-.8 s' 2 Ml if 81? in "S Sr I Em M BI S. J. BOW. CLEARFIELD, PA., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 186-5. VOL. 12 NO. 6. OtRTH ANNUAL EXHIBITION or TBB CLIAEIIELD COUNTY AGEICULTU- SAL SOCIETY. Will be held on the Fair Grounds near the Borough oUlearJield, Pa., on Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, the XUh, ldth, I9lh Jf 20tA of Oct. President, HON Wit. BIGLER. Executive CommiUe, Richard Shaw, jr. O. D. Goodfelloir, Vim. A. Read, Eli Bloom. Treuuw, A. M. Hills- Secretary, L. F. Irwin. EUII AST) REGULATIONS. Fmil Tickets. : : : : : : $1 00 Single Ticket daring Fair, : : : 60 Single Admission Ticket, : : : : 25 Children onder 10 years old, when accompanied by iueir parents or guardians, free. Erery person wishing to be enrolled as a men her of this Society must apply on or before the first day of the fair, and on the payment of one dollar to the Treasurer, shall receive a eertificate ct membership containing the name of the ap vYicant nd endorsed by the Secretary. Eierj person becoming a member as above sta ted thill, on the presentation of his certificate, re ceive a ticket uhich will admit him free during the fair. Any person complying with the above reg uUtioM sud paying $10, shall become a life member, and tbtll be exempt from all contribu tions, and shall annually receive from the Secre tary a free fcmiiy ticket. All persons must be provided with tickets, which an be bad from the Executive Committee Treas urer ar Secretary, or at the office ou the ground Perfens acting as judges are expected to become mentors of the Society. Persons from other coun ties can become members by complying with tho aboTe rules. Ladiescan become members by ma king application as above, and paying into the Treasury fifty cents when they will receive a ticftet to admit them free. Exhibitors must become member of the Society and hare their animals and nitroles entered on the Secretary books on or before the 17th day of October; and all animals and articles, except horses, must be brought within the enclosure as ear'y as Wednesday, at 12 o'clock M., and all persons entering animals and articles for exhibi tion will procure cards from the Secretary with the class and number of entry of said articles, previous to placing said article on the ground. Hay and straw will be furnished gratis for all an ioial4 entered for premiums, and grain will be furnished at cost for those that desire to purchase. Persons intending to exhibit blooded stock must prodi-;e authentic pedigrees, and are earnestly requested to furnish the Secretary, by the 10th of October with a list of their stock, and the pedi grees of each, this will facilitate the preparations of entries and in case of deficient pedigree, will afford the owner time to correct the same. Xo horse bll b entA allowed a premi- . uiu unless he is free from disease, n .. received until Wednesday noon! but must he en tered previously. All persons who intendto ex hibit horses, cattle, sbecp or swine, or who intend to offer stock or any other article for sale, should notify the Secretary of such intention, on or before the 10th of October, and hare with him a list and full description of the same. Premiums and diplomas will be paid on and af ter the first Wednesday of November, and until the 1st day of January, ISrtO after which all money premiums unclaimed will be considered as a dona tion to tho Society The officers of the Society and members of the Comioitties of Arrangements will wear a badge designating their office, and it will be their duty as well as pleasure to attend to the expressed wishes and wants of exhibitors and others, if it is in their power so to do A select police force will be in constant attendance for the preservation of order and protection of property Checks will be given at the door to persons de airii.g to pass out during exhibition, but will not admit the holder to any other exhibition each half day counting an exhibition. The trottingcourse is level, well graded. and one third of a mile in circuit. Ample arrangements will be made for the convenience of speoiators. The number of the class, and the number in the class, nitlj the name of the article will appenr on the card attached ; hut the name or the exhibitor will not appear. Children under ten years of age not admitted unless accompanied by their parents. Instructions to Judges. JNo animal to receive an award in more than one class. . Judges are expressly required not to award pre miums to over-fed animals. No premiums are to be awarded to bulls, cows or heiffers, which shall appear to have been fattened, only in the class of fat cattle, the object of the Society being to have superior animals of this discription for breeding Fat Cattle. The judges on fat cattle will give particular attention to the animals submitted for examination. It is believed all other things being rqual those are the best cattle that have tho freateat weight over the smallest superficies, he judges will Tequire all in this class to be weighed, and will take measures to give the su perficies of each, and publish the result with their reports. They will also, before awarding any premiums, require of the competitors full statements as to the manner and cost of feeding as required by the regulations of the premium list. n hen there is but oneexhibitor, although be may show several animals in one class only one premi um will be awarded, that to the first, or other wise as the merits of the animal may be judged. The superintendent will take every precaution m his power, for the safety of stock and articles on exhibition after their arrival, and arrange ment on the grounds, but will not be responsible for any loss or damage that may occur. ,The fcwiety desires exhibitors to give personal atten tion to their animals and articles and at the close of the fair to attend to their removal as the Soci ety canaot take further care of them. Rules op PLOw-isa The name of the plowman must be given as well as the kind of pi ow to be osed. at the time of entry. The quantity of ground to be plowed by each team to he J acre. The time allowed to do the work will he three T?r!' furrow slice in all cases to be lapped. I be teams to start at the same time and each plow inn to do his work without a driver or other as sistance.. - - The premiums offered by the Society will bo a warded to the individuals, -who, in the judgment of the committee shall do their work in the best manner, provided the work is aone in the time allowed for its performance. Each plowman to strike his own land, and plow entirely independent of the adjoiningtand. With in the one-fourth of an acre plowed,each plowman be reluire1 1( strike two back furro weil lands nd finish with the dead furrow in the middle. Any information required in regard to matters ol the Society canb e gained by addressing the Ex ecutive Committee or the Secretary, who will be pleased to give any information in their power at any time. . Any article not enumerated in the above elass- and placed upon exhibition, if worthy of no- -n, Wr 1 suitblJ rewarded. . ; 1 ne ExecutiveCommittee reserve a disoretionary V ,ward diplomas in any ease for 2d best frticlei. or for articles not entitled to premiums J the rules. A1.1 rticles may be entered free of charge, ex eepting horses for pleasure, and for the trottinz premiums. T EATIIEK an assoitmnt-rforsaJe by . t, MliRRELL A BIGLER" fceeeaber H, 186. Clearfield Select gflctrjj. HOME AND EBIENDS. Oh ! there's a power to make each hour t As sweet as Heaven designed it ; Nor need we roam to bring it home, Though few there be that find it. We seek too high for things close by, And lose what nature gave ns ; For life hath here no charms so dear As home and friends around us. We oft destroy the present joy For future hopes and praise them ; Whilst flowers as sweet bloom at our feet, If we'd but stoop to raise them ! For things afar still sweeter are When youth's bright spell hath bound ns ; But soon we're taught that earth has naught Like home and friends around ns. Tho friends that speed in time of need, When hope's last reed is shaken. Do show us still that come what will, WTe are not quite forsaken. Though all were night, if but the light From friendship's alter crowned us. 'Twould prove the bliss of earth was this Our home and friends around us. THE ANTI-SLAVERY REVOLUTION. From the Baltimore American. Freedom has gained tho day, but will she keep jxissession of the field? This question is being aked with anxious brow by many who have aided in her triumph. They re membered the death struggle of her great enemy and fear that the snake of Slavery is only scotched, not killed. It is true that while the mental type remains of those who I fanatically proclaimed Slavery a divine in stitution, and the most secure ibuudatiou for a political and social structure, the prin ciple of Slavery still lives. This mental type may be found in the North as well as in the South, in the constitutional uionar.hy, in the Empire and in the despotism as well j as in tne ivepublic. It manifested itself a mongst the supporters of aristocratic govern merit everywhere towards thoe who were trying to overthrow democratic institution:-' j in America. Every species of oppression is allied with every species of oppression, and finds its own justification in the apparent , necessity of its existence demonstrated by me race oi us existanee elsewhere. And it is because there is some logic in this plea that we may rest secure in" the conviction that the institution of Slavery cannot be re vived in the United States, Tho, Rvt, i ntui'Ci ifais us auciiipteci re-estuulish- ment by another revolution. "The history of the world has established as an axoniatic truth that ' 'Revolutions never go backward. ' ' The first election of Abraham Lincoln was the culminating point of anti Slavery revo lution in the Lnited States. It was a mor al revolution, accomplished through the a gency of political machinery established by law. It was a popular reversal of the lhed Scott decision, and meant that if that dacis ion was lute, the people, who constitute the soverign powers of the Republic and make or unmake laws, intended to so alicr the law as to reverse the Dred Scott decision. Sir James Macintosh got great credit for discovering the philosophical truth that ''constitutions are not made, but grow." In his day belief in legislation and the om nipotent power of government was greater than ours. Everything was explained in the hypothesis of manufacture, and society was regarded as the creature of the govern ment instead of the government being the servant of society. It is now held that the chief duty of government is to protect soci ety that the government which governs least, and leaves the people most free to ex ercise their talents and business likings, without unnecessary restraint or interference, is the best government. What are called "rrfornis" are the repeal of restraint? vpon individual action. It was at one time the fashion to legislate upon all subjects, and we are sorry to say the fashion still prevails to an alarming extent. British legislation, being for the benefit of the ruling class, has given us examples of every species of inter ferance with individual rights. It is only by suppressing the right of the many that the privileges of the few can be maintained. Xprtcuege necessarily involves the suppres sion of a right. In our country the conflict between rights and privileges which termina ted our Briti-h connection in 1776, and gave to the world a chart of Universal Free dom in the 1 )eclaration of Independence, still kept on amongst ourselves, subject to the pendulum-like swing of public opinion and the temporary asoendencj' of local and sectional influence. The history of the U nited States is imprinted on every page with the footsteps of its progress. Peace and principles Ions struggled for the mastery At last principle got so far the better of mere peace tor peace s sake as to declare itself in electinc Abraham Lincoln Pres ident He had explained the tendency of events,. and demonstrated to the people that by the very nature of the laws which govei n man's mind there was an "irrepres sible conjlir.t'. between Slavery and freedom. In 1858 Mr. Lincoln said: "In myopinion, it (the anti-Slavery agitation) will not cease until a crixis nhall have been reached and jxissed. A house divided against itself can not stand. I believe, this Government can not permanently endure half slave and half free. I do not expect the Union to be dis solved. I do not expect the house to fa'l, but. I do expect that it will cea3 to be di vided. It will become all one thing or the other. . Either the opponent of Slavery will arrest the further spread of it, and place it where the public mind shall rest in the belief that it is in the course of ultimate extinction, or its advocates will push it for ward until it shall become alike lawful in all the States, old as , well as . new, North as well as South." . It was this conviction that forced the people of the country at last to meet the is sue. They met it by moral force. The preponderant sentiment of the country was against Slavery, and it expressed itself ac cording to legal forms against it. 1 bat ex pression was regarded by the friends of oiavery as tne aeath-knell of the institution, auu ic was its ueath-knelL It was a true indication of the advance of public opinion to a position where it was willing to take risks in support of a principle. Hitherto public opinion had been passive now it be came active. The threats of dissolution had formerly awed it into submission to the be hests of Slavery. Lincoln's election proved that the constitution of Northern society had grown to that point, which made all further demands of Slavery futile. Hence, the rebellion. The triumph of anti-Slavery opinion was the real revolution, but it was a moral and constitutional revolution. The rebellion was a rebellion against the revolu tion, the last desperate struggle of freedom's antagonist to maintain its ground against public opinion which was overwhelming it. As almost always happens, the enemies of progress, in taking up arms to prevent it, only precipitated a result which but for their suicidal madness inisrht have been postponed for many years. The abo ition of slavery, which under the nuiefc nnpr.if.inn i of law reforms was only a very remote prob ability, became a fixed fact by the act of the war. War makes a people run through its phase of existence fast. The -American people are no exception to the general rule in this respect. The abolition of Slavery was a necessary step in our National pro gress. Die friends of the institution pre cipitated that step by rebellion, and made a Diooay stride accomplish what a thousand pt-acvtsl ones would not have done. We have, however, not merely shaken off the de-ad weight that clogged our movement as a -Nation, lhe masses of the people North and South have been converted from inert ness into a living force. Ther have b.-en siirred up out of their immobility and made tne active agents of a mighty power. Can any one suppose they do not feel this Does r:y one believe that the South is here after to be cursed with the presence of an ignorant, quiescent and lazy mass of poor whites? Necessarily they have felt their importance nn c i t.n:.. . . . . . jumi ui iu; iuuuuhju. A held partially oj ened to them by war, is t mown open still more widely by the con summation of peace on the anti-Slavery basis. The labor market. onw a mnnmw-MV. . . -j - - t s tree lor the competition of energy and en terprise. An unrestrained career is openc--' tl?y.I-v ?2ltJenlllu-r ami progressive, although may be the immediate .aspect of the rela tions of the races, there is an intellectual aw which governs men's actions as fixed as the law of gravitation, ihe principle of iberty is an abs'.ract principle, and compels a consistent maintenance fbr its own- nreser- ation. It is certain to revenge itself upon anv man wno departs irom it Dy involving his own rights. It follows then that Slavery being dead, the monopoly of labor which made it proCt-! able being broken up ; the political power rVinging from that monopoly being destroy ed ; the people formerly subjected to its po- ltical sway being emancipated and the em bargo against emigration into its section re moved ; that the great moral revolution which only preponderated in a section will substantiate itself as national, and progress amongst a homogeneous people towards the achievement of its logical sequences. Alabama has fulloweu Mississippi and other Southern States in declaring the Se cession ordinance null and void and in abol- very. We do not see any great. merit in this, inasmuch as Alabama was compelled to do it. And we freely confess that the sentiments uttered by some ot the members ot the convention m their remarks upon the act abolishing Slavery are anything but encouraging a! evidences or the exist ence of a real anti-Slavery sentiment. - We fear that there is still treachery enough left in the hearts of the old political hunkers that have grown fat upon the carcass of Slavery to be willing to revive it if such a thing were possible : history has warnings which even they must heed. While we are pretty . certain that the remembrance of Sherman's raid and Lee's surrender will have a wholesome effect upon present sur vivors, we are equally as sure that free prin ciples arill so vindicate themselves in the ad- vancement of the material prosperity ana moral greatness of the South that we may safely leave their support to tho sons of the soil that follows these survivors. BeACTTFITL AXdTrue. In a fate article in Frazer's Magazine, this brief, beautiful pas sage occurs : "Education does not cora- mrnn. with the Alithabet. It besrinswitha mother's look with a father's smile of ap probation, or sign of reproof with a sisters gentle pressure ot the hand, or a brother's noble act of forbearance with a handful of beautiful flowers in green and daisy : mead ows with bird s nests admured but not touched with creeping ants, and almost im perceptible insects with humming bee sand glass bee-hivesr-with pleasant walks in sha dy lanes, and with thoughts , direotca in sweet and kindly tones, and words to mature to act3 ot benevolence, to deeds ot virtue, to the source of all good to God himself. , "Oh. mother ! do send for the doctor!" said a little boy of three years. "What for,' mv dear ?" -"Why. there's a irentleman in the parlor who says he'll die if Jane don't marry him and J ano says she won t. fin Loarinrr t.Vlrt Rontr pntillod " The dear- ost. crwir. nn pnrt)i is hnmft. " . - Henrv remark ed that he found his home so dear that he was going to break up housekeeping and go to boarding. ': ' - ; fTl. ,. . .1 . 1 .nnilnff fP fi Tl PI1- X LIU lilUCa KL DU1U1L1 u;ujiug vnAv v gagement, and those of. a young woman go ing into one are yuwucieu. - - -- - When can a donkey be 'spelt with' one let r! when it's U. Nothing personal meant. When is a boat like a heap of snow? itu,.i- : : j;p. w DECISION OF THE CHESHIEE CASE. From theN. Y. Times. , 11 there were any expectations that the tviltffts orpus proceedings in the case of uanes Cheshire before the Supreme Court in ivings bounty, would result in a conflict of authority between the Courts of the otatc and the Government of the United States, those expectations were brought to nothing by the decision of the casc.by Judge Lotton Saturday last. The position of the matter was this : Cheshire, who was one of tne supervisors ot Kings County and a mem Der ot the .hnrolling Board, was tried before a court- Jiartial and convicted of receiving money improperly in connection with his jo sition, and was sentenced to be fined and im prisoned. lhe Secretary of. War designated the l emtentiary at Albany as his place of iin t x -i . i . l . . iiiinuumeiii, auu tnitner unesnire was car ried. A habeas coriitts was kh) rmt i?i Vile nenair before Jude-o l,ntr dirrr-tl tn f"r.i,t - , Pillsbury, the Warden of the Prison, order ing mm to produce Cheshire tmrnra thf Court in Brooklyn, that the cause of his im prisonment might be inquired into. On tho day named in the writ, Capt. Pillsbury was present in court but did not produce Cheshire. On the contrary he made return to the writ that although Ches hire was in his custody, under the sentence of the court-martial, which sentence was set forth and the jurisdiction of .the court-mar-tia! averred, yet since he left Albany he had heared by telegraph that the prisoner had been,' by order of the President, transferred from his custody to that of another officer, and that he could not therefore produce him ia court. Upon this return a motion was made for an attachment against Pillsbury for con tempt of court, in not producing his prison er in court, as directed by the writ. And it was very confidently expected that Judge Lott would, in his decision, take very higii ground, and would stand forth as the defend er of State rights and the rights of the citi zen, against what was claimed to be an out rageous assault upon bothby tho Federal Go vernuusnt. JudgeLott's soiuewhatin temper ate language upon the hearing as to an ap parent distrust of the State courts by the United States Government, and as to the possible advantages of dissolving the gov ernment, if such were to be the state of vtiPJti ST-CjcilcuilafiHl to lend tmnntenanra But a sober second thought, and a careful examination of the arguments and author ities of Mr.Silliman, the United States Uis rict Attorney, who represented the case for the government, apparently brought him to a different way of looking at .the subject ; for on Saturday, after having held the subject under consideration flr some weeks, he an nounced that he had decided to deny the motion for the attachment and to discharge the writ of Itabeas corpus. It is no doubt true that since the hearing tho Democraey of this State have declared themselves the only true and staunch sup porters of President Johnson, and that it would not have looked very well for a Dem ocratic Judge, so soon after that declarat ion w.ts made, to have undertaken to punish an officer for contempt of court, because he had obeyed a direction given .by the President. But se need not go so far as that to Slid reason for the Judge's yielding his assent to the legal positions taken on behalf of the gov ernment before him. They were indeed, so strong that a contrar3T decision would have indicated a disregard of the authority of de cided cases and settled principles, which could hardly spring from anythisg short of most virulent partizandiip. ;' , Among' the arguments urged in behalf of the government it was said that as.thcro was no traverse of the return, the facts set forth in it must be taken to be true, a position which could hardly be controverted. And inasmuch as that return set forth the decis ion of the court-martial - and alleged that Cheshire was amenable :6 its jurisdiction, the ppplicant could not be heard now to allege or argue that he was not subject to that ju risdiction and this position also seems to be irrefragible. Then again the Supreme Court of the United States decided in the case of Booth, who as will 1 e recollected was ordered to be discharged on habeas cor pus by the Supreme Court of Wisconsin, that an officer who holds a prisoner by au thority of a court of the United States must not produce him before a State court when called npon by a habeas, corpus, but must simply return that he lipids the prisoner by virtue of such United States authority,and that thereupon it becomes the duty of . the State court to discharge the writ and go no further in the matter. . And accordingly it was urged, that as Pillsbury had acted in strict conformity to this decision of the Su preme Court, by' returning that the prison er was in his custody bv virtue of the decis ion of the court martialjwhich was none the less a court of. the United States because t it was a court-martial, this .court instead of Eunishing him for -contempt of court, was ound to take the same view of the case as he. did, and to'take no further proceedings in the matter.,.; . - . - " ; These arguments alone would seem to ba conclusive. But there was another equally so, in the suspension of the writ of habeas corpus in all such cases by President Lin coln "as long as the rebellion shall contin ue. It was urged in opposition to this ar gument that the rebellion does not still "con tinue,", but as we all know, is at an end.and therefore the time fixed when . the suspen sion of the writ of liabeascopus should cease, has arrived.'; But "no," said the council for the government,"this suspension must con tinue until the same jower which declared the rebellion to exist, viz.; the, Executive, shall declare that it no longer continues. It cannot be that such a question as that can be.allowed to depend upon the decision of a court or jury, whether as matter of ; fact the rebellion has ceased. : It is. a political ques tion, and the courts are bound to adopt that view of it which the government adopts. And till the government shall declare that the rebellion no longer continues, the courts must treat the habeas corpus as suspended in the cases provided. This view of 1 1 t i t -r i ue case was aiso adopted by Judge JjOtt in the verbal announcement of this deci sion. We hope the J udge will find time to write out his opinion. There are those in this State, and elsewhere, who need yet to be en lightened on the respective duties of the State and Federal niirt and hn nnoA ! so, to be instructed that, politically, the re bellion still continues, and will do .so until the restoration of peace and order and the forms of law and frnvemtnenr. line en far rm- jrresscd that the President, shall feel himself justified in announcing that we have again returned to tne normal condition ot things. Till then the courts.aswell as the government, must act as befits the existing state nf af fairs. The Indian Expedition. Fort Laramie, Oct. 1. General Conner returned cn Saturday from the Powder-riv er Indian expedition. His columns will be here in six days, lhe results of the cam paign were four pitched battles with the Cheyennes, Sioux, and Arrapahoes, with a loss on our side of Captain Cole, of the 6th 3Iichigan, and twenty-four men killed and two wounded, and an Indian loss of f'oui hundred to five hundred killed, and a l.ire number wounded ; the entire destruction cf the village of the Arrapahoes, and the cap ture of five hundred head of horses and mules. The Arrapahoes acknowledge the loss of sixty-eight of their braves in one battle, and are now coming in to make peace. It is thought, however, that the Sioux and Che yennes are not half whipped. Not less than tnteen hundred men should be stationed at Fort Conner, and the camnaiim continued during the winter. The citizens fear that the Sioux and Cheyennes will come back ou the road and interfere with the mails and tele- aph. The expedition was carried cut un ;rthe most embarrassing circumstances. : Not a pound of the stores intended for the expedition arrived in time -for use. The troops were mutinous, and claimed their discharge because the rebellion has ceased, and regiments were mustered out almost as soon as they arrived on the plains. A Temperance ijtory. Deacon Johnson id a great temperance man, and sets a good example of total absti nence, as far as he is seen. Not long ago he employed a carpenter to make some al terations in his parlor,andUn repairing the corner near the fire place, it was found ne cessary to remove the wainscotting, when lo ! a discovery was made that astonished everybody. A brace of decanters, a turn- J bier, and a pitcher were cosily reposing there, as if they had stood there from the beginning. The deacon was summoned, and as he beheld the blushing bottle", h.2 exclaimed : "Wal, I declare that's curious, sure e nough. It must be that eld Baines left them there when he went out of this ere house thirty years ago. ' ' "Perhaps he did," returned the carpen ter, "but, Deacon, the ice in the pitcher must have been friz mighty hard to stay so till this time." - - To ReviveFadep Black Cloths. Boil . two or three ounces of logwood in vinegar, and when the color is extracted drop in a piece of carbonate of iron, which is of the same nature as rust of iron, as laige as a chestnut, let it boil. Have the coat or pan taloons weil sponged with soap and hot wa ter, laying them n a table and brushing the nap down with a sponge. Then take the dye on the table and sponge them all over with the dy j, taking care to keep them smooth and brush downward. When completely wet with dye, dissolve a teaspoonfull of salaratus in warm water, and sponge all over with this, and it sets the color so completely that nothing rubs off. They must not be wrung or wrinkled, but carefully hung up to drain. The brownest cloth may be made a perfect black in this simple manner. 1 . . Good Idea. The Secretary of the Navy has caused to be prepared a handsome cop-por-plate document as discharge paper for all volunteer naval officers honorably dis charged. - A finely executed engraving, rep resenting a steam frigate,, a monitor and sailing vessels, ornaments the heading; whilst the body of the paper sets forth that the war for the preservation of the Union having, under the benificent guidance of Al mighty God, been brought to a successful termination, a reduction of the navsl forces becomes necessary; and, having served faith fully in the navy, he is hereby honorably discharged, with the thanks of the pa,rt ment Each is signed by Secretary vv ells. It forms a beautiful ornament for framing, and will doubtless be highly appreciated by the gallant officers who have faithfully served their country. - - " " ToKlLLCoCKROACHES,ATS,i&C. Equal parts of dry red lead and sugar, well mixed, is given as a pertain and sure- exterminator of cock roac nes, uiuck ana reu ams, auu uiu er pests. As every household is more or less plagued wit h these vermin, this receipt, so easily provided, .should be .'tried. The pimple mixture should be put in places : in fested by then?., Care should be observed in the use of it, as tho lead is poisonous. . 1 'A man who'll maliciously set fire to a barn," said Mr. Slow, "and burn up twenty cows, ought to be kicked to death" by a jackass, and I'd like to do it." - blow is very severe sometimes. ;- Men slip on water when it is frozen, and on whiskey wbe.p. it isn't. STATE AND NATION. A great many well-meaning gentlemen in the unorgaized States are writing letters and making speeches to prove that those who took part in the rebellion honestly believed that the single States of this Union are sov ereign, and that therefore they did deliberate ly and wickedly violate their obligations to the Union. It was, they contended, the uni versal Southern theory of our Government. So far as the present generation is concern ed we believe t hat these gentlemen are cor rect, and that is the verry difficulty. It is undoubtedly true that Washington and Marshal, and many other of the noblest Americans of the last century, who lived in the Southern States, were as truly persua ded of the enormity and peril of the doctrine of State sovereignty as the stanchest loyal men of to-day throughout the country. But Calhoun, and not Washington, has been the modern political prophet in those States. An intelligent noted rebel officer, who was never north of the Mason and Dixon's fine until he was brought as a prisoner, told us he had no more doubt of the right of a State to secede than he had of his right to eat din ner, and that the proclamation of Pres ident Lincoln calling for seventy-five thou sand men to compel obedience to the author ity of the United States seemed to him as incredible and monstrous as a summons from Lor is Napoleon to enforce the authority of France in this country. And this.he said. was nie universal conviction ol his neighbor hood in the Southwest. That there were some who held to the par amount National soveieiiriitv is doubtless true. But they were not an imoosiuff num ber is plain from the absence of any vigorous protest against the rebellion. It is no an swer to say ten or silenced them ; that Union men were watched, and not suffered to as semble nor to vote. If the Union men had been a power! u! body they would have as sembled and voted and resisted. Could the Copperheads have dragooned the Northern States ? Certainly not; for the whole moral force and vast majority of the population were loyal. The rebels did dragoon and si lence the Southern loyal States, because the vast weight of opinion as well as actual numbers of the v he population were with them. That population, as every well-informed man knows, had been long and systematical ly alienated from the Union. They were a:cder 11. Stephens was called a Union man. So he was, as long as he thought his section could control the Union to its own sectional purposes. It was a Union subor dinate to State sovereignty which he sup ported. It was a Union whose Government had no right to enforce its authority against any citizen of the United States, if the State in which he lived released him from his alle giance. It was this universal conviction alone that enabled the rebellion to endure so long and so desperately. Has the war changed this view? Do ihe people of the disaffected States hold any oth er theory of the Union ? It is a real Union that we reorganize if they do not ? II we sin cere 'y wish a solid and true reorganization shall wc not seek to found it upon all those of the Southern population who reject this theory? Can we wisely discard an entire na tive clars, in smie States more than half the population, who have been always faithful to the national supremacy, and trust the wel fare of the country entirely to those who, for any reason whatever, are willing to take an oath? Mr. . Herschell V. Johnson, of Georgia, for instance, has taken theoath of allegiauce, and has been pardoued. Yet . his loud assertions of his old, unchanged senti ments in Washington, since hip oath, were so offensive that a" loyal citizen silenced him with a threat of personal castigation if he did r.ot stop. Mr. JOHNSON is doubtless a fai : illustration of men who take the oath with out any change of heart. Is he the kind of; Representative or Senatnr from -Georgia that it is desirable to see in Congress ? If lie, and such as he, are intrusted by the loyal citizens of the United States, who are soon to decide the qustion. with the entire local govern ment of the State of Georcia.to the absolute exclusion of the unswervingly loyal part of the State population whom Mr. Johnson and his friends could neither cajole nor frigh ten iiito rebellion, do we not show a subser vience to the doctrine of State power which is as dangerous as it is absurd? ; Every loyal citizen of the United - States has rights in the State of Georgia which he is a very foolish man if he surrenders un conditional to Mr. Herschell V. JonssoN and his friends. Harpers Weekly.,..-. The Credit System.' A beautiful girl stepped into a shop to buy a pair of mitts. "How much are they?" ' v - l- "Whf," said the gallant but imprudent clerk, lost in gazing upon her sparkling eyes and ruby lips, 'you shall have them for a kiss." .. .- . - "Agreed,"sid the young lady, pocketing the m jtts, wftile her eyes spoke daggers, "and as I see you give credit here, eharge it on your books, and collect it the best way you can!" So saying she hastily tripped out. ' - -A man in getting out of an omnibus, a few days since, made use of two rows of knees ' as - banisters to steady . himself, 'at which the ladies took offense, and one cried aloud, "He is a perfect savage!" "True," said a wag. inside, "he belongs to the Paw-; knee tribe." . - . r , "Mr. Smith," said a little fellow . the other evening to his sister's beau," "I wish " you wouldn't praise our Ann Maria's eyes any more. You've made her so proud now, that she won't speak to cousin Laura, nor ' help mother the least bit." ' . ;" Twenty-five planters are said to be under arrest at Vicksburg, all charged witheither maltreating or killing their former slaves. is! a, I! 4 J fill I ! .1 I ... !- ( i nr