Missouri state times (Jefferson City, Mo.), 1866-10-19 |
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Swawa. " : ...--' - a - - I " K. d. Cooper 1UTJSS OF ADVERTISING. FOSTER fc COOPER. .IKKFEUSON CITY. MO. t J . . 3Wr. , ?i - :!-"' : : Onesrjoare, oneweek i " each addltfeaal weak . i ee - three net he,. a oa It.- t l-KltISUF StjBSCKIPTIOJI. $s oo ,!f Sveormor - 1 SO J -i.,ri..nm-ti every cam be paid for i n adrance. accompany the ordT to Insure attention, j ...anita Weekly Tlaeee mailed for one , 4 U i... wiihfnthe county, ft; within lb Stat. I ..M,;TitbinthCnitelSttes,tweBty-nTcent ! ,tOOIt AXD BLOK PRI5TISO. ..'(:" has unrivalled facilitiea for executing I , .;. r Blnk printing luja nNTior menuer. ..' f! - n any portion ..f th Stat, promptly at- I r.Tma.caen. I 3?octtu From Forney's Weekly Prees K. J 'S GRKAT PKETH. firs: niv great r.ublir career I began, , '. (BlT a Ureenvillian Alderman; : qa:." klv -i.-h:inpei the greeo tnrtU chair e liiore nailed position of Mayor; ,. i vine t.. u-e H my talents and time, j ... to ibe cation bow bigh I could ciimb ; i.j.t. r. d the art of deceatioo 80 we. I, I li-.vei:f my wonderful program to tell. ,, h.,,.pi'r Mre4 with much brazen audacity. ' v'.int of try boaats .f my wondrnni capacity, iaip"l a Ibe people's eotd nature V 1. '-et tlieni to eud me to the Legilatur! 1':; r. Si t be Coogressman, Goreruor and Sen -,1 Ic.irrr!T had proved bow much I waa unfit -i- i,U of Vice President, when a yon know, r...urrferou confe.1er,te ttruck ueatb-blow. That ma i.- every loyal mn, w.m.n "d"?' by making me Pr.ident, made my "' heart glad. . . ' ,.,J I'm now .winging round the circle to show, H a mn in high atation can lay himself tow. y,.a've ail bard, of courae, f my grand pul'OJ. thf -me now it was in Tennessee. V ; ', ;he iraiu-r shall go to back aeala, i fr better plan to award ibem choice meata, lY'Vi-h upon them place, pardona and power ; j , u., ,. ii,elr awetfi leuipera frum a'er getting if.f.JUfr,!t tai have in all thiogti their own way, i'"- i the .Ir-tines of the whole naiioa to iway. 1 , ; . drmt: d that the North, on ita kneel, --.:; let ..uthern brethern do just aa they please, ',.'tV.afr.B.:y triumphant f'er t.egroea at home, 1'.,, . f .ioa'mea down or compel them to roam, Tesra tr ut.lesome loyalita that in the South So l. aii at-a r.st treaaon dre opn hi mouth ; .i ke i. tbir whole country peaceful aud quiet 'nT'd'nt f a Memphis or New Orleana riot, v.. . uh-idi"d pre haa dared to aoooe me, 1 ... e i I... ... . ..juiJ ihat they all were concentrated in one, 1 cbai!fig him then before down went the fjn, Ar,i I'd tir:r.g upon him your hatred and mirth, r .sn out-talk any man on the earth. Wh: right have these fe Iowa to eall me a traitor t j, ;n wing round the circle I crois'd the equa ls I'aion party may go to the d I, E ii j.. call me a Judas ia Tery uncivil ; Of ;r.i' ti there is only one kind that's odious, T. Wt- Canfed-rates from seats eommodioQ lu C"ticr. where they can always freely ask r".t. i t.-.ey want, and in sunshine bask. Vt'wj-d not jet, in fail, my greatness know, v ho i : I''" your tribune 1 Tour Monsieur Veto J ;vf-.if:iil, J .r 1 killed the Bureau bill, ioivbel friends could negroes whip er kill ; At,! 1 Uve tritd to crush all civil rights, Fx-yi fur my sweet brave Confederate whites. 5,.t so man iIk of fighting in the war f,r bore am I I without wound or soar, Adah- has sufl'erivl, struggled, toiled like ma T !i i'ni cinitent to let all go acot free Why cb ul 1 plain mortals dare to make eom- plaiiits, . 'i .u tiiose gentle lambs impose restraints 7 Tf u:.rvinen, beloved ! if vain should prove the aii Af .rl.- i l,y the Buttered Bread Brigade, I; (.'a,ii found a party to prevail, if l 'i.i.trn.-4'is and Copperjuhns must fuil, I; I m'lst ruB'-r the infernal paiu ( . e,.r:t.g news like that they sent from Maine, TS-.i ; i in- "ffer uji (I always do S s?u ii. u tipbt plaee, having naught else new) v .on tiea Uojd aa a last choice libation, c',,ri i r, to surely save the nation. what I've said 'a so wondrous strong. Id n t w'rih while my story to prolong ; i,n vour tine I'll make ao mora demands, lrave the Constilatien in your hands. THE COPPERHEADS. Wha are the men that clamor most A-sitjst the war, its cause and eostT Aid who Jeff. Davis sometimes toast T Ibe Copperheads. Who, when by wretched whisky tight, Hi- out in r.ige their veoomed spite T Who crawl and eting, but never fightT The Copperheads. Wbr. hold peace meetings, where tbey pass L-ngiby revives of wind and gas, Much like the bray of Balaam's ass T The Copperheads. Who, when false faction ia forgot, Wheu patriots keep a common tnoaght, Have discurd and dissension taught 7 The Copperheads. Who fwear by bondage, and would see Rutticr their country lost than free? "Kh: .irtad the name of Liberty ? The Copperheads. Vfc.j hate a freedom-loring press, Toe truth and all who it profess T Wt.' don't believe in our eaooess ? The Copperheads. And who, when Eight has won the day. Will lake their slimy selvea away, Aii 12 their dirty holes will stay? The Copperheads. A: .! hi will be the hiss and scorn "! generations yet aaboro Ualed, despised, disgraced, forsworn ? The Copperheads. ruiTgD utt who sleeps npon my heart, W,l8 the first to win it ; Six who dreams upon my breaat. Ever reigns witbin it ; V wh kisses oft my lips, Wakes the warmest blessing ; who rests within my arms, Fe-ls their closest pressing. ') hr days tbaa these shall eome, buy that may be dreary ; O her hours shall greet us yet, H' srs thnt may be weary ; 'i!i 'bat heart shall be thy borne, v.:H t .at breast tby bead shall pillow "ii! il mi lips meet thine as oft 2 !..w ii.teifelh billow. .-n, then, on my happy heart, .- toy love hath won it ; li'rtm, then, on my loyal brest-- ' ne but th'iu has done it ; l rhn age our bloom shall change, i:h its wintry weather; ' e, iu the self-same grave, otd dream together. A bhip Eace from China to England 14,000 Miles in 90 days. " , five English clipper ships started 1 for a race to London. The Lon-T 'rTrjj.h of 5?fpember 7 says: "'-:.rriv! yesterday in the Downs of Deal of " i' of the clipper ship engaged in the great '- o-sfrom China, created much interest in the tu looked upoa as a most extraordinary p If'-ecd, M-d circumstance. The ships en-; y fie nrett were the Ariel, 853 tons; the , ;y 6; tons; the Taiping, 787 tons; the "'j '"ns and the Sariea, 708 toni. The J.'"1 ''rr ''len wiih tl-.e first ca'go of teas of the '' An jJitonal freight of ten shillings per .';J !"'d the owner by the consignee of the . . '. ?rst 'hip arriving in dock, beaee the -"it. fir ;i;e rice. J. "!"''" Ari' I aod Tapping pawdFoo-cbow-j it L .atm; all on one day, the 30th of May. " 'r failed from the same place OEtbe tbt 29. b, and the Taiuing left on the "Wi-i r' ttxt 'fird of them was from Angier. ... ' S ii,, u follows : Fiery Cross passed "'lti. 1lB of June, the Ariel, Benca, - i t,uS' on tbe S2 June, all wiln-STI ':r each other, running the distance : ,c.v latent 7,700 miles) in twenty- I fTJ;1' '"'vd's gent telegraphed tbe arrival .Fj... . iu ioe ioviii. Aoai Ariel auu V-VP"1 at 'i?ht 'c,',ck n(l the Serica " 'cl,ck. afternoon. They bad u-..V", ta altendance.on them, aod were a at Blaekwell to day. Co to late last H '' " 0(" the race last yesr or the Tait-tTtl "' u m miles, was rue in W days . n-' Of Ul r,lU . J..I mm A it lJ i . Ariei aud Tcpine ran almost seek , ftire pr ssage, the Serlca following -t"rtlLw,E- The time taken in last year's i ,. p vross io aaya ; tne isepiog ii tk pnce, 121 days, and tbe flying A WEEKLY JOURNAL OF POLITICS, COMMERCE; A6EICULTURE, LITERATURE AND ZZIZZIZZZZIZI T)J 4 NO. 41a Unfortunate Mexico. It is difficult, if not impossible, lo ascertain, with any degree of certainty, bow and when the Bunapartean empire of Mexico will terminate The London Timet, review ing the condition aud prospects of this mufchroom concern, anticipates its collapse l.e fore the close of 1866. It ssys : "It is not to be dissembled that the Mexican enterprise is a hopeless failure; and that tbeemptre founded in the capital of ibeAitees by Napoleoa IU has withered away without so much as taking root in the soil. Tbe Empress arrived in Europe a short time ago, and the Emperor, it is expected, mast soon follow his apoase. The cjantry, in fact, sou at be abandoned by ita imperial occupants, like a worthless settlement or an antenable eolony, and Mexico will one more be left at the disposal of a population which baa hitherto exhibited an absolute incapacity for any form of aelf-gorernment.' No one e spec's that the Empress Carlo t! a will return lo Mexico, but it is declared that in a short time Maximilian will rank among the "monarchs retired from bnnmeas, who, ao much abound in tbeeer later days.- Napoleon's experiment of violating the Monroe doctrine has occupied nearly four years. It has coat much ; it has injured his prestige as a statesman; it has made him unpopular to no small degree in France. The question so bard of solution is, what will become of Mexico after the foreign ruler and foreign troops make their exit? Will Mexico then be agitated by the political distractions to which she has been the victim ever since she shook off the Spanish yoke? Will Juarez be strong enough and wise enough to retain his tiosition at the head of the republican party? Already it would appear that Santa Anna is preparing to return with money, u.en, and arms, and this can only be with the hope of again obtaining supreme power. But anarchy may be the result The Time says that if Juarez, by resisting Maximilian, "has acquired in the process any such principles as befit a constitutional ruler, or any such power as is necessary to sustain a government, we may see an independent Mexico in the list of civilized States; but we are not yet acquainted with anv facts which could induce a belief in such an event, and it is far more probable than an immediate return of confusion and another period of murderous anarchy will lead to the disappearance of the country in Ibe United Siatea. With that result Europe will have no deposition to quarrel." But tbe difficulty consists of this: that the moment the common enemy, the imported enemy, the invading Austrian, the Napoleonic cat's-paw, makes bis exit, Mexico is by no means likely to settle down into peace and quiet Were Juarez, or any one strong man known to his countrymen, to be accepted as chief magistrate of the Mexican republic there might be ground for hope; but already two or three other Mexican publicists have given tongue, and intimated that they will not allow Juarez to continue Dictator. After tbe collapse of the empire, civil war has been the normal condition of Mexico almost p-r retually since Santa Anna first took pnrt in public affairs, which was forty-three years ago. When be was at tbe age of twenty five he raised the banner of the republic at Vera Cruz aea'mst that of the first empire and drove It urbide into exile. If we had an nexed Mexico in 1847, after the occupation of the capitafby Generals Taylor and Scott, (as some able and far-geemg statesman aa vLied at tbe time.) tbe destiny of that coun try would have been greatly changed and her condition greatly improved now. It is a matter of nncertainty whether even yet, if anarchy ehonld again afflict that country, it may not be our duty to interfere, and interference would probably end in annexation a convenient and aggrandizing policy which has been recommended practically by England in Asia and by Prussia in Germany. Maximilian, a man of ability and education, was wholly misplaced In Mexico as Napoleon's representative, for he was that and no more. It wanted a bold, rough, strong, arbitrary man, one of the rough and ready Pelissier school, to have governed Mexico under French auspices. We mention Pelissier because his main experience was in Algeria, where be displayed much animal courage and unscrupulous wilL Such a ruler, not even covering the iron hand with the velvet glove, might have had belter luck in Mexico than the Austrian Archduke had At all events he would not have dawdled and delayed in his contest with the national parly as Maximilian did. Had this Austrian gentleman succeeded to tbe crown in prosperous times and without having to defend it with bis sword, he might have ripened into a model emper -r, and his wife, the fair Carlotta, who is said to be master of the house, would possibly have imitated Cleopatra in magnificence. But they derived very little money from the country itself and had to support '"the dignity of the crown" and the cost of a foreign army upon cash bor- owed in Europe at a high rate of interest Tbev have had the crown at any rate, and now, joining the rapidly increasing corps of "monarchs retired Troai business, the ex-Emperor aod ex-Empress of Mexico can live flourishingly in Europe, he restored to bis position and income next his brother, f ran-cis Joseph of Austria, and the, enriched by the vast legscy from her futher, the late K-ng of the Belgians, better able than ever to reign as queen of lasbion in Vienna Supposing that the empire should collapse in Mexico, there yet looms on the future the darkening shadow of a continuous strife with France. There has lately been com pleted a treaty between France and Mexico, whereby Maximilian surrenders to Napoleon one half cf all customs dues received in Mexican ports on the Atlantic seaboard and one-fourth of those dues in seaports on tbe Pacific. These confiscations are to repay France for her expenditure in trying to build up a Litiu monarchy in republican Mexico. Even should Maximilian depart, this legacy will remain a source of exaction on the part of Fianc of discontent and resistance on the part of Mexico. By whom are the customs dues to be collected for Fra ice. and by what military force is that collection to be supported ? Napoleon might leave an army lor the purpose, but, in the commercial slang of the day, "it will not pay. The quarrel between rraDce and Mexico will certainly cot end with the down tall of Maximilian. TTwAintea Chronicle. Singular OcsiTence in Ohio. The Cleveland (Halo) Herald of Friday says:. Yesterday, shortly after twelve o 'clock, a very singular casualty occurred on Hill street. On the north aids of this street is a ravine, perhaps twenty feet deep, occupied by the oil works of Mr. Dela mater and some others. At tbe hoar named the man in charge of Mr. Delamater's works heard a rumbliac noise, aod looking toward the street saw about titty ftet of the bank moving rapidly out into the ravine, aod directly upon tbe works. In an instant a great mass bf earth was precipitated with much force againat tbe building, which, being of wood, cave way, and was crashed to atoms, with several tanks, some machinery, etc. Tbe ravine was suddenly filled to tbe depth of four or ore leet with tbe earth from the bank, the deposit being made evenly, and very moch as if it had been "damped" from wagons. The roadway ef Hill street was carried oat, ana inero is now a imi iunj or fifty feet broad, and nearly half as deep, across the street. Tbe singular feature of the affair i that it was not the falling of a steep bank, but a vast mass ol earth was foroed out horizontally by some unknown agency, carried, some of it, seventy-five yards on nearly a level, and deposited as evenly over the bottom of the ravine as it could have been by hand. There was aoaae water with the slide, but tbe greater part of tbe earth which moved was not even wet. There are various theories among those who saw the slide. The most common is that it was an earthquake, and tbe most probable is that ii was caused by a large accumulation of water aad quicksands under the road, which finally burst their bounds. ii w was. N A SB Y. Sir. Nasby Appeals to the People. - ' From the Toledo Blade. Post Orn Coxfedrit X Roads, fwich ia in the Stait uv Kentuc October 1, 1866. President Johnson, who hez bin likened to Androo Jaxon, and wicb, since my ap-jintruetit, I cosseed hiui to be in many par tikelera bis sooperior, requested me and William II: Seward (bis secretary and chap-lin) to draw np and publish to the Democracy of tbe various Stales hoJdin elecsbuns this fall, an address, or rutber an appeal, firmly beleevin that hed he extended his tour to Maine, and isshood an address to 'em, that that stait would hev goneea it did. William retooled to take part in the appeal, say in that it warnt uv no use ooyoosa, aud ao the dooly devolved upon me. ( ' 'Democbats ako Conservatives , or the North Appreaheatin the gravity uv the is-aboo, I address you. - The signs uv the times is' ominous. A Radikle Congress, eleetid durin tbe lime when the Southin Staits, wicb comprises reely all the intellek uv this peo ple, didn t take no part iu the elekhtiun, bein too bizzy gettiu out uv aiierman a way to open polls, a Congress, I repeat, in wicb there aint no Suihern man, and wicb consekently kant by any stretch uv the hooiuan imaginasbun, be considered Constitooshnel, hez dared to tbwsat the Presidrnt uv the United Suits, and set up il3 will agin his'n ! I need skarcely recount its high handed axuv usurpashun. It passed a bill givin rites to niggers, wich accordin to Scripter (see Ooesi-mtM, Ham and Hager, tbe only three texts in Scripter uv any partikelar account) and the yoosages uv the Democrisy, aint got no rites, and the President exercisin the high prerogatives put into his band by the Con stitoosben, vetoed it Here the matter should hev endid. He bed expressed, in a manner atrikly Constitooshenel, his objeo-shens to the measure, and a proper regard for his feelins and just deference for his opinions, ought to hev indicated the right course. Here wuz peece offered this Congress. Here wut the lender uv a olive branch. The President didn't want a quarrel with Congres he didn't desire a contin-yooance uv the agitation wich hed shook the country like a Illinois ager, but he desired peece. Congres cood bev hed it, hed they only withdrswed their crood noshens uv what wuz rite and what wuz wroog ratified, ez they shood hev dun, sicb laws ez tbe President sw fit to make in short, hed they follered tbe correct rool when we he? a Dem ok r a tic President, and put the Government in his hands, with an abi 'in trust in his rec titood and wisdom, we mite hev avoided this struggle, and thus wood hev bin peeceful. But this reckless Congres, bent upon con-sen tr&t in power in its hands instid uv dividtn it between him and Seward, parsed tbe bill over his hed I regard lis uv his feeling! The responsibility for the dissension rests, there fore, with Congres. But these questions are altogether too befty for the Demokratic intellek, and I fling em out for the considerasden uv the few Postmasters we get from tbe Union ranks. TV. tjje piaioki-L-y I 'I 'Ires iiiytelf wore parlickeleriy. . . - - Do Yon Wast to Marry a Khmer? This ishoo is acin before yoo. Are yoo in favor of elevatin tbe Afrikin to a posishen where he kin be yoor ekal or perhaps yoor soo perior? I bat ishoo Is agin betore yoo in yoor decision, only the dagger to yoo ia in creased. The matter has beoome threatening lor disgise it ei we may, thousands uv em kin read, and they are akkumulatin property and wearln good clothes lo a extent trooly alarmin to tbe Iiti,okratic mind. We hev alluz consoled ourselves with tbe soothin reflection that there wuz a race lower down in the scale of humanity than us ones. Shall we continue to enjoy that comfort? That's (he question for every Dimokrat to consider when he votes this (ill. ' Remove the weight uv legal disability, and ten to one ef tbey dont outstrip us eveu, and then where are we goin to look for a race lo look down upon Its a close thing at ween us cow, and ez we uv this generation cant ele vate ourselves, why for our own peace uv mind we must, I repeet it aver pull them down Agin then I repeet. Do too wast to Marry a Nigger? Your daughters wunst carried banners onto wich was inscribed that trooly Dimokratic motto, "White husbands or none," and in consequence they've bin mostly livin in tbe enjoyment uv none are tney to go back on that holy determinashen to preserve the Anglo Sackson race on ibis continent in its purity 7 Poo you want the nigger the big buck nigger the flit footed nigger the woolly headed nigger the bow legged nigger the mogeb to step up aside uv yoo and exercise Ibe prerogatives nv freemen in tbis country? Do you want the nigger aforesed to be mayors nv yoor towns vriih all the hatred tbey hev towards us? Wat chance, oh Dimokratic dweller in oities, "think yoo, yoo'd hev ef hauled up afore a nigger mayor on a charge nv disorderly con duct ? Wat chance wood yoor children bev in a ekool in wich all tbe teerber wuz niggers? Wat chance wood yoo hev weh ar-reetid for email misdemeanors afore nigger judges? "But," say some uv yoo who, set ravin by drum and flags and sicb, went on violently into the war and wuz, perhaps, saved from starvjn by niger9Tr"these niggers wus onr friends in the late war tbey fought agio the South ? " 01 wat a deloosion! 0! wat a blindnis! froo tbey did. and that shows the danger that's afore us that . lifts the fog from tbe precipice onto wich we arestandin and shows us our danger. Wat does tbia fact prove? It proves the onreasonablenes uv the Nigger his disconteniednis with the posisben to wich nacber assignei. and bis cussid disposition to upset the normal condition. The Bible makes biro, a servant unto his brethren, (see Ham. Hager and Onesimus, three bless.-d texts ) Science proves him to be not a man but a beast, and so to lake him rz we may, either ei our brother or ez a beast, and Diniocrtsy, with that liberality wich hez alius distinguished it, give t-very man his choice, wich theory to lake, his condition is aervi tood. But he, with a cussidness, a perversity wich I never cood understand, flies into the face of the Divine decree, flies into the face of science, and asserts his independence He turned agin them ez bed fostered him turned agin, in many instances, for convenience, his own parents (in these instances, tbe parents adopted the brethren theory) ami for an abstract idea fought agin em. That restlessness under bonds alarmed the Diniocratic mind. We who owned em under tbe skripter (see Onesimus, Hager and Ham) and under tbe eternal laws of scientific troolh. wuz content with the arrangement. by sbood they not hev bin? Things wuz normal. They worked and we eat, and ef they hed bin content with this ekitable di vision uv the labor uv life all wood hev been smooth to-day. Their takia part agin us at the South and in favor uv tbe Federals, is instead uv a cos uv feelin good towards em a source uv on- easiness instid uv bein a reasor for elevatin uv em, its my principal reason for depressin uv em. Sicb. onse'tled minds shood be quieted tbis itchin to raise theirselves shood be crushed out uv em, that Science and Science and Holy Writ (see Onesimus, Hager and Ham) may be vindicated. Sbel ' we desert Androo Johnson after all the trouble be hez bin to in gettin back to us? Sbel we elect a Congress this fall so soaked in Ablisbin so-filled with objeck-shuns td our Southern brethren ez to refooze to receive era back into tbe seats which they bev, vacated? Consider I The Southern Dimokracy bevn't and don't lay np nothin JEFFERSON CITY, FRIDAY,' OCTOBER 19. 1866. agin yoo, Tbey are willing to forgive and forget They railed, but they are will us to forgive the cause uv their faUyoor. They, hevn't got tbe government they wanted, but they find no fault with that, but are wiHin to take charge uv the won tbey hev bin compelled to liv under. Kin they offer fefj The fate uv war was agin em, baryta all bard feelina tbey extend to us Cbriscben charity, and say here we are, take us, give us our old places. They hev bin chastened their household gods bev bin destroyed, and their temples torn down. Wun neighbor uv mine lost two sons in the Confedrit army; another aon wich he hed refused $1,500 for in 1860, he wuz compelled to shoot, cos be wax bound to run awsy into the Federal army, which, he hed a dozen'gtoea refoosed $2,500 for, each, iq Noo Crlejwsbe saw layln dead on the atepa av a airfjol boose in Memphis. Hez be suffered nqthin?, And yet he ia willia sxi take a seat in Congress forgittin all, fee, B? suffered, and forgivts the cause thereof. What wickedness it is, with wood further bruise sich a broken reed. Therefore, ez yoo luv yoorselves and bate the nigger, I implore yoo to act Take yoor choice uv tbe platforms uv tbe different States vote ez a Johnson Union or a vemo crstic Johnsonian but vote. Kentucky holds out her hands appealing-ly I Kentucky implores yoo to bild op a bulwark north uv the Ohio river to save what little there is uv pure Dimocracy there 1 Kentucky will back yoo in yoor endeavors. Will yoo heed her cry ? Sbel she appeel in vain ? Forbid it Hevin ! Petroleum V. Nasbt, P. M , (wich is Postmaster.) The Jonahs of the South. The New York Pott, in an article entitled "Cultivating Hatred," says : "But more mischievous than even the mistaken course of too many publio journals is the conduct of a number of leading men of the Southern States, who insist on putting themselves forward for official positions. What business has a person like Semmes, the commander of tbe Alabama, for instance with any official position in tbe United States ? He is a paroled prisoner of war, and therefore, has no right of citizenship He is an unpardoned offender against the Constitution, and is therefore without any rights except that of life, secured to him by bis parole Yet, in spite of all this, be allows biujelf to be eleoted to an official position in Alabama; when elected he impudently sends to the President for a pardon, and when this ia refused be d-c!ints to resign the office which be is not allowed to 611, and writer that be regards himself as 'an humble representative of the honor and dignity of bis State.' "So, too, Alexander Stephens, who did not scruple to hold the piece of Vice President of be rebel Confederacy, std who Is an amnestied traitor, permits himself to beseot to the United States Senate We hear of other cases, of mn under similar disabilities, seeking publio office ; indeed, we doubt if one-half the men who are now leading and forming the sentiment of the Southern Stat8 have been pardoned, or are vet relieved of tbe condition of paroled prisoners of war. . '"Now, this -conduct is mere selfishness. Tfhese men forget their position and the crime which has placed them jn bonds, and try to regain their od eminence and control by putting themselves at the head of ,be Southern people. If tbey had the peace of the country and the welfare of their States at heart, they would strenuously avoid public life, and rigidly refuse all office and place, and content themselves with urging upon their fellow-citizens a just and reasonable course. "As it is, they put themselves in the way of a speedy reconstruction they openly insult the loyal people of the country ; tbey put a strong argument in the mouths of those who oppose all attempts at reorganization. There is, in the Northern States, no feeling of hatred, or even of dislike, to the Southern people. On the contrary, the mss of the population of tbe Southern States is regarded with the utmost fairness. Ask even the bitterest 'Radical,' and be will tell you that he believes the white people of tbe South to have been sincere in tbe(r rebellious conduct mistaken, fatally misled, but sincere. But there is here, very naturally and properly, a determination that those who misled them shall not now take the foremost placps of power and trust. "Paroled deserters like Semmes, unamnas-tied traitors like Stephens; men who swore to support the Union and then engaged in an effort to destroy it J men who swore to defend the flag, and then deserted to its enemies, and tried to bumble it ; such men msy be permitted to live; they may be allowed to remain in security in the country; but it is incident for them to foist themselves jnto office sgain, and it will not be tolerated. If they insist on weighing down the ship of reorganization with their ambitious schemes, they may yet sink it, or tbemselrea They are a parcel of Jonahs, and tbe sooner thev are flung overboard, or put themselves off, the better. - It is sometimes nrged that they are well-intended men, that they are only anxious to serve their" fellow citizens. If this is true, they can best ahow it by retiring altogether from public affairs into the strict-eat privacy." Another Sccial Problem. Tbe San f ranciseo Monitor, as follows, gives a grave picture of the merits of the Chinese as a class, and of the effect of their nreaene nn the nrftanflritw nf a mmmnnilw i i i 1 j '-j j We were informed, a month or to ago, that a person bad arived in tins city, from New Orleans, lo make arrangements for tbe transfer of three hundred Chinamen to work on Southern plantations, and as all distinctions of race and color are abolished by the Civil Rights bill, so fsr as Congress can do so, we imagine the day not far distant when copper-colored Pngao labor will be submitted for tbe labor of the white man in all the Atlantic States These coolies, for such tbey are, are a demoralizing blight to any community in which they are domiciled. They are active and ingenious, it is true, good copyist, quick of comprehension, and useful drudges; but they are filthy, thievish and infamously vile. Tbey are brought to this city as merchandise, to be parcelled out on the labor market, with no other condition than the supply of their animal wants and their return borne, living or dead, at the end of the term contracted for. Very few of them return alive, but continue to work on their own account after the expiration of their term of service, and after death their bodies are picked up and transferred to the "Flowery kingdom" annually. . There aa several companies trading under real or assumed names, engaged in their import and export to and from tbis city. The Chinese population of California may be set down at 75,000; but it may aot become ua now to present any details of the demoralizing influences of so large a hethen population on a State which casta a little over one hundred thousand votes or about fifteen thousand votes lets than were cast in 1856. The reduction of fifteen thousand votes in ten years, and in a new State which offers unprecedented inducements, affords indubitable proof that tbe Mongolian race is ret pulsive to tbe Caucasian, aod we know that the vast majority of whites on this coast, of all conditions of life, are desirous to return "home" at soon aa they can. Mr. Keith Johnston and other gentlemen engaged in the exploration of Palestine have discovered at Tell Hum, the ancient temple of Capernaum, nearly entire. Conaerratiam ra. Radicalism ConiavATiaM : T tfett&W pntcrrc, an L. Badicaus; T reforn. Ttmove. eraJicuU The firef conflict between Conservatism and Radicalism is described in the "first chapter 6f Genes!'," when "the earth was withoet r form aod void, and darkness was upon the face of .the deep, and the Spirit of God moved upon the fac of tbe waters" Inanimate nature was io the Conservative condition of Chaos, and ! "God saii, let there be light, - - 6ns darkless felt His might, '- ' Aad fled swav. The purple seas and mountains cold, ' Shims forth all bright with Mas an. geld, , .. And eried, 'Us day I 'tie UyJ'; . . -.Noah was a' RaeJieal, aSd his eootiaued warning f the impeodiog flo4, (though coming f om God,) was too radical an idea to obtain pyp en&liitXw tte antMelttvian conservatives of bis time. He built the ark in violation of all well established conservative principles; the flood came; Noah floated upon the waters, and conservatism went under. Christ the great radical principle of the universe embodied, waa a terrible eyesore to the conservative Jews. It waa a most shocking spectacle to them to witness the healing of the sick, raining the dead and the preaching of strange doctrines to the people without permission from the Levitjcal Priesthood, so that in him Radicalism was crucified by Conservatism; intending to crush it, but under tbe mysterious operation of the Divine law, sealing the convenant for the salvation of tbe Gentile world; another blow to Conservatism. At his death tbe Apostles went forth, were imprisoned and stoned, as Radicals ever have been and ever will be until the millennial day, when conservatism must become radical, or cross the Styx. Gallileo was impiously radical when he announced that "the world turned" the conservative church, as usual, consigned him to a dungeon. Harvey shocked the conservatism of the doctors in proclaiming tbe vital current. Columbus, adopting the radical idea of Gallileo, told conservative Europe that he could either sail round the world, or discover a new one The Priests denounced hint as a blaspheme; the Savans ai insane; but Isabella had faith in radicalwni, and gave him "ships and money ;" he sailed, his crews were conservative), and threatened mutiny if he did not return; he begged from their conservatism three days time, and gave tbe world America. Guttenburg outraged conservatism in the invention of type and the printing press, and fled from Paris to escape the conservatism of the church, which denounced him as an agent of the devil, for printing too' many bibjes He was the first book printer, and his invention is destined to eradicate conservatism. Tbe telescope, tbe watob, the quadu rant, the compass, the thermometer, the barometer, the dauuerreotype, the telegraph, the sewing machine, the reaper, tbe cotton gin and tbe monitor, are all the legitimate children of radicalism ; tbe steamship as illustrated in the Gretl Eastern, a vsst floaticgworld, propelled at tremendous speed by a power developed from nature by radicalism, and which conservatism, will not understand, illustrate the principle as compared with the floating galley of tbe ancients, propelled" by ors, or the canoe of the Indian, the true representative of conservatism. The Mexican, who transports his firewood upon a don key 'a back, and culivates his land with a crooked stick, lied by a rope to his mqle's tail, is tbe true type of conservatism, while radicalism shows the locomotive, dragging her thousand tons with "railroad speed." and the steam plow nf the Illinois prairie aa Ler appropriate representatives The harvest of the conservative French peasant are cut with a sickle, gathered by hia wife and children, and thrashed with a flail; the grain fields o tue American Radical are ploughed by at earn, planted witU the "drill," cut, g4ther.d, thrashed and winnowed by the "harvester." In horticulture, conservatism tenaciously adheres to the seedling, the hitter almond, the wild cb,erry, the fox grape, and simple wild fjower of the foresr and the prairie While Radicalism produces therefrom the Newton Pippin, Bellefluere, Spitsenberg, Golden Russetts, tbe Malacatoona, Rareripes, the Begereau, Duchess de Angeloame, Van Mons, Bouclett and Seckel, the Black Hamburg Catawba, Mayduke and Napoleons, Stc The whole family of roses and the infinite world of flowers that fallow o their train, the results of the skill, patient industry and love of beauty of the radical florist In the conflict of armies, that of conferva tism and radicalism has also appeared. When at Tharsalia, the lancers of Caesar thrust their spears into the faces of Pompey's cavalry, they, perhaps, violated tbe conservative rules of Roman warfare, but Cteiar was victoriousHannibal's escape from tbe encircling legions of the Romans by makingtorch-bearers of the cattle of his pens, may have outraged conservatism, but Hannibal was successful. Napoleon, as the champion of the radical school nf "strategy and the art of war," conquered conservative Europe, and waa only defeated wben bis enemies adopted his principles. Grant at Vicksburg and Richmond, Sherman at Atlanta, Aa, each voluntarily abandoned bis "base." Conservative traitors predicted failure, yet they crnshed the rebellion. Of the races, the negro is the Prince of eonservativee In bis native clime slavery is indigenous. There he tenaciously adheres to it With him it is a divine institution, and perpetnated only by continual wars. Tbe King of Dahomey is conservatism embodied. The Mexican has bis Peon slavery. Tbe institution is found in a most flourishing condition among me interior races ; among the superior types of the human family it has now entirely disappeared. In our late struggle conservatism clung to it aa its vital part, but radicalism demonstrated that it was an element of weakness. Tbe American of the free States, where socially the negro ia almost unknown, ia the h;ghest specimen of the enlightened radical, while in tbe slave States, tbe influeuce of the negro, even as a slave, has conserved conservatism " After the negro, the Indian is tbe next best conservative He adheres to madie life, notwithstanding that the radical white man has eradicated the forests, ploughed up and planted tbe prairies of his ancient hunting grounds, and the future presents no hope, but tbe ultimate extermination of hia race, he is eontervative ttUL The conservative Hindoo retains hia Juggernaut ; the Japanese the custom of suicide and national isolation. Feudalism has been crushed io the conflict with radicalism in Europe, but its representative, conservatism, .still struggles to retain ascendency. Here, as in Europe, conservatism sought to repeal Feudalism in ihe monopoly of immense landed estates, thro' African slavery, to crush popular education, freedom of , thought, freedom of auffrage, establish a wealthy caste, and degrade and impoverish the masses. Radicalism sought to equalize the lands by confining their ownership to the cultivator, to establish universal education, freedom of thought, of speech, and to enrich the masses. In the prolonged struggle, conservatism appealed to arms and was beaten. With African slavery, the whole capital and power of conservatism in this country is destroyed, the nation's safety secured. . The American Republic stands now before the world as tbe champion and embodiment of Radicalism ; Conservatism, the child of barbarism, may, like the Indian, plainly foresee the doom of the future, but without in hope of recuperation will not of cannot effect inennevuaoie reams. - - . The nation, riaing from the straggle like a vonrifli viant iam in k.. . u - i z z . .c uqkiuj uis suiuoe , oi mnnue growtn in numbers, wealth and ( power, to whose form of Goverrrment, prioci- pies and policy, all other people and nwitooa must uium&ieij comorm.. ' ' ; Life on the Plains. INTERESTING BKMINI3CX03 0 KIT ., . ; CABSOJT. A correspondent of the Cincinnati Cbav. merdal haa bad an interview with IT it fVreon who communicated to him the following' interesting reminiscences : L - All the Indiana, banters and trappers ride wiui eatoriaiirTup. sna aunoat iow-tegted from it -It ia more insnnrft towhe Indian tbaa 'to the white man, as it ia only by aid of ine stirrup mar be can shirt His position, hanging down on one side, so as to conceal all his body but his leg His leg is all you have to fire at, as he throws himself on the side buttocks, or around the neck of the horse. On tbis account, atso, they hang the stirrups well forward. Some . one referred to Carson's intimate knowledge of Indian strstegy. "Why, yea, I am up to a good many of their tricks, but they fooled me once they fooled me pretty bsd that time MI tell you about it It was in let me see yes, 1833. There were six of us hunters out after buffalo, up in the Snake country. We had made a pretty good hunt, and came into camp at night, intending to start in next morning with our hunt Well, we camped Had a good many dogs with us, some of them good dogs. They had barked a good deal, and we heard wolves. As I lay by tbe fire, I aaw one or two big wolves sneaking about camp one of them quite in it Gordon wanted to fire, but I would not let him, for fear of hitting some of the dogs. "'I had just a little suspicion that the wolves might be Indiana, but when I saw them turn short round, and heard the snap of their teeth when tbe dogs came too close to one of 'em, I felt easy then, and made sure it was a wolf. The Indian fooled me that time Confound the rascal,' becoming animated, 'coufound, the rascal, do you think be didn't have two old buffalo bones in his hand that he cracked together every time that he turned to snsp at the dogs t Well, by and by, we dozed off to sleep, and it wasn't long before I was awoke by a crash and a blaze. I jumped straight for the mules and held 'em. If tbe Indians had been smart, they'd a had ua all, but they ru.n aa soon as tbey fired. Tbey killed hut one of us poor Davis, bad five bullets in hia body, and eight in his buffalo robe. The Indians were a band of Sioux, on the war path after the Snakes, and came on ua by accident They tried to waylay us next morning, but we killed three of 'em including their chief. '"Whea I first went over into California in 1849, the valleys were full of Indian tribes. Indians were thick everywhere, aod I saw a great deal of some large and flourishing tribea When I was there again in 1859 they bad all d.isa.ppeaTeiS, and when I inquired about certain tribes I had seen on the spot, was told by the people living there that they had neyer heard of the TO.' ' .We tke the following interesting financial article from the Cincinnati Gautt of Friday) It is time that the people were befiaalng to prepare the-r selves for a sharp sontraeuon of the currency. It is particularly Important that the National Banks were preparing for it. Mr. Me-Cu I loch's poliey is manifestly in that direction. Re has now very naarly aa much eurreacy in the Treasnry as when lie eommeneeri tbe payment of the temporary loan, and bis balaaoea are steadily increasing, while nearly all his obligations that weald mature within a year are out of the way. Ia addition be holds $60,000,900 in gold exelasively of that represented by certificates uf deposit. Of greenbaok-s there are less than $400,000,000 in escalation, while there is autherity to cancel ft, 009,-000 of these per month, (a addition the Secretary has authority to sell gold bearing kinds for lawful messy. (ow suppose Mr. MeCnllnet should look ip within the next sixty days $100,010,000 in greenbacks, la it not evident that the notes remaining oat would at onee go to a premium, and from that moment woajd virtually be withdrawn from circulation? Then the National Basks would be called upoa to redeem, and the whole accorting machinery of the country woald go into operation. This is to he tbe first step ia the direction ef specie payments the first effeotlve step, we mean and whea it is taken it will be felt Then will fallow, not immediately, bat in due coarse, specie payments. Thai Mr. McC.lloeh expects lo be able to resume specie payments some time during his administration is certain ; that he believes he will be able to resume early ia 1887 is generally asder-stood ; bat in the latter expectation he will ua-deobtedly be disappointed. But within three months he caa ferae national Banks to redeem ia greenbacks, and that will be as much of a shock as the conn try eaa safely stand within one year. It does not require a prophet to foretell the effect apoa values of the withdrawal of $100,000,00 ef greenbacks within the next ninety days, and the consequent necessity for greenback redemption en the part of the National Banks. This would be equivalent to tbe withdrawal of at least $300,000,000 of paper money from aetive circulation. To this contingency easiness men and banks, if they woald avoid the worst conseqaeneee of panics, and failares, should look forward now with a view to preparing for the ehaoge which Mr. M oCaltoah has ia een-tampletioa."The Cholera at Naples. Correspondence of the London Times. NAPtn, September 17, 1866. The cholera inoreasea rather than dimin ishea in intensity. On some days in several quarters, and especially tbeCbiaja, tbe place of greatest resort, though the leait healthy. every case proved fataL For one or two days there was a slight diminution, but again the bulletin rose, aud tbe last rejiort I have given for the city cases, 110; deaths. 79; while, including the neighboring townships, tbe cases were 18V aud tbe dealha 129. Torre del Greco and Torre -Anunziata continued to be greatly afiicted, and daily one or two new places are added to the d:streasinfc list of infected place Thanks to past paternal and priestly gov ernment, which did all it could to keep the people in ignorauce, tbe epidemic is not tbe only evil we have to contend with, but to this is added that of the sottish prejudices and superstition of the massea. Many conceal their illness, fearful of tbe poison which may be administered by tbe medical men ; shun tbe druggist lest he may give them "aaputta" assemble in crowds in the churches, and get up processions in honor of the Ma donna, while neglecting the most obvtoua hygienic laws. Among tbe crowd, too, may be discovered priests and men enjoying the title of "galantuomini," who encourage the delusion, and I could name those who have been guilty of these follies, and those who have sunered from them. It was hoped that tbe heavy rains which have fallen tbia week would have produced a favorable change, but a slight consideration might have shown that tbe decomposition of the summer accumulations of filth would produce just the opposite result There can be no hesitation in saying that Naples and the neighborhood are paying the penalty of their neglect of the simplest laws of health. I conclude with fresh intelligence of tbe fearful progress of the cholera. It ia spreading a panic all around us and in all diree tions. Saturday especially was a 'die irce, and the weather, which is aa close and hot as the month of Jul v. readers it but too probable that the epidemS will go on in creasing. At lorre Anunziata there is an entire street which baa been swept of its inhabitants, and ia shut np! The cattle plague has broken" out with great intensity in Galiicia, Moravia, and Hungary. 5 (JO GENERAL NEWS. WHOLE NUMBER 199. A Convict Farm in Ireland. The Dublia frwJmmit Journal gives the following description of convict farm at Lusk, Ireland. .vTi ffrni k ,i,ut oat one mile from tbe Rush and Lusk station on the Drogheda feawey, and commands a fine prospect ot the swrownding country, with the sea at d lmbay Island in the distance to the aouth-Entering by a green lane from the nigh road the visitor finds himself in a kind el eemp square, on which are erected two obloog buildings of eo irrigated jr0n, or.e serving aa a dormitory and dining hall and the other as a workshop. At the opposite ? quare is tbe cook-bouse, superintendents office and officers' quarters, and at the rwar at.M. J u 1. . - j uu iw-DDanR Along the boundary wall oa tbe western aid. kxag eneas bn wnlch rhe convicts break stone on wet days All the buildings have been erected by tbe prisoners. The arrangements in wumiiwjry are quite man or-war rash-- Hammocks were never stowed away the nettinffo" nvn u...n.n. .1 ion in the beds. hiatast. Uaa; ed along the sides of the apartment wbich umoer ana furnished with an American atova in iha r u- n . - -WW VI UWI. The arrangements for ventilation and light- In the workah fins! nUAVIlinn Kan a kriAn wm J .-a. BJ'a V V ioivu UM a;r I i,ur for performing tbe necessary carpenter's work required on the farm, which, taken all J "oold remind a person of what he bad read of a well-arranged and circumstanc edsetUement in the colonies. Tbe persons who are admissible to become occupiers of the farm aa workers are the convicts who have Daaaed ihrnink ; nnk. i course in Smitbfield, Mountjoy, or Spike Island penitentiaries, and the book in which the biography of each ia kept telle how strict j and severe is the exeAtiturlA nf th Hii. i pline thev If! ailhlM Ia lea .nam Aftnnn I t " - j - w mm vsavj vuiuuiii ao i the name of the offender and Ihe offence of which he waa viaMAVrl rA Irs aa waa.wK... t -- w wwwia,t ajsaavai iu ea uuuiuv;! others is the record of his riaing from class wets, oy good conduct, and also the petty traoegreasione which threw him back again tory of the erring man toiling up to goodness, and bis occasional falls in the steep aau., a !? 1 . ... ""' wnicn ne seeks to climb; an.l, perhaps, that knnlr tlla Af nn " uin mF. IIU belp enough, or of minor obsticles being put ruaa oi nis progress. Occasionally be is trioed Ufl sS Trtd I ui iA ti a fttt w a Ae en a Vli path back tq goodness, and often retarded in hia firaarMi In anrJK tva V, . discipline. The average number of con- Vicla at Lusk farm is generally fifty five; but at Dreaent them fnri aon . Tl,u are principally engaged in farm operations. "wme notion win ne formed ot the good which haa been accomplished when a glance is given at the following facts : "There are at present contained in the fsrm 170 acres, divided as follows : Wheat, 38 acres; oats, 28 acres ; potatoes, 24 acres ; mangolds, 4 aorea; turnips, 4 acres; carrots, I acre; vetches, 1 acre, vegetables, I acre; twnuuw, JU acres; grazing land, ol acres; rP 2 acres Fourteen well bred young DllZS are he in if reared wnrl nfton h,l nf cattle are on tbe land This is all good and In aright direction, but it ia not enough uo l. a f . .. fc 1 i . . i r i " m rwi piau uas oeeu ineu anl lounj to work wonderfully Persons should not suppose that the cocvicls are pampered or overfed ; io no prison is the work half so severe, and out of the sixpence a week allowed to each they generally inve&t it in 1 1 1 r , ma puituaw oi oreaci. The dav of the convict w rlivitloH aa fal lows: At 5 o'clock the bell ring for all to ne, fold beds, and dress: 5;30. officers' parade and unlocking of dormitories; 3.35, prayer; 6 o'clock, breakfast of stirabout and milk ; 6:30, parade and proceed in classes lo work; 12 o'clock, dinner on four days beef, bread and potatoes, on three d tys potatoes, tuilk and bread ; 1 o'clock, resume work ; a nrlnB lltnnA, ef Kra.. 1 mr,A ,.fr. . g.Tii school and lecture by Mr. Dally, discipline omcer ana registrar; t.JV r. m, make beds; 7:43, prayer; 8, lock up and 9 bed. We walked through the farm as the convicts 1 ! . a . I 1 . - f arm rujcagcu reaping, under me direction oi afr firallawhttP aoviMittnpul Biin...ini..n,I..Ai Tbey were honest workers, tryioft to make imPlliiA frir Wrnn 0a int-i A an, all m. a.m. pthi?a -ind best wishes were wiih the reaper?, aavi I k awtiAtM 1 1 1 1 J L.a- i . I T'-a nuvui aa glMJU luru feUUUlU UV UJ Ufip aad encourage and aid them in their atriv- HA. . . A.. L. t -I . . , , mi gc iwa to sua poaitiou suey naa lost." The Southern Pine Forests. A correspondent of the New Orleans Picayune, calling attention to the proBts which may be de rive from the distillation of the pine gum into rosia aad tarpentiae, makes the following calculation of the probable expenditure and yield of aa orchard of 100,000 boxes : Cost of land, say 2,000 acres $2,000 Cost of still, Ae...... .. 3,000 wsges of manager or foremaa at J100 per month Wages of tea good boxers and packers at $40 per month . .. . Wagee of cooper from April till October, at 1,200 3,800 BOO per month......... ........-420 Wages sf distiller from April till October.... 420 Wages of teamster from April till October, at $40 per moots........ ........ 28(1 Wsges of four hands to dip daring seven . nvlbs........ . 1,120 Oast of barrels far rosin and spirits..... 1,000 Wagon and male team .. 800 Two hones, saddles, Ac 300 Coaliagfto! ex peases . ,ou0 Total necessary expenses 517.310 The yield of such an orchard during the Srst year, when properly cultivated, should be about 2,500 barrels of "Virgin Dip" gnm, yielding on distillation about 1,700 barrels of while rutin aod 17,000 gallons of spirits of turpentine. Estimatiug roeio at ten dollars per barrel, and tbe spirits at Bity eeals per sajlon, we have a sross tirmlaclinn the first year of about $25,000, with a clear profit ia money oi a.ouu, oesides ma land, toe urrrarJ and the still. The orchard will last tea yen and the still almost as long. From Virginia to Texas a vast forest of primitive pines sweeps ia an unbroken extent alone the At lantic and Gulf shores of all the seaboard UUa of the late Sontbern Confe-ierary. In some parts this forest is a mere fringe of stunted pinrs, serving as a boas lary between the more fertile high lands aad the sea. But in Florida, Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana it covers large portions of the State, aad contains eome moat valuable varieties of the tree. President Johnson and the Fenians The following paragraph seems to demand some sort of attention from those it incul pates : Tbe Sandusky Register states that in a speech in that city a few days ago, Ibe Hon. Joseph M- Root, late United Stales District Attorney for Northern Ohio, said be considered he was not breaking official faith when he related one fact in regard lo the Administration and tbe Fenians, which occurred during tbe Canadian excitement. He, as district attorney, and Marshal Bill, received instructions from Washington to watch closely all organization, learn about the storsge of arms, Aa, but in we of any attempted expedition from Cleveland not to interfere to prevent the movement until it was under way. But, said the instructions, when the boats, barks, etc., have gone a mile or two from the city, blow them up t And it is known that for three or four days the Fes-senden lay in the Cuyahoga river, with steam np, ready to execute tbis order. A correspondent writes to as that six years' experience has convinced him that a I coat of gum copal Tarnish, applied to the ! solas of boots and shoe, and repeated as it dries, until the pore are filled and tbe face shines like polished mahogany, will i make the soles water-proof and also cause them to hut three times, as long as ordinary ; sole. - i EtX I " " one r - Oae-bana cojaeaas tar mii-r OMjear 98 OS On -half eolaain, three saoatba. SS qp ,tl - owe year. Owe ooloma, six aontaa-Owe ectaxoa, ewe year lTaala.ttlaataoBtwweonarsaadlftyoaeta; A atiaaaareaer'a aetjeec tbm aoOara. ' . - The law reqnJrae Adxalaastratarv ofcag to bw edverUa C aad proof ot pablicaiioa lo be llaa la sixty Save Iroea date of taking eat lettera. Tbeateaey at art aeeoapaay sock matawa awa6Maft wHlb rrrwa. Frtoaeaev be 4a cards afafrat Haae ev leas wtU belaearsae hreta itnltawa j ir , 4 CITY CARDS. K. L. KING, X. SCHTXlKTBXaO Aaormty at law. .Sttwrg PMt. KING & SCHIERENBERG, GEXEJtAL COLLECTING AND LAND AGENTS, Jefferson City, Mo.. Wtu pay Taxes ta any OeeaW la (he Staaa. . Will H.alu.M .11 h. . . . MMIBin. w M. a tb Slate. Will collert claim do from the gurarnaaaat er indivtd-aals.Will practice It lathe CMatfe at CM. Cbopar, Caxtd aooibeu. Moreaa, Hilar Osaoaaw Martae. 8pt 8. l.leiw. W. P. BILLINGS, ATTORNET -A.T T, VW. OFFICE I IT POST OFFICE BLOCK, Jefieraon City, Mo. I Ir ILL practice hi Snpretne Coort ant Circuit Court of V V Coi, Cooper, Uaaio. Miller. Morgan, MoaiiMo. Marie. Callawa aad taaaoonaj eoeatiea. . M..j 4. iikm-It. FREDERICK ROETZER Justice of the Peace AND. NOTARY PUBLIC. Orrice os High Street OrrosTri Post Omct, jsrrsssos citt, mo ALL BPMMK9 TRUSTS to aaya prompt attentto.. will elve OrtntNir 13, ISM-IT. DR. L.EOIR. DR. JOBS B A KICK. Physicians, Surgeons AND ACCOUCHEUR SJ Ot'FICK Oppoatle tbe Virginia Hotel, Slab Strwat. Jeff. City, July 20, 186S-ly. Dr. J. H. Otto KraiLse, Phvsician & Accoucheur. fcfJSS OF PICK High Street, Opposite Poetaflee, Jefferaosk City, Me. OctuUr 20. ISSS-ty. DK. R. A. WELLS, HAS resumed the practice of hi Profaasioa la tAls City aodeotinty. Office on High Street, two Doora Eaat of Poet OxsVeo. B. ird at the residence of Waller Boltow. lea., sear tbe Jail, JEFFERSON CITT, NO. Dr. Wall also acta a Examine Soiawn aadar the Halted State Tension Law. Novembers. IStio-dAw-tt Dr. JOHN BAKER, PHYSICIAN, SURGEON, AND ACCOUCHEUR, JEFFERSON CITY, MISSOURI. Office ia old stand of Dr. J. H. Edwards oa Hirh street, opposite Virginia Hotel. Jane 1. 1S60-U. Dr. Krause & Rubin, Oruifijists & Apothecaries. DEALKRd IN DRUGS, MEDICINES, OILS, rAlNTS. window Ulaaa, ec, Ac UIkb sirrvt, op posit tb Poatofflca, Jeffarsoa City, Mo. Ocwber 'JO, lsoa-ly. DRUGS & MEDICINES. A BW 4D Full Assortment or all zisos or Drugs & Medicines, NAT1VS and Khio Wine, excellent Perfa marie , Palnte and DveMuAa, Notion aad Ulaaa. has be received and iafor at DR. N. DoWYlYS DRUG STORE, Oa High Street, Jeffetaom City. Prescriptions put np carefully. O. tober 27, 1865-dAw- PHOTOGRAPHS. COLORED PICTURES. THE undersigned respectfully Informs tb peblietbat be ha mad arranmmente that enable blm to do all kind ol Photographic color! uf, in water and la India Ink. lie den competition ia Iht line ot work. To pablie caa now be accommodated without going to St. Loaia. and at a tea coat. II Is making all kind ot ptrtane worn thw card picture to th. lif aise, and a So a eaa be had la rn country. He Invites the ettiaso to eall and examine bie work. J C. DO Virata, Artist. October 13, 1SS-I y Saw. BOOK STORE, FRANCIS RO ER, Bookseller aad atatlomer, Matlaai Street, JeSToroosk City, Mo. KEEPS always on band ell tbe weekly and saonthly liter' ary pwodicala of tbe country. Also all kind o SbUeoi Hooka, cStetiuaary. Novels, Rellgioa Worka, Historical Worka, Moaie Book. Ac Also a Sac easortmant of Photograph Album and Photograph Picture of all lbs promt Deo t men of tb day. A flu aaaoctowot ef tiold ran. Pencil. Fortmouiea, Ac., alwaya on hand. Order roea school teaebere and country merchant will receive romps atteutieo. rRAJtCIa ROEk. Sept. 2. 166 ly BUSINESS EDUCATION. Wortliiiigton, "Warner's & Co's., Bussiness College. JEFFERSON CITK, MISSOURI. I HIS Institution offer superior advantage to all who desire a sonnd business education, Book-Keepmg ia all Ita departments. Commercial Arithmetic, WerraotiU Law, buainea and Ornaaaentai Ptamaaahip thorongbl' taught. TuiaCotk-zecnr.atltutee a prominent link In tb Greet American Cnain of Busineaa College, a connected eerie ot inatlmtion extending from Main to California. Call or arbd lor Circular. Addresa. WORTHINGTiiN. WARNER A CO., Jefferson City. Mo. January M, ISoo-tf. George Scharmann Public Book Binder, JeOersem City At at. Loola. IS NOW prepared to do all kind of fancy aad plain Bind ing, promptly and in th beat manner. A new Ruling Machine enable him to fnrnlah all kinds of Olauka at aa low price a any other eatablietuaeat ta tb Mat. Order for R1nk Books aad all work la bla Ita r pct fuil? solicited. Ureal car aad atlentiou wlltj he paid binding ol music and micUaonua hooka October H, IHri-V. HARRY "W. MARCEK, Watchmaker & Jeweler, JEFFERSON CITT, MO. WO OLD respeetfally la form my kt friend aa tbe citizen, at Jenerwftn. thmt I h.e. narmanantlf eateMiaoed myself la Mr. Boer's Book Store, Oa Mmbana street, and will attend to th wan' " mf caatosaere. CJ- all woRJa warranted. Pleas give me a call and be eonriaced. HAMCtM October JO, 136S-tf. NEW BiHiard Saloon OVER- OBEBMAYEB'S STORE. reiH PATRONAGE of tbe pablie 1 iwspactrally soil. J. aim. ORIX3HAJOf ES A KENDALL. May 11, 1SM-3-V
Object Description
| Title | Missouri state times (Jefferson City, Mo.), 1866-10-19 |
| Issue Date | 1866-10-19 |
| Issue Year | 1866 |
| Issue Month | 10 |
| Issue Day | 19 |
| Edition | 1 |
| Title Volume | 4 |
| Title Number | 41 |
| Type | Newspaper |
| Source | The State Historical Society of Missouri |
| Rights | These pages can be freely searched and displayed. Permission must be received for distribution or publication. |
| LCCN | sn90061597 |
| Issue Present | Present |
Description
| Title | Missouri state times (Jefferson City, Mo.), 1866-10-19 |
| Page Number | 1 |
| Source | State Historical Society of Missouri; Columbia, MO |
| Transcript | Swawa. " : ...--' - a - - I " K. d. Cooper 1UTJSS OF ADVERTISING. FOSTER fc COOPER. .IKKFEUSON CITY. MO. t J . . 3Wr. , ?i - :!-"' : : Onesrjoare, oneweek i " each addltfeaal weak . i ee - three net he,. a oa It.- t l-KltISUF StjBSCKIPTIOJI. $s oo ,!f Sveormor - 1 SO J -i.,ri..nm-ti every cam be paid for i n adrance. accompany the ordT to Insure attention, j ...anita Weekly Tlaeee mailed for one , 4 U i... wiihfnthe county, ft; within lb Stat. I ..M,;TitbinthCnitelSttes,tweBty-nTcent ! ,tOOIt AXD BLOK PRI5TISO. ..'(:" has unrivalled facilitiea for executing I , .;. r Blnk printing luja nNTior menuer. ..' f! - n any portion ..f th Stat, promptly at- I r.Tma.caen. I 3?octtu From Forney's Weekly Prees K. J 'S GRKAT PKETH. firs: niv great r.ublir career I began, , '. (BlT a Ureenvillian Alderman; : qa:." klv -i.-h:inpei the greeo tnrtU chair e liiore nailed position of Mayor; ,. i vine t.. u-e H my talents and time, j ... to ibe cation bow bigh I could ciimb ; i.j.t. r. d the art of deceatioo 80 we. I, I li-.vei:f my wonderful program to tell. ,, h.,,.pi'r Mre4 with much brazen audacity. ' v'.int of try boaats .f my wondrnni capacity, iaip"l a Ibe people's eotd nature V 1. '-et tlieni to eud me to the Legilatur! 1':; r. Si t be Coogressman, Goreruor and Sen -,1 Ic.irrr!T had proved bow much I waa unfit -i- i,U of Vice President, when a yon know, r...urrferou confe.1er,te ttruck ueatb-blow. That ma i.- every loyal mn, w.m.n "d"?' by making me Pr.ident, made my "' heart glad. . . ' ,.,J I'm now .winging round the circle to show, H a mn in high atation can lay himself tow. y,.a've ail bard, of courae, f my grand pul'OJ. thf -me now it was in Tennessee. V ; ', ;he iraiu-r shall go to back aeala, i fr better plan to award ibem choice meata, lY'Vi-h upon them place, pardona and power ; j , u., ,. ii,elr awetfi leuipera frum a'er getting if.f.JUfr,!t tai have in all thiogti their own way, i'"- i the .Ir-tines of the whole naiioa to iway. 1 , ; . drmt: d that the North, on ita kneel, --.:; let ..uthern brethern do just aa they please, ',.'tV.afr.B.:y triumphant f'er t.egroea at home, 1'.,, . f .ioa'mea down or compel them to roam, Tesra tr ut.lesome loyalita that in the South So l. aii at-a r.st treaaon dre opn hi mouth ; .i ke i. tbir whole country peaceful aud quiet 'nT'd'nt f a Memphis or New Orleana riot, v.. . uh-idi"d pre haa dared to aoooe me, 1 ... e i I... ... . ..juiJ ihat they all were concentrated in one, 1 cbai!fig him then before down went the fjn, Ar,i I'd tir:r.g upon him your hatred and mirth, r .sn out-talk any man on the earth. Wh: right have these fe Iowa to eall me a traitor t j, ;n wing round the circle I crois'd the equa ls I'aion party may go to the d I, E ii j.. call me a Judas ia Tery uncivil ; Of ;r.i' ti there is only one kind that's odious, T. Wt- Canfed-rates from seats eommodioQ lu C"ticr. where they can always freely ask r".t. i t.-.ey want, and in sunshine bask. Vt'wj-d not jet, in fail, my greatness know, v ho i : I''" your tribune 1 Tour Monsieur Veto J ;vf-.if:iil, J .r 1 killed the Bureau bill, ioivbel friends could negroes whip er kill ; At,! 1 Uve tritd to crush all civil rights, Fx-yi fur my sweet brave Confederate whites. 5,.t so man iIk of fighting in the war f,r bore am I I without wound or soar, Adah- has sufl'erivl, struggled, toiled like ma T !i i'ni cinitent to let all go acot free Why cb ul 1 plain mortals dare to make eom- plaiiits, . 'i .u tiiose gentle lambs impose restraints 7 Tf u:.rvinen, beloved ! if vain should prove the aii Af .rl.- i l,y the Buttered Bread Brigade, I; (.'a,ii found a party to prevail, if l 'i.i.trn.-4'is and Copperjuhns must fuil, I; I m'lst ruB'-r the infernal paiu ( . e,.r:t.g news like that they sent from Maine, TS-.i ; i in- "ffer uji (I always do S s?u ii. u tipbt plaee, having naught else new) v .on tiea Uojd aa a last choice libation, c',,ri i r, to surely save the nation. what I've said 'a so wondrous strong. Id n t w'rih while my story to prolong ; i,n vour tine I'll make ao mora demands, lrave the Constilatien in your hands. THE COPPERHEADS. Wha are the men that clamor most A-sitjst the war, its cause and eostT Aid who Jeff. Davis sometimes toast T Ibe Copperheads. Who, when by wretched whisky tight, Hi- out in r.ige their veoomed spite T Who crawl and eting, but never fightT The Copperheads. Wbr. hold peace meetings, where tbey pass L-ngiby revives of wind and gas, Much like the bray of Balaam's ass T The Copperheads. Who, when false faction ia forgot, Wheu patriots keep a common tnoaght, Have discurd and dissension taught 7 The Copperheads. Who fwear by bondage, and would see Rutticr their country lost than free? "Kh: .irtad the name of Liberty ? The Copperheads. Vfc.j hate a freedom-loring press, Toe truth and all who it profess T Wt.' don't believe in our eaooess ? The Copperheads. And who, when Eight has won the day. Will lake their slimy selvea away, Aii 12 their dirty holes will stay? The Copperheads. A: .! hi will be the hiss and scorn "! generations yet aaboro Ualed, despised, disgraced, forsworn ? The Copperheads. ruiTgD utt who sleeps npon my heart, W,l8 the first to win it ; Six who dreams upon my breaat. Ever reigns witbin it ; V wh kisses oft my lips, Wakes the warmest blessing ; who rests within my arms, Fe-ls their closest pressing. ') hr days tbaa these shall eome, buy that may be dreary ; O her hours shall greet us yet, H' srs thnt may be weary ; 'i!i 'bat heart shall be thy borne, v.:H t .at breast tby bead shall pillow "ii! il mi lips meet thine as oft 2 !..w ii.teifelh billow. .-n, then, on my happy heart, .- toy love hath won it ; li'rtm, then, on my loyal brest-- ' ne but th'iu has done it ; l rhn age our bloom shall change, i:h its wintry weather; ' e, iu the self-same grave, otd dream together. A bhip Eace from China to England 14,000 Miles in 90 days. " , five English clipper ships started 1 for a race to London. The Lon-T 'rTrjj.h of 5?fpember 7 says: "'-:.rriv! yesterday in the Downs of Deal of " i' of the clipper ship engaged in the great '- o-sfrom China, created much interest in the tu looked upoa as a most extraordinary p If'-ecd, M-d circumstance. The ships en-; y fie nrett were the Ariel, 853 tons; the , ;y 6; tons; the Taiping, 787 tons; the "'j '"ns and the Sariea, 708 toni. The J.'"1 ''rr ''len wiih tl-.e first ca'go of teas of the '' An jJitonal freight of ten shillings per .';J !"'d the owner by the consignee of the . . '. ?rst 'hip arriving in dock, beaee the -"it. fir ;i;e rice. J. "!"''" Ari' I aod Tapping pawdFoo-cbow-j it L .atm; all on one day, the 30th of May. " 'r failed from the same place OEtbe tbt 29. b, and the Taiuing left on the "Wi-i r' ttxt 'fird of them was from Angier. ... ' S ii,, u follows : Fiery Cross passed "'lti. 1lB of June, the Ariel, Benca, - i t,uS' on tbe S2 June, all wiln-STI ':r each other, running the distance : ,c.v latent 7,700 miles) in twenty- I fTJ;1' '"'vd's gent telegraphed tbe arrival .Fj... . iu ioe ioviii. Aoai Ariel auu V-VP"1 at 'i?ht 'c,',ck n(l the Serica " 'cl,ck. afternoon. They bad u-..V", ta altendance.on them, aod were a at Blaekwell to day. Co to late last H '' " 0(" the race last yesr or the Tait-tTtl "' u m miles, was rue in W days . n-' Of Ul r,lU . J..I mm A it lJ i . Ariei aud Tcpine ran almost seek , ftire pr ssage, the Serlca following -t"rtlLw,E- The time taken in last year's i ,. p vross io aaya ; tne isepiog ii tk pnce, 121 days, and tbe flying A WEEKLY JOURNAL OF POLITICS, COMMERCE; A6EICULTURE, LITERATURE AND ZZIZZIZZZZIZI T)J 4 NO. 41a Unfortunate Mexico. It is difficult, if not impossible, lo ascertain, with any degree of certainty, bow and when the Bunapartean empire of Mexico will terminate The London Timet, review ing the condition aud prospects of this mufchroom concern, anticipates its collapse l.e fore the close of 1866. It ssys : "It is not to be dissembled that the Mexican enterprise is a hopeless failure; and that tbeemptre founded in the capital of ibeAitees by Napoleoa IU has withered away without so much as taking root in the soil. Tbe Empress arrived in Europe a short time ago, and the Emperor, it is expected, mast soon follow his apoase. The cjantry, in fact, sou at be abandoned by ita imperial occupants, like a worthless settlement or an antenable eolony, and Mexico will one more be left at the disposal of a population which baa hitherto exhibited an absolute incapacity for any form of aelf-gorernment.' No one e spec's that the Empress Carlo t! a will return lo Mexico, but it is declared that in a short time Maximilian will rank among the "monarchs retired from bnnmeas, who, ao much abound in tbeeer later days.- Napoleon's experiment of violating the Monroe doctrine has occupied nearly four years. It has coat much ; it has injured his prestige as a statesman; it has made him unpopular to no small degree in France. The question so bard of solution is, what will become of Mexico after the foreign ruler and foreign troops make their exit? Will Mexico then be agitated by the political distractions to which she has been the victim ever since she shook off the Spanish yoke? Will Juarez be strong enough and wise enough to retain his tiosition at the head of the republican party? Already it would appear that Santa Anna is preparing to return with money, u.en, and arms, and this can only be with the hope of again obtaining supreme power. But anarchy may be the result The Time says that if Juarez, by resisting Maximilian, "has acquired in the process any such principles as befit a constitutional ruler, or any such power as is necessary to sustain a government, we may see an independent Mexico in the list of civilized States; but we are not yet acquainted with anv facts which could induce a belief in such an event, and it is far more probable than an immediate return of confusion and another period of murderous anarchy will lead to the disappearance of the country in Ibe United Siatea. With that result Europe will have no deposition to quarrel." But tbe difficulty consists of this: that the moment the common enemy, the imported enemy, the invading Austrian, the Napoleonic cat's-paw, makes bis exit, Mexico is by no means likely to settle down into peace and quiet Were Juarez, or any one strong man known to his countrymen, to be accepted as chief magistrate of the Mexican republic there might be ground for hope; but already two or three other Mexican publicists have given tongue, and intimated that they will not allow Juarez to continue Dictator. After tbe collapse of the empire, civil war has been the normal condition of Mexico almost p-r retually since Santa Anna first took pnrt in public affairs, which was forty-three years ago. When be was at tbe age of twenty five he raised the banner of the republic at Vera Cruz aea'mst that of the first empire and drove It urbide into exile. If we had an nexed Mexico in 1847, after the occupation of the capitafby Generals Taylor and Scott, (as some able and far-geemg statesman aa vLied at tbe time.) tbe destiny of that coun try would have been greatly changed and her condition greatly improved now. It is a matter of nncertainty whether even yet, if anarchy ehonld again afflict that country, it may not be our duty to interfere, and interference would probably end in annexation a convenient and aggrandizing policy which has been recommended practically by England in Asia and by Prussia in Germany. Maximilian, a man of ability and education, was wholly misplaced In Mexico as Napoleon's representative, for he was that and no more. It wanted a bold, rough, strong, arbitrary man, one of the rough and ready Pelissier school, to have governed Mexico under French auspices. We mention Pelissier because his main experience was in Algeria, where be displayed much animal courage and unscrupulous wilL Such a ruler, not even covering the iron hand with the velvet glove, might have had belter luck in Mexico than the Austrian Archduke had At all events he would not have dawdled and delayed in his contest with the national parly as Maximilian did. Had this Austrian gentleman succeeded to tbe crown in prosperous times and without having to defend it with bis sword, he might have ripened into a model emper -r, and his wife, the fair Carlotta, who is said to be master of the house, would possibly have imitated Cleopatra in magnificence. But they derived very little money from the country itself and had to support '"the dignity of the crown" and the cost of a foreign army upon cash bor- owed in Europe at a high rate of interest Tbev have had the crown at any rate, and now, joining the rapidly increasing corps of "monarchs retired Troai business, the ex-Emperor aod ex-Empress of Mexico can live flourishingly in Europe, he restored to bis position and income next his brother, f ran-cis Joseph of Austria, and the, enriched by the vast legscy from her futher, the late K-ng of the Belgians, better able than ever to reign as queen of lasbion in Vienna Supposing that the empire should collapse in Mexico, there yet looms on the future the darkening shadow of a continuous strife with France. There has lately been com pleted a treaty between France and Mexico, whereby Maximilian surrenders to Napoleon one half cf all customs dues received in Mexican ports on the Atlantic seaboard and one-fourth of those dues in seaports on tbe Pacific. These confiscations are to repay France for her expenditure in trying to build up a Litiu monarchy in republican Mexico. Even should Maximilian depart, this legacy will remain a source of exaction on the part of Fianc of discontent and resistance on the part of Mexico. By whom are the customs dues to be collected for Fra ice. and by what military force is that collection to be supported ? Napoleon might leave an army lor the purpose, but, in the commercial slang of the day, "it will not pay. The quarrel between rraDce and Mexico will certainly cot end with the down tall of Maximilian. TTwAintea Chronicle. Singular OcsiTence in Ohio. The Cleveland (Halo) Herald of Friday says:. Yesterday, shortly after twelve o 'clock, a very singular casualty occurred on Hill street. On the north aids of this street is a ravine, perhaps twenty feet deep, occupied by the oil works of Mr. Dela mater and some others. At tbe hoar named the man in charge of Mr. Delamater's works heard a rumbliac noise, aod looking toward the street saw about titty ftet of the bank moving rapidly out into the ravine, aod directly upon tbe works. In an instant a great mass bf earth was precipitated with much force againat tbe building, which, being of wood, cave way, and was crashed to atoms, with several tanks, some machinery, etc. Tbe ravine was suddenly filled to tbe depth of four or ore leet with tbe earth from the bank, the deposit being made evenly, and very moch as if it had been "damped" from wagons. The roadway ef Hill street was carried oat, ana inero is now a imi iunj or fifty feet broad, and nearly half as deep, across the street. Tbe singular feature of the affair i that it was not the falling of a steep bank, but a vast mass ol earth was foroed out horizontally by some unknown agency, carried, some of it, seventy-five yards on nearly a level, and deposited as evenly over the bottom of the ravine as it could have been by hand. There was aoaae water with the slide, but tbe greater part of tbe earth which moved was not even wet. There are various theories among those who saw the slide. The most common is that it was an earthquake, and tbe most probable is that ii was caused by a large accumulation of water aad quicksands under the road, which finally burst their bounds. ii w was. N A SB Y. Sir. Nasby Appeals to the People. - ' From the Toledo Blade. Post Orn Coxfedrit X Roads, fwich ia in the Stait uv Kentuc October 1, 1866. President Johnson, who hez bin likened to Androo Jaxon, and wicb, since my ap-jintruetit, I cosseed hiui to be in many par tikelera bis sooperior, requested me and William II: Seward (bis secretary and chap-lin) to draw np and publish to the Democracy of tbe various Stales hoJdin elecsbuns this fall, an address, or rutber an appeal, firmly beleevin that hed he extended his tour to Maine, and isshood an address to 'em, that that stait would hev goneea it did. William retooled to take part in the appeal, say in that it warnt uv no use ooyoosa, aud ao the dooly devolved upon me. ( ' 'Democbats ako Conservatives , or the North Appreaheatin the gravity uv the is-aboo, I address you. - The signs uv the times is' ominous. A Radikle Congress, eleetid durin tbe lime when the Southin Staits, wicb comprises reely all the intellek uv this peo ple, didn t take no part iu the elekhtiun, bein too bizzy gettiu out uv aiierman a way to open polls, a Congress, I repeat, in wicb there aint no Suihern man, and wicb consekently kant by any stretch uv the hooiuan imaginasbun, be considered Constitooshnel, hez dared to tbwsat the Presidrnt uv the United Suits, and set up il3 will agin his'n ! I need skarcely recount its high handed axuv usurpashun. It passed a bill givin rites to niggers, wich accordin to Scripter (see Ooesi-mtM, Ham and Hager, tbe only three texts in Scripter uv any partikelar account) and the yoosages uv the Democrisy, aint got no rites, and the President exercisin the high prerogatives put into his band by the Con stitoosben, vetoed it Here the matter should hev endid. He bed expressed, in a manner atrikly Constitooshenel, his objeo-shens to the measure, and a proper regard for his feelins and just deference for his opinions, ought to hev indicated the right course. Here wuz peece offered this Congress. Here wut the lender uv a olive branch. The President didn't want a quarrel with Congres he didn't desire a contin-yooance uv the agitation wich hed shook the country like a Illinois ager, but he desired peece. Congres cood bev hed it, hed they only withdrswed their crood noshens uv what wuz rite and what wuz wroog ratified, ez they shood hev dun, sicb laws ez tbe President sw fit to make in short, hed they follered tbe correct rool when we he? a Dem ok r a tic President, and put the Government in his hands, with an abi 'in trust in his rec titood and wisdom, we mite hev avoided this struggle, and thus wood hev bin peeceful. But this reckless Congres, bent upon con-sen tr&t in power in its hands instid uv dividtn it between him and Seward, parsed tbe bill over his hed I regard lis uv his feeling! The responsibility for the dissension rests, there fore, with Congres. But these questions are altogether too befty for the Demokratic intellek, and I fling em out for the considerasden uv the few Postmasters we get from tbe Union ranks. TV. tjje piaioki-L-y I 'I 'Ires iiiytelf wore parlickeleriy. . . - - Do Yon Wast to Marry a Khmer? This ishoo is acin before yoo. Are yoo in favor of elevatin tbe Afrikin to a posishen where he kin be yoor ekal or perhaps yoor soo perior? I bat ishoo Is agin betore yoo in yoor decision, only the dagger to yoo ia in creased. The matter has beoome threatening lor disgise it ei we may, thousands uv em kin read, and they are akkumulatin property and wearln good clothes lo a extent trooly alarmin to tbe Iiti,okratic mind. We hev alluz consoled ourselves with tbe soothin reflection that there wuz a race lower down in the scale of humanity than us ones. Shall we continue to enjoy that comfort? That's (he question for every Dimokrat to consider when he votes this (ill. ' Remove the weight uv legal disability, and ten to one ef tbey dont outstrip us eveu, and then where are we goin to look for a race lo look down upon Its a close thing at ween us cow, and ez we uv this generation cant ele vate ourselves, why for our own peace uv mind we must, I repeet it aver pull them down Agin then I repeet. Do too wast to Marry a Nigger? Your daughters wunst carried banners onto wich was inscribed that trooly Dimokratic motto, "White husbands or none" and in consequence they've bin mostly livin in tbe enjoyment uv none are tney to go back on that holy determinashen to preserve the Anglo Sackson race on ibis continent in its purity 7 Poo you want the nigger the big buck nigger the flit footed nigger the woolly headed nigger the bow legged nigger the mogeb to step up aside uv yoo and exercise Ibe prerogatives nv freemen in tbis country? Do you want the nigger aforesed to be mayors nv yoor towns vriih all the hatred tbey hev towards us? Wat chance, oh Dimokratic dweller in oities, "think yoo, yoo'd hev ef hauled up afore a nigger mayor on a charge nv disorderly con duct ? Wat chance wood yoor children bev in a ekool in wich all tbe teerber wuz niggers? Wat chance wood yoo hev weh ar-reetid for email misdemeanors afore nigger judges? "But" say some uv yoo who, set ravin by drum and flags and sicb, went on violently into the war and wuz, perhaps, saved from starvjn by niger9Tr"these niggers wus onr friends in the late war tbey fought agio the South ? " 01 wat a deloosion! 0! wat a blindnis! froo tbey did. and that shows the danger that's afore us that . lifts the fog from tbe precipice onto wich we arestandin and shows us our danger. Wat does tbia fact prove? It proves the onreasonablenes uv the Nigger his disconteniednis with the posisben to wich nacber assignei. and bis cussid disposition to upset the normal condition. The Bible makes biro, a servant unto his brethren, (see Ham. Hager and Onesimus, three bless.-d texts ) Science proves him to be not a man but a beast, and so to lake him rz we may, either ei our brother or ez a beast, and Diniocrtsy, with that liberality wich hez alius distinguished it, give t-very man his choice, wich theory to lake, his condition is aervi tood. But he, with a cussidness, a perversity wich I never cood understand, flies into the face of the Divine decree, flies into the face of science, and asserts his independence He turned agin them ez bed fostered him turned agin, in many instances, for convenience, his own parents (in these instances, tbe parents adopted the brethren theory) ami for an abstract idea fought agin em. That restlessness under bonds alarmed the Diniocratic mind. We who owned em under tbe skripter (see Onesimus, Hager and Ham) and under tbe eternal laws of scientific troolh. wuz content with the arrangement. by sbood they not hev bin? Things wuz normal. They worked and we eat, and ef they hed bin content with this ekitable di vision uv the labor uv life all wood hev been smooth to-day. Their takia part agin us at the South and in favor uv tbe Federals, is instead uv a cos uv feelin good towards em a source uv on- easiness instid uv bein a reasor for elevatin uv em, its my principal reason for depressin uv em. Sicb. onse'tled minds shood be quieted tbis itchin to raise theirselves shood be crushed out uv em, that Science and Science and Holy Writ (see Onesimus, Hager and Ham) may be vindicated. Sbel ' we desert Androo Johnson after all the trouble be hez bin to in gettin back to us? Sbel we elect a Congress this fall so soaked in Ablisbin so-filled with objeck-shuns td our Southern brethren ez to refooze to receive era back into tbe seats which they bev, vacated? Consider I The Southern Dimokracy bevn't and don't lay np nothin JEFFERSON CITY, FRIDAY,' OCTOBER 19. 1866. agin yoo, Tbey are willing to forgive and forget They railed, but they are will us to forgive the cause uv their faUyoor. They, hevn't got tbe government they wanted, but they find no fault with that, but are wiHin to take charge uv the won tbey hev bin compelled to liv under. Kin they offer fefj The fate uv war was agin em, baryta all bard feelina tbey extend to us Cbriscben charity, and say here we are, take us, give us our old places. They hev bin chastened their household gods bev bin destroyed, and their temples torn down. Wun neighbor uv mine lost two sons in the Confedrit army; another aon wich he hed refused $1,500 for in 1860, he wuz compelled to shoot, cos be wax bound to run awsy into the Federal army, which, he hed a dozen'gtoea refoosed $2,500 for, each, iq Noo Crlejwsbe saw layln dead on the atepa av a airfjol boose in Memphis. Hez be suffered nqthin?, And yet he ia willia sxi take a seat in Congress forgittin all, fee, B? suffered, and forgivts the cause thereof. What wickedness it is, with wood further bruise sich a broken reed. Therefore, ez yoo luv yoorselves and bate the nigger, I implore yoo to act Take yoor choice uv tbe platforms uv tbe different States vote ez a Johnson Union or a vemo crstic Johnsonian but vote. Kentucky holds out her hands appealing-ly I Kentucky implores yoo to bild op a bulwark north uv the Ohio river to save what little there is uv pure Dimocracy there 1 Kentucky will back yoo in yoor endeavors. Will yoo heed her cry ? Sbel she appeel in vain ? Forbid it Hevin ! Petroleum V. Nasbt, P. M , (wich is Postmaster.) The Jonahs of the South. The New York Pott, in an article entitled "Cultivating Hatred" says : "But more mischievous than even the mistaken course of too many publio journals is the conduct of a number of leading men of the Southern States, who insist on putting themselves forward for official positions. What business has a person like Semmes, the commander of tbe Alabama, for instance with any official position in tbe United States ? He is a paroled prisoner of war, and therefore, has no right of citizenship He is an unpardoned offender against the Constitution, and is therefore without any rights except that of life, secured to him by bis parole Yet, in spite of all this, be allows biujelf to be eleoted to an official position in Alabama; when elected he impudently sends to the President for a pardon, and when this ia refused be d-c!ints to resign the office which be is not allowed to 611, and writer that be regards himself as 'an humble representative of the honor and dignity of bis State.' "So, too, Alexander Stephens, who did not scruple to hold the piece of Vice President of be rebel Confederacy, std who Is an amnestied traitor, permits himself to beseot to the United States Senate We hear of other cases, of mn under similar disabilities, seeking publio office ; indeed, we doubt if one-half the men who are now leading and forming the sentiment of the Southern Stat8 have been pardoned, or are vet relieved of tbe condition of paroled prisoners of war. . '"Now, this -conduct is mere selfishness. Tfhese men forget their position and the crime which has placed them jn bonds, and try to regain their od eminence and control by putting themselves at the head of ,be Southern people. If tbey had the peace of the country and the welfare of their States at heart, they would strenuously avoid public life, and rigidly refuse all office and place, and content themselves with urging upon their fellow-citizens a just and reasonable course. "As it is, they put themselves in the way of a speedy reconstruction they openly insult the loyal people of the country ; tbey put a strong argument in the mouths of those who oppose all attempts at reorganization. There is, in the Northern States, no feeling of hatred, or even of dislike, to the Southern people. On the contrary, the mss of the population of tbe Southern States is regarded with the utmost fairness. Ask even the bitterest 'Radical,' and be will tell you that he believes the white people of tbe South to have been sincere in tbe(r rebellious conduct mistaken, fatally misled, but sincere. But there is here, very naturally and properly, a determination that those who misled them shall not now take the foremost placps of power and trust. "Paroled deserters like Semmes, unamnas-tied traitors like Stephens; men who swore to support the Union and then engaged in an effort to destroy it J men who swore to defend the flag, and then deserted to its enemies, and tried to bumble it ; such men msy be permitted to live; they may be allowed to remain in security in the country; but it is incident for them to foist themselves jnto office sgain, and it will not be tolerated. If they insist on weighing down the ship of reorganization with their ambitious schemes, they may yet sink it, or tbemselrea They are a parcel of Jonahs, and tbe sooner thev are flung overboard, or put themselves off, the better. - It is sometimes nrged that they are well-intended men, that they are only anxious to serve their" fellow citizens. If this is true, they can best ahow it by retiring altogether from public affairs into the strict-eat privacy." Another Sccial Problem. Tbe San f ranciseo Monitor, as follows, gives a grave picture of the merits of the Chinese as a class, and of the effect of their nreaene nn the nrftanflritw nf a mmmnnilw i i i 1 j '-j j We were informed, a month or to ago, that a person bad arived in tins city, from New Orleans, lo make arrangements for tbe transfer of three hundred Chinamen to work on Southern plantations, and as all distinctions of race and color are abolished by the Civil Rights bill, so fsr as Congress can do so, we imagine the day not far distant when copper-colored Pngao labor will be submitted for tbe labor of the white man in all the Atlantic States These coolies, for such tbey are, are a demoralizing blight to any community in which they are domiciled. They are active and ingenious, it is true, good copyist, quick of comprehension, and useful drudges; but they are filthy, thievish and infamously vile. Tbey are brought to this city as merchandise, to be parcelled out on the labor market, with no other condition than the supply of their animal wants and their return borne, living or dead, at the end of the term contracted for. Very few of them return alive, but continue to work on their own account after the expiration of their term of service, and after death their bodies are picked up and transferred to the "Flowery kingdom" annually. . There aa several companies trading under real or assumed names, engaged in their import and export to and from tbis city. The Chinese population of California may be set down at 75,000; but it may aot become ua now to present any details of the demoralizing influences of so large a hethen population on a State which casta a little over one hundred thousand votes or about fifteen thousand votes lets than were cast in 1856. The reduction of fifteen thousand votes in ten years, and in a new State which offers unprecedented inducements, affords indubitable proof that tbe Mongolian race is ret pulsive to tbe Caucasian, aod we know that the vast majority of whites on this coast, of all conditions of life, are desirous to return "home" at soon aa they can. Mr. Keith Johnston and other gentlemen engaged in the exploration of Palestine have discovered at Tell Hum, the ancient temple of Capernaum, nearly entire. Conaerratiam ra. Radicalism ConiavATiaM : T tfett&W pntcrrc, an L. Badicaus; T reforn. Ttmove. eraJicuU The firef conflict between Conservatism and Radicalism is described in the "first chapter 6f Genes!'" when "the earth was withoet r form aod void, and darkness was upon the face of .the deep, and the Spirit of God moved upon the fac of tbe waters" Inanimate nature was io the Conservative condition of Chaos, and ! "God saii, let there be light, - - 6ns darkless felt His might, '- ' Aad fled swav. The purple seas and mountains cold, ' Shims forth all bright with Mas an. geld, , .. And eried, 'Us day I 'tie UyJ'; . . -.Noah was a' RaeJieal, aSd his eootiaued warning f the impeodiog flo4, (though coming f om God,) was too radical an idea to obtain pyp en&liitXw tte antMelttvian conservatives of bis time. He built the ark in violation of all well established conservative principles; the flood came; Noah floated upon the waters, and conservatism went under. Christ the great radical principle of the universe embodied, waa a terrible eyesore to the conservative Jews. It waa a most shocking spectacle to them to witness the healing of the sick, raining the dead and the preaching of strange doctrines to the people without permission from the Levitjcal Priesthood, so that in him Radicalism was crucified by Conservatism; intending to crush it, but under tbe mysterious operation of the Divine law, sealing the convenant for the salvation of tbe Gentile world; another blow to Conservatism. At his death tbe Apostles went forth, were imprisoned and stoned, as Radicals ever have been and ever will be until the millennial day, when conservatism must become radical, or cross the Styx. Gallileo was impiously radical when he announced that "the world turned" the conservative church, as usual, consigned him to a dungeon. Harvey shocked the conservatism of the doctors in proclaiming tbe vital current. Columbus, adopting the radical idea of Gallileo, told conservative Europe that he could either sail round the world, or discover a new one The Priests denounced hint as a blaspheme; the Savans ai insane; but Isabella had faith in radicalwni, and gave him "ships and money ;" he sailed, his crews were conservative), and threatened mutiny if he did not return; he begged from their conservatism three days time, and gave tbe world America. Guttenburg outraged conservatism in the invention of type and the printing press, and fled from Paris to escape the conservatism of the church, which denounced him as an agent of the devil, for printing too' many bibjes He was the first book printer, and his invention is destined to eradicate conservatism. Tbe telescope, tbe watob, the quadu rant, the compass, the thermometer, the barometer, the dauuerreotype, the telegraph, the sewing machine, the reaper, tbe cotton gin and tbe monitor, are all the legitimate children of radicalism ; tbe steamship as illustrated in the Gretl Eastern, a vsst floaticgworld, propelled at tremendous speed by a power developed from nature by radicalism, and which conservatism, will not understand, illustrate the principle as compared with the floating galley of tbe ancients, propelled" by ors, or the canoe of the Indian, the true representative of conservatism. The Mexican, who transports his firewood upon a don key 'a back, and culivates his land with a crooked stick, lied by a rope to his mqle's tail, is tbe true type of conservatism, while radicalism shows the locomotive, dragging her thousand tons with "railroad speed." and the steam plow nf the Illinois prairie aa Ler appropriate representatives The harvest of the conservative French peasant are cut with a sickle, gathered by hia wife and children, and thrashed with a flail; the grain fields o tue American Radical are ploughed by at earn, planted witU the "drill" cut, g4ther.d, thrashed and winnowed by the "harvester." In horticulture, conservatism tenaciously adheres to the seedling, the hitter almond, the wild cb,erry, the fox grape, and simple wild fjower of the foresr and the prairie While Radicalism produces therefrom the Newton Pippin, Bellefluere, Spitsenberg, Golden Russetts, tbe Malacatoona, Rareripes, the Begereau, Duchess de Angeloame, Van Mons, Bouclett and Seckel, the Black Hamburg Catawba, Mayduke and Napoleons, Stc The whole family of roses and the infinite world of flowers that fallow o their train, the results of the skill, patient industry and love of beauty of the radical florist In the conflict of armies, that of conferva tism and radicalism has also appeared. When at Tharsalia, the lancers of Caesar thrust their spears into the faces of Pompey's cavalry, they, perhaps, violated tbe conservative rules of Roman warfare, but Cteiar was victoriousHannibal's escape from tbe encircling legions of the Romans by makingtorch-bearers of the cattle of his pens, may have outraged conservatism, but Hannibal was successful. Napoleon, as the champion of the radical school nf "strategy and the art of war" conquered conservative Europe, and waa only defeated wben bis enemies adopted his principles. Grant at Vicksburg and Richmond, Sherman at Atlanta, Aa, each voluntarily abandoned bis "base." Conservative traitors predicted failure, yet they crnshed the rebellion. Of the races, the negro is the Prince of eonservativee In bis native clime slavery is indigenous. There he tenaciously adheres to it With him it is a divine institution, and perpetnated only by continual wars. Tbe King of Dahomey is conservatism embodied. The Mexican has bis Peon slavery. Tbe institution is found in a most flourishing condition among me interior races ; among the superior types of the human family it has now entirely disappeared. In our late struggle conservatism clung to it aa its vital part, but radicalism demonstrated that it was an element of weakness. Tbe American of the free States, where socially the negro ia almost unknown, ia the h;ghest specimen of the enlightened radical, while in tbe slave States, tbe influeuce of the negro, even as a slave, has conserved conservatism " After the negro, the Indian is tbe next best conservative He adheres to madie life, notwithstanding that the radical white man has eradicated the forests, ploughed up and planted tbe prairies of his ancient hunting grounds, and the future presents no hope, but tbe ultimate extermination of hia race, he is eontervative ttUL The conservative Hindoo retains hia Juggernaut ; the Japanese the custom of suicide and national isolation. Feudalism has been crushed io the conflict with radicalism in Europe, but its representative, conservatism, .still struggles to retain ascendency. Here, as in Europe, conservatism sought to repeal Feudalism in ihe monopoly of immense landed estates, thro' African slavery, to crush popular education, freedom of , thought, freedom of auffrage, establish a wealthy caste, and degrade and impoverish the masses. Radicalism sought to equalize the lands by confining their ownership to the cultivator, to establish universal education, freedom of thought, of speech, and to enrich the masses. In the prolonged struggle, conservatism appealed to arms and was beaten. With African slavery, the whole capital and power of conservatism in this country is destroyed, the nation's safety secured. . The American Republic stands now before the world as tbe champion and embodiment of Radicalism ; Conservatism, the child of barbarism, may, like the Indian, plainly foresee the doom of the future, but without in hope of recuperation will not of cannot effect inennevuaoie reams. - - . The nation, riaing from the straggle like a vonrifli viant iam in k.. . u - i z z . .c uqkiuj uis suiuoe , oi mnnue growtn in numbers, wealth and ( power, to whose form of Goverrrment, prioci- pies and policy, all other people and nwitooa must uium&ieij comorm.. ' ' ; Life on the Plains. INTERESTING BKMINI3CX03 0 KIT ., . ; CABSOJT. A correspondent of the Cincinnati Cbav. merdal haa bad an interview with IT it fVreon who communicated to him the following' interesting reminiscences : L - All the Indiana, banters and trappers ride wiui eatoriaiirTup. sna aunoat iow-tegted from it -It ia more insnnrft towhe Indian tbaa 'to the white man, as it ia only by aid of ine stirrup mar be can shirt His position, hanging down on one side, so as to conceal all his body but his leg His leg is all you have to fire at, as he throws himself on the side buttocks, or around the neck of the horse. On tbis account, atso, they hang the stirrups well forward. Some . one referred to Carson's intimate knowledge of Indian strstegy. "Why, yea, I am up to a good many of their tricks, but they fooled me once they fooled me pretty bsd that time MI tell you about it It was in let me see yes, 1833. There were six of us hunters out after buffalo, up in the Snake country. We had made a pretty good hunt, and came into camp at night, intending to start in next morning with our hunt Well, we camped Had a good many dogs with us, some of them good dogs. They had barked a good deal, and we heard wolves. As I lay by tbe fire, I aaw one or two big wolves sneaking about camp one of them quite in it Gordon wanted to fire, but I would not let him, for fear of hitting some of the dogs. "'I had just a little suspicion that the wolves might be Indiana, but when I saw them turn short round, and heard the snap of their teeth when tbe dogs came too close to one of 'em, I felt easy then, and made sure it was a wolf. The Indian fooled me that time Confound the rascal,' becoming animated, 'coufound, the rascal, do you think be didn't have two old buffalo bones in his hand that he cracked together every time that he turned to snsp at the dogs t Well, by and by, we dozed off to sleep, and it wasn't long before I was awoke by a crash and a blaze. I jumped straight for the mules and held 'em. If tbe Indians had been smart, they'd a had ua all, but they ru.n aa soon as tbey fired. Tbey killed hut one of us poor Davis, bad five bullets in hia body, and eight in his buffalo robe. The Indians were a band of Sioux, on the war path after the Snakes, and came on ua by accident They tried to waylay us next morning, but we killed three of 'em including their chief. '"Whea I first went over into California in 1849, the valleys were full of Indian tribes. Indians were thick everywhere, aod I saw a great deal of some large and flourishing tribea When I was there again in 1859 they bad all d.isa.ppeaTeiS, and when I inquired about certain tribes I had seen on the spot, was told by the people living there that they had neyer heard of the TO.' ' .We tke the following interesting financial article from the Cincinnati Gautt of Friday) It is time that the people were befiaalng to prepare the-r selves for a sharp sontraeuon of the currency. It is particularly Important that the National Banks were preparing for it. Mr. Me-Cu I loch's poliey is manifestly in that direction. Re has now very naarly aa much eurreacy in the Treasnry as when lie eommeneeri tbe payment of the temporary loan, and bis balaaoea are steadily increasing, while nearly all his obligations that weald mature within a year are out of the way. Ia addition be holds $60,000,900 in gold exelasively of that represented by certificates uf deposit. Of greenbaok-s there are less than $400,000,000 in escalation, while there is autherity to cancel ft, 009,-000 of these per month, (a addition the Secretary has authority to sell gold bearing kinds for lawful messy. (ow suppose Mr. MeCnllnet should look ip within the next sixty days $100,010,000 in greenbacks, la it not evident that the notes remaining oat would at onee go to a premium, and from that moment woajd virtually be withdrawn from circulation? Then the National Basks would be called upoa to redeem, and the whole accorting machinery of the country woald go into operation. This is to he tbe first step ia the direction ef specie payments the first effeotlve step, we mean and whea it is taken it will be felt Then will fallow, not immediately, bat in due coarse, specie payments. Thai Mr. McC.lloeh expects lo be able to resume specie payments some time during his administration is certain ; that he believes he will be able to resume early ia 1887 is generally asder-stood ; bat in the latter expectation he will ua-deobtedly be disappointed. But within three months he caa ferae national Banks to redeem ia greenbacks, and that will be as much of a shock as the conn try eaa safely stand within one year. It does not require a prophet to foretell the effect apoa values of the withdrawal of $100,000,00 ef greenbacks within the next ninety days, and the consequent necessity for greenback redemption en the part of the National Banks. This would be equivalent to tbe withdrawal of at least $300,000,000 of paper money from aetive circulation. To this contingency easiness men and banks, if they woald avoid the worst conseqaeneee of panics, and failares, should look forward now with a view to preparing for the ehaoge which Mr. M oCaltoah has ia een-tampletioa."The Cholera at Naples. Correspondence of the London Times. NAPtn, September 17, 1866. The cholera inoreasea rather than dimin ishea in intensity. On some days in several quarters, and especially tbeCbiaja, tbe place of greatest resort, though the leait healthy. every case proved fataL For one or two days there was a slight diminution, but again the bulletin rose, aud tbe last rejiort I have given for the city cases, 110; deaths. 79; while, including the neighboring townships, tbe cases were 18V aud tbe dealha 129. Torre del Greco and Torre -Anunziata continued to be greatly afiicted, and daily one or two new places are added to the d:streasinfc list of infected place Thanks to past paternal and priestly gov ernment, which did all it could to keep the people in ignorauce, tbe epidemic is not tbe only evil we have to contend with, but to this is added that of the sottish prejudices and superstition of the massea. Many conceal their illness, fearful of tbe poison which may be administered by tbe medical men ; shun tbe druggist lest he may give them "aaputta" assemble in crowds in the churches, and get up processions in honor of the Ma donna, while neglecting the most obvtoua hygienic laws. Among tbe crowd, too, may be discovered priests and men enjoying the title of "galantuomini" who encourage the delusion, and I could name those who have been guilty of these follies, and those who have sunered from them. It was hoped that tbe heavy rains which have fallen tbia week would have produced a favorable change, but a slight consideration might have shown that tbe decomposition of the summer accumulations of filth would produce just the opposite result There can be no hesitation in saying that Naples and the neighborhood are paying the penalty of their neglect of the simplest laws of health. I conclude with fresh intelligence of tbe fearful progress of the cholera. It ia spreading a panic all around us and in all diree tions. Saturday especially was a 'die irce, and the weather, which is aa close and hot as the month of Jul v. readers it but too probable that the epidemS will go on in creasing. At lorre Anunziata there is an entire street which baa been swept of its inhabitants, and ia shut np! The cattle plague has broken" out with great intensity in Galiicia, Moravia, and Hungary. 5 (JO GENERAL NEWS. WHOLE NUMBER 199. A Convict Farm in Ireland. The Dublia frwJmmit Journal gives the following description of convict farm at Lusk, Ireland. .vTi ffrni k ,i,ut oat one mile from tbe Rush and Lusk station on the Drogheda feawey, and commands a fine prospect ot the swrownding country, with the sea at d lmbay Island in the distance to the aouth-Entering by a green lane from the nigh road the visitor finds himself in a kind el eemp square, on which are erected two obloog buildings of eo irrigated jr0n, or.e serving aa a dormitory and dining hall and the other as a workshop. At the opposite ? quare is tbe cook-bouse, superintendents office and officers' quarters, and at the rwar at.M. J u 1. . - j uu iw-DDanR Along the boundary wall oa tbe western aid. kxag eneas bn wnlch rhe convicts break stone on wet days All the buildings have been erected by tbe prisoners. The arrangements in wumiiwjry are quite man or-war rash-- Hammocks were never stowed away the nettinffo" nvn u...n.n. .1 ion in the beds. hiatast. Uaa; ed along the sides of the apartment wbich umoer ana furnished with an American atova in iha r u- n . - -WW VI UWI. The arrangements for ventilation and light- In the workah fins! nUAVIlinn Kan a kriAn wm J .-a. BJ'a V V ioivu UM a;r I i,ur for performing tbe necessary carpenter's work required on the farm, which, taken all J "oold remind a person of what he bad read of a well-arranged and circumstanc edsetUement in the colonies. Tbe persons who are admissible to become occupiers of the farm aa workers are the convicts who have Daaaed ihrnink ; nnk. i course in Smitbfield, Mountjoy, or Spike Island penitentiaries, and the book in which the biography of each ia kept telle how strict j and severe is the exeAtiturlA nf th Hii. i pline thev If! ailhlM Ia lea .nam Aftnnn I t " - j - w mm vsavj vuiuuiii ao i the name of the offender and Ihe offence of which he waa viaMAVrl rA Irs aa waa.wK... t -- w http://wwwia,t ajsaavai iu ea uuuiuv;! others is the record of his riaing from class wets, oy good conduct, and also the petty traoegreasione which threw him back again tory of the erring man toiling up to goodness, and bis occasional falls in the steep aau., a !? 1 . ... ""' wnicn ne seeks to climb; an.l, perhaps, that knnlr tlla Af nn " uin mF. IIU belp enough, or of minor obsticles being put ruaa oi nis progress. Occasionally be is trioed Ufl sS Trtd I ui iA ti a fttt w a Ae en a Vli path back tq goodness, and often retarded in hia firaarMi In anrJK tva V, . discipline. The average number of con- Vicla at Lusk farm is generally fifty five; but at Dreaent them fnri aon . Tl,u are principally engaged in farm operations. "wme notion win ne formed ot the good which haa been accomplished when a glance is given at the following facts : "There are at present contained in the fsrm 170 acres, divided as follows : Wheat, 38 acres; oats, 28 acres ; potatoes, 24 acres ; mangolds, 4 aorea; turnips, 4 acres; carrots, I acre; vetches, 1 acre, vegetables, I acre; twnuuw, JU acres; grazing land, ol acres; rP 2 acres Fourteen well bred young DllZS are he in if reared wnrl nfton h,l nf cattle are on tbe land This is all good and In aright direction, but it ia not enough uo l. a f . .. fc 1 i . . i r i " m rwi piau uas oeeu ineu anl lounj to work wonderfully Persons should not suppose that the cocvicls are pampered or overfed ; io no prison is the work half so severe, and out of the sixpence a week allowed to each they generally inve&t it in 1 1 1 r , ma puituaw oi oreaci. The dav of the convict w rlivitloH aa fal lows: At 5 o'clock the bell ring for all to ne, fold beds, and dress: 5;30. officers' parade and unlocking of dormitories; 3.35, prayer; 6 o'clock, breakfast of stirabout and milk ; 6:30, parade and proceed in classes lo work; 12 o'clock, dinner on four days beef, bread and potatoes, on three d tys potatoes, tuilk and bread ; 1 o'clock, resume work ; a nrlnB lltnnA, ef Kra.. 1 mr,A ,.fr. . g.Tii school and lecture by Mr. Dally, discipline omcer ana registrar; t.JV r. m, make beds; 7:43, prayer; 8, lock up and 9 bed. We walked through the farm as the convicts 1 ! . a . I 1 . - f arm rujcagcu reaping, under me direction oi afr firallawhttP aoviMittnpul Biin...ini..n,I..Ai Tbey were honest workers, tryioft to make imPlliiA frir Wrnn 0a int-i A an, all m. a.m. pthi?a -ind best wishes were wiih the reaper?, aavi I k awtiAtM 1 1 1 1 J L.a- i . I T'-a nuvui aa glMJU luru feUUUlU UV UJ Ufip aad encourage and aid them in their atriv- HA. . . A.. L. t -I . . , , mi gc iwa to sua poaitiou suey naa lost." The Southern Pine Forests. A correspondent of the New Orleans Picayune, calling attention to the proBts which may be de rive from the distillation of the pine gum into rosia aad tarpentiae, makes the following calculation of the probable expenditure and yield of aa orchard of 100,000 boxes : Cost of land, say 2,000 acres $2,000 Cost of still, Ae...... .. 3,000 wsges of manager or foremaa at J100 per month Wages of tea good boxers and packers at $40 per month . .. . Wagee of cooper from April till October, at 1,200 3,800 BOO per month......... ........-420 Wages sf distiller from April till October.... 420 Wages of teamster from April till October, at $40 per moots........ ........ 28(1 Wsges of four hands to dip daring seven . nvlbs........ . 1,120 Oast of barrels far rosin and spirits..... 1,000 Wagon and male team .. 800 Two hones, saddles, Ac 300 Coaliagfto! ex peases . ,ou0 Total necessary expenses 517.310 The yield of such an orchard during the Srst year, when properly cultivated, should be about 2,500 barrels of "Virgin Dip" gnm, yielding on distillation about 1,700 barrels of while rutin aod 17,000 gallons of spirits of turpentine. Estimatiug roeio at ten dollars per barrel, and tbe spirits at Bity eeals per sajlon, we have a sross tirmlaclinn the first year of about $25,000, with a clear profit ia money oi a.ouu, oesides ma land, toe urrrarJ and the still. The orchard will last tea yen and the still almost as long. From Virginia to Texas a vast forest of primitive pines sweeps ia an unbroken extent alone the At lantic and Gulf shores of all the seaboard UUa of the late Sontbern Confe-ierary. In some parts this forest is a mere fringe of stunted pinrs, serving as a boas lary between the more fertile high lands aad the sea. But in Florida, Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana it covers large portions of the State, aad contains eome moat valuable varieties of the tree. President Johnson and the Fenians The following paragraph seems to demand some sort of attention from those it incul pates : Tbe Sandusky Register states that in a speech in that city a few days ago, Ibe Hon. Joseph M- Root, late United Stales District Attorney for Northern Ohio, said be considered he was not breaking official faith when he related one fact in regard lo the Administration and tbe Fenians, which occurred during tbe Canadian excitement. He, as district attorney, and Marshal Bill, received instructions from Washington to watch closely all organization, learn about the storsge of arms, Aa, but in we of any attempted expedition from Cleveland not to interfere to prevent the movement until it was under way. But, said the instructions, when the boats, barks, etc., have gone a mile or two from the city, blow them up t And it is known that for three or four days the Fes-senden lay in the Cuyahoga river, with steam np, ready to execute tbis order. A correspondent writes to as that six years' experience has convinced him that a I coat of gum copal Tarnish, applied to the ! solas of boots and shoe, and repeated as it dries, until the pore are filled and tbe face shines like polished mahogany, will i make the soles water-proof and also cause them to hut three times, as long as ordinary ; sole. - i EtX I " " one r - Oae-bana cojaeaas tar mii-r OMjear 98 OS On -half eolaain, three saoatba. SS qp ,tl - owe year. Owe ooloma, six aontaa-Owe ectaxoa, ewe year lTaala.ttlaataoBtwweonarsaadlftyoaeta; A atiaaaareaer'a aetjeec tbm aoOara. ' . - The law reqnJrae Adxalaastratarv ofcag to bw edverUa C aad proof ot pablicaiioa lo be llaa la sixty Save Iroea date of taking eat lettera. Tbeateaey at art aeeoapaay sock matawa awa6Maft wHlb rrrwa. Frtoaeaev be 4a cards afafrat Haae ev leas wtU belaearsae hreta itnltawa j ir , 4 CITY CARDS. K. L. KING, X. SCHTXlKTBXaO Aaormty at law. .Sttwrg PMt. KING & SCHIERENBERG, GEXEJtAL COLLECTING AND LAND AGENTS, Jefferson City, Mo.. Wtu pay Taxes ta any OeeaW la (he Staaa. . Will H.alu.M .11 h. . . . MMIBin. w M. a tb Slate. Will collert claim do from the gurarnaaaat er indivtd-aals.Will practice It lathe CMatfe at CM. Cbopar, Caxtd aooibeu. Moreaa, Hilar Osaoaaw Martae. 8pt 8. l.leiw. W. P. BILLINGS, ATTORNET -A.T T, VW. OFFICE I IT POST OFFICE BLOCK, Jefieraon City, Mo. I Ir ILL practice hi Snpretne Coort ant Circuit Court of V V Coi, Cooper, Uaaio. Miller. Morgan, MoaiiMo. Marie. Callawa aad taaaoonaj eoeatiea. . M..j 4. iikm-It. FREDERICK ROETZER Justice of the Peace AND. NOTARY PUBLIC. Orrice os High Street OrrosTri Post Omct, jsrrsssos citt, mo ALL BPMMK9 TRUSTS to aaya prompt attentto.. will elve OrtntNir 13, ISM-IT. DR. L.EOIR. DR. JOBS B A KICK. Physicians, Surgeons AND ACCOUCHEUR SJ Ot'FICK Oppoatle tbe Virginia Hotel, Slab Strwat. Jeff. City, July 20, 186S-ly. Dr. J. H. Otto KraiLse, Phvsician & Accoucheur. fcfJSS OF PICK High Street, Opposite Poetaflee, Jefferaosk City, Me. OctuUr 20. ISSS-ty. DK. R. A. WELLS, HAS resumed the practice of hi Profaasioa la tAls City aodeotinty. Office on High Street, two Doora Eaat of Poet OxsVeo. B. ird at the residence of Waller Boltow. lea., sear tbe Jail, JEFFERSON CITT, NO. Dr. Wall also acta a Examine Soiawn aadar the Halted State Tension Law. Novembers. IStio-dAw-tt Dr. JOHN BAKER, PHYSICIAN, SURGEON, AND ACCOUCHEUR, JEFFERSON CITY, MISSOURI. Office ia old stand of Dr. J. H. Edwards oa Hirh street, opposite Virginia Hotel. Jane 1. 1S60-U. Dr. Krause & Rubin, Oruifijists & Apothecaries. DEALKRd IN DRUGS, MEDICINES, OILS, rAlNTS. window Ulaaa, ec, Ac UIkb sirrvt, op posit tb Poatofflca, Jeffarsoa City, Mo. Ocwber 'JO, lsoa-ly. DRUGS & MEDICINES. A BW 4D Full Assortment or all zisos or Drugs & Medicines, NAT1VS and Khio Wine, excellent Perfa marie , Palnte and DveMuAa, Notion aad Ulaaa. has be received and iafor at DR. N. DoWYlYS DRUG STORE, Oa High Street, Jeffetaom City. Prescriptions put np carefully. O. tober 27, 1865-dAw- PHOTOGRAPHS. COLORED PICTURES. THE undersigned respectfully Informs tb peblietbat be ha mad arranmmente that enable blm to do all kind ol Photographic color! uf, in water and la India Ink. lie den competition ia Iht line ot work. To pablie caa now be accommodated without going to St. Loaia. and at a tea coat. II Is making all kind ot ptrtane worn thw card picture to th. lif aise, and a So a eaa be had la rn country. He Invites the ettiaso to eall and examine bie work. J C. DO Virata, Artist. October 13, 1SS-I y Saw. BOOK STORE, FRANCIS RO ER, Bookseller aad atatlomer, Matlaai Street, JeSToroosk City, Mo. KEEPS always on band ell tbe weekly and saonthly liter' ary pwodicala of tbe country. Also all kind o SbUeoi Hooka, cStetiuaary. Novels, Rellgioa Worka, Historical Worka, Moaie Book. Ac Also a Sac easortmant of Photograph Album and Photograph Picture of all lbs promt Deo t men of tb day. A flu aaaoctowot ef tiold ran. Pencil. Fortmouiea, Ac., alwaya on hand. Order roea school teaebere and country merchant will receive romps atteutieo. rRAJtCIa ROEk. Sept. 2. 166 ly BUSINESS EDUCATION. Wortliiiigton, "Warner's & Co's., Bussiness College. JEFFERSON CITK, MISSOURI. I HIS Institution offer superior advantage to all who desire a sonnd business education, Book-Keepmg ia all Ita departments. Commercial Arithmetic, WerraotiU Law, buainea and Ornaaaentai Ptamaaahip thorongbl' taught. TuiaCotk-zecnr.atltutee a prominent link In tb Greet American Cnain of Busineaa College, a connected eerie ot inatlmtion extending from Main to California. Call or arbd lor Circular. Addresa. WORTHINGTiiN. WARNER A CO., Jefferson City. Mo. January M, ISoo-tf. George Scharmann Public Book Binder, JeOersem City At at. Loola. IS NOW prepared to do all kind of fancy aad plain Bind ing, promptly and in th beat manner. A new Ruling Machine enable him to fnrnlah all kinds of Olauka at aa low price a any other eatablietuaeat ta tb Mat. Order for R1nk Books aad all work la bla Ita r pct fuil? solicited. Ureal car aad atlentiou wlltj he paid binding ol music and micUaonua hooka October H, IHri-V. HARRY "W. MARCEK, Watchmaker & Jeweler, JEFFERSON CITT, MO. WO OLD respeetfally la form my kt friend aa tbe citizen, at Jenerwftn. thmt I h.e. narmanantlf eateMiaoed myself la Mr. Boer's Book Store, Oa Mmbana street, and will attend to th wan' " mf caatosaere. CJ- all woRJa warranted. Pleas give me a call and be eonriaced. HAMCtM October JO, 136S-tf. NEW BiHiard Saloon OVER- OBEBMAYEB'S STORE. reiH PATRONAGE of tbe pablie 1 iwspactrally soil. J. aim. ORIX3HAJOf ES A KENDALL. May 11, 1SM-3-V |
