The Potter journal. (Coudersport, Pa.) 1857-1872, April 26, 1860, Image 2
• FM 6~il •• . I'o,/,e sure.. Do you talte..teejer a! :"''l said: '" Put trligt are 'you _'such-:e'-fchange• for ,Oculdu:t ;the +Ad luitise orttent - yettl" Ii s'arisfies tee well enough ;.but t ex.: stet yi:flters this sArotner, ha .. .dre quite and tkis ohi tv9rirt,e - ai en '49od T work. wouldn't do for them. IVhat iuu :es yogi b . uoi so dark ? Don't you like the • :m i t tun of my lady :visitors . • • . isnir* tirai -they-4ere to-be !Air. nniii.3ou told - tile," 1 Fula ; " and lies:a/my of my buziness Whom you enter , - • • was . 33,4,._ nut ch. f a : Welcome. for .thei i .our face st any rate,". lie tin, iCereq. "Ahki -io the. trilth, I tun unt 31.13'0! plca.ed with' the . arrangetqemt 4,6 r. Mit ".,.t hey took - a sudden fancy amount' Of'fiersua" slot) liit 0.0 3.., , 1nge their mindS. I):;r fl ly . ,,asnitable place for liAles ;but :irtllk ; i corne, they must make the it.,, • . . -• • kix,v,eame you ever to take t fancy , nli:ce an:l . -what mr.kes von spend ,„so oll.t3C;1 money or 3 I asked. • • (lon't, like to see. Oic..mtiney: 'tlit'6:y3;-13wav,''&3 said lamthin The trith: 1.4 that"skeleton; /1 1 -e , top.4-4.lprurtnr..3-701., - 414 - 41, : - iO get.away frOM it. The. 'Csi: 1 . 0 - lined to rest under this' ••; - • Aire, vielt light-licarted. I don't: know' „xvliy 4 except it was some mysterious influ ence • buy I loved the place, an I - love It noless nom -al.oolmh my skeleton has feund it lothring'.place here too.". • 01 course,7 I said,•" and very - a,ppro-: .Tl3c .. honse tvas henuted before; situ came.' . -" It was blunted fo^ me nrterwards," -lie said st,ftly, more to himself than to MC j - v is . ions T shOuld be glad "to un mow.' And he earned away and swallowed n slzh.. (o.)iichtsion, next week.) Dctiace Victorleq. I—The murder of 13roderick be pause lie opposed a wicked administra tion, and the rxtensioit t.; : f dtirery. No 2—The destruction of the . Free aF , P (newspapcy) in Kentucky bscause j opit.t.se the exte.4lon of Altzver . y. .' No 3-4yresting of• 'Br. Breed, of . 1 - ttshitigton and placing hint under bonda for stating. that he ii:as op posed to tl - .c extension of slavery. No-I—The whippinz,, tarring and feath •eriir, of an Irish mechanic at Charleston. S.C. for saying that " it was disgracerul .for a white man to be compelled to work ,b.esida .No s—The cxptilsion of a colony of -white Men and wouien from Madison Co, Kentucky, fir giving. it as their opinion that Kentucky iou!,.t be more prosperous without slavery. - _ 6--13re;1;ing up a methodist, Con. &ranee in Benham, Texas, because they - feared that they would proclaim liberty throucrhout the land and to all the i n t i b_ kants - ,thercid. No '7—The defeat of .the bill in the Ls , 7islature for the charter of a Nethodist li.niversity . , because the Meth- Chureh prohioas the'traffie . of hu plan flesh in her discipline. - -Gov. Black has vetoed a Bill passed by the _Nebraska Territorial Le t zis•- -1 ature;; abolishing slavery in the Territory. This is the fast Democratic v:etory The peefile don't want Slavery, but a lo eufoco Governor says they must have it - the South demands it, Fpyerty a Crime. Senator 'Mir:Jail, from Texas, recently .wade a speech on the "Ilomestead Bill, in 'which the following. Gqlffant language was uttered by this genial expounder cf; luodern democracy ; It was popular to talk of the poor. Poverty, be said, woe a crime. The map 'who wiw:poor hdl..ziacti, and there was, a- screw loose snaewbere. Ile would' amend the title.of the bill to read ' for 'the encouragement of crime, - providing , • for criminals and violating the constitu. , tion.' It MS popular, he repeated, to .talk of the bone and .sineiv, of the land, ittf wool hats and brogans, bet poverty was' a crime, Re would not pander to preju dice, by suck talk. The bill provided - foi the • purlieus of London, the live' •I'oluts of New _York, and criminals who violate the tan' , when they get on the lauds. The bill_ providesfor these unable.to pro. vide•for themselves.. Gentle,mert tried to' be popular in the intro4u6tiOn of such a - bill. It was a great'utistake of any man -to suppose that the people had no sense, (Laughter.) These lands would be . oel • Pupied by the. outpourings Of jails; Ste., and when they were represented: in Con. ress. hO would like to see the man who wore the ermine. - Great God: what a eight: it would lie." • 'soniebody' asked Wigf..ll, if Texas had • pot wet tho example - by donating public - !width: - They didn't catch 'Wigfall that Wiy:" e slipped the bridle and run, like • Tev-ts conid please her ()sin fancy She hairkt right. to do as she pleased :with . `-her Oivu property, to . gi . ve it to a tills:Sion _ ary soeip.fyi la publish a Bible, or to gam ; ble it. Off . in hell: .(Laughter.) Texai ~gays free .Fovereign State, and exercised were' not deteg,ated to this lifiserable One-horse concern in Washing on,"(lianas:od laughter.) ' - rive iri Q ie ji rsey Pines--Elair- .breadth Esc ape. The . kt. holly (N. .Nirror . says was , fire s raging in the pines, in this county,: in.'st week to -a Tearful extent and of eOurse . doing , rreat damage. 'lt Start ed—On Wednegl.l7.ly at Garentown, half vray between, ited Lion and F r iendship. Ica eourze was deross to ex-Sheriff Dob• ."'"~ ~ '^=tt.?w.:~T.~~rs.~is 4x:3i'slß.s'~x:s_.sr.«.i __ . y ~. ` .sc,>s '`p?"- bins' "tract,-'at Retreat; from there to Burr's mill ; thence by Brown's Hill, to= wardsMingen',s,-in . the vicinity ,of which plafee„lt va*butuing.ouVriay. _its -*advs. attliat.,,time, -- 'was a distangeof.about six miles 1n length i -by tkre4l.la b eat T- Li r. The. Matinahawkin stage.n Its way to Mf. Holly, on Friday, met With a narrow escape from the fire. ,The driver, before he was' ewlire'ef -I,lknit- -n I most in the midst of the flames... -The 'great Lbody of ,t h e fire, , ho_wevEr, ._Eeetned to: be . . in advance 'of him, and he turned around ,his es,qape,,b9t..lie bad 'not I prbe.cedpd far - before the flames 'elleelted iniM retre:it . , mid 'ire was 'obliged to pursue 'jelling . in another • diive i {jou. ' • t Itta shoat time - titrMain 'fon nd. self Surrounded - 6;V 60'11a:ties. • :Jle saw tie other - eourse• to ptirsue ISzt to 7:gti .traight h urging-. his' horses to tlvir utmost speed;•hoped Soon fithe free from th - e'devpurinfi• element. Bit when 'We . Was' - surroundedthe . it : Catest, bodY of fire and sMolt:e,' lidrties beeame• frightened end, .stopped, ..aid it Was' , inv possible tO, move them. thev .. - :re mained:for a minute Ot two, the-fire roar : ••• I.Llitur„,td.azt•Tße„,_.e .. .v,Lent V' 11 C. rf suddenly, the smoke clearing hOrscs started, and: the driver found that the - great mas s of 'fire had, Crossed .th e . road - a sbor . t . distance hi advance, 'and was nicking the must :fearful' ravages in its . . . 'traoictse the right of !um. • was . soca : en alaVed _tn. get -entire!, out of ifs . path, - and telt - thatltohad nev er before been in so ,terrible.a .\t one time it "appeared to 'him that the flames must. ,entiraly surround and cut off all means .of escape.' lle hatl.two female pa.sentters, and; as may he sup posed, they:were - ftsightened: beyond all description. Fearinig that; they :would perish in the fire and smoke, theft. servants Were frequently of the most painful fsa ture. C57.41 - 4LESTON COVVETiTi'ON. The Democratic National Convention at Charleston was temporarily 'organized :yesterday by the. Choice of a Mr. Flournov of Arkansas as Chairman,. with Wm.- F. Ritchie of Virginia as Secretary. The Soft Deleg,ation frrtithis Stittc-and ti e Donglas men•from Illinois were primarily admitted to seats and their rivals shut out by decree of the, National Committee —an arbitrary act, which excited some feeling. Committees_ of one from each State on Organisation and on Credentials (New-York and- Illinois not represented in the latter). were then ft;rmed, and the Convention adjourned to this morning, when it is understood. that• (len. Caleb Cushing of Massachusetts will be made President. The Committee. on Creden• tials is excreted to report in favor of the New-York and Illinois delegations al ready seated ; but therp will boa. unnori• ty report in 'favor of tire -Wood or Hard• deletzateS from our State, which Will hard ly be .disposed. of without tumult. The Convention is foil of explosive and the Chairman had all he could 'do yesterday to keep it within boiling dis tance of order. Our Special Corre3poodent teems to regard Douglas's defeat as mark- certain ; aull it is clear that the selection. of Cashing foli Presi dent is not a good symptom. But oe suspect the Ne:Fforlf Softi are plaiing 'Possum till after the decision on their right to si', after which, they demonstrate fur D:mglas% they do not, hit ease looks had, since New- Jersey as well Pennsylvania is reported ad verse to" him. But nothing can be clearly seen till after the contested seats shall hate boon disposed of.--/Tribune t . The Conrention re;isenablefl Tuesday morn ing at la o'clock, when the CommittCe on Per manent Organization reported in ;:nor of the lion. Caleb Cuziling for Fr.ssident, and one Vice,Presidsnt and Secretary from each State in the Union. Those of ICNV• York arc Eras tus and Fid ward Coop; Maryland, W. D. Bowie and B. F. Lowe; PenLylvania, Thomas Cunaingharn and F.YanZanclt. :W . A dispatch from ashington was i3;:orrn around the hall from a Member of the (labi net declaring, that the reports of dierension in the Cabinet growing, out of Walker's testi mony; are entirely destitute of :foundation, and that the Cabinet were never taaro entire ly hbrmonious. The Committee on Permanent Organization also reported an additional rule to wit: That in any State in which it has not been provided -or directed by its State Convention how its vote may be given, the Convention will recog:- Rise the right of each delegate to cast his dividual vote,- 7 , Telfgrapie . 7)6patch, 3, p. at. • 61It -Eiilia i-,j,otrital. .COITILD'gIitSPWEIT. Itit[Vs6:w IS6O. T; - S: - CHASE. EH till ATYII-PtiEilltfil..--- Tizll4--1800. For Gov.E.It:N 04, ANDREW G.TVITIN OF, CENTRE CQUNTY aa — We invite the 'attention of our friends _throng - Tient the county to the Cash - Prerninms which4e otter, in. anoth; column, for Enlis.crib?rs:' Yining men, as well as'old`men, will find them: worthy of their attention. . . Eat D claw ar e is rapidly getting rid of her slaves. ,ihe had 8,000 at the first census, and but 2,200 at the last one. Their. 'owners find it more, profitable to sell thein'at the South than to keep them. Suffolk county alone ships six par creek, or three hundred and twelve - a year. rya ery ,census shows adecrease of ten' per cent. - . in the scare population. , Nearly the battle lath) of decrease is observed in the hisforyior Beford oily bt; er bordevetaietwilt a ye,uo tip; slavery. EVX:Frotti -the VittsbUrg ~lirttcic.pf the 111.1 i; we eut . rhe' ing itnportatitjtesui 11ivz Countetfeit.—Meisrti. .F Lure, of the .National-Bank _LV Co)Tivreiztl r:parter r sCD dus th ing tleseripiiun of - a new - ...spUrieu the Franklin : Ccunty,-.l3ank,-,01 3.lasS.L-Fives, .spurietis; yie,n, upper left corner,) . famale with ure - 5 ori ; feiuUle • bunch cif 'WheSt i ' &bore a en - right en FINK : in ted part • 1 , ninnes AdiUns & Co.. Ne on the. upper part of - ller , swering deseriptioti." The fulkwirig let ter..app::, tact number Of the Pittib'u're:ll (.. prominent gameron paper:' ' i _ ~ d:REENS- W RG7 Past April I . , 1,96 • This Gazr.ttc:- The conferees of onr pOng sionel District met - yesterday nt Bissirsv end elected the frillowing delegen; to - . xv_ Indiana; arwinTliTop"., Leech, of Aritistrong:and'll.. N. Shryi34 ‘'fcGtuloreland They are all. Cameron's rriends, and 1) event ullt ihey cast their vote for Mr. Seirai , We do not• believe that Darwin Phe nor either of his colleagues, will g , (3,icagO determined in no event to his cote. for Mr. Schwa. It is simpl absurdity to suppose' that if the eonlen tiou dominates Mr. ,Seward or any other good man by a close vote, it will nut 'also ,confirm him- by a tinatantous - vote ; and we have too much .respect for Darwin Phelps to suppose that he will refuse to compliment Mr.. Seward under such Or, cumstMices. Mr. Shiyock, who is doubt. less the author of the above letter, wiould scorn such a proposition ; and yet! the letter _rives ground for such an inference. As the G«zette _gave the . above a promi nent-insertion-ming its editorial matter, we regret to infer that it endur.-esi the ugenerous seutinient that we have put in The - 12 . 011. jLtri2OS IZale, • It gives us great pleasure to notice the universal approbation with which ouripeo-ple speak of the course of the Member of Congress from this District. Always at liis,poF.l-, attending filithfully to _t4 du tiei of. his office., voting upon every Toms- . tion that is before the House, and oliways voting 'on the side of truth, freedeui and justice; he has fairly earned .the cutihusi astic support of every one of his constit uents who prefer • freiedom to slalvery.. The contrast between him and his FT:Nie ces:tor is the contrnst between a cnasci encious statesman and an Unscrupulous party hack; and that is the differen e be tween ar true Republican and' a pro- Tare-- ry Democrat, the country over. 0: douse :+l.r. Huie will be reelected. No Ricipub, ming lican in the District will think of n any other candidate, and the peal)] orally, we feel cOnfident, will say tol the ballot-box, well done good and ful servant," thou art the man to sent us in another Congress. • Progressive Legisto.tioc' Two bills wen: , Passed. a': the la sion of the Pennsylvania Legislat much more importance to the ,pcont the ordinary legislation of our Statt i arc very glad the Republicans of th can point•to the "Free Banking and the new " Penal Code," as ev i of the wisdom of entrusting to Ili can hands the .reins of government!, should be !Duel' better pleased if w , add a- Personal - Liberty Bill. But: as our side has only lad .both branchesLegif . 1 islatiou for one session, we are satisfied to t point - to -the record of. last session on banking and. Criminal - law, as erldurin* testimony in ,farof of Republioan Ascend= ancy. We think the people -will very naturally say that so long as the Tarty of Freedom--bears-such fruit as this, it should be kept in. the majority: Speaking of t 1 1 S4ttilM) , • _., . 2 ~ an thus explains how it was in : ought' about: . The two great tuetisnms of the late ses ' s ien.of the Per asylvattia Legislature are the Free Banking Law and the itew, Pe nal' Code. These, in the opinion of good judges, are far in advance of the ordinary course of Penns . ylvauia legislation - .., The attetupt Arai made, early - in : the iscssion, to ianore.the,Free .Bank -question entire ly, by constitating the Bank CoMmittee in the House; of those Wha were ?apposed to any. ohangein the exist/rig laWs. The injustice: of th4,,arrangcnient filially re sulted-in .the appointment ilf a selCof Com taittee of . nine - ,,--Messrs. fitrong; „Byrne, _Williston, Green, Dunlap, l!resslejt, Mann, Frazier and Butler,- - ----a majority of whom were favorable- to the proposed' system. f t :is needlt;ss to reeite-lere thie f amount of labor which the Commitiee peformed, both in the preparation of, the bi f l, and in ad vacating its merits in and - Jut o session.! By far the most work -was,dorte! for the measure while not in sessich ; and Banks and Banking were ,comt24l subjects of conversation for some w4s among the =ill 11111 MEE members. :.•The - majority•of the : -SPeeia, OonAtiii4e„received;.-the;hiihest praise forn f . 4 :ev ery Obj e etiurged: 0i st the. s .Allilatae.xplainin , z, , .ivith great pa: 4ience; tli:cir - 461rsviris felloiaipiciit- Zer4lilf:the':minitti•e - Of its s'serititios. • . • —• he euf:t Ilk en 4 this bill at. eti <lily - of- the session, in ,either lfouse, it . wonictundoubtedly have-fallen. : ."electioneering,' ; (if lite. term is a lowable,) carried' ' 'measure and 1 thelcopppon appliances of" 'Tnoderil'l6gis-1 Ilatif! t n, l 76iffers anti 'money, were not even thottght of. . (If . t.lie other 'great' tunas:um the neer PO' al . t there • was b'u't. one .opinion 'amonglnembe • s of the letal profession— , nut ualified approval, and :a conviction of itsUtilttv and - Eeneral idaptation to. the. -feeds lintl circumstances of ihePommon. Tite-syi:tcni of ;iv/xi/num, pun ishioenlts is new to our people ; out with a jediciaiy as able and upright as ours, I no IfearS are entertained; that the discre tiolt eblinitted to them-in the sentencing Of brirdifials wilt. be productive of-any but beit --results. .(!sasitiNie, e Jett& in_,Slt- urday T,Thune, d'atc'd at Philadelphia, and - keystone,"" giorifieation.of 10C kead.-lint meitatv directed agAinst Gen. 231 EIM ~m 'olio V )UI on afield. re (ilipn ke, bell) v, i lo er gravels' Ynl-1,) e all. n- EMI Reiad'sjapproval: — 'fbe letter may tie coir . :3Th. er)l' . l4l,prablv modest in its laudation-Of that di tin.r..lniished gentlemen; in•riew of the fact that liits , mirne was nut mentioned in the Con which so emphatic:ally endorsed Gen.- Glinier l pn as Penasylvania's choice' for the lq,esiclrtcy. Judge Read is assuredly quail fild fuj the position he hold?, but !ike other great 1 - . leit be has his faults and Hun weak nqs.ei-4 not the least df vhieh is one that af fii:ets;the unlettered and the learned, and man ifjsts itself in smni-occasional returns to Eye. This lief may "account for the -7i-a/991: later, in tlie• tt i senee of any speciEed reason.--Har ;•lsl,ury Teleiraphi Wt. I t IThe _Telegraph, is very much incensed . , at the •Trilywic correSpohdent, not for w.hat ilte did say, but 'for!Whathe did not silt' —on the principle that - what does not 1 I trequalifiedly glorify and:flattei• the Pres,- thential aspirations of 'Gen. Catucreu,- does 'unconditionally condemn and p l erselthem. But in:.order that it mad . h!avl,!some responsible person to lay the. Kline upon, 'the l'elegraph charges it up.- , 1 JAidge Read; while the Pittsburg aa zielle !thinks - that the Bates proclivities of the 7'ribirue arc at the bottom of its .non- I T glnrilication of Mr. Cameron. The whole. truth is that the Tribulue oiVas the pee pte at large the privilege of dis.etisr:ini= the,Presidential. question through - its ittn - iyle and widely circulated columns, ncr- !itself : independent! of all of ThiSat has. a, right to do; and if one cif. titil-People'' of Pc.nusylvania cliances•:tb ihri:4 a little.cold, water on the over-float- 'to •ast ed brains of Gen. -Caniaron's wholesab , 4(luTtcirs,ll..y . dertying that he is the choice Of 'r efin . sylvania Republicans to. a mar, ire t'biiik these seusitiv'es should submit to sd wlolesome a rekulie without allow:- , ing ~.their. anger to earry away their brains entirely. Since the appi , aranee of the ariiere of ;A' 14ystone" . in the Ti l'l,irrie,, at least fOu'r latiirs have appeared iu the sumo dopart,- ~ that anent oi , paper, to read which would Ilcad; ' one unacquainted with the rent facts ,of the case to suppose that Gen. Cameron 'occUp'iesa more prominent - position than i . any; other man in-the Union at the preF.-'- ent ;I time. And yet, we, do not find the r i friends of Judge Read Gov. Seward, lir. 'Bates, Gov. Chase, iiino.:)ln, or Pico - out, , sayaaels attacking th.e. authors of those articles, and pro.nouncitig them as t‘inean . - ly'direeted against" either of their favor. 1 rte.- Besides, it loOltsvcry unfair for the' 1- ' 7'efrgpapit to be kicking judge Read so ' is Arr.- he down----as it has frequently I Immed.ho was put down by the Harris bufrg COnvention. It looks to us as though oiler his ghost or himself is coming up again before, the Cawdor of Telrgraph, to frighten him. i - : gen at faith- NM e ses-1 ire, of e than L. We State ? Law,' aerate We could ,If G en. Cameron desires to make agotid inipression'at Chicago', he Will dowel to suppress the wholesa:.e adulations of the IParrisburg Telegrap4, which is every. where recognizedas his home or4hti, and whiekseems to be wholly . devoted to his adulation. • The slightest compliment to 4.. the Merest doubt of his infallibility as a Ij : residential candidate involves it in ago. 'nzing,anger; which it Must needs let - off id some wild, impassioned frenzy in de. 4melatien of sotne, auppoSed rival-.of his in tbe . ,Chicago. expectancy. An over. zeelout friend it often mom injurious than, an enemy, is an adage that Gen. (3:lW:cr. and the, Tele,ireA, will both do ti ell th consider. • . 1. QM. I ID title; Internptiona Influeneoll ' • Trade*. . - k writer in the A r pril No., of. All the dear Rciund,-4ow on our tab:e-by the kindness of J. M. EMerlsOn Lt.:, Co:, of New York, the. American publishers;—in a ~u;e11-prepared, though fallacious, 'article sdefqPse of English Free Trade, fells ome pointed truths. Be condenses some t 4 ofy: interesting facts in regard to th(i in fit:mace which Trade; exercises upon;the qip!peatttic relationsand moral economy • Of. grett:t ,p a t len!=,::.'•alain) i rig : 4 0/7::4 5 t-h:-.1 , Eng1and.......... - - the'7b o .oA r§ . aid profits alike:."-:nf .the ieauguration of :an anti-yvaylsyStoui. of CeminciTie' balance of - f., : pelet. - : AVP.jdo not,prpese te:arguelhe 04e-ion:Of Free Tratle; and therefere.call the,n(tetition of: our 'readers - to the a.ongi::ll , rypesitlona .contained in ti, ruiluo4l '. i x . iiitt.t.i . , •Therri is no - more Strilfing! revolution in - the Whole history'of:huinaM affairs than ..this by which 'mercantile queStionS have eetified-to ho purel r y mpreautile, and are regarded,:r.ot less as moral and political.. W". - e laugh at- the magniloluent advertise ments in. which settle malt_ invention' is described as preOunt with the; mightiest results-for the regeneration of the world; but, perhaps, ire would laugh" less if, be , hind all the 'farce and - prtlfery of adver 7 tisinr , we salt the Moral interests that are real.ly itivolvd--if we...saw that - besides the two.penee. halfpenny' of profit - which the trader is anxious:to - Make out of his i trifling improvement„he is really 'bent on doing a service to the s publie, and is able o do it. . In the last few years we- have engae•cd in r ublic svorlfs - - of prodigious magnitude, that have moved the ivorld, and given anew character to civilizatfon. Is it by the simple levemge.ef a five or ten per cent, .protit that we have [leen in . - ! • .-•• . - • Li; in these undertakings? Not so. - Theren-Turralrc,- • • protit In them. Imagination is the strong est faculty In man,••and 'we, have been carried-away; "by the 'love of .perfection and the delight iu enterprise. even more;l than by the hope of gain. Trade is now-' a-days more than trade. It is a weapon of enormous. power 7 ---it is enterprise' n, which the mightiest issues are at stake f —it - is a s . cienec.. of such vast importance that. he who can best exPound it becomes naturally -the.dominating Minister:of the I:l:mate:4' nations. It is perfectly Well known on both sides of the; Atlantic that trade has rendered a . war- hotween this+ country and the United Stales of Ameri ea an impossibility. •We Ilnice become necessarY.to each other's e!:istence, andl in this way trade has been! able to pro-; duce a moral effect which t;ur kindred or-1 our 'nether tongue, Mir similar ind stitutions,•and our Muttnil adtnirati , M,l have not of theinselvcs been able to en-1 sane. It i 5 now sug:restedl than more in-i tiMate comMercial dealin:g4 with fra'nee may have- the like effect, in conSolidatin7l an alliance between the two ceuntries and making us who • have been, eternal' enetnies,•etCrual friends. To any one wlio has the slightest acquaint:limo witir histcry and , Yith the political philosophy ;if otir fathers, the novelty end the strangyness . of such a proposal Will be ap parent. . The merchant elevated into a diplomatist, and 11M:argo•Fy Substituted fur die markof-war—in every past ate of such an idea would have been la-ighed to scorn. w little is a policy to which nereantiie considerations are in volved,- undi - irStood . to this day on the Contine:lt, that we ore still described, in the phrase.of Napoleon, as a nation of shop-keepers, find People Cannot see that there- is anYthing niorein it than a sordid devotion to .money." iiialit.Stsve of a €.100E3 Garden. Nest in importance tc),:: good farni is t.he garilen in good ebndition and well at- Unpropitious as last season toil tied to was to tiic farmer, every -garden that w as ealimited produced liberally, and return ed a.--richreWard fur all the labor devoted) to•it. NOV is the time to dress currant I and gooseberry bushes, and no garden is' complete without a proftion of these un pretending, but most pl',ofitable. shrubs, - even the unprecedented frost of last June.l left p_gobir supply .cf currants and goose• berries - in all 2-ardeh's •witere the bushes of these fruits had receiVed moderate at-1 tention. . Then make sure of tt,supply of fruit by attention to the: znfaili»g ones. This is also the time to Secure pie plant roots; if sou', have not already done so. Half a dozen' days' work- every §printz in '1 "cultivating pie plant, wilisecure an abund ' apt supply of, a good sub4itute . for apples,. for any ordinary family. An asparagus bed will require a little . more labor, but the labor .will 'have a rich reward. We ,note with great pleasure an increase of asparagus beds among the farmers of thiS county:. It is an indication to _us 'of an increasing desire. for health. and comfort: kgruall - plot - devoted to strawberries is !another way.nf inoreasing.your.supply of fruits. — .l3ut, this lash is-,so plenty in the field's we shall only urge its cultivation upon. those living in villages The portanie.of raising an abundance of ordi. nary ;garden Vegefablei is so well under, stood by all, that We need not_ urge their' cultirktion. . • - •. '• -.As 'no g,ardert, is complete. withoutits I of, :dove- band of. rov imz.Gy India' flowers, we urge a - free Cultivation of them i died recently at Xadison; his remains were taken to Payton, upon every one ; and 'upon thissubject we adopt the language of the Erie • - thy_ were in terre-lecen fly. 'WI!' G"' ceremonies. .''Harriet - Olin>. a zette, ivhich has a happy faculfy of saying Queen, was buried Roving bands of her side. the right thing at t G he;-right time. Here years ago, and -the King:is Poll' • - is the G'azelle's exhortation--we make by.A Daytofi. 5( it ours: • . . • - gular people gathered at Dayton directions, c , Rea . der, are you a lover of the beautirul 7 to participate, ii -tbo in Nature ? If so; belie to 113 there is nothinr,lceremOnie4,..whickivero: of a null ( in the world, that will cotribute so much •t ' 'o I-imposing nharacter,- becoming fl gratify your- taste as gay, blodming flowers, I meat of royW al - : ''-- ' for. there is nothing in Nature so beahtiful: . '-------------.0,-- - . .', Or ere you "indifferent to nat - trarheauty - t— ' AT thelate Municipal etectio Then, by all meaus-plant, cultivate, study arid" i m ' learn to loTe'llowerS,-anfl become human as i ' -,-," J. len. Republican - w ''' 1 1 L cr• n .t., '.33:utvr .r..sq -, was e.ce. q ~ tl - elndidais I soon as , possilae: ..• He who appreciatesamt the ' ' " ' ' ' ' iau lc • , beauties of Nut tire is only half human, and believe this.i.s • the- first Rebuh -tlie sooner he tierelOpes the other that is de" OT DUbllqUa hti.i,&Cr:/141; ' - ENE Seient, the;Soonerll he be prePared iilco'a Stan; rind die lika'n Flouers are -the. ifi of beitiitify:-His earth And Itiveioy to ni, 6 -lures. ", .They: are Nati:ids ornaments, int the .dear birds dint Coma t 6 us in the Spring, tittle:and tury _with us through the glosi z , Summety;:are -Nature' S musicians. •A b r , that" lias flower.-becisabuat it-rno - f shrubs.+-no - inviting - grass plats—has not, mer-ch'eer for us. 4t ise pyiSon-housu-i-cl leSs 'and solemn. rhaii6to cQxis-clorttsites% ..„ In the Slay : :rine; just. receh - ed, .we --finds a . „140 34 . 1 . the' case of --Mitiy : :. - RepplOs, -of - ch r Tree, - . Venange Co., ,:clestobir4veii . pl irdtly! . her ha bits,: in ohat waS:called first and'see : tnd States--;--by SeernS tUrliate liv ri.r.seperate lava one body. Her firstor natural'statt Unit] fen . UPtid wa4.:AS when she -became- Subject tooceasi ''tits," which continued until she', years-of age;, in 181:I.: - -On ksunaci the spring `cif 1813, she' took:a boilt. Went into •thc field Some . . ,distance: the:house to read. - 'Soon' after she found in a state of utter insensibility, when she rettrned - tei:oetnadoustiess was ftiund io latitleaf'and blind; and tinned so five or-six - weeks, . when sense of _heariniffetiffrittl — sroldeuli entirely, and that of: sight more - g - tadt but. in the - end perfectly.' . Abacl i months after,' she Was found lag found'aluarber in bed, from Which it impossible; to. arouse her; . b.u(aftt while she awoke in-her "second state, which she was wholly itneonscionsof a events of het' natural state, knowinqi cher - her parents or friends, ignorant the-Mid of the Most familiar implica and seemingly born to a - new :life. • far. as all acquired knowledge was cerned, her condition was precisely of r a- new.b . Jrn retainik the past the faculty of propouriciuga. incoherent unmeaning words, - mph to be taught their - Sitznificance—dtffr only, frOm the child in the fact that learned with 'matured readiness, 'de: atone s 'with the facts- of existence. continued thus about five weep., she resumed . her natural life, ie RI her seeoud state had been as nfa conS•eiLyttsues's. In . eithee.state she urf life where the transition left it. alterrattons from ono state to am continued 15 or 16 years, bat, ceased at the' agc... of 35 or 86, lea her .pernianZ•ntiy second scat which 'she reenained_ without, char. the last quarter eentuy - y.of her lifT died very suddenly at Meadville, house. of ides nephew, Fes. John V. nahls, a Presbyterian Mini ter, is ary, aszetl. about-61 years. The above is an abstract of the al facts of this :singular. history, munieated to the //(irper by Dr. Pi ofthe Western Theological &inlet Headvjile. Thy% familY ennnesioi 'Mary Reynolds still live in Meadrill at. Cherry Tree—the latter place 12 tulles north of - Era-D . l;lin and s south of Titusville, w!iere leer William Reynolds, settled at.the the last century• The country time was an unbroken wilderas: Was regarded as tlie "Fat West," hty. 71,1 r. Iteynoid's nearest nei when he: fir,t arrixed,•Were the habiCant§ of Franklin. ou one Si Jonathan Ti..cui; (our maternal g they) .3t what is.new other. remember- well the.; ci! stances of Mis's'• - lteynold's death, we read in the newspapers of teaL We - being at that -time a ‘ - jour" is Trui . American• office at Stet& Ohio. She arose in.the morniu, usual health, proceeded from to L the -kitchen to superintend sot inary inatters, (in thehonse of h( ew, for . wboth she had been Iciepinl for some time ) ) when she salient: her hands to her head .exelaiming. done so I ' OR ! what is the matter my bead," when she , fell upon the and expired soon after on the sith parlor, to.w.hich she had been h ately removed by her .tienhew ant servant girl. - The above brief stat wilt be read with interest by the ci of that - neighborhood and all serum the 3.laga7tee article i 1 'doubly ana interespng. _ - J)WE:sI-- ST:4I.NLEY, t:hc recogni