1 1: it us or Tin: A.ni:Kiv., sIMlLE HJliScllIl'TION : Two Poi.lars for annum, to be puirl hnlf-yrnrly in ntlriuicc. Ko paper ilinccntluuctt unlit 11 m n .irngcs are paid. To ci.im i Tlirca cjpin to one Rehire, J 5 00 Seven do do 10 CO fifteen do do 20 10 l-'iva Dollar. In advance, wilt fay tor llirco year1 ubserintiun to the Amtritan. Cub subscription muit b Invariably paid In til-vm-ee. nnd sent to ono lulilrcs. If subscriber ncirh-ctor refine to hike llicir BPwa jiuj.'Sii from the office to whleh they nrc dlrccti'd, thry ure rostwwiMp until they hnro tcttled the bills and ururcu them discontinued ' lVstimislors will pleiute act m our Agent, and f i k loitrrs conlalniiiR uhaeri.tion monoy. They an: permitted to do this under the l'oat Ollioa Law. LOCK HOSPITAL. ESTAUL1.SI1KD AS A REFUOE FROM QVATK EltY. THE OXLY r LAC 11 WHERE A CURE CAX BE OVTMX11D. DR. JOIINSTOX has discovered thenioit Cortnin, .Specify and only KtTvetual Remedy In tho World for all rrivnlcDii'ciiKM. Wonknew nf the 'tuck l,inils. Strictures. A flection of tho Kidneys and I '. iil.ler. Involuntary Disclinrges. Iinpotency, Oenc i Pebilily. Ncrvonsuew, Dyspepsy. Languor, bow -..int.. Confusion ot" Ideas, rnlpitutinn of the llenrt, r'iinidity. Trembling. I'inine.. nf Sight or (iiddinew. h'erise of the Head. Throat. Nose or skin. Affection if the l.iver, I.iipsk. Stomnch or llowcls thone Terri ilu I'i.-i nlcM arising from the Solitary Ilnbit of t' juth those secret and military practice more fatal o their victim than the nong'of Syren to the Ma ir.crs of Ulysses, blighting their most brilliant hope r tuitii.-it'iitiuns, rendering marriage, Ac, inipomi- voixniFA 'eeehilly, who hnv hoeoine the victim of Solitary 'ice, that dreadful and destructive habit which e.imillv weep to an untimely priivo Ihoinsandu of imiI'c Men ot the ino.it exalteil talent and brilliant iKlk'Ct. who lnijrbt otherwise have entranced linten .g Senate iih llivndei'B of eloouence or wnked "eostaty the lixi'.ig lyre, may call with full cuu- k'lR'C. Married l'crsoi.s, or Young Meu eonleiuiilaling nrriagp, being anre of physical weakne, organic ul ility, iI'jIoi initios. Ac. cedily cured. He who place himself under the care of Dr. J. f'.V religion: ij cuiifi'Untly rely r.ion his ill as a Pli y-sk-inii. nmcJintdy Cun il, tv l'ull Vipnr ltfitorcd. J iiis lilrt'..;ini; A.Vi'itim wh'u-.h rniJvrii Lifo Mt inhU Bi.d in..i-riH4 iiniinvMblc i.h tli i'tiMil(y i: i ly tlie'vip.iuis oi 'inijri)or nuhiltfriirt !. Voting vunt nrc tt-o wyt to rotmnit cxci-tffw frimi nut ;n;4 awnro nf the .Iri'iuU'iil coi.ftwiuriicM thut mny -u Mow. thitt umlcrKtiimU the itiljw't will ytcn.1 to deity thnt thp n.wir if firorrvnlioii is lnst hut by thn-t r!linir into in;inHT huhita tlmn hy -m iuit ? !! AiU-s hvini; di-vriveJ tin vU'HMires healtiiy uflVprinn tho nut noriou and ilratnictive ii'.-tuiia to imth h.nly uml mitxl iiriso. The iystt'in .mjIik's lU'rniicl, llie rhyiral uml Mcntnl I'uno rs WcakciM-il. l.(st uf Ti oVrriitive 1'wit, Nervous it'ihUity. 1 'vhh-mi. I'nlpituii'm of the lli'iirt i;'t"t!-'i!. (!' tiu.'iir:il IMiility. n YuMin of l i'tiiiH., Coui;h, ttii."Ui)i)tioii. I'i'Oiiy nnd 1'i-titl It tuu 1 ; ' ) jf.-in.; t'nin Il:iltini"re stroot. a IVw ii ti' iM the ci;:cr. I'uil not to ohscrvc jihiiic J i imih-.r. ,i tto-: tiu:-l hn -J-. : i I uml poulMtt ft stamp. Tho 'or'jj l'ii ! 111:11 In his ufVict. vi ui: v.n;sM.vre-:B s iv l'v ?Ttr?V'-y or Xtirsttnti T)rt'gy. Bt5S. D5S.'-sirO.'. hiK-r i. f the lloyivl Cn!! of Surgeons. T.mnlon. ih;te from ono if thf most oniiiu'tit t'ollrijcs in l uilutt StiittH. ari'l tli j.r! Piil'T j'Jirt of whoo lift fj.jnt in ihf ln'-iitnlf of Lomhm, Paris. :.:'U'. hi:i ini'l Uvw itrv. has (fleeted tntii of ii.c st iL-'- jii-iiinj; rurti that wore ovrr kimvfn ; y tr-'tihlfil w i tli riii'xiu) in tin liwnl mid curs h u-l-p. rtnt ijiM'Viiu.'m'K. heiti nlnrmrd at Jen h'turitU. bushruliusr-. with fie-juont hliwhin. tt li-'l ?w im-iiiins with deniiiL'inntt of mind, wvrv itlilllC'li:itlrlV. r. J. addrc-e- nil those who hav itijured them 1 y in.j'n'ln-r iinlnhiu'e and snliiary huhitj. i-li nV'ii h-itli huily and mind, unfitting them fur tr huVniuff, siudy. n-cioty ur iHarrintf'. , ii i:si: arc eoiin t if I he id and nit-hmhol v cflt'cti i lo.-ed ly early hul-iinuf y.mtli. vir: Wonknessof Jtiiek ai.d Limhy, ruin?' in thr lltnd. 1'imnco of ,! . I of Muscular l'uwor. lNilf-itatiuu (if the ! it. I'ysji'-sy. Nc:inii Ir; ituhilitv. Ierniiemcut I 'ui.-v.ive I'i:n.'!i:ns. tlenerul bchility. Symp- , t uf Cuiw.mi,ti-'ii. Ac. i - i:.-.tai.i.v. I hj fiMirful fff'ectj on the mind arc .h tu he drt'inlfd of Mfnmry, t'onrusinn of Jti.-.rt'.-iio.i nf Spiriii. Ihil-l'tirfhudimi". Aver to fui'ie'.y. iflt-l)ihtnit. lov nf Sulitudt'. tiy, Ac are 'iuuof the v.vWt j.rodrieeil. .it SAM'S of j-eroiis f all aires can nnw jud)?( t i-ti.e ejiti-fof their deel'mim; health, losinc vi-'jr. hoc an i n wt'iik, tale, lirrvoti! Hlid ii.'.t-l. hfivin a inid.ir fi j't'iirjinee ubout tlio . rough and t7hituiiii' uf n.Mv iiiiiiitiun. OC'ACii yit:x 'tave iijtirotl thfiosclvps hy a certain prnctire 'd in when aUiiie. a liah'it frequently learned evil euini'tiiU'ir..', ur at -;houI. tlie etlet'ts of h nre nightly fell, even wh.m n-leep. ami if md rendiT." lefivri'ie iioios.-ihU". nnd destroys r.dud and hndy. t!. uh apply immediately. uit a pny Ui;A a Vi'Uii) man. tut hope or Inn fry. the d.-r!ii: :'!. i parents, tthould h natehed ! i:!l pr-and enjoyment of life, hy the i.i r yf deviattn from the path ofiiatur :ii.:l;niu a certain secret habit. ueb ptrjoii. . I :'-Ji e ciiite!iioliiiint; I that a r and mind and body are tho twt ,.iry requi-iles toprutnutc coniiuhial hnppinrf, t wi;iut these, tlio journey through life he weary pilsi iuine ; tho prospect hourly v. the view; the mind LteconiP! Fhailuwcd h -i nirand Ailed with tho mrlamhuly retlec !iMt the hit i pilled of anutlur heconHM hlhted HIT nVIl JKifilAME: OB-" B.TaCKB'tB:,B-:. hi tho ni.-tftilded and imprudent votary of in- fm Is that he has io;bihi-l the seed of this il ilifu-" it tt nt'uMi h.iirrit4 that an ill-timed i.f ilium', "r dn-ad f di-vovery. drtem him avph ir-f? to thui-e who. fr-'in cdneatimi and f.il.itiiv. run alone befriend him. delaying till i:-titu(iiial Fyuiptouin of thii horrid di.-eae ilo ir upperirj.iit e, suth a ulcerated iru . di-i tit-ii' no-r. inietiirnal pains in the bead !:.h.-. .Iii. nr:. ol'-i-!it, tlef;,e.s. nodef on the ..: i Mini iirii. bloi,'hr on the bead, faro and niiio. rutfrefiitu; villi fiihlful rapiility. till the p.thiteof the inoutli or tht bones of lh all in. and the vietini of thin awful d'i!-r-ae c !! I. rrid objett.f eMumi.Jerathn. till death ).: ii..d to liifl'dreudfitl nifl.-rins. by aetidinj? lljrtt I ml ieyvered i'uuntry from whence no ,ir i euirns. !i ht'l iii'-i'f'ltt fart that thuunund! fall victims l.-ri llde di-i'ii.-i'. ow ii' to the unckillfulnenn of nit pretend Tf. who. by the use of that JicatHy M ii-mii, ruin tlic constilutluu and tuako 1 ut- of life mi"nib!e. I mi! y e.r live, or lienltli, to the fare of the I i li niiie I umI Worthies? Pretender, delitnte i.'nd!;o. naiiie or character, who copy Dr. ri advertisement, or rtyle thenielvo. in ew. .paper, regularly V. located l'hvhieian. d.le of ('urine they keep you trifling luoulh i.. i, lli taking their filihy and dniinw coin - or a- loiii as tlie.-niuliert fee can be obtainril. i --pair . b :i e y iu with riiinul health tu (i'h our irailiiijilisiii Hiiniu,ont. I li:i I 'll i- the uiily 1'hysieian adrerti.inp. t 1'ini.i! or diplomas a I way ban j in hi office. I, 'ui lies or ti cateiiu-ut are unknown to all pn -pared from a life pcnt in tho great hi .1 Ijirope, tbefii-t in tho country and a more ne I'rtratc 1'iiiriirt than any other I'hyuciau Moril, :sc!i:in:'i' or un; r it r ii :,i.v tliou-an.ls cured at thi in.titution year i fir.' an I ibe iiuiiieroim iinporunt Kurxical on- i.i-rl irii.ed bv 1'r. John-ton. witneit-td by p. ru i . I tbo Siiu.'' I'lipper," and uiauy - ,...1 t oi 'which lime appeared again i '.no III i iiblie. I.ide In. Handing a Imiihii ..I cliiirueter and rupuiiibiliiy, u i.l guarantee lu the alllicled. l dim: si: ttii:i:in.T i. wriiinit ilii-'ibl l particular in directing ii, ;. to hi. luslilutioii. inlhrlolli.aing uianrr JOIl H. jiito. n. !., o lialii.ii .re I.. k ll.pitl, llallimor. Md. u..,y I'l l-M'J-lji nun tu: viiii:. , mi: JIMI. l-i Hl.l. "l'B AI.IU JIS , ..r .l..... I ill ..-11 .-i m:i li-'l' "1 n'p !' ". . - ' ; i H .N'''ll 01U'.Mi't i'K Vl.-llli . t I I s lor IHullnr. 1,1... I I'' I, ' I"'' I ,.,.,. I.-, no- U-i ..lli'he. andara r.a i ... l-i.. .' H b l-uw'l! ' , p..., t,.,i 1.1 I- Ai.. l.o..f I ,,.uu... i.i. Lung J t i r .ud lik-.il lik.(iAl(l .,. i.l i ll In ntloU ,;. ,. ..... ,...t u i..4 f 1 '"" Ji.IISIi.OMV .'..a-' iu "t , run (ijLi ,it i-V PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY MORNING, BY II. NEW SERIES, VOL. 10, NO. MISCELLANEOUS. '1 IIU iici:miiii:.- r a.m MMiMai.tn. Mr. Jncolit'i ltily to llio Ohio (.'omtititK'ir. The rresiilcnt lias niitde tlie following re ply to the committee of Ohio cn)pcrhvu1ii who went to Washington to present a peti tion in behalf of Vullaniliglmtn : Washington, I). C, June 20, 1803. Messrs. 1J. IJiirchnrd, David A. llonek, George Miss, T. W. Ihirtkv, V. J. Gor don, John O'Neill, C A. White, W. K. Fink, Alexander Lour;, J. W. White, George II. Pendleton, George L. Con verse, JIunzo 1. Nohle, Jnnies H, Slorris, W. A. Iltilt liins, Abtier . lluckus, .1. V. Jl'Kenuev, 1'. C. Lu Ulond, Louis Schae icr: Gentlemen : The resolutions of the Ohio Democratic State Convention, which you present me, together with jour introductory and closing remarks, being in position and argument mainly the same as tlie resolutions of the democratic meeting at Albany, New York, I refer you to my response to the latter as meeting most of the points in the former. This response you evidently used in preparing your remarks, and I desire no more than that it be'usfd with necuraey. In a single reading of your remarks I only discovered one inaccuracy in matter, which I suppose you took from that paper. It is where you say : "The undersigned are un able to agree with you in the opinion you have expressed that the constitution is dif ferent iu time of insurrection or invasion from w hat it is in time of pence and public security.'' A recurrence to the paper will show jolt that I have not expressed the opinion you suppose. I expressed the opinion that the constitution is dillcrent in its application in case of rebellion or inva sion, invohing the public safely, from what it is iu times of profound peace- and public security ; and this opinion 1 adhere to, sim ply because by the constitution itself things may be done- in the one case which may not be done iu the other. I dislike to waste a word on a merely per sonal point, but 1 must respectfully assure you tiiat jou will find yourselves at fault should you ever seek for evidence to prove your assumption that 1 "opposed in discus sion before the people the policy of the Mexican war." You say, '-Kxpungc from the constitution this limitation upon the power of Congress to suspend the writ of 'habeas corpus,' nnd yet the other guaranties of personal liberty would remain unchanged." Doubtless if this clause of the constitution, improperly called, as I think, a limitation upon the power of Congress, were expunged, the other guaranties would remain tlie same; but the question is, not how those guaran ties would stand w ith that clause out of the constitution, but how they stand with that clause remaining in it, in cases of rebellion or invasion involving the public safety. If the liberty could be indulged of expunging that clause, letter and spirit, I really think the constitutional argument would be with you. My general view on this question was Muted in tlie Albany response, and hence 1 do not state it now. 1 only add that, ns seems to me, the benefit of the writ of habe as corpus is the great means through which the guaranties of personal liberty are con served and made available in the last :es:t ; and corroborative of this view is the fact that Mr. Yallandigliani, in the very case in question, under the advice of able lawyers, saw not where else to go but to the habeas corpus. ly the constitution the benefit of the writ of habeas corpus itself may be sus pended when in cases of rebellion or inva sion the public safety may require it. You ask in substance whether I really claim that I may ovcrridu all the guarantied rights of individuals, on the plca'of con serving the public safety, when I may choose to say the public safety requires ft. This question, divested of the phraseology calcu lated to represent tnc as struggling for an arbitrary personal prerogative, is cither sim ply a question trhn shall decide, or tin alHr uiation that ntlnhj shall decide, what the public salety does require in cases ot rebel lion or invasion. The Constitution contem plates the question as likely to occur for decision, but it does not expressly declare who is to decide it. Hy necessary applica tion, when rebellion or invasion conies, the decision is to be made from time to time ; and 1 think the man whom, for the lime, the people have, under the constitution, made the coininander-in-chief of their army and navy, is the man who lioldo the power and bears the responsibility of making it. If he uses the power justly the same people will probably justify him : if he abuses it, he is in their hands, to be bealt with by all the modes they have reserved to themselves in the constitution. The earnestness with which you insist that persons can only in times of rebellion be lawfully dealt w it li in accordance with the rules for criminal trials mid punishments in times of peace, induces me to add a w ont to what 1 sail I on that point in the Albany re sponse. You claim that men may, if they choose, embarrass those whose duty it is to combat a giant rebellion, and then be dealt with only in turn as if there were no rcU-l-lion. The. constitution itself respects this view. The military arrests and detentions which h.ve been made, including those of Mr. Yalluudigham, which are not different iu principal from the other, have been for prevention, and not for punishment as in junctions tu stay injury as proceedings to keep the peace and hence like proceedings in such cases, and for like reasons, they have not been accompanied with indictments, or trials by juries, nor, iu a single citsu, by uny punishment w hatevtir beyond what is purely incidental to the prevention. The original sentence of imprisonment in Mr. Yallandig- liuiu'a case wus to prevent injury to the military service, only, und llio modification of it was made us it less disagreeable mode to liini of securing the sumo prevention. 1 am unable, to iierceivo un insult to Ohio in the case of Mr. Yallandigliani. Ignite surely nothing of the sort w as or i intended I was wholly unuwuru that Mr. Vullandi huui was, ul the time of his arrest, a candi date for the democratic nomination for Governor until o informed bv your reading to me the reaolutiotia of the Convention. 1 urn grateful to the Mute of Ohio for liiuuy tiling, ei.pccilly lor the brve noldiir mid tilth ii she luugiviu iu the present national lil.il to the annua of the I lilon. You i Willi, 1 Undclatuiul, thut Wcord iug to my own jHiiiou in the Albany re hi.., llftl Mr. Yulhiudichulil alioll 1. 1 U H leas ed; and this ixcUM, M jout Uilil, lie li lint duiu iged the mililmy Mtiue i y (lia . ..uriieiii! i iilLlll.cliU. nicoiiraelng dt r li...... ur olhil ! ; and lh.il II lie lot. I lie 18. authorities, under recent acts of Congress. I ccrtaiti'lv do not know that Mr. Yallandig litttn hns "specially nnd by direct language advised against enlistments and in favor of diwcrtion' and resistance to drafting. We all know that combinations, tinned in some instances to resist the arrest of deserters, began several months ago ; that more re cently the like has appeared in resistance to tlio'e'nrolment preparatory to n draft ; and that quite n number of assassinations have occurred for the same animut. These had to be met by military force, nnd this ngain hns led to bloodshed and death. Anil now, under the sense of resposibility more weigh ty nnd enduring limn tiny which is merely ollicial, I solemnly decline my belief that this hindrance of tlie military, including maiming and murder, is due to theeourscin which Mr. Yallandiglmin has been engaged, in a greater degree limn to any other cause, and is due to him per.-onnlly in a greater detrrcc than to nnv other one num. These notorious, known to all, mid ofcotir.se, known j to Mr. Yallandigham. IVi-haps I would not j be wrong to say they originated witli his ; especial friends "and adherents. With per- ! feet know ledge of them, he has frequently, i if not constantly, made speeches in Con- j gress and before "popular assemblies; nnd if j it can be shown that with these things star- j :....i.:... ; .1... r.. i,n l,,,c ,,ii,i ,, word of rebuke or counsel against them, it ! winding road over its undulating yet culli will beafi.emreatlvtoliis4avorwitl.me, and valcd MUiacc, a distance ol about two nines one of which, 'us jit. lam totally ignorant. , . "'"f 'thwcstcrly border we, ap When it is known that the wole burden of ' P"ached the salt deposit ot North America. his speeches has been to stir up l.icn against the prosecution of the war. and that in the midst of resistance to it. he has not been known in any instance to counsel against such resistance, it is next to impossible to repel the inference that he has counselled directly in favor of it. With all this before their eyes, the Convention you represent have nominated Mr. Yallandigham for Gov ernor of Ohio ; and both they and you have declared the purpose to sustain the national Union by all constitutional means. lint, of course, they and yon, in common, reserve to yourselves to decide what arc constitutional means, and. unlike the Albany meding, you omit to state or intimate that iu opinion an army is a constitutional means to save the Union against a rebellion, or even to inti mate that you are conscious of an cxi.-ting rebellion being in progress with the avoivcd object of destroying that very Union. At the same time your liomiiuefor Governor, in whose behalf you appeal, is Know to you and to the world to declare against the use of an armv to suppress the rebellion. Your own attitude, therefore, encoura deser- tion resistance to the draft and the 151- because it teaches those who incline to de sert and to escape the draft to believe it is your purpose to protect them, and to hope, that you w ill become strong enough to do so. After a short personal intercourse with yon, gentlemen of the Committee, I cannot cannot say I think you desire this effect to follow your attitude, but I nsure you that both friends and enemies of the Union look upon it in this light. It is a rubstantiul hope, and by consequence, a real strength to the enemy. It is a 'false hope, and one which you would willingly dispel. 1 will make the way exceedingly easy. 1 iend you duplicates of this letter in order that you, or a maioritv, may, it you choose, endorse your names upon one of them, and return it thus , t . , .. . ... i . i. ..a ' endorsed to me. with the understandiiur that thoso signing are thereby commilttd to the following propositions, and to nothing else : 1. That there is now a rebellii n in the United States, the object and tendency of which is to destroy the National Union ; and that, in your opinion, an army and navy are constitutional means for suppressing that rebellion. 2. That no one of you will do anything which, in his own judgment, w ill tend to hinder the increase, or favor tlie decrease, or lessen the ctlicicney of the army or navy, while engaged in the effort to suppress that rebellion ; and, a. That each of you will, in his sphere, do all he can to have the of.iccrs, soldiers and seamen of the army and navy, while en gaged in the cll'ort to suppress the rebellion, paid, fed, clad, and otherwise well provided and supporteil. And with the turtlier uniierstaiu.ing that, upon receiviuir the letter ami iian.es uius endorsed. 1 will cause them to be published. which publication shall be, within itselt. a revocation of the order in relation to Mr. Yaliandigham. I will not escape observation that I con sent to the release of Mr. Yallandigham upon terms, not embracing any pledge from liiin or from others, as to what he will or will not do. I do this because he is not present to speak for himself, or to authorize others to speak for him ; and hence, I shall expect. that on returning, lu: WoiUi. nut tint himscll practically in antagonism w ith the position of his friends. Hut 1 do it chieily beeae.se 1 thereby prevail on other influential gentle men ol Ohio to so ilehnc tneir position as to bo of immense value to the army thus more than compensating for the consequence of unv mistake in allownio Mr. Yiilla.idig- ham to return, so that on the whole the public safety w ill not have sulfcred by it. Still, in regard to Mr. Yallandigliani and all other, I must hereafter, as heretofore, do so much us tin public saU ty may seem to re quire. 1 Have llio minor ne respcciiuuy yours, etc, A l.iNcot.N. A Ffvai.i! Si iimtox n Shu Amur. Among the unuiar.-b:illed li"t of camp follower of tho aruiv. not tli. leail not.wurlhy pcr.ume i. Mi Mi.r'v V. Walker, or -I'r. Walker." as she i usually tyled a leiiiiualo daughter of Ktcuhtpiu and apparently a lady of eniiiiueiidublu philanthropy. .M.c is a ilolive of New V. i k, ipis r i-ei , d a regular innlical edlicali and belives her ex ougli net I.i di-iiualilv tier tor llio perturniHiiee of decd i.f luerey to I Ik- .ufljiiug lieroe of Iho ltepulilic- hnwJ ill in iln habiliment', wild I lie -.m-i I'lioli o girlish lii.-kilin .iruw lial.divked on with auodtieli I ulliir. with a petiie fiiruro and l.-uiinnix reitiuo-i lliu lo.( mile i. ijiliio driving, ller repulliliull U un ullied. and .be carrie hi-r'ilf amid the cniup II lit jaunty air d dignity well calculaucd tu recue tho kineere rc-poct of the mildici. Mi du. Leeu with ill aimy on rveral difb renl uce&.iou. tu willi il al Uuriuid,. defeat and ui.iru reci-iiilyat sedgeaiek' cr.iiig bel-o l'ro,l.-rick-burg, wlura .lie an. c. y aelit in her aiteulloii l our wounded r-h cau amputate a lunb with ibo kill ofau old auigeou, and a-liniui.l. r uii-dieiiia rually a well Miaiigf lo ay, lhal alll.ougli .ha ka liciueiitly applied tola p. run.ii.-iil ptaiiioii iu Ik in r. I uml eii, .Ii liu m vir lo-eu form.ly aa iguwl lo any H.riieular di.iy la w r.-J lupo riiipMclia or eon. euliouul ruin touid pre nil Lcr flow ol.laiuiug a plan lu lb tue.llc.1 d. -ariuiul, ah ii.li uiL I., r. 1.1 w ll.o oiler of li.r ii u. . lu lb roM-r aulliu.iiy al W a.lilngiou "li i al picwnl IriuporMU ail.el.a lo lb f.iiuary loiuunxiou a.u kradiuailoi al l.ae.-jf ll-'UM, opll t it, I llcktbug Aiarar lli aa r.nlly difc-bargeJ lt Ut ultu lu In iUHrt(r de artuieul al W k iiigi.iti lb di.un.Ml i. 1. I'w "A.tiuuu di wk.ig.4 lol inal Jt'f " put I J.W tl.ii.k u y 'U riuLla u.' ' I. UIM -I U "1 ill..'.;. b llil.-lutid Kl-I- lull. .ml'. II ell.. lU I 4 . i... p. jl.o lil.g Ui a III " '. '! '! ... I . . .. I M. 1 l I'- U.I.I ! 1.4 XymTUC Litntru JSbtrrtiar.net J B. MASSER, SUNBURY, SATURDAY MORNING, JULY A ESIUIAHK.-ttrl.K KAlr S.JAi:. I HOW Tltrj 1IK11K1.S (KIT TtlKIlt HALT. We find in tho New Orleans Fra of the Kith tin account of a visit to the remarkable salt mine of l'ctite Ansc, where salt is quar ried out in solid blocks. From this vast nnd. valuable deposit the rebels drew n large part of their supplies. The mine is not far from the town of New Iberia. The visitors left this place and tra veled in a south-southwesterly direction over n most, beautiful level prairie plain about six miles distant. This plain is so much of a dead level that the hind, although a very rich soil, is deemed by the farmers almost valueless, because the water falling upon it linds no declivity by which to run oil' from its very Hat, even surface. The writer says : "We then approached the celebrated rais ed planknmd, w hich had been built through a sea swamp, about two miles long, extend ing from the dry or main land through the swamp to the salt island of lY tite Ane. This road is the only land passage to the island, and is so narrow that the teams or vehicles cannot pass each other upon it. "A signboard at cither way upon the road. l ,,,, :J !l ,l u '"e noru eas- terl v border ol the island, and then, bv a .vs we ncaicu iiie saiiue net;, we couu.i see through the scattered trees und bushes white heaps of the quarried rock salt, stacked up in p'les about ten to fifteen feet high, short distances apart, giving evidence nf the W ells, or shafts, excavated within the earth below, and adjacent to these several piles of quar ried blocks of salt. now Tut: SALT IS MIM'.n, "These wells or shafts, for the blasting and excavating this rock deposit, ate about twelve in number, of dill'erciit sizes, and lo cated within a radius of about four hundred feel. They consist of a square or oblong excavation down from the surface into the ea-th a depth, on the average, of about nineteen ami a half feet below the surface to the hard, smooth rock-salt deposit below. These pits arc sunk and walled up some thing similar to a coll'er dam either by planks thoroughly braced from the opposite sides against the earth's bank on cither side, or a sort of frame w ork of logs dovetailed together at the ends like the w alls of a log house, nnd extending from the surface of the ,-rn.,l .l,,.. ,, to the salt oitarrv below : and and made so tight that the crumpling, lull ing earth was thereby entirely excluded from the pits. "These shafts arc, on the average, about twenty feet square. One of the pits, how ever, which has been made and worked by the rebels, is much larger than cither one of the other pits, is made in the form of an L, and is about eighty feet long on its outer line, anil about .sixty feet on its inner line and about twenty feet wide. Krom all of these pits there has been excavated mote or less salt dow n into the rock a depth of from ten to thirty-live feet below its surface. This large pit had been worked much more than eitiicr one of the others. The salt rock has bei ll blasted and taken lrom this salt to th ,i(11tli ofabout thirtv-tl. ice feet, and far into I the rock below, out.-lde ot tlie walls nt the pit and under the earth, and salt banks left standing above. A large column ol the salt rock, about six feet, in diameter, remains ftaiiiliiig"uti'ier the inner elbow or appex of the pit. to sustain the rock arch of sail and earth above it. Over and around these nits there were erected, during the hist year ! .-tveral buildings, sheds, and much machi nery for dril'ina, blasting, hoisting and bar reling the blocks of salt just as excavated from the mine, without any oiaiiulatioii whatever. "1 was informed that from four hundred to six hundred men were constantly employ ed dui ln a portion of the last year a part ; both dav and i.ight to exhume ot the time I and barrel the salt, and load it up on lrom due hundred to live hundred teams, con- I stantly there on the ground, and driven lrom , amiosi ecry seeimn oi me i.-oe. sum, nan , . 1. ..I . 1 .............. i teamster statiiiing aliotit nii'l in most anx ious waiting, with ca.-h in hand, t!m next turn for their long wished tor load. "Some of these pits were worked by the owner of the soil ; others were worked by contracting parties; ho fiiini.slied or defray ed '.heir own expense, with the necessary la bor, and paid to the owner a stipulated sum per pound for the salt. "The average selling price of the salt on the ground was 4J cents per pound. '.W ill here remark, by way of contrast, that the average price in the city of New Orleans for Liverpool ground aluin salt, in neks, (coinnionlv called coar.-e line,) has been, lioni on shipboard, during the laM lift ei-n years, about fifty cents per sack ol" about three bushels, oriuic quarter ot a cent tier pound, including the cost ol the sack. J . I have been assured by persons who know the facts, that J.n Averv has received, within the hist vear, over one m Ikon two hundred thousand dollars for this salt, iu addition to the many smaller sums which have been received during the same time by the other contracting panics at the mines. "H is said to me that there lias probably been received in all for this salt within lite hut fiscal year, at the works, the enormous siiin of frciii two to three millions of dollars. Such another prolific source of liiotiev mak ing has never yet been discovered within the United States since the formation of our government. 1 was told on the inland that Judge Avery, with hW family, haj left tlie plantation fo reside lor the present more se curely w ithin the rebellious districts of the Smith. "The only way to quarry out this salt is by dull and powder blast ; and 1 mil assured by. Mr. Uobertsiiu, and hilcicMcd party, that the drilling is quite a hard anil a dif-lli-iilt itw tliu drilling of granite rock; the blasting is, however, U little more lice. "All ul' these building aiulllie machinery works have been till in ly destroyed Py our uruiy. Nothing remain but one or two frail" sheds, the lining ul 'the pit. ud several xiiall stocks of th salt block piled around upon tluicurt linear the wells. I mil u..urd by Major Gi n. riii Hank that the I'oiifede r.ito nun were Ion. led Willi till salt, ttud liri-it upon our uldui. 'TI I body of hind, or l.lund, Ucallod by the r'lelicll appellation, "I'dlld Alls.-,' which ill our Luylisli tongue, menu 'l-lllle l.lbow Island,' fl. mi the peculiar h ipe 4 the laud, mid llio (looked coiitMi mhlih tho It-Jon lMiiiiAnsea.idilio.nl bi r bo) on. uukiuu III Ihiir ( In Ullo.i coiir.u up lioin lhe,.iiitli or liccl wulel. of ilililllill ll.i) to the ...ulhirlj i.h-i f the l-l oid, tin ik al-'io: Ihe w. .1 side -u. I iili'lnil to II ifUlhiJ el' sh.i.itiii,.. w nil an i !.-'. Ii look in n.'Kh wt ttiS illiule li th... .. il I-. 4 "44tt.p. AMEBICAjN NORTHUMBERLAND COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA. 25, 18G3. , OLD a distance of about eight miles. Tim island is a body of very productive land in every part, of "undulating surface, growing rich crops of sugar cane, coin, forest trees, shrub bery, &c, and rises to a height ofabout one hundred nnd seventy feet, in the midst of a wiile spreading sea swan.), and is about two nnd a half miles long from north to south, and about one and a half miles wide, con taining about two thousand two hundred and forty arpents, or about two thousand one hundred acres of land. AlTKAllANCK OK Till-'. ISLAND. ''This watery sea swamp completely sur round" the island, tnul extends from six to twenty miles to the southwest midwest, and which is covered w ith a tall, coarse grass nnd short shrubbery. To the north, about two miles, it is covered wilh bushes nnd :-tu a ted trees ; and on the easterly nnd south easterly aides ore located extensive, heavy cvprcss forest trees of many miles extent. The soil of the island umbcr'coloicd loan composed mostly of silliciotts sand, and so compact, as to permit the making of it into brick. "There is a most luxurinnt growth of forcrt vegetation covering a good portion of the island, nnd consisting of almost every variety of tree, shrub, plant and vine known to our" country, growing immediately over the salt deposit as well as elsewhere through out the island. "About two-thirds of the land, including the se.lt deposit, belongs to Judge Avery, and the other one-third (mainly in the cen ter of the island) belongs to an old man, John 1 laves, who is now and h;rs been a resident on the island about, seventy-three years. The deposit is found near the south westerly border of the island, under dry forest ground, which ground is only about fifteen feet about the level of the tide w ater in the bayou. The salt quarry consists of a whitish or cream-colored solid smooth rock, underlaving the earth, w ithin a space, so far ns yet ascertained, ofabout forty-live acres, and on an average of nineteen and a half feet below the surface of the earth, and about four and a half feet below the surface of the bayou or tide-water. "There is no water or brine moisture with in the .salt deposit. The rock is hard com pact and perfectly dry. The only moisture attending it is contained in the earthly soil above the rock. "The salt was discovered as follows : Mr. John Hayes, now living upon the island, w here he" has resided since lT'.m, was hunt ing for 'deer, iust over the salt bed, in 171)1. and to quench his thirst drank the water of a small, char spring just tit his feet. lie found the w ater so salt that lie afterwards took some of it to his ow n home in a bottle, and boiled from it a tca.-poonful of salt. Soon after Jesse McCaul bought about nine teen acres of the land, including the salt spring, and began boiling salt. lie after wards dug several small wells for a better supply of brine, without much success; but while' di-ruing. found an Indian earthen spoon about two feet below the surface, I found also a buck horn about nine tect be- low, and also found the aliuo.st perfect . skeleton of a supposed mammoth about ten , feet below the sl'.llace. 1 nesu springs e.e afterwards almost wholly neglected, until the year 1S10, when John C. Marsh, on ac. ' count of the enhanced price of salt conse j quent upon our war with Great Ihitain, com : lm-need and continued boiling until the i peace of lsp-,. Judge Daniel I). Avery, the j present owner, became possessed of these salt lamls, and commenced boiling the brine in September, lbtil, t.nd continued boiling tillMav, ljstii, when ha concluded to im I prove one of the spring-", and, if possible, to liinl u la tter supply oi iiniio i .i.." much lower into the" earth; and when only about thirteen '.feet below the surface, the pick-axe man at the bottom struck upon, as he thought, a cake of ice, but this, upon being broken off, closely examined, handed all round, broken to pieces, tried in lire, tasted of. etc.. etc.. to the wonder of all, j proved to be pure rock salt. j "This Island, from its salt deposit ns a radius, is distant about ten find a halt miles i ; Sl,t!,. southwesterly direction from the ; vilhe'e of Now Iberia. A double track of I . ' . ... j railnaut CCUUl lie Dtllll lioiu inn .uv ... , . .1. 1... ....If I....I over the uml ilating surface ot the island : about two miles, and thence over a dead I level plain eight miles to the H.iyou Tcche ' at New Iberia, where there is always about feet of steamboat navigation, for the stun of ' say iftiO.Otiti, with all the necessary rolling stock complete. "The other more favorable npproach to the salt bed is bv the way of the Gulf ot j Mexico, through" Vermilion 15ay, distant from the Gulf 'about twenty-five miles, with I ti ilfaught of water through the bay ofabout ! nine feet up to the Hayou of l'etite Ause, ! ih, .nr.., tlmiii.'h the bavott. with four and a ; half feet draught, ot water, a distance oi about four and a half miles, to within one I mid a half miles of the salt deposir, thence bv railway through tho sea swamp to -"u : milt works. . . i ,c -i r ...ti.v,i1 I "llns one ami a nan nines ... vt ouni prooaoiy co.-i. M-. - i dollars. 1 lie cost oi ere. -ting ouii.ui.s ... , neoessarp machinery at the works would amount to ubout one hundred thousand dol lars. This amount of outlay, together with propir transhipment facilities to the various markets of our seaboard, would enable n working compativ to compete successfully with the cheap sack or bulk salt from Eng land or clscw hcie." A New Win sk i.i-. it may be an oUl "wTH.klc" revived and we bciicvo it is Ihe follow ing statement made by u cories pondent : "Grape lcnv. s and foliage, dug in around the roots of inn, supply u healthy ulini' iil, and ate pel Imps the la st that can be applied. Tliu fact ot their singular applicability for this purposowas Hist discovered, it is aid, by accident ; but to this source agriculture hit been more than once indebted for important aid. A Vinu dresser, to get lid of the pruning, of a vine, buried tin in ul its roots. .The vine giew more luxuriantly, and produced tt better crop than it neighbors, and aiibse qilctilly upciiii.clit proved that tho in creased energy and fiuttluliies in this case, w an iittiibuliible lo the bell, llci-il M tioll of tliu leave nt it. root-,." lUinmiiv Vim-ovh. -Take thno or four quail of ruspU rri. .. put tin in in a .lone i rock and courlliiin with vinegar. (.. tllu-iii tuud twenty l oir lo.'ii. Tin il iniui thit juici) Ihiounh Jillybiig Mint p.mr it on to Ir.-h berrii, h trim; tin land uiiotlu-r d.iy. Ibpiat ihi ptic( until ion hlc the qil.i.il.ty jou.h.ire. Add M (Jill pud of juice oi. i pound of H'.' ir. Put it into 4 .ii.-iiiig kitihi and (.Hour il lo p. hi ..l '.!!. .. uil Pi on 'I the '. r. VA l. u il l i. .11 put 11 .lit" U'ltlv. it Hill k..p ii vi I al (I -I ' e SERIES, VOL. 23, NO. U. XIip II ilxploici 1YII!ii;v tUr ("iH.ry of f licit ll nnslcrlnpri' . The members of tho Koyal Institution held n. special meeting in London on the 23d ultimo, to hear u lecture by Captain Spoke on the discovery of the source of the Nile. Tim Prince of "Wales was prcfetit, nttendod by GeiierM Knollys, Sir Koderick Murchison nnd a numerous suite. The Prince was accompanied by the Comic de Paris nnd several other members of the late roval family of France. Jlcforo commencing his letlttie Captain Ppcko introduced to the audience two little black boys who were brought, to England for education. He also desired publicly' to thank Sir Koderick Murchison and tho Fellows of the Geographical Soci-ty for the assistance they had' afforded him in proving the correctness of the conclusion at w hich he had arrived in 18-i3, that Lake Victoria Nvanza was the source of some great river, nndtliat that river was the Nile. Time would not. permit him to describe the whole of the incidents of his journey from Zanzibar to Egypt, which occupied two years and a half, nnd extended over n distance of more than three thousand miles. lie chose rather to give some account of the "Wahunia and somu of the other tribes inhabiting the shores of Lake Nvanza. Judging from the physical characteristics oft host; tribes, he considered them to be descended from the ancient Abyssinians an idea confirmed by the traditions of the people, who, when questioned about their origin, always replied that they come from the north. Captain Spcke gave a long and interesting account of the history of the people of Unyoro, tracing their kings down to the present monarch. On the most fertile part of the shores of Lake Nyanza, he said, is the kingdom of Uganda, which is the most interesting of all the nation? of equa torial Africa, being better cultivated and better governed than any other. The cus toms of Uganda arc many of them most irregular. The Princes having largo hnr:ni of women, their progeny is, of course, most numerous. "When a King dies all his sons are burnt except his successor and two others, who are kept, in case of accident, until the coronation, after which one is pen sioned oil' nnd the other banished to Unyoro, Untidiness iu dress is a capital crime, except the offender possesses sullicient riches to pay an enormous fine. Ingratitude, or even neglecting to thank a person for a benefit conferred, is punishable. The court customs are also curious. Xo one is allowed to stand bclorc the King, and to touch him or look at one of his women is death. They believe implicitly in magic and the cvifeye, and the kings are always attended by a certain number of women crowned with dead . lizards, and bearing be wis of plantain wine in their hands. The King of Karaliwe is the most civilized of all thene native chiefs; before entering Uganda Captain Speke spent many days with him. In manners, civility and cnl'ightennieiit he might be compared with many Euiopcans. He owes much of this to the influence of un Indian merchan named Moiissa Mzouri. who helped him by Ii'.i Advice to conquer his brother, with win t.i ho was at war. Captain Speke was luiich entertained w ith many of Ilia questions as to what became of the old suns i.id Why the tuoon made faces at the earth, lie also wanted to know- whether England, of which he had heard from the ivory traders, could blow up the whole of Africa with gunpow der. The moment the King heard that he was desirous of going north he sent mes sengers to the King of Uganda to prepare the way for him. The King was most anxious to atVotd him every possible in formation about the country While at the palace the King took him yachting on MurchiFOii Creek lor several lays, mid he frequently went shooring with the princes of the court, who, when he had shot anything, would rush up to shake him heartily hy the hand a custom little known in that" part of Africa, liel'ore leaving they heard from the King Karasi that a body of white men had been seen to the north, who hail killed numbers of the natives with a wonderful gun. This made Captain Spcke most anxious to push on, as he supposed the partvof white men to be that of Mr. Petherick, who had appointed to meet him. j lie then started for Uganda with a numerous , retinue, lleforo leaving King IUmiauika's 1 palace at Kan.gwe he had noticed on several occasions three or four lofty mountain peaks, more than ten thousand feet high. Hie king of Uganda sent an armed body of men to meet him, whn conducted hitu through the kingdom. Evcrywheie they went the people left their huts" leaving their provisions behind them. The fertility of this part is very great, and the scenery ou the shores of the lake most beautiful. On arriving at the King of Uganda's capital Captain Speke found it necessary to wrap up all his presents in chintz before sending them to the King, as nothing bare or naked could be looked at by his Majesty, lie found tliu palace to consist of hundreds of conical tents, spread over the spur of a hill. Thousands of courtiers ami attendants w ere to be seen engaged in every conceivable occupation, from playing on musical instru ments to feeding the royal chickens. On sending word to the King that he wished for an interview, that monarch sent back a sharp message that ho wan to sit on the ground and wait until he was at liberty. Cantain Snekc. however, sent back word that he was il prince, and not accustomed either to sit on the ground oriowau. .v com tier follow ed him, prophesying ull kinds of evil from his presumption. Captain Speke, however, tertillcd the whole court. King and all into subinis-ion by merely opening his umbrella, which they took to'le a deadly weapon, killing by imigie. A chair was consequently allowed to Ciyitain Spi ke, who was received by the King, surrounded by I.i court, und having by his side the women crowned with dead lizards, to w ard otl'lhe t tlect of the ev il eye. The King Mured at hi ;u for id unit an liour'at the cud of which time bis .Majoty said, "ltae jou seen lui."l nnd n Hud to niiollur tent, where the same process of staring was followed b' a Mtiiihir inquiry. The King Went into a third tent, and Captain Speke followed. This time, however, tho monarch deigned to examine Captain Spcl.c ' Wli.twoitli 1 ill.-. Cnplaill Si" ke told bun t ltil it wii Iho ciuloni of the liiliiiLilaiit of the coiiiiliy of which hu wu pi luce to in ike present of cvel j thing that ihey po fc.'M'd III Mil) king into wh.'-.i count!) tiny entirid. Uu accordingly h it hint eei il nlh ttlld w ul. he, nnd it iplulilily of pun Ismdcr. Ho cn.leavorid to engage hi. Sluje.ty hi cunt cioni ion about p.ih.iiik' pui t v, and tho p.iuibihl) of i'H iiin tru le IhtoiiU Iho lioith. Il w.i it huijj time, however, fofO lie eiined Id I .uillihii. On I Ic-ivlng ihe Kiny pn-MiiUd li.nl w II .ui.i.is vuv ..!.iil'U pu-.i.t.. liui'i. i ' oi v . I v t .uu. il'U 1 Al (ioi, Ink '!' I apu.OI t xk(, lll.t M fl on ii n no h, no 3 uo 10 on Ju.'ini'M notice inserted in the hm-At. Cni,ri!. or bi-forn .Miirrinitos and Dentin), 1'IVU CtM'ri I'liK LISK for eiich in'crtion. fj?" Liirgor Advertidemcnlf fl per agreement. JOS PHISTIKO, IV c liavo connected with our prMiiblirlitiiciit a well selected JOU Ol'l'lCIl, which will enable in to execute, In tho ncatent ftyle, every variety of Printing. r;;kcr, but the latter, heniing from Caplaitl Spcke that he had not been able to explore the lake Luta Nzigt. Mr. linker immediately set oil" on un expedition in (hat direction, nnd Captain Scke has no doubt that by next year we shall know all about this supposed tributary of the Nil". Captain Grant was present at this meet ing but made no speech. 'm-!cKfli'M of 'onl .''HI !;; The 1st volume of the "Transactions rf the North of England Institute of .Alining Engineers'' contains some particulars which would make an interesting paper on tho curiosities of coal mining. Men cannot read without astonishment of the dillicullics which have been overcome by miners in pursuit of coal, and the vj.st amounts of money laid out sunk, so to speak in mines. "What is called Morton Tit, not far front Durham, is remarkable for the dillicullics overcome in sinking to the coal. In the process of excavation the sinkers encountered probublv the largest body of water ever met with in any one milling adventure. The estimated quantities seem incredible. No less than nine thousand three hundred gallons of water were lifted every minute. from a bed of quicksand which lay at a depth of live hundred and forty feet from the surface. This bed was forty feet in thickness, and for its whole extent thorough ly saturated with water. Any person may conceive of the difficulty of sinking through such a quicksand. To encounter and defeat not far short of ten thousand gallons of flooding springs, minute nfter minute mid. day after day, might, well have ttppahed any engineer." lint the engineer fought tho floods with their own weapons; he niado use of the vapor generated from water steam and added horsepower to horse power until, in all, he placed steam engines around that one pit to the extent of no less than one thousand live hundred nnd eighty four horse power. Night and day those putnping-cngincs were at work in pumping up the floods; cranks, 'crab?,' and all kinds of requisite engineering were added, and the water was obliged to give in or, rather to come out. Murton Colliery is now a thriving concern, and sends up tubs of coal instcad'of gallons of water every minute to the surface. 5ut at what cost was this water pumped out ? At an expenditure of no less than ',0n0,000. "It is remarkable that in another sinking for coal, about a couple of miles from tho same locality, the same enemy was again encountered, nnd in a continuation of tho same bed of quick sand. The colliery viewer, however, conducted his campaign so adroitly that lie was able to insulate each separate- 'feeder' of water ns it was met w ith in each stratum of sand nnd limestone so that, while an aggregate amount of up wards of live thousand gallons of water per minit'o was met w ith in passing through the various bejj, so cleverly was the wholo passage accomplished that nt no time were, there "more than live hundred gallons in one ii: nt" to pump awav. This, indeed, was a o' lantitv sullicient to frighten some ; but ! in comparison with the nine thousand and Olid gallons at .inn ion it was Homing. There are nits where. long after coal has been for many years extracted from them, the waters break in and flood the mine. In these instances, ngain, great I enterprise is Manifested. In the case of tho I 'drowned' colliery tit Jarrow an attempt was made a few years ago to draw oil tho J water and to resume ordinary operations. Hut the sum of one hundred and ten tliou j sand dollars was spent fruitlessly in this attempt, and It was ultimately abandoned without drawing up tv single ton oi coal. "Whence nil. this subterranean water comes is an interesting question, but scarcely i capable of receiving a satisfactory reply. Its amount must be immense to aliord j neatly ten thousand gallons per minute at one sinking and probably it is the aceu- mutation oi' numberless centuries of surface j waters which have percolated through tho potous strata. It is always threatening. and never materially diminished, as respects its vast aggregate, by any etl'orts of man; on the contrary, it is always gaining ou man and filling up his excavation. No less than thirty-sis collieries near the river Tyue have been, iu mining phrase, 'drowned out,' or rendered unworkable by an irre- sistible irruption , main Wallseiid of water, titter the liest seam had been nearly exhausted. These stand lit the coal district like closed factories in the cotton towns, with this difference, that the cotton factories may be reopened and busity at work again, while the drowned collieries aie probably drow ned until the world fchall be burnt up. The late Mr. Thomas John Taylor, indeed, devised apian for drawing oil" the water from the whole of the drowned pits, and gave notice of his intention to apply to Parliament for an act empowering its ex ecution. Death, however, overlook hitu and his plan." VHESE3.T OllArE HINTS. In the June niiii. her of tho t'nr.lcner' Monthly, w (inil the following hail; relume tu Iho present cure uf grni'c in,.: drupe couiiuigin tiunriui. rh-iuhl not bo pirinitlej to .ei tii't liiro er.iis of Iru.t whllu youii. ill. t-x-cu.-.ii.lo to fruit a lniu-ti or u on yuun ihe ju-t tu l.-.i On- kiu l I m no morn rhmilil he eriuitte, lilt ll.u viuv luiHeiinit treiith. viurou groutU mul retit pi.MlucliM-ii.- ur lh fuilio.le iif lh ivh-ihU1o uorltl. Kii.'oi:iHtfi u Iniieti loliuu a o4.iliio uu the me, ttit.1 u.ui lo tiuve a .lion sIumiIi, nl lau linu ns nt ihe t. n of ihe emie; thi enu bo ilouo hy (.inch i in.; out tho (Hiiui. of (tie .iron .L.hiIs tiller they Luvu ma 1 1.- a KOo'lh "' nv" '" "x leaver, fiii. will maka I the i. iik inn 10'ow .Iroiiger. Youuk vine urow niU' h tiiiT over a ti?)!y liiani-U. .tuck iu lor .un- ri. tlituiover a .-ivt.it.t .tiek a a trellis, un.l gene i i.il!)- .lo better ei.iy way. vvheroevira line liui.elu of nlii.e. me ili.-ile.l. pin. Ii b. k llio shoo! Pen in il in uti-iul ti.tu or tno leuvo iiIkivo llio hum-ii ll.i. ! .hotit l not be Jeuo in.ii-ei imiiiHlely villi all lliti bun. le I io nun h l uu liiiiij si. I alui.of injure, ihu ro.ii.-li-.i, of i,m..Ihuo.1 ..i ui l .canon. Ulu-M.. limit ro tor auuiioui., who tinve a lea viu.- on ueln.i-.; t.r h.r,! v in) ni t i-ullure, tl.oilll llie .'lino pi ilii-q l. . hol.l ijiol u tar a Ike)' go, ih.y will vuiy Ii, .Liu Ml I'll. Illloll in.ta. iii c.l'l v iik ne. ii..v Ii,, ,,( i,e fil for lliiulitlig In lhoe ciw.. Vkl-.cre llio bull In. al in leli.lisl iu hul.' I n "11 lh Villi., Un v rlloul, I .l lliiline.l uul ui'.lo .ivi-ivly llii.li iu-ir i-Ji, e.li-t (o b'l cut em!) A elo.Ci yutlq'.ie( bunch fuvoi.uillileH u t t-.ut) l,vy Ir iiie. il h Folhir I lav. i.If.-iu.hI a olio of it... ii il. i. on. whin by lu Ju.,'v ul .In. ei.-illn.i a it a hull suiilihl i. ol hi. I lu.) ..nail.-.-, bul II l n. i I'Uitall) ki.i a that lui. i. ii.juii.i.i. Mt..-n in rv.-t. lu M Ul ) alUio.'t.llO. M It U 1.1.1 mb U'.l , M I.l le del ev iq. -i iilil'K l-io-v., .f.H-. on lour lli.iu Uo' ..-eieu.o 4iu. i le, wl..l .toiuM b."iite a .1 It rov Llu.lt iu a liutl i. . lu.i..,1 I.i a .ti ki) )tll..a . i,4 ll.olt.lij l bU. k i-l a arHl'' b.e.u-i. I-y ti.t r- .u.e ii.. tjl'iHll Ut VU.IIUI-O.I, III VI. M .1 ll.lMI Ul, ... I V lb. II V ill, ll.s. lui II. ft III. i b I III 4 p.vru, bul lob. I , ll..-, I k.-.i th" .lt..'l ilu a ,h'a a ls,il,l It.. 1. 1 U-I o.-Mi.o .1. U. Ii-.im I be It.,.-1 ut lb. It oil ibolMM laU I (bal wboU C'.l.bit.t U'lt. l.clli. A lai.ullMTua lu ni l ,j Ii I.. .U ll.a f--tliilu4 i.ltaJ l.r,. I) ii .' i uil. .llkl,uM ll-i. I-) I.M ..IU.IHUI Ii, 1 tt. .tlu.. h I ti ' .1 . 1. l.-.l ll.al . ol.-l I.. . . I Ul ' I. I ul I It VI.. .11. I lw I.. . ' -t I II One efjnnre of 12 line", 3 time, Kvcry HiUcfiuont innrlion, Cue rijunro, 6 month, Six month, tine yrnr, r.iifinnw Card.' of 5 line., per annum, Merchant nnd oilier iiilvertisinR by lhi your nitli the priv-ili-iru of inserting Uifloi cut d vrrtisiittf weekly. , I, uiM haw l-.i lain.. I imi to uit inn