u BY S. B. KOW. CLEABHELD, PA., "WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 27, 1858. VOL. 4.-NO. 23. LOVE'3 SEASONS AND EEAS02TS. BY IR. MACK AT. I love Tii j- lore in spring time,' ' ' For beauty fresh as May, : For checks like early rose?, For eyes as bright aa day, .tor breath like balm of lilies, For ?iniles liko sunrise clear ; I lore my lore in spring time, "And love her all the year. I love my lore in summer, - For promise warm and trno ; For truth like noonday throwing ; A light on old and new ; -- For wealth of bloom and freshness, For shady comfort near, I love my love in summer, And love her all the year. I love my love in cutumn. For fruit of gentle deeds, . For wisdom to be garnered To servo our future needs; For virtues ripening ever, Like harvests full in ear; I love my love in autumn, And love her all the year. I love my love in winter, For charities untold, For warmth ot household welcome, For looks that thaw thecold ; For harmless mirth and pastime, And rich as christmaschcer; I love my love in winter, And love her all the year. SUT LOVENGOOD'S LIZZARDS. 58 EIT DCLLEK3 KEW-ARD. 'This cash will be paid in korn or produce lu be colectid at ur aboute nex kampuietin by euy wun what kotchis him, for the carkus ov wun Sutty Lovengood ded ur alive an safely gia over tu the kare of Passon John Bullin at Squire mack Junkius fur a raisin or the devil pcrmiscusly, discumfurtin the wimen powerful an a skarin ov folks gineraly at the ratil snaix springs big meeting." signed by me "John Bcllix the Passon." "attested tu by Jehu Wethoron." I found written copies of 'the above highly intelligible and vindictive proclamation stuck up on very blacksmith shop, doggery and store door in the Frog Mountain range. lis bloodthirsty, vindictive spirit, its style, and, above all, its chiragra;.hy, interested me to the extent of stealing one from a tree for pre servation. In a few days I found Sut in a good crowd in front of Ca'pehers's small doggery, and as he proved to be abont "in tune," I read it to him. "Tes, George, that ar dockymint am in ycarn est, sartin. They dus want me powerful bad, but I spect eit dullers wont fetch me. I'll go myself for fifty, planked down, ef yu'Il go long and see me hev justice. Lite, lite, old feller, an let that roan boss ov yourn blow a ' little, and I'll splain thi3 cussed afar what has ruinated my karacter as a pius purson in the society about here. Ye see, I went to last year's big meetin at- Ratil Snaix Springs, an wer sittin in a nice shady place conversin with "a fiien in the hi.ckil berry thicket, when the fust thing I know'd I woke from a trance, what I'd been knocked inter "by a fout ycarold hick ory stick ia the hand of ole Passon Bullin, durn bis alligator lookin hide ! an' he wur standing a straddle ov me, a foamin at the month an a preaehin tu me about sartin sins an my wickedness ginerally. My poor frien wur gone, an I was glad ov it, fur I thot he meut tu kill me with his club ef he failed tu . preach me ta deth, an I didn't want her tu see me die. "Who was the friend you speak of, Sut V "N-n-n o-v y-o-it-r b-i-s-n-i-s duin your lit tle ankshus picter ! But I'll tell ye one thing, George ; that nite a neighbor gal got an orful counfounded stroppin frnm her mam with the stirrup lethor over a saddil, an oldPassin Bul lin had et snpper tliar that nite; and what's ! , w3 nur all,,she cooked it fur him an begged him a trimblin and crying not ta tell on her, ' the durne, infernal, hiperkritikal, pot-bellied, ; whiskey-wasting old ground hog ; but I paid him fur it all, ef I haint I will. I mean tu " keep a paying ov him all the time. Well, at nex big meetin at Ratil Snaix, I wur on hand, - a solemn as a hat kerier at collection time, . far I had promised the old bog tu cum an be . oonvarted, jist to keep him from killin me. I tuck a seat on the steps ov the pnlpit, to prove H wur in ycarnest. Thcr wus a monstrous ' crowd in that ar grove, an ole Bullin wur a preaehin tn em at an orful rate how the Hell Sarpints wud serve em if they didn't repent how they'd ciawl over them, rap thar tails roun thar necks, poke thar tungs inter thar eyes an blow inter thar cars ; and ef it wur a woman, how they'd coil in her bussum, an try tu crawl down under her frockstring. An he had em hot, hollering, au scared ; the fac is, the thing was a workin powerful. Now I'd kotch five big grey pot-bellied lizzards, and bed em in a little narrer bag, what I made a pnrpos thar tails, at the bottom, an picked as tite ns a bundil OT sVicks. "So while he was atarin onto his tip-toes, mbenenst tu any body,! ontied my poke an Tit tho mouth tip under h britches leg, and g 'a their legs a squcese an a shake, when they ah'nk tip his bar leg, making or a noise sor ter ike squirrels a climbin a she bark hick ory. He stopped preaehin an lookeafor a mo men iike he wur a listnin for suntbing,, sorter like b, ole sow dus when she hears you whistle for tfct fogs. I ge a big groan, an hild my "bed atecn my knus. Then ho commenctd a slapinov his self ar ye cut the steak out -ov a beef, then he'd fecu a rub whar a bosses tail sprouts, then he stomp, then run his -hand atween his waisbuian i,j3 shirt emd reach down au roun mitily w it then he spread bis big legs und give bis. .ck a good shakin, sort ov a rub agin the pulpit sorter liko a hog scratches agin a stump ; a leaning to his work powerful, and squirming generally az it he'd jist cum outen a dog bed, or hed slep on a pis ant trail. About this time wun ov my lizzards (scared and hurt, I spose, by all his rubin and scratcbin and slappin) poked his hed out a tween the passon's shirt collar an his old brown neck, tuck a peep at the circumstances, and dodged back agin. "Old Bullin's speech now com tu him ; his eyes stickin out like two buckeyes flung agin a mud wall, an his voice trimblin : Sez he, "Bretberin, take keer ov ycrsefs, the Hell Sar pints hev got me !" Sum ov the wimmin fotch a painter yell, an a ramrod leged doctor what sot near me, allowed it wur a clar case ov De licious Tremendjus, an I thot ho wur rite, fur it wur tremendjns afore it wus dun with. Off went tho claw-hammer coat, an he flung it a hind him like he wur a gwine inter a Cte, (he hed no jackit on). Nex he fotch his shirt over his hed faster nur I got outen my pasted wun, an he flung it up in the air like he didn't care a durn if hit kept up forever, but hit lodged onto a black jack. I seed wun ov my lizzards a racin about over the big old dirty lookin shirt, skared like the devil. Then he gin a sorter shake an a twist, on he cum outen his britches, an he tuck em by the bottom ov the legs an swung em round his hed a few times an then fotch cm down cherslap over the frutit ov the pulpit. You cud have beam the smash a quarter ov a mile J Nigh onto about fifteen shortened biskit, a briled chickin with his legs crossed, a big dubil-bladed nife, a slab ov ter backcr, a pipe, sum copper ore specimens, a heep of brakin' glass, a cork, a sprinkil ov whiskey, a squirt an' three ov my lizzards flew perm iskusly all over that ar meetin' ground, outen the tipper ind ov tbem big flax britches. Wun ov the smartest ov my blue lizzards lit bed fust inter the bussum ov a fat woman, as big as a skin'd boss, and nigh onto as ngly, who sot thirty yards off a fannin' herselt with a tucky tail, an' smart tu tho last, bit com menced runnin' down. So she wur bound to faint, an' did it fust rate ; jist flung her tucky tail np in the air, rolled down the bill, tangled her legs an' garters in the top nv a hnckilber ry bush, an' war thar all safe, fair an' qniet when I left. "Now old Bullin had nuthin left on him but a pair of bevy low quartered shoes, short woolia socks, an' eel skin garters tu keep off the cramp, an' his skare wur a growiu on him fast. He wur plum crazy, fur he jist spit in his hands an' leaped over the frunt uv the pul pit rite inter the middle uv the pius part uv the kongregation, kerdiff, and sot in tu gittin' away. lie run, or rether went in a lumberin' gallop, heavy, like an old wagon boss skared at a locomotive. When he jumped a bench he shook the yearth an' his self to. Bonnets an' fans clared the way, an' he hed a purfectly fair track tu the woods. lie weighed nigh on to three hundred, hud a black stripe down his back like onto an old bridle rein, an' his bel ly looked about the size an' culler uv a big beef paunch, an' hit a shakin' from side to side. He leaned back frum it like a little fel ler a totin' uv a big drum at muster, an' I hearn it slosh plum tu wher I wur. Thar wur cramp knot3 on his legs as big as walnuts, an' all over he minded me uv a crazy ole elephant whatwnr possessed uv the devil, with hits years, snout an' tushes sawed off, an' rared up au' gwine on hits hind legs away frum emedi ate trubble and tribulation. He did the loud est an' scariest an' fussiest runnin' I ever seed sicce dad raced with tho hornets, to be no faster than it wur. Well, he disappeared in the thicket, and ov all the noises ye ever beam, it wur thar in a cirkle of two hundred feet ar thar abouts sum wimen screamin they wus the skeery wuns ; sum larfin they wus the wicked wus; sum cryin they wus the fool wuns, (sorter ov the Lovengood stripe ;) sum tryin tu git a way ur hide thar faces they wus the modest wuns ; sum lookin' arter ole Bullin they wus the curious wuns ; sum hangin to tliar bows they wus the sweet wuns ; sum on thar Knees with thar eyes shut, but thar faces turned tho way the old mudturkil wus a runnin tbey wus tho deceitful wuns ; sum duin nothin they wus the waitio wuns, and the most dan gerous ov all ov em by a durnd long sites. I tuck a big skeer myself, arter a bibil about as big as abrick4adisiplin, an a book called a kataplasm, a few rocks, and sich liko fruit spattered onto the pulpit ni onto my bed ; and as the Lovengoods, durn em knows nothin but tu run when they git skard, I jist put toward the swamp on the krick. As I started a black bottil ov boldface smashed agin a tree fornist me. Sum durnd fool perfessor dun this, who hed more zeal then sence ; fur I say that any man who'd wast a quart ov good whisky fur the chance ov knockin a poor devil liko mo down with it, if the bottil was wurth nuthin, isn't as smart as old squire Mackmullin, an he shot his self with a hoe handil, and hit warnt loaded at that. Well, you know, George, I ortcr run fast jist look at these legs I used em sum atween that meetin grownd an the swamp, and they haint kotch me yet. "Ole Barbelly Bullin (as they call him) since uis tribulation with the hell sarpints, haint rreched but wunst, and then he hadn't an wo wam ta beer him. His tex was, "nakid I cum onto this wurld an I'm agwine outon it the same way ef I'm spared till then." I'm told twar a powerful sarmint it was hearn three miles. He proved that nakidness warnt much, arter all,et you take the rite Tiew ov the thlng-that hell sarpints ov all sizes wus skee ry, cold and trubilsum that it warnt tn be expected ov him, a poor, weak, frail wan ov the dust, to be sarpint ur lizzard proof either that wun small sarpint of the tribe ov.mll cizidick ruinated a wurld through an woman while he wur beset with a barri! full ov em. An sixteentbly an finally that Sut Lovengood is the biggest raskil, fool, and skare-crow ever hatched in the mountain range. "Now, George, that all may be bo, but I want you tu tell oldGrownhog this for me ef he'll let me alone I'll let him alona; and ehe don't, if I don't lizzard him agin I wish I may be durned inter a poultice. Lets go ta the spring and mix a little ov hit with this yere whisky, (shaking his flask,) afore you start. Mind, tell ole Barbelly what I sed abont a nuther big skeer, with say a peck ur a peck and a half ov lizzards fry an skeer him if you kin good bye." - GOV. PACKER'S INAUGURAL. The inauguration of William F. Packer, as Governor of Pennsylvania, took place on Tues day the 19th inst. The concourse of people was large, and the proceedings were very interesting. After the oath of office had been administered, Gov. Packer delivered his in augural address. He expressed his thanks to the people for the honor conferred npon him, and engaged to regard the will of the people, the public good, and the commands of the Constitution as the guiding lights by which his course shall be directed. He desired to cul tivate the most amicable relations with his fel low citizens of the Senate, and House of Rep resentatives, and to unite with them in the a doption of all such measures as the public good may require. He alluded to the duties of the Executive, the veto power, disapproved of the practice of the Governor keeping bills in bis possession until they become laws without his signature, and stated that all bills not approved by him within ten days after the adjournment may bo considered as awaiting the next meet ing of the General Assembly to be returned with the Executive disapproval. In regard to the bank question, he says : "The currency of the State is in such a dis ordered condition that a general and whole some pnblic opinion demands its reform and the establishment of effectual barriers against future convulsions. This is a subject which will test the intelligence, the firmness, and the patriotism of the representatives of the peo ple in the legislative department, and may im pose grave responsiblities upon the Executive. My views are decidedly hostile to the emission and circulation of small notes as a currency ; to the increase of banking capital under pres ent arrangements ; and to the issue of bank paper upon securities inadequate for their re demption. The want of uniformity in the le gal provisions under which existing banks op erate, is objectionable. In the revision and amendment of our banking system, the public interests, in my opinion, demand tho extension of the specie basis upon which issues arc made; the suppression of the smaller denominations of notes heretofore allowed ; thorough reports of the condition, and business of banks with their frequent publication ; additional securi ty, (other than specie,) to consist of the bonds of this State or of the United States, for the redemption of circulating notes, including in all cases proper individual liability of stock holders and directors, fitted for convenient and actual enforcement ; with a supervisory and controlling power in some proper officer or de partment of the Government, to restrain or suspend the action of banks in case of their violation or evasion of the law. "When a specie currency shall be secured to the people by prohibiting the circulation of bills of a small denomination, it will be highly desirable that the fiscal affairs of the State governments shall be wholly separated from those of the banks : in other words, that the money transactions of the government, both in its collections and disbursements, shall be in tho legal coin of the country. Whenever a practicable, convenient and efficient scheme for the operations of the Treasury upon such a ba.-iis can be presented to me, by the repre sentatives of the people, it will meet with a cheerful approval. There are difficulties in tho case, however, far greater than those sur mounted by the general government, in the es tablishment of its Independent Treasury sys tem ; but the object being one of the first mag nitude, and calculated to exercise a most sal utary influence upon the action of the govern ment, and upon the business of the banks and the people, it is well worthy of earnest con sideration. . "In reforming the currency, a single Slate can accomplish but a moderate amount of good, however sincere, intelligent and earnest it may be, without the co-operation of other States, and especially of those which adjoin it. Bank notes are not stopped in their flow by imaginary State lines, nor does it seem possi- j ble for a State altogether to prevent foreign notes from circulating within her borders, even by the most stringent enactments. We must, therefore, invoke onr sister States to join with us in the repression of small paper, and in such other particulars of reform as re quire for complete success their co-operation. Meantime, to the extent of our power, let us exert ourselves to furnish our citizens with a safe and stable currency ; to prevent future fi nancial revulsions similar to that under which the community bas for some tirao been strug gling ; and to relieve the Government in its fiscal action, from the danger of depreciated or worthless paper, and the embarrassments arising from dependence upon corporations of her own creation." The Governor says tinder the sinking fund act of 1849, the public indebtedness has been but slightly diraished ; but that he shall con sider it ono of the leading duties of his admin istration to see that the recent amendment to the Constitution relative to an effective sink ing fund, bo carried out in letter and spirit. He considers a thorough revision of the laws in relation to incorporations is imperiously de manded by the public interest. He says : Our Common School system is justly dis tinguished as one of the most practical and efficient in tho Union. Let us then cherish this traditional policy, coming down to us from the fathers of the Commonwealth, and by ev ery means in our power foster and strengthen the measures now successfully producing the results so ardently desired by the patriotic men who have gone before us." Gov. Packer then alludes to the Kansas question, and takes the Douglas view of it in the following paragraph: "To the people of Pennsylvania the admis sion of a new State into tho Union into that confederacy of which she is a member must be at all times a subject of high interest. And I believe I express their sentiments as well as my own, in declaring that all the qualified electors of a Territory should have a full and fair opportunity to participate in selecting del egates to form a Constitution preparatory to admission as a State, and, if desired by them, they should be allowed an unqualified right to rote upon such Constitution after it is framed. Of course those who then fail to vote, in either case, cannot complain that the proceeding goes on without their participation. It is to be hoped that Congress will make such provi sion for other Territories that the present dif ficulty will have no repetition in the future." A GOOD SPEECn. Hon. Eli Thater, of Massachusetts, made a speech in the lower House of Congress on the 7th January, which produced quite a sen sation. The subtle irony and sarcasm of the speech, and his original and ingenious method of carrying tho war into Africa, evidently bothered the fire-eaters much, and raised a laugh at their expense, which they finally in dulged in themselves. We give the follow ing extracts : "Then, sir, by what agency may we thus A mericanize Central America ? 1 reply to the question, by the power of original emigration. That is abundantly able to give us Central A merica as soon as we want it. We could have Americanized Central America half a dozen times by this power, within tho last three years, if there bad been no danger or appre hension of meddlesome or vexatious execu tive interference. "But if we are to use this mighty power of organized emigration, wo want a different kind of neutrality laws from those which we now bavo ; and, therefore, I am desirous that this committee shall recommend something which shall not subject us to the misconstruction of the President of the United States or to his construction at all. I want these neutrality laws so plain that every man may know wheth er he is in the right or in the wrong, whether he is violating those laws or is not violating them. For, Mr. Chairman, with our new-fashioned kind of emigration, with onr organized emigration,which goes in colonies, and, there fore, must of necessity to some extent resera ble a military organization, there is great dan ger that a President with a dim intellect may make a mistake, and subject to harrassing and vexations delays, and sometives to loss and in jury, a peaceful, qniet colony, going out to settle in a neighboring State. "Mr. Chairman, I can illustrate this position, l'ou, sir, remember, that in tho year 1856, when it was bad travelling across tho State of Missouri on the way to Kansas, that our colo nies went through the State of Iowa, and thro' the Territory of Nebraska. These were peace ful, qniet colonies, going to settle the Territo ry of Kansas, by that long and wearsome jour ney, becauso It was bad travelling through the State of Missouri. You remember that one of these colonies of organized emigrants, which went from Maine and Massachusetts, and from various other Northern States, was arrested just as it was passing over the southern boun dary of the Territory of Nebraska, on its way to its future heme in Kansas. It was a peace ful, quiet colony, going out with its emigrant wagons all in a row, and therefore looked something like a military organization going out with their women and children, with sub soil plows and coulters a yard long, laughter with pick-axes, with crowbars, with shovels, and with garden seeds. . "This beautiful colony was arrested by the officials of the present Executive's predeces sor. It was by some mistake, no doubt. Per haps he took the turnip seed for powder ; and I doubt whether the case would have been bet ter if the President Lad beep there himself. This colony was arrested within our own do minion. It was not an emigration to a foreign country and there was no danger of Interfer- i ence with the neutrality laws. These qniet, peaceful colonists, because their wagons went in a row, for mutual defence, through the wild uncultivated Territory of Nebraska, where there were Indians, wero arrested as a milita ry organization. . - - "We do not want hereafter, either within the limits of theUnited States or without them, any such meddlesome or vexations interfer ence by the executive powers of the Govern ment. Therefore, I say, let us have some neu trality laws that can be understood. If there had been no apprehensions in the North about tho neutrality laws, if we bad not expected that whatever emigration we might have fitted out for Central America would have been ar rested within the marine league of the harbor of Boston, why, we would have colonized Cen tral America a dozen years ago, and had it rea dy for admission into tho Union before this time. We want a modification or an elucida tion of tho neutrality laws, and I trust that it will be the duty of the committee so to report. The Northern States are, as the States of Northern Europe were designated by Tacitus, ofiicina gentium, 'the manufactory of nations.' We can make one State a year. In the last thrco years w& have colonized almost wholly the Territory of Kansas. We have furnished settlers to Minnesota and Nebraska, and the Lord knows where, and we have not exhausted one-half of our natural increase. We have re ceived accessions to our numbers in that time, from foreign countries of more than one mil lion souls, and now we have no relief; wo arc worse off to-day than we were when we began to colonize Kansas. We must have an outlet somewhere for our surplus population. Laughter. "Sir, I have a resolution in my pocket, which I have been carrying about for days, waiting patiently for an opportunity to present it in this House, instructing the Committee on Ter ritories to report a bill organizing and opening for settlement the Indian territory. Mr. chair man, I came to this conclusion with reluc tance, that we must have the Indian territory. But necessity knows no law. We must go somewhere. Something must be opened to the descendants of the Pilgrims. Laughter. Why, sir, just look at it. We are cramped in between the Atlantic ocean and the Rocky Mountains! The bounding billows of the wes tern tide of our emigration are dashpg fierce ly against the base of the Rocky Mountains. "We come now to the obstruction of the great natural barrier. Nothing is more natu ral than that this tide should flow back. Will it flow over towards Canada 7 Not at all. It has already begun to flow over the "Old Do minion," laughter, and into other States. Missouri is almost inundated with it. We cannot check this tide of emigration. Yon might as well try to shut out by curtains the light of the aurora borealis. No such thing can be accomplished. This progress must be onward, and we must have territory. We must have territory ; and I think it most opportune that the proposition seems to be before the country to Americanize Central America. "Now, sir, I said I was astonished that gen tlemen who come from States bordering upon the Gulf had advocated this project, and not the Representatives who come from Northern States. Let us see the reasons why the North should be more zealous than the South in this movement. In the State of Massachusetts we have one hundred and twenty-seven people to a square mile, by the census of 1850. In the State of Rhode Island we have one hundred and twelve to the squaru mile, by the same census. In the State of Connecticut we have seventy-nine. In the State of New York we have sixty-five. So you see, it was not ficti jn, it was not poetry, not a 'stretch of the imagi nation, when I told you that the descendants of the t Pilgrims were in a tight place. Laughter. "But how is It with the States which border upon the Gulf ? Look at it and see. They have, some of them, cighty-nine-hundredtbs of a man to the square mile. Laughter. In another one we have one and the forty-eighth-hundredth part of a man to the square mile ; and, taking them altogether, we have just a bout three men to the square milo in all those States which border upon the Gulf of Mexico. "But it is not only for the purpose of furnish ing an outlet for our immense population in the North that I now advocate the American izing of Central America. The interests of commerce, as well as this great argument of necessity, are on onr side. Who has the trade beyond Central America? We have whale fisheries in the Northern Ocean which build up great cities upon the eastern shore cf Mass achusetts. Wo have trade with Oregon and California, with the Sandwich Islands, and the western coast of South America. We are opening a trade, with the empires of China and Japan, and we must of necessity have in Central America certain factors and certain commercial agencies, who, in a very few years, with their families and relatives, will ' make a dense population in Central America. I say, then, that for the interest of commerce we want Central America Americanized. .This commercial interest is, unfortunately, a sec tional interest In these States. It is emphati cally a Northern Interest, and, therefore, as a Northern man; ! I advocate especially that Central America should be Americanized. . Now, sir, it would be folly for me to arrne. and there is no kind of teason for supposing that these States expect to do anything about colonizing Central America. They cannot af ford to loso a man. They had better give away $2000 than to lose a single honest, In dustrious citizen. Tbey cannot afford it. I have left out of this calculation, to be sure. the enumeration of the slaves in these States, for the gentleman from TennesseeMr. May nard informed us that the question of Slavery did not come into this argument properly. and I agree with him there. I think he may agree with me, that by no possibility can Sla very ever be established in Central America. That is my belief. Just fix your neutrality laws, and we will fill up Central America be fore 18C0 sufficiently to bo comfortable. "It may be said that Yankees, when they get down into Central America, will, if tho climate is suited for It, make use of slave la bor. I have heard that argument before ; and it has been asserted that the Yankees who go into slave States oftentimes turn slaveholders and outdo tho Southern men themselves. I have no doubt that they outdo tbem if they do anything in that line at all. Laughter. The Yankee has never become a slaveholder unless he has been forced to it by tho social relations of the slave State where he lived and the Yankee who bas become a slaveholder, has, every day of his life thereafter, felt in his very bones the bad economy of the sys tem. It could not be otherwise. Talk about our Yankees, who go to Centra! America, be coming slaveholders ! Why, sir, we can buy a negro power. In a steam-engine, for ten dollars (laughter), and we can clothe and feed that power for ono year for five dollars (renewed laughter); and are we the men to give $1,000 for an African slave, and $150 a year to feed and clothe him No, sir. ' Setting aside the arguments about sentimentality, and about philanthropy, on this question ; setting aside all poetry and fic tion, he comes right down to the practical question is it profitable ? The Yankee re plies, "Not at all." Then there is no danger of men who go from Boston to Central Amer ica ever owning Slaves, unless they are com pelled to, by tbeir social relations there. "If a man goes from Boston into Louisiana, and no body will speak to him unless be has a slave ; nobody invite him to a social entertain ment unless he owns a negro and it he can not get a wife unless he has a negro, then, sir, very likely he may make up his mind to own a negro. Laughter. Mr. Thayer closed by offering an order of inquiry, as to the political condition of the people of Nicaragua, and whether they invito colouies from the United States to settle a mong them, and also, whether the soil, cli mate, and other natural advantages of that country are such as to encourage emigration thither from the Northern States. DOMESTIC ECOX03IF. Sugar raox the Chinese Caxe. We bare received from Joseph S. Lovering, Oakhill, Philadelphia county, five different samples of sugar,the results of experiments, made by him with the Chinese sugar cane. Mr. Lovering planted the seeds last year, to determine the value of the plant in its sugar-producing qual ities. First he established, by polarscopio observation, the presence of crystallized sugar in the cane, and then he began hisxpertment, of which be gives a detailed account in a pam phlet which he has published, and to which we refer those interested in the .matter, our purpose being to record only the general re suit. Tho fiist experiment was a discouraeine one, and the dark visced mass stood six days without the sign of a crystal ; but being kept warm four days longer yielded a crop of solt crystals. The second produced a yellow- brown sugar, as dry as and about the color of second quality Cuba sugar used by refiners. For the acre C25 lbs. sugar, and 123 gallons morasses, proaucea irorn I,ii3 canes, yield ing 1,737 gallons juice, weighing 9 lbs. per gallon, or 15,033 lbs., being 4 per cent, of sugar and 9.50 per cent, of molasses, or 13.50 per cent, together. The third experiment was a failure. The fourth was very successfu pro ducing 1,221.85 lbs to the acre and 74.39 gal lons oi molasses. I ne rmu produced white sugar directly from tho cane without refining' The seventh experiment was in refining, and 15 lbs. of good loaf sugar were produced from the proceeds of the experiment considered fail ures. The conclusion that Mr. L. comes to is that an acre will probably yield 1,466.22 lbs. of sugar and 74.39 gallons molasses from 1,847 gallons of juice.. The weather was unpropiti ous to the ripening of the cane, and, probably, ten per cent, was lost in consequence, which would increase the .quantity to 1,612 lbs. of sugar and 81 8-10 gallons of molasses, a yield very nearly corresponding to the best conduc ted Louisiana plantations. The best time for sugar making is when the seeds are all ripe and after several frosts, the thermometer be low 30 degrees ; frost or hard freezing docs not hnrt the juice nor the sugar, but warm weather after frost docs. Cane cut and boos ed, or shocked in the field will probably keep unchanged a long while. When the juice is obtained, the process of sugar making should proceed continuously without delay. Tha clarification should be as perfect as possible bullock's blood and milk of. lime will an. swer for clarification, skimming being requir ed constantly. The concentration and boil ing done after clarification should be as rapid as possible in shallow evaporators. With these conditions secured, it is as easy, Mr. L. says, to make good sugar from the Chinese sugar-cane as to make a pot of good mush, and easier than to make a kettle of good apple butter. These experiments, conducted by an intelli gent gentleman, extensively engaged in the sugar-refining business in this city, settle at once all question respecting the production of sugar from the Chinese cane, and the ale of that plant to the agriculture of the country. Tbey are of the most reliable character, and coming from a person of his. experience, can not fail to make a strong impression npon the minds of all interested in the -culture of the new plant. We return our thanks to Mr. Love ring for enabling us to lay his interesting facts before tho public We bVe, at the Ledger office, specimens of sngar and molasses, which any per may ,ee Dy calling. Ledgtr.