TERMS OF ADVERTISING one Sqoare one Insertion, For each out s.-quent Inaertion. For Mo utotlie Advertisements, Legal Notices Profes•lo Jai Ourds without paper, Obituary Not -es as Uo amide tlou rel tug :anti, sot pri veto Interests shine, IU Cents per Ilur. 108 1 . 11.1N11 (1.--Our Job Printing 00lee 18 the argest and most complete o•tebliehaiout In the -loun y. Four good Premiss, and a general variety 01 ennerlal milted for plain and Fancy work o: every clod, a:tibias co to do Joh Printlng at the oho•tent lot es, and .:11 the most ro namable terms. Peismix In wane of 1.11118, Blinks, or anything In the Jobbing it 111. , V 111 find it to their interest to give ux n mill. gntmal ilwfprainitifoz., 11. S. GOVERNMENT President —Atronsw JOHNSON, Pico President -1.. S. IcOaTER, Secretary of State—WM. Secretary of Interior—Jas.. 114111.4 N, Socrotary of Treasury—llyon NIUCULLOCII, Secretory o f War—Vownr 11. STANSt.N, gocrotary of Navy--Gtosotr WELLES. Post Master General—Wm. DENNIsON. • ttornay tteneral—./AMES S. Spoon. ChlefJ notice of the II oiled &MOS—SALMON P. Coast • STATE GOVERNMENT Uovernor—ANDßEW 0 CL RTIN. Seererary of State—ELl SLIFER. Surveyor Gerl , ral—JAMEß . . BARR, • FMtOP Gen Ora I—.ISTAC Sts.mit ER, attorney General— Wu. M. MERL:DIM Adjutant General—A L. 12 oa+•:I.1.. • State Treasurer—ll ENRY D. Monne. 'Chlorin -tle of the Supreme Court—giro IV. WOOO. "ARE COUNTY OFFICERS. President James 11. Graham. Associate Judges—lion. Michael Corklln. 16 , 0 II ugh Stuart. District Attornoy—J. W. D.olHelen. e.-at. ,110 tarY—EM tta I Clerk an I Reenrder—Ephralts Crouton t. Register—(lee W. North. High Sheriff—John Jacobs. County treasurer—Usury S. Pitts, Coroner—David Smith County Cmunalssionors—Henry Karns. Job M 'fly, Slltcholl McClellan, Superintendent of Poor Houso—lfonry- Snyder Physician to Jail—Dr. W. W. D a l e Physician to Poor House—Dr. W. IV Dal• BOROUOIi OFFICERS Chief Burgess—John Campbell, Assistant Burgess— William Comeron, Town Counell—East Word—J. W. D. fi lielen, An drew B. Zeigler, Oro. Wetzel. Chas. U. Ito or, Barnet Hoffman, ((set Ward—A If B heem..lob Hays, 'Oda. M. !Bark, S. D. Hillman, Clark, Jas. M.. ltsoninunmer Borough Treasurer, Dash' Common. High Constable, Emanuel SwAri 7.. %Vont Constables. East Ward. Al. drew Morriss. West Ward. James WI.I 110 r. Assessor-11ililain Noakm. A ulitor— A K. Sh eater. Tax Collector—Andrew Heir. Ward CO leen., a— F oat Ward, Jacdh (rnod) col 11. act Ward, Williams, Street Commission,. Pal rick Madden leo; of the Pero-1. L. Spdrislor. David Smith. khrol Ddhuff. 1I lehaol Holcomb. tamp 11,hter.— Al.,.Meek, Levi .Nisei CHURCHES First Presbyterian Church, Northwest angle of Ceti tee Square. Hey Coo, ay P. Wing Pastor —Service-. every Sunday Morning at 11 o'clock. A. M.. and 7 o'cloca P. M. Seem] t Presbyterian l'hurch, et.rnel South Han over aid Pomfret streets Her. J Ohll (.; BI lxe. l'ast, :Services commence at 11 o'clock, A. 31., and 7 n'o.ork l'. 31. St. John's Church (•prnt Episcopal) Ilorth,ast nnylr or cent,o oti.tre Ilov p . .1 ,21err, rector Sar vice,. at 11 o'clock I. , aad l' 31. Chan h. 110d1,(1, botweeti 11)1 LOU timer mtreetm It or '1 Pastor. 01,•00 at II "'clock A. )1 , I' 31 donut, !Let 4,1.1 , :ttlivr, r,vor I ritt “ov. a tattel at II ll'Qlovlt A. \I., and if .•'4•11,1% l' )1. \I .41..11.4 (fir St. Nillll. In I r'ltt •tr•et,.. Itnr l'hoili.ts 11. Sht,loc•k t II I I o'vlor.l, A. \I. at.(l 7 o'clock I' \I. .I.bc h iset..lll Om, e.) Ifevb• I 119,viti All. ry icosin Emory M b.. c hurrl, u I \. , lid ,I;( 2 V. M. Church ot .-ooth West ror. of cat Ft anti Onapel Alloy. It or. 13 Beck, rust° . lerstai:t. at II a, In.. and 5n w t Patrick', Ott th , plic Church Poulfrot near Ea,tot I too Pasta, eterviceq every et tii.l rnh I'aap,:ra t 3 P. 11 El= iunuui Lutheran Church, coruer 1 l'ota!, et and Bo Ilurd 4trows. Rev C Sort ht, a , D'otoch P. N. IM.Whon ehanget in the 11 1 .'11 are nueessary the roper porno's are requested to notify us.' ,ICKINSON COLLEGE Rev Itor oCO M. Johnson, 0. D.. Pres n' and Pro esspr of tl rtl Science. Wilson, A. M., Professor of Natural Science a., Curator n the Museum. Rev. IVllltuui L Boswell, A °rook and Gorman Laugu.gec. Samuel I). Lllllnonn, A. M., I'rofe sor of Mathernat. John K. Staym in, A. M., Professor of the Latin nod French Languages. lion. James ti. Graham, LL Professor of Lan. Henryltov. C. Cheston, A. 0 . Principal of the Grammar kichool. John flood, Assistant in the 111111111211 School THE MARV INSTITI"FE CORPORATION :- Tho hector, %Val Jena and Vestrymen of St. John's Church Carlisle The lion. F. J. Clem D 0., Hector and Treasurer. Mrs. John It. Sneed, Principal. Miss A. E. Donkersley, instructor In Languages. Mien L. L. Webster, Instructor In Nlathentatlcs and Vocal Music. Mrs. M. M. Ege, Teacher of Piano. Miss E. Graham, Teacher Of 1 caning and Painting. Rev. S. Philips, Lecturer on Elocution and Psychol ogy, BOARD OF SCHOOL DIRECTORS E. Common. President, James damilton, 11. Saxton, R. C. Woodward, Ilonry A ewahum, C. P. Ilumerich, Seet'y J. W. Eby, Treasureri-John.Bphiir„ Messenger Moot on the let Monday of each Month at Fl o'rloek A M., at Educationlfall. _ CORPORATIONS OVELL9L6 DEPOYIT BANE.—President, It. 31. Homier. sou, W. Al. Beetem Cash. J. P. Hassler and C. B. Pfahler Tellers, W. K. Pfahier. Clerk, Jno. Underviood Mes senger. Directrirs, It. Al Henderson, President .lt C. Woodward, Sidles Woodburn, Moses Bricker, Jobs Zug, W. W. Dale, John D. (largos, Joseph J. Logan, Jug. Stuart, jr. FIEIST NATIONAL Samuel Hepburn Ca-bier. Jos. C. troffer, Teller, Abner C. Brindle, Ales se.,ger, Jesse Brown. Wm. Ker, John Dunlap, Bleh'd Woods, John O. Dunlap, .ease Brenneman, John S. Sterrett, Sam'l. Hepburn, Directors. IJUDIBERLAND VALLEY RAILROAD COMPANY.—ProRkIent, Frederick Watts: Secretor and Treasurer, Edward M. Biddle: Superintendent, 0. N. Lull. Passenge. trains three times a day. Carlisle Accotnmo atlon, Eastward, loaves Carlisle 6 55 A. M., arriving at Cur. Melo 6.20 P. 51. Through trains Eastward, 10.10 A. 01. and 2.42, P, M. Westward at 9.27, A. M., and 2.55 I'. INRLIBLE Gas AND IVA I a CoMYANY.— President, Lem uel Todd; Treasurer, A. L. Spotn.ler ; Superintom en, George Wise: Directors, F. lVatts, Wm. M. lientemt E. M. Biddle, Henry Saxton. it. C. Woodward. J. W. Patton, P. lardoer and D. f 3, Croft. SOCIETIES Oumberland Stu Lodgo No, 107, A. M. meets ul Marion Hall on tho god and 4th Tuesdays of every month. St. John's r.odgo N 0.200 A. Y. M. Meets 8d Thurs day of each month, at Marion Ifall. OarlislaLodge.No. In 1. ll of 0. F. Moots Monday evening, at Trodt's Letort Lodge No. 03, 1. 0. of G. T. Moats every Thursday evening In Itheem's story. 0 FIRE COAIPANIES. The Union Fire Company waQ organized" In 1780.- 11mi - so inl.outher between Plitund liennver. Tho Cumberland Fire Compary witainstliuted Feb t 8: 1800. Ilouae In Bedford, between Main uno Pool fret. ; ' The . Gond Will Fire Company wee inatitutod in March, 1865. Holum in Pomfret. near Hanover Th 9 I.:tapir° limo k and Ladder Company was inatitu ta is 18511. , Llouee in Pitt. near Main. RATES OF POSTAGE Postage on all lettere of one half ounce weight or under, a cents pre paid. .PoStagn on the HARALD vv l thln the County,' free. Within the-State 18 conts'per an'plam. To any part. ,of the United States, 20 cents ,Postage on all ;ran sle it Opera. Weents per ounce. Advertised lettere to he 'charged with Cost of-advertising. SMITH'S Phrotogiiiphi,Anitirotipes f ivorytypea Beautiful Albums I Beautiful Frames I Album for Ladies and Gentletnon,': '• • ' Albums f a Hisses and for Crip.llo4 rtiekOtrAllnks tsta , Najd era, end CisallanA I Cholcost,All;ume I Prettiest Albums! Cheapest Albumbl CHRISTMAS GIFTS ~Freph and. Now from Now York.and Philadelphia • Market., . . , „ IF you want satisfaototy . Pic turns and pOlito attention call at, Mrs, R. A. Smith's Photo- graphic GalleryeiScnith East Cornerot ilanover.Street and Market Square, opposite the Gotta House and, Post Ornco.,.onrllele, PA, , . , Mrs. It. A. Smith well known as Mrs. It, A. Reynolds, and io well known ass Daguerrean Artist; gives per sonal attention teladies'and;Gentleinen ;visiting her Gallery; and having the best of Artists and polite at tenclantd,Tran sately , prondse that in 'nentber can those who favor her with a call get pictures supp lier to.hers, not. even in•NeW;YOrk:or yhtladelphia, or meat : with more kind and prompt attention. • Ambrotypes Inserted in Rings, Lockets, Breast Pine, .do. ,Perfeet copies crDaguerrolypes , and Ambrotypes .madtrof, dedetteed :.W here, copies Me defaced, ll'o-liku•picenres may still be bad, either for frames or ,for cards.. All'negatives preservekono year'and orders by mall or otberwisepromptly tittended4o., • December .23, 1804--tf .;. Wlll.. 000 R, •' • ROMOEOPAIIIIIC. PHYSICIAN,'.• • , Surgeon - and , : Aecouchour, . • QVPIOX •at his residance •in -. Pitt ti i t na t afi the Methodist Church. ' ltVlB , fl 00 25 Ou 4 00 7 LO At the request of a large number of our subscribers, we re-publish Me following let ter, which appeared in our columns some five years since. The description of the noted local characters named in it, cannot fail to interest all who are familiar with the earlier history of our town. Con rn denre of the }tennis, GRAVESEND COTTAGE, Nov. 12th, 1860. j b;dito r ,r the Carlisle Herald.— DEAR SlR:—your last - number, a copy of which I have just been reading, revives some slumbering recollections which demand ex pression; end if you have no objection, I will make your columns the medium of their ut terance: It SOODIS that the _Herald is tn.,n, in ifs " sixty-second volume ;"n fact which indi cates that the paper was started in the year 1798. My acquaintance with it..dates back to a period considerably later than that.— AV hen I began to read the Herald, it was published and owned by GEonos: PHILLIPS, . sq., a man who was better known to me at that time, in his military, than in his ed itorial capacity. For Mr. PH IL LIPS, it must be known, was a member, and a prominent one, too, of the redoubtable Carlisle Guards. Not that he was a high officer ; or even a very fn•nuidable looking private, but, never theless, on "Fourth of July's" and "Review Days," he was always among the most con spicuous of his company. His temper was choleric and his spirit plucky, and When a little excited, he was What might be called a very ugly customer to handle. On those fes tive of oasions referred to. he was araphati calls it " high private." of Mr. Pintoes, as an Editor, my mem ory is very indistinct; but the Herald, 1 believe, was in hi; hands, as it always has !wen, a highly respectable and instructive paper. To be sure, for the last thirty years I have seen very little ()I' it, and tun, there hire, hardly qualified to judge of its late charactar; but 'ft on) the occasional numbers that I'llll into my hands, it is hut ,just to ex- press my belief that it more than ,ustains it original reputation. But, dear me I the old town of l': u •lis e, judging from your columns, ha ve great ly changed since I knew it. I see cnt have Uns and ll urlraul Waler : trod fenr ot• live Deolists, and as niter loiniropo ie Ph ysi rin os; and that you are actually taking step' Lo get up a Dlrerlory. W hat a contrast does this iwpsent to the old times when we learned rle.,on,by the fervor of a "tallow-dip, — and slaked our thirst at the Murkk House Pump; when the Doctors wern.the Dentists, and the sole remedy for an otl'c•nd- ing truth. we , : to pluck it out and cast it from us. When llommopathy was a name unknown. mid hor. , e•doses were the general practice; when ealoon 1 andijitlap—senna and manna—eusom salts and emetic-tartar, were the chief remedies of the Pharmaccepoia, and Dr. ARMSTRONG, Dr. NI cCosicur, Dr. G US TINE, and Dr. Fow.K.E, the only persons deemed competent to an opinion in the oc cult seirnee of medicine. As for a Directory, we had half-a-dozen living ones at every corner ; who by word “r mouth could tell you anybody's residence /Old everybody's business. They were to be found supporting the posts of the public square, or propping up the walls of the old Court house; sitting under the locust trees at TOMMY CAmrruEns' door, or lolling on the benches in front of M AVM ItIV ARMOR'S. Ah ! my dear sir, the md town must have undergone great changes ! I fancy, if I were to go back, I should hardly recognize it. I used to know every Ong-stone in the borough. (I shouldn't wonder if the town, now, were paved with brick !) I could walk, on the darkest night. front the College to "Gun's tavern, and from 31 ETZGAR'S to the grave yard, without once tripping or " stumping" my toes. 1 know all the people of the town "like a book," and some of thorn a good deal better for while the moral lessons of "Web 'Aces speller," and " Pike's" Directions for the Rule of Three, are clean 'gone from my memory, GEORGE DAGGS •and JINNY ROPE, —BETSEY GEORGE and OLD HILDEBRAND, stand there with all the vividness of objects seen but yesterday. EllEl= Poor old BAGS I There ho stands in all the glory of his dirt and drunkenness; sways, ing to and fro—unwashed, unkemped,-fm shaved ; with his slobbering mouth and idiotic laugh ; his reeking clothes, hanging unbuttoned from his half covered porson ; surrounded by a circle of boys just disgorged from Breckenridge's alley, who insist that ho shall " strike up," and who will not bo satisfied until lie commences his well known but meaningless "Glitty glow 7 -glitty glow."' And thenlcemes " old Jinny," with liar man's hat and flaxen hair streaming from under it; her dingy white frock, and her in separable bundle in one band and a club in the other. ,See how furious she looks, with her big teeth and rage-distorted features, as _she makes for a pile of stones, and with im potent curses, hurls them after a Parcel• of urchins, who scamper before her with loud cries of -"More ropc more rope to 'hang Jinny I" Then. thefo was old Hildebrand, who used to visit' the borough every two or three months; no one (of us boys) knowing whence lie camkor,lihither ho wont. How distinctly 'Tseot isdoer Anil - cockade - 'his - grrizy beard - and bandittbk, as witli• foaming rage and fearful' oathli, he lets fly 'the stones 'at the Wanton yot *store who still' keep hooting, and lallooi g after him I ' f As for p or old Betsey' George, none of the boys,r , ekless and. running over . with mischiotits "thoy were, had the hardihood to, Plngua her. Her inalancjt6lir,.hiee, and *Lent , *CS; 'liar lowMuttoribiVindo'ffe aliTieeitoill 'fifts6ages froM 11'u well' conned Bible b abil the quid appeal of her whole manner id 'the sympathies of bystanders, 'rePressod all redo-, ness and kept in check the ustiali.Ontlencyto. jiilienilo ntisehiof, ' ' ' ; '' "'' ' " ' ' ikisidesthese notabilitieS, s .therci 'Were nth-: ors of a different category, 'WhOse, images are 'still viliid oh my memory's retina. Thei'ir 'was OLD,MATTIIEW MILLER, who i.ised'ib ; cOrne . iiding'oVer the lguirt i llridge, eiitising us to wonder how a common'. sized horse: could enrrY,,..with apparenttmeonseionsUess,; 'such an rineommon sipsdanan.. ) Not that ho ,wits ii:Pdesen , :of s , uch',9.7c.trttordintn.Y, bnik oitiiiu.' " hut ,corpulenco ,on horse-1;46k hi at any time a rare sight; and, when 4Er. Miiler, 0 0 ' \ . 4 , - ' • , 000\ \•\ 1 1! , Ci t i o 0., \ , •, . ; • , , 'Rq , VOL. 65. RHEEM_&, WEAKLEY, Editors & Proprietors iargliJingems. used to come to town our attention was.nat urally arrested. But there was another whose proportions were Much more Daniel Lambert-like than those of Matthew Miller. I allude to a very, respectable gentleman, who was known in his time as—. OLD McOLAN, the big-bellied man." I see the old gentleman (boys have a way, you know, of calling men " old," without reference to their years,) just as he used to look, sitting at his door panting for breath on a summer's evening, or basking at mid-day in the sunshine of spring. And how I remember how our admiration used to be equally divided between him, in his shirt sleeves, fanning himself with his hat= and a gay plumaged parrot that swung over his head, gabbling its own vain praises as " Pretty Poll—Pretty Poll !" Then there was a wonder of wonders!—the Carlisle Band' How I wish I could li ten now with one-tenth the- delight to Leds worth's or Hassler's, that I then experienced in hearing the strains of that extraordinry group ! We drank it in with eyes-and ears. It was about as much pleasure to watch the inflated cheeks of DAN FISHER, GEORGE SMITH, (Gentleman George,) JOE Givirr and JIM CREVER, as they played on their efar lands, or the still greater distention of those of Levi \V II EATON, as lie poured himself out into his huge brass Serpent, or the white face, turned red, of SAM ALEXANDER, as he labored on his Kent Bugle, as it was to listen to the diversified sounds that proceeded from their various instruments. Then how grand old BLACK looked, as he leaned beyond the perpendicular, and with his head in the air and his brass drum on his bel'y, pounded away with an accuracy of time and a grace of flourish impossible to be 6:celled! Then there was MeGoNniAL with his bassoon, and SWARTZ, with his cymbals, and a boy in " Guards" uniform, who played the triangle. The pleasure derived from the two latter came altogether through the medium of the eye ; auricularly, they were like religion without faith, nothing but "sounding brass and tinkling cymbals." Then not to be forgotten, as alternating with the band when on the march, were SAWNEY MITCHELL and SAM EAGLE with their rattling drum and eatridereingfife.- 1V hu that ever heard the inevitable i-jAWNKY or the inimitable SAM, can forget the shrill and ,oul-stirrin; sounds with which th y were wont to Wilke up the old echoes! As for the BAND, I hear it now in the cells of my memory just as it used to sound, at a lit tle distance, in my boyish ears. And I se Captain HALBERT, with his tall and manly form, turning to give the word of command, and Orderly Sergeant JONES, the indefati gable Drill Master, seeing to its execution. Then there were the INFANTRY, a COM pany 1 never fancied much—chiefly, perhaps, because they had no band. But they were generally hold in high repute, and BILL MORRISON, theit drummer, was fully equal to SAW X KY. Then there were the HussAlts, whose chief attraction was the red-coated Bugler. ANDY Scorr usually served in that capacity, though the place was sometimes filled by JOHN ..ONSI.EIt that many-talentqd genius, who could walk the wire, stew oysters, blow rocks, keep a sweat•cloth, and do at least a hundred other things in a style that admit= ted of no superiority. Doctor FOULKE was the Captain of that Cavalry company, and DICKY MILES was one of its members. 1 hardly know how these two men, so little resembling each other, should stand coupled in my memory, unless it is, that I saw the Doctor once handle Richard rather roughly, because he refused to obey an order. Then there was a new company, formed by BILL BRECKENRIDOE 7 (eECtise my irrev erence—that was the name he was known by among his cotemporaries)—called the AR ,TILL Kin% This company had a handsome brass cannon, and its members wore "shovel plottgb" hats, and, being something of a. nov elty, was very popular 'with the boys. Ah ! those were halcyon days! • (Though, between ourselves, Mr. Editor, if I had them to live over again, I think I could turn them to bet ter advantage !) Then there was the Carlisle Bar, of which our fathers were so proud, whose members were objects of our juvenile admiration.— Jour; D. MAnoN was its bright particular star, young, graceful, eloquent, and with a ,pry irresistible. Equal to him in general flinty, and superior, perhaps, in legal acu men, was Mg . cotemporary and rival, SAM DEL ALEXANDER, Esq. Then there *as the venerable ANDREW CAROTHERS, and young FREDERICK WATTS, just admitted in time to reap the advantages of his father's yepp-_ tation, and create an enduring one of his own. And GEonog METzuAtt, with his treble voice and his hand on his side, amusing the Court and spectatcrs with. his not.oyor deli catefaccthr. An . there was "BILLY RAM sEY, with his cue," a man of many clients, and the Sine .jua non of the , Demeeratic par • ' and then, towering above them all. was " Cninn" TuomPsow,:wbo - uied to fetch us boys up all standing, -with his-sudden-and Stentorian demand of "Silence!" Then ,there was on the, pavement, at, the door, "Gnextx; Alouniamf,!' with her long, yellow, flexible melting "sticks" of molasses candy, Milled, not ifaaptli : ,: l —•filiddininal intestines 1 • . . Mr, Editor, I must top,„ IVs ,no use. Time would fud me to atten.pt a desdription! of half that occMlrtyme, my mem l ory, once gets n fillip on'thesG sUbjects, there, is no end to the images it'is. Sure to Call up' Pofhaps on comp range occasion, if I should] have leisure,-and ,you should be willing, E will trouble yon, further. with my.yondiful: reminiscences, In, the meantime ; , please re gird me, .'though anonympus'rd•Unreccig-' nized, an, old friend and tieifin f aintimenc'and! • • - • LEBANON:---T4e cedars of .Lqbanon have diminished from a forestio a sacra d d• 't to t a grovokguar e by a pries au ,pro, e by a superstitiori. !'• The• prophecy Of•lsa.:. iah, 4tis knee ;Been,- ulBlled;,aad i'Lebanon turned into a 'friiitful: field,"; the'rest:Of the 'frea.ef Glio, forest are few ; that ;1), child may.*rite them." , i rhc; cedars' of 'Lebanon -scarcely . occupyy i k 'space,eitual.to;tVm'acres gro u nd.' AUti .Lebanogi is a' truitfill.fiehl; ,the''Mulherry tree yields its luscious fruit, arkali!s more useful: leaves, with graceful lufturiance and • in valleYw.t,he'ddihrvestw wabo spontaneously ittuimi " anepusly ut 1 i • ~.. Correepondence:of the HERALD. Polvlobacror, Chailes.oo, Md. .1 July, 2f3,,,1.§65. Dear Ilerald :—A trip froth mole to Washington,' Vi o. ,CbesapeAlie Bry n is perhaps one of the most• 4m.hiltqa4 ting and interesting voyages *Web Oy one, not an experienced ' tourist; ecOd take. , After a sweltering season of three days It in the monumental city, during w lob period it seemed to me that the calor° of the continent was concentrated within itB precincts, I succeeded in securing a state room and accommodations on .board the fine side wheel steamer Express, of the "Potomac Trarispertation Line," with self and baggage checked throagh to final <4...q....ti 4 n, Not loos AftAlr. reaching the vessel the welceme sound ofthe Captain's "Cast off that bow line,"lndioated•a speedy _departure, and soon after we swung out into the stream under full headway adown the Patapsco. , Passing Forts , McHenry and Carroll— ' the latter, one of the finest military works ever constructed, looking like a veritable Gibralter, surrounded as it is on all sides by water—we were not long in entering the dark green waters of the Bay. Night, on this vast expanse presents a truly grand and magnificent sight. With the shores growing dimnTer and dimmer as the sombre darkness advances; the sky effulgent with "[leaven's golden lights;" and the monotonous laboring of the ves• sel as she steadily ploughs her way through the deep rocking waves, it is certainly in tended to inspire one with awe at the eyeful splendor of Cod's great handiwork, and with admiration for man, whose in genuity holds the troubled water with an iron grasp, as it were, and enables his fel low beings to ride with safety o'er its sur- It was morning when we entered the Potomac and as the Sun rose the sight of that beautiful river, radiant and F park ling, as if offering us a s.niiing welcome to its placid boson), presented a view nev er rivalled by artificial or natural scenery. This noble etre= brought back to the wind of your correspondent vivid recollec tions of the:lunforgotten past," 'when foot sore and weary he crossed and recrossed its broad expanse ; rode its length on heavily laden transports ; forded it, and finally fought. upon its banks. Alas the Potomac is too truly a historic river, and for the roster of departed dead along its either shore during the war, the blue wa ters will ever beat a sad and mournful re quiem. Off Point Lookout we landed in a yawl a few passengers for that place. The buildings consists of a number of frame houses used us hospitals, and guard houses for confederate prisoners. It has gained some notoriety during the war. Piney Point was next passed and then Matthiases, at which place It will be re membered a batter of rebel artillery blockaded the river for a long time. Fre quently captures of Union vessels were made off this Point, more especially un armed schooners—and run off to Nassau. Leonardtown is quite .a buy little place but is not noted particularly, except us the home of the Hon. Benj. G. H AStR,IS of considerable public notoriety. t Mary's County along the river shore is beautiful in the , extreme Its pictur esque and scenic loveliness was doubtless the great incentive to Mrs SouTriworru, and it - is no wonder that' she chose this locality far "away from the allurements of fashionable life," to indite her stories of such worldwide celebrity. No landings are us yet made on the Virginia side, but when the regime as it was before the War, is reestablished,: all the usual stopping places will be touohed and the regular mode of travel 'resumed. Arriving at Glymont, a beautiful spot in the midst of foliage—solely tilt - pia for excursion parties front ykehshiii;gtou,, having u large p‘avilion and suitable build ings erected therefor,— X:guye 44oweil to the Express, quite enchanted. with , the trip experienced upon her.—E' • •" A GERMAN CUSTOM —The following , is from the Springfte.il Republican ;'''" A gentleman who wastinvelling in:Germany' madee til *. qu!ry, an.tnapor place in whioh he happened to ,bo on Sabbath, in , which church be. would boi likely to hear the best mink.' The'qinewer' •We do tioChaire, any , mudie - in oburnb.'; Sonhewbet etirilided; he asked itne'hynnfir were , 'sung., The person- itkoniped r 9.1 8 P 0 , 0 9d: 01e.A 1 4F:4144 7 .0) bo , ,. B 9e l Ped ; ,to ; have ; no, idea , that itiwas music o religious etercise into which music came, incidentally, Without doubt; but'id rsubh a'tutberdi unto plade'es hardrytiibe regard= ed' for. l its `own tiake.."Thle is i 4P a a ° F;9° I ?O 3 RIPPAI ARON, „ qcsjp ja nothle ohjeot,,buit SHUTTING W? A Risnor.--Jarvis, the, painter, was painting Bishop-4----,--,•at4 the venerable prelate began. , to retncat- Strate•with hint upon'the dissipated - eourtia into' Whioh he had fallen': 'Jarvis, plog,shia,paoell from the forehead of ~hor portrait to the lower part, of, his ,Taee said, with .a slight motion to the revirenti == " g eWiii 'you be'good'enoligtitii khtit'youi By pai9q9g that fciaturt3ll3e : c4ttloed Oi ‘iitaßbj9et2,' t =UM `Atigust 11, 1865 THE 'TOOSIN 'PETA.tS OP TEN YEARS AGO. True History of The " Flaunting COPPERHEAD .' PAPERS. PLEASE COPY A s all the, copperhead journals and ora tors throughout the country have seen fit to attach undur importance and a totally garbled construction to an extrot from a dertain song which appeared many years ago in our columns, it may be as well at this •lioint to place on record a true copy of that song, and a history of the events out of which It grew, together with copies of certain other songs on the same subject, forming a series of which the muoh•quot ed lyric wit.; but a part . The first song of 'the series appeared in the consulate of Franklin Pierce, and was called out by the circumstances at tending the capture and imprisonment of one Anthony Burns, an alleged fugitive slave from Virginia. This arrest treat. ed intense excitement in Boston, inso much that nearly all busiaess was sus pended during its pendency. The people and State authorities of the great Old Commonwealth were perfectly will ing to obey the Fugitive Slave law, pro vided its provisions were properly com plied with, and the accused given sow Agee of• proving, if he could, that4 - Ve was not the character he had been taken for. This, however, was not the policy of the then Federal officials, who con ducted the whole ease with an overbear ing insolence and disregard of the pope• lar feelings which seemed to court an armed' collision. While the excitement was at its highest, a I3oston paper announced, with high cornmdndation, that "two companies of foreign born soldiers had been stationed in and around the Court-llouse to keep back the rabble"—this " rabble," we may remark, embracing seren•eirhts of all that was most eminent in the learning. piety, public confidence and respectibili ty of the Triniontane City. Taking these words of the paper for his text, the au thor of this series wrote and sent to The Independent the following verses, which he - called - - Are I throng the courts, that once were free With bands of savage soldiery; Call out the foreign kern I Beneath the shade of Bunker shaft, Where earth the blood of freemen quaffed, A different tale nib. day we learn. Crush Massachusetts under foot, Enslave and menace, stab or shoot, The Northern - mind is bowed ; No more the Pilgrim banner waves, Content we see our 'ethers' graves ily Slavery's groaning cannon plowed 0 Massachusetts I' Mother home I Thy rocks that dash to whitening foam Those seas the "Mayflower" pressed ; Those very melts cry out to-day— The waves dash high their glittering spray, To see thy weakness thus confessed I And shall Virginia's brutal lords, Backed and anstained by foreign awords Thy ancient cool !mishit. t Shall hireling ateol and Sonthorn fraud Reverse the mandate given by God— ." Done ye would men do to you l" Oh I never, while to misery's sob Our eyes o'arflow, our pulses throb, Can COMO a day so cursed ; While hope remains, while =lns hre strong While lives the sense of right OW wrong— Those fetters he it oursdb burst I We have been patient, and our pence Mistaken was, for cowardice— We try a different tense: The passive mood bath brought us chains, The active now nlOllO remains To bring these tyrants back to sense Up, Massachusetts I up and arm I Let every steeple toll the alarm : .. Rally thy freemen soon! Old Boston, no you hope to live, Neer let that frightened fugitive In fetters quit your barracoonl Whether our rights we now defend, Or if the North Must yet descend lerom depth to lower deeps; Remember this, nor be you dumb When the great time to net has come With us the South no promise keeps This song, immediately republished in THE TRIBUNE, achieved a sudden and immense popularity, being widely copied in the journals of the day, and largely quoted from in the adverse speeches of party orators. It was a veaitable " toc sin peal," end was answered by an up• rising of popular opinion, such as is rarely witnessed. 'While these matters were going on in Boston a"wretoli, to whose nurne we afford the charity of - oblivion, committed in one night a succession of crimes at the bare recitalof which the imagination shudders. The scene of the occurrence was in the vicinity of Flatbush, Long Island. The monster entered a house in which he had formerly been employed ago servant, for tho d'ouble''purpose of robbing bis roaster :tindbutiaging a young girl who had been ,his,fellpw, servant and had rejected his'. eddreSses During, the perpetration of these 'crimes, his. former master and Mis tress' aronbed,' Whereupon he split their mbat:ai, and other wise mangled Optia 010itfully , and then ,atternpted. to hill tbezirl ,helad tried to -.ravish, after .whioh he set lire to the house (itilorder ter destroy the lifeless proofs' f '•' ' ' A horror so aggravated aroused 'ill the neighboring citizens' to fury:, Iluridreda organizeil themselves into a seariihing (Orty! t!•9d l uoted for, the villain thropgh wki,qh he bad taken refuge.' ; , lie,was..at last found, after two. or ,three ditys;•search, bidden up' to his 'neck in mildprind bleeding profusely - some Won' n' Which be hOperl tq Oheat . tfie , On, being toatiglit ;he, i‘Vonce,confessed his •erirnes, ,‘and it Nvas for a 'moment .depated as to whether he ahould not be lynehed , upon the spot. :The' sPirit of' law'.and JUStitie prevailed, ifeW`tiVOr, him" afair trial ,an , an ppportunity ,er i eentiap defend•Alim:, I; he, very' lame paper, that gave partiou los, of this tragedy •dosotibod - also how , 4 fith i aiiiViii*i v ,l l;l o ll 4: any., fair BISI LINES FOR THE DAY BEIM ( I t TERMS:--$2,00 in Advance, or $2,50 within the year had been ordered back to Slavery on the mere affidavit of a citizen of Virginia, claiming to be his owner, and the arbitra ry decision of a Commissioner, who was paid an extra $5 by law for deciding a gainst the black man. All Boston closed its places of business on the day that the military procession appeared as an escort for Anthony Burns from the Court-House to the wharf. The black man was in the eater of a square of infantry. Two sections of artillery, loaded with grape, were paraded to repress any popular out burst. Meanwhile appeared on nearly every house -top the United States flag at half-mast, while over rancuil. Hall, the old "Cradle of Liberty," the same flag was displayed at half-mast and completely enshrouded in crape. On these simultaneous events were writ ten the verses (originally pulished in our columns) which we now subjoin : THE CONTRAST. THESE are two pictures roughly drawn— Two scenes to meditate upon : No rainbow tints o'erflood The breathing figures they reveal— The pencil was assassin steel, The palette swam in blood. LONG-ISLAND Crouched in the swamp, amid the fern, What hideous features we discern, Torn, filthy and aghast— How brutishly his eyeballs glare! Vet shrinks he back into his lair, 'Till those who hunt have passed And there are shouts and thrilling cries As hunting group to group replies— Ills covert they have hemmed : They a monster steeped in crime, And find him, grovelling in the slime, Self-wounded, and,ondemmed. What tongue describe the midnight scene, When first the mu-derer crept within That home of peaceful life? When the run ment-ax amain Through the crushed bond and spattering brain Of husband and of wife! , No matter—let the law decide; Though he confesses how they died, Although-his guilt appears: Let Judges tilt and counsel plan, , And let him an• Neer as he can, A Jury of his peers. NEW-ENGLAND. Our Boston streets are Mute ea-day, Though tens of thousands throng the way.— Our flags are hung with crape; No sound except the death-heirs toll, The tramp of soldiers and the roll - Of cannon brimmed with grape. Lo! as the fettered Idaek appears Amid he square of serried spears, .Ilow heaves the mn'titudel They seek with flowers to strew his track lint leveled bayonets drive them hack— le his the oriole of blood? Worse than all crimes! Matilda Is dark And Southern fraud has set her n u u•k Upon Ilia fettered limbs; Pampered and fed by Federal might, limn ARK of Liberty and Hight On slavery's lied-sen strives Nor does the man-thief even avow That guilt hoe stained that ebon 'mow— - . - The crime is in the skin! Yet, monster 1 hungering for yet r prey A whiter heart than ymirs tt tiny Tin it bosom teats within! For h:io no trial! never pause I Rough-ride New-England's honored laws Make of our tenra yo-r mirth! Our first-horn Freedom ye haNe lain— But in the "Cradle" once again fir swear to rock a nobler birth I The troubles of Caleb Cushing and Company were not yet half over, in ref erence to this poor "colored American of African descent." On the trial being made it was found, that no ship or steam er in Boston could be hired for the pur pose of carrying this alleged fugitive back toslavery. The universal cry was: "Give him a trial. Demand from the Virgin inn that he shall give as much proof of ownership as would be requ red to recov er a stray cur! Comply only with these requisitions, and we bow as in duty bound to the supremacy of the laws of the Un- ion." Matters having arrived at this pass, Caleb Cushing and Company had noth ing for it but the conversion of a nation al armed vessel into a slave ship ! The Morris was ordered to Boston for the sole .purpose of oarrying back to Virginia this one miserable wreteh—alleded to be a fugitive from slavery. Picture—those who know anything of the Old Bay State —the horror created by this ignominious desecration of a national ship! The flag that had waved over slippery and sine king decks in our early conflicts with Great Britain—the flag to which our ear liest and noblest captains had lifted their eyes for inspiration through the hot hours of many a bloody sea-fight, for that flag Caleb Cushing and Company could find no better business ten years ago than to cover at the masthead of the Morris this isolated instance of the slave trade carried on in an armed vessel of the nation. Just think of it! Bear in mind' all - the surroundings of the case; acid then, as you read the following lines, if your pulse does not beat quicker, your cheek tingle, your eye kindle .and your heart throb with sympathy and approval—be assured that your natural place is in the syna gogue of the Copperheads, and that in the conventicle of "Peace Saints" you are'entitled.to„a hassock on the highest steps of the pulpit. lIAYL TO TiH STARS AND BTRIP.BI . [TI2O ,U. 8. nutter Morris has been ordered by' .Preal dent Franklin Plorco to carry. Anthony . Burns from Bos ton to Virginia, to be there enslaved for over. Boston Paper.] r. • , lisn, to the Stars mid Stripes I The boastful flag and Lail I ' The tyrant trembles 'now . '''And at the sight grows pale. The Old:World groans lu pain, And turns her eye to see, ' Beyond the Wratern Mani, This emblem of the Free: Ildil to ilieSiripes, end Stars 1 , '• liepe•beame in every ray, • An Po ci throuh tho dungeon bars • • inte outt brightr wavy;wa . ,The Old' World sees the , light , „ That shall' her cella Memo, • . And, ehrinking back to night, Oppression reads her doom. 'Bail to the Stars and Stripes I They float in every sea; O'er every ocean'sweepe • The emblem ofthe Free.. • Beneath the azure sky, • • Of soft Italia's clime, sn ; Or. here Aurorae die Inaelitude . All hail tbe flaunting Lie I The Stars grow paid and iim— The Stripes are,,biOod,y scars, A lie the flaunting hymn!, "It'aldolds a'pirate's sleek; ' , r , , It binds a tnatt•in chains, And round the captive's no* ; Ito folds Pro bloody stains. rat down tbo daunting Lie! --- -' ': Itilf , Plllld 0 1 ' 0 ,0 6, 0y n,gl . --r . 1 ., fult'no stinny sky -••-• • ' • 3'lllthll'attee polluted rag! , ~, betroy it, yo ,who can! ' . , poop, sink it In Op !laves! • • ' ' ." " • It boars' itiellOrronen ' • To groan With followilaree. ' '•'. "2 •'' Awake the burning scorn— The vengeance long and deep, That till a better morn Shall neither tire nor sleep. Swear once again the wow, By all we hope or dream, That what we Buffer now The future Shall redeem. Enter' the boasted Lie, Till Freedom lives again, With stature grand and purpose high Among untrammeled men I Roll up the starry sheen ;, Conceal its bloody stains ; For in its folds are seen The stamp of rusting chains. Swear, Freemen—all as one— To spurn the flaunting Lie, Till Peace, and Truth, and Love Shall fill the brooding slcy ; Then, floating in the air,. O'er hill, and dale, and NOR, 'T will stand forever fair, The emblem of the Free I To all of treason, disloyalty, or con tempt for the national flag that the ene mies of human freedom can find in the foregoing verses, we bid them heartily Welcome. They have never heretofore publishdd more than a few stanzas, and even those feW were garbled and twisted out of their proper sense and connection. The copy now submitted is from a revise by the author, with a few merely verbal corrections ; and as, for good or evil, this song has passed into the history of our country and age, we think those who have mis-quoted extracts from it, should let the whole of it be seen in its rightful shape. And now for the last of the tocsin-peals" rung out in our columns. On the arrival of tl e Morris in the South, with her black prisoner duly fet tered on board, there was tremendous re joicing through all slavedom—late Jeff dom. All the orators and bards of the "Chivalry" made speeches and wrote songs in honor of their victory over the law abiding citizens of the old 'Bay State. Joy bells were rung, bonfires kindled, windows were illuminated, much whiskey consumed and the friends of Franklin fierce thought his renomination certain. There wa, joy in the IVhite House, bui mourning iu the best hearts of New- England. That a fugitive slave truly proved to be such, should be returned. was a necessity in which very nearly a I New-England acquiesced. But that a Southein master should be quatained,by the Federal Executive in seizing a man in the streets of Boston, and hurrying him away without any substantial proofs . of identity or _former servitude— this cup was a bitter one, but President Pierce and Caleb Cushing made Massa chusetts drink of it to the very dregs On the receipt of Anthony Burns in the Slave I)ouiinion, he was soleinnly turned over from the custody of Union bayonets to thatof the local militia, an organization with which the North has since become pretty 'thoroughly ac quainted at Manassas, Antietam, Mal vern Hill, the bights of Fredericksburg, and elswehere. By these military scions of First Families of the South he was ostentatiously escorted to the plantation of his alleged owner; and it was on the report of these ceremonies, that the fol lowing verses were struck out and given to the public in our columns : TUE CURTAIN FALLS HARK I how the Joybells of the South Speak victory with bracen mouth What tyrant have they slain What conquered monarch comes to-day Begirt by all this plumed array Of fierce and wcaponed men ? Thos Joybells I Once I heard them ring When Britain's dull and savage King Loosed from our throat his grip ; Then sabers gleamed—then Kingship fells— And are they pealed once more to tell This victorygf the whip 9, Behold him in the center, there? The fettered imago of despair, While round him hotly flows, That "Chivalry" the Bouthrons boast— And ou the flag that leads the host The name of 'Freedom" glows! Ay I lead him where the lilacs bloom Around Mount Vernon's silent tomb— Green be those trees and fresh I And there, with oaths as fierce as deep Salute the moldering tenant's sleep With bide for human flesh! Who cares for Boston 1 though her cry, Her wail of bitter agony, Through all the welkin swells She dared not face our shotted gene— We drown the murmur of her eons With shouts and ellangia Lolls No reapito—no surcease of woo; And shall it be forever so? Was this the Pilgrim faith? Shall Freedom's votaries still despair, And must the living North yet bear • • This yoke with moral death? From the foregoing history,it will be aeon that the "flaunting-lie" story of the Copperhead journals and orators is a • , flaunting lie" indeed. It will also be seen that, far from being an utterance in contempt of the flag, it was a cry of sor rowful indignation at beholding the dese• oration of that sacred emblem. • This state ment we have felt due to the truth of his tory, and now the subject stands dismiss ed, with only this concl i nding remark: All four songs were tossed out, we 'believe, in the, heat and hurry of daily journalism, and have this eminent value : that, how ever deficient they may be in literary nisrit or polish, they giVeli — true, perma nent, -and—intensified expression to the cotivietions of the popular mind on a sub ject which must forever remain of the highest interest.—N. Y. qrilrune. A MAN coming home lute one night, little more than " half-seas over," feeling thitsty Procured' a glass of 'water am) drank ft. In doing so he swalloWed a small ball , of silk that lay in the bottom of the-tumbler, the end catching his teeth. Feeling something in his mouth, and not knowing what' it was, he began pulliiieat the end; and the little ball un rolling, he fI , QOEI had several feet in his hands', and still. no' end,-apparently, Ter riflodfhe shouted atthe top of his voice, 4i.Wife-1 wife l • l'say I wife come heiel am uniaveling c• ; •• r MEI kV-Nothing is :more tieeoming than. the blush of modesty upon the,eounte amine of, a young,man, Xis the index .of &Imre heart sild !a , :virtuous' ' • Since the notable surrender of JEFF. THompsoN and his ragamuffins, we hear nothing from Arkansas but reports of the pacification of the State, and the re suscitatit n of the courts and state and county offices generally. Acquiescence in emancipation is universal, and society ris rapidly conforming to the new basis. In this respect the contrast is great with the extreme bitterness of the pro slavery faction in Missouri. NO, 32. No State in the Union was more in jured by slavery and its consequent wills of vice, sloth and ruffianism than Arkan sas. Access to almost all parts was ren dered easy to immigrants by her fine riv ers, which also offered easy conveyance to their products. Yet along the valleys of these rivers, nine-tenths of the land, of the best quality for the production of cotton and of grain crops, far superior to the average of the lands of the Southern Suttee, lies waste and unpeopled. There on virgin soil, unoppressed by the influ ence of an effete and prejudicial class of former slaveholders, free labor will have an opportunity to show its superiority. to the old system. With all the advantages of soil and climate, the land ought to equal in productiveness the most favored regions of the North, and the rapidity of their improvement, to be exceeded by no other part of the country. HALTER-BREAKING COLTS Young colts,'when their dams are used in a harness, are frequently troublesome about following, especially when travel ing on the highway, where they are lia ble to meet other horses. It is common to see a young colt run directly way from its dam, when on the road, and becoming bewildered, no little trouble is required to bring it back. To avoid all annoyance from this source, make a soft halter suit able for the colt's head, and hitch it to a strong fence, or some other place, where it can not run around a post and wind the rope up. It may pull for several hours, but will soon learn to stand. As soon as accustomed to the halter, the colt may be taught to lead, by placing the dam a few rods distant from where it is hitched, and leading it toward her. It will be impos sible to lead a colt away from its dam, un til it has become well accustomed to the halter. By spending a little time with a cult, treating it with the greatest gentle- Oess, it may be taught to travei by the side orAts dam, wherever she goes. Tic the colt's halter to the backband of the dam's harness, so that it can jusC 'reach her udder. This length of halter will prevent the colt running forward of the mare when she is traveling. In a few clays it will become so gentle, that any one can put on the-halter and handle it. When colts are not accustomed to the hal ter until they are two or more years old, they are frequently very difficult to man age. But if taught to lead when quite young, they can often be changed from one place to another, with little difficulty, and will be much more manageable Amer. Agriculturist. THE BOSTONIANS - A New Yorker, who visited the great musical festival in Boston, writes home thus : " These Boston people are nothing if not critical, and their satisfaction at find ing•something to critici. , e is the chief pleasure they derive from a musical en tertainment. When ttey go to Heaven they will declare that some of the harps are out of tune, that one of the angels takes liberties with the composer's text, and that another, sings flat.' They will alsO deplore the absence of the Boston organ." Be-" Cato, what do you suppose is the reason that the sun goes towards the South in the winter ?" "Well, sah, I don't know, unless he no stand de 'clemency of de Norf, and so am 'bliged to go to de Souf, where he 'speriences warmer longitude !'' was the philosophic reply. Trinity Church, New-York Its Im- • Trinity Church, the home of the choral service in America, may proudly sing a song of gladness over her vast wealth. With the exception of her corporation, but few are aware of the miles of real estate from which she receives an annual rental. In this tor rid u eather it would tire the strongest man to walk over tile street lines which bound her property. She owns the very heart of the city, rife with commerce, speculation and hourly profits. There is no diozese so wealthy no her parish; no European Bishop enjoys so rich a See; for, on the first of May in every year, her treasury is replenished by hundreds of thousands of greenbacks. On the last of May, )866, the leases which Mr. Astor obtained of the corporation of an immense portion of the property, svi'l have full control of rent estate in the most prof itable part of the city, worth, it is estima ted, over six Millions of dollars. As prop erty has risen one hundred per cent., since these leases were made, it is a matter-of doubt whether renewals of them will- be, granted at the present rates. The - enbjeet will doubtless cause an animated session among the corporation. .-Th„eAstor lease, it- should be stated, in cludes -- three. hundred and thirty-six lots, which were let in the year 1766, at seventy. five cents par lot for a term of ninety More years. The lots are, of course, all-occutned by buildings which ,yield generally 'high rents. Some idea of the amount drawn from the rents of those buildings may ben,re alized when it is known that Mr. Astor'iCia emir last year, as returned in the Internal Revenue office of the Sixth district, was over $1,300,000, Mr: Astor pays Trinity Chord' $2OO per 'annum for all the lots, being about fieventy five cents for each.' -If we estimate the ren tal -from each building on these - lots at the low average of $5OO, the fortunate leasehold er- must receive on an invested capital of $269, an income of $168,000 per annum. The gold mines and the petrOleuiti'fields, in the palmy days of their'first discovery, nev er yielded such immense wealth froth so pet ty a capital. 'We cannot, at 'present, furnish Ourrread era with-an:account of the disposition of the vast sum 'which Trinity Church receives annually from her real estate; es no one,' 'ekeept Member of the v,estry, is allewed access to the bboks: „BiatlrOm 'all the re have; coma to our ktiowledge, we can stat i c that thaf,the annual income or should bit - overs3oo,ooo. In a few yearif all the leases,given by Trinity to:vbribus•Parties will' expire; and the,propert* , wll)„ revert back to the corper mien. ,The, value .of the..whole rcal estate *lll . thini;i, itf Said, not fall far slt,Qrt ; of twenty, millions of dollsr4 ^ • ' • ARKANSAS. mense Wealth