"f 1)“. HUSTE'I'TER‘S numeronu friends will plenno accept. hm sincere thanks to: their libs‘ml patronage and prompt payment. and wmlid announce that he will continue to devote (“0 whole ofhis attention. to the prac- tice of Mrdictno. Surg‘ury and Midwi'ery. All Cullu. (night or dnyfl promptly altcndud to. Elgiu Mills, October 5,1866. JOIN M. REM), M. 1)., CUR. 0F YONGE AND COLBURNE STS., (Innmllminhn in lh- ofï¬ce on the morning- of 'l'uu-dm‘s. Tllulxdny- and Sulunlayn. 8 10 10.1.. m. [TAN consultations in (In: uflico, M. TEEFY, ESQ, Notary Public, COMMISSIONER IN IHE QUEEN’S BENCH, (Insh READ & 80 Y D» Barristers, Attorneys at Law, Solicitors in Chancery,&c., 77. King Street East, 'mor ‘X‘hompsuu’u East India Home) RXCHMOND HILL POST OFFlCE. CREE.“ ENTS, Hondn, Deeds, Morlgnges. Willa.’ kc, kc†drawn with unenliun Ind promykiludo. Terms nmdorule. mail-tor qlher conveyance, when so desired. The You: HERALD will always be found to contain thalatest and most important Foreign and Provincial News and Markets, and the groalosl care will be taken to render it ac- coptalrlo lo the man ofbnsinoss, and a. valu- able Family Newspaper. TERMS :â€"-One Dollar per annum. IN 1m. vuca: if not paid within Two Months. One Dollar and Fifty cents will be charged. Fix linen and under. ï¬rst insertion . . . . $00 50 Finch lubseqllent insutlon . . . . . . . . . . . '1‘": lines and under. ï¬mtinserlion. . finch oubxequom insertibn. . .. .n.......-. Abovo [all linel. ï¬rst insertion. per line Each nuhsequenl insertion. per line. . . Una Column per lwelve months. . . . . Half a column do do . . . . . . . Qua-(er of n cuhmm par twelve months. One column pen nix mouths.. . . . . . Halfu column do Qunrlor o.’ a column per aix momhs. . . . -c~-.....o- A card of tan lines, {or one your. . . . . . A card of ï¬fteen linen. do A card oftwellly linds, do . 00 I3 00 75 00 ‘20 . 00 U7 . Oll ()2 50 (IU 30 00 520 ()0 . 40 ()0 25 (‘0 18 00 4 “ll 5 ‘25 G 50 All ndvcrlinomems published for a less porZOd than one month. mun be paid for in advance. Alllotlorl addreused to {he Editor mqu be I 5 punt-paid. i No paper discontinued until all nrrenrages no puid : and parties refusing papers wilhout pnying up. will his held accountable for the subscription. P. J. MUTER. M. 0.. Phy~ician,8urg00n & Accoucht‘ur ‘Thornhill. HT Resillrnce~Nenr the Church of England Reference pcnnillell (00. S \Vinshnley. Esq. Mnnh. Royal Culley» of Sulgrmls, Eng" Yang's St. Toronto, and Thomas U. Snvngo, )I-q. M 1)., Melnb, IK(1'\.(loll.Surguous, ling. 'l'hi‘llatun. \, ILL generally be found at home before half put )4 mm and from I m ‘2 p.111. All pnrl'u-I owing Ur‘ J, Langslnfl‘nro oxpvct- ed [a call and pay prnmpll)‘. as ho hum pay- m-nlt now (hat mun: be met. My. Geo. Burkin in authorised to cu]lccl,nnd uivo receipls {or him. Kit-limond IIiH, June. 1‘65 1 Toronto. D.B‘ READ, Q.C. |J.A. BOYD B A May 7. 12566. ‘l‘l-(f And Iii-patched to subscribers b) the All transitory advertisements, from “rangers or'nrugulur customers. must he paid for when innd d in for inser'ion. OFFICEâ€"l†the “ York Herald†Buildingsy Richmond Hill. {If} Money to Lnntl. BAHRISTEH, Altomey-alâ€"Law. DR. JAS. LANCSTAFF, CONVL'YANCER. AN!) DIVISION COURT AGENT, M‘NAB, MURRAY as JACKES, Barristers & Altorncys-at-Law Solicitors in Chancery, (mxvm'Axmms, &c. ()rerEâ€"In the Court House, . .TORONTO August 1, 1866. 5‘.) A card oftwenly linds, do . . . . . . . G 50 HAdvenisemoms whhoul wrineu direcuons naorled till forbid. and charged accordingly 6m. 5m. Jun. Residenceâ€"Naner nppnsil» the Post 033429. Rm'lmond l'lill. THOMAS SEDMAN, ' ï¬n Carriage and Waggomrl “am Tums. wunn 511011qu CISTRENS AND PUMPS! 1 EVERY FRIDAY MORNING, Mauuraclutod and for Sale by John. Langgtaï¬ MAKER, UNDERTAKER Richmond Hill, Juno 9. 1865. l Juiy, 5w. 1866 'l'hnrnhill. June 9,1865 Solicitor in Chancery, 0 N V E Y A N 0 E R, &c, &c muni‘ucm mixctturg. RATES OF ADVERTISING. (El): fl)qu 53min GEO. B. NICOL, Snw Mama?“ amum LA\V CARDS. [S PUBLISHED I'lIORNIllLL earliest That he h'u: cur‘cecsfully treated the, above for fthe pnst Nan yanrs without a singlo failure. J This trenxment dogw not none shale lhelr lbeing: 1am asido only for a few dm’s. that he has leased the above Hole]. uvhereha willkeepconsmnlly on hand a good (supplv of ï¬rst-class Liquors. «\‘c. As this ‘hum‘o possesses avery nccomlmmalion 'I'ra- Ivellan: can (luaire. thosu who wish luskuy where 1they can ï¬nd evurycunlfurlaru mspoclfull} in- vited to give him a call. G I DEON {)0 LM A G H. Proprietor. :Tl‘lIE Subscriber begs to inform the Puhlic V l DAVID EYER, Jun., Slave & Shingle Manufacturer Kopl on hand. SA WING ESHHCNC‘Eâ€"um '25. 9nd Con. Markham on lhn l'llgin Mills [’Inuk Rand. A large Stock ofS'rAvrs and Sumnmzs. km)! rmvlamly on hnmLand “old M'the lowest l’ricns [13’ Call and examine Stock bufuro purchas- ing olsowlmre. Post ()Hico Addreesâ€" Richmond Hill. Al the lowest possible rams. Saw "Mill on lot ‘25, 2nd (Inn. Markham, 9; IanM onsluf Richmond HHI by tho Plank Road Richmond IIIâ€, June 'JG, 186.5. 4-1)‘ EDMUND SEAGER, Provincial Lam] Surveyor, &c. RICHMOND H 1 LL, "r ‘HE Subscrilmr begs in infunn his friends and {he public genernllv, that he has ropenud nn HOTEL in the Village of Maple. Ydth Con. Vaughan. where he hopes, by atten- ition to tho comforts of (he travelling commu- nity. to Inu'ita share of thair patronage and :Iupporl. Good Stabling. 62c . Planned Lumber, IL?" Give John a call When in Town- 'l‘uronlo. Dec 186:1 ‘27 HIEHMWEILLXHTE I F. lunng leased the above Hotel, ' [l‘nrnmly occupied by the late Mr. ll. Nichols], 11ml hm'in; put ii in u lhumnluh slate of rqmir, 'l'rm‘ollms will liml this house bath (-omf'urlnhlu and cmlvunivnt. A good [lost/(W always in attendance Richmond Hill Jun 31, 1567. 3:3 LU M E RING- 'ABR.\HAM EYER Residenceâ€"~Lut 40 Yongo Street. Vaughan. GEO. McPlIILLIPSSL SUN Provincial Land Surveyors, Richmond Hill. Dec. 1865 One of the uldgsl and cheapest houses in the trade. PLANEINC. TO ORDER, ’ [IIC Suhscriher would intiunln to I'm“ farm- ersund others of Richmond Hill and urrul n: (In nrv having. Quito a num‘mr of reference given if rflqnir- ad orporsuns whom horses hava been cured by JAMES BOWMAN, Issuer of Marriage Licenses, Jmm [H35 My charge is $1 50 if {mid when operated on, if not $3 ()0 will be charged to ensure a acuro. Residence rear of lot '23, ï¬nd Con, Vaughan. JAMES DUN'I'ON. BREAD KIHISEIIIT BAKER lg}:le luave l0 nulify [he publlc that he ha> purchased the business and good will of \V. S. Pollock’s establishnmnl, and that he is prepared to furnish BREAD and FANCY CAKES (0 those who may honor him with their patronage. I’iCLNic pzii‘liea and Tan Meetings supplied at the lowest possible rates and on the shortest notice. lim. Manufacturer and Dealer in all kinda ofMen's Women’s and Children’s BOOTS 8b SHOES, Horses Afflicted with Ring~bone, Vol. VII. No. 49. All erers strictly Mhmded to. Richmond Hill, March ‘21. [566 ALMIRA MILLS, Markham. Nov. 1, 1565. Richmond Hil‘. Oct. 95. ’66 LOOK AT THIS Richmond Hill Bakery P. BASING'I‘WAITE, NEW SERIES. DOLMIAQEiSW HOTEL. le't/L Maple. Jan [856. Henry Smelscr, ICENSN') AUC'I‘IO‘NEER for I'm noun- tioa of Y9:( and Peel, (‘wluclor of Notes. Accounti. &u. Small charges nnd plenty to do Labkey, Margin ‘Jud 1865 LSD-L SEAFORTII. C. \V Juna7,18(35. Jnnuarv IS. 1866 umber 'l‘on gnu] & Grovcd EGS respe-(ttl'nlly to inform his (‘ustnmm‘s and Um public llml he in pmparud [U do 38 \Nosi MarkelSqunm. ‘2 of King b‘lruul. In any qunnlilv. and aple LATE B Y 1‘1 0BR RT FE H BIS JOHN BARRON. RICHMOND-HILL AND YONGE ST. GENERAL ADVERTISER. VAN NOSTRAND'S, 1910 min 2‘ RICHARD VA I LES. 3943' TORONTO. on short "mica done promptly 3‘50 “coring, x0. AGE. Proprietor doors south QS-lf 11f 3'2 lt was in ’61, whenl guided a detachment ol cavalry who were Coming in from Camp Floyd. We had nearly reached the. KtIDSZlS line, and \M‘re in South Nebraska, when out? llllL‘linUUll l \VCnl Oul Ur Calnp to no to the cabin of an old friend ml'tninv, a Mrs \Vultman. I took :only one of my I‘CVUlVL‘l'S with me, llor although the war had broke out. l didn't think it necessary to carry {both my pistols. and, in all ordin- ary scrimtnuges, one is better than la dozen, if you shoot straight. I isaw some wild turkeys on the iroad as l was going down, and llioppud one ol‘et'n over, thinking ilie’d bejust the thing; for supper. l\Vell, l rode up to Mrs Waltmnn‘s, ljumped oll my horse. went Into the icabin, which is like most of the cabins on the prairie, with only gone room, and that has two doors, one opening in front and tether on a yard like. ; 11’s M‘Kumllas and his gang. u‘There is ten of them, and you’ve no chance. They've jes And Storm moot storm with their deï¬ant how], Lonvinq thr‘ world a scene nf' solimrlo; And all its hoantv as: :1. shutto'vd wreck, Thu! wnsons will not fail, but from that arrayed ; v ' Before bleak Autumn lairl their beauty low, And o’er the landscape where the meadows lay, And fiirrowed ï¬elds, so dreary in their looks, Like one in mourning for the Slumbering dead, Her voice is heard and all begins to stir Towards the work emnmamled them to do; The sleeping plants hegins to vegitate, And struggle npvard till they burst their tomhs, Fit emblem of that morn, when sleeping (lust Shall hear the voice that hids it rise again, And come triumphant fiom thelowly gram. She hids the farmer trearl his tieldh‘ again, Throw hroad his seed, that when the time arrives. The God of harvest may repay his toil, Nor mat) alone is summoned from his haunt ; But everywhere, where sheltered from the storm, Each thing that lay, they hear the welcome VOICL; And know at once it comes from an old F1 ienil Who has dispersed, the foe that drove them there, Aml now recalls them to their homes again, Aml to the sunny south, in whose fair (Wimp, The aerial gangsters found a Karo retreat When tvrant winter drove them from their homes. Her voice is sent, and on their fleeting wmgzs 'l‘liov now mmm to ï¬ll our land with song, And lovely Spring. slie hath a voice f'ormo. And from that voice, again the truth I lwur, Thousrlu wintry blasts may roll from every Wlm lends il'l'm in their march, we Still mnv lflhk Swot Spring to send, and scatter every storm. Aml o’er the world lwr fm‘morlwnnfv throw. She 1ell~1me ton. when stm‘ms uflife arrive And brightest hopes like withered herbage 110‘ ‘ H To \mh with calmness for the Spring of Hf?) Tu sliil 1110 tempost, and renew their bloom. Her Tow The Ant] How are you, Mrs Wallman ?' (said, feeling as joHy as YOU please. The minute she saw me she turned as while as a Shem and screamedâ€" Is that you, Bill 7 Oh, my God they will kill yonl [tun lâ€"«-run They will liill you! Wlm's-agoing Io kill me 2 said “ Awake, awake; no longer dormant “0,, Thou Shunb’ring earth, too long thou hath hmn dam], Full time it is, in take thy vernal bloom,†The wood Izmdsheur it, and begin to dress, 'l‘heirleufloss houghs as when they were \th's-agoing Io kill me 2 said 1. There‘s two can play at that game. Alive again all nature seems to be, And from each point where lately winter . a reigned I hear the voice of Spring.a welcome voice, That seems to sav to all within its sound. you’ve no chance. They've Jes gone down the road to the corn- raek. They came up here only five minutes agn. M Kandias was dragging poor Parson Shipiey on the ground with u lariat muud his m-ck The premahvr was mos! dead with chucking, and the horses ‘slamping on him. M'Kmidlas ‘lmows yer bringing 1r; that parly A Dreadful Fight. 1V ritlcn for the 11 vruld. THE VOICE OF SPRING. itmiurr. heard and :1“ begins to Stir work commanded thmn to (10; plants hogins to “agitate, upward till they burst their 33mm. Let Sound Reason weigh more with us than Popular Opinion. RICHIVIOND HILL, FRIDAYJIAY 10, [867. er, and I said to myself Only six shots, and nine men to kill. Save your powder. Bill, for me death bug’s a coming; ! I (1011‘! know \vnyit was, Kemu, continued .Bil|,10()kmg a! mo inquirmgly, but at that moment things summed clear and Sharp. 1 slmuld think slrong. Wnen I heard that, I [all as quiet and cm] as if I was a-goin m church. I look around lhe room and saw a Hawkins rifle hangng over the bed. I [ell you what it is, Kenn-I, he resumed, after a while. ldon't mind a scrimmage with these fuller: round here. Shoot one or two 01 Ihcm and the rest run away. But all of M'Kax‘dlas’s gang were reckless, Mood Illirslv devils. would ï¬ght as long as lhey had slrenglh lo puil a trigger. l have been in light places. but lhat's one of Ihc limes I said my prayers. Surround the house, and give him no quarter! VCHC'i Mcv Kundlas. “13,1110 poor thing whispered. She was so frighicngd she couldn't speak out loud. tight me ! M'Kandins was no onward, if he was 21 bully. He jumped in- sith: lilL’_I‘0()lt') with his gun lovelieil to shoot; but he was not quick cnought. My ritle bali went through his heart. He fell back outside the house, where he was lound ailerwards hoidmg tight to his rilie.which had iallcn over hi< heat]. “is disappearance \VJIS {allowed by a yell from his gang, and then there was :1 dead silence. [put down the rith: and took the vevolv- Are you sure I said l. as [jump- ed on Ihc bed and caught it from its hooks. Ahlmugh my We did not leave the dunr, yet I could see the noddcd Yes uguiiflM‘Kandlas poked his head inside the doorway, but jumped back whvn he saw me with the rifle in my hand. There was but a few seconds of that awtul stillness, and then the rntlitns cattle rushing in at both doors. l’low wild thev looked with their red, drunken faces an intlum- ed eyes, shouting and cursing! int 1 never aimed more dolihera- tcly in my life. Om:â€"â€"twoâ€"â€"threc "(our ; and four men fell dead. That did't stop the rest. Two of them ï¬red their bird-guns at me. There’s that dâ€"d Yank Wild Bill‘s horse; he’s here; and l we'll skin him alive! if] had thought of running be- lore it was too late now, and the house was my best hold, a sort of fortress, like. I never lhoughl [should [cave that room alive. The soon! slapped in his story, rose from his seat, and strode backward and forward in a slate of greai ex- cilemem. Is that loaded 1 said I 10 Mrs Wallmun. \Vhile she was aétalking I re- membered ‘hal I had but one re- volver, and a load gone out oflhat. On the table there Was a horn of powder and some llnle bars of lead. I poured same powder into the empty chamber, and rammed the lead after it by .h‘ammcring the barrel on the table. and had just‘ capped the pisml when I heard M‘KanJlas shout-â€" Come in horv,y0u cowardly dog: ! I shown-d. Come in here, and And then I fulla sling run all over me. The room was full of smoke. Two gt)! in close 10 mv, their eyes glaring out of the clouds One I knocked down wilh my fist. You are out of the way for a while l thought. The sparmd I shot dead Thc other Iln‘ee clutched me, undi crowded me on It) the bed. I ‘ fought hard. I broke with myI hand one man's arm. He had hisI ï¬ngers round my throat. Bt-I'nrc I couid got to my Ieet I was struck ucrqss the breast with the Stank of :1 rifle, and I IcIt the blood rushing out of my nose and mouth. 'I‘hun I got ugh} and I remember that I‘ gm hold of a knifu, and then it wast ail cIoudly like, and I \Vt15\\'ild,j and. Istwck savage blows. follow- ing the devils up Irom one side 10 the other of the mom and into the corner. shitting and. slashing; until I knew that every one was dead. AII of a sudden it, seemed as if my hszm \ygp‘ on fire. 1 was biped- of Yankee cavalry, and he swears he’ll cut yer heart out. Run, Bill. run !â€"Bnt il’a too late; lhey’;e coming up the lane. ‘Stl’lOliC explosion, dripping ‘ other extinct craters in Val del Bove,tl1at weird and ghostâ€" like chasm which had struck them so much when l0()l{lnt1 down upon it. from the height of the cone. Floundering in the snow, which wesagood deal deeper on that side ol the mountain, their mules continually sinking: and struggling up again, breaking their saddle girths in the efforts, and conse-‘ qnencetly landing their riders con? tiuuallv on the soft snow, the party arrived at, last on the edge of this magniï¬cent amphitheatre. It is of vast size. enclosed by precipices 3000 feet in height. and ï¬lled with gigantic rocks of wonderfully strange and fantastic shapes. stand- ing out separately, like beastsâ€"â€" hence its name. The perfect sil- ence ol‘the spot remainds one of some Egyptian citv ol the (lead. ice. or characterise the this wou- derl'ul mountain; but in this one all is still and silent as the grave. It is, stern as the Curse ol Kehuma, and as ifthe lava had been cost up in these. wonderful shapes in sortie extraordinary eonvuision ot' rushing torrents, nature, unl then had been petrihed ;as it rose. E'I‘NA.â€"Elna, unlike other mountains, stands along, rising straight from the plain, with no rivals to dispute her height, or in- tercept any portlon of the glorious view below. The whole of Sicily is stretched out at your feet, the hills belows looking like the raised part 01 a map for the blind. Not only is the panorama unequalle in magniï¬cence, but there are at- n’I()S])llt.'l‘i(‘.,'dl phenomena in it which belongs to Etna alone. As tlte sun raises over the Calabrnbian coast, a perfect and distinct image of the cone is rellectedwas on the sheet of a magic lanternâ€"on the horizon below. gradually sinking lower and lower as the sun becomes brighter, and ï¬nally disappearing altogether. As it was early in the season, the snow extended over the whole of the so-calletl desert re- gion, while the wood below seem- ed to encircle the mountain as with agreen belt, whieh added t0 the beautiful effect of the whole. Tired and exhausted, and vet delighted our travollers descended the eone, and rejoined their companions at at the Casa Inglese, who had been compelled to content themselves with seeing the sun raise from a green hil'oekï¬just below the house. They determined on their way home to diverge a little from the straight route, in order to visit the ‘lto protect them from moisture and now MP Cherblane, mayor of Lentilly (Rhone), announces that lit is an excellent destroyer of in- tsects. such especially :15; attack gplants The little red bug which ‘lul'eats fruit trees, hvgms to muku ï¬ts ammurqnce in [he preacnt gott- That prayer of yours, Bill, may have been more potent lor your saler Ihan you think. You should thank God for your deliver- ance. To tell you the truth, Kernci, respandcd the scout with a cerluin solcmnily in his grave Iace, [don’t talk about 51011 lhmgs ler the people here, but I allcrs feel sort of Ihunk- ful when I get out ofa bud scrape. .___..â€"â€"-r o<~â€"â€" There were eleven buckâ€"shot in me. Icarry sorï¬e of them now. I was cut in thirteen piaces. All of lhem‘ball enough io_have let out the the life of a man. But. that blessed old Dr. Mills 'pullud me sale thsough it, allel a bad siege of many a long week. You must have been hurt almost to death, I said. ing every where. I rushed out to the well. and drank from the bucket, and then tumbled down in afaint. Breathless with the in- tensetnteres‘. with which I had followed the strange story, all the more thrilling and weird when its hero, seeming to like over the bloody eventsof that (lay, gave way to its terrible splritflwith wild, savage gestures. I saw then-~ what my scrutiny of the morning had failed to discoverâ€"the tiger which lay concealed beneath that gentle exterior. COAL '['AI:.â€"'I‘hcro seems to be no and lo the appliances of coal tar. There are alrcadv half a dozen recipes for using it in (12139 of had cores; it is Very genexally employed for coating wood, iron, and the roofs ol'burldings, in orJe Do farmes ever regard honesty as a qualiï¬cation essential to one they elect to manage the affairs of their township, country or county? Burns, Pope, and others have held honesty in the highest esteem and admiration. Why do farmers rm gard it as beneath their attention in electinga person to transact the tmportantallairs of the townshipI the county and the counter It is too lowly a virtue to he looked tor amongst the great Lawyers, Doc. tors, and merchants that are can- didates tor the high and honorable ofï¬ce of members of the House of Commons. or the Loc-tl Legisla‘ ture? Looking amongst these, you may have a difï¬culty in ï¬nd- ing it. But what would you think! of looking tor it amongst farmers 1 You knew m.tny farmers whom' no one suspects of deceit, trickery and falsehood. Butsomc how or other, lilt‘ttlct‘s regard it as use-‘ lese labour to look amongst farmers I for one to represent them in the House of Commona, or in the Local Legislature. They have such a lowly oniniou ol' themselves. that they regard no tanner as worthy of the high honor, and high ofï¬ce. They must search amongst the great Lawyers, Doctors, and other greatness, with whom they have little or nothing in common, and make their election. The) have no personal acquaintance with them. They know little about them. They are great men. “We. ther they are honest men or not, they cannot say, and do not in- :quire, When farmers elect these, it seems a necessary consequence tthat they will have just cause to :complatn cl~ heavy taxes. These ’represent the merch int, the dealer. LETTER NO. TEN. Continued. To the Editor of the York Herald. Bums saw and appreciated lhc worth of an honest man. He re- garded moral worlh as more valuâ€" able than any ornaments that glit leron the high and noble. 'l‘he unprincipled see no value in moral worlh, and do not believe thallhcre is such a thine; in exismnce. But we ï¬nd undeneahlc prools of do exislance. At tunes, on \vuness- ing human nature we say wilh the poet ; son when the sun shines, lays its leggs on the bark, where they get covered with a sort of whitish moss at the point where the branch is joined to the trunk. This moss need only be removed to bring to iligllt thousands of small eggs to be hatched about June, when they produce a multitude at green in- sects that attack the new leaves and buds, and ultimately destroy them. There is a plant louse which lives under the bark, where it may be ettslv discovered by stripping off the old scales. Another species, called ‘laniger,’ is recog- nisable by a sort of white down ; the insects may be seen with a magnifying glass. They form groupsattackmg a branch all round and eating up the bark, after which the branch generally dies away. There are also ants,centipedes, and other insects under the bark of trees. All these enemies of vege- tation, M. Cherblauee tells us, may be removed by a very etlieaeious and cheap method, viz., by applyâ€" ing coal tar. Before doing so,how- ever, the tree should be cleansed of allthe old bark, moss. and other extraneous growths, with a scraper, and then coat the trunk and princi- pal branches with cold coal tar, a process which, he says, will not prevent the new buds from coming out. Goal tar not only destroys the insects in question. but invi- gorates the trees, and heal all the wounds inflicted by the parasites. The operation, however. must he performed before the usual budding time. “And what is friendship but a name, A charm that I‘liiS to sleep; A shndc that follows wealth or fume And leaves the wretch to weep '2†But we ï¬nd in our passage lhrough lifc,undeniablc proofs ul fnendship. We also ï¬nd notwith- standing complaims, real worth. Pope says: ‘ An honest mzufs the. noblest. work of God,' TERMS $1.00 in Advance. an}! consumer am} carefuliy uvuid taxing the merchant! the Quads: Providing for the Poor- flurrmpnahrurc. ‘VIIOIG N0. 460. Why is the remark so common, tlzat every one when once elected remembers number one? Just be- cause electors viulated the golden rule given to guide them in eleotv ing rulers. Let this law be obey- ed, and its results will be just as umnifcst,as the results produced by two farmers, the cue of whom is Idle, indolent. imptovideut and unprinclpled, and the other is in- telligent, active, frugal and honest. No one expects that honoaty and deceit pruducu the same results, up that, subrlt‘ly and prolligacy prov ducc the same results. These are the noble minded men who have led the country onward to its progent greatness and pros. perity, and who are now carrying it onward, to higher degrees of splendour. Crooked and false politicians may say, that these are only dull and stupid larmcrs, and that they have brain enough to manage their farm, and to save money, by telling and living in a miserable way, but that they are altogether unï¬t to manage the high ullatrsol‘ the nations. How can any man of common truth and candor call them stupid. It is not their (luluess, stupidity and ignore ance, but their superior intellig. ence, their sound Judgment, and their vast amount of common sense that have enabled them to attain their honourable position. The intelligence. the common sense, the integrity and the success that distinguished them in manag- ing their private affairs, and in their general dealings, would not desert them in managing the afl‘iirs of the nation. The man of intelli- gence, integrity and truth, may go from country to country, but his moral excelliencies follow him, and are ever present with htm, and would not desert him when manag- ing the aflairs of the country. The honest man retains his honesty-The deceitful and cunning man retains his deceit and cunning. When :11 unprinciplcd person is elected, his great enquiry is, how um I to advnncga my own interests? He soon ï¬nds many ways lic open before him. The question with him is, not how he may serve his country but how he may serve himself. The temptation in his way are so pmveriul, that they seem irresislable tn anv, but to those under tho. deep influences of religion. Though amongst larmers you can ï¬nd some who are tricky. crooked, deceitful, unprincipled and [also as the most cunning poliq txcian, you ï¬nd farmers who have honorable feelings, who are up- right and straight lorward in all their dealings, who are clear head~ ed, and who manage any business entrusted to them with consum- mate shill1 \vhodespise petty acts ofdeceitand rascality. who give abundant proof that they are rigid- ly honest, and whom no one ever suSpeoIed of acting a deceitful. crooked, and false part. The more intimately you are acquainted with them, the more vou see of their reat worth, and the more implicit oonï¬tlonco you place in their in. tegrity, or in their honesty. '[‘h3ugh farmers have prospered in consequence of their own wis- dom and exertions, they may de~ pend upon it, that if they consuit their own and the public good. tht‘y will elect persons to Hunting: public business, who seek the pru- liv,1he honor, 11m prosperity,L and 1118 grculness of the country mum than they seek their own personal aggrandizemem. In calling the attention of {arm1 crs to the question, whether it might not be for the public good to search amongst farmers for tone to transact the affairs of the country iutheir place. I do not maintain that farmers are honest as a matter of course. There are farmers who cannot be appointed to the ofliec oi uathmaster without striving to put as rnuoh as they can into their own pockets, and ' into the pooketsof their friends, and who cannot even sell a cord of wood without trying to (heat the buyer, and who think themselves smart in proportion as they sre suc- cessful in their villainv. These are unpriucipled, and are probably on the way to the poor house. 'l‘hese would pmba bl-vtbewhe mm forward to assure you of their ï¬t~ mess for the high and honourable ollice, and to solicit your vote. The lady entered the kitchen the other day and Found the oven swimming with grouse. On asking the servant, u \Velsh girl, the cause. the Cambrian maid answered‘ with the greatest si1npli~ city, ‘ Look you, miSsus, the candle was fell in the water, and I put it in the oven to dry. The mde ofapnsaionafn man’s Ikife is in nontractin; dam in his pussqu which hm virxge obliges bin 0 pam and consumer. They do no; r»- present the farmer. They throw burden alter burden upon the farm- er. and never trouble themselves with the enquiry whether he is able to bear them. The amount of taxes they pay is very little. I remain &o.