least one* around (I wouldn't like to say how many time* I was hugged in the course of the evening, for I do not wish to overtask your credulity;) and took nor leave. That night we spent in an ancient nunnery, now used by an American merchant as a stor, and residence. Onr beds were made under an open veranda, the roof of which is supported in stone pillars and arches of great antiquity. anti immediately over the resting place of priest,. and nuns. who died there long ago. But no un quiet ghost, whether of gowned friar or white tripled nun, disturbed the sweet,unbroken sound rxr. NWT. I have described though very poorly and faint ly our interview with a party of Liberals; bu yout introduction to them would not be eons plete without some description of their appear ance. Most of E , pinosa's party were fine look ing fellows; though cone of them would dn, in costume, bearing, etc., for admirably got up tra ditional stage bandits; some almost as dark as negroes. The former are of pure Spanish de scent, of unmixed "Castilian blood;" the other af mixed descent, and some, especially in th, ranks, probably or nearly quite pure Indian.— Espinosa is of mixed descent, about thirty year old, dark complexion, short and thick set. Ili countenance is rather pleasing, and he is said h be a great fighter, he told me he had heel wounded in battle twelve times, and a tolerahl, respectable man—that is, something more of. patriot and less of a highway robber than mos of the Liberals in this section. Eseahadn's com mand—to which he belongs and which he corn mends during the absence of that.ofileer on e visit to Gena Weitzel and Steele at Brownsville. is totally distinct from that of Cortina; and has the reputation of being seperior to it in charact er and respectability: ortinas, from all ac counts that I have heard, is simply a highway man and cut-throat on a large scale, and his head, which is said to number about three hun dred, though %MEW say six hundred, has the rep station of being a mere gang of desperadoes and robbers. It is certain that there is not much ar curity for life and property in that part of meet co which is held by the Liberals near here—the' is by Corti:ma's party ; for Escebado's men or, more from the interior, and have only recenii:, arrived here. It is further certain that he hie been guilty nt great crimes in and against de United States; and in 1859 he was actual', hunted as a felon by Ueited Slates troops, for some high-handed robberies and murders cvm mitted by him, and a reward of twenty -fly. hundred dollars was offered fur his capture.— Be had confined his operations to the Mexiene side of the river, lent when that became too bo to hold him he slipped over on this aide and piled his calling here. His headquarters are CM this aide now, at his mother's rendre, nine miler above Brownsville. Citizens here express great astonishment that such a notorious robber and outlaw should be recognized by the military au thorities' as a leader of the Liberals; and espec ially that he should he allowed to remain and earry on his warfare from this side of the river. It is even said that there are several hundred indictments against him in the different vanities along the river for robberies and murders which he committed within the limits of the United States; yet he has his headquarters and an arm ed force on this aide, and gots across into Mex ico to fißbt or rob whenever he pleases. From this ft will be seen that I have no vet) sanguine hopes fur the Liberal cause, and the es tahlistment of a firm and healthy Republic Mexico. I Republic, being of the people, i 4 on ly possible where the people have attained a certain degree of intelligence and civilization, which the Mexicans as a people have not. The Liberal force in eastern Mexico, excluding that of (lonian, is probably about fifteen hundred.— They are poorly disciplined and poorly armed; subsist principally off the country, and carry on a guerrilla warfare, dashing upon small bodies of imperialists, capturing trains, etc., but sc.tree ly ever fighting anything like a regular battle. They had a fight last week, I helleve,oul toward Monterey, and claim that they won a complete victory They say that among the prisoners they took were a number of ex-confederate of Four of these ex-rebels, General Parsons, Colonel Standish, and two others whose names 1 was unable to learn, were hung by . the guerrilla piny which captured them for trying to escape. Rather a new reading of the laws of war that, I gunk. They say their cause is gaining strength, and encourage themselves like Micawber, with the hope that sometning will turn up. Cortina( is said to be wire-pulling to be com mander-in-thief of the Liberal forces; but they do hot trust him. They say they do not know whether he is on their side or nu the side of the Imrialists; and the truth probably is that be is for pe the side where there is the best chance for plunder. Since onr occupation, he has confined his peculiar attentions mostly to the Imperial ists, hoping thereby , to gain the reputation' with us of a Liberal leader. The Monroe doctrine may be all very Well hut if it means that United States must he sad. died with the responsibility of the proper gov, erntientof every race and every petty State op.- nu the American continent, I am opposed to U. European influence in America le undoubtedly to lo deprecated. But why , ? Simply because it represents a state of civilization, or political progress less than that which_ we hope to see prevail. But if the other races on the continent are so far' behind us in civilization and eraighs. .'" . ttORMRSOPICO CM9 1 4 1 . 000 1* Mee unfit for them, what then 1' Shall we take them in charge, under our wing, as it were, end edde eate theta op to the point of self government t It would be little better than national suicide. We cannot govern them as pmvinres ; it is con trary to every principle, to the very spirit of our institutions. We ought not to incorporate then) with us; for if they areas:lP for self govenament• their infillelle, upon the national legislation in Congress would be likely to he bad, and they would be at best, a heavy dead weight upon our own pregresa„ and, even if they are lit for self government, They are so different from 1213 in inn— gauge. manners, religion and institutions, that annexation would but add another and power ful element of discord to the too many we have already. From all that I can learn, -Maximilian has give the Mexicans a better government than they were ever able to give themselves. Wher ever his authority extends, there Is security for life and been the case among themielvesfor many veara , property, at least;. and that has lieldoM, Many Mexicans, especially amo ng the higher classes—some even in Comargo—fully appreciate this fact, and accordingly support the Imperial Government. I should like to see a firm and strong, a just and liberal Mexican Republic re place the Empire; and if the Mexicans can achieve it, or are worthy to achieve it, I bid them Gal speed, with all my heart. Rot be tween governing it ourselves and letting Maxi• militia govern It, I prefer the latter. It seems to me that intervention in Mexico would almost inevitably lead to annexation, and that I should consider a grievous national calamity— In lad, almost the worst thing that could happen to us Jest at present. Reconstruction, harmonizing the discordant elements that will else retard our progrestoward a higher and purer civilization, re-establishing the government upon thoroughly e.nniut princi. riles, will give us our hands full of work for s good while to come_ And lam the more nnx [nun to avoid burdening ourselves with anything else, for that I fear the reconstruction is being sadly botched, done nil wicrly, In too much hur ry, and upon unsound principles,. It Peeing that political power in the rebel states is still going to remain in the hands of the men who caused lhe rebellion, and who, though conquered, are unrepentant, unconverted, ana as much enemies in principle as ever, and doubly bitter from the mart of defeat. We have fought four years to overthrow the Principles of inequality of human rights; wc have poured out Mood like water and money without stint, and filled thousand of homes with de. , olation ; and yet, when at last our hard won triumph seems complete, we deliberately go to work and throw away the fruits, and render all our labor vain. There Is one safeguard sgaing the evil I fear: it is manhood suffrage. That way lies safety and honor; the other, certain difficulty and possible destruction. CITY va. 001111 TRY LIFE. Cory Olianns of the Brooklyn Eagle, gives his experience of the felicities of country life. The loeslity is somewhere In New Jersey: The place is a lovely spot but wants improv mg. The sidewalks aro not 11:igged, and there an un street lamps. No Ice cream saloons, no lager, no aldermen ir any of the luxuries of city life. But there is a treat deal of nature. The ns. owe consists mostly of frees, rail fences, core , tchln null isiaNcirtltrlPS. Particularly mosquitoes Also dogs. Everybody In the country keep, logs. They are animate of large pattern, not particular about breed They earn their bread by barking at cows, 'vines and strangers. There is a picturesque village, composed of n •aven and two blacksmith's shops. Being situated on the hank of a canal, it may be regarded as watering place. The graceful coal boatagentl, -lade along nt the rate of two miles a week, re binding you of Venice and gondolas It much resembles Venice before Venice wa was,built. Farming life, is very serene- Yon get up tr. he middle of the night and milk rows and soli vood for breakfast. You then hoe corn til; meak fast is ready. After breakfast you feed theliigs and hunt Then hoe corn till dinner is ready. By way of variety you then milk the cows and feed the pigs. The balance of the evening is spent in the cheerful recreation of sparring with the mos quitoes. Then there's the gifts Most of the farmers raise girls; they are use ful to teed chickens and sit up with young men in the best room on Sunday evening. Country girla are nice. If yon should want to get married at any flue, Tll take you out to New Jersey and intro- Ince you. The Jersey girls wear waterfalla, exhibit a , reference for male society, and are very fond of peanuts. W two you go courting, them, you must alwayp 'nke a pneket full of peanuts if you don't man o bn considered mean. Filopene hardness is very popular. The girls an very expert at it I have just bought out a fane!, , tore, and sent it an there by express, to square my outstanding liabilitiea in that line. 'Otherwise, sitting up with country girls is very refreshing.. Sitting with one arm round tier waist with the other hand engaged in iltitterting morqnitoes, while the tella you all ibont the quilting party last winter, at Aunt Ferushats; what tinily Ann Van Spoek wore' when she was married to Josiah. Corododger ~ nd how many chickens they had. when tbey commenced house keeping, is an enjoyment not to be mettivith in town, INGRATITUDE TO PARENTI3.—TheTO is a prov erb that "a [ether can more easily maintain six children, than six children one father." Luther relates this story: There was once a father who gave up everything to his children—his house, his fields, his goods and expected for this the children wodtd support him; hut Mier he had peen sometime with hiseldeia son the latter grea tired of him, and said to him, " Father I have .itvi a son born to me this night, and there, where your - arm chair stands, the cradle must come; will you not, then, perhaps, go to my brother, who has a large room ?" After he had been some time with the second- son, he also grew tired of him, and said, "Father, you like a warm room, and that harts my head. WOht you gp to my' rother, the baker?" The father went, and after he had been some time with the third son ho also found _him, troublesome, and said to him, "Father, the People run in and out here all day as if it was a pigeon -house, and you cannot have your noonday) sleet); would you not be better off at my sister Kate's near the town wall ? The old man remarked to himself, !'Yes, I . will do so; I will go and try-At with ray daught"r." She grew weary of him, and she was always so fearful when her father went to church or_anywhere else, and was obliged to deset nd the three steep stairs; and at her sister Elizabeth'. there ware no stairs to de acend; as she lived on the ground door. ror the sake of peace' the old man assented, and wentbi the oilier daughter; bit after some time Abe too becumetired of him, and told him, by a, third person, that her house near the water was' too damp . for a man who suffered with the gout, and her osier:the grave digger's wife, atJohn's.k had much drier lodgings.' The old man hints'ir thouchtehe was right, anti Went to his youngest daughter, Helen; bat after' he had bum three days with her her little sea said to - hit grand father, "Mother said yesterday to consiti . Bess berb that _Otero was no better charober far YOU than - such a one as Utter dike- These words brake the old man's heart, so ho lima back hi his chair and died. • OrDr; Franklin tap that evesyrittlle free. meet of the day Should be saved. = The moment *the day breaks set yoaraelfto Work to save the pieces.. - „ titfthe reratans as an.ient writers iorprai a% used to teach that sonata pay their dehtshn. WO& Irbil wutivlcti tam • _ _ file-tio Per mull: l =s An itav'ence NUMBER 45 Mr. Ruby meets a' "Reconstructed D . eßozat; who Opposes Immigration. Batrcra RasT, (which is the Stair. nv,/, • • 't't troaGemy,) Sept 21,1885. Gineral Bnanerger Pogram, uv Idisaladppy, who demonstrated his devostain to the grata piinsioes or -ndtuditooshual littertfWiterving the confedrasy as a commissary, wrote me to meet him in Washington. He bed Ja4reseetad his pardon, .and the lust yoose he made, uv blot privileged wuz enimetti meet tne for emana tion on the hopes and prospex uv the Dimocriv. Ginral Pogram is a fine specimen or the gin oolne, shivelru autherner; five feet 11 inches In bite, or II feet's inches, (1 forget which,) and can thaw more terbackar,.spit with 'gmater swum'. ac3r, and walk upright under a bevyer lode ,ulr avant, whisky than any man I ever met.... L A nm sofistikated child uv nacher, he scorns stm_ped .ish and sham nv'wat is called civilizatints. torah the iltening- glance fly 'contempt he darted at me, when I asks him to qualifyh4 wtt isky with a - little water! Ginral Pogram opened by lamenting the un timely decease uv so many suthern voters, In the late dlaholikle war; Linkin and'hid helyuns made upon 'em. I replyed, to•wunst, that that deficit baud be easily made up. " I hey," sez I, " bin a candid rin This matter. At a triflin expendiutior try money the tide lay emigrashen tram limps kin be turned southward, and the places nv your slawtered heroes be filled with the Irishman, he German, the"— "Liarl theft murderer! nigger-steelMP tthowtid the Ginrel, seezing me by the throta, and brandishin his cane over my bed. Pullin on my knees, (rennin a tabby, the Yoonyun ez It wuz.") I gaspt: " Why this violent-T" "Ore nutlibi," replied the Gland, relaxin his bolt: "1 shel be electid to Congris, and et '1 Awl hey to mix with Imo Yankees, I wuz sprat>. tisin the old tack ix, just to git my hand In ante. Wuz yoo afeered? Riess yoor sole, we wood ..nt kill a Northern Dimettrat for no money— we need em. But," continued he, "this emigre shen Arena uv yoorn won't work. Yer Irish man and yer German wood work, but they'd want wazes I" " Wal I" sez I, astouodid, not seein writ be wuz drivin at. "Can't you bee," sea he. " They'd earn man they'd save it. Our habits is expensive, and now that nigger-hreedin is dun away, with, we rian't sell a half dozen niegers per annum, to keep up ourexpmrses. Alas! (veers suffused his "seeming eyes, ez he spoke,) the last nigger I sold vuz o z white ez you are, my son nun wuz her Faber, and I gin $2.500 fist her in 3lobeel, when he wuz 15. I sold her to the President nv the iuthern Society lar cimvcrahun nv the Heathin. I knocks a hundred off the price of the gal, pn that account. But to resoom. " The latrines works, and saves sutltiewe won't work, can't sell no more nine* and git nerd up. and bey to sell land to furriner. Then, ne's OUR EKAL I and teat becomes of the an- Inept sbivelry 7" "Bit," set t , "yuo bed the poor whites among coo afore the war. What wuss wood a furrimer "Them poor whites wuz a pekoolyer class—, ve kep em cot we bed to hey em vote. We al lowed em in squat on our lands, never let em earn 2 read. and kep their skins full uv cheep whisky. •Wbeti won cry em got to know too 'cinch, we either killed him or sent him North. keepin among us i-st sich ez we wantid. With .inr poor whit-s dein our votin at hum, yoo Dim ekr.t.s dole it up North, and the Diggers dole ur laber, tmoly, we war a favored people." "But who are yoo gain to git to do yuor la her?" "The nigger." "But yoo'l hey to pay him wag's!" "Not much. The Northern Legislacherti are passin laws nein ther constr. there, so they git - away from us, and Jest ez soon es the •li rice accursed hireling soljiers are withdrawd, our laws Is in force, and then wet good to a nig zees contract to him? Methinks the ewe of Kans.] is still onto him, Liakin to the contrary, notwithstanding. I shel be kin to mine—l shot pay the abel•bodisd tleld.hands $4 per month, mechaniks say $6. I.lv coarse, of fnrrinerli kin tupelo with em, and work for legs, we'll take ern, provided they'll be ez amble. -The nigger won made' obe a slave. God' cost Itaroui and sed,he snood be s servant forev oe, Did he mean us to pay em wages? Not ..any. for of [Li bed Ile wood hey so ordered nr tastes and habits so ez we shoed hey had be wherewithal to do it. "Nasky," sed he, a pausin to drain the bottle, and rollln hlz ize upwards, "I am the chitri.nv a parence, and never, no, never, will I de part from their faith. 0 3:id cast the nigger, and I will do, my part, manfully, towards carryin .ut ills will. Whatever betides us, the sons nv Hain most be the servants uv Japheth, and their dawters likewise, that the Shriprer *hal be fultilied." I partid with that grate and good man, my mind uv the nearly white gals he owned, tad determined, par long, to ho assistin uv him iti fultillin that part uv the Skripter. TETTOLEILIS V. Nam', Lett Paster av the Chltrch uv the Non Dispen aashen. JACOB STRAWN, THE ILLINOIS FUZES Jacob Strewn. of Jacksneville, Illinois, died suddenly on the 24th eh. Stuart; in farming and caul. buying at an early age, with a capital fit y cents in silver. Mr. Strewn came to be the king farmer of the West. His 'acres spread .ver almost whole counties, and it was no un real thing for him to sow a field of wheat nr onnt corn over a space twice the size of a Ger man kingdom. He bad sheep and trine upon .bnusand hills, or would bad if the hills had neen there. He built pretty much the whole of the village of Jacksonville; he represented his listrict in the Legislature, where he Wes noted nit direct and available good sense, and In all positions filled the ideas of a good eltiz.n His -little garden patch" at the time of his embraced nearly thtity thousand acres, worth at ;ewe $1,5Q0,000 without improvemeuts. Rowse twice married, and leaves coven sons and. one daughter. To person he was a Daniel Lambert. weighing about three hundred and fifty pounds. Many interesting incidents have been related re- Tecting him. among which are the flu began life for blmeelf by raising sixteen acres'of wheat, which be traded for sixteen steers, which he sold at a_proet. After this he • dealt mainly in rattle. He was a rapid talker and a keen judge of human nature. prompt aster, knew how to drive a brognin and Allan Made money. He seldom came to town, was busy ev ery moment, and was always - in :the:field. or in the saddle going from place to - itlace...Until within a few years be was Ms own iticete !retain and his own banker, and strange as it may seem, kept no books, trusting entirely, to his memory, which never failed him. In physicel labor he tuteitiled in every dePartment. With a common hand sickle helm; been known to reap, bled and - Meek sixty dozen bundles of wheat ill a day.— Farmers will understand ads to be what not inure than one man in thousands could Iturform. In earlier dayelte earriedleig,e sums of money upf), hi s - person . and on several occasions his tee was atternemr" be rode alone t h rough the country, et one time, near Alton, Xua was a t.. tecked,be wee robbers, whom he thrashed end au t, to eight with his cattle-whip, Ito was a T ner , wonderful muscle and 'activity. - Re caa rd spripg ovor the I he 4401 fence by p iecing one hand on ttop rail; and'on - One cation h e caught an .infuriated bultiVtlid horns who. was charging on him en open dell, and throwingliim on his beet completely subdued the animal. ktnortil dekuitiag sock:y*oM Wed fa eh. gaited hz discussing the following 'quistkft t "V a bullhead down, his wife, which b.*, ;Mod Mal l et: holed" the man et The Wlicuanr ' IV' Ks s rssnr is bast whetted is oil so wit IS best,shargened by pplltiinses. The Isar, pf w i f e 111 both' L 4 /0 0 :4 0 0 114 14P 3 1 0 , 00 attllae . o* Pohl i 3'.; ~ ~ :; : r 7 OEM 5 ' ' ME - - „ • ME