. . . . . ------ ------- _ --- -- ' • . ) - - • -..,- - - ' •--, : j,4 , - 4 1 t4+ 1 Amoebalrtio %Wilk ellkomaimie wllf -- - I f. - , 4,1 "N !I.•'. ` ' S'''n 7 '''-: ' it .. " M ,' .. . 1 1!"1 4 P l r f tt , k ~, ..' '. '' “ [ Af ! 1 .. ,1 . , P 45.4-1,- "ok 1,41 44+4 , 44, 4,4 4 ,...,4 1 .4 ' wt.... 4 )04 . f . , 1 4 iie . 5 .' -'' • 1 )-,. : ' ' " - I ' \ . . , , t, ' . i -•\ ..\ „ "\ m- iii ..r ) . )1 ri - . 1 0 ) C "; O r I I 1 1 ' \ . 1 )..1 f I I IV . 14N • • . ,/,. ..4 , , - -4 • ..„..... # 1 ‘ - . ' • ‘\ #... ,' . I C ' A.. VI '.:. •- . -,.___- • • • • . i.• '......-- _ . . . _ . . . . . i, $ , , • . • , • + , . t , • C.- i . . gi. tlik, 1 , 1. .6 $ Tit ' t' 'i 19 ' $ t s* " .l. l3tiltatb . tO 14." *nal Agrituttur Itraturt, foittan .0111t5ilt ad' #3,entral: •• 4 1 t • Xe *lt& •,w t Olt ESTABLISMO IN 1813 IHE WLYNISBURG DIENV/GER PUBLISHED BY 1. W. JONES AND JAS. S. JENNINGS. 'Waynesburg, Greene County, Pa. ItrOOFFICE , NEARLY OPPOSITE TILE PUBLIC SQUABS. . wlatlUSEteZt illuascatrrion.—s2. oo in advance ; $023 at the ex piration of six months; i 52.50 after tin exoiratiou of the year. ADVERTISEMENTS Inserted at $1.50 per square for three insertions, and 50 ets. a square foi each addition al insertion; (ten lines or less toasted a titivate.) fr7a liberal deduction inatieloo yeatly ativertisers. IU -- .1013 PRINTING, of all kinds, executed in the, hest style, and on reasonable teen's, at tite'lltasenger' Job oAice. Magutsburg usintss 6arbs. ATTORNEYS. = FURMAN & RITCHIE. ATTORNEYS AND COUNSLLOR:4 AT LAW Waynesburg, Pa. pi . r*OFFlrr. -- )lain Street, one door Past of the old B ink Building. SII Jusiness w cre,qle, Washington, am! Fay Counties, elll.ol , , Lcd 01 00!111, prowl. attention. N. B —Pattirolar attention will he given to tho col lection of p ens ions, Bounty :Jowl , . Back Pay, and ether claims against the Government. dept. 11, 1601—Iv. R. A. M'CONNELL. J. J. DUFFMAN. M'CONNELL Of. scurrnils.N, 4T7'ORNE3'S AND COUNSELLORS A7' LAW W aynesbu rg, Pa. i]l7"Office in the "Wright Ilt ~se," East Door. Collections, &c.. will receive prompt attention. Waynesburg, April 23, 1862-Iy. DAVID CRA SVFORD, Attorney 'And Counsellor at Law. Otlire in the Court House. Will attend promptly to all business entrusted to his care. Waynesburg, Pa.,.lnly 13ECEM BLACK & PHELAN, ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELL,OII23 AT LA W Office in the Court liouge, Way nutburs. Sept. 11,1861-,-Iv. SOLDIERS' WAR CLAIMS ! D• R. P. HUSS, ATTORNEY AT LAW, WAYNESBURG, PENNA., 'EI AS received from the War Department at Wash ington city, D. C., official copies of the several laws passed ly Congress, and all the seceseary Forms and Instructions for the prosecution and collection of PENSIONS, BOUNTY, BACK PA Y, due dis charged and disabled soldiers, their widows, orphan children, widowed mothers, fathers, sistets and broth ers, which business, /upon due notitm] will he attem! edis promptly and accurately if entrusted to his care. Office., .11i0.. 2, Casupbells Row.—April 8, 1863. PHYSICIANS Dr. T. W. Coss, 3E 1 '13. - snesicietia. dot SEllargeoc:•22., Waynesburg, Greene Co., Pe OFFICE AND RESIDENCE ON MAIN STREET, east, and nearly opposite the Wright house. WaSnesbu - g, Sept. 23, 1563. DR. A. G. CROSS WOULD very respectfully , tender his services as a PHYSICIAN AND 11RG EON, to the people of Waynesburg' and vicinity. He hopes by a dne appre ciation of human life and health, and strict attention to business, to merit a share of public patronage. Waynesburg, January 8, 1862. MERCHANTS. - - WM. A. PORTER, Who,esale and Retail Dealer in Foreign and Domes ( Dry Goods, Groceries, Notions, &c., Main street. Sept. 11. 1861-Iv. MINOR & CO., Dealers in Foreign and Domestic Dry Gonda, Grit Series, Queensware, Hardware and Notions, opposite tlte'Dreen Douse. Main otroot. S.W. 11. 1861--OY. ROOT AND SHOE DEALERS J. D. COSURAY, Boot and Shoe maker, Main street, nearly opposite On "Farmer's and Drover's Bank." Every style of BOON and Shoes constantly' ua Laud or made to order. Sept. 11, Iti6l-Iy. GROCERIES & VARIETIES JOHN MUNNELL, Dealer hi Groceries and Confectionaries, and Variety Geode Generally, Wilson's New Budding, Main street. Sept. 11. 1861-Iy. WATCHES AND JEWELRY S. M. BAILY, Main street, opposile the Wright linine keeps always on hand a large and elegant assortment of Watches and Jewelry. irr Repairing of Clocks, Watches and Jewelry wil receive prompt attention I Dee. 15, 1861— ly BOOKS, &c. LEWIS DAY, Dealer in School and Misrelleneous Books, Station ery, Ink, Magazines and Papas: One door east et Pnrter'w Store, Mail, Street. Srt.t. 11. tout SADDLES AND HARNESS. SAMUEL M'ALLISTER, Ilarnese and Trunk Maker. old Bank Build .ng. Main street, dept. 11, 1861—L•. BANK. FAMERS' & DROVERS' BANK, Waynesburg, Pa. C. A. ItL.CK . Pres't. J. LA Z EAR, Cashier DIEDOONT DAY, iirmDWESDAT "TM 11. 1861—Iv. gitte HACK I FUNNING RECITLABLY BET% 'EEN RYES MID EU IMIER. THE undersigned respectfully informs the generous Public, that having the contract for the carrying of the stall between the above poiets, be has placed upon the route two new and commodious Hacks for lilt &C. rommodation of the travnllng vommunitv, One wit leave the Adam's Houve, Waynesburg, every morn ing, Sundays excepted, at 7} o'clock, and will arrive at Ricee' Landing in time for the }tomb') Pittsburgh, the other will leave Sites' Landing at the same time and arrive in Waynesburg at noon. No pains wilt be spared for the acc.rumnociation of passengers, 'TIMOTHY UOUGLIER, Proprietor. ligust 7th, MC. no. N. WAYNESBURG STEAM MILL. 'WM. ROGERS respectfully inform his friends and the public that he low teased the NEW STEAff MILL at Waynesburg, Pa., where h e will alwayele found ready to accommodate all who may call on the shortest notice- Grinding done on the same ternw as PO ; water wino. FLOUR and ISOM kept constanny an hand. Orders fur Other tent be left at he Minns* Alan amna. (Jas. M.MIM cJu fortilanto A Good Thing to Breathe. The great mass of the inhabitants of the Northern United Staten live in better houses, wear ,beaer clothes, and eat better tod than the mass of any other nation, but they breathe the worst air of any people in the world. They like bad air. Every man chooses to have his clothes and food prepared fresh and new for himself, bathe likes to have his air breathed over a few times by his neignbors before he takes it into his own lungs. In this process its oxygen is di minished, its carbonic acid is increased, it gag . a little . wail* :hid Moist, amdt Mr ty, and then it just suits the American taste. All through the winter months our city railroad cars are literally packed with passengers, and the doors, windows and ventilators are kept tightly closed. If any passenger ventures to open one of the little narrow ventilators in the up per part of the car, sonic very nice gentle man, with a clean collar, white teeth, and a carefully dressed wig, who is drawing in at every breath quarts of tobacco fumes and animal matter from the lungs of his fellow passengers, is sure to give a shiver and a request that the minute openings might be closed. In our churches the congregations generally have air in the forenoon which is quite tolerable, but in the afternoon their consciences and good manners are subjected to a constant strain in their efforts to resist the stupifying effects of the noxious gases with which the churches become filled during the morn ing service. But the worst effect of this national predilection is seen in our thools.— Hundreds of little boys ana l girls are confined in close rooms for three hours at a time, breathing over and over again the same air, constantly diminishing its oxygen which is the supporter of life, thus reducing its vital functions ; while at the same time the brain, that inevit ably shares the enervating influence, is stimulated by the most excited ambition, to exertions too great even for its un diminished strength. By this course hundreds of helpless children, each the pride and joy of its home, have each been doomed to lingering disease and early death. There is no necessity for breathing poisonous gases. We are placed in an ocean of air which has just been pre pared in proper proportions of oxygen, nitrogen and watery vapor to adapt it to the structure of our lungs and the healthful action of all our organs. We know that by constantly breathing this atmosphere, taking a fresh and pure supply at every breath, our physical syst• in will attain to the highest degree of health and strength of which it is capable. It is only by laborious effort that we can box ourselves in, so that we can obtain the foul air of which we are so ford. J G. RITCIIIE JOHN PHELAN There may be, however, a few per sons in the community that prefer fresh and pure air to that which has been breathed over a number of times. To thQo we Sa minima De_ Reed's Ivo' k on ventilation recently re-pubushed by John Wiley, 535 Broadway, New York. It is a small book of 120 pages and dis cusses the subject with an intelligence which is the result of a long series of investigations. The various methods of bringing in and disturbing the fresh air and removing the noxious gases, are treated with a rare combination of pro found scientific knowledge and practi cal common sense.—Scientific American. A late number of the Framer's Mag azine has the following: Doubtless you have remarked with satisfaction how lit tle oddities of men who marry rather late in life are pruned away shortly after their marriage. You have found a man who used to goshabbily and carelessly dressed, with a huge shirt collar frayed at the edge, and a glaring yellow silk pocket handkerchief; broken of these things and become a pattern of neatness. You have seen a man whose hair and Whis kers were ridicuously cut, speedily be come like other human beings. You have seen a clergyman who wore a long beard in a little while appear without one. You have seen a matt who used to sing ridiculously sentimental songs leave them off. You have seen a man who took snuff copiously, and who generally had his breast covered with snuff, aban don the vile habit. A wife is a grand wielder of the mor al pruning-knife. If Johnson's wife had lived, there would have been no hording up of bits of orange peel, no touching all the posts in walking along the streets, no eating and drinking with a disgust ing veracity, If ever Oliver Goldsmith had been married he never would have worn that ridiculous and memorable coat. Whenever you find a man whom. you know little about oddly dressed, or talking ridiculously, cot exhibiting eccen tricity of manner, you may be tolerar bly sure that he is not a married wan; for the little corners weeounded off,the lit tle shoots are pruned away, in married men. Wives generally have much more sense than their husbands, especially when their husbands are *NW .mqn- -- "" The wife's *dykes are like ,the ballast thstr . keeps tke ship, steady. : , These afro, Wil M" 1 " 1 ° 111 X 4 .1 08 i0 8 k 8 • ping .e( little, growths of 4,4onceit. Ana 4 The Effect of Marriage. WAYNESBUO-, GREENE COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1864. Boring an 011 Well. 'The follwing is a summary of the little difficulties to be encountered in boring an oil well : In selecting a spot for an oil well the artesian driller raises a der rick about one hundred and -ten feet in height, brings up a steam engine of about six horse power, and then, after driving down about six inches in diam eter through the earth and gravel some fifty feet or so to , the first strata of rock, introduces a drill of about two and a half inches in diameter attached to a temper screw, and thence to the "walk ing beam' and engine, with Whiet he bores now at the-rate of eight or ten feet per day into the solid slate and 49,901014. Any,ame 4/66 4 ,: , }10. then comes on the first strata of sand stone, which may be ten or twelve feet thick, and bearing through this comes again to slate and soapstone of a blue ish cast, and working on say for twen ty-five feet or so, he reaches the second strata of sandstone, out of which there comes a rushing up, when the right vein is struck, inflammable gas, salt wa ter and petroleum. The bore of the well is enlarged by an instrument called a "rimmer ;" and then an iron tube, in sections of about fourteen feet and closely screwed togeth er, is inserted by sections and run down to the veins of oil; a flaxseed bag, which expands when wet, is fixed between the tubing and the walls of the well in order to prevent the surface water from descending: a "plunger" or valvid pis ton is introduced into the tube, and the sucker rod being attached to the "walk ing beam," the conduit pipes and tank, which may hold sixty barrels, being in readiness, the engine moves and the precious treasure gushes forth. This is what is called pumping a well. In the flowing wells, that is such as send the oil out spontaneously, the drill msst go down into the third strata of the sand- , stone, but this, in some instances, is very deep. Yet, notwithstanding all these obsta cles in the way of obtaining possession of the hidden treasures beneath and which would place one of our richest resources as far out of the reach of man as the hidden treasures of the deep were it not Tr machinery, oil is always in abundance. The profits assuring from the sale of the precious liquid am ply repay the labors and expenditure which the speculator may have to meet in boring the well, and therefore he pushes forward Isis enterprise with a will and determination worthy of the difficulties he has to encounter. A Proposed Plan for Prolonging Life. M. Robin, an eminent Fiench chem ist, in a memoir recently presented to the French Academy, expresses a be lief that the period of human life may be greatly prolonged, and enters into an argument to show that his opinion is based upon sound reasoning. Re also gives the result of his personal observa tions on this subject, and proposes to demonstr* the truthfulness of his po sition by actual experiments upon ani mals whose lives are of short duration. His arguments is; that the mineral mat ter which constitutes an ingredient in most of our food after the combustion, is in out my.t,ein to incrurt and the different parts of our body and to render imperfect many of the vital pro cesses. He compares human beings to furna ces which are always kindled ; life ex ists only, in combustion, but the combus tion which occurs in our bodies, like that which takes place in our chimneys, leaves a detritus or residuum which is fatal to life. To remove this, he would administer lactic acid with ordinary food. This acid is known to posses the power of removing or dissolving the incrustations which form on the arteries, cartilages and valves of the heart. As butter milk abounds in this acid, and is, moreover, an agreeable kind of food, its habitual use, it is urged, will trco the system front these causes, which in evitably cause death between the sev enty-fifth and one hundredth year Annual of Scientific Discovery. A Temperance Fable. The rats once assembled in a large cellar, to devise some method of safety in getting the bait from a small trap which lay near, having seen numbers of their friends and relations snatched from them by its merciless jaws. After many speeches, and the proposal of many elab orate but fruitless plans, a happy wit, standing erect, said: "It is my opinion that, if with one paw we can keep down the spring, we can safely take the food from the trap with the other." All the rats present loudly squealed as sent, and slapped their, tails in applause. The meeting adjourned, and the rats re tired to their homes; but the devastations of the trap being by no means diminish ed, the rats were forced to call another "convention." The elders, just assem bled, had commenced their deliberations, when all were startled by a faiut voice, and a poor rat with only three legs, limping into the ring, stood up to speak. All were instantly silent; stretching out the bleeding remains of his deg, be said, ",ley friends, 1 have tried the method, and you see the result. Now let me suggest phm to escape the trap, not tough* !" • - siiir"4o. 4eSParOg man Mira his hair. . 454.! compd. ,women is wiser—she tears busbancts." Singular Marriage Customs. The inequality almost everywhere vis ible in human affairs is perhaps nov,ikcre more conspicuous thaa iu the contrast be tween the poverty of ceremony which at tends matrimonial unions in sonic 'parts of the world, and the pomp which accom panies them in other parts—the absence not merely of a 'priest, but even of a jus tice of the peace, at the nuptials of the South Sea Islands, and the :diluent pres ence of two or more first-class clerryiaen at the fashionable celebrations in our own society. The Siamese used to marry by the simple ceremony of handing over the bride's pets the conplopmcechug home- Virard..as man and wife, , Ivitton, further ado. But as these people now have a king who is devoted to steam engines, telegraphs and other emblems of progress, doul itless the ladies DELI. kingdom have ob tained glimpses of "woman's rights," iln ported along with other notions from the United States, and accordnOv, no doubt, they do not now suffer theniseh es to be disposed of in such a cavalier manner.— Marriao-e with ..11 hupruve meats would not unnaturally be one of the earliest reforms introduced br an in novating female Siamese. Instead of desiring the presence of two clergymen, the Crimean Tartars are said to value the privilege of having one, even so little as to keep him standing outside at the bride's window, through which he throws his formulas. Other barbarous and semi-barbarous people have ceremo nies elaborate enough, though of a queer character. Among certain fir'eworship pers the happy couple are united by a hem on their garments and led in pro- , cession around a fire. On the banks of the Gauges, the Bralimin priest, bride and bridegroom all hold on to the tail of a cow; another Hindu() custom is ibr the bride and bridegroom to shower rice on each other's bend. In Ceylon they are tied together by the thumbs, the courtship having begun by the lover sending to buy his future hride's clothing, which, knowing that it is to be returned along with a husband, she read ily parts with at her own valuation. The Chinese practice of three days' mourning befOre a wedding unay seem curious, but it is hardly so curious as inarrying a liv ing man or woman to the °rave of one betrothed to him or her betbre death—a custom belonging to no other people. A Strange Story The truth of the passage that the way ofthe transgressor is hard," was never more clearly illustrated than in the case of W. W. Tread'vell, of lind son, Michigan. lie was a man of fami ly, possessed of wealth, education, influ ence, and respected by ail who knew him. He was a banker, and the good name which he bore in the community caused hundreds of poor people to de posit their savings with hint. Thus situated, with all the comfbrts that a man could wish for, he suddenly ab sconded, in company with a confeder ate named Crowell. He took all the e posited money with him, was art-cacti and convicted, but escaped from ctiso dy. Months p2ssel, and a short time since, near Napoleon, Ohio, telly miles o t h of .A. , ,biao, a man was passing through a piece of wool:, awl W;l4 at tracted by a stench, which he tbund to proceed from a decomposed human body. The flesh had been picked and gnawed by wild beasts and birds, the head was detached from the body, and lay some distance from it, an arm torn off and partly eaten; two bullet holes were found in the skull, and tie clothing, contents of the pockets, and other unmistakable evidemes proved it to be the body of W. W. Trcadwell, the Hudson banker; and subequent developments proved that he had been murdered by Crowell, his partner in iniquity, whu has since been arrested. The Use of Lawyers. A wealthy fanner, being engaged in a law snit against one of his opulent neighbors, applied to a lawyer, who happened to be engaged on the oppo site side, but who told him he NI ould give him a recommendation to a pro fessional friend, which he did in the fol lowing lines: "Here are two Mt wethers fallen together; If you'll fleece one fleece the other, And make them agree like brother and brother." The letter being unsealed the farmer had the curiosity to open and read it ; he did so, and instead of carrying it to the other lawyer he took it to the per son with whom he was at variance.— Its perusal cured both parties, and end ed the dispute. Inference—Lawyers live by the violation of the laws of good ness and truth. WORK IF YOU WOULD RISE.--Richard Burke being found in revery, shortly after an extraordinary display of powers in the House of Commons by his broth er Edmund, and questionel as to the cause, he replied, "I have been won dering how Ned has conti(ved to mo nopolize all the talents of the family, but then again I remember, when we were at play he was at work. The force of the anecdote is increased by the fact that Richard Burke was consider ed tiot...inferior in natural silents, to his brothel:. Yet one rose to greatness, while-the other diej Cthitratively -ob scure. Useful Hints. Autumn Plowing. To eat when you do not want it, i Farmers we commend you to plow all is brutal—nay, this is a slander on the that is possible this autumn. There are lower animals, they do not so debase several reasons why this should be done. theniselveF. We have had a great drouth, and that 2. Do not enter a sick chamber on being fbllowed by warm rains, Ims and an empty stomach, our remain as a will produce an unusually large growth watcher or nurse, until you feel ex- of herbage, which will enrich the land if hausted, nor sit between the patient 'turned under while green. If suffered to and the tire, nor in the direction of a ripen its seeds, it will exhaust the soil and current of air from the patient toward seed it for a great crop of weeds next yourself; nor eat or drink anything af- year. When you plow, do it as though ter being in au invalidsro(ini until you you meant something. Let it be ten have rinsed your mouth. inches deep at least, and then you will get 3. Do not sleep in any g irment-worn the benefit of frost, the (neat refiner of in the day. hard earth. If you reallY , =mot NAY 4. Most grown persons are able to winter grain upon the land you do plow, sleep sounklly over six hours in sum- let it lay naked. But we assure you it mer and seven in winter ; to attempt would more than pay you for seeding to force more sleep on the system by laud that you intend to plant with corn sleep in the day time, renders the next spring to put in rye, which you will hole of the slumber disturbed and im- turn under when a foot high, making a ,rfeet. ieek 5. Seine of the most painful stomach aches ai; occasioned by indi , restion this generates wind, and hence disten finn rug the abdomen with the hai.d, skin to skin, from one side to another, iro n ' the lower edge of the ribs downwards, whereby the surplus air is forced on and outwards alimentary by the canal. G. When you return to your• house from a long walk or other exhaustive exercise, go to the fire or warm room, and do not remove a single article of clothing until you have taken a cup of hot drink. 7. In going into a colder atmosphere, keep the mouth closed, and walk with a speed sufficient to keep off chilliness. H. Two pairs of stockings will keep the feet warmer than one pair of a great er thickness. 9. The night sweats of disease coma on towards daylight; their deathly cold ness is greatly modified by sleeping in a single loose woolen shirt. 10. Those who drink a cup of tea or coffee, or other stimulant, in order• to aid in the performance of any work, are fools; because it is to the body and brain an expenditure of what is not yet , got. It is using powder in advance,, and this can never be done with im punity. 11. The less a man drinks in lot weather the better; Ibr the more we drink, the more we want to drink, un til even ice-water fails, and becomes of a metalie taste. Hence the longer you crlu put off drinkivg cold water on the morning of a hot day, the better you will kel at night. l?.. If you sleep at all in the day time, it will interfere with your sleep at night much less it' the bleep be taken in the forenoon. How to Tell a Lady. Two woman shall get into an omnibus, and, though We never saw one of them lietnre, we shall select von the true lady. She does nut titter when a g,quleinan, handing up his fire, knocks Off his hat, or pitches it away over his nose; nor does she receive her — change," atter this (to him) inconvenient a c t o f gallantry, grim silence. She wears no flowered brocade to be trodden under loot, nor ball-room jewelry, nor rose-tinted gloves; but the lace nut around her face is scru pulously fresh, and the strings under her chin have evidently been lied only by dainty lingers. . Site makes no panicle of a watch, if she Nvears one; nor does she draw of her dark, neatly-fitting glove, to display ostentatious rings. Still we no tice, nestling in the straw beneath us, such a vrini little boot, not paver-soled, but of an anti-consumption thickness; the bonnet upon her head is of plain straw, simply trimmed—for your true lady never wears a "dress hat" in an omnibus. She is quite as civil to the poorest as to the richest person who sits beside her—and equally regardful of their rights. If site attracts attention, it is by the unconscious grace of her person and manner, not by ostentation of her dress. AVe ore quite sorry when she pulls the strap and disap pears; if we were a bachelor we should go home to our solitary den, with a resolu tion to become a better and a —married EMU Whooping Cough. It will be seen from the f 'Rowing communication to the London Times, that the English have discovered a new remedy for whooping cough. "In confirmation of the statement on this subject made in your impression, I can add that the practice of sending children to gas works to inhale the gas from newly opened purifiers hag been adopted in France for two years past From information obtained at various works which Ifrequently visit, I may in fer that the cure for whooping c ou g h is perfect. It often occurs that as many as a dozen children arc brought to the gas works at one time, and the managershave now come to regard this new custom as part of the daily routine of business.' ,g&—The act of Captain Clay" who went down in the monitor Tecumseh, off Mobile, was an instance of sublime courtesy. As the pilot and himself, the last in the vessel, moved to the ladder, the Captain stepped aside, saying : "You first, sir." The pilot was saved, and the hero perished in magnanimity, and an exainple,as noble as Sidney. leflionosty is Om lost rofroy, an 4 iiinocem..-11;!e* treat manure crop. It is also very hit portant to plow every day that it is pos sible to do so, before frosts stops you,. T i.fel,stl l );'lali - or . will affect you 11C t spring. and it is your duty to i».e pare for it now. One farmer says of his • operations this year of dear labor and drouth : "Last season I plowed in the 1411 ti,r all my spring crops. This sea son, when ready to plant corn and po tatoes, 1 harrowed the ground thorough ly and then rolled it. At this time I have as good a field of corn as any one would wish to see, and the best 1 have ever had." Better probably than he would have if he had waited till the spring to plow the ground, by more than enough to pay four times-the expense of plowing. That certainly was our ex perience in a piece .of oats. The best piece of oats that we ever gkrew Wail up on ground deeply plowed in autumn, maimed in spring and plowed with a sub-soil plow as deep as it would run, then harrowed to stir the surface and mix the manure, then sowed--four bushels to the acre—and the seed plowed in and surface dragged smooth with a bush. We ask farmers totry this course the present autumn. —N L Tribune. Witty Reproof. A witty suggestion is often more effective in the way of reproof than a sharp rebuke. Mrs. Stowe tells a good story of an old minister, who had been unable to keep some theivish boys out of his peach orchard till he inanat e 1 to reach their consciences by a story in the pulpit: Old father Morris sometimes used his illustrative talent to very good purpose in the way of rebuke. He had on 4iis farm a fine orchard of peaches, from which some of the ten or twelve-year old gentlemen helped themselves more liberally than even the old mans kind nosa thought expedient. Accordingly, he took occasion co introduce into his sermon on Sunday, in his little parish, an account of* journey he took, and how he was very warm and very dry, and how he saw a very fine orchard of peaches which nude his month water to look at them: "So," says he, "I came to the fence, awl looked all around, for I would not howo too olkod one of thc•nt k ithout Icerre for all the world. At last I espied a man, and says I: 'Mister, won't you give ma some of your peaches?—So the man came and gave me nigh about a hatfull. And while I stood there eating, I said, Mister, how do you manage to keep yonr peaches? 'Keep them?' said lie, and stared at me. What do you means' 'Yes, sir.' said 'Don't the boys steal them?' 'Boys steal them!' said he. 'No, indeed!"why, said 1, have a whole lot full of peaches, and I cannot get half of them [here the old man's voice became tremulous], because the boys in my parish steal them so.' 'Why,' said he, 'don't their parents Mach► them not to steal?' And I grew all over in a cold sweat, and told him I was afraid they didn't. ,Why, how you talk!' says the man. 'Do tell me where you live' 'Then,' said father Morris, the tears running down, was obliged to tell hint I lived in the town of ' " After this, Father Morris kept his peaches. &a-Some years before the death of the Duke of Wellington, he was sitting at his library table, when his ro , m door opened, and witJ►out any announcement, in stalked a singular figure. "Who are you?" asked the Duke, in his short, dry manner, looking upon • the intruder without the least change of omntenance. "I. am Apollyon." "What do yon want?" " I am sent to kill yon." "Kill me? Very odd." " Lam Apollyon and must put you to death." "Obliged to do it to-day?" "I am not told the day or the hour, but I must perform my mission." " Very inconvenient—very bnisy— great many letters to write— call again or write me word—lithe ready fin• you." The Duke went on with his correspon dence. The maniac, by the stern, immoveable old min, backed out or the room, and in half an hour was safe in custody. Speak not well of . ,ymittoeit; nor ill- of others. ' ' NEW SERIES.---VOL. 6, NO. 17 SPEECH OF THE HON. JAMES GUTHRIE. Address Delivered at New Albany, Ind., Sept. 15th—The Meaning of the Chicago Platform—Peace on the Basis of the Union. Ritmo Citizens of Indlizaft :—Kentucky bids you God speed in this great work of saving the nation. I have been in Chicago. knowthe .platformi there adopted by - the assembled Democracy. I assisted in making it. I know what it 4 means. It means peace. It means peace upon OW basis of the re-establish meut of the Union in all its integrity. Who would give up the mouth of the Mississippi and the grave of Jackson f(r 3 1 3 f3ce,Wkiliti dirdiellAxin i s r- bin'- stitution of our fathers - fOr a peace which separates this glorious republic Not the Demo c .atic and conservative masse s now arrayed under the stand ard of that hero-statesman, Gen. Geo. B. McClellan. No, fellow citizens, it is another party which would thus dis rupt this nation if its hideous dogmas of Abolitionism are not accepted by the people oflhe South. The Chicago platform, Art the letter of acceptance of McClellan mean that the President of the United States, and every official of the Government, either in the civil or military department, shall be as obe- . dient to tie Constitution as the hum blest citizen or soldier. It is a peace platform on the basis of the Union, the Constitution, and the laws. Who dares say we shall not have peace upon the basis of the integrity of the Federal Union ? lf the South is against such a peace; if she refuses to accept the offer of such a peace ; if a frank, earnest, and persistent effort to obtain these ob jects should fail, then the responsibility for ulterior consequences will fall upon those who remain in arms against the Union. But the Union must be pres erved at all hazards. Such is the con struction of the Chicago platform as given by Gen. M.O el an, the nomi nee of the convention. Such is the construction I place upon it. Such is . the construction placed upon it by the Democratic and conservative masses of the country. We will never give up the mouth of the Mississippi for Jeff. Davis and all his crew. I know him well. The Smth are for peace. Offer them peace upon this basis and they will take it—yes take it with joy, and return to their allegiance. It is the principle of the Constitution that the majority shall rule. It is not for one man to say that we shall not have peace. Who is it that reverses this principle of the Constitution, and says that the ma jority shall not rule ? Abraham Lin coln and his party ; he who denied the people the right of tree speech and the liberty of the press. This is the first time since Abraham Lincoln was elect ed—the first time since he violated the Chimer() platform of 1860—since he violated the laws of CmoTess--3inee he violated the Constitution, that the Dem (wade party has had a chance to speak. And now it will speak until it saves this gTeat republic—this precious Con stitution. It will speak at the ballot box, the great and sacred forum from which every American citizen may speak with power. I have a right as a Kentuckian, to speak of Jeff. Davis and Abraham Lincoln. They were both born in Kentucky, and both have dis graced that noble commonwealth, and her principles of equal rights and jag, laws Both of them take men ag o alaait their wills to tight their battles. 1;4 coin is doing this now—forcing men to tight for the Abolition of alavery, not for the restoration of the Union-sending men into your houses with bayonets to hold in awe peaceable loyal citizens.— Lie has to day scattered throughout the loyal States of the North soldiers enough to subjugate Jeff. Davis' con fedeiacy, to dominate over a free people. I am for peace—for a peace which will. give us hick the old Union under the Constlt ition. I was a member of the peace Congress in 1861. In that Con gress I was the peace, concession ; .and re newed guaraatees to all the Stater. I be-. lievtd then, as now, that the great waste of precious blood which was taken place would restore the Union. I asked that' the seven border slave States might propose a basis for the settlement of all aifficnlties: They could have proposed. such a basis as would have been a full, final, honorable, and satistlictory settle ment. But the radicals in that Om oress would not consent to it. Neither the Abolitionists of the North nor the secessionists of the South would eon set tto it. They would have nothing but blood. Well, have we net had blood to the heart's content of the na, lion ? Even the preachers have preached war, and desolation, and blood; the temples of the meek and lowly Jes us have been made the temples - froM which war, and rapine, and blood has been preached, by ministers with hands dripping in blood. This must be end ed. We will hold out the olive branch like a great, and magnanimous, and powerful people. We will offer to the South their rights in the Union under the Constitution. We will guarantee ,those riahts and dispose of confliettag, altd.ireastious quAtion.s * Oat. 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