BY S. J. ROW. CLEARFIELD, PA., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1865. VOL. lL-N'O. 50. TEllHS OF THE JOURNAL. The Raftsman's Jocbnai. is published on Wed nesday at 52,00 per annum in advance Auveh tisbjiests inserted at S-1.50 per square, for three or less insertions Ten lines (or less', countings square. For every additional insertion 50 cents. A deduction will be made to yearly advertisers. . JHrcctonj. 1RVI.V BROTHERS, Dealers in Square Sawed Lumber. lrj Goods, Groceries, Flour, Grain, , Ac, Burnside Pa., Sept. 23, lSfi3. I -iRrnPHrCK: LEITZINGER. Manufacturer of i 11 Litnl nC tniin.nrarn CM fl rfi a1 il Pa. Or is' solicited wholesale or retail. .Jan. 1, 18l3 C1K ASS A BARRETT, Attorneys at Law. Clear- field. Pa. May 13. 1S63. i. . j. trans. :::::: Walter bark btt. 1y 0I5ERT J. WALLACE. Attorney at Law. Clear V) field, Pa Office in Shaw's new row. Market itreet, opposite Nauglo's jewelry store May '26. HF. KAUGLE. Watch and Clock Maker, and . dealer in Vatchegt Jewelry, Ao. Room in Graham's row, Market street. Nov. 10. HBI'CHER SWOOPE. Attorney at Law. Clear Gold. Pa. OEot in Graham's Row, fourdoo 8 wc?t"of (irahain 4 Roynton's store. Nov. 10. , AKTSWIOK 4 IU'STON. Denlers in Drugs, I I Medicines. Paints. Oils. Stationary. I'erfiime- r. raia'T nnons. .MJWfiis, etc rVarfitl'd. Pa etc . Market street, June. 2'J. ISfit. J. P KKATZER, dealer in Dry Goods. Cloth, in J. Hardware. Queensware, Groceries. Pro- vi-i- ns ,tc. t ront Street, above the Academy, n-a. field. Pa. April 27. "I 17 Il.LIAM V. TRW IN. Market street, Clearfield, Pa., Dealer in foreign and Domestic Mer cian disei Hardware. Qucensware, Groceries, and ijinily articles generally. Nov. 10. TOlfS Gl'ELICH. Manufacturer of all kind of Oabinet-ware. Market street. Clearfield. Pa. lie alstiiuukes to order CoBn.. onshort notice, and aiiends tunerals with a hearse. AprKVaS. DH M. WOO US, PiiA'TtriNft Physihs, and Examining Surgeon for Pensions. Othi-e, South-west corner of Second and Cherry Str;i t. Clwirtiuid, Pa. January 21, 18t3. 'i MinMAS J. M CULI-OUGn. Attorney at Uw. Clearfield. Pa. Office, cast of the -Clearbeld Co. bank. Uee ts and ottier leai insirumems pre pared with promptness and accuracy. July 3. M EN ALLY, Attorneyat Law, Clearfield. f). P. Pr:ictiL-es in Clcarueld mid adjoining t,'Ui:ti-s. Office :u new brick builduii; oi .1. i.oyn t ii. 21 street, one door south of Lauich's Hotel. T It." HARD MOSSOP, Dealer in Foreign and Do V mestic Drv Goods, Groceries. Flour. Bacon Lioiiors. Ac. Room, on Market street, a few doors we.-tol .lor,).i! Ojjii-t, Clearfield, Pa. Apr27 f AKKTMER k TEST, Attorneys, at Law.Clear- .1 J field. Pa. Will attend promptly to all legal and other business entrusted to theircare in Clear field aad adjoining counties. August 6. ISoG .riWMAS W. MOORE. Land Surveyor and Con 1 vevancer. Office at his residence, i mile east of Pennville Postoffice address. Grampian Hills Deeds and other instruments of writing neatly executed. June 7th, lsoo-ly Wf.M. ALBERT fc BltO'S. Dealers in Dry Goods l ( rocerics. Hardware. Queensware. Flour Bacon, etc.. W'oodlan I. Clearfield county. Penna Also, cxiensive dealers in all kinusof sawed lum ber, shingles, and square timber. Orders sulici ted. SVeodland, Aug. 19th. 1M3. A I'CTIOX LEK. The undersigned having the citizens of ClearSeid county that he will at tend to calling sales, in any part of the couuty whenever called upon. Charges moderate Address, JOHN M yl'ILKIN. May 13 Bower Po., Clearfield Co., Pa. A IX'TIONKEK. The undersigned having . Imen Licenced an Auctioneer, would inform the citizens of Clearfield county that he will at tend to calling sales, in any part of tho county whenever c.iiled upon. Charges moderate. Address. NATHANIEL RISHEL, Feb 22. Istij. Clearfield, Pa. T U'ENSEI) AI'-CvrroXEEK. WILLIAM JLi M BLOOM, of Pike township, desires to in fonii his friends and the public generally that he bus tukeu out a License as an A I C 1 ION tttv and will attend to the crying of sales in any part ot the county at the shortest notice, and at the most reasonable charges. Address, cither personally or by letter, either at Curwensville or Ulooin ingville. May 1, 1805. tf. MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE COMPA NY OF YORK, IA. Irwurcs against loss or damage by- fire. It is the s:ifst company in the State, and has made no as sesuie'nts since its establishment, and heuce it is the mot economical. . S. J. ROW', Agent. June 21. IS05. Clearfield, Pa 1 fll ISKEKS ! WIIIS REUS! Do you want Whiskers or Moustaches? Our Grecian Compound will forca them to grow on the sinth e.t face or chin, or hair on bald heads, in Six W'eesvs. Price, 51.00 Sent by mail anywhere, closely sealed, on rectipt of price Address, WARNER A CO.. Box 133 Brooklin, N. York. March 2ltth, 1885. KEYSTONE MAKLLE HOURS, Woodland. Clearfield county. Pa. J B1NN DeIIAAS; respectfully informs the cit izens of Clearfield, and adjoining counties, that he has just received s fine stock of foreign and domestic marble, which he will wotk into Monu-fiK-uts. Tombs. Head and Foot stmies. Door-steps. Window gill and Lintels. Table. Stand and Bu reau tops. Ac Ac on reasonable terms and short notice. All persons in want of any thing in hi; line will pleusecall, or address him by letter, at Woodland, Clearfield county, Pa. Orders by mail will receive prompt attention. July26.'bo-y. HAUPT & CO., at Milesburg, Pa , continue to furnish castings of every description at ihort notice. They have the best assortment of patterns in the country for steam and water-mills of every description. All kinds of machine and plow casting- furnished NewW'orld and Hatha way cook-stoves alw.iys on hand. They m-ike 4 borse sweep and 2-horse tread-power threshing Machines price at shop, SI50 with haker and i0 feet if strap. Warranted to give satisfaction In threshing, and kept good to thresh one crop, free of charge. June 2S. 18(i5-y. Isaac II acpt, at Eellefonte, continues to take rieki for insurance in anv good stock company in the State. Also in New York : the Royal and Et na at Hartford ; and the Liverpool and London, capital $5,000,000. rROVISIOS. Flour, bacon, lard. chees. dried beef, dried frnit, received regularly, at More f Mar. 22. J. P. KKATZER. deleft goctnj. MUSTERED OUT. Hail to the hero mustered out, Let the black-throated cannon shout, And fling to the wind the stars. Rejoice, O ye jubilant bells. The hiart of the patriot swells, And tears ovvrBow from their wells. When we see the soldiers' scars. We welcome him home from the field, Untarnished his sabre and shield, Untainted his laurel crown. Chumpion of the brave and free, O w battpirit and dash had he ; God grant that we may never see A cloud on his grand renown. O now let us muster him in, Where the ranks of the true begin, To fight for themselves again; hile he has been striking the blow, At the rebels, another toe Hath laid many a brave man low, Who passed through the leaden rain. A LIVELY SPEECH. Tho Rev. 3Ir.GaiI.iher, formerly of Quin cy, Illinois, ami now pastor of the First Bap tist Church in Jurcokitn, cot o:i the lol lowing racy speech at ttie Congregational re union in Mew l oi k city Hike re-unions. They ruboff yourdinomi natkmal angles, they bring us closer togeth er; they melt that most frightful thing on earth religiousetique;te an J are to ine like Sydney Smith, s fiit love kiss, a perp ?tual remedy against the blues. I suppose I was invited here because Baptists are looked up on as a sort of poor relations ox the great Congregational family relations who pro tect the faith in a stingy, close-communion kind ot way cork ins th's nozzle of our bel lows to save the wind. I read latelv, in Mr. Tilton's paper, that there were no Congre gationahsts in thehouth, and it was a mat ter of gratulaaoti that such was the case. Is not that 'to be understood in a Pickwickian sense? Why, there are two million excel lent Congregatinalists there all loyal all Baptists and all black. We Baptists are really good Cngregationalists, on!' a little more so. As the Irishman told his friend that in America "one man was as good as another and better too," so we claim to hold the principle as well as our neighbors and a little better tio. You may plate us at a lower seat at the fainilj' table, below the salt indeed. We will be content, but still be-lit-ve. that, "where M'Cfroger sits is the head of the table." We have met to cele brate the complete overthrow of the rebel lion, t is dead, thank God, and this is part of its joyful funeral. We meet to sing. 'Believing, we rejoice to see the curse removed." I know a young fellow who sat out late one night, and ihe next morning felt badly the want of some Scidlitz powders. lie did not tpuite understand how they were to be taken, so he swallowed first the white paper then the blu one. The result was a great com motion inside. Well Sherman went in first with white papers at Atlanta. Grant next with a very blue one at Petersburg, and the result has been such a blow up, that the Confederacy, like Holmes' one horse shay, went to pieces at once. The days of South ern chivalry are gone. What is left ot it is a perambulating pestilence with a hun- ureu thousana dollars lor whoever win a- bate it. It never was letter than a dea dog. Xo elevation has helped it ; the high er you iaised it, the wider was its o.ijn-e. It was a chivalry guilty of robbing Ver mont banks, of attempting to burn peaeefu cities, of massaeremg the black troops at tort billow, of starving and torturing cap tured soldiers, and its hands are dripping with the blood of our murdered 1 resident. It was most cowardly and cruel, and it is dead. (J fort in Av.s. J low could it expect to live ? Its crimes cried out asrainst it. No wonder the Lord put it between the upper mid neither millstone, called Grant and Sherman, ami trround it to pieces. If we catch Davis, what shall be done with him? "Hang him." Amen up, up with him. I kuow hanging is the worst use you can put a man to, but tne worst use is an uavis is fit for. ' W hen 1 stood in bumntcr, and saw our flag go up at last, and, from the glittering tail unfurled, shine like a meteor, stream ing to the wind, I asked, why is it that the hand ot-an old man to-day lilts that with eae to its old home, when all the .North had not, in four years, thepower to do it? Ihe answer is tour millions ot bondmen stood upon it. We ask for the negro the land he paid for Ions ao if ever sweat paid for anything; and we ask that the right to vote the ri2ht to make true your Declaration of Independence be no longer withheld from hun. He is not ht tor iree- dom, you saw True, freedom, like a new made garment, must be worn somewhat be fore it tits vou gracefully. What shall we ay, "Don't go into water .till you learn to swim f iveep back the ballot box. and vou keen the nejrro from respecting himself Vou keep him like flower seed on a shop shelf from ever growing. If ever russet-cheeked apple, if ever peach-hanging lucious and sun-kissed said "Come and eat me, don't wait till I rot." The negro is to-day saying to us, "Don't pity me. don't patronize me, give me my rights ; and 1 II help myseit. Our patronage is a hindrance now. Liet them alone. "Is not a patron, my Lord," said sturdy Satu Johnson, "one who looks with unconcern or a man struggling for life in the water, and when he had reached ground,eneutubered him with kindnesses?" And, now, what word shall we send to our friends over the water? First of all, that we are delighted at their great disap pointment, and hope they may have much more of it no, our first message must be to Gen. McClellan : "We have the honor to announce that all is quiet on the. Potomac." To John Bright.to Goodwin Smith, to Mill, to Foster, to man v others, wesendour heart j 'thanks fortheirkind words, when, words were worth something to us. Tell them to come over and see us, they will be received with a hundred thousand welcomes. But to those who laughed at our calamity, who mocked when our fear came, who slandered and a bused us, who called our dead President an awkward buffoon, and our brave soldiers the sweepings of our wicked city, what message shall we send to them, to the limes, the leiegrapii, jjiaclcwootl s Magazine to my Lords Derby and Broughan,andahost of oth- rry t lhis, that democracy is not a failure, nor the great Republic a bubble that is burst ; that Richmond has fallen, and with it the rightjot the few to lord,it over the many ; that slavery "and rebellion, lovely in their lives, in death are not separated ; that the hideous pretensions to property in man has vanish ed with their pet, Jeff Davis ; that we au swer their taunt of "a mere mob," "impa tient and fickle," . ''insensate and degener ate,". by saying that James Buchanan would not be living to-morrow under like circumstances in any other nation under heaven nor Would Lee and Johnston ride unharmed through other streets ; that Brother Jonathan is yet but a stripling, and when he straightens himself up and places his hands upon his hips, it may be seen that his elbows cover the one Canada, the other Mexico, that our beys are coming home vic torious, and are entirely willing to make those who abuse us keep a civil tongue in their heads ; that we are obliged to them for their sympathy they have lately proffer ed us, but think it would have been much more acceptable four years ago, when the Alabama steamed out of their port ; that though our best and bravest lies dead, so does not the cause he died for ; and if he who uttered "Emancipation" has fallen, "yet the immortal fire shall outlast the or gan who louveyd it ; and the breath of lib erty, like the word of the holy man, will not die with the prophet but survive him. " Too Proud to Work. Some, r cople are ashamed to work. They are too ilroud to be seeu carrying a market basket, or helping to wash, or wheeling a barrow, or putting in coal, or dijging in the garden. They are afraid to let others see that they work. And whenever they must do anything of this kind they wat until it is night, or go where nobody can see them, cr they go round the back way. If there are any boys or girls who take the S'. V. Jles sfnger, I wish to tell them a story of a great man who was not ashamed to work. On one occasion, during the Revolutiona ry war, ashingto;: was going around in uisguise, to visit some log torts that were being built. In the course of his walk, he met with a company of men who were har at work under the command of a corporal. I his petty oluctr, proud of his elevation a hove the common soldiers, was walking a- bout. full of the thought of his own im portance and crying out, every now and then, "come, work away boys," but he nev er offered to help them. But Washington, when he saw that the men had more work than thev could well do, took off his coat at once and began to help them saying, "Spring to it, mv brave fellows! we are working tor our couutry : let us do it with a good will In this way he worked with them til! they had finished ; and then when he was putting on lus coat, lie asked the ollicer why he did not help the m;n when he saw that they h ,d more work than they could well do. Maiming up straight with a proud look on his face, the officer replied, "I would have you know, sir, that 1 am a cortoral. I don icork." "Oh, are you sir?" said Washing ton, "you are a corporal and don't work. w ell, l would have you know that am General XVashin otoi, Commander-in- Chief t amt 1 do icorlc. Don't you think that the corporal mu have felt ashamed? Now if evet you begin to feel to proud too work, just think of Washington and the corporal. S. S. Mes senger. Over Work. Unwise above man is the man who consid ers every hour lost which is not spent in reading, writing or study, and not more ra tional is she who thinks even' moment of her time lost which does not find her sew ing. We once heard a great man advise that a book of some kind be carried in the pocket, to be used in the case of an unoccu pied moment, such was his practice. He died early and fatuitous. There are women who after a hard day's work, will sit and sew by candle-or gas light until their eyes are almost blinded, or until certain pains a bout the shoulders come on, which are in supportable, and are only driven to bed by physical inability to work any knger. The sleep of the overwork ed, like that of those who do not work at all, is unsatisfying and unrefreshing, and both alike wake up in weariness, sadness and langor with an in evitable result, both dying prematurely. Let no one work in pain or weariness. When a man is tired he ought to lie down until he is fully rested, when with renovated strength the work will be better done, done the soon- er, and done with a seit-sustainea alacrity. The time taken from seven or eight hours sleep out of each twenty-four, is time not gained, but the time much more than lost : we can cheat ourselves but we cannot nature. A certain amount of food is neces sary to a healthy body, and if less than that amount be furnished, decay commences that very hour. It is the same with sleep, and any one who persists in allowing him self less than nature requires, will only hasten his a rival at the mad house or the grave. 1 his is especially true ot DrainworK. An important traffic at Nantucket. Mas- tide of houses. Dwellings that cost from t 3.000 to S5.000 are sold at from $300 to $500. Thev are taken down and shipped to Cape Cod, New Bedford, Norwich and else where, and re-erected and sold at a hand some advance. ! ME. NASBT LAYS DOWN A PLATF0SM FOE THE COMING CAMPAIGN. Saint'sRest, (wich is in the Stait ) uv Noo Gersey, June 23, 1S65, j These is the dark days uv the Dimocrisy ine misrorchoons that betell our armies in front of Richmond, the fall uv our kappy tie, follered by the surrender uv our armies uranc and onerman nez hurt us. jut leeders are eether pinin in loathesum dun guns, inkarseratid by the hevin-defyin, Man destroyin, tyranikle edix uv our late lament ed President, or air barskin in the free air uv Italy or Kanady. We hev no way uv keepin our voters together. Opposin the war won t do no good, fer before the next e lekshun the heft of our voters will hev dis- ktvered that the war is over. The feer uv drafts may do suthin in sum parts uv Penn sylvany and Suthern Illinoy, fer sum time yit, but that can't be dependid on. But we hev wun resources fer a Ishoo ther will alluz be a Dimocrisy, so long ez ther's a Nigger. Ther is a uncompromisin dislike to the iNigger in the mind uv a ginooine Dimmo- crat. The Spanish bull-fighter, when he wants to inflame the bull to extra cavortin, waves a red flag albre him. Wen j'oo de sire a Dimocrat to froth at the mouth 300 will find that a black face will answer the purpus. Ther4 the nigger is, to-day, our best and only holt. Let us use him. Fer the guidanse uv the faithful, I shel lay down a few plain rools to be observed, in order to make the most uv the. cappytle we hev : 1. Alluz assert that the nigger will never be able to taik care uv hisselt, -but will alluz be a public burden. He may, possibly, give us the lie by going to work. In sich a e- mergencytue duty uv every uimocrat is plain. He . must not be allowed to work. Associashens must be orgenized, plegded to neether give him employment, to work with hi;, to work fer enny one who will give him work, or patronize enny one who duz. (I wood sejest that sich uv ez hez bin forchoo nit enuff 2 git credit, pay a trifle on account so ez to make our patronage worth suthin.) This course rigidly and persistcnly follerd. wood drive the best uv them to steelin, and the balcncc.to the poor-houses, pre ven what we hev alluz claimed, that they are a idle and vishus race. Think, my brethren, wat a inspiriu effeck our poor-houses end jails "iill uv niggers wood hev on the people! My i.'it ixpaods ez I contemplait the delightful vision. 2. Likewise assert that the nigger will cum north, and take all the good places, throwin all our skild mekaniks out uv work by underbidden uv cm. This mite be open to 2 obgechuns, to wit: It-crosses slitely Rool the 1, and men mite say, ef ther's jist enuff labor fer wat!s here, why not perhib bit furriners fruui cumin? I anser. Its the biznis uv the voter to reconsile the contra dikshun he may bleeve eether or both. Ez to the sekund obgecshun, where is the Dimocrat who coodent be underbid and stan it even to starvation, ef the underbidden wuz dun by a man uv the proud Kaukashen race? And whpr is the Dimokrat so lost to manhood ez not to drink blud, ef the same underbidden is done by a nigger? The i starvin for work aint the question its the color uv the cause uv the starvashen that makes the diffrens. Nigger equality may be workt agin 2 ad vantage. All men, without distinckshun uv seeks, air fond uv flatrin theirselves that sumbody's lower down in the skale uv hu manity than "they is. Ef twan't fer niggers what wood the Dimocrisy do fer sumboddy 2 look down upon? It is also shoor to enlist wun stiie uv wiinmen on our side. In times gone by I've notist gushin virgins uv 45, full J 6 hands high and tuff ez wire, holdin aloft banners onto wich wuz inscribed, "Save us from Nigger Equality." Yoo see it soothed em 2 hev a cnanse uv adveriisin 1st, That they wuz frale, helplis critters, and 2d, That anshent and tuff ez they wuz, sum wun wuz still gom fer em. Ef ther aint no niggers Sentral Commit- tis must furnish em. A half dozen will do fer a ordinary county, ef theyr hustled along with energy. Ef they won't steel, the Sen trel Committis must do it theirselves. Show j'ear niggers in a township in the morning.. an the same nite rob the CiOthes lines, and hen roosts. Ever willin 2 sacrifice myself fer the cause, I volunteer 2 do this latter dooty in six populus countis. lhese nees, et rollerd, will, no doubt, keep us together until our enemies split, when we will reap the reward uv our constancy and fidelity. May the Lord hasten the day. 1 ETROLEUM V. iNASBT, Lait Pastur uv the Church uv the Noo Dispensashun. Josh Billings on Poultry Raising. The best time to set a hen is when the hen is reddy. I kant tell you what the best breed is, but the Shanghigh is the meanest, It kosts as much to board one as it does a stage hoss, and you mite as well undertake to fat a fanning-mill by running oats thru it. There haint no profit in keeping a hen tor his eggs if she lays less than one a day. Hens are very long lived, if they don't contrakt the thrut disseze. I kant tell exactly how to pick out a good hen ; as a general thing the long eard ones are cou ted the best. The long legged ones i kno are the least apt ! tew SKracu up tne garain. iggs pacicea in equil parts of salt and lime water, with the end down, will keep from 30 to 40 years if ! they are not disturbed. A new process of photographing has been patented in Europe. Pictures can be trans ferred to pannels, ceilings, or any surfaces that may require ornamentation. Graining can oe muiupnea ana iranaierreu tu suriace wun accuracy. There are eight hundred and forty-four patients in the Government hospitals at Philadelphia. Stanton and Buchanan. Ex-Gox. Washburne's oration at Portland, on the Fourth of J uly.contains the following ; "And that no example might be wanting to illustrate the degeneracy of the times and the perfidy of the public meu, who at such a period could alone occupy the high places of power, it was found that au ad ministration of the people's choice, and rep resenting what appeared to be the average opinion and sentiment of the country, had deliberately set itself to the work, in concert with open traitors, of betraying and destroy ing the Government it had been appointed and sworn to preserve. And so well were its plans laid for the accomplishment of this flagitious purpose that they could scarcely have failed, if not to accomplish the end designed, still to have produced such com plications, and given the rebellion such ad ditional advantages, as would have rendered the preservation of the Union, if possible, a matter of vastly greater difficulty and cost than it has been, had it not been for one of those fatal blunders, which, under the over ruling hand of Providence, men engaged in wicked enterprises are so apt to,make. We tremble when we think that the salvation ot the nation's prestige and honor, if not of its life, and ot the cause of free government everywhere, depended upon the accident, as it seemed, of the accession, in the winter of 1861, of Edwin M. Stanton to the Cabinet of President Buchanan. He made himself at once the ruling spirit and th-3 directing pow er of that false but weak Administration ; and by his own personal strength, which was as the strength ot ten by his iron will and his sublime devotion, averted that monstrous crime, that unutterable dis grace, and that last calamity disunion by consent 01 the Government itselr. The Guerilla Chiefs. That the evil effects of slavery are by no means restricted to those who are the vie tims of tyranny, has been proved again and again by the conduct ot the Southern people in the recent conflict, and is now shown by the fact that some of the leading guerilla captains, who are keeping the border-land between Louisiana and Idas in terror by their lawless deeds, were, belore the war. large plantation-holders in Louisiana, and the masters of large numbers of slaves. Having sacrificed or lost everything in the cause of secession, they are now without home or profession. FeeHng contempt lor labor, and despising the laborer, they have no means of support in the future, and are utterly destitute of capacity for adapting themselves to the new order ot things. Perhaps the life of the guerilla, defying law and living by pillage, more nearly resembles their old, vicious, and unrestrained hie on their plantations, amid a cringing mass of trembling slaves, whose happiness and lif were at their disposal, that any position in the new societary arangements which are being instituted under the influence of Northern example and regulations, loo poor to live, too ignorant to learn, too proud to work, these gentleman have only one profession open to them theft. Having long lived on the unrequited labor of the negro, it is but one step to wrest their sup port from tLeir white neighbors. A Significant Census. The Cincinnati Timet, with a pardonable elatioi, contrasts the progress made by the btates ot Uhio and Kentucky. Ihe anise of the difference need not be stated. Ohio was settled in 17S8 ; Kentucky in 1775 ; and the former does not appear at all in the cen susof 171)0, when Kentucky had a popula tion of 73,077. Now, let us trace the fig ures of each succeeding census : Oh nu. Kentucky. 1800 43,365 1800 220,955 1810 230,700 1810 406,511 1820 581,2'.15 1820 564,185 1830 937,903 1830 687,917 1840 1,516,463 1840 779,828 1850 1,980,329 1850 682,405 1860 2,339,511 1960 1,155,684 From the table above it will be seen that. though by the census of 1800 Kentucky had a greater population tran Umo by 17o,000, yet in 1810, while the former had increased in the ratio of 84 per cent., the later had bounded forward by the enormous increase ratio of 408.97 per cent. ; and in twenty years she distanced her elder rival, her de cennial increase between 1 SI 0 and 120 be ing 161.96 per cent. ; while Kentucky had fallen off 38.82 per cent. ; which dispropor tion continued until 1860, when Ohio more than doubled Kentucky. Exports from France and England. France exported, during the first four months of 1865, says the Moniteur du Soir, merchandise to the value of 892,5G9,000f., being seventy-one millions less than for the corresponding period of 1 864, but in aug mentation of the same months in 1863, 1862 and 1861. The products represent the larg est sums in the statement furnished by the customs returns are silks, 103 millions; woolen goods, 1 06, and wines 86. The for eign goods imported show a total amount of 752,126,000f. for the first four months of 1 865. This is an increase on the correspond ing periods in the four years last past. The most important sums stand for cotton, 107 millions. The value of the exports of British goods, and produce made to'the Australian colonies has considerably increased this year, having been 1,837,679 to March 31, as compared with 1,484,064 in the corresponding period of 1864, and 1,507,822 in the correspond ing period of 1864. The colony which con tributed most largely to the increase was New South Wales. The demand has also increased this year for British goods from Western Australia, South Australia, Victo ria, Queensland, and Tasmania ; in the case of New Zealand, it declined, although ib was still more considerable than in the first quarter of 1863. C0EEESP0NDENCE. For the Kafuman's Journal. Bcrnside, Aug. 2, 1865. Mr. Editor: I have read the Journal of the 26th July, and find on the first page an article headed "Andrew Johnson's Policy." I have no fault to find to it, so far ; but I do say, that the man that penned it ought to be in the ranks with Bigler and Wallace. When Christianity was first preached by the Apos tles, and their followers, it was pure. ; and when it got to be popular, wicked men crept into the churches, and alas for the conse quences. Just so with our Republican gov ernment. Many pro-slavery higs joined in with us ; and many more joined with the Copperheads and v ent into the Southern army and fought against us to the last of the present war. There are some ot those old por-slavery Whigs, I find, in this county. They are jealous. They think they ought to have a place in our national couueils ; But we have tried them and found them rotteu at the core. (I refer to Mr. Cowan, Sena tor from this State. ) This would-be adviser of Johnson and his worthy cabinet, says a great deal about "fanatics wanting to cor rupt" our worthy President. Certainly it would be a hard case if these rebels are dis franchised and the loyal citizens allowed to go to the polls. He seems to rejoice when the President speaks of taking care of the "poor whites. " That is certainly right. If any white man is disfranchised on account of the color of his skin, or his hair, or his beard, let him have a fair chance, by all means ; but the author of this jiece squints towards Congress. He is atraid of that no ble set of patriots. He is afraid that the relicl constitutions and congressmen will be rejected, and that there will be no compro mising. He fears that Congress will not al low the loyal citizens of the South to be tied, hand and foot, by a set of rebels. He would wish to have a clause in their Consti tutions, like we have in Pennsylvania, to let no colored man have a vote. We have ma ny thousands of colored citizens, well educat ed, and who are no disgrace to the pulpit or the bar, who are disfranchised, while many thousands of priest-ridden Europeans are led up to the polls, every general election ; but this defender of Andrew Johnson's pol icy does not find any fault to this wrong in our constitution. Mr. editor of the Jour nal I would like to know the name and resi dence of the man who wrote that piece. He is an enemy to the Republicans, and of our National Government. Let a poor white man be heard, as well as a rich one. I sus pect the man that penned that piece doea not get his living as the Almighty directed by the sweat of his brow. Yours respectfully, a friend to both white and black, George Atcijeson. The Blacks and Whites of the South. The principal argument urged in former times aeainst emancipating, and now against giving the suffrage to, the blacks, is their inability to take care ot themselves. In evidence of this it has been claimed that the emancipated uegroes of the South are now living in dependence upon the gov ernment, and Copperhead journals are mak ing a irreat hullabaloo over the amount ot money thus lavishly expended upon a"pack of lazy, worthless niggers." hat are the facts r In Beaufort, S. C, in the year 1864, there were about three thousand whites and very nearly the same number of blacks. Of the blacks, from three to four hundred were applicants for aid from the government ; of the whites from twelve to fourteen hundred or about four limes as many. In Mobile according to the last figures to which we have access, the census returns of 1 860, there were 20,854 whites and 8,404 blacks. During the month of June, 18C5, 6S.416 rations were issued to the white in habitants, and 3,000 to the blacks. In other words, three and one-half rations per month were issued to each white inhabitant. and less than one ration a month . to each lack. And these are only sample cases. Had the reverse been the case it would not have been surprising in view of the fact that the whites own all the land, all the cot ton, all the food, all the houses, all the mon ey, while the blacks are, as a class, thrown by emancipation entirely on their own resour- ces, owning no land, no buildings, no iood, not even the clothes upon their backs. And vet this newly-emancipated, seli-supporting class prove themselves tour times less de pendent than the whites. lhese are hard tacts tor the rsorthern Copperheads, who reverence the Southern chivalry as much as they hate the negroes, to swallow, but they are true, nevertheless. Fcnnv Mistake. TheSpringfieldfMass. ) Union, is responsible for the following ; Ihe old proverb that circumstances alter cases,' had a spicy illustration the other day at a Boston hotel, and two parties, one irom this city, and the other, of Boston, participated therein. A young man, who is the least bit feminine in his appearance. parting his hair iu the middle, &c. went to Boston, and while in that city was taken with a severe fit of cholic. Stopping at a hotel, he put himself to bed and sent for physician. Ihe doctor came, felt bis patient's- pulse, examined his stomach, and inquired solemly if his habits were 'regular;' to which the young man, somewhat sur prised, answered in the affirmative. The doctor then cautiously and politely informed his patient that his symptoms mannested some probabilities ot an increase oi tne census in a short time. The surprise of the cholic-stricken young man at this singular announcement, was only equalled by that of the doctor when he discovered the true sex of his patient. . Major General John Pope has been bre- eted Major General in the regular army, for gallant conduct.