The Jeffersonian. (Stroudsburg, Pa.) 1853-1911, January 31, 1861, Image 1

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HicDOtcIr to folitics, literature, Agriculture, Science, illegality, cuii eneral intelligence.
VOL 20.
STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA. JANUARY 31, iSGi.
0. 2
Published by Theodore Schocli.
TERMS. Two dollars per atinumin advance Two
doll'irs ami a q-tarter, half yearl)- anil if not paid be
fore the end of the year, Two dollars anil a hair.
No papers discnriiinued uniil all arrearages aic paid,
except at the option of the Editoi.
lO" Advertisements of onesquarc (ten lines) or Icss
Dne or three insertions, $1 00. Each additional inter,
ton, 25 cents. Longer ones in proportion.
PATRIOTIC SPEECH
OF THE
Kon.JARED CLEMENS, of Virginia,
Delivered in the Housoof Representatives,
. Jauuarj 22, 1801.
ncnt by perpetrating the immortal joke desolate condition, and ita possible fate, oase. Let us-foel, he acid, that vrc have
of advising the people of the United States he felt almost ready to close the quick a country to pave in-tead of a geograplii-
that it was of infinite moment that they accents of speech, and allow the heart to oal section to represent Let us act as
should properly chtituate the immense val- sink down voiceless in its despair Hy men and not as partisans, and the old
uo of their national Union that they would refer them to the words of Lloyd Constitution, now in the verv trough of
should chorish a cordial, habitual, and Garrison, and demand what answer would
Mr. Clemens (Dcre. Va ) nest address- m movable attachment to it that they be iven to them? Mr. Clemens then re
ed the House. He thanked God that he should watch its preservation with jealous ferred to an article in The Liberator,
was permitted, after a long -sickness, to anxiety, discountenance whatever might which appeared a few days after the So
the sea, with battered musts and tails.
will weather the stora.
-i i was permitted, alter a long -sicKness, to anxiety, discountenance whatever might wbioh appeared a few days alter the So- ; Parson Brownlow of the Knoxvillc
TJ"5 General assortment oHarge, plain and or- . , . , . fl . nova. aniin. n ..-:; that :t m,i,i :n nnw 0BS(.inn 0f Konrh Hnrnlina in whinh finr. rn W.; ' i
utuncnuu rype, e arc prcparcti io eiecuie cvtfj uc - r - , " j; v . . j"""" - j --- 1 xvuu.j rrtt, vuiucs uut iu me jiioiuvv
scriptionof j ted health, ot a tiao when his services ovent be abandoned, and indignantly frown rison said that "The last covenant with kiud 0f language against the infamous
iffVS1 ?IfflSIri ' might prove rnot valablo to his constit- down the first dawning attempt to aleni- death was annulled, and the agreement traitors who aro trying to destry the U-
Cards, circulars, mil i Heads, Notes, Biai.it Receipts, ueuts. He would notnow .-peak in passion. ate any portion of the country from the with hell broken by the action of South nion because thev could not elect their
Justices. Legal and other Blanks, lamphlcts.&c.prln- ,. r. t, ,i .f J . , n i f i t n i- i. c i .i i , . ZJ uu. 1
ted with neatness and despatch, on roason.thictcrms It would not beht the solemn and porten-, ret, or to enfeeble the sacred ties which Carolina herself, closing with au appeal caudidate for Presidcutt We annex a
Ms office. tous issues of tbe hour. They wore in the linked together its various parts. Wash- to Massachusetts, ending with the words, few extracts from a late number of the
"ZZJIlZ: midr-t of great events. It might be that iDgton Baw into the future, and discover-j "How stands Massachusetts at this hour, Whig, which contain decidedly more truth
i cT . , , j tht were in tho dying days of the Repub- ed that disastrous poriod in our history in reference to tho Union in an attitudo than poetry, but are particularly appKoa-
A way down South in the fields of cotton, j i;C aod he would not therefore utter, even agajust which he warned his countrymen of hostility." 8 blc at the present time : '
Cinnamon seeds and sandy bottom, t in a whisper, one word which might tend when be told them to"beware of gcograph- Mr. Clemens then quoted from a speech ! Subaoribero in South Carolina, Ala-
Look away, look away, look away, look to bring down the impending avalanche , CJX parties.'' Theso extreme partios of Wendell Philips, delivered in the Mu- ' bama, and Georgia, aro constantly seud
away ' upon tbe quiet homes of the people. He North and South had at last met. Their sic Hall, at Boston, a few days ago, in ing in their insulting epistles to ui, and
Then away down South in the fields of cotton, would at the same time e peek as a South- differences had been created and carried . which Phillips declared, "Wo are disun- ask a discontinuance of their papers, be
Vinegar shoes and paper stockings, em man, identified with all tho interests of on SjStemntio perversions of each oth-; ionists, not for any love of separate con- 0au-e we are opposed to secession. We
the South, lie would speak as a Western era aiuja an(j objects. In the North it , federacies, etc., ending with a reference receive as many uew patrons as we loc
Virginian, and as tho cuModian of those had been represented that tho South de-jto South Carolina, "and Egypt will re- 0Jd ones, but if we were to receive none,
who were not old enough to know the per-1 sirefi arj(i intended to mononolize with ioice that she has departed. M The peo- 8n(l eTCrv man on our list were withdrawn
ils to which they were exposed, by those isiave territorv all tho nublio lands, and Tple had, therefore, arrayed against them j we would have no Dart or lot in wickedness in from two hours to a half or whole day,
who were now riding on the crest, of tho t0 drjvc therefrom free labor, to convert these knights of a new crusado. Tho anu treason of secession. Tbis effort to j depending upon the weather ind the pro
popular wave, but who were, nevertheless, everv Free State into common around for Constitution of the United States was the break un this government, led onbv South v,ous condition, of the leather w-b tho-
defined to sink into the very trough of the rcCaDture of colored persons as slaves ! sanctified Jerusalem agaiust which their Carolina, is a bold, wicked, darin, and : rouLly with soap md. In making tbe
Look away, look away, look away, look
away.
Cuonu.s.
Then I wish I was in Dixie; ,
Ah ha! ah ha!
In Dixie's Land I'd lake my stand,
And live and die in Dixie's land,
Away, away, away, dow n Souihnn Dixie !
How to keep'Harness.
Obscrviug the good condition and fine
appearance of the harness of Baker, pro
prietor of the ""ost extensive livery es
tablishment inTWhester, New York, we
requested hiai to iucpart to m, for publi
cation, the mode by hieh so derirable
an object was achieved. In, cotiiplianco
therewith, be stated the course adopted
as the beat and most economical, after
twenty year experience in business which
required considerable attention to tack
liug aparatus. Hm process of oiling and
waahiug harneja.i! ubatantia.lly aa fol
low: Take neats foot oil and itory or
patetit bUck the lattir well pslvcrised,
or to be ruadc po before tiding. Mix
thoroughly, adding the black until the
oil is well colored or quite black. In
cool vreather tbe oil should be warmed
somewhat before mixing. With a sponge
apply a light eoat of tbn mixture only
what the leather will readily absorb, no
less the harness is very dry, in which
case a heavier coating may be Decenary.
After the harness is drv whieh will bo
Pork and cabbage in tho pot,
It goes in cold and comes out hot,
Look away, look avvay, look away, louk
away,
Vinegar put right in the beet,
It makes thenr always fit to eat,
Look away, look away, look away, look
away.
Chorus. Then I wish I was in Dixie, &c,
Old massa's mad, and I am glat,
He's lost the one he thought he had.
Look away, look away, look away, look
away,
If he comes back, which I know he'll do,
Old massa'll bcal him till he's blue,
Look away, look away, look awaj-, look
away.
Chorus. Then I wish I 'was in Dixie, &c,
A nigger in a bushel measure,
Was tickled to death by swallowing a feather,
Look away, look away, look away, look
away,
The doctors tried to fetch him to,
fut they soon found out it was no go,
Look away, look away, look away,
away.
Chorus. Then I wish I was in Dixie,
1 sea to a depth so unfathomable that not WDO were free, and to put the Federal I deluded cohorts battled. They conten- ; damuablo act, for which its guilty leaders
j a bubble would ever rise to mark the spot Government in all its departments under jded that the only mode to overthrow Sla- ought to be iguominiously executed. The
uhcre they went ho ignominously down. , the control of a slave oligarchy. These very was to overtnrow tne uonstituuon. i (Jotton States may go out oi the Uuiou
Well might those who had inaugurated aDd nil other stratagems that could be re- (These men claimed that their allegiance i the border States may go with them all
wa3 only due to the States whorem they ; together, may form a Southern Confeder
look
&c.
6
the revolution which was now stalking o-,n0rted to arouse antagonistic feelings,
vcr the land cry out with uplifted hands whicb were wielded with turbulent pas-
for peace and deprecate the effusion of!c- a . f.n r;iQnf,i an rnin.il
blood. It was the inventor of tho guillo ,N ... to ha(I b thc
tine who was the first victim, and the daJ J Republican party, and Government must
was not tar ou wuen tncy wouiu nuu a- . j,,!-.:,.:-.... nnon a naf;onal nolicv:
mong their own people thoe who would he fissure8 in the ground occupied by
have to rely upon the magnanimity of that them beCttme apparentj and hence there
population whom they had mot cruelly I ould ncflcssarilv be a lanre defection in
outraced and deceived. He had not the';, .nnta omftll th mnm ultrn nf it id.
heart to enter mto a detail of the argu- hereuts, who were, as a general thing, i-ment-,
or to express the indignant emo- deaIj specuialive and not practical men.
tions, whioh rose to bis lips for utterauce. 0ufc of actual DQWor a party wa apt t0
But before God, and in his inmost eon-!Kta r!Wi:ni tr0 w;fh nnwor and it hn.
- r i
Concession.
V. and W. tnet on Main street the oth
er day, just after a fresh batch of "Cri
bis" news bad come in, and says P.
"I have been ttadying hard to thtok
what concessions we can make to the
South more than we have already made.
We have conceded everything demanded,
and everything imaginable. We have
granted all they asked of us politically,
and as to social compromises, we nave
sent them preachers to tar and feather !
we have sent them scbool:narins' to in
sult and imprison; we have in fact, I
don't know ht wo could do for th.cca
that we have not done, and overdone."
"But I have thought of one more con
cession I suppose we might make," says
w.
"And, what is that!" anxiously dc
Eian'ds P.
"Yoq observed the item in this morn
ing's paper, that they barreled up an
Aboiitipnist, and rolled him into tie Mis
sissippi River the other day!''
"Yes welll"
"Weil, 'if that thing is to be continued,
it will cost them considerable for cooper
age. Don't yoa think wo ought to make
oue more conces-ion, just for tbe sake of
fraternal peace, and furni.-h them with
bxelfll" Xenia (Ohio) News.
4&
Either Way,
We yesterday heard, says the Boston
Courier, a couple of politicians eighing
over the affairs of tbe nation. "I wish,"
aid one of them, "Old Jaokson was in
old Buchanan's place."
T ain't so particulor about that," re
torted tbe other, I'd be satisfied if old
Buchanan was in old Jachson's place."
Where he tood.
"I Btand upon the soil of freedom,"
eried a stump orator. "No, you don't,"
exclaimed his shoemaker; "you stand up
on tb Boles that have never been paid
tor.'
science, he believed that Slavery would be
crucified should this unhappy controversy
end in a dismemberment of tbe Union.
If not crucified, it would carry the death
rattle in its throat. It retuaiued to be
sein whether treason could be carried out
with the ?ame facility with which it hadj
been plotted. There was a holy courage
araoDJ the minority of everv State, that
might be for a time overwhelmed. Laza
rus was not dead, but slept; and ero loo
the. stone would be rolled away from the
mouth of tho tomb, and they would wit
ness all tho glories of a resurrection. It
would not bo forgotten that among the
clans of Scotland beacon fires u-ed to be
lit ty concerted signals from crag to crag,
in living volumes of fiame, yet expiring
even in its'own fierceue-?, and sinking
into ashes as the faggots which had them
were consumed. To such a picture a
that might be likened a rebellion such as
political leaders sometimes excite for a
Lrief hour; but the fires of rebellion burnt
out with the faggots", and all was cold and
dark aijnin. There was a striking contrast
b tween such a movement, between such
a rebellion as be alluded to, and the up
rising of the masse of the people in vin
dication of violated right3. As great a
difference as there was between Snug, the
joiner, and Bottom, the weaver,.vho "could
roar you as fierce as a lion, or coo you a
gently as a ?ucking dove." One wa- the
stage trick of a political harlequin. thc oth
er was a living reality tbe one was a li id
and fitful fiame, the other was a prairie
on fire, finding in every step of its pro
gross food for its all-ravening maw. In
the present emergency, bofore this pqliti
cal conspiracy, it might bo that he would
stand alone with his colleague (Mr. Wil
sou). Let it be so. He sought no office.
His political race was very nearly volun
tarily run. History would record the
proceedings of tbis turbulent period and
time the gentle tut infallible arbiter of
all things earthly would decide the truth.
Upon that he would take his stand. They
lived in the age of political paradoxes.
Broad, expansive love of country had be
come a diseased seutimentality. Patri
otism bad locouie a starveling birdling,
cliacinc with unfledged wings around the
nest of twigs where it was born. A statos
man mu't now not only narrow his mind
and give up to party what was meant for
mankind, but he must recede as subrcis
sively as a blind horse in a bark-mill to
every perverted opiuion which sits, whip
in hand, on the revolving shaft, at the
end of which he is barncsi-ed. To be a
diamond of tbe first water he must stand
in the Senate House of bis country, and
in tho face of a forbearing people, glory
came conservative. Ibis was the ordeal
through which the Republican, like all
other parties, was now passing, and he
hoped for the peace of the country, and
the triumph of practical rather than ideal
policy and. measares. Heroin consisted
the almost insuperable difficulty of com
ing to any feasible adjustment upon tne
existing di-contents 1 he bulk of politi
cians, North and South, were bound by
a past record and past professions. They
were, in fact, thinking all the while "what
Mrs. Grundy would say." The people
themelve! undestood tbe cause of difficul
ty, and if they but once interfered, the
couutry would be saved. What was the
difficulty now I He appealed whether it
was not that in the hands of ultras jtforth
uud South the slaveholder had been used
a a shuttledore, who. for purposes utter
ly dissimilar, had been banded from South
Carolina to Massachusetts, and from Mas--achusetts
back ayain to South Carolina,
until now the last point of endurance bad
been reached. Every violent word ut
tered North had been sent South, and the
South bad rcpondd iu "the spirit. The
Abolitionist himself had been granted an
audience in everj Southern city, at every
Southern political meeting, and tho most
violent, insulting, agrarian speeches, ro
peatod even in tho hearing of the slaves
themselves. Was it not humiliating to
confess that the very people who would
born in effigy, if not at the stake, a Post
master who would dare to distribute a
r t 1 . 1 f
copy or Anontion speecnes, nonor as a-
moog thoir chief defenders tho candidates
who could quote the mont obnoxious pas-
f it l l . C..1
sages trom an wuo una mauo aoutuero
politics a vast hot-bed for tho propaga
tion of Abolition sentiments. The two
sud- use pood castile soap and cold rain
water. Warm water should never be
used on harness leather. Apply the suds
with a sponge. Rub off with bucksbin.
This will givs your harness a nice glosiy
rurface, and the leather will retain a good
color and continue pliable for months.
If it becomes nied with mud or sweat,
an application of oap and water, as above
directed, (without oiling,) will be suffi
cient to give" it a bright appeannce.
Two applications of this oil and black
mixture a jear (or once every six months,)
will be "ufiicieut to keep the harness, as
ordinarily used, in good order. It may
be necessary for livery men, and others
who uae harness constantly, to Rpply tho
oil oftcner but, in moit ouses, two oilings
a jear, and washing with suds when soil
ed, will keep a harness iu good trim for
sight and service. Tbi process will pay
a large divined in extra service and dura-
the friendly light which peered from tho Sand as infamous as has been demol- billty, to say nothing of improved ap
, A .L r a. ! ui ii,n fmuKl. Miltnn pcarance. iMr. linker assures us tha
1 III III Lilt: ' Iulu a nuu inuK ia nuv w i w vi -
lived. They olaimed to be State-rights ; aCy. We shnll adhere to our Union,
men of the strictest sect, and they would j Constitution and Laws, and denounce
wield the legislative power of tbe State cession and the miserable Southern Con
Tor tbe extinction of Slavery, as South J federacy that may spring from it, and
Carolina professed to wield it for tbe per- j those wad brought it about, it may cost
petuation of Slavery. In this orisis it u3 our life upon the scaffold I Nay, we
was meet that Massachusetts, so largely shall dare say in thc teeth of boutb Car-
Dartakins of tbe common clorv in the
past Massachusetts, whero the first blood
for American liberty had been shed
should riso superior to the convulsions of
the hour, and give an earnest at least
that thc spirit of conciliation, of inter-
olina that the Federal Government ought
to enforce her laws, collect her revenue,
and lash tbe rebellious States back into
line, at the point of the sword, and thc
mouth of the cannon !
We have no desire to live under any
state, comity, ot fraternal ailection, was , government organized anu conironea oy
'not yet wholly lost. As the worn trav-j tha corrupt, wicked, and belt-deserving
leler. in tho midst of the snows of the villains who lead this revolution in tbe
Alps, lingered with delighted gaze upon ; South. Democracy, as foul, as corrupt,
windows of th? tfonvent where
desolation of tbe atorai around him he ; says, "the Devil preferred to reign in
might at last find repose, so did be hail , Hell, rather than to serve in Heaven."
the iittle gleam ot hope in the futuro. ! So with Demooracy.
Mr. Clemens t?ave statistics of population ! Let every man in the country speak
and Slavery in tbe Border States and in 'out. in these "times that try mens' soub,"
the Gulf States, for tbe purpose of show
ine, as he said, that tbefro was an irrever
at all hazards, say to tho world what he
feels in his heart tobe true. There does
iblo law of population governing the not live a Liunionist aoutn oi mason ana
question, and that the South wanted pop- Dixon's line, who is not a Democrat, and
ulation and capital rather than territory, if this Uuion is destroyed, as we inoline
. . -it, . mi i . i
If secession were allowed to be carried
out, be would show them a Southern Con
federacy from which eery man would
tufu back affrighted and pale, because it
would be on tho bloody band that his
rights of property would have to depend.
Slavery canuot expand rapidly, either
within the Union or without the Union,
so long as slaves remained at their pre
that
the same, or a very similar application.
is just the thing for carriage tops, whioh
are made of top leather. The only dif
ference in treatment is, that less oil should
be u-ed, or rather a lighter coating ap
plied; and it should be washed off before
drying in, top leather being thin and
much more penetrable than harness. Of
course, tbi miture would not answer for
enameled leather, of wbioh some carriage
to believe it will be, it will be destroyed are constructed. Ezcliange Pwper.
bv defeated, ambitious, and wicked Dem- : : '
oorats. To oppose Disunipn i to oppose
Democracy, and as long as we have a
voice to speak, a band to write, and a
heart to hate thc vile organization, o long
The Milwaukee Postmaster.
The Postmaster at Milwaukee, Wis
consin, has refuod to honor a draft of
the Department for $4,000, and thus for-
we will war against Democracy, whether feited his official position. No explana
it shall appear in tbe garb of Disunion, tion ha been ,given of thi default, and
in the cloak of Southern rights, or in the a spe3inl agent must be sent out immedi-
the monster I"
sent high prices. The only mode by garb of an angel, of light, we are against ately to take po.-session of the office in
which Slavery could ever expand was to
reduce tho price, and have a new source
of supply. That wai, in fact, tho real
design of the coast States. Mr. Clem na,
Cow-oxen.
An agricultural correspondent writes
nmnf nf flu r.itnrrnrl tn nil thfi South- to t.ho Coicntrv Gentleman.' "For the
14 w.ww.w. -
.... r t 1
accordance with tbe regulations of thc
Department. These defalcation are ex
pected to multiply before the 4th of
March, as tbey did at the close of Mr.
Van Burcn's term.
ern Conveutious of late yoors, and cited
last ten years I have used -my cows for
1 1 c i r
sawing an my nrc w.ooa, cumu uaj,
$3TCorae here, my little lad,' said an
straw and stalks, and considerable thresh- attorney to a boy of about nine years old.
stood
frrnnfc unnMnns nf thn nation
- ......
moment toward eaou other like two
at that
en
camped armies waiting thc orders to en
gage. The patriot planned, deplorod,
and appealed, but found little succor in
the only quarter where succor could come.
Tho Abolitionist reveled in the madness
of tho hour. He saw the cracks in the
iceberg at last. To him the desert and
the battle field was alike welcome. He had
knnlfc down in the desert with the camels.
for a speck in tbe. far distance showed ! eignty over half of her domain.
that tbe. simoon wa coming. Ho looked
into the future as into a dark cloud in tbe
morning, whcn.nothing but tho early lark
was on tho wing. But soon history, like
tho light of the Eastern horizon, would
curtain back that cloud, and paint in
blood's ruddiest tints field and forest,
the admissions of Mosrs, Miles, Bonham,
Mcllao. and Crawford, in the House to
show that the object was the reopening ing, and believe it altogether thc cheap- "A case is between the devil and the peo
ot the slave-trade. Suppose, said lie,-est and most convenient power in tne p:e wnieu no you tnmic win do tne moss
that they do not get, out of the Union, reach of most farmer. For the past fif- likely to gain the action?" Tbe boy re
tbi5 equality which they now claim? teen years I havo had two or three pairs plied: "I guc.3 it will be a hard squeeze;
That is a little problem in the rule of three of eows broke to the yoke, which are al- 1 tbe people hac the most money, but the
which will be ciphered out if these events ways ready to beip along wnen wo waui ( devil uas tne most lawyers. -
. rry i r
more team. Ihey Paul out most oi my
manure, and do most of tho carting.
With some additional feed when at work,
I beliovo they civo as niuob milk as if'
not worked. This I think does very well.
aro much longer pending. The border
Slave states might as well bo prepared first
as last for tho realization of the truth. But
whero was Slavery to expandl 'If tho
South left the Union she would never get
as much of the present territory as he
could grasp in his band. A war of thir
ty years would never get it back, nor
could there ever be extorted from the
To Clean the Eye of Dust.
When tho eye is irritated by dust or
intrusive particlos of any kind, the sfferer
North a treaty giving tho same guaran- 5n7Briably shuts and rubs his eye, and
tees to blavery mat it now nau. vvnere not unfrCquentIy tbe removal ot tne irn
was Slavery to expandl Not to Central ta'in causo becomes more difficult. The
Amorica, for England exorcised sover- proper practice is to kept the eyo open,
nut iu a jf gtaring; a sort ot rotary movement
he ab- nf hall takes nlaee. tbe surface be-
I . w w J I
olitioo of Slavery there also. Their re- 1 oomes covered with water, tho particle is
,,tiring confederates ought not to forget j gradually impelled to tho corner of tho
tuu tsveuta ui xuo-i, uwu - " i' eyo, ana is mere uuuiuu uut,
Sound Reasoning-.
In a recent eaee for assault, the defen
dant pleaded guilty. "I think I must bo
guilty," said he, "becaust the pUiatitf
and I wore the only ones in tbe room;
and tbe first thing I knew was that I was
standing up, and h was doubled oer tbo
table. You'd better call it guilty."
SA notice in a northern town, np
on,a store door, on Thanksgiving day,
read:
"Closed on acconnt of the death of a
turkey in the family."
son, tho English Abolitionist, was sent to
enlighten the dead conscience of tho A
merican people. In this connection ho
oited a letter from Thompson to'Murrell
of Tennessee, in which was tbis sentence:
"Tho dissolution ot the Union is tho ob
irtot to hn kent steadily in view." In the
- r-
hamlet and city, the very mountains to
their pino-crowned tops, and the great o
cean itself, as an ensanguined flood where
tv j , ... . i j i i i,i nj
v t ' ( 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 i i.iiii in ii ii 1:11 lit lit. 111: & u u ia i a - u u v
,n being a traitor and a renei lie m . Bflnnlchre. No anaconda, with event of a Southern Confederaoy
solemnly proclaim the deatb or tne nauon; - , ',,aL;li u wl tha African slave-trade.
The bark of a willow tree, burnt , t0 which he had sworn allegiance, and ind a2itatiolK
i . i . i. . . t:. i:. c njn.fnkai. .iuiuw uunuo ,u-uui.- j
uuuuitcinw ! . . , . .i. tj Ol o tUa ..mnf ruling ln?frHt Of
WUU pUIUU U UW j O
roust dwariaud provincialize bis patriot
ism to the Mate on whose local passions .--. , r . - . . n,lftndoned. Tt would be for tbo
atcs to hayo free
or can ne
easily removed, without any of tho disa-
groeable consequcuoos that attend auui
ting and rubbing.
to ashes, and mixed witn strong, vinegar, Witn tne grave Biouuuy or an
corns, or excrescence of any kind.
there
VJ HB UcS, ilUU IU''-" b. -, ...vw ft .
applied to the parts, will remove all warts, JUV,te its citizens to their own tuncral l e - r , thfl extreffie whj,e ,bo Qther StatJ9
" . . ., . i.. .....M
JJJ3 A Brother lawyer once told Saxo
that a beard was unprofessional. "Right,'
Baid Saxe, "a lawyer cannot be too barefaced."
Um to the Mate on whose local passions j --" " , 06cd reparBt.- be lightly abandoned. I
be thrives, the country where he practices i je oed If or lh. Ion p p p J f Goagt
nnnrt ftr to the citv whero he flaunts in vt" mi6ll' J Y J. . . . . , . , j
Rhina. and money, belonging to tho Union,
whose officer he is 8nd find a most lojal siffns
Sand for Bedding for Horsea.
Mr. Small, of Dundalk, Scotland, a
veterinary surgeon of considerable expe-
a oonspira- , , , . , -f . u propo8. Hence, states that sand is not ou.y an r-
i t his countrvraeu. ho now gloatt-d ovur the lnere would pe, inereiore, iu vuuiwp , eT fcorsen'
i, under the 11,3 couuirymcu, uu m n;nn n ntnuoniiom auito as great ' eel ent substitute for straw tor norsc
Lth most fearful of all retributions. His ed Union, an antagonism quite a-Rr Pw to ,traw. as tho
now struck as there ever has been in mi u . u.u, ftf
.,r.,;a ro to bo Droteotod and sand ooes noi neai u
uuiuvfui w - - a
ha nnn o.ntor with honor into
raw irishman, on nis urst gigut t overthrow it. Ho can
tf a locomotive, declared that it was the fl;nctitT 0f the same oath advUe the eei- most fearful ot an re r.ouuoi
-J :i 'N7rt l'anA liia nnmnnninn if'itft J 1 A 1, ,.. rA a o A dCudllCSt foefl 1H tuC OOUtll USU H
uwi. , zureoi tores anu u...-., .ruU in ne kindred de-
teaaboat hunting for watner." I ships, and money, belonging to tho Union, " . . .... ' nnmiraJTf,rf in the border Slave States,
and with exu ant tramp, u , - B noDUlation would increase so
Peeling Potatoes.
All the starch in potatoes is confined
very near the surface; thc heart contains
but little nutriment. Ignorance of this
faot may form a plausible exeusc for those
who cut off thick parings in preparing
potatoes for nnuhing; but nono to those
who know. hotter. Circulate tho injunc
tion, "pare thin the potato skin." Scien
tific American.
The Charleston Mercury advises tbe
immediate importation of a couple of mil
lion of Africans, whom it calls "canni
bal," into South Carolina. But isn't
there so roe danger that so many canni
bals might some morning eat up for
breakfast all the white folk's in that little
State, and thon start off toward Florida
for their dinnor?" Louisville Journal.
moi
jtfA very small pattern of a man
lately solicited the band of a fine buxom and State allegiance Ho was ready
eirl "No, no," said tho fair lady, I lau,li in their faces if they only told ni
an't thick of it for a moment. The fact that before tbe time when he was "mulu
wuuau uiuvki " - ; ,. , ... r , tneiT WUHH OUUUionuu
and convenient retreat in State authority marched adorned, use a umuu. fast tllBt th ' ould be nominally Slave
rnriw to tho par ands ol sacriuce. to mu . - r, c .i i. t?.
. - - - . - '.
.. . i ; i..
thn horses. He states tnat sanu ia exclu
sively used for horses' beds in his sta-blcs.
M
a. MranKV. TOU are
i j
little too big to and puking in his nurse s arms
E :i i'T,V ' i whS. bofor. be di,d, bc.a.c , bie oouotrj, and .u
become Froe i -
aThe following name wo nou in tne
lint ot letters remaining fn , tho postoffico
at JTow-YorCity: "John Olenbauben-
presbnt -distracted and tbe Snpremo. Court in the DM Scott grapetisrbabenbioker,
. , fir,ii
t . .1 t n OnllllOIl O l l-" , ...iv. .
m aoom. At tnis momeui, wucuuDu--M ,. , ,
nlinrr frenzv bad struck blind Ibe Southern peo, Statos. Ho appealed to tnq norm io
there lived pic, this picture could not even be roaliz-d guarantee by constitutional enactments
Wnsh- in all its horror. VYlion he looaeu ai me pnumpio buuuicu uj vuM
yirSomo "seedy" poet lets off thc fol
lowin in regard to South Carolina:
She may soc-sced,
Then pro-seed,
But oau't euok-secd,
Mast re-seed,
Or take grape-seed.
BjfJauuary 12, 1861, was Nov Yeir'a
Day in llu-sia, acoording to the Old-Stylo
to whioh that Empire still adhered It
is a day destined to be forever memora
ble as""the date of the complete abolition
of serfdom, tho final and triumphal eloio
of the aiigbty movement inaugurated by
thc Eiaperor,:Alexandcr H. in 1857.
if'Como, arouse!' exoJaimeF a Dsra
ocratio editor to his sleepy parthiaq.
Since tbo election ho has had'oacaon to
exclaim, 'Nix cum arousV
put in a