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It. .... - —. . ~.--; i ! t, - ; ;!. - ' • - ,hitc.,:. , ..t , rf... ~; _ __ . . ~.. 1:.:: , :, i•.,.• 1•92:1 ---- ..........4/ ...I.•• -, •.--"' •- :- ''' '."--..- _ "\. ......,i___,1..... .......:40„ .....„ .._.....,........ 1 .,• . . ... o __, ,-..-:- ~,,•_ ~. _ ,L. .., • . • • ___ ~., .\. ..,.._.. _, . .. , • di . .? 917 , ,.1 Si \ I.; 'V.I. ••• , 1) ,;•- T/ --- 4 , . .''J' 2 ; I •CI - ': .- • .. ... -. :1 7 7 r' `..r...; • ..). ..- _. N • , r _ • •It . t MEE 1111 MOE VOii:ftat 'B*-'-'IViIYZBER 40. THE )i I'OTTER': 7 JOURNAL, , 4....4131119 , 1 M. W. 31eML&RNEIG , Piolprietiw. - ,.!:. -tat-Devoted to tbeeatibe df iLepdbiicanisrra, the in. titeetaof - Agrioeitoje_,lhe advamientent of-Education, the best gockot ottit conuty. T„thvning no guide except thatof PrincipleOt Wilt endtrver to ltid in : the wark of mere ftlll2,Fteedotnisingti r Country: , Advdateiments inserted at tim following rates, atTtprepprliOre special bargains are made, A "square" 1011tken nfAreaier or.B of..l.ormar it : tit Zigeirith3,.. ,f 50 1 Volga.; 0r.3 insertions ....... 2 eo Zach isulasegitent It:dation less kb n 1340 1 !quern, 1 year 10 00 'lin • trWss Cards, 1 year 5 00 A.dministiater's or Executor's No tipecial and Editorial Notices `-'2O" 6a - All transient advertisements roust- - -be paid In tel} , ancoattid no notice will be Micaniof advertisements flout a distance; ttiticf,Etthey:nre accompanied by the W iley or,aatishictOryleference , igif ; JOb Work, of all kinds, executodwith neatness anti despatch. - BUSINESS itObpitstwi y_ i Attorneys-fit-Y+' *,:::: , Arllgiii,,lt.Al,ll.lo,7,6)olituTc,Lopotlin. 1: pedal attention 'ens! np, Dowdy and Think Pay, and. aft elalins against t to -National and tiintetioveinmants.„.. -, ~, ...: tf nofr2l • .. . - , . Free oinuil+Aocepied Ancient Voik 3111MOILY 6,11E4 TA A. LODGE, No. 342, A. M. Stated 111 Dinetings on tho rrnd4th W • Dewlap° of each month: Tian, In the 3d Stoiy of th • Oirneted Block, ItC.l.AuftanseiSee. :HFAIt,-W.61.. J9HN S. 'KANN, - . TroRNEr AND COUNSELLOR , AT LAW CoudimTnrt, P. will attend Cu a sovoral Coujl. In_rottir,Clitnaron 'and Iff.cßean ociniinteli. All bnec ifeins rltruntoLl.j.4,hla reed i! ! prompt attert tioil. 'toil - leo on Alain ntreet, In residence. -AivritlTß , (41. OLMSTED, TTORNEY AND COUNSELL I ER AT 'TAW , 11: • Clapiltorliptkrt; ..;will attend t nil business en -3 t rtisted to hie care with prenipt nese anl I fidelity. O ffi ce In the sceold storey of the Olmsted lock - . . ISAAC BENSON ,. 1 ~' -.-. .. . . . ... . TTORNEY-AT-LAW, ConderA oil, Pa., will attend to all bu4ine.4.entrnsted l him with care dliihniptneeo. ' Attends Conne of tidjOlbinz, coun !. Office on second strea,near t.bo÷llegany bridge . . . F. W. ICSOX, , -f-TTOR\ EY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW, 11, ei,iiiierspOrt, Pa., will attend the Oottrts in Pet t -r , :ttul the 'adjoining counties. • . . , I AILILLEIt 4t, - myALAR 4 EY, Ai MTN ErS-ATT, AW.,' II Anttisit TR G, Potin'n.— _te,. Atrent4 for the Collection of Cla4tw agul 1,14 the 1, , ttl red SbitedmitlState tioi•ortonunt 1,4 ch ns Pensions, Itoic iit y, Ar roans of ray,dte-Address kinr{. 9561 nrri s h n rg 1r.1.11..ittt4434 .. 1.,.'W. IIIeALARNE -, .1j HAL ESTAT i rind iltair: A GENT.— TX) - I;3nd - Botr,h! and Sold; Ta - xes paid and 'Mies inVrYntigatoL I nsn ren property agai n,41f1 re in the best companies in the Countryonq 'Ptirn - omiagain‘t Ace'. ‘ients In the Travekirs 'lnuranie Cningrpty of Ilart. ford, Business trnnsacteViirranyily 17- --; •.. ondr r.' P. A. STRIIIRINS 4:1: C 0..: rEIICILA.NTS—DeaIers in Tn*.k . '"Goodis, - !coney ffo %ode, Groceries. VrOviolons,Floor,treed,Pork, nuit oTe . rything ueually kept In a good country storo. l'irluee bought and RUM I , .17 20 C. 11. 513131.43:15, dr RiA R e — tmit is 7 t l l' a; °l;saleana alell%rGogney and OCA C loth i n g,Ladies DressGoOs,G roce ri es, Fldur, Feed, &a; Retailers supplied ea liberal terms - I - C. S. & E. A. JONES, ERCIIANTS--Dealers In Drogi,lder Iclnes,Paints, 'EaticY Articles, Stntlonon Dry Good; Greerles; ' &c., Main Street, Couderspo't, Pa t , • . . i A- ' D. E. OLMSTED. . I t EttaNT z ptlerln Dry Gx::4 ldS- A atgoaeryra,e:i.Fir. Fred, f";Fic, Pyor,kiows &e., 151.31 n street, Coulemport, PIS • I riot LINs r D ct rL o G ns oo4, Gii 3 o t c lt e l r r e; .: nalta3l lt•arla u•ually found inn country etorc. n'6l. H. J. OLYISrEp, ARDWARE ; lierconiV!; 7 itiuf ~ T in nnd•SGbet sport, remli'a. Tin and Sheet Iro oner, in good atyle, on short notice. I 31ARBiE 1 - Anil _ . ... , . rultm:AziGetiiiiieidosires to Infocnall otoefot- L ter that he can supply thorn: Iv Inds of litsatle work. I.4 . cheap and as tOOl/ 4 k be had a n e•place iii the othuitry. MONITMEN.,.._ ad TOll3- srtm - Es of all.ktrele furnished on shortmotice. 1 Coudersport FobLT6sly . •C. 33FtEl.T.NLE. • LOVDER.SPORT . 11E0T.1141.: F. . S . GLASMIRE, PROPRIKTOR; Ccirner of Main and Second strects,Coudersport.rotter A !Livery Stable also kept in cnniieritihn with this Irate]. Daily Stakes to and from the Railroads.: . . Journal - Avrwe latly , added a fine new-assortment of , Jllll-TY PEI° our already. largei !assortment, velare neer-prepared to . do, all, kinds of vitirk, cheaply end with taste and neatnes'a.• Orders Solicited.: : DAN •BAKER, MNSTON, I 1 TT :10 .WAR. CLA' Fya Y-Ir:PwthbestoVidi'salAnercilyfovi.eaktindolef"Wg the l e ' c re ei ge vn . or dlikenno contractedd - While In the sorvl -of the United hititfes - ; and pensions, iantnty, and arrears of pay ob.'. tained for widows or heirs of thoso wh hare died or been 'Jailed while in service. .All lett re 3f Inquiry prizlMptlynnalyrm:ed,.and mrecelpt by, ail of a State -1 mini of the case of olaiinan't, I - .will fb ward tub no; resiiary Tapirs fcr their signature. - Irecli in Pensida caseeas tired by law: Refers to'llonio. Thane Beason, A. - CP. Olmsted, John S. Mann and F. W. Knox,'ESgi i-". - -' ' - bAN 13.1 r Ep., jnneB'l3ll palm Agent, Condors ort,l'.i. ' . 865 Pirlin - dkliplaia: SL. E rie Railroad: , T lIS went line trwreiges thi3 Northcra and North "- Agi..a3t codittles of Pennsylvania to city of Erie en;bike „Erie: It has been leased and is operated by the P6NNSTI.VAiikitAIIMOAD COMPANY. ..7130 of passenger trains at .EhIPOR M.. i -.. LEAVE EASTWARD.;. I -.. • . Brio Xl4,7Fit,Lin ' ' ,1012 A. m. Brio Evrese Train.................'.... .....1.0:17 P. M. . . . .. . . . _ 1 ... - r.. • LEAVE WESTWARD, 1 • : • - - Erfe, 31:111Tra1n....; - ............----........-11012 A. 3t.: , Erie Express Train ' 1,1.-8:50 ie. M. Fasmonzer cam Tun. through on; the, krielfail and 1 Eipro-s I rains witherit,ehange both Avrays'between PlidadetPhie and Erie: 2 1 ~ ' • I . '' l • NYORK CONNECTION f 'Y ' l. • . • • '.- i LCATf3 NOF Irv* at 0.00 E. if., artiyeakErie 3 31 A.M. Liave El le at 1.55 r. m., arrive at Now Yin* 1.15,P. M. NO CHANGEOF CARS BETWEEN ERIE NEW YORK ELEGANT:SLEEPING OARS on al Nightirnine . . , t r hiforbiasn. respecting- Paliffit rg° . linsinesicap ply ?oen,•ner el .30th itlid g arket etreetsl'hiladelph la Id i Vtiiii. ter 'Freight beakless ortlieQem. any 's Agents ,A Rinzeton,'Jrl, Cor:l3th and • rket, streets, Thietneinliis.-: 4r:in • .• ; • • it -• •:* Ll ' W. iteynoldri, - Zrie.• , ,_.. Min. lir^wii; Agent; N:101.11.: E. , Dirriere. 111 Al I. IOU STO S, General •Yrnigh b.A. t•,Philad:' 11.1.. W.' 4l- 17.1.XN1iilt, General ticketAgt. Yiltlade p• L. TYLER., General Suli'l., Willlatesport. ' D . f'lNTidit LISTING DIALOGUE, - I sqipsdr 4 lli,e..fail-6bli!ige=. ot.p i ttrartAppl , , l'-thritipes,LL iteeis--Viiiilsrta ---liiretidH 1 , ''Ciiic.ikiiia tliOnie t Other u'rhlilipt--Ami IB4iyiviiid Gi.rLii.Beside I_ , .: r .. w $ . iintyi—.Tokri'-' , Syniih'i!Cati ) ritorl i store-+Tnnii -' l fEveriingz-Srkwress, Sizil l priy T Yillagem,‘' Ond Farmer; ,w 4 have "!haPPel)efli PL,Is 1aua7 1 ?... 1 1 , 1tii , Sm'fth:—Trade 'iii very doll nowa days : I done aell . ‘tuilf as -much es I did five years ago. • .'- :. t! , n.; . •-, .=-,-- 111 fr. Vottoi.--Good 'reason. :Thlngero so ` high dwe itaii't ' afford 'to 'buy; 1 You charge such awful 'prices, Smith. ' ' ' - Mr: iSjiiith,.•L-Cao't help it, '- , lihavato' Pay so-ninth more. Icrihim I sold linger at 10 cents ai pound,' j. bide •"ii cent a pound, and I only' tnakiela tent now Oni 29: ceritsJ'Afid this cent; profit doti'ygo so' far to ketp' my tatiiily..--- ,1 oil i 7 .. -,-, -,::::. .: , Ilr. Br own,. l - - .bni lust a.spmuch_ . as ever:`; I 'don't sae as there ie to deli Change. I used to sell my' GOO buihels Of' wheat for 75 teats ti-bushel,'oi, 64-59. - Of this; $250 ;went 'for familY store bills, and 6200 to-pay off my'farm,debti' Now, when I sell for 61.50 . ppr birAel,lot $900 ) .• it takes' aboutl6soo for'stort bills,, , and leaves•E4oo to paY off the debt. Int fact, these high' prices snit ma. - I wish Mr: McCulloch had I kept' out of the . Tresnry, fcF ' he r threateiii,to''inalte,'Gree' backs . ..pray and knock duivn prices; • l' lifri P, rte. don't see as it makes much. difference. - If there' is twice as much money going, and everybody gets' twice as miich for everything he taiseS, and pays 'twice, as, Much for 'everything he buys ,'it all comes out Square -at end'; an'd therrOdgain in the operation';, thos6- who Save;- money; or make a profit, make dotbleits neighbor Brown explains' alithit *paying his farm debt, Mr. /3atter.-'+,-Thies so. l - • .31r. Qrreenc.i-S6l thinli. ' '• ~ TIOES. I. Cuunmin. . . 11/(. llidoi.r. i Sol do I. .41/ • B a ker. --There J—Th re is a little draw- I. ~ . , e back. I 'keep; the -- accounts of Widow Rollerts, who has the mortgage on .Mr- Brown's farm, and the $lOO be pays,don't go only . half se) far in supporting her, and educating l er Children. , , Air. Trfzi , is i (alit School 'Teacher). , -.-- Yesit does; fol . I' Only get $3O a month for teaching 'i re. ;Itoberts'' and' others' children„ and f used to 'get' $25, with wheat at 75 'eta. ' 1 ' • ' L' , ---;4 1 - etrr•-•7-- TI-- 4, '••!..' l ' ' futito square: i • ' ' • Editor.--Arid you only pay me $1.50 la year for my newepaper, whichyou thee cheap at $1.25 five years ago; though I have to pay flirt() dims as much for every thing I use in ; making a newspaper.' ' " Air. " G-rcene-L-Why doh% ycia raise your prices, tett? • 1 Editor.--Peeple •won't stand it. I must keep ' alog Nvith no profit, or even at a loss, hopin g for better i times, or else lose my subscribers, and ldt the paper go, down.. Why, -when. I. raised the pricel from $1.25 to . 1.50 a year, a good many iistopped• the per--amang: them Mr. Brown himself i though Ismid him double ' for his wheat., 31r. Brbwn -t--I didn't stop it so much for the price;'.l went in for pitying for my farm byextra' economy. ; - .2 7 ditor..—Yes,•he follovied myadvice for people " to *ohm:nice and pay their I debta now:" But let us see if Mr. lbegan at the'right )place `''On one Satur day, I published thatwheat had - adilinced 15': cents ''ii bishel. 'On Monday 'Mr: BroWn Went to'market with his' wheat,' and sold sixty bushels at one Cent adVarice over the 'old price and thoriglit' he did', well. Elelcam 'home • boasting about it,' until he - bet.til.litior Johnimn, who got the 15 cents advance, becaUse he read' my paperi and . was ' Wide-awake. Mr. Brown's -loss n 60 bushels would pay . , four whole yeas' subscriptioh. ' -- .- Mr, - Brototi llso't eay anything more abdut that, 'M r Kiiiixf and'put Me down . airibsoriber, for life • . . . Editor.—k H ave:heard of several other inelflosies - • bsi .Itosci who stopped my pa per, , Not `to 'b . ton personal ! ! as some of them are•here,tl will call them A, B, C, etc. Mrlr A. paid 4 per Cent more feed on $74 tax.es, becousehe did i net See the col , , lector's notibeln my papeivantf-tbes lost $2.4,..t0 save $;1.50. 111r...8 Paid $3:O 1 the same Way. !.,Mr. C. failed -0 bring in his , claim agailist 'an' estate, because he, did!not see in my paper the legal notice Meiling the time. • •That, ( Oosti'hini $34, to save $1 1 .50 eintiseriptiop. ' Mr: . D.;sold 200 pounds' of *ool at '62'nents,becattse he did not see an advertisoment'of 111i.Smithi= right here at !home, offering 70' cents. That coit'himllQ; - to save' $l5O, pre.' g's bois went Own' to the yillage.everq night or twit, to h get this Eieirearld local. gossip, because i Tthey.,liacr tio..paper at home, and one bf them fell into bid corn pony, and is.ruined ..- I - 'sttiow twenty cases wher4 peOple lost money for- not learning what iii,going on. "I gather' up ail that is going en in business and society, and 9ondepse IN into, my coluriens. It is important for every man to knosiall about home matters, i and .I. doubt iilthere is a 'man in Obi whole 3tiwn who would not,. in the course of, a I , year 'get Bathe informa- , Stoves, (*etudes lade to AGENCY tiebota TO he "hie Qehlocheg qilD Dissetilirmtiq of Voillitg, gliehtithe. 411 a lelgS- 6 , OllDEiiaPottti POTTER. ,CCitagtgs F 44 sI'UPPDAYIiiNtrARY 1866, ttorr;that would pay him-back more Owl 61-50alifir.:, And then think of abousei. hold,iittibg down - tegether 365 'days' Yeatc mid' having nothing to talk' abOut, dieepting -their 'own" affairs, and a . lew items of gossip, gathered up by occasional contact . with ,other people. ' 1 ~llfr:l'ajter:L.--"Let'rne helpihoF,ditnes argument. Wife, read to me aniteie pub-. about 'a•turribitg, - which he 'copied. 'Troia Ihe Aiiieriaun .Agriculturisi,of Net TOrk :City. 'Next day one-of those same' hutribugs' came round with las' article,and' was so pl . tiusible that:he almoit.persuaded" her into'paying him $3, foi his swindling' recipe ;: but the editor's ~cantion kept her . Yea,.anti do Youknow that the Telloisr i3old more-thah: fifty of biik'reeip'ea 'hereabout, at $3 . hpiede ? bra nitt'tei atilone of my aul:iscribera:, • .dovin as' a Sub sPribei, Editor, here is your one dol.. lUr'itUCfifty tents. • .Ij.': Sltaro:—And me too.' Editor:-=-Thank you,' gentlemen. 'l'll try'.to make it better ;paper than ever!' Every dollar helps; it new subscriber only' adds td my expense the cost of paper. If everybody took the paper,' and i thusdi. vided 'the cost of getting news„:setting' type, - offme rent, ete.,l could -doublet the value to 'each. 'Please talk the' matter' over with other neighbors, and see if it canna be ' done: Sevral Voices. —We will. Synith.--And now while you are about it; I want to make up a club for a good New . York paper. , Mr. .Brownt-AV e can't afford to take so many 'papers. Mr._&tith.--You have just seen that yeti 'cannot afford to stop your home pa per; let us see - if it will not pay to join oer club.' Mr. Rich, you have 'taken the Americcin. Agriculutrist for several years. Does it:pay 7 Mr. Rich Pay ? Yes, fifty times over. Why; I, got 'two ten , acre fields ready to sow to 'wheat, and put in one of them. ' That night 'my Agricutturist came,' and I read a simple reedmmondationaboUt prepariog seed wheat. I called John'atil' put bushels in soak for the net? day. -It 'cost 50 cents Tot the materials': Well, that second field yielded 5 bushels an acre more than the other-:-7or 50-bush els extra. and better -wheat too. 'Pretty good• pay for the $1,50 expeuneu paper. And. I have got lots' of . other hints alaiost as profitable. You know I gor better profits on my , beef, park and mutton ' than any other, man in the place, Now this does not come from any direct hint, like the wheat, but from a good many suggestions that I have pieked up in reading the Agriculturist, and from the course'of reasoning that I have been led into, by reading in it what others do, and thiuk, and say. • Mr. Sruith,—You are another sub scriber to the Agriculturist, Mr. West; does it pay ? , Mr. Inst.—Pay 7' Yes. You know what good - cabbage.s and potatoes I had last season. Why, the 'cabbages were worth double any others in town, for mar ket or for home 'use. I had 400 heads, worth' 5 cents apiece, ;extra; and they only cost 20 cents extra for seed. My 250 bushels of potatoes . aro - all engaged for seed' at $1.50 (bushel, when other kinds bring only 50 cents. oat's s2so' clear gain, for $l4 extra I paid for seed, and the $1.50'1 paid for the Agricultur ist.' It' was thiaugh this paper that I learned' about' the cabbages and potatoes. Its editors - are careful; intelligent men, on the constant lookout for ilaythin.• new that - is really good; while the paper abOunds in cautions, against:the poor and unprofit able. ' Mr. Sazit7t.—What sayyou, M. Tay lor 7 Does it Pay, to' invest $1.50 in the Agriculturist :P Mr. 7'aglor.—Mos. , t, certainly; A hint in th&paper led ma to look after certain insects at the proper time, and the result was, I liad . l:6o . barrels of splendid apples, which brought me a clean 65 per barrel, and this you know was better by $l, than 'the average-prices here, or $l6O. Then I have read so much` about good and ' bad Grapes,. the* method of treating them ,6t,C., that I can beat the town'in raising grapes profitably.- .11ty son, William, got a kink iu his head about T,omatoes, from some-' thing the Bditors'said, dna : sent for Some seed. -He made More money'on the'crop raised in his spare houri, than:was cledied by `half the farmers in' thia town: • 'Mr. Smitli,-- . -Let's hear 'from Mr. Crime - . Mr. Crane -I only read in the paper what - 'was'aaid about bogs - -•—what kind paid'best,'how to feed them; , ina the-like; but if you Will 601' around and sdetiny porkers; and my .expense ' aecotint, yll bet a ,- pippin I can show fifty ',dollars , more pork for" the same money, thatiarirother man here: A.nd'this cornesifro4Vrehiling what other men think and'd. But Wife ought to be here to speak % iShe and . the. girls read the 'Agriculturia; next to the Bible. , "Iltiey think-, the - household de partment Ls. worth mote Char l tho lash- I . ion-magazioee in the world. . They say it is so, fall , of - good Nuts- 111 0 i AILIOdeI9, howiework. All I ' can Say is, tha,we.de have tatter cake iIT 2 4 Wife sayEr i . the:cake, don'tl coSt.-,S9tkmilcit 2iie it used to. She has learned from the paper hoci 7 a hundred other, lipase-keepers_ I do their work. - •; D ; t! 2 ' Rev. Corey.—Let me say, also; that Mrs. 'Crane and ter daughters: ave added a geed' many:beautiful' bat cheap home; 'made fixtures to their parlor and' sitting rooms, which' certainly make ;their home more attractive. They O ld me, the other day, they got these bp froth Picturee n ind descriptions in'tlib Agriculturist r Mr. TiciVis:=L4lo salary has not alleired me to take the paper; !though' I must squeeze out enough to cliieci:tbis My saio'el boys , ,have, ; lir'pug~t ame some copies. to , look at, the . past year or two, and I find the HOys' ,and Girls',' depart; indot of the:Agrieu/turist - the: best thifig I eve r ; %La% Ii is full • of items, etc., that amuse and at the same, time 'instruct the, children. :.Why,, I Could out .the boys and girls in my school whose parentd take the Agricu/turist; Jost by 'hearing them talk—they- are so full ,of new ,and `good things, they have learned from the paper.: The paper bas- mapy, beautiful 'engravings. Rev. arey.—.As-small ps my ealdry, I would have the , paper if it cost 65 a-year, instead of 61:50.. The fact is, it helps out my salary. My little garden plot at the p4rsonage has yielded , us alinpst all our table vegetables,, besides many beautiful flowers. The Agriculturist has bethi my constant guide., I knew but little of ger: dening; but this paper is so full of infor mation abo4 the bast things to plant and sow,' when - to plant, and how, to cultivate —all told , in so plain and practical a way, by men who seem to talk from their own experience, that,l know jast,what to do, and how to do it well:. • The high moral tone of the-paper,-its common sense, the care it takes of all parts of the. Farm; the: Orel - ma— Garden, ;the.' Orea-0e household work, and the Children as well, with its hundred's of beautiful and instructive engravings-'—make the most-valuable , 'periodicalj - hnie ever. seen.:, I baartily, wish` every one of my_parisbioners would take lit for himself and family. -It would awaken thought .and enterprise, give in terest to the town and neighborhood talk,' , citimrehlta I npw and profitable crops, animals mtid imple ments, and add to our wealth. Take my, advice, and all 'of you trr`the paper a year. The,sl.so it coats, is only three tents a week,,, and - it is worth that any way. Why the large and beautiful engrav ings are worth many times that. Hr. , Davis —I took the. the .Genesee Farmer last year. and as that has stop ped, I thought I would take a new, paper. Mr. smith.,:— .7 The giGenesee Farmer" was not really stopped. The Publishers of the Ayricultu.rist invited Mr: Herris to join the Farmer to the Agriculturist, and put his ,whole 'fore° into the latter. paper. They paid him a large price his office, and moved it with everything edirneoted with io their office. So the Agriculturist is really tWopapers joined into one, and of course better. I think we had - better go with -Mr. Harris to the Agriculturist, that has .been publiShed fur 25 years,and has a hundred thousand circulation, Which, as Mr. Knox has told us, supplies the means and facilities for giving us 'a great deal more for the'same money. Mr. Harris carries on his large farm, and in ibis „€'Wallis and Talks the Piaui," and other things he writes for. the` AgriCulturist; he tells ns great deal about all kipds of farm Work. Mr Davi4.—Put me down for the Ag riculturist. .! , Mr. Smith —I am glad to do so. I know you will like it, The January num ber, which has fust come tor hand, is. alone worth the best of a year. See 'here, (showing it,) there are 40 pages, twice as largo as the magazine pages, and there are thirty- fire engrivings in it, two of them - full page sii,e;and seelieW beautiful! Why, I'll give any man who. takes the papers a year, a dollar and a' halt in. goods out of my stem, if he .saya at, the end of a year he hes pot got many times his money's worth.."..• Mr; Butler.--Put me in'your club. - Mr. greene.—And melte. Mr. Broion. l - 7 Alid me: ." . Mr: Smith: —T have no interest in the matter r except So. do.a .good_thiug; for , the place.. Yon : :can _join. our. cio, or any one who' desires can get the ..44ricultur ist for all of 1866 - (Volumo 25), bysimply enclosing el.po,;ivitti his name and post -' 1 office,Address, anteeAqin - g it te 104 Nag I JILTED da CO., 41 PAM< iiOW, NEW Y4K GrrY... The 'paper always come:s.piompt and regnlarly;'and, whorls 'a good' th ing. it stops when your time up; witimut you having to wiite„about`lt.' ; I predict tb a t , there will be plent3r. of others next winter, to talk as Mr. Rich, Mr. \Veit,. Mr. t_lrano`and Parson Corey have done t‘niett. ' ' -114: Wet—Capital imadia'.lYorld.—A Capital wife—scarce-ly. MEI JE~F`.'DXl~Ii3i 11=11 ..i The m 'followlng At torneyiomeinication'froin r Genera! 'Sided iiiiiiiiiipanied ii : mee- Sage of therreatdenf te the Setititi z in an ewer. to intermateries* to ON Aiiipositien to be made of,Jeft: Davis, and embodies the:reasene.whieh have controlled-the..ac tieng•the administratien on,this subject, To t 4 : P 7. .4 2.4 .4 7 4 : : ~ ~- - 1 , ..-z-_ , • :. "•- ' , , ' , .Sin : ! -1 , •-•have the .honor : ' to acknowl• edge. the :receipt front you nta , ..copyof the resolution: of -Ow : Senate of the A:rotted States, of date the 21st : ef,Detiember,1865.;.• In And resolution the, Senate; respeettntly, ll request to. be: informed .pn-,whet charges and for- what : ; reason _Jefferson,l.Devia • is etill..4l4 l dlP CoufluPlP°Dakl (l .,: F 4. 41 )4 8 nPt , beelliPttittPPP: 401.—. i ,,, -.:•:; k - •:,:- When the. war , 7 1 ! -at , itt 0 1 0 1 . 1 7 iiiiii - : SOWDavis, the comiliandft-in chief 400, artily of the. insurgents, • wasi.-iSieni- pl:4- - ondr,,With otbei.:Proteinentrehete, l !ly.the military forces of the United States. ..It was the duty of the Military ed to take thoin . - Vie.i:litiv . heen heretofore, and are yet held as . prisoners of war. 'Theugh active liestilitiee have . ceased, a' itate'of war still elistein the territory in 'ebel. lion. 'Until peace shall come in fac t , and, in . law; 'they can rightfully ' be he l d : as prisoners of Wail. ' - ' ' :': , ' I' have ever thought thattiiali foil tiess sow iitinneit be held .before a ' militaiyiii blip:lL'''. The civil, coins liaire: alone nris ,- dictiohot dint erigie ,l ; The question then rises, , where and' when must : the , i.trials thereof loe'bel&? I,ln'. l that - .olaise of the Constitution : mentioned in-the resolution of the• Senate, it is . plainly .writteni . that they must be held in the State or district wherein.the ceinie shall have hem:geom.,. witted.: ;I: :knew that many -, persons, of learning and ability: entertain the opinion that the egencianderin,-,chief: of the !rebel armies should be: regarded-, mi. •constriici-, ively - pieseut with all.theinsurgente who prosecuted .hostilities,,. and , .matle.:,lreids upon the , northern ,: and Sonthern herders of the lOyal States.. Thiidociiine of con.. structive presence, carried _out to its log ical , consequences, w ould make l all r,, who . had been, coil neeted with the.rebel armie s liable to trial . in any - ,State lond . , distriet into-which:any. Portien of these ' armies .he& Made ' the - slightest - incursion ; 1) Not being persuaded of thdeorreeineas'n'f,:, that Opini h on, urregaiding the doctrine Wien .4..,...:.....2. i.- - ...r ar..,,t0r..1 ~..„.- . 444.01,,,.ny1e. • - r• haiethoiight it not prop er to'adVisci yo'n to canse criminal :proceedings: to beluga tutud against Jefferson Davis or anyher' insurgent in the states or . distric tsin which they ' , were net . .aatually- present during the prosecution of hostilitiesd . : .Some,prominent rebels werepersoally present at theinvosien :Marylon and -of c ii Pennsylvania; but all ; r.nearlyall,of hem received militery pareleStipp thesuiren der of the rebel armies. Whilst, I think, that those parolee are knot an. ultimate, pro , tdotion : for prosecutions for, high s treason,. I have thought 'that it ww o ld . hes, Viola tion of the paroles to prosecutei l thesd.'pei sons fqr °rimed before . the political p l ower -of the. Government has; proclaimed. that the,rebellion 'ha's been sup Pressed: . I : 'lt follows, from whet, I he , ie iiid,ithat I ma of the ciOinien that Davis. and Others of the insurgents ought' o . be tried in some one of the States or ilistrieta 1 in which they in pereon ,ispeaially -ecto:; . pitted 'Crimes ; with :Which' they 'they he charged. - Though active' hostilities , and: flagrant war :have not - for:Some -timex isted between the..UOited :States-AO the t i insurgents, perfeehilielatious betWeei . the Gtovernment and the People in the States, and, districts : in. rebellion: have: DO, yet. been fully restored: None of thejuetiees of the Supreme Couit :have held circuit Conde in these Stateiwnd districts ,sinee actual hostilities eeased: When the courts . are,ppon,and all Ipwi pan be peoeplly administered and enforced in thos e States whose.pnopie,, rebelled, : against the _ l prOv ernment,, when .thus peace Jibe!' Lave comeie fact and in law, .the persantil.nOw held le military - custody -as . 'prisoners of war; - and - who mOy .. not have lken'ltriea and. convicted :, for offences against the laWs„cd• war, should hes transferred, tei the custody ,of the ~civil authorities; of - . the 1 lmpet., districts to. be i tried-lor siohlhigh . I crimes and . misdemeanors •as may he: al leged against them. I ."- . - I ' I think it is the gain duty of the.Pres ideut tecause orimiiialprosecutioes:to be I instituted before the proper tribunals,and at all proper times *deist some of t hose who •Were ' instrumental in : inaugurating most conspicuous• in eenductitig . the late hoistilities. :, :I: should, regard:it tie-a direful calamity, if many tvhom. the sword has spared, `the kW' Should "spare' also; but I would , ' cleen'it *goie. - diiefqt, p..i . lamity still if :the.Excooi , e, iii - ,imforin... ing - his:_conatitutionatilJuiy: Of; bringina" these peisona before the bar of justice t o answer f9rth6lrcrine-g ll r ld r ite tie ptaie.MeaiingefticCoistiinlOterii7 1 fringe ,in'tiio least 4 p . articular' the living Ispirit of that inetruinent.% , I havethehenor teibe,mostrespee,tfully, .i. L .;.4.01.ES aliEs•EDi ' Attornery--:Gwierq,Z.,;., 7.7 . 17:C4t•r= 1;0 . , •27;1q,“ti a; • L !LEW r =tooittzi,t. • 'roil .IL - 1 1;5-v1i s;~ -,n;. Eil _J ,J ~'. ~ 9:i~ IBM TERESp:-$1.50 • ; /1, BRIT/SO I .I III ,ERALIATri The.l4nidon Times, thought it askouff rage-that Jefferson Datiaishould:beitires imilriootied' hot to say that he should;'Sli . tried and hanged; ta no7 3 . l e,ndrig,,, i 3,4 1 gtl i pbooPstY, he34'ooe_;Pe l oal!.fx'MPlFAT cy r obaii;by.hanged, if ; ;he, is secaiitOrds and not 'only -he but all' his eaafedeiitest In is long artiele on the tipprimObitiltreiki ion trints'inrlrainniy,ol7yniell l, iiiil C:1:1 ! . ..!',oae:idirCrn!tteni.. ; can afford, in; jrult* to:484(0,0o 4 . aubjcpts, to - detd.iii#4 wi# . . Bl 9b. Orkb_inati'o,B.- While, Ft joie? that ,no letraoroinag 1 PeofV.oo-.9 Coarciektiave_heen neeesamy,„we',:stiNil regref..tu..ien, any' or those , Elhaccui t tokg ahailoned„, gh.e. law, Alkolgg„ . 4i,lo:4bg . takehatin course aaelia eopvlotionhp9 ti4 R d-ao4t 'if li l l : Rf $44 POliiti°YdriAl. l l the ecillFdranh-lk Pi° 4 '4PP tir JA* I 9IA being vindictive, should be exemplasp. The -77721CSAeqdnuced, as tyranioalidesi potic, unendurable - , aid 'demanding) interVeiitioi - pfEloglanajdr: .it r;„ • • • few interferences with. the •• 115 . press durin g the our tretderidouss civil struggle.; butit onlyrikF proves the suppressioU 'of . an •Mitt news paper, bit applauds the zugeidiustralof the british . ::Attorncy4aapial, by which luby, the , pro l prietor (42the:Z•isik..,Page s isle be tried • for treason=. ut ~ c uot sa l t(' press-prosOottOon,!' says the `Times -oh no I—the Attorney-Gebersr will treat titer' seditious articles' of the Irish I:Jew - 1e ap a series of overt, acts,!' 1- . ; The Times held, when our 'war dlbsiti; that immediate, unconditional al4 univral'aionesty he, onty i rtatesmanlikr and rigitepusiolicy9g our Government; . but it,.atipports : bsidt praises the Jam aica- planterswhocontinucd to flog„and . tf," lq p ebols',' for moo Una three,weeks 'after resistance bad,,Ceneitd, and the so-called rebellion ,bad been lern tinignished ; and it will no doubt justit3i ttie:plariters in their •proposal'ici''entii44' extinguish political and - in. Jawacie, by acts wh i ch are D9iv. the colonial legislature., .ze - Jeffersdn Davis must iijoice 'that it waa not against tbe British he,consprred and rebelled. If he, had, they would before ; this have-hanged him, and - turned r,tho, southern states into provinces, to be . rultili by generals with orders to hang,every mau l who appeared on the streets io gray dottiest( —Post • '` - : , Meerschaum:l,, , , This is a German word and,meaniCees foam,lhei the color of thesea-htini, The i blea that the pipes of thet oaths tin) / mhde_ out of sea-foam, or anything,iike it, is"erroneous. Meerschaum id l e mineral: pioper, found in the 'setpett:inn or tni f ie6'. amp rock. It occurs chiefly rit'the of the Mediterranean, where it isfdtig chit of its native bed, and Sent to" blnckti'or rude It is sif whitish color.' The brown or 1 reddidW l cost iti - Obtained-by saturat i ng ; ' t h em. h with' , , oil 'or wax. liieersohatitn is composed it flitit; magnesie . and earboart;--tsj, l ; l carbon and in an otydlo4l slate. is seft"arid . Vfons.' Its :poriiiity gives", it rte 'properties as a `pipe atiorbi it the pois9pous gnalities of _ the It is, 'inferior to a clay pipe la c ," this 'respect ; but better than - the briar ] ' piipe l ,.tvhich.ll3 neat to it :" i Th - ere is fault with the nieerinihatimj.yipeth'e; one ; Is too short . Tobacco' tteelflean absoeber of the poisonocii qualities of `tl e smoke—and when tile smoke passes thro ,, . • - tobacco--aS it; will ,in a long ! column of smoke in it being long,- 7 it ‘ wili--: become,putified. ptenisely,the it!ra3% it ,do,ad ; in a ; cigar. , 'rite _first .half . ', of the-cigar: affords bartnless.sinoking, tile, latter. ,half lessaud less so, till ; the poisoned stemp,, remains. So_ with :tehapeo iulthe bowing, a pipe. .4; long bowl putti,it, in ti4oforia„ of a cigar, Thefirst, smoking is illeix t bt„ (as every smoker; knows .is.the ease pipolmoking), especially if the ,distance tbroughthe tobacco ls,great. always stop:arnokirig when. the tqt4eu, half out _The remanderjs pnrineate4 kit e tlle•poison-and in that is'tho hortotrfo i , get from emoklag. Accoidiog to the returti4totherinedn, l Raritan, thei§afei.,3l.l,Bo4-Inditiris vartous'intets and Teriitorins. •' . 1)10i14 4 tti'tvai aver 5,000 l eilligtediditie arday: - •1.. :11 0: - { - _ - George ,N. Sanders says the Freuell,io..l vasioe of; bletico was made lq.pursuan'Oel of a plan agreed: , upon by,Napoleoct. and o hinaselt, when he was, in Paris, Au seeura : the recogni t of ,the onfecierdelY• possible Sa n dors has hoopoe told the troth, --XtEr'By4ite-way,our wood-pile nsry Tore,q--Wolit soilee one of alto plowibing: yepleuistrit,. , • I i 1..- BE ME 1c i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers