; . I 1 • ' •; ' ' • ' 1 ' I • . . . 1 . . 1. ..', 1.. ! i -., 4 - - 1 1 I , -i - ... ,1 .1 ...1; -, , ;-... ;;, • ; - •; . ' ' .-- . -- 7 - • , .I . ' -. ' , . I ' ' ... '. - - . , • -- . -----. ...."!"-.4...i ~ . .- ! , I 1 * __,- 4 ' • . 01,,.- . -, , ~- .. - ..,,, -- -..,___41, ~ ;.. . . . ~ . . ~, .._ . :-• •-i • , . - . ;!... ilr pli t y .. , , 1 :_ - -' - - 0 t.: ' h i'' 1 t A g s g I ,' ." . , , '"•.-- , - ''. ' '' • .'' .. i s : '' tO , '. - " ;NA ':''' -- - • '-'• -% .. • _ . . I • • .. .„ • 4• • . ~... ,•. . _ . i ~ 4 . . , . .... ,n ~ .... ~. ~. i _...., .. , i r I - . I . • .. .; . ' VOLUME XVIL-NUMBER L THE POTT ER JOURNAL PURL FIND,AY 4. W. 1101.1arney, Proprietor. .1;1.50 PR. MIN, I:MINI/LIMY IN .A.DIriNCE. *** Devoted to the cause of Republicanism, the interests of Agriculture, the advancement of Education, and the bestl good of Potter •ounty. Owning no guidh except that of Principle. it will endeaver to aid in the work of more fully Pree - romizing our Country. , . ADVERTISEMENTS inserted at the following -stes, except where spe'cial bargains are made. 1 Square [lO lines] 1 insertion,, - - -: $1 50 1 " " 3 4 ‘ --, - 00 gach subsequent insertion lessthan 13, 40 I Square three months, . .! - 400 I . ,c Al " 1--- - - = - 700 1 ' 4 iiinelo 0 , 4 at., , 12 - 1 b 1 " one year, 41ohamn sks months, - - IL a --- 36 00 - 17 00 - - 10 00 50 00 la - SO 00 ldministrator's or Executor's Notice, 300 Business Cards, 8 lines or less, peeyear 5'.00 4peCial and Editorial Notices, pe. line, 20 transient advertisements•• must be .laid in advance; and no notice will. be. taken of al.lrertiseinents from a distance, Unless they are accompanied by au. money or sitisactory reference.* . 1 **Blanks , and lob Work Of all kinds; at tended to promptly and faithfully. ,1 per year, - it it BUSINESS cAltOS.' Free 'and Accepted Ancient York Masons.. Ell LA lAA I,OOGE, No. W., I? A. 51: STATED Meetings on the 2nd and 4tlWednes, days of each tnonth. Also Masonic gather ings on every Wednesday , Evening. for work and practice, at their HA in Coudersport.. D. C r LARRIBEE, W. M. M. W MCALARNEY, Seey. JOHN. SI MANN,- TORS . EY ,AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW, Douderspoill., Pa., %%11l attend the several ..lourts in PotZer and W...j.tilean Counties. All susiness entrusted in his ; care 1011 receive ' prompt attention. Office corner of West I anti Third streets:. ARTIIIIK G. OLMSTED,. ATTORNEY •Sr 1001.7NSEL , LOR AT LAW • •oudersport, Pn., %vitt attend to all husines itrusted.lU his care. with prc niptaes an! 3. ity. 'Mice on Soth-west corner of Mali Ind Fourth streets. ISAAC 'BENSON ATTORNEY AT LAW, Coudersport, Pa., will attend to all business entrusted to him, with - care and promptness. Office on Second at., near the Allegheny Bridge. F. W. ;KNOX, • - ATTORNEY AT LAW, Coudersport. Pa., will regularly attend the Courts in Potter and the adjoining Counties. o.‘ T. ELLISON, PRACTICING PIEYSICIA.INI, Coudersport, Pa., respectfully informs the citizens of She vil lage and vicinity that he will prom ply Ye ripollll to all ails for professional services. (Mice on Main st., in building: fortnet L ly oc- cupied by C." Ar. : Ellis, Esq. . • C. 5.. - , E. /..TONES, • sEALERS IN DRUGS, MEDICINES, PAINTS. Fancy Articles, Sta.ticitery, Dry Good:. Gro eeries, kc . ., gain st., Coudersport, Pa. D. E. 'OLMSTED, .V.:ALER IN DRY GOODS,` READY—MADE Clothifig,.CrockerY , Gr9eeries, &c.. Main st.. Coudersport, Pa. COLLINS . SMITH, DEALER in Dry Goods,Grdeeries, Provisions. 'hardware. Queensware, Cutlery; and all Goods,usually found hi a country .s . tore. Coudersport, Nov. 27, 1861. ---- COUDERSPORT HOTEL, F. GLASSMIRE, Proprietor, Corner o- Main and Second Streets, boudersport, Pet ter. Co., Pa. A.Livery Stable is also kept in connect Ilion with this Hotel. H. J. OLMSTED, DEALER IN STOVES, TIN & SHEET IRON WARE, ltitin st., nearly opposite the Conrt House, Coudersport, Pa. Tin and Sheet Iron Ware made to order, in good style, on short notice. [~ MILLER Si, McALARNEY, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW. HARRISBURG, PA., AGPITS -for the Collection of Clait s against the United States and State Go - ernments, such as Pension, Bounty, Arreai of Pay &c. Addresr Box 95, Harrisburg, Pa. PensiOn Bounty and War Claim Agency. TIVENSTONS nrocui,ed for soldiers of the present war who are disabled by reason of wounds received or disease contractracted while in the servi'e of the United States ;and, pensions, bounty, and arrears of e ny obtained for widows or heirs of those who hare died tor been killed while in service. All lette. of inquiry promtly answered, and on receipt 53 , loan of a statement of the ease of claimani I will forward the necessary papers for their , signature. Fees in Pension cases as fixed by law. Itiramotoss.—Hon. Isaac BENSON, Hon. A. 41. 0 ianstary; J. S. M.Auti, Esq.. F. W. Knox, Esq. DAN BAKER, Cream Agent Couderport Pa. June 8; '64.-Iy. HOWARD ASSOCIATION, PHILADELPHIA, Pi. 11111 SEA SECS of the Nervous, Seminal, Urina l) ry and sexual ay stsms—new and reliable treatment—in reports . of the HOWARD AS. SOCIATIONent by mail in sealed let sr envelopes, free of charge. Address; Dr. T. NRILLIN'HODGHTON, Howard Associatim , Ne. !South Ninth Street, Philadelphia; .Pe. Strike hat More eto4 Then rise Nor eras% Strike in The foreil But 1261(11 Content • I w ,_ 1 the right '.I It i °ugh kindred fight, in arms, in Lire's spite' 1 ' le foe is like other; , I - or, act the e 'a part, 1 1 . y spare thela:ent heart i ona naturel ye for brother li , ItStrike hi whose hat would lift the brand Against tie life of lays r liind, 1 Thnughi boriti o orrtMon mother!. But yours' the 'yantag stay the hlciw I, Enough t knoW that lies low; I • 'An that he is rdther. , . , ntrlke witha will I tho - Keep striking I 'tis nis Betrays the'hurt I Great nature pleads as t "His fiesh t ig yours I forg ii'Ti God that !made Strike r, Arrayed i Pq Once vfct And nob( Strike then, but hear I wit The truant, lort o arms y Drs home, ith lim Sheut victory all l nor stint Shout I—but respect his ma, And with a'welcome Let blows ncrease 7 tbat strife, The shafte of war are winged '" And with dove-plumagt A blessing fails on clasped hat , And unitylthe Lord cominpnds And chat shodld makh THE P , , Fifty years ago a terrible „s ,rm shook the city of London.; At the iad of the night; wlieu the storm was at i highest, an agedinibter living in the t '3urbs of the city, as arousedd by an eitilst cry for help window from his winw he i; ,,s, beheld a rude mitt, clad in the coarse or he sweeper bf the publiestie:ets. lin a,few moments then .the. ; rain came down in orreats, and the storm howy above, &llf preaCher, leaning his trar l ep the seavenger, thrSaded his waythroutA the dark suburbs. I That very day as strange, old man hadi, fallen spe6chless, in, front of the scavem per's' rue hi:imej The good-hearted street sw e eper had'taken him in, laid him on his own bed-±he had not spoken once —and now he wasl dying. . This was l the story of the rough team. Ahd now through dark alleys ' among miserable tenements, that seemed to top ple clown upon their heads, into the lone ,, li-st and dreariest, suburbs they pass— thiti• 44 1 haired minister And his t' o•uirl. At lasiNa a narrow court, and up aElight of stairs , irit, creaked beneath their tread, and then into the death room. It . was, in truth. wiserable place A glio meting light stood on a broken clink: here were 'the rude walls, there the sOlita y garret window, with the rain beating t rough tkerags and straw,which stuffed t e brok e etipanes—and .here audd a eap of cold ashes, the same valise wb . ch it seems the stranger had brought with • to ane orner, on the coarse straw. of the ragged bed lay; the dying man. He was but half dressed—his legs were con cealed by military oots•c. The aged preaeher drew near and look , ed upon 111 m. And as he looied—throb —throb•-you • might hear the death' watch tickin ,, in the shattered wall. It was the form of a strong man, grown old it:l3 care o tuore;thao age. i There was a face:you might look,upon once, and yet wear in your memory for evert, Let us bend, over that l bed, and look on th'at face. A bold forehead; seamed by one deep wrinkle b' tween the brows; long locks of darn hair, sprinkled over with gray±lips firmly set, and quiVering as though they had a life Oeparata from thus life of the man-an then two large ; eves vivid, burning, unnatural in their glare. Ah, thtire:war something bo terrible in that 'face+-something so full ) of unuttera ble loneliness, unspeakable despair, that the aged minister started back in horror But look, those Strong arms are clutch. jug at the vacant !airr--the death sweat starts in'drops upon the col brow—the man is dying 1 -! • Thieb l. throb 1 throb : beat dm death in the battered, shmtered wall. - "Would you die in the faith of a , ahristma?" faltesid the preacher, as he knelt there on the floor. J. C. BeALARNE'Y The white lips of the , death stricken man ireMbled l but made no sound. Then, iwitb thel agony of death upon him, ho rose to a sitting posture. For the first time he , spoke "Chrietian'l" he echoed, in a deep tone which thrilled the preacher to the-heart, "will.faith give me back my honor 7 Ceue with me—With me, far over the water. Ha! werare there! This is• my native home. Yonder is the church in Dobotea to tile iitirpiples of itito ,Dikoolrecy, ena the issetifilietio9 of liffot•elilp, Kitehtyte .Web)s. ITEM E Y VERSES., 1I • - 'with- blow for blOW— eeis you soL . f. valor lays him ; swell as jast, n in the dint, ! d to raise himll • • d the foet Hy as he 11 low you' it be great Ia brave ~ t lead a bei p at bay our'fray, uld divide us'l Id make amends, . be friends, d beside us. a way to k,. n meddler' hose envy %;, wwhen, he.wi ith all me .o wisely. h pity thrill, ,ering ekili smotbers,; itte he•bleeds— his deeds ! oti tordthers !" broken spear' ur peer, that fail him our . cheers= [3 , tears, il him!' ay dean! or pe i ace, solely; TRIOT AND T COUDERSP which I knelt in childhood—yonder, the green on which I sported when - ,a bey. Bat another flag than that waved when I was a child. And listen, old man, were I tal ; pass the streets as I passed them when a child, the babes in their cradles would raise their tiny hands to curse me. The.gravcs in yonder churchyard would would shrink from my footsteps, and yonder flag would rain a baptism of blood upon my heart." That was an awful death bed ! The minister had watched- the "last night" with a hundred convicts in their cells, and yet -never beheld a scene so terrible as this. Suddenly the dying man arose. He tottered •along the floor, with those white fingers, whose nails are blue with the death chill, he threw open the valise. He shOw.td a , military coat trimmed with sliver, an old parchinent, and a piece of cloth, that looked like the wreck of a battleflag. • "Look ye, priest, this faded coat is spotted with my blood!" he cried, as old memories seemed stirring at his heart. "This is the coat that I wore when II planted the Mars On Ticonderoga. That bullet hole was pierced at the fight of Quebec,--now I am a—let me whisper in your ear." ;' , .Now help me, priest," he said to a voice growing suddenly tremulous, ,thetp me to put on this coat of blue and silver. For .you see," and a ghastly smile came over his face, "there is no one to wipe the cold drops from my brow ; no wife, no child—l - must meet death alone; but I will meet; him as I -met him in battle, without fear." • While he stood arraying himself in that worm eaten coat of blue and silver, the good preach'sr spoke to him of faith in Jesus. Yes, of that great faith that pierces the clouds of human guilt, and rolls them back from , tho face of God. "Faith 1" echoed the strange man, who stood there erect with the death light io his eye, 'faith can't , give me back my honk I Look ye, priest, there, over the wades sits George Washington, telling his comrades the pleasant story of the eight years' war—there, in 'his royal hall, sits George of England, bewailing in his idi otic, voice the losstof hie colonies. And here am I—l, who was first to raise the flac , of freedom the first to strike the blow n against that king--here am I, dying like dog!" The awe stricken preacher started back rom the look of the slying man, while— AITOR- rob—throb—beat the death watch in 'be shattered wall. i "Hush ! silence along the lines, there 1" 11\ muttered, in that '; wild, absent tone, as tt ugh speaking to ,the dead; "silence al g the lines ! Hark tbere, Mantgorn• er . we will meet there in, victory or der b ! hisi ! silence,i my men, not a whis• per, as you move up to those steep rocksi nov on, my boys, now on.! Men of the wilt rness, we will gain the town ! Now up v th the banner rrf the stars; up with the 1 r., v. of freedom though the night is _ _ _ _ dark iul the snow fulls ! , Now, now I" shrier d the death stricken man,. tower log tl re in his blue uniform, with Ws clencl d hands moving in the air—"now, now I Me blow, and Queoec is ours." Anc l look. His eyes grow glassy.— With that word on his lips, he stands there—ill ! what a hideons picture of des pair, e•ect, livid, ghastly. There for a moment; and then he falls . ] He is dead'! A.h i loik at the proud form, thrown cold and stiff upon the dark floor. In the glassy eyes there lingers even yet horrible energy, a sublimity of despair. Whois the strange man dying here alone in this garret, this man who, in all his crim4, still treasured up his blue uni-. form anfaded flag ? . Who is i this thing of terrible remorse —this maiz, whose memories link some thing of Heaven and More of hell ? Lek us look at the i parchment and that flag. \ , The old 'minister unfolded that faded bag—it wio the blue banner gleaming with thirteeb stars. - • He Imo' 'the parchment. It was a Colonel's co mission in the continental army,' addres 'd, BENEDICT ARNOLD. . And, thole, io that rude hut, while the death wat'oti throbbed like a heart in the shattered_ ssallunknown, unwept, in all the bitterniss of desolaiion, lay the corpse of that patriot and traitor. . 0, that our own true Washington had been there. to Sim: that 'good right arm from the corps l e,', Mid - while the dishon ored body rotted into' dust, to bring home that good right arm,and embalm it among thelholiest memories of the past. Fot that right arm had struck Macy a gallant blow fol. fre edom; yonder at Ti conderoga, at Quebec, Champlain, Sara toga—that aria yonder, beneath the sncris , white mountain, amid the deep silence of the dead lc drat raised into sight the ban. ber of the STARS. 1 It was dttriag the renowned expedition, through the v;ilderoess to. Quebec, that Arnold 'euditdped fer two or three days beside the river of the dead ; near a snow RT, POTTER COMITY, PA., WRDNESD = Y APRIL 12, 1865: white mountain, which rose in lovely grandeur over all the 'mountains in the autumnal. sky.: : A single soldier ascend ed the mountain with the hope of behold in,g from' its summit the rock and spires of Queben. When lid Came down, Arnold took from his breast, !where, for four days in privation and danger he hid carried it, a bine banner gleaming with thirteen stars. He raised it into the light, and for the first time the ICentinental banner floated• over the solitudes of. the Dead river. This is a fact attested by history and corroborated by tradition. • STORY OP A FIAT.-i—There was a start ling development, ,a i t Mount Holyoke Seminary, not' long since. One of the young ladies had just returned from a visit to the outside world, and soon after vigilant teacher located into her room and di'soovered a gentleman's hat there. Another teacher. alsol satisged Imrself of the existance of the alarming object, and the pupil was forthwith summoned to the hall of judgment. was a most delicate subject of inquiry, and the point of attack was onl3 reached by gradual and zigzag approaches. The pupil, who manifested her depravity by half concealed merri ment, and showed no disposition peni tently to unbosom herself, was at last brought up with a plumii question as to the hat in the room.l There was a mo ment of painfully anxious suspense, fol lowed by a sudden .collapse, when the offender confessed 'th a t she had brought in - orie of her father's 'old hats to cut up for rolls for her hair.- She was pronunoed excused, and then there was great fun in the halls, as the story circulated. LOST i3TS Wm —A gentleman while taking a drive through one of our country towns, accompanied by his Irish servant had the misfortune to have his vehicle smashed, and himself and companion thrown violently to the grdund, by his horse taking fright running away. The gentleman was solnewhat bruised,but not seriously. His principal loss was that of his wig which, had been shaken off, and on picking himself up, he found Pat in a most ludicrous condition, hold ing on to his head with the blood trick. ling through his fiegeis and his master's wig in the other hand, which he was sur veying with the mops ludicrous alarm and horror. Pat," said you. much hurt?" "Hurt, mit ? •Ah, l master, dear, don't you see the top of me' i head in me band ?" Pat, in his terror ,and confusion, had mistaken his master'sl portable heatipiece for' his own natural scalp, and evidently regarded his last hour as havine , arrived. WHAT MAKES A LADY.—When Beau Brummel was asked What made a gentle. man, his quick reply wai, "Starch, starch, my lord !' This may be true; but it takes a great deal mo i re to make a lady: and though it may to some seem singular, I am ready to maintain that no conceiv able quantity of -muslin, silk or . satin, edging, frilling, hooping, flouncion , b or furbelowing,can per se', or per dressmaker, constitute a real lady. Was not Mrs. Abbott i Lawrence just as much of a lady when attired in twelve cent calico, in Bost* . as whea arrayed io full court dress at St. James, London ? "As Mrs'. Washington was said to be so grand.a lady," sayi a Celebrated English visitor, (Mrs. Thorpe') "we thought we must put on our best.lbibs and bands, so we dressed ourselves in our most elegant ruffles, and were -introduced to her lady ship, and don't you think we found her knitting, and with her check apron on ! She received us very graciously and easi ly, but after the compliments were over, she resumed her knitting. There we were without a stitch 'of work and sitting in state, but Gep. Washington's lady, with her own hands, was knitting stock ings for her husband.". Does not that sweet republican simplicity command your admiration ? "NEvEtt."—Neverepeak of your father or mother as the "old man„ or "old woman " Never reply to the epithets of a drunk ard or fool. Nevei slander a woman. Never abuse one who was once your bosom .friend, however bitter an enemy . now. Never sneer at the expense of religion or the Bible. Rm. John Randolph of. Roanoke,once exclaimed in Congress. after the duty on wool had been discussed for many weeks: "Mr. Speaker, I am' so sick of the word wool that I would consent to walk three miles out of my way to kick a sheep." A lady *hose girls were all misshapen consulted the celebrated anatomist and le - eturer, Dr. Hebbard on a .preventaticn. "Loose dresses and plenty of air, just like the boyit," was the excellent reply. ilfitiTs.--little red thin,q,6 that men and women play with [ for money. \\,' Never Say Die. Forty burs ._ the "Old Beaver" India man, home w ard bound from Canton had been lying there off the Cape of Gooii Hope—hull i s o—every yard of canvas close, furled and mired in double gask ets. . - The ship bad bee hauled to under bare poles, at noon on Sat ',ldav, and ..it was eight bells in the fir st. forenoon watch, Monday morning. Fort hours of as fair a wind as ever blew was d! But we• could do no better. 1 The of st sailors in the ship' said: they ha& neve seen the seas run so high and break, so uriouslY. Kept off on her course, under all the'can vaa we could show, the ship would\have foundered in an hour. Hove to as \she was, She lay as comfortable as she woill• have ,done in her berth at the foot of `Val, street, though not so quietly perhaps. • II She was rolling tremendously,but theia that was nothing new for the Old Beaver She always'rolled in any weather. 01 Charley Latham swore thaii a man mith6 just as well be the snapper on the end of a coach whip ithree miles long as a man on the Beaver's royal yarde, and she going anywise free. All our quarter deck people and pas sen,Ters were ti till below at breakfast when one bellwas struck, and.just then I saw Charley Bognet, an active young sailor lounging in the starboard watch, .spring up into the larboard forprigging, and be gan to climb aloft. It was a daring act and a.very dificult one too, for the . ithip so rolled and slat, that sometimes Charley would be'pinned to the rigging,unable to move hand or foot. Then watching his chance, he would go up a dozen ratlines like a monkey.. Looking aloft to see what was taking CharleY up without orders, I discovered the bort yardarm of the e foreroyal adrift, and the sail slatting like mad. That was what Charley was after, to secure that sail. , I was at that time a lad ten years old, and could climb whereOr the best sailor in the ship dared to go. IBut I remember how I trembled and shuddered that morn ing, as grasping my father's trumpet I screamed with my might of lungs : "Charley, ahoy eew ! Come dowif, sir! I say, you Charley ! get down out of that! • I might as well have bawled at the gale to hush and be quiet. for Uot a word did Charley hear; and if he had, he would net have heedid me an atbm. the master, 74are He gained the royal Jard and laid him self ont on it just a,4 ill father the chief mate and several of ,tie gentlemen pas sengers, almimed by my yelli, came hur rying on deck. . Charley secured the snit, and watching the starboard roll, flung himse l lf in along the yard, and caught hold of the royal rigina , with his hands But the ship brought up- with a sudded jerk, and slat back'to port so quiek that the man failed to get a hold with hiti feet, and when the ship was down, rail to,:.en that aide, he stuck right out straight, at a right angle with the royal mast, clinging to the rig ging with' his hands onley. The next surge of the ship to 'the starboard slat him in againetthe spar with a violence that it seemed must have stunned him and broke his.hohLentirely. • My father, though for thirty years commanding a ship, had no.(other oath fhan "by hemp Fr that he evetq l swore by, and that morning, ten times, when Char ley swung out at rik,lit angles from the royal 'rigging hanging •on.his hands, my father would exclaim : "There, by hemp 1 he's gope." Then as the next roll of, the ship would dash the poor fellow in against the mast my fithei would clap his hands and cry out :1 "No, he sticksyet 1" • But Charley, theughl he had been a monkey, could not have clung there long. His desperate grip was at length broken, just as tho ship was on even keel, and endlong, whirled over, and over, down t he came, checked somewhat, first by some of the fine topsail gear, then striking the bitatlof the fore course, and from thence fallino , upon the port anchor, twisted and doubled up, a quivering mass; having scarcely the semblance of humanity. •"Mr: Montgomery," my father said to, the - chief mate, after we had all stood for ten minutes. I think,.lgazing • upon the sieletiing; spectacle, "there will be a ham mock; and a slupg shot for poor Charley at noon." , , There was a convulsive movement of the mangled mass,,a 'nervous clutching of the hands, the gory head twisted itself out from under the shattered thigh, and bubling with blood, the lips cut, and hid eous, muttered distinctly : . .-"Avast there, Capt'n—l'll live to , see you launched over the side yet l" No one had dreamed of there being life' in' the man, but th i ere was, years of it, horribly as he was crushed. We had, among our passengers a skill ful sUrgeon, who took Charley in hand, and so straightened, him out ttnd splinter ed him up that ten weeks from the' day ofhis fall, when we went into our berth TEM.-41;5D PER-OEMI. - in New york, Charley Boguetwas ableto walk; and the only , nyidence_ the general break up he hadreceivedmisi l a alight swing of his left* in iralkiiri t , Charley'S declaration, as Ice Jai there. , all in a heap on the forecastle, was,a we t; phecy tor fifteen years later my„ father. was b uried at sea frpin the deck of the BI ld Charley Br It, lief 44. cep „. ley when an , apprentice in a country { fir_ in.. : tiug office in Vermont. - - On a visit connected with political . mati tors to the Hon. C. Mallory, then tone ot '- the most distinguished members of CON grass, and most able champion of the, "American. System,” we went with him. an obscure printing offiJel in Toultney hi: place of residence. Among other thin:B he called our attention to - tOyoung - =1 comp ..itar,who was ratherawkwarlystick.l. log typ: , and who though evidently ftill grown,w: • the youngest apprentice in the office. His legs ran a good deal more then a "feet" thr*angh )his pantaloons—day: sleeves of his.coat scarcely reached 'to his elbows—his hair was very irhiteadd , flaxen, and he was on the whole, 'in- the aggregate, taken separately and together - ,' the greenest specimen tiif bumanity.we ev— , ` er looked at—and this: is saying great. , deal. for we kept a good looking glass "That. boy„, said Mallory, will make a re markab'm man ; I can't hold an argumeni , with him on masonry or - anything else '• connected wits politics." As Mr.M. wao - considered one of the ablestlmen in Coll."- gress, his remark cauied us some surprise and we not only "made .a note of it," but' took another look at.the "devil"(printer's we mean) And could not but trace in the : expansive foreheild . "a - tnind formed in tire's finest mould,. aud 'for im mortalityrl It was years afterward that we becaniei aware of the fact that tde boy was Horace Greeley. . - PETROLEUM BENT ABROAD IN 1864 —The export of petroleum the past, year amounted to 21,288,499 gallons. • There, were sent to Great Britain 6,2t5,000:,. gallons; to France, 4,625,000; Antwerp,' 5,149,990 , ißremen, 971,000 i,llamburg, 1,186,000; Rotterdam, 533,000; Cron. stadt, 400,000; Genoa and Leghorn, , 635,000 ; Peru; 170.000.; 167 r e. 000; China and East Indies, 34,004 Brazil, 149,000 ; Mexico, 113,000; Cuba,; ; , 418,000. In fact it was sent in large quantities. to nearly every leading poet in, the world. Four thousand gallons were= sent to light up the tomba.of Egypt, and... even Hayti took 7000 gallops. •The Nat/aria/ intelligencer remarks that this new product fills the void in 'our cotton exportations. Horses often show pride, but bow Intel. erable vain they would be if they only knew howiinueh they are talked ationt by their lords and masters I Indeed. in his 'fondness for "horse talk," the man qttitb frequently make an ass of himself —which the horse never does. The man who cultivates philosophy and belleslettres at the expense of a jogtrot pro fession,is like concert elooks,whioh,though striking their hour in Hate melodies', are poorer time keepers than your common steeple clocks. Woman of genius, like flying fish be. tween the two elements, hover between manhood and womanhood,injuret by both and persecuted in both kingdoms. Tis of little Use for a man pinched with poverty for thre score years, to get rich, then—to obtain luxurious food when he his lost the teeth to eat it with. Our youngladies are"getting' altogether too fond of feeding accounts of the Mem and execution of great criminals. Like larks in cages, they live, upon heap keett With your true swindler, the • brain must have played the 'Aron's Rod to the; heart—swallowing it whole; a 'Arnie often performed itr the anatomy of great puhlio men. . / Stranae it but reputationA like bats, and cloaks, will last some people twice as long as others, thou; h \ the commodity be the sane to a thread. Money is now the equivalent sod rep- resentative of value in all things,andoon seqUently in understanding; the rather as a head is stamped on it. _ The fellow that—dosen't pay, the tailOr for his coat should be fitted with a coat of tar, turned up•with feathers. •• , • There are angelus female' voieei Ant would win a bird from the tree or coax 'a- nail out of the heart of oak; - • - • If woman are flowirs,we ftotrfthot. tbif are as often Bilk and paper and guinflore ern as botanical ones. 'Most of us hate sinuoriwOisethist-sii;:: ~- El Ei II Il OM =Mal , 1 - =iota MIME Greg