1 ' bot r?4 1 .mm irait'dnr nu - im imitu ih rusm mm hihi hi mi ra n j "ww f-3 sa y h ii iei psm ii iu ii if ftfa Hum I I KJ Icrl I LI i.-. Hi MUU . I Fir Kt I ltd 1,3 ktl - lit 1 PCM , M M cSl 14 L'J Ml t.1 LI id L a t-.l El El I PI II nn II II 75 ll III II M t.tJ I HI J l.v J .- Aa toT M It Et'LV IA H Wl f.1 K M M TVMVM1 Ml , X ll tfl'-v tl i H tl II 11 t IV U i II I3J A 'I 1 i y. I ".A ' j - . 1 V ; . J r,tr; ,' VOL. IX. BY AB. "W ATKINS. OKVICB 05 MAIN sr., ovrostus oomrr H0U8K. TERMS Of BIIB8CB1PII0X. hit months. In advance. il.00 : One year, in advance, $2,00; within tho year $2,25; if not paid wltliln tejvear, TfclUS OF AI1TKKTI81N0. ADVBRTiaBMBNTginacrtcdforiill.BO per squaro . Arat tltrnn InUArttollt unil All cnntS for 1U1 uiO in iw 1 each additional Insertion. XA reduction will bimade on advertisements uf half or whole column. - Miftii Akin r6Pi PLAIN ftNU rr-- , and on reasonabla tuig. THE IM P.ftRlMEIQRGAMS. tu-w ? w oi lurent etyiei!. auuutud to bacrcd ana y-vTOtniar mnsio, lor ipau 10 ijmun eauii. luin TY FIVK OOLD or 81LVKR MEDALS, or hntL fWmiunia awarded, tlicm. IlluBtrated . . Uataloiiie free. AdcJrcua, JIAHON & HAM UN, Bofrro, or MASON IJU0T11EK8, Nbw York. Bepl3,'65-ly ob. l. rtv. J. A. J. HUOUANAK WYLY & BUCHANAN ATTORNEYS & COUNSELORS AT LAW (S- OFFICE In the old Carik Building, Waynesburg, Pa. February 3d, 1863. t-f. k. A. M'CONNKLL. J, J. UMKJ1AK. M'CONNELL & HUFFMAN Attorneys and Counsellor hi Lav Waynesburg, Penn'a. ' oOfpic in the "Wright IIouse(" East floore.- Collections, &c, will receive prompt attention. Waynesburg Aobust 20, 1862. tf. R.W. DOWNEY, ATTOIINEY AND COUNeEIJiOR AT LAW O-Olllce in Ledwitli's Building, opposite the Court House, Waynesburg, Pa. Nov. 4, 1862 ly. V DENTISTRY. TtElHl TEETH! TEETH ' DU. S. 8. Patton informs the public tliatat- V February 1st, 1864, ho will be at Wayncs . vv. ...i..... i.t, .1, ..,.i .....!.,,. ,.,:n i, ...,i.. e njiny und all making uppli.oij.tion. wrv iii CJ"racuug iceui Kmvi,x nod fltsliii'w ones' in to ncifec- iYiV5'deced onus to soundness. .iUviios ali.i,,-. .. jio0j wo, gold. ROSS, M. D. afc"- r j "IBAN AND krilGlSON 5 and Nearly Opposite tno A WRIGHT HOUSE, ..r.:,.,ri;!mr'r. iSretiic Co , Uobcrt toiitflicrlvi Carriage Manufacturer Watnhsiiutc, Pa., RESPECTFULLY gives nollce that lie has located hi Waynesborg, Pa., where he in tends to mauuuicluro CAR Hi AGES Of every description From his experience in tue business, no icuia uuuuuuun O n stylo, finish and durabiUty, will give entire (X. eatisfaction. It is Ills detennuiation to purchase a the beat material in maruei, anu empioy uuuo but competent workmen. pyAU new work warranted for one year. Wavncsburfi, Feb. 21. I860. tf. "Adams House," WAYNESBURG, PA, Jacob Blendcrsliot HAKES pleasure In Informing his friends and i the traveling public generally, that he has (taken charge oTthts popular house ofenter itolnment, and feels confldent in saying that .he can render perfect satisfaction. Every cf ifortwill be made to meet the wants and iwlBhesof his guests l4( The BAR will be supplied with , th best ar itlclca found in the market. The STABLE will bo carefully attended to. Call and try us. , April 26. 1864. tf. - ?8Uo! rulLADELPUlA. VMb WALL. PAPERS. JiOWELL & BOURKE, MAKUFACTUKEK8 OF PAPER HANGINGS, and WINDOW SHADES North East Corner rOURTH AND MAR KET Streets, PHILADELPHIA. N. B.-Always In Storo, a large Stock or a"g2-lim LINEN and OIL bllADES MG ilLEJSBOUO" UOUS12. ' OrenesDpro, D, Ii. JONES, Proprietor. milE UNDERStuNED still occupies his old IX Btana and takes tncroaseu piuiwuro m au jhitlstering comfort to the hungry and weary. in realizes uie lorce c mo uioAim umv, pen way to procure paironug" v n. (May 10, '6S-ly . P. R JOMEo. ETT1S UP! i Saving disposed of my entire Interest In the e of Campiikll & Co., it becomes necessa- close the books. Those having accounts t me will come forward ana some mem Vrllntnlv Tl.o hiuika urn In till) hands of VCampboll for scttlomont. R K.CAMPBELL St. '64-tf ON HAND AMD ATTIIISOrnOE! I 1 1 1 --. r v r sr uri 1 1 THE FUTURE 6T Pi,P.TIE8. Front the North Aurorlcan. Tho Pkiohmonii Vhifir, nndor the head oi"D(iclin8 of tlio Ropnblican party,' tells Its realtors that tho Republican po litical organization had but ono string to its bow, tho abolition, of slavery, which being gone, the party ia done for. It the Whig founds its adhosion to tho Democrats on tho belief that tho Repuli oan organization must necessarily go to piecebecauso of the end of slavery, it is most cgicgioiisly mistaken. There nev er has uk is ted in this country a moro .compact, well-disciplined or enthusiastio party than ours, andoUn tfie past its adherents did not mind dofoat because of thoir devotion to principles, so in the future no reverse ot fortune and no dis. eouragoment can soa(t- .' tuera. TJftTa8" to having but one prinoiplet only those uomocrats whose wnoie at tention has been absorbed in the defence of slavery bolieve anything of that sort. The first national convention of the Republican party deolared "undying hostility to those twin relics of barbar ism, polygamy and slavery." One of the twins is dead, but the other survives, and the Republican party docs not mean to go into a decline until it has sealed its fute also. Polygamy has been al lowed to obtain a permanent foothold in an extensive territory, nnd to rear op their condition of society based wholly on it, In that community treason is as rife as at tho south. We do not mean to allow our party to depart this life until it has doomed this organization of sin and treason to destruction. On this question tho Democratic party stands imito, but is well understood to be in favor ot tho admission of Utah as a State with polygamy. The editor of tho Whig having been out of the Union lor four years, has probably-forgotten this little matter. Negro slaveryUsJpmshod by tho war j but peonage W nity and that, too, the Republican party is opposed to. It is the distinctive feature m New Mexico, and tho Democrats havb as yet given do sign of being in favor of its abolition, notwithstanding that it is the slavery ol .m.;n,-ot allraccs white,. .Uack, and rod. V.phe Vlcnublican Vu.,urUoofuJ?l true mid : evil, and means to do it. This matter is ol vital import ance, because peonage exists all over Spanish Amorici, and should wo at any tiino hereafter acquire any of .those countries, we should h'ivo slavery reviv ed unless wo now provide against such contingencies. As to the question oi negro Buffrago, the party has' as yet ta ken no distinct grounds, but it such blind guides as the' Whig can succeed in preventing the southern peoplo from granting the freedmen that equality be fore the law which is essential to their protection, then it will not be in povver of any one at tho north to arrest the in. evitable course of events. IM there are several other questions on which the Republican parly occu pies distinct and well defined ground, and whereon we find the Democrats ar rayed against it. 01 theso the chief is that oi protection to domostio industry by means of a well arranged tariff. It the Whig really inherited any share ot old Whig principles, it would know this without being told, and it would also know that the Democrats are for free trade. If the Whig choosos to iguore protection, it had hotter tako down its name, for proteolioa was the soul ot the Whig party. Protection is now the belief of the overwhelming mass of tho northern people, as it ought to bo of the southern, iu order to build up a greater diversity of industry than now exists at the south. The Chicago Convention of I860 declared for protection in an un mistakable manner, and the Baltimore Convention of 1881 confirmed the dec laration. On this question the position of the party is as well settled as v any thing can be. On the great question of the nations ality of the Ropublio, tho two parties are as widely asunder as the poles. We oontend that this is an indissoluble na tionality, the land and the people alike incapable of separation. On that ground we rested our cause throughout the whole war, and on that we have tri umphed. The Demoorats oontend for State sovereignty, which is necessarily iniinioal to nationality, and is but a dis guise for secession and disintegration. To assume that the party which alone oontends for nationality is dof unot, is to believe that rebellion has come off vic torious, and that the peoplo of the north repuut of having trono to war. Every Demoorntio State Convention has square ly come out for State sovereignty. Where we are la this matter' needs no definition. The war tolls the tale, and the Whig must bave lived through the WAYNESBDBG, last four years with its eyes shut to bo ignorant ot the position of parties on suuh a topio. 1 The Republicans have also a record and a toslimony against filibiutensm, just as the Democrats, ou the other hand, have a rooord and a testimony in favor ol it. Wo are one anHIT "oppos ed to theso piratical expeditions against Mexico, Canada, and the' Wot Indies and Central America, and we mean to savo tho American name from such dis grace hereafter, as our government has signally proven by its suddoa suppres sion of the Mexican enterprise. On this ground we plant ouraelvfcTul?ft'y- F'li bustorism ivus but the pioneer of slavery. Everybody at tho north knows that, and woaroall wide a wakotjjj 8toP " j a part of thb monster evd, against which we made war. The Whig may choose to Ignore this question in Vir ginia, but it may rest assured that here at tho north it is a live issue, and all men know thoroughly what it means. We are for a permanent peace with foreign nations, and an end to filibuster ism. Now, hero are several nSpics which the war has not ended, and we think we have shown that these live issues demand the continued existence and exertions of the Republican party, the position of which, as well as its oppo nent, may be seen at a glance', thus i Republican. Democratic Protection. Free Trade. International Poace. itilibuaterisra Ciyil Rights to Freed- men. . Bfaclt Codes. Universal Einancipat'n Peonage. National Sovereignty. State Sover'nty. National Currenoy. Local Currency. Those who wish to disband tho Re publican party, on the plea that it has accomplished its mission, should study this contrast, and see what would be the effect of breaking up the only organiza tion which guarantees internal and ex terual peaco, a proper enumeration to home labor, tho termination ot sootion al squabbles, and tho extirpation of ev ery vestige of human bondage aud Po lygamy. pA.Tn a tint? A.T, A XTrtL-' v. U1UATE3 AS THE- 'm'mi u ' ION AND COPPERHEAD PLATFORMS. From tho Pliil'a North American It is a striking and singular tact, that tho Union men of Pennsylvania have conferred almost all their nominations tor the best offices iu the gift of the pco pie, OU those who nobly stood up in de fence ot the national life. It may be insisted with some degree of truth, that the copperheads have also nominated soldiers for office. But there is this difference between tho parties ranking these nominations : Tho Union men are impelled to' this act of justico by gratitude to the soldier, while the cop perheads have seized upon soldiers who are willing to be used, in order to in sure tho success of political dogmas dangerous to the life ot tho Republic Tho Union men were ooutrolled by principle in their nomination ot soldiers. The platform on which Union men stand, is consistent with tho character of true soldiers iu consonance with the principles for whioh such soldiers con tended in battle with traitors in har mony with the oause of the Union and the Constitution. Not so, however, with the copperhead nominations. In every instance, the resolutions of copperhead conventions reflect discredit on the oause in which the candidates they nominate derive their elements of popularity. Thus, W. H. Davis would never have been nominated for Auditor General, had he not made some reputation as a soldier had it not been calculated by the copperhead faotion that he oould secure the support of inon who fought at his side to put down the Slavehold ers' rebellion. And yet the platform on whioh Davis stands declares the war in whioh he acquired the popularity fitting him for copperhead uses, to haoe been a brutal crusadt on Vie rights awf proper ty of the Southern people I Every sol dier who votos for W. II. Davis will thereby condemn himself as a mere rob ber and raider. Every soldior who votes a oopperhead ticket for county or State officers, virtually oharcterizes himself as a freebooter aol assassin. Evory copper head platform Insists that the war for the Union was an aggression on the sovereign rights of the Southern States. If this be bo, and it is confirmed by the votes of Pennsylvania soldiers, their plaoe in history cannot be other than is usually occupied by burglars and pi rates. Tho soldiers who vote for Can didates standing on platforms which charge the oause, the crimes and the suffering of the war on the National authorities, condonlu themselvos aud ar- PA WEDNESDAY, raugo history to securo their own dis grace. On the other hand, tho Uniou inon have not only nominated soldiers, but tliey have endorsed tho work ot the eoiupauioiis-iii-arms of our candidates. Our warrior candidates stand on a war platform. Soldiers o.in voto for the Soldier Union candidates without stul tifying themselves. Oar political creed harmonize with the martial neliiovmeiiti of our candidatos. .We. do not seek to prostitute the popularity! of our candi dates for tho purpose of securing the suo nous of evil nrinoiules' Tho reoord of our candidates composes the virtuo of J our political principles, V We only nsk the people to vota.tof that in defence of whioh our oaudi'jbitesWWfO willing to risK Uyjir livesr; ' soldier and every oiUjKK.otiviJ,.,y( consider theso 8 ttnllts- ' , From fhir!5! Telegraph. Tub FnmsDS itf' -.wkbanch must soon be up aiidvd.- Vlp iily, hourly, the woful effects; o,lunirance are ex hibiting thoraselvfcsvjj'cioty. In our own lopality Ve have onj redently had a most fearful exhibition otue effects of liquor iu crazing tho brain'and nerving the arm for ra'urdef. Wbpky was tho prime causo of the attempt, in this city, by a husband to murder hisinfirm wife, and then afterwards his success in putting an end to bis1 own life. TWe is no use in concealing tho faotsi Niy there is danger in denying them. Anl while we refer to this most horrible afair in our own midst, we are reminded a similar bloody transaction in Lmoastcr county, whioh occurred only a day after tho in tended murder in this city. InjXancaster county a husband slew his wife, (tabbing her to tho hoart without tho loatpro voca tion. Ho was drunk whon hi did it. Are those facts not sufficient to abuse the fears of all law-abiding, peaceable and temperate citizoni l' This very four tho life of every drunkard's wite jnllarris burg is iu danger, Tho drunkard does not know how soon he may become a murdorer, while the man who sellsTwhis ky is in tho sight of God, contributing to passions whioh are thirsting for human blood.d'ui helD the drunkards' w've8 vbt unmurderod t- aa r-i,'- - ''iVS If A .-' . J - J a'nd useful citizen. A young lady moving in the first oir. clos at Chicago was betrothed at the be ginning of the war to a lieuttnautin-the army. lie was killed in battb, and his body taken home and buriod by his near est, friend and comrade, who was with him when he fell. To this young nun the youug lady's affections were very natu rally transferred in time, and she enga ged to marry him. When the happy day arrived, and just as the clergyman was about to pronouuee them man and wife, the lady fainted, anl on being revi ved forbade any further froceduro,as she said she had seen the spirit of ber for mer lover, aud ho was opposed to the match. She persisted iu her decision, and has since retired to I convent. A gontlomiu saw a nouoo of valuable information Bent to any address on the receipt ot ten cents, and '.bought that he musthave ten cents' worth more of know ledge, lie sent his dime, and rooeivod in answer the lollowing: "Friend, for your ten cent, postago, etc., please find inclosed advico which maybe of great value to you. As many persons are in jured for weeks, mouths and years by tho careless use of a knife, therefore my advice is, when you use a knife, always whittle from you." Brownlow's Endorsements. A lottor from Chattanooga says that a short time since Gideon J. Pillow sent in his appli cation for Governor Brownlow's endorse ment ot his petition tor pardon. He en dorsed it as follows: "Were I the Presi dent of the United Stales I would pardon him on the ground that nothing but his vanity took him into rebellion- " On an other application ho endorsed as follows : "This man deserved hanging before the rebellion, and he has done nothing since to lesson his chance." Great care should be exercised in the purchase of Government bonds to see that their numbers have not been altered. In several cases where bonds have been stolen their numbers have been changed by inserting two-additional figures, one before and one after the original number, in that way making tho bonds worthless to whoever shall buy them. The frequent thefts of these bonds that occur render caution on the part of purchasers es' peoiully necessary. . The party changes which the war. has mado aro aptly illustrated by tho fact, that Gen. Slooum, the Demooretio candi date tor Soorotary of S.ate, before the war was a Hopubhoan, while Geu. Bar. low, the Rcpublioan candidate, was a Democrat OCTOBER 4, 1865. INTERESTING ITEMS. A man of genius can no more divest himself of freedom of opinion than of the features of hfs face. On Seventh street, from Pine to Carpen ter, irt Philadelphia, a distance of seven squares, there are n'ft'y-fWe houses in which liquor is sold. The proportion is one tavern out of every four houses. In the days of the draft a good, looking but boor young man married a rich old maid to get money to buy n sutmtfuite. That l'ul low muri-ied as a military necessi ty. It Is proposed at Lewistown, Maine, to' Iiavo an exhibition of the different styles of bonnets worn within the past twenty five year?, A very large halt will be re- W. L. Bary, of Lebanon, Tennessee, now 87 years of age, is said to be the old est printer in the United States, having been a compositor for sixty years A woman in Cliarlistown, Massachu setts, has a family of tame toads in her yard. She feeds them, pets them up, dresses them on Sundays with velvet, and on other days in drab, kisses them and otherwise tenderly cares for them. As the battery was going into camp at New Haven on Monday, an old battery horse grazing in a lot, lioaring a bugle call, jumped the fence, took bis old posi tion in line, and moved out to camp with the battery. So much for force of habit. A few years ago there was a newspaper published at Niagara Falls, the editor of which was a Hind man, the compositors were deaand dumb, the press work was performed by the blind, the papers were folded by the blind, and wrapped by the mutes. The newest thing o'ut is "plumpers'' for hollow-checked damsels. The plumper is made of porcelain, pea-shaped in form, flat on one side and bulging out on the other. They fit on the inside of the ckeeks, giv ing'a round plump appeuraance; hence, doubtless their name. The standing army of the United States now consists of 18,000 regulors, 99,000 col ored and 100,000 white volunteers. Of these, about 160,000 are now in the field ; the others are absent on leave. It is said that Pithole, tho great oil city in Pennsylvania, was thus named in con- -'. . .Jian ATtrnnr,linurv fitt Al MV. etn , r.. --- fn fiBui nuout mree miles irom toe . -this nit stones are thrown, but notyetbeTatl;Wdr, ' T '-"-" A Nashville letter says that the late rbels, Henry S. Foote, John Bell, and Neil S. Brown, are all residing In thai city. Brown has returned to the practice of law ; Bell is in feeble hoaith and, keeps verv quiet ; Foote is active and bustling as ever, and says th'at he shall hereafter eschew politics aud devote himself to the lav. A swamp in Tuwksberry, Masaacliusclts,has been on fire for some time, and the combus tion having worked into a peat-bed eighteen to twenty I uches,' continues to advance. The roots cf the trees are burned off and they top ple over, adding fuel to the flame. Gangs of men have been at work Iu" Various places trying to check tho fire, but without success. A Harrisburg paper tells of a man who has failed in business four times; was burned out three times ; was robbed five times ; was up set iu a stage coach and thrown down an em bankment a distance of sixty feet; fell bend foremost through a- hatchway in a store at Bemling j has lleeu merried three times, and i8 the father of twenty-ono ccildren. He "still l)rcs''and is engaged in business at Harrisburg, Nearly half a million (495,592) people in New York live in tenement houses and cellars. There is a story of an inspector who foundfour families living in one room, chalk lines being drawn across in such a manner as to mark out a quarter of the floor for each 'amily. "How do you get along here ?" inquired the inspec tor. "Very well, sir," was the reply, "only the man in the farthest corner keeps boarders." A correspondent writes from Pithole that the Ilolmden farm owned by Thom as G. Duncan, Esq.. of Pittsburg, and George C, Crothor, ot Plumer, Pa., was sold by them on the 14th tor two mill ions dollars cash. This sale Is one iouith the oil and tho town lots, with a reserve of one acre each to the former owners. Theso gentleman have in one year made millions in the oil regions, and have still left a large and valuable property proni- ini.i(r crroat develonments aud great au5-- e o w a mentation of their already acquired pos sessions. Wonderful Tree. In the birch wood of Culloden, Scotland, there is a remark able tree, well worthy of note. Some whero about thirty years ago a littlo giant of the forest was blown down in a storm, and lell right across a deop gully or rav ine, which it completely spanned, and the top branohes took root on (he other side, from the parent stem no less than fifteen trees grew up perpendicularly all in a row i aud there they still flourish in all their splendor, where the parent Stem evinces no token of deoay. Several of the trees are not loss than thirty feet high. The tree is a largo fir. Some of our religious exchanges tell a story nooui a woman oemg relieved irom speechless grief by a hymn. We have kmiun a nnmhnrof thasfiX to ha strong ly affected and greatly benefitted by Aims Deiore hub. i .. c V I. OH. COME TO TilRI The thirteenth annual the Ofccne County Agricultural Soclel bo held at Cunulruucls, on Thursday Friday, the 5th nnd 6th Inst. Tho JeilFuir will'be held on Wcducsduy and and 12th lust. iy, tho UUi Oh, ccmo to the 1 Whoever vou arc And brlug something Whatever it be; Come one and col or Your couuty doth land f rom tlio hills and ho From town uud f: nrmg your horsd ktne; Your sheep and iwiuo, Your fowls of rarest I, Your "Dunghill oot, And whatever y , Bring your fust I a too, The crowded track c 's To take aud dis Bring on your k -work, Also your iisathci it All curious productio Of nature and art Come with your tUry, Also vour man lJ to Palutiuiis most rare your up in For the eye and til Brin fruit aad brli, Bring ores irom thuL ne weaiiu me enrtu yiq Above and below;. 1 this, UKB tuv ruse on uie k ui me mur ones wno'ii coa And not tldmk of a beak Brmg along your ncedLfe, girfg, itigiii. uiuug wwu yuur u . Your oasqucs and your bona "i our sltevcs and vour And bring curiously wroL And those "wee little garuieul Vt various shapes. And let the matrons come. (Though tlicj seldom leave Hm.1 uri.i ..t i r"i And their bed-quilts so rare, With work of all kinds. Which their careful hand finda So much pleasure in doing Let Uiem come to the Fair. Ye mechanics, well-skilled, Let your place be well-HUed, With all munuer of work Iu neat order displayed; Let tho ground, too, attest That you've all done your best, And our folks will be proud -. - -Of the progress you've mads. HoA ye farmers 'attend i , . .Off'-1 -"sl?ovtt4 failo -v 'iw J i would "fare" not alall"--r ' Bring tiie fruits of your toil, ' ' The rich cream of the soil, In its varied forms, To the farmers' own stall. The hitch-strings hang out, Aud our people, no doubt, Will be happy to see you. By niuht and by day; What a time it will be I If you come you will Bee The beautiful and the good, And the biillii.nt array. FATTENING FOWLS. Though in genei al fowls, when in health, will become sufficiently fat by having plenty ot food, with air and ex ercise, yet they are somotimes fatted for market by keeping them in confine ment, with nbiiuJitnce ot food and little light, so tha. ia j;u:t, they have nothing to do but to eat. It U a common prac tice with some to coop their towls for a week or two, under the notion of im proving them for the table, and increas ing their fat i a plan which, l owever seldom suooeeds, sinco the fowls goner ally pine for their loss of liberty, nnd, slighting their food, loso instead of gaining additional flesh. Such a period is, in fact, too short tor them to become aooustomed to confinement. It takes several weeks to fatten fowls confined iu coops. The prevention of light, by in dining fowls to a constant state ot re- poso, except when moved by the appe tite tor food, promolea and accelerates obesity but such a state cannot bo a state of health, nor can the flesh of am mals so fed equal iu flavor, nutriment and salubrity that of the same species fed in a mote natural Way. Economy and market interest may, perhaps, be the best answered by tho place ot dark ness and close confinement t but a fuedor for his own tablo, of delicate tasto and ambitions of furnishing his own board with the' choicest and most salubrious viands, will declare for tha natural mode of feeding. ' HOGS IN THE ORCHARD. One neighbor praising the fruit crop of another, remarked that the land must be in very good order. "The secret is not In the toil," John replied with a twinkle in his eye, "but on it. Do you seo those grunters there t My pork brings me fifty ' tits a pound eight in flesh and the ballance in fruit I began to pasture my orchard ten years ago with hogs, and sinco that time I have bad no trouble with wormy fruit. Ap ples, as a general thing, do not fall from the tree uulosg something is tho matter with.tb.nm. The apple worm and cur culio hy their eggs ia Uie fruit, and the NO. IS, apples drop early. Tho pigff devonr the fruit, nnd by September every uWuiidl applo is gone, and I have nothing but fair fruit loft Tho crop of insects for tho next year is destroyed by the1 $igty thoy root the ground-under the troeft' keep the soil loose, manuro, tho fanol some, and work over what manure t spread. The apples help the pigs, aud 1 the pigs holp the applet" Tin r nr k-Kirt'llSlitM tmikHttSt ' S1UU liUl iJAl' v- x-. " J' Select your ground on som'o' ffotrtuerri , southeastern slopo.or any other dry ' that you may have t plow; It from fiftnen to twenty inches deep, wua v.; a plow SO oonntrhoied ns to ttt'T tn'tbo' satjje furrow whioh can be done at ' very little' cost ; then lay your motion or Inclination, from' 4 by I to 4 by 10, no cording to tho stylo of gYn'pos' you aim' cultivate. If yon onltivato dwarfish. growers, such as the Delaware', llebeoa, DiifW perhaps 4 by 5 is a very good distance. If Norton's Vugmia Sodlingv Hcrbomont, Concord, and Taylor Bul litt, 8 by 10 is not far apart. Plant vinos as soon as yon can tako thotnf the tall or procure thoicf from the nursory i and when done, lull tuo rows op as you would corn, cbverinof yotfr vines ontirely. It you Bhould fail to do ' the ground will sottlo around your tines, form a basin, and hold too moon water, whioh will injure, it not ontirely kill your vinos. That is your whole' sooret. Now, whon spring comes and sometimes wet and cold, like last spring your work is done ind yo can patiently wan, mi wmu. -u weather Bets in. Then w yiow plow your ground back to witlm Uireef . or four inches oi mo roow, v w(w them a chanoe with the rays of the1 warm spring sun and and thr iovtgora ting dews at night. This Ut idea orig. inated with Dr. Grant ofIona, York, and he deserves rB" credit for it. Then.as ? -- j V , withe hori-cuUivotor will gron , which U , hot. thn vines erri """" rtO. 10 VUO buiu."H : advantaffe-toj-" 0' iX. - let me tell you theAVoneAL, In the - month of October hdvvt of tfovora ber, we bave the finest aVJ most uni form weather iu .thoyworld, the ... ground? is generally loose anl worm, and ' plants then removed hardlyexperienee ; a ohango ; while on the othtr hand, plants suffer frequently by spring ship: rents in cold spells. Moreover the fine fibrous roots got nearly all 'destroy 1 ed, and somotimes the entire roots rot off during tho winter, if they come in con tact with water. Somotimes they start to grow before they are planted and then the main and best buds are knock pd off. .Besides, you can never . hare' your ground in as flue a condition' in April and May as it is in October and November. Cor. Rural World. CLEANLINESS FOB PIGS. In discussing the diseases of swine, the Scottish Farmer sensibly says : "We remember oneo of hearing an' . old woman remark that 'sows just re- 't quired as much care . and attention as bodies,' and the truth ot the observa tion is ooii firmed by the experience of all the largest and most successful breed ers of pigs in the kingdom. Without ' cleanliness and oomfort tho human spe. cies cannot thrive ; it is rendered more liable to all kinds of disorders ; and kept in dirty styes, with Utile room and bad vontilation, and ted out of filthy troughs, swine languish, or, at the beet, take on fat muoh loss rapidly, and are moro likely to fall a prey to the first ep idemic reaching them than If they had met with kind aud liberal treatment." 'bavingTcabbage. Whnri the woather becomes frosty,- , out thorn off near the head, and carry1 them, with the green leaves on, to a dry collar. Break off sUporfkoii leaves, and paok into a tigtit Cask ot fro, stents upward, and when nearly full cover with leaves. Seoure the barrel or box with a lid against rats. All vegetables or fruits required for wintor use, apples and potatoes especi ally, are prosorved best in barrels and boxes in a dry cellar, with light and air1 exoludod, and tho temperature as near to the freezing point as practical without actually freezing, v - A businosg firm in Arkansas, who wero indebted to n houso in Boston to the amount ot tour thousand dollars pre vious .o the breaking out of tho rcbollion,' have within a few days past paid the debt, principal nnd interest. A moraber . of tho Arkansas linn is now in B"Jtot making purchases of goods. y ' 4 i