A. J. GERRITSON, Publisher.} it For the Democrat. A History of the Great Struggle in Aingica bo.ool34bertie , ' and Despotism. A Reptiblican.paperr r a few months ago made the followititg 'istatelnent respecting the policy of President Johnson. It says : ,‘ Andrew Johnson used to profess n reatroTorulerfor tteir9l4ippary fa taers solaria:ln of In- dependence, and especially for the opin- Abr.sham Luteeln,,: c hnt , now,..hu thriurir thitif idliaverbtkird arid linitits th — ti :lag of Jefferson Davis—State Rights and n o interference in favor of the oppressed. We do not believe he can carry out his Tans without a war. The Republicans sre almost a solid phalanx against him, and rather than let the rebellion accom- Dash its ends, they will go into.auother year'S war. We tell the President that hie faith is leading to blood. The on hope of the black man is in the ballot. President Johnson denies him this, and orders the Southern governments to be composed entirely of white men. He has shays professed to be a Democrat, but pow he wants to establish an aristocracy. . - Some have laid the basis of aristocracy in wealth ;,others iq, ancestral titles ; but President Johnson thinks:a skin aris tocracy will be the best. In some States the blacks are a majority of the people.— They have just .asgood aright to theohief control of those States as the Caucasian races have to the phief Control of the oth ers. President" Sohnson nullifies at a blow t'.l that Presiderg..Lin:eoln bas-done." - Now we shall prove that every man vho believes . the above dootrixtes.atniacta upon them alraitor td-the governinetit of tho ruited States. We shall prove that those principles are the identical principles of the French °Revolutionists, and that they were abhorred and con demned by everX,lctunder of,ADAnseri,-, can government. We -- ebtaltlireVii - that in their determination to 7 . carry out their, principles, the French revolutionists— Robespierre, Denton, Bristle:. and Marat —instigated the Degrees, in St. Domingo, a colony of France, to murder every white person on the island, and that from Isaac day St. Domingo his been governed by negroes, and that from a Republic it ended-M a despotism: -; - r We shall inassaere of -egrocs in New Orleans" was caused by the teachings of men with the same prin. cir'es as those of the French revolution. and that the "massacre" vrakiti self .iufence ; that, is, if -the whites had not mastered the blacks, they themselves would ere long either have been enslaved or extenititiatotti. PiTociiniyilte: : the au ttior of" DemocraeY Ainerica," was a r;tneas to the horrors of the , French rev. n'utiou, and he Rays, in treating of "The . present and future condition of the three races inhahitinggity Vaited Staltee :" " Hitherto, whenever the whites have been the most, powerful,. they have main tained the blacks in a subordinate or a ser 7 vile position ; witerarei the'negroes have been strongest,' they have destroyed the whites; such has been the only course of events ; which has, ever- taken place . be tweeu tbs 3 tiv(i.;ftices- I 0 12 144ttiagine :hat the two tilia rack will ever I,ve in anyconntrt two =equal footing. But I believe `il difficulty to be_ still greater in tbe United Suites_ than else= where." - The riajons offers aro ton lengthy for this number, he gives it as his opinion that there " will come a conflict o races in the South, or that the fate of the white PoPlation similar to the Moors of Spain; after having occu pied the hind foi ceutaries, it will be forced to retire to the country 'whence its ancestors came, and to abandon to the negroes the 'posOssion of a territory which Providence seems - more peculiarly destined for them, since they can subsist and labor in it- more easily than the whites." There is the Opinion of a man whose work guntlid'ltbovelniChiiii universally admitted to be " ;he best, if not the first ayatematie :and philosophic view of the great principles of our Constitution which has been presented to the world, and was worthy-to be introduced as a text book' in some of our seminaries of learning. of ciaustittition l of 04117nited StatiaAa dill bat ahem° bercattlir, coin cides in every particular with that of PresidentlivdßlPPPuld-he givesit3ts his opinion,alfei a careful` penetration into working of lefties, during his visit to AinericAthat, 4,the anal*lm4init ration of tho'Dmi., evil hinge about a revoltitippary, crisis,. th at . / be, Federal (now RepUblican) party , would endeavor to eqiijkiSkirall,Y.PV4lbr: "4", We shall prove that everrassertion of che that President (Johnsen is not carrying ,yogi thi, policy of Abra ham Liniad; Is a false tiasertieti, r aiid that the very pepeteffteithiclifthetratiitot above islnketWdenottnve4:l,Yoidedt. coin until theday of his'Aleatkia t§e.exi' sot language now noes in derin* lll :9; President Johnson. Thn Aril ! etiaPPlitip favor of President Johnson's 'alga asser tion that be was pnrsningstwreriliall of Abraham' Uncoils; will be taken fro the pen of John W. Forney. On the 28th of September, 1865, he says : "No statesman who watches the pro gress, of public affairs, fails to ask himself whether, had Abraham Lincoln lived, he would have pursued the course which is unquestionably the settled policy of Pres ident Johnson. It is instructive as we trace the career of the departed Presi- dent, to see how little of the partisan per vaded his action, and how much of the in dulgent and forgiving philanthropist,. Ite did'nothing in anger, and was disposed to treat, the arrant offender with mercy ra• ther than respond to the load cry for ven geance on the part of many who were his true ftlends. .It 18 not unjust to either side to say that Abraham Lincoln never really came up to the expectations of what are called the earnest men,' and that his very last public utterance was an unconscious criticism of their connsel,and au undoubted difference from their poli cy. This utterance was his speech from the window of the White House on the evening of tho 11th of April, three days before he eras assassinated. A single ex- _ . tract from this speech will show how ir resist ably the motives and necessities that brongbt Abraham Lincoln to this belief have modeled the deliberations, and af- fected the measures of Andrew Johnson." Before we copy this speech of Presi dent Lincoln, we will analyze the remarks of Col. Formy in relation thereto. Here he pays a tribute of respect to - the depar ted President, and eulogized those virtues• in him which are now considered as vices when possessed by President Johnson.— He was indulgent and forgiving, doing nothing in anger or revenge, and was dis posed to treat the Southern people with mercy rather to respond to the loud cry for vengeance on the part of many of his • party. In the next number we will give some specimens of- the "load cries for ven geance against the people of the South,to which President Lincoln gave no re sponse. They were the same outcries as those which Issued from the torch-and- turpentine party, to which President. Johnson refuses to respond. Mr. Forney says Abraham Lincoln never came up to the expectations of the • earnest men'— that is, he never came up to the expecta tions of the men who were earnest for revolution—earnest in overturning the government and establishing a despo tism ; and the very last speech which tell upon the ears of a listening audience, was au undoubted difference from their poli cy. What clearer proof is wanting than is given in these confessions . of.Mr. Forney, that the policy' of the radicalsistlifferent from the policy of Abraham Lincoln, and that Andrew Johnson, instead of his tra ducers, is pursuing the path marked out by his predecessor ? Does not Mr. For ney acknowledge that up to September, 1865, President Johnson had remodeled his acts after the pattern set by President Lincoln, arid that all his measures were affected or influenced by the policy com menced before he was called in to the Presidential chair? After quoting the last speech of Mr. Lincoln, Mr. Forney continues thus : " There is not a word in this plain state ment of a knotty question that may not be used as a key to open some of the dif ficulties that surround the present politi cal situation. Recollect, Abraham Lin coln spoke before all the armies of the re bels had yielded, and in advance of many of the other gratifying results of the sur render of Lee. He could- not know bow rapidly the whole Southern people would submit to the national authority, and that there would have have been so much ri valry on their part to rush back to their duty. It was scarcely within the scope of his argument lo suppose that the ob stacle to the restoration of the Union would come from without those States ; from those who had been contending to bring them back to their proper places, and to restore things to their proper sta tus. Will not the refusal to admit the reconstructed States cover 'their territo ries with new disorders and new distress es, and afflict the whole nation with new vexations ?" And be adds that " not one i•among the Radicals ever denies that President Johnson is following the exact policy of President Lincoln in his meas ures for reconstructing the Union." In the next number we will show how these Radicals turned with disgust from the farewell address of Abraham Lincoln aria' damored for Butler; and prove that all the disorders and distresses which afflict the nation are directly attributable to the doctrioefraf:thel4v6l4Lionists of America . who are, ire siding ,in the foot 'steps of the ItevalugcMists of France. ~ : . i,, , U .._ Ai ,: . , r ' I . • —lt is rimorect that information has been retrieved in very high quarter%) that MaximiliairAisplaya the same symptoms of insanity Ili the Em press Carlotta did in her recent visit to Europe.. —The propoifitiOn—Ot Mr.- Wens of Obic43bsS,the limit of the term of the :Piesidetit of thelSoiteA -States, shall be foii,k7yeiiii;iiadilit , t shall ;spot.. be ible to rs-olnotion,, has undoubtedly been offered witti a- view of making President Johnson ineligible. „ ..,. . . , ~ -... ... _. . . ._ . ° T , .', ..r.lidAri -q. IL;flo114.1. r . :.11 . 1,4 ' 11 7 : 1 ;2,1 :17 . -_.::) 1,„,,,, , , If: j,.- . , . ••,k -f, ... Li i l liti , .. , , P; ......; , • 4 1 ” . . • • 1 "•'! . i • 1 1 4. ..•:.;,3•Tt - e: It. , :•7:_•' . ,r.til r. , • ..-1-11. .-t ' i: ..•• ..1 ,, fl. . . ....„ ....1 .., .....,,4 Dr: •.:clilt - .....0.nc..k.' ziftl7 Pa • .a.: • P . *--: ' 4 I . " !••••.:?..,.. rt ~ 1_ , ; :;,;:•:.: • tirpt• '...;,• . -,i • . .r .-- •:, ~ ,. - : ".i 4 .-'. ~, • 1 ;, Alt .., i 7,:._ • .1 io HI ..; ~: 01'1 _,...; .., ~ , , .. A T . ~r......,„ ....l' ,• 41 , l• %N../ ...').l;r ...‘ .11• .' • -.' . 5 ,' 1 1 : 2' 2 ...,' 5.7. ,- 110V , "...111 74 , "! - ' .. "; 1 :, • , - ....._...., , . ~, ......e. . - • .1 -, • ~-..., n • •' „7: ' , r 1 „:.•,-,• • - , , _.......1 .-__J-L_ ' • 141ONTROSE, PA., TUESDAT'', DEG, What a Poet sees on the Itlisootal River, B. F. Taylor writes in the Chicago Journal: The Missouri lurks behind that heavy curtain of timber. It is five miles of ree- dy meadow; as rich as anything Father Nile ever gave the Pharoahs,then two miles of woods, and then the Mad River. You strike out into what is rather a deep, damp grove than a road—a grove through the rankest of grasses—and straight across the plain. Millions of tall sunflowers, standing as thick as they can grow, border the way, and enough of them thrust their East Indian faces into the carriage to cover you with their taw ny dust till you resemble the symbolical rat that is always under the meal. The stems of the grass just suggest the old fashioned yellow, and make you think you are surveying the field through a couple of microscopes. Here and there a dozen acres have been mown, and the windows lie trailing about in the sun, but nothing obliterates the wild, untamed look there is to everything; the amphibious air of the whole landscape, hinting very distinctly at Missouri's capabilities. No bowlders about you; no bluffs before you, but one broad lap of uttermost fitness. Lonely cottonwoods, and mighty, oaks stand silently about. Great black oaken shafts with their leaky capitals, begin to show gaudily. Elms spring into the air with their graceful sculpture of arches. The road grows ruggeder; you go into the eclipst; the shadow of the woods comes down as Homer's God of silverbow came —" like night"—and you wonder at the magis of the earth that can three perspire a tree at every pore. If any bodrthinks that figure violent be can sooth iiit. Sprinklings of walnut, ash, elm and lin den among the oaks and cottonwoods— the great fellows you feel like taking off your hat to. They are the bassoon, clari on and trumpet pipes of a mighty organ. The way is tangled with living things: Grape vines are climbing, and, as yotr balffancy, frolicing about. Sweet Will lams and tribe after tribe of flowers, fresh and beautiful, smile out at you from bush and briar. Gooseberries, mulberries, raspberries, tempt you in their season; mosses, three ply and all velvet, cushion the logs along the way as if somebody had expected you. It is all the true bar. bark magnificence of forest. A crocodile crawling out of some oozy bed would not snprise you much, nor the crash of ono of Job's sea horses through the-Jan gle. There is nothing fiercer teretbau , troops of turkeys that the edvions leaves conceal. The woods are' - still, and you faintly hear rush as of hurrying waters,. but clearly over it the toarse, rough snort of a steam saw mill on the river bank, that, day and night, with short and feverish breath, rives out the ties from the cottonwood for the railroad across the continent. Look round again upon the great columns of this first temple; for no man shall behold them long. Here for cent nries they have been silently grow ing, to lie at, last on the road bed of the New World's thoroughfare. Listen again and you shall hear the tick of the axes that, like so many solemn clocks, are tim ing the minutes of the dying woods. At last the bewilderel road makes a sharp turn, and out, you come upon the river's bank. And that is the Missouri, that narrow, half mile breadth of dirty water, tumbling . along the Gulf. That is the stream you have longed to see, even as saints the Jordan. You have known the word, " Missouri" since early childhood. You have traced its course a thousand times, with a small forefinger, from the dim and mystic shadows of the Rocky Mountains, as that broken row of fine tooth comba-1 upon your map was named; traced it, down the clear white field of paper, that wrig gle of ink they call " Missouri." Pictur ed groups of shaggy Vented buffalo, cloth ed with taurine terrors, lowered at you I upon the map, far eastward of the river. Peaked wigwams , like so many stark and:, stiff night caps, dotted the blanks between the lines and parallels, and pictorial bears stalked unrebnked. It was beyond "the I Genesee country," beyond " the Ohio," beyond Lake Michigan. You wondered how anybody could have gotten there without dying, and, having died, how he could ever come back to tell it. It was as inaccessible to your thought as the riv er that runs hard by the great white Throne. And now, fresh friom that same home three days ago, yott.stand upon its brink. You do not look across where the bold and breezy hills of Nebraska relent, and creep gently down in meadows green to the river's edge. Yon do not see.that steamer creeping around the bend ;with its " cloud by day." You only sea that , , tiberish looking water, the hue of scions , ,meal gruel, turbulent with the 'current . and catfish. What can your lavender laid poets of the 41 bine Mo011e," and' the arrow . Rhone" have to say. or tbia, monstrousuutpouring of .porridge ? sum it all up, it was a sharp disappoint.. ment I felt, as I scrambled. siong . the' slip pory bank and sat down, damp as a halt' rush, to wait: for' a. boat; . lAird , l7llinla. daughter Would have laredilliu.herillp tiug gm atiemptetrthe , passalpiOf the river' here, with her "Oh, boating, do not tar t y , 'A 7 4 9 S ..9, llle u r ' 9 I ) C ld ,tg row fir eer.ibelerrX•e' It is high ne9P diseonsolate—hUt the gr,,Ot artery,ofth'e,co"ntineiaij r .Arßo i to +Eme VI 40j) I can la,y,,Luyfingers.up l. on Ohm Apa re 4 The etree,el is neit her , She - n(04104h, 4augliOt 'of do; 0tr3;,2,.a. no Ohio, "the berniful is not without its grim denr., Wits Ifrins- 7 - those i sky larks of 0% . - 7 - h 4gay:ft tO" do with it. It belongs tO tlwtSterbsnk. vaned"; not been' horn ling, epßoti liers4l,to P4S, a mother. She has pro,driOd Anglo, Saxon, 101 l grown Man. 1301 % ltos hOnOr enough that she hai cradled &Jiver:l4i,, like the , Missouri, iolls diAvii the toad; that drains almost five hundiid,And.t.Wen ty thousand sqnare its foot a tnile,,over , the, y.srallils of lati, tude as if they were so glad, rounds of ladder; that receives" all the ,great 4vers but otie that slide down Of% epistAr,o_d4.- clivity of the Rocky ,ISlOnntiutis; : that, has, three thousand and ninety eix t ,u3,lleit 9f ins dependent existence ; tkati t has 'OEM sand fire hundred and forty, miles' gable - viaters; that sallied. to the.) Vilagisgip7 pi stream, like a comet o.aiix;:foOr thou sand Sic hundred and rail'escrOss planet to the quit, futre_wAl h„Y, steam three thousand 'Tann 'lA:iftia#l . 4o fifty. "Winter drifts' its , head iva-, tern, and summer lien atile4.a.t.lll It is thy` snow the ' Are:tic at one; end, and thii . Snow of' the 6 , 4t",toin other. NSW, spread wide yottr alias; bpd - ; get as , 'Fitt *est as yon 'oho in tile:l l 4w World without-wettingyour ' Mit ; hack the' Columbia Until it shaVsniii 4 Wity ) 1`14O. • the Leivei, the Clark Mid', Muliii4tia4, grarrderirident . tthin Weeklrop 'e.r er gave to Neptune, the godlir ;tali wa ter; tree° them back tililbtelintatiat 'the birth plOioe Boort is one; that' tlifin foi/414'4 a dfitance that lot • conk! travel on c tho Sabbath without divides the cra dles of the twain; *or ytilicoOldtceoaff up a draught of; water ,ft:?m, tAqi.IMPIPA3ttin the holloW.'oryifitiebii9dOrld Tnity4t, 14 % to the Ociliiioli'ititl)° l 4.),,a!Pfing TT° ole spillinkndroß, Op a zoo. Op /A tciithinli, that . bean EstrgOgeiUPAO " 31 i*ciri the r B aid it in With 'the, t4iiisisattiptf. ftii4 Chun a think of the million and ',.‘a _quarter, &pap .1 miles they drain;'Utile blended wa to's-Surging up . the, world toward ~the, equator, two aPq r liiilrffiitettlEther the center of the Vett? 1 /44. at the'place I;ll3ol3ll4l4;;Ndy n fiseri r to the dignity 'of a', distirint,:secognition the.great etT#YL.thia universe, and you ,wiltlo„itlinopt ready to , bareyour brow dad, p;tit ,fti; " and t h ank "God you - haie •Ixed IPeg•erk ongliand traveled far enough 1, - 6 see the Missouri River. • uses of)eid~ffbg, itlielidltos; The - fotiowiliv'Fiif JFpT4itl ,Wily ippr tain Frenchman is anxictus to Olitain,from the 'Board of Super_asOrs ~a monopoly of ali'the dogs that, matdie itiSan„krancis-, co for the next !view. yeafg... -. _,,, - . What use can'llilode.of . o a.dead dog ? It can bp Used f 4. li. tatiltittide Of, useful and lusurroupPliiVies.,.._ "-; ~ . Name one. 'A putt of. it inay it4e, puit• into a lady's 'stiiellnig bottle, ~.. . Under ivhat f9rm_?; .Etker.usdelicloca perfume, or" es sineillOg salts. , 1 , , _ How can it bo_convetted :into tit.. Ter. fume ? Glicerille is'. large . ll,,upi.4 7,11_ Fel . . fwners for their Choiceet_perfn*PN, How is glycerine obtained ,fro v a.. (144, dog? By" uniting ; soda wipt; 'tile bOilinge of the fat and'bones. , ', .' , , I , What' does Ibis 'P'rktecc:?. ''''Ji t iweet substance 'called . gilciirines Or Vie jingar al fat. How can 'the` putrefying del l of a , og i bo turned into smelling salts'? ` Merely by adding to it a littiellOcii - 41)*a s cid. What furtheilitle'CaVidlthilleof a dog? Yoe-can Wash 'yob,' liandiind fie ` w ith a - part Ofit. . 'T.' •''• ' ' '"- !'; '" ' '1 How so'?' Part "of tti*:g:l);cil a ntie ',tra y . be used for scenting'Soaf), flottqa b 4 011 , 0 1 1 glyeerine"soap'. - '' ' ' ' '" '"' ' '" ' , What otbei-nso catre dead dog . 'be put • to ? A . lati'ltgoini , ''iti : .o'nit. l ,etiia) l • - put 'a little onhor - ebeastke Spa 'to 'improi: . e.l their brie. -t•••= , - ' li'lL '—'''''' How can this 'lie 'ilianegfd'? Part : r itf . ,' the glycerine inay be itikedivith eirmine t ' and-sold for lip" salve or' delltalti 'tint, fpr 1 the-cheeks.— -• :. ' ••-•-'"''''". '''"l''' ''" ' '' Vinie naothei ns'e that cati 'be timai•Of a dead do 4 '•:''lt• ma ,y, 'be;' brOught tO"thS', table as - a dltwbyt Rd. Oaten 'With •• indeh •• T ATA . ,_ .- ,• .) :::t . - 1. 1 ...5 . ~,,-, .. 1 IHow•Leati•-• this' be°' dtifiel l 'PAiii• " thei skin, tendons and _§,ongs,,,...gelatine coati:l .. ' obtain e 4 iand this „gfiVrte,ca9Ae Artasle into jetty, _ , .. , , ._ ~_ .., ...,., _,, _ 1 . What dili`eiillelicAf:pitWliets44ff,O,fit? • A part of It, l 4fisbo"ildt, Intp:Ogik, tpa,olc9f-; fee 'tai:te,jo44liit.„ 10K;' - calii r 'tlinft 4 , 3 ; "1 6 ~p, ...., .._ -.,..: ~ ... . ~ T .: t.t.q . . 1 'Sugar ii;t& tic rAiiilklif 44 . 0iiiiip= .eetinsglikhliititienetailkti:- ' 1":. '' 42 -"I '' WhatAlre#i'Veltvii4fx_cooll lit t_ , ' kiiiiitaifi'clAii ii) ail idlu.koafar it' at' 'a bAlli4,l4bi'liiii i' ."'" 1/4 un •,,,. ..Q L 0 1 , - 0 6 kf -Or" \ciirireAkfiO4y°bli, mide, irit l / 2 ,1A c 14fliiik: ifiji:epdge o v a: , 1i 'g ,•_. -We1...? .....rst,•ltV pd •trn - What order was made ieisailf ifsitif 7.. t, - Oge 9 o wner years age - .50: - 1% 2 et ,,••• •f . tli ifibuld 'fin* igunedifitqy etilrand tlikroyin into' tfie Seine tioVnlaiti'dOge were so detitroyed Seiei thoripds.-. -. MG ' • out .that these dead ,doitt could be - turned into monery,...Tho ref.' fuse pickers' lel4fioniers.) , L 'What ' did' 40 with .them. Thei gaiti'em'ouk kit the river, skinned them thein *n ' 'wits done with the skins? Thei wk . i made into kid gloVea. _ What - Wes done, With the: I:telling's. They. Were made into soap and muffles. Uttl Ilartfirbe'followinA' general Tales are wortbr of Preservation. • ; ' • 'it. That- which originally void does poi 'hyllapse bf time bicatne valid. ' -2: A personal right of 'aetion dies -with' tboperson. • , 3. The law ' compels no one to do lire, • , possibilities; -i .• 4. Ito one shalt be twice vexed for one, and: the atone 'cause. '• 6. The-greeter contains tbe'less. 0. The law; favOrs things which are id. the eugtody of the 1. The husbfind wife are one pencil. 8. Every act shall"' be taken - mopt etrongly-against the Maker.' --' 9. When two titles occur the elder should .be- preferred. - ' 40. Agreement overrules the law, , 1h He , Who , , derires` the advantage ought -to sustain , tlie- , burden. -,12. No *lan' shall take 'advantage °Mb; own -Wrong. ,13. When the right is equal, the •claim of the party in actin! possession shalt pre , call. • ' 14. Be has the best title who was'firlit in pointof time. . 9 /5...ti, right of action cannot •iirite - Out De fraud,. •.r • /6. Itis fraud, to conceal fraud. , 7,11. -The lawlissiststhosemthasre vigt lant. and trotthose who , sleep over their - . • • :1/B;.ligziorance of the law mouses no Onectf Ff....-. • • 19. Who does, not oppose Whst,ho might oppoSelteenieto condo-zit.. •to :T -20cWhen contrary law ccimesirrqUes= tioni thejoferior law must -yield to the eel:kg/ion-the law general to.the la* spar cinl; 411 old law to a new law; man's laws; tJ4:4'O. laws. ~. • , • - . .. • , A French Solon. Asugar refiner at Lille' gerierfoizaly fit.' ed up the room' adjoining his engine teeth' as a steam bath and allowed :511 patens' in the town seized cholera to be brovight .04404. 44to.uRtOf itielletsons exposed in 4 this'sfearia;:bath! died of that disease. One woman , , .faet.ory, girl in ) a cotton manufactory of Lille; Iviktylie4d r , did during a bath as tilt beWwerilr; for' two days, and with singu nable trade she brought suit . against her ' bad; fabtOr recciver the two daYe'iveges fib'e lost. The judge, summoningall tits grav ity to his countenance, thilif addiestidd, her; after lieartng the testiniony . - of Vern witnesses : Madame, I should , tzOt lies: I hide• to sentence the defendant to payytiti: the wages of the two days you' bade-leatl could tat-the same time force hint !i,'l* - - store you the cholera which you yirdisio confess•you lost in his house; .urnibte strain my power so far e. I must diiittlialf yob r case." The audience approved by r great laughter-the judge's decision, 'and. the woman, covered with confusion and pursued by jeers, quitted the'coull'hottse. ® 7.7 Profiting by a Speech. Daring a recent political campaign • in the state of Massachusetts twoorstOriftet out together for.the purpose of rousing's certain district to the spirit 'ofitbe One (whom we will call Davis,) 'help* 'weitAttown in. this-espicity, w t,tnto..Sk 'last, as it was feared, if ''he spoke fftrat;! that:his colleague (Pratt.by naine)woutd , be left . minus an andidence.-- They bed , charge of a very extensivodistriet,itind at each 'little town land village Davis delight , ed his hearers with the ' same speech; until Pratt, lostallpitience. , thirrepl - etition became a source of enokanho ance that he .set - seriously-to work try ;e. visdawayitdputoitoOlo thisAnethod • t speech' making4i .lielog-alelh?Vin of LisOme. wit,,he finally! hit .upon a., planwhich he thoughtimighte prove enecetsful,. and;.re solvtd to putitintoczeontion.st the next meeting. ..Actordingly, • when. the. a, pointed.-hour arrived, and he-was called upon: for-a few - remarks, be -rose, Midi with.out, the slightest ,hesitaticin,repeated Danis'e speeoh, word for wordi.- Boor, Davis was, utterly at a- loss. what oto:do; he rose. in,embarrassment, mumbled oft a. fe,u.r. words, • and. ended, by saying:flit' '" the gentleman who. •had-. preceded Aim had: exhausted the subject!" - , . —erho olivg branch- which-the:Frail dent - d:lids ontaci-iCougreas- is otont , oo-: i) ugh to bisluted-aa a cudgel: eoessury —A gentlemen yestordny ndvertised in our. ttolumtis, o .o dOgiostil ThiA nukrrg the. deog wetalhOxtie.Of (MP acFlCT'fm .Re thought it, 00 19e 109jA6tgalPti ALVICY I ; away if.Stiolitortpapera , ,wkr o ; l43 VlßlYkg ULS...bititi4tOro ottike.Fritiabliatt W* 1061SIii tafkifikthOMll44: nuiesnce. ,4 1 . p.i. 14! I VOLUME =XXIII;i pa:MEER 51. .ey : . • e - • ex . ` e kg•eo stor,y the early of I3i;i3etitnne' in Church then located on the outskirts of the eit*," of Rotlltcater,`l Theedificef Was pieced in the centre of a lam_ IRV* or. park,. and it. bg,ipg is9 n im.ff s.lFri,t49. open...doors node thy - geti 4sle, carpets appear Qs the contannitioilatt giassy lawn outside. At leastint theanatter appeared to a half dozen geuarwhoiquietly warked.into the otittrob AsitilikCan.preachar was -closing a spliidid, mum of elognenne r and wu , • " Who are Aliiiie / nifaicaln white?" duo. A nYt ern wn „country, boy, who siipticiged•ib@luentiiiii•eo• eloquently prep• pounded:, reqtarectini answer, nt once re, PliPdf 4 , 9 4 , :90th11tl ;lisp "Them—them thy , re's mstlie V? The wings °lithe yotuig minister were "thus abr uptly , clipped while hicithitriflrght, - iibd die 'ones " arrayed in witiieThmiere• *tilt fled " indicidn in.the ,Audience. . • . A g a QYb laiiiit - yl3 the name of Illi nois originated halhittollnwing manner : ' p tittint"Fietiebinen set .out upon an eiplOrtneeVpiditikon ftoWn the river' which they afterwards named, providing them. ogiVes burkoanoes and relying , chid ly, ferAbeirlqueten,auee upon game. They four at the chnfinerice of this river with afe Milslitsippi;an 'ialan'd thickly wooded With black walnut. It was a season of the year when the9mattrwere ripe; and this party expiinatiz - necamiiing - Ow this isl and, great:ly,enjoyed the .lu4 s ury of fruit. titioi this clicnnistance they call ed it the" 'Mind ortinta i ':--or, in French, "-Isle - sox Noitin-hich'ilivirie was given to Abe ricer Nittch:rther , eiplored, and 1!2ePc.9,1?,, tba,.Tmitery Jind St ate. ' Wittiiiidltriibiiiiii A;ir.:---Anasimines l4tlgitrot4a-iiii ii-wiind. l, Some one else says that air is the hidden food of life. Plutarch ieenuito incline to Anaximiness opinlithi,riernatking that'perhaps the rea- S&P why thet.e itt - aptithy of feeling on validuirltibetti arises from breathing the either; dir.Lt. 'Afe.'in" iii ",iilialiiion of the Inineloalifi"Of kfib t -goti4cti4 most clabo litteffilnialtedqof air thi'' works qi the Crelitbt,lba' rali . ef"iiieS disietegrated acdfitted fof die lifei3fread. All classes of Itultfliffirtn this . ; 'SfdilaY 'Srilith says, tolintlicr'ipeakers; that le they would walltitwerveinlits before *liking" they . would 'never 'brisk 'down: 'ln , English titiiyetsitiesi,- . .beaf riebes„ borsebnek rides and ien.inThe /if tdka area part of the eau edit:4nd meibi for' pbysiCal 'develOpment. Philo titi/il a W i alk n` the open air will al tnoa.tielire— if guilty , conveience. ~..-.;;* "I --...1.--LL....p. 4f.40.------ ' • ,liiiir Mr. Greeley, of' the New York Tsibitei•and .probable Successor of Mr. Harrisdasthe Senate of The United States, hatroflate, - iin an extensive Correspondence, tuieised the Members of the radioal party tetnoslify greatly their. demands upon 'the Solidi; aml, to kiwi) altogether their at• tempt to govern the Staten and nation by [ a aYateM ..,of -proscription. Ile also re- Milittitheak of the utter -impracticability .6(4l.mitietity governing. an intelligent mas jtilitj.imerelylby fraud .and force, for any cagai4rable. time, and instances the re; lliklarittbe tilection. in Maryland as c0n ..,, - elusive evil oft he infallible correctness . ~.-. -,.. ... • bt 44#1,29.84i0Di - These facts;coming from 4iwat esnirrea.Veteran in the Republican railice•Wilt be pondered. . • Hl ii - ~~-~ r e ,rippl_sck.d..! Fun, 4eas.--~ scientifie p4tet,e7i! , ,.tl:4 ,t,ef,.PA blee ding at Vas, ncee,,,it is, only. necessary tecput a piece ofpepiti±itiAe, mouth and chew it rapid-, ly.'", 4netheg Plan ,to produce the same. rstitip,t)s,, : s . : phice,n Twill , roll of, paper or raHlg s ti , Ove, aiii; front tevb, under the t i npliec s ii .4tni i , preSs npen t,.: it ,will ar-,- test:pct. e4ingby,obecking the passage Pflbitiblil o lll4Fo`ugh the 'arteries leading to 00 - 4. -... . c •-:.'' 'llt Yoink MaTiZara the country, Who visitell'Okiielihd, 91114, the other day ie seArah'Of 41nployMent;:wai asked by a taiii-thwhnti 'be iiPplied if he could ride bniieliiiiiV,‘li4WrigetlY - Oplied hi the af firmative. His prospective tiatrors told him be had - mkppeliii,g;;T:tra young man -li businVeit'lluif - ii6asitated a great teal Oflrtivelig4." The Applicant declared, '.that be shetildilißnatyig better thmili , traVetfof ieliVitito',' and a, bargain was soon strnekUfW:Ceri)fhet*O; but beWasetittigh whit; atiVibild"ht, 'ending • that the -bnsi- 'lasi contieted hi riding h-blinfland.infirm old horse in a circular track for the biaida blitinirp6V6 of 'grinding tau' , -- : birk,, , ' , B e deelined Ole 'proposition. •., .•.-• . ',. ..• :Sew!Wald-Beecher:in 1844. • • Irbe- , 4011o:wing. iesOtutiikti -hf Henry Weed' Died ei ,l was ofilite'd' iti Nei York oe,lthiild day Of iffity;lB4 . 4:' • " ResoWeckgrifat it iktbd dutidr Aboli• ' tiditiald,rBdfith'lnidNitithy to agitate add reegitald' , Ontil ihe r feff l 4de'the overthnier ofth•ti FedttarCoblititiitiee, and eff!iot the g dire , 11 dissolving th efiedn - , Union. °` • 1 , ,11:4 Ttr • o.lll§ . Witetinkbealo:coiree'ia generilly , thOlaisVetliiing event 'of ' the 'day.. ' —What shoal...n*ln= do when ins ' .b oo tthmetTektt.tolisipumpsVotaoume. Le.Wiir it iitiiiiiviiireauut`dieurcilt ant— elliksenti wortaf , SiNinse lbw )17 wrings men's bosoms. .