i - -- ' - i ' ' " ' - " " , . , . n.. . . i i in - -- ----- , BY S. B. BOW. CLEAMTELD, PA., WEDNESDAY, APE1L 28, 1858. VOL. l-m U: Written for the "Raftsman's Journal." MEDITATION IN A GRAVE YARD. There is a sptrit in the passing breeze, A soul inspiring and etherial spirit ; 'Tis in the shining gun, and in the storm, And in the thunder-cloud, and in the stars. -nd in this field of bones, that houso of God . spirit that lifts up the soul or men, And makes it feci and own its magic power, .And gird itself for meditative thought, To muso upon Jhc present, past and future. ' .And hold converse with nature, and with God. Here by the ashes ofnij dearest friends, .And by the sepulchres of sainted dead, .And by that temple of most holy God, AVhere he in mercy sent his spirit down -To quicken deathless souls, yet dead in sin, And give to every one their blessing meet, I sit me down to meditate my end. A few short rolling years have passed away ince I, a stripling, at my mother's knee, Waspleased with fancies, tho'U of future years. A few more rolling years will pass away And here among the dead, and food for worms, This body, now with youthful vigor warm, " Will moulder and return to kindred dust, l'erhaps a few years longer the grey stone May whisper to the careless passer by, The dust of an immortal, mortal man, Who left a friend behind, reposes here. A few years moro, and that grey stone itself M ill also crumble into dust again. And name, and place of rest be all forgot And yet when other years shall pass away, And other age? shall succeed those parsed, I'll stand again on earth, and iinny lot. Tailed from the grave, and from ray sleeping dust, To live immortal in eternal youth. The "last of earth,'' the dying statesman cried. The phrase is eloquent, but not correct. The earth will-be renewed for man's abode ; And tears, and pain, and want, no more distress The happy dwellers on this earth of love, And ages. ages, ages on shall roll. And no more change shall pass upon me then, For change hath died, and time itself hath died, Or passed perchance unto some other sphere, Where time and change may live a little longer. LotiAS. A SHOT FOR A "WIFE; OR, A DOUBLE DISAPPOINTMENT. It was rather late wheiMr. Thomas Twillet awoke, one particular morning last summer, lie sat up in bed and yawned, and rubbed his eyes spitefully with his knuckles. Then he laid himself down again, but not to sleep; for lie had fixed his eyes intently upon a very ser pentine crack in the ceiling overhead, upon which he continued to gaze utiintermittingly for the space of full five minutes. . It appears, however, that his mind was not occupied with the fissure in the plaster, but was, on the con trary, engaged in reflecting upon a breadi which had suddenly opened . between himself and his former friend and intimate, Mr. Nathan Gutter. For weeks their friendship had been weakening, but not till the night previous was it completely annihilated, at a party which was attended by both young men. The cause ol the difficulty was a woman a young woman nanted Eugenie Erwig.- "The conduct ol Nutter last night," said Thomas Twillet to himself, his eyes still bent upon the ceilrng, "is more than I can tamely endure; it is more than I will endure. His endeavor to monopolize the attention of Miss Erwig, knowing, as he well does, that my af fections are all centered in that young lady, cannot be looked upon in any other light than that of being a studied insult tome. Nutter shall hear from me ; he shall know my opinion of his acls,"and he shall desist from proceed ing further in a like manner. DearEugenie!" exclaimed the young man, after a few moments silent thought, "ere long, I hope to make you all my own. Beautiful being loveliest of the ex affectionate heart twelve thousand dol lars !" and a soft benevolent sort of smile was bestowed upon the insensible ceiling as he concluded his broken cj;icrJations. A few moments after he sprang to the floor, and proceeded to make his toilet. "I will see the misguided young man at once!" said he; 'I will confrout Nut'er, and prove to him the baseness of his course ot ac tion." When he had partaken of his breakfast, Thomas Twillet went forth in search of his ri val. He had walked the distance of a couple of blocks, when, suddenly, he espied the very person he wished to find, coining rapidly to ward him. "I was about to call upon you," said Thomas, "and this nieetiug is quite oppor tune." The air of Nathan Nutter was plainly hos tile as he answered : "And I was on my way to visit you. I have 'something to say to you, sir." "Very well, sir very well !" exclaimed Mr. Twillet, in a supercilious tone ; "I also have something to impart to you. Let us turn down this street; it is deserted, and we shall be uninterrupted." They walked on for a few moments in silence. "Last night, sir," said Mr. Nutter, at length opening his batteries -upon the other, "last aiight, your conduct was such as to call for an .explanation. I now call for that explanation. I wish to know, sir, why, knowing as you do, iny attachment for Miss Erwig, you presume to thrust your attentions upou her on every .occasion T" - . Mr. Twil.et stopped slrort in his walk, and looked at the other with amazement, mingled Mtl rising anger. "I hardly know what to think of such impu dence!" cried he, as he started on again. "It is your attentions to the lady, sir, which are offensive to nic." "Ha! ha! Goon, sir; I am Astonished at nothing in you." ' "I will go on. And I will say, sir, that your Attempts to steal the affections of one to whom 1 am attached is contemptible. Miss Erwig, sir, has longxbeen the object of my love ;,I intend to marry her." "Then allow me to say you intend to do something you will never accomplish. She is mine, sir, and I will never be frustrated in my designs by you." - "Don't be too positive." "I will be as positive as I please, sir," cried Nutter, who bad worked himself into a pas sion. "The whole object of my seeking for you was to say to you this : I intend Miss Er wig shall be mine, and, consequently, desire that you will no longer interfere in that quarter." . 'Have you Been commissioned by Miss Er wig to tell me this 1" asked Twillet, in a tone f scorn. "That hag nothing to do with the matter." "Pardon me, but it has everything to do with it." "Then I am to understand that joq will continue your attentions to her." "Most assuredly." "But, I tell you, you must desist." "And I say I will not." "Beware, sir? You bad better reflect." "Beware !" repeated Twillet, in a contemp ttionstone; "and of what should I beware? of whom should I beware 1 Your threats are contemptible ! I don't care that for them !" and he snapped his fingers very iusultingiy under the very nose or the other. "Don't don't do that to me !" cried Nut ter, in accents of anger, "1 am not in a mood to hear much rrom you." "Oh, such words can't frighten me ! And now, that you have spoken, I hava a word to say. You must give up Miss Erwig.'.' "What, I!" exclaimed Nutter, in amaze ment, "I repeat it, you. You must gtvo her up at once." . "Never!" "Then, sir, the consequences be upon your own head." - - "Mr. Thomas Twillett uttered theso words in a menacing tone of voice; his mind sugges ting at he moment a vague idea of something of a tragic nature which he might be compel led to resort to in case his opponent remained obstinate. "Ha! ha! the consequences!" repeated Nutter, in a tone of disdain ; "what do I care fo.r consequences ?" "It is a serious matter, sir, more serious than you imagine." "To you, indeed,it may prove so, but for myself I have no fear." "There is but one way, I sec, to settle this affair," said Twillet, at length ; "we must fight." Nathan Nutter clenched his fists, and scowl ed fiercely. 'Come on !" said he, with a smile of irony. "I'll give you all the satisfaction you wish. There is a fine spot, where wo can have it all to ourselves," and he pointed to a vacant lot a short distance ahead, surrounded by a high fence. Thomas Twillet smiled derisively. "Think you I would, resort to such ignoble means V he cried. "No, sir, you mistake my meaning." "Coward! You refuse then, to do what yon yourself proposed 1" . "No, sir!" exclaimed Twillet, with a hero ic air! "I mean that you shall fight me with deadly weapons. Blood blood alone can set tle this!" "Let it be as you say ; I am not to be daun ted ; I wil fight you whenever you will. The death of one of us shall decide who shall win the lady !" "Very well, sir. You shall fight. Select a friend; for you shall hear from me before night." "The earlier the better. I will be prepared." Arriving at a corner, they bowed stifily and separated. The same day a challenge was sent and ac cepted. Seconds were appointed, .and the belligcrants anxiously awaited the time of meeting. ' - They were to meet at a retired spot on Sta ten Island. The weapons were to be pistols. The distance decided upon was fifty yards. The time set for the encounter was next morn ing at seven o'clock. That night, be it privately spoken, neither slept. Both wrote affectionate letters' to their relatives, and both regretted a hundred times that they had ever seen the young lady for whose sake they were about to brave so much. But having gone so far, they. could not now retreaf. At the tated hour both parties were on the field. After saluting, the seconds retired together a short distance and proceeded to load the pistols. The principals viewed the opperations wtth faint hearts and pale cheeks. Both en deavored to assume an air of nonchalance ; but it wasa failure. Still, neither one attempt ed a reconciliation. The two seconds, having concluded their arrangements, returned. Each one spoke a few words of encouragement to his friend, and then they took their stations. The weapons were placed in the hand of the adversaries, and the fatal word was spoken. The explosion of two pistols rang -out upon the air, two loud shrieks were heard above the noise of the weapons, and two forms a moment after were prostrate upon the bosom of the earth. The seconds rushed to the assistance of the fallen men. It was soon discovered that neither had been touched. The seconds were the first to ascer tain the fact, and it took some little time to persuade the two champions that it was indeed so, Nutter asserting in a positive manner, be tween his groans, that the bullet of the other had gone completely through his body, and Twillet for a considerable time affirming that his brains were entirely blown away. Finally however,they were induced to believe that they had been .mistaken, and arose to their feet. The seconds declared at this point that the law of honor was satisfied, and hoped that a re conciliation would take place. The rivais in terposed no objection, but on the contrary hastened to carry oat the suggestion of their friends. They shook hands, uttered the most profuse expressions of eternal friendship, and started upon their return to the city. . "My dear Nutter said Twillet, as they walked along arm in arm, "I presume yon no longer have the least intention of claiming the hand of Miss Erwig." "My excellent friend," rcpliend Mr. Nutter, "yo'u are certainly laboring under a great mis take in supposing anything of the kind. However, I cannot doubt that you have sur rendered all pretensions in that quarter !" "Far from it ; I intend to urge my suit more vigorously than ever." Both frowned, but recollecting what tbey had just passed through, and fearful of bring ing about another similar performance, they prudently forebore to give way to anger. "Well," said Nutter.after quite a long pause, "I see that we are in about the same position as we were before wo came here, and our diffi culty is not yet settled. But let us proceed in an amicable manner to a final arrangement of it." "Agreed. But how do you propose that it shall be accomplished V "In a very simple way, and one which we were blind to overlook yesterday," "Well, let me know it." I will it is this: wo both, I think, love Mi Erwig." "Ji ' "I think wo have fully proved that this mor "But it is not to be snpposed that Miss Er. wig loves both of us at least with the same devotion." thiak you are quite correct there." " n ell, let us go to her and declare our love, and let her decide between us at once." "Capital ! Why did we not think of that before ?" "Then you concur in my advice 1" "Most assuredly," "But it must be understood that her decis ion shall settle aU difierences between. us r You promise to bear no malice if you are not .the favored one ?" "I do ; and I hope you will act in the same way." "I certainly will. And now for an interview with the lady." That day Miss Eugenie Erwig, a very beau tiful and a very sensible young ladv, was sur prised from a visit from Messrs. Nutter and Twillet, who, shortly after their arrival, pro ceeded to acquaint the young , lady with the object of their mission. Mr. Twillet opened on the topic. "We have called to-day," said he "for a particular purpose." Miss Eugenie bowed, and listened attentively- ' "I think I may say, for a very particular purpose ;" added Mr. Twillet, somewhat em barrassed ; "and we wish you to do us an espe cial favor." Mr. Twillet having arrived at this point looked for encouragement at Mr. Nutter ; Mr. Nutter smiled and nodded approval, and Mr. Twillet continued : "Yes, Miss Erwig, you can do us a great fa vor indeed." Miss Erwig opened hgr eyes a little wider with curiosity and astonishment. "I shall be happy to oblige you if in my power," said she. "The truth is, then, to come at once to the point, I love yon !" "We!" exclaimed Mr.Nutter, quickly, "ire love you !" "Kight," said Twillet; "he is correct ; we love you !" The young lady heard with unfeigned sur prise. "What," uttered she, "am I to understand ? I do not comprehend you." "As I have said," replied Twillet in a ten der tone, "ire love you. You cannot be igno rant that for some time past we have both paid you much attention, and have both no grea ter wish than to win your heart and band. 1 have for gome time been aware of my friend's passion ; my friend has for some time been aware of mine. We naturally enough looked upon one another in the light of rivals, and and I am sorry to say J it led to an estrange ment between us." The speaker paused for a moment and look ed again at bis late antagonist, as if inquiring whether or not it was best to reveal all. Mr. Nutter's countenance informed him that such a revelatiwn was perfectly correct.. "Yes, Miss Eugenie," Mr. Twillet resumed, "it led to an estrangement which soon became the deepest hatred. And this morning this very morning a duel. was fought by us on that account !" ' It gradually became quite clear to the young lady what was the purpose of the two young men before her; and, as Mr. Twillet ceased speakirg, a merry twinkle in her eye, and a slight smile which she could not entirely sup press, would have revealed to any one less in fatuated than fliey that she was exceedingly amused at what was passing. "Is it possible!" she exclaimed, with feign ed alarm ; "but neither of you was injured f " "No, no ! Very fortunately, we were not. It then occurred to us that the best way would be to leave the matter to your impartial decis ion. Therclbie, we implore you to state in the boaring of us both, to whom you are de termined to yield your heart. I assure you it shall be as you say without further trouble ; you need not fear that we will meet in hos tility, whatever your decision may be. Our words are pledged to that effect !" It was with difficulty that the young lady could suppress her mirth while Mr. Twillet spoke. When he had concluded, she contin ued for a few moments silent, her eyes bent downward, while the two lovers sat, eagerly expecting an answer. "Your request was quite unexpected," she said, at length, as if deeply impressed with what she had beard, "and I cannot undertake to give you an answer, at present, as you de sire. I hope you will indulge me in this. I must have time to reflect upon the matter. But if yon will come again, one week lrom to-day, I will give you my answer then." "Very well; we submit." They bade her an eflcctionate adieu, and departed. On the day appointed, the two young men met and started for the residence ot Miss Er wig. She was alone, and, evidently, expec ting them. "You see," said Mr. Twillet, "we are punc tual, and all impatient to learn our fate. Let me inquire if you have yet come to a decis ion V - ' "I have," said Miss Erwig. "And what is it T" they asked eagerly. "It is," answered she, with mock serious ness, "that I cannot, for my ' life decide be tween, you. No; I assure you I love you both equally well. But, in order that your minds might bo put at rest, I determined upon a course which I am sure will prove' satisfactory to you both. 1 married an other " "How!" "I married another but, he is here, I see." A door opened, and a gentleman advanced into the room. 'Gentlemen," continued the lady, "my hus bandMr. Matthew Millet." Mr. Twillet was struck dumb. Mr. Nutter was struck ditto. For a moment they gazed blankly at the newcomer, and then they seized Jheir hats, and, without so much as returning the salute of Mr. Matthew Millet, they hurried from the place, a peal of merry langhter fol lowing them, which rung in the ears of each for week niter It is gratifying to know that the young men havo survived the shock. Didn't Take the Papers. In Cincinnati, a few days since, a man who resides within twelve miles of that city walked into the Citi zens' Bank for the purpose of obtaining a sum of money which be had deposited there several years ago. Iiffagine his feelings on learning that the bank had failed six months ago ! ' He had not even heard of the extraordinary finan cial panic which recently swept over the conn try with, eucb a levelling influence. WADE ON DOUGn FACES. Jon. B. F Wade, in a speech delivered in the U. S. Senate, on the 13th March ; daguer roetyped the race of doughfaces in the follow ing style : 'Your allies, the doughfaces of the North, in my judgment, are the most despicable of men. The modern doughface is not a charac ter peculiar to the age in which we live, bat you find traces of him at every period of the world's history. He is void of pride ; he is void of self respect ; be is actuated by a mean, grovelling selfishness that would sell his Maker for a price. Why, sir, when old Moses, under the immediate inspiration of God Almighty, enticed a whole nation of slaves, and ran away, not to Canada, but to old Canaan, I suppose that Pharaoh and all the chivalry of old Egypt denounced him as a most furious Abolitionist (laughter). I do not know but that they blas phemed their God, who had assisted the fugi tives from labour to escape. I have no doubt at all that, when some Southern gentlemen of the Gospel come up to preach to the North, they will say that the Almighty acted a very fanatical part in this business. .1 am afraid they will 6ay so ; for He was aiding and abet ting in the escape. But amidst the glories of that great deliverance, even feeding upon mir acles of the Almighty as they went along, there were not wanting those who loved Egypt better than they loved liberty ; whose souls longed for the flesh-pots of Egypt ; and who could turn from the visible glories of the Al mighty God to worship an Egyptiau calf. These were the doughfaces of that day. They were not exactly Northern men with Southern principles ; but they were Israelites withEgyp tian principles. (Laughter.) Again, when the Saviour of the world went forth on His great mission to proclaim glad tidings of joy to all the people of the earth, to break every yoke and to preach deliverance to the captive, He met with the same class of men in tho persons of Judas Iscariot and the chief priests. In the days of our own Revo lution, when Washington and his noble associ ates were carrying on that struggle to estab lish justice, and to secure the blesssings of liberty to themselves and their posterity, they met with the same class of men in the admirers of George III arid Lord North. They are all of the same class false to the education of their fathers false to the great principles which have been instilled into them by their mothers from their birth willing to do anything that will minister to the cupidity of their masters, let the consequences be what they may. It is this class of men, aided by close aristocracy at the South, that has en abled the minority to rule with iron hand the majority, since the organization ot this Gov ernment. I have endeavored to daguerroc type these men for tho benefit of future ages ; for I believe that, like the Indian tribes, they are disappearing. You have put tbem to very hard service, sir. They die faster than the Northern negroes in your rice swamps politi cally, I mean. You put them to service that they cannot stand. When you ask them to vote for a fugitive bill, they may do it once, but political death stares them in the face. When you ask them to go with you for the repeal of the Missouri restriction, you find the same state of things. And now, worstf all, when you ask them to fasten upon their fellow-men, : in a Territory of the United States,a Constitution which that people abhor, I tell you every Northern Representative who participates in this act is not only politically dead, but he may thank bis God if he escapes with that. . - But theSenator spoke about a degraded class in our great commercial cities. I have to con fess that there is some truth in that. We have a degraded class in the cities.. Theatre the offscourings generally of the OUsJjy orTd men who come here reduced to beggary by their ignorance ; reduced- to beggary by their vice ; ignorant, vicious, dangerous. I do not deny it. They are incidents to all large cities ; but the Senator should not complain of them. They are the chief corner-stone of yonr polit ical strength in tho North. Find me the vi cious ward of any city that does not uphold your system of slavery, vote for its candidates, support its measures and labor for its men. No, sir; you should not complain of this vi cious population. In truth and in facttthey are about the only stay and support you have there now, and you ought not to traduce them. From their very natures they attach themselves to you, and 1 do not think by any treatment you will be able to drive them off'. They are naturally with you ; they were slaves in their own countries ; they do not know anything else than to be the understrappers of some body ; and when they hear that there are slave holders contending with freemen, "you find them with the former all the time." "Not Quite so Bad." The Bellefonte Dem ocrat tells a good story of Sam Bike, who had been down the river this Spring, with a raft. Returning home, he stopped at a tavern, where quite a crowd was discussing the Kansas ques tion. Sam had not slept the previous night, and was about squaring himself out for a comfortablo snooze, when one of the loudest, turning t him, said, "Here sits a Lecompton man, I'll bet the liquor for the roora."--"Dono !" says bis opponent, who was anti-Le-compton. "Now then, lriend," said No. 1, "in order to decide this bet, will you be so kind as to tell ns whether you are a Lecomp ton man ?" "What makes you think so?" Sam asked. "Because, sir, you look like one ; I can always tell them by their looks," replied No. 1. Sam answered, "Do I J Well gentle men, I was on a raft from Snow Shoe to Mari etta; I have been drunk for two weeks; but I had no idea that I looked at hard asthal,"- Tbe Lecomptoner paid tho liquor, and sloped. The essence of modern democracy of the Buchanan school seems to be that all labor is base and slavish,, and that the free white far mers and mechanics ot the North and West are really in the same degraded position as the black chattels of the South. Gov. Hammond regards all laborers as mete "mud-sills" for rich aristocrats to tread upon ; and The Wash' inglon Union says that "those who talk about the 'free labor' of the North, and parade it as contradistinguished from slave labor, are the merest quacks in political economy. Of course, it is but natural that with such senti ments as these the Administration should wish to force the Lecompton Constitution upon the people of Kansas. ' It is said that the cost of printing Emory's Report of the Mexican Boundary Survey a work which no one has read, and few have even seenwas f 277,800 ! ' : A Beacb of Opihiohs. We present below a brace of Southern opinions ot Wm. II." Sew ard, the distinguished New York Senator. The first is fiom the Clark county, Virginia, Advertiser, and the other from the Washington correspondent of the New Orleans Delta. The Virginia estimate oi the man runs thus : "The country should look with more anxie ty and interest to the course of Wm. H. Sew ard than to that of any man living. Ho is a man of mighty influence. In an important sense be is the representative man of his age. His influence over the northern mind and control over the northern mode of thought is almost unbounded. lie is regarded here as an honest man in that highest sense. He is living for ages to come not for the present moment. He has a disposition to find, and ground himself on the right, as be knows that only will endure forever. "The expression is very common among Re publican members here, that the Republican party is destined to become the great nation al party of the country ; that the south will all come into it, "when it learns that tbey do not meditate any interference with the insti tution as it exists in the States; and the south will relinquish . their claim .and desire to ex tend beyond their present limits." ' The following is the . view orthe New Or leans writer: "I have a passion for Seward. He comes up to my idea of "Rolin in the Wandering Jew the most delectable devil that was ever drawn by human pen so cool, so clear headed, so indomitable, so relentless in the pursuit of his fiendish purposes. Seward traverses the seem ingly tortuous, but really straight line of his ambition, with tho unerring certainty of foot steps that characterize a rope-dancer ; never missing a step, and keeping his agle eye steadily fixed on the goal before ;him. The balance-pole by which he preserves his equi poise is that cool, big bead that bulbs out a bove his narrow shoulders. If he becomes our next President, and disunion docs not im mediately follow his election, I willwager that ho will so beautifully honey-fuggle both South and North, that the people will pronounce him one of the best Presidents we have ever had. But I begin to think there is little danger of his obtaining the nomination. He is too great a man, that is, if he is a man and not a devil!" Asothee Failcbe. The President has not succeeded in carrying a single measure thro' Congress. - He has been defeated on the Army bill, defeated on the Deficiency bill, defeated 'J on the Lecompton bill, and now he has been defeated on the Pacific Railroad bill. A great deal of influence, ingenuity and address have been expended upon it during the last 'four months, but it was put aside till December next, although Mr. Gwin, who had" the meas ure in charge, announced that such v. vote would tie considered by him as conclusive a gainst the construction of any road to Califor nia. . Of the" forty-seven Senators present, twenty-five voted for the postponement,includ ing eighteen Lecomptonitcs and twenty-two in the negative, one half of whom were anti Lecoropton men. Thus it will be seen that this favorite measure was killed by a Demo cratic opposition, and the President again sub jected to another of tho many humiliations to which he has,been exposed since the mes ing of Congress. The administration, as sucn, is now as powerless there as before the conn try, and the developments of every day ctaly serve to render its weakness more visible and painful. There never was such a fall before, in so short a time. When Tyler abandoned the Whig party, and renounced the principles by which be accidentally reached the White House, he must have foreseen the consequences of that defection upon a Whig Congress, and therefore was prepared for the repudiation which followed so justly and swiftly. Mr. Bu chanan claims to have maintained his Demo cratic integrity and consistencv, and yet the Democratic majorities which greeted his inau gural address, as the advent of an auspicious Presidential term, and as insuring future suc cess, are now melted away into minorities, a vowing nothing more than bare toleration for those in power. Geasd Desigs. On Saturday last, all New lork was agog with the ceremonies of break ing ground, in their new Central Park, for the ejection of a new reservoir that is to surpass in capacity any artificial lake, in the world The reservoir commences at the corner of Eigh ty-sixth street and Fifth avenue, alongside of the present receiving reservoir. Jt will be 100 acres in extent, and will contain 1,029,880, Wo standard gallons of water. The contrac tors will receive $614,208 77 for the work, which they expect to complete in three years The design of it is to contain water to supply the city in case of any accident to the water works which would prevent the nsual flow of that element to the metropolis. The Mavor, in his speech at the breaking of the ground for the new work, said : "On our new lake of the Manahatta, no in considerable navv might ride, and find "ample room'and verge enough" on its surface to float at anchor. Even the noble Niagara, the ad mirable master-work of the genius of the la mented Steers, might ride here on the waters of this lovely lake ; and, by its side, the colos sal Pennsylvania might be moored, and cover less than the fortieth pait of the lake, while every other vessel of the American Navy, with the starry flag of the Republic streaming fioufj the peak, mightjie moored around." "It is impossible," said a Lecomptonite to an anti-Lecomptonite "to say where your par ty ends, and the opposition begins." "Well sir," replied the other, "if you were riding a jackass, it would be impossible to say where the man ended and the donkey be gan." " " .. : Did you not tell me sir, you could hold the plow T" said the "master. "Arrah ! be aisy now, said Pat ; "how the deuce can I hould it, and two horses drawing it away from me ? but giYe it to mo into the barn, and be jabers I'll hould it with any .boy." -.-': ,.' - An Irishman, writing from Ohio, says it is the most elegant place in the world. "The first three weeks," he says, "you are boarded gratis, and after that you are charged nothjn; at all. Come along and bring the children." ; 1 ASOTHEE OOTEAQE COMMITTED AO AW ST THE South. An attempt is being made to intro duce Northern shad into the rivers of Alabama. This is supposed to be a part ot Eli Thayer's Southern colonization scheme ORIGIN OF SLAVERY. Mr. Bancroft, in the first volume of bis His tory of the United States, gives an account of the early traffic of the Europeans in slaves. In the middle ages, the Venitians purchased white men. Christians and others, and sold them to the Saracens in Sicily and Spain. la England the Anglo-saxon nobility sold their servants as slaves to foreigners. The Portu guese first imported negro slaves from West ern Africa, to Europe, in 1442. Spain soon engaged in the trafficyind negro slaves abound ed in some places of that kingdom.." After America was discovered, the Indians ofllis paniola were imported into Spain, and mads slaves. The Spaniards visitrd the coast of North America and kidnapped thousands of the Indians whom they transported into slave ry in Europe and the West Indies. Colum bus himself kidnapped five hundred native Americans and sent them into Spain, that they might be publicly sold at Seville. The practice of. selling North American Indians into foreign bondage continued for two cen turies. Negro slavery was first introduced into America by Spanish slaveholders, who emigrated with their negroes. A royal edict of Spain authorized negro slavery in America In 1508. King Ferdinand himself sent from Seville fifty slaves to labor in the- mines. In 1511, the direct tariff in slaves between Africa and Hispaniola was enjoined by a royal ordi nance. Las Casas, who saw the Indians van ish away before the cruelty of the bpaniards. suggested that the negroes, who alone could endure severe toils, might be further employ ed. This was in 1518. . Sir John Hawkins was the first Englishman that engaged in the slave trade. In 1652. he transported a large cargo of Africans to His paniola. . In 16-37, another expedition was prepared, and Queen Elizabeth protected and shared in the traffic. Hawkins, in one of hia expeditions, set fire to an African city, and out of 3,000 inhabitants, succeeded in seizing 260. James Smith, of Boston, and Thomas Keyser, first brought the colonies to partici pate in slavery. In 1654 tbey imported a car go of negroes. Throughout Massachusetts, the cry of justice was raised against them as malefactors and murderers ; the guilty men were committed for the offence, and the rep resentatives of the people ordered the negroes to be restored to their native country at th public expense. At a later period, thr -were both Indian and negro slaves in Massa chusetts. In 1620, a Dntch ship entered James river, and landed" twenty negroes for sale. This was the epoch of tho introduction of slavery in Virginia. For many years the Dutch were principally concerned in tha slave trade in the market of Virginia. Deep Plowiso. We are U too apt to fol low blindly in tho beaten track. The first plow was a tough, forked stick, whereof one prong served as a beam while the other dug the earth as a coulter. Of course, the plow ing was merely scratching necessarily sov It uld have been preposterous to expect the plowman of Hcsiod's or of Virgil's time to turn up and mellow the soil to a depth of fif teen or sixteen inches. Down to the present, age plowing was inevitably a shallow affair. But iron plows, steel plows, sub-soil plowsv have changed all this. . It is as easy to day to mellow the earth to the depth of two feet as it was a century ago to turn over a sward to. the depth of six inches. And our fierce, try ing climate, so different from the moist milder one of Great Britian, Ireland, or even of Hol land and the Atlantic coast of Germany,, whence our ancestors migrated, absolutely re quires of us deeper plowing. Drouth: is our. perpetual danger. Most crops are twenty to. sixty per cent, short of what they mould have been with adequate and seasonable moisture That moisture exists not only in the skies a bove, but in the earth beneath our plants. Though the skies 'may capriciously withheld it, the earth never will, if we provide a rich,, mellow sub-soil through which tberoots can descend to the moisture. The hotter and dryer the weather, the better our plants will grow,, if they have rich warm earth beneath them reaching down to and including moisture. We cannot and need not plow 60 very deep each year to assure this, if the sub-soil is under drained that the superabundant moistnre or the wet'season docs not pack it. Under drain ing as tho foundation, and deep plowing as the superstructure.with ample fertalizing and gen erous tillage, will secure us averago crops, such as this section has rarely ever seen. Our corn should average from fifty to seventy bush els per acre ; our oats still higher. Every field should be ready to grow wheat if requir ed. Every grass lot should be good for two or three tons of hay per acre. Abundant fruits, including the grape and pear, should gladden our hill sides, and enrich our farmer's tables. So should our children seek no more, in flight to the crowded cities, or to the wide West an escape from the ill'paid drudgery and. intellectual barrenness of their father's lives,, but find abundance and happiness in and a round their childhood's happy homo. 7A Working Farmer. Costly "Pictces" The Government paid- for lithographing and printing in colors a sin gle ox, for the Patent Office Report, $ 10,5797 for a similar service for one bull, $10,576 ; for a cow, $7,500; and for a horse, $5,579. Total: for the four pictures, $34,22.8,. That's Itmt way the money goes- . The New Salem justice who fined a man $G, for kissing another man's wife, last week, ia; the same who imposed a fine of $6, not long since, for malicious mischief in tying a basket, to a heifer's tail. So the tariff or both theso. amusements is fixed for the New Salem peo ple. - '" ' A Cceiois Diffebesce. A Maysvillo -cor respondent indicates a curious "point of difler- ence" between the administration "of James Buchanan and that of Pharaoh, at memortv ble period ; the latter bad corn is the national; crib, the former has only a Cobb. . Buchanan, an old Federalist, has two. old line Whigs (Toombs In Senate,, and Stephens in uie uouse) as his leaders in Congress, whtfa Wise, Douglas, Reeder, Forney, and the other Democratic leaders who elected him are now his opponents ! ! ' ' . ' The hard times which have of late prevailed havo filled the ranks of the English army. Since October last, 86,000 men have: joined the military force of Great Britain, and enlist ments are progressing at an avers go of 7,000 per month '' : ' - 4 v