~ fL fI sfft ly '' $ *t. Jware, fiikon ekmri* tfttntiuKM*- rifXia Siwf iw»nttj ion TininU trmt, MMBtU M#ir> mi**, Ax~. Ancon, Adlw, ChtotU, '■ RsssrtnsvM. n-- - ad exuiM tbftr atooc. dJod OU*, Point*, Carbon Oil, »*«•, to thoh- ' paaaof «U,tlM«o>nrtklMntn «**P*fcV. r MUMwOM VE BUSINESS.. a mi Maortmeiit from wWtk iiy ' (j toMtoclioirticto tepflAMUricft^oy. 0 SHEET IRONWARE, ; ami WILLOW-WARE , km* larfe mpj>ly,*Dd;will ■"• Ybeadlod for. .■.■.■ iff ■ to* promptly to. «G AN3> SPOUTMNQ t>- otoelnUKbMtrtjle. , ~ EW GOODS. J iraigned wouldrespeotfiiUyia^ liecse oriltouna »nd ■rnwtiauM»; net returned from the Beat, WfaereTbe%mr latoqkof . ... , (• *D WINTER GOODS, ; quality aod price, cannot W aorpaafed far stry. Hle etock ia mucfa Ur*er.tha* ; ■ it la quite an object, in Hum exciting «ry one to parched where they, cna.49l. >ods and at the Lowest Priqe% at h» on end will Mil M low. If Mil any other bonne io tbik place. He Widkee > hie atock before pnrehuiog eleewbece, Cat he can offer inducement, which .WIU, . Qie stock coneiite of SB GOODS of every deecriptio*, 1 lIS’ WINTKR WJEAB, I AND MISSES’ DRESS SHOES, X AND BOYS’ BOOTS AND SHOES, MEN'S U*U BOU S AND MISSES' WOOL BOSE, ;l) AND UNBLEACHED MDSWK, lINQHAMB AND lIBAVT DRlttlNO*. ' J tdne Sewed, Heeled Booteee at *1400141 lS»lA0 . - ÜBIS, «ij low. - g GROCERIES. f. iwn Snger, Rio Coffoet, Sjrape, Tree, Ac.* 7, 'net b utaellj kept tn » Dry QeMi Nora the cheepeet. J. A. SPBANKU. IMS. Y DYE COLORS. ued October 13th, 1863. Sfertftws Woden aid A i»*d Send*. Bbavl*,Sbt*A' bone, GloTee.Bonnete, mu.VMlbwi, rM, Children'* Clotblag, *od*U ' Jndi,of Wnrio( App»ni- DIG OF 80 FEB li racu color u m.nj good* M woold yth*. , tinei'lfait *tuc. Tartan* abadtredaw w *ub* dj*. Thcprcce**t*«fcßpla ad ;i be dye with perfect eacceee. DirecttoM eb»ndw*rmiui. hu Id* efMeir package ormallo* is Kiting, »nd giving bperiii* , colon are beet adaptedto mow «Cb ninable recelpee,) pnicbta* Howa AMo- : taralag and Coloring. Seat by aaaU *• , Sb caate. Manufactured by " BOWJS A SUVAI* aWßaoißpaT.Jw>«-, V tKietaand dealere yeoerally. *T- •' ■ >' ; rovES, at tin trice*. X large enpply wfll alway* be •sr-mojr WAXX, to gnat e«ri*r, fG & SPOUTING ■oitee. ’ iadhed a copper-emftbiog room To b4f . i «luv«cpoß BamtftawioitaeatofMp* J AC. • oodt promptly attended to. rtf BTwncvwnrrMa. and Sheet Iron Ware. UTJNG, &C. -I O.OL1) RESPKfiT. . n th* eitlten* of 1 teene coneUntly «ahand *•*' Cbofew. flprtor. Qfiee mdJHHt i etyfc* andetoe, toinu 1 be will well at low pric»a,ew noeio % JnaU’Umttwk of nt arflh#- ' ,-j luMd tW right ar wb h >l# u»ty - I ® SAUSAGE BIUJTEE, j i mwdxmljr to be eeen tebe imucli, . HMdbjrtTerjr tmn r imtd*k*t&*v -<*f ■chim. ■ - ..■■ ■ '■, _ _■ ,-y ttmttoo paid to pottta# Bp •TOUT LM ~ ■ontrjr. Spontiagpatetad *ad vvf wf association, * . r aiLADXLFHU, M. | mriw, amilßil. Prtoanr ■pjAjW)( ratUM tnatißest—(B BeppnrarnW " - !- trd »o. aSooth !••«•«, i : , [*<*»**&? l.- - s COFFg* 1 ANT GOOD Mju ,■ -; . .i,*7,*rT!nnCn [£EB&! A fresh rap* i trMktei Jut roccJrtd titjl: ’ ‘ ; nuxoHtrs . yjAßi*. iWNO, :QJ iXS " 7 " ' j '' | ■ i-:' McCBUM & DERN, VOL. 9- THE ALTOONA. TRIBUNE. m a McCBUM, - - ■ B. C. DERN, *■ aaitoai •*»» nonmoH. P.r ..nem, (paeeble ineariahly in adeanee,)...... $1 60 AU paper. duJontinu«l »t the expiration of the time paid lor. txx»i« or ADrixTUiso: ' '•& 1 Lnurtioa 2 do. 8 do. Poor line, or leM--- * 60 * *loo 06. Bqujre, <>' i oo 1 60 2 00 !•“ ... >1! « r;.; I 60 a oo a &0 three week. and thm. thr*. month., 86 mu per aqain fcr «cb i “ ,rt * 0 j' |JlOIlt j li . s month.. 1 year. Six!.«. or »|“J •»“ syoo $ yoo On. iijuM. d 00 6 00 10 00 „ 6 oo ■; *’«oo la oo Three a 00 10 00 14 00 *°nr , io oo M oo ao oo Half a column 14 00 ! 25 00 40 00 *°/ m ln ”«tor. end Kxecumn Notice. 1 76 b, the J»r, three equate* 6 00 .lone dwdnS. erill be continued till forbid and charged T^n n i^o\te« b fl O r.*«JSW line forerety ineertion. Obituary noti°c” exceeding ten line*. flftyceutaa»quare ®hoi« fwteg. From Frazer’s Magazine. THE WISHING WELL. Voice of his region fabulous'. For silent else is all the air, None else remains to tell ns The story of the things that were Fair fountain of this valley lone. That, falling with a ceaseless plaint Into thy cup of sculptured stone,: Speakest of faity and of saint; For name of either thou hast borne; Time was Titania round thee played; And rings by elfish footsteps worn Still linger in the magic shade. B-.it when the Benedictine came. To build upon these meadows fair, He called thee by a holier name, And blessed thy source with prayer; And said the old belief was sin : Yet still, so ran the rustic creed. Strange voices sounded, faint and thin, Bv summer nights along the mead. And whether it were- saint or fay. Blessing.or magic, who could tell ? Men said that virtue in thee lay, And loved thee as the Wishing Well, And still thy chalice carved of stone* Though old beliefs have passed away, Though fairies and thongh saints are gone. Brims with clear crystal day by day. And waiting here an idle while. And looking with a listless eye, I see beneath thy waters’ smile The changeless azure of the sky; The changeless aznre flecked with gray, That was,as deep, as fair, as clear, Or ever down the woodland way The tint wild savage wandered here: Or ever man thy dwelling knew, And, resting on the virgin sod, Looked wandering on the imaged bine, And blessed thee as the gift of God. Ami if there still be power in thee To grant the wishes we conceive; If it avnil implicitly The old tradition to believe— Give me, fair stream, not gold nor love. Not fortune high nor wealth of days,,,. Hot strength to rise the crowd above, Nor the deceit of human praise: g But this: that like thy waters clear, Thi.’ creeds and systems' come and go. Unvexed within a narrow sphere My life with even stream may flow— May flow, and fill its destined sppee, With this at least of blessing given, Upward to gaze with fearless face. And mirror back some truth of heaven. felwt HOW A WOMAN HAD HEB OWN WAY. “ I shall never recover from this blow,” •aid M. CoulaincOurf, ashisfriend led him from the room in which he had been ga zing for the last time on the body of his dead wife. . * Henri Augrer sighed deeply, but though he had lived to know that time finds for all consolation, he did not attempt to con sole. “ Husbands have lost their wives before, I know—wives that they love—but re member how Cecile and I have loved each other since %ur childhood ; remember all the obstacles that separated us .for many years; remember how I toiled to make home worthy of her, and now but two years of happiness, two years of enjoyment for the work of a whole life., Oh ! it is frightful 1 Cecile, my poor - - Cecile, how “ er eyes yearned towards me, till at last they, closed forever. Oh! Henri, I can never know happiness again.” Henri Augrer led him silently to his s f udy, and there sat by him 'Whilst the widower; paced the room, now talking of his dead wife, now subbing like a child now exhausted and weak, throwing him* self on the sofa, and lying in the stillness of despair. I- v The laws of iFrance prolong but twenty four hours' the survivor’s watch over a dead one loved. Mme. Goulaineourt was next morning borne from her home, and in a few hours her husband returns to his desolated bouse, his heart nearly broken, his nerves worked up to the highest pitch by the horrible ceremonies he has Wit nessed. Madly and with wild shrieks he now paces the room, thrusting from him all his friends ; even Henri, who has asked to be left alone with him, is repulsed. At last the door of ths room opens slowly,-and a lady in deep mourning robes, her face calm and solemn, but with red, tearful eyes, enters the room. She has in her arms an infant, whose long white robes form a contrast with her mourning garments. Coulaincourt does not notice her, but she goes up to him, and as he stands beat ing his breast and sobbing wildly, she holds up to'him the fair, sleeping child. “ She is another Cecile,” said the lady in a low,;calm voice; “and the Cecile that is gone left her to you, a memorial of your love aitd of the two years of happi ness you passed together.” M. Coulaincourt sunk down on a sofa, gazed on the child as it was laid across his knees, and for some moments spoke nut.- Then at last, extending a hand to each of the friends who watched him. “ Sister,” said he—“ Henri, for the sake of the child; 1 will try to live.” Seventeen years after this, the door of this same room;was opened, and a young, bright, beautiful face, with shining braids of chestnut Itair around it, was thrust in. •“Eh? Father mine, why are you so long ?” exclaimed a fyesh young voice, and a light form bounded frpm the door to tlie sofa where Coulaincourt was seated “ Cecile!” "said Co tlaincourt, looking up, a smile of joy beaming on his face. “ Yes, Cecile,” said the young girl. “I* really is very strange I cannot make you more obedient to your daughter, yet I’m sure I spared no pains in your education. Don’t you linow that breakfast ts ready ?” “No, yes; F had forgotten it. I was thinking— ’l. “ Thinking about what ?” “ Well—” “ Now, sir, if you dare to have a thought you have not communicated to me, you had better look out.” “ Indeed,; I have not —” • “ Let me cross-examine you.” “ Well.”' “ Are your affairs in order !” “ Yes.” : , c, . “ Has no house where you had money failed!” “ None.” “ Are you prepared to meet all your notes !” “ Yes.” '■< * “ Have you made any bad speculation?” “No.” : ; “ Are you not satisfied with Adrian !” “ Absurd!! You know Adrian is de voted to me, heart and soul.” “ Well, then, what were you thinking about “ You.” ■’ “ Me—about me ? And you dare to look serious, almost sad, when you are thinking of-me 1 '■ This is worse Jhirifany thing. Pniy, what thoughts could Tin spire you with that could make you look sad and serious !” “ Thoughts inspired by last night’s ball—” j' “ Why, they should be merry thoughts; wasn’t I the very queen of the ball! didn’t I dance every dance, and were you not surrounded by all the young men in the room ?” ' . ' ■“ Yes, greeted'! was and overwhelmed with wine and refreshments handed to me on all sides; and that has made me melan choly, for I am alraid of losing the trea sure for which I have toiled these many years.” “Why ! Do you think these young gen tlemen were rubbers in diguise, or ain’t you sure of the lock of youi* strong box?” “Cecile, Cecile, you are laughing at your father; the treasure I mean is your self.” Have these men any intention of carrying, tpe off? What a pity they should be such dangerous characters, for i they waltz so well.” “ Don’t’pretcnd to misunderstand me. j Cecile, you know exactly what I mean.— ! You know that you were admired by every |‘body, and you know what is likely to I follow this admiration of a parcel of young ! men.” |, No, I don’t.” | “It is too-bad Ito think that after a life | spent iji loving you, in making! you what iyoudpre—beautiful, amiable, i good, ac ! compliahed, just because you are eighteen, ■ I am to give you up ; yes, give you up (o a domestic invader called a son-in-law, a . man who will carry you off from mi;, a man who will assume to love you, and what is worse, 9 man you miiy probably learn to love yourself; it is dreadful!” “ flat all this is imaginary. I’m ashamed of youone would think you 1 were a young, romantic girl.” 1 ALTOONA, PA., SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1864. “ Imaginary, is it 1 What do you think has happened this very morning ?” “ Has there been an invader here already ?” “ Yes, an invader that has actually pro posed for your hand, Colonel Santerre, an invader who is rich, who is well born, an invader in fact against whAm there is not a single objectiou to be made, unfortu nately.” “ Yes, one that you have never thought of, but which is the most powerful of all; I don’t like him, and I wdu’t have him.”* Monsieur Couluincourt rose, and clasp ing his daughter to his heart, heaved a deep sigh,of relief. I thought you would want to get married ; all young girls are said to want to get married.” “ But they have not such fathers as I have ; now come to breakfast, and make yourself perfectly easy on the score of husbands, for I shall never, as long as 1 live, leave you.” t ' ' Now when Mile. Cecile spoke in this way, she was telling the truth ; but not all the truth, for certainly she was giving her father to understand that she had no affection in the world beyond the one she had for him, and that she never intended to marry. M. Coulaincourt had made an idol of his daughter; after his wife’s death he had consecrated his life to this child, and gradually he had grown to look on all who sought to share her affection with jealousy, such almost as a lover might have felt. But with all this, M. Coulaincourt knew that every girl in France is expected to bo married between the ages of eighteen and twenty; an old maid is a rara avis in France, and all his wile’s and his own re lations were importunate for him to find a match for his daughter. She was beau tiful, young, and charming, and possessed a handsome dowry; pretenders were not wanting. M. Coulaincourt felt as if a doom threatened him. He was afraid to talk to Cecile on the subject, so the posi tive declaration he had drawn from his daughter that morning caused him mqp happiness than be had known for many years. But after all it was an E\e-like, wo manish answer she had given him, she did love some one better than her father, and the happiness of her life depended on her marriage. Many years before, Cecile, being then only six years, as she was sitting in her father’s carnage, driving along the high road in a'country pbice where her father had hired a residence for the summer, had spied a boy three or four years older than herself, sitting on the wnyside crying. One command from Cecile had stopped the carriage, and the next minute she was by the side of the child, inquiring into his griefs, and forcing info his hand the cakes ■and cherries with which her little basket was laden. Monsieur Coulaincourt inquired, how ever, more particularly into-the boy’s cir cumstances and condition, and finding him really an object of pity, and believing his story, had taken twenty francs out of his pocket to give him. But Cecile stopped him indignantly. “ Not at all,” said she, “ he is going home with us.” . - And home he had accordingly been ta ken. It was luting that he had the be ginning of a good education, that lie spoke correctly, and was a very well behaved boy, continuing his own story that he was the orphan of a gentleman who had passed his life in writing, the boy could not say what, and who died suddenly, pen in hand, leaving no indication who he was beyond his own name, and but just money enough to bury him. The orphan boy had been turned adrift; and bewildered and helpless, had wandered on until forlorn and wearied, he had sat down by the wayside and wept. Coulamcourt had Adrian, as he was called, educated, and now at the time Coulaincourt, was in such trouble about his daughter, Adrian had taken oif his patron’s hands all the responsibility of his business, one of the most important in the great commercial city of Havre. ‘“Cecile has been a blessing to me,” Coulaincourt would say, from the mo ment her aunt laid her in my arms. I owe the prosperity to my house to her, for she gave me Adrian.” Adrian felt the deepest gratitude to both the merchant and his daughter ; his was a fine, generous nature, that does not shrink from obligation ; but the sentiment he felt for father and daughter, as he grew older naturally assumed a different aspect. To both he was devoted ; but as he saw her expand into loveliness, both of mind and person, he came to love Cecile, passion ately, deeply. lint he concealed his pas sion as he would have hidden a crime, for he felt it would be the basest ingratitude, which is a crime, to seek an'alliance which was so infinitely beneath what Cecile had every right to expect. But Cecile had not been as blind as her father to Adrian’s feelings, neither was she so scrupulous as Adrian, for she had made up her girlish mind to marry Adrian, and she had by her woman's tact discovered his love fo^her. On the day of her Explanation with her [independent in evehythinq.] father Cecile contrived, on some vain pre text —he often undertook commissions for her—to summon Adrian to, her presence. She had determined to make him declare his' sentiment, for she felt that the time had come when she would have to combat all her relations determined on her mar riage, and her father determined on keep ing her to himself. . Adrian was timid in her presence that she felt she had to encourage him ; so af ter a little insignificant conversation, Ce-- cilc suddenly asked him if he had seen the letter addressed to her father by Colonel do Lacy. - ■ “ I have.” “ You know the answer!” “ M. Coulaincdurt has told me —” “That 1 would not have him. I don’t intend to. marry at all; 1 wish people would leave me alone.” “ They are not likely to do that; you know, M’lle. ! Cecile. that wherever you go, you excite admiration and love.” “ Nonsense ;do you moan, to’say then that every man who sees me is in love with nie ?” “Everyone who is often in-your so ciety.” “Everyone! Why, Adrian, you then, who have known me all your life, and see nie every day, are you iti love with me ?” “ Mademoiselle, that is a cruel ques- tion.” “ Not at all, Adrian, it is an honest question, and demands an honest answer. Give it to me from your heart, Adrian.” “ Then, Cecile, from my heart, I love you.” “And, Adrian, with all my heart, 1 love you ; do not go off into ecstacies of joy ; our love has a great obstacle to sur mount.” “My poverty—my birth ?” “ No, your love ; my father will never forgive that.’? “ It must be concealed from him, tjiis is the only way to bring about our marriage. Trust all to me and we shall be happy.” Adrian's presence in the counting-house was never of so little use as on that day ; lie could not bring his mind to Contemplate dull commercial details after all he had heard that morning. The dream he had never dared to think would be realized had become a reality. On Cecile the interview of the morning had a different effect: it made her serious and thoughtful. After all, Adrian was but a creature of her father’s bounty, and that might be an obstacle, not one that would resist a positive desire of hers ex pressed in bar usual positive manner, but one she Qoulifnot signify without declaring her love for Adrian, and that would make her father miserable, and might perhaps utterly prevent the success of her plans. “ lie must 'propose Adrian to me him self,” was the result of Cecile’s reflections. It so happened that a few days aftier she had taken it, a letter came from her; aunt, urging her brother to establish her niece, and requesting , him to send her on a visit of three months to her to Paris. “ I have been nursing a capital match for her for more than a year,” said she, “so pray send her.” “ Now really this is too bad,” said M. Coulaincourt, “ your aunt being your mother's sister fancies she has a right over you ; and I cannot part with you.” , “ I shall certainly not go.” “Then here--every one is asking the, honor of my daughter’s hand. I wonder if the men think I took all this care of you ■ expressly for them ?” “Theyneed not trouble themselves,” said Cecile, “I wi|l never leave you;' but as you would not like me after all to be an old maid, I should like to rind a husband who .would consent to come and live here and make my i home his.”. “Capital!” “ For that we mqst find some one who is not rich.” “Of^our^e;” “And whp will understand us both; but where is sffch a being to be found I” “Ah!” exclaimed M. Coulajncourt, starting up— “I have the very man; he has often, told me he would lay down his life for me; he will not dare refuse me this—Adrian.” Cecile's heart beat, but she had sufficient self-control to keep down the blush that thrilled through her veins, as with an air of indifference, she replied— ‘‘Adrian? Oh, yes; why, he knows us both so well, knows all otir faults, and knows all ‘my love for you , you might make him your partner, but then would he have me ? Perhaps he loves some one else.” . ; “Nonsense!; he cannot, he shall hot; my Cecile thein will never leave me, and no passionate love will ever come to ob scure the love of all her popr father's life. It will not be too great a Sacrifice, though, will it, Cecile? I think you must like Adrian.” “Just enough, father, to marry him , without aversion ; and I shall love him for ■ keeping me all my life near you.” ! “ What then is to be done’” “ I am rich enough for both.” “ Who has i no relations.”, “ Certainly.” . “ Who has grcat respect for you.” “ Love him, but only second to me.” “Of course!” ' Coulaincourt hastened to the counting house, shut himself up in his office with Adrian, and there made the proposition to him. Adrian, being a man, had not as much tact as Ceciie, and, thrown off his guard, avowed his passion for her, which came near spoiling the whole plot. But Cecile’s tact and skill came to the rescue. Never was accepted suitor,re ceived in a colder or more cavalier man ner. Not one word of tenderness, not one look of love was bestowed on him du ring the whole courtship. Not for ten minutes was he ever alone with his ih .tended. Coulaincourt was enchanted; Ceciie, too, for she* had gained her point j her lather wa? not jealous of her husband. On the wedding day, as they were re turning from church, Adrian offered his arm to his bride, but she had already ta ken her father’s. “ Cecile,” said Coulaincourt,'. “ your husband has, periiaps, the right—” “All had begotten him,” replied Ce cile, just touching Adrian’s arm with the tips of fingers. “ Even on her wedding day,” said Cou laincourt to himself, with a thrill of joy, “ she thought of me before she thought of him.” Cold and ceremonious was the bride’s manner through all the banqueting and rejoicing. • Adrian himself was almost de ceived, and on this, the happiest day of his life, could not help feeling sad. When all was over, the guests gone, and Coulain court conducted his children to v their own apartment, his heart thrilled with joy to thinlv that his home was now to be for ever hers. Then. whe_n the door was closed upon them, Cecile threw herself into her husband’s arms and whispered, “I love you.” They have all three; been supremely happy ever since, and Coulaincourt takes the credit of all on himself, never suspect ing the stratagem by which a woman contrived to have her own way.. Who Fiddled.—-In the Pennsylvania Legislature, two years ago, there ! was a member named Charles Wilson, from one of the northern tier counties, who con sidered himself among the great orators of the day, and, when pretty well filled with “Harrisburg water,” would get off, for the edification of his colleagues, some very rich illustrations. Being somewh’al interested in a bill before the House, ho made what he considered one of his master-speeches, during the delivery of which he used the illustration of “Nero fiddling while Rome was burning.” He had scarcely taken his seat when a member tapped him on the shoulder and said, “ Say, Charlie, it wasn’t Nero that ‘fiddled,’it was Caesar. You should correct that before it goes on the record.” In an instant he was upon his feet,»and exclaimed, “Mr. Speaker—Mr. Speaker —I made a mistake. It wasn’t Nero t|iat * fiddled ’ while Rome was burn ing; if was Julius Ccesar.” Happily for him, the speaker was so busijy engaged that be did nut liear him ; but some mem bers near heard and enjoyed the joke.— Afterwards some one told him that he was right in the first place, which resulted in his reading all the ancient history in the State Library during the remainder of the winter, to assure himself as to who it was that fiddled.”— -.Exchange. Oke op Lamb’s Best. — Lamb once convulsed a company with ah anecdote of Coleridge, which, without doubt, he hatch ed in his hoax loving brain. “I was,” he said, “going from my house at Enfield to the East India House one morning, when I met Coleridge on his way to pay me a visit. He was brimful of some new idea, and, in spite of my-assuring him that time was precious, he drew me within the gate of an unoccupied garden by the road-side, and there, sheltered from observation by a hedge of evergreens, he took me by the button of my coat, and,, closing his eyes, commenced an: eloquent discourse, waving his right hand gently as the musical words flowed in an' unbroken stream from his lips. I' listened,entranced; but the stri king clock recalled me to a sense of duty. I saw it was of no use to attempt to break away ; so, tafcing_advantage of his absorp tion in bis subject, and, with my penknife, quietly severing my button from my coat, 1 decamped. Five hours afterwards, in passing the same garden, on my way home, 1 heardCoieridge’s voice; and, on looking in, there be was with closed eyes, the but ton in his fingers, and the right hand gracefully waving, just as when 1 left him. tie had never missed me. A Grammatical Waiter. —“ Waiter, is my chicken a broiling ?” “No, sir, the cook is.”.. '■ ‘M didn’t order the cook. He is too tough.” “ How will you have it done?’’ “ Why, I want it broiled, to be sore.” “ That be is doing, sir.” - “ But yon said he was broijing himself.” “ So he is, but he is not being broiled.” “ Well, Mr. Waiter, (rising and bowing reverently), may I ask your high gram- I jmaticolarity, fa ply cAWsm ippuect f’ EDITORS AKlife From the Dollar Newspaper. '■ PUTTING POTATO**^ Potatoes should be taken from the ground only in fair weather, and left ex posed to the sun and windno longer than is necessary. In handling, care should be trken not to bruise!'the surface or break the skin. It is a common error that a potato will stand all manner of ill usage and be none the worse- for it. Orchard ings know that if an apple is bruised in the gatherinjftt is not fit,for wilder keep ing. In like manner farmers should know that for table use the potato needathe same careful handling to insure the best results. A potato that is bruised or chafed, oc is subject to a water leaving tbo ground, is materially injured for Vinter keeping. ’ j A potato of the finer varieties, such as Neshannock, Peachbluw, Kidney, Mercer, Lady’s Finger, etc., when upon suitable soil, properly harvested and evoked right, is a positive delicacy upon the table; but take the same' lot, let them be roughly handled, dialed, immersed in water, mad laid by in that ruined and undone condi tion tor, a few weeks, and then cooked, even tolerably well, and they are not a very inviting dish. When the potato crop of Ireland failed, and-that people were confronted with starvation, little did we Americans realize how much suffering to the poor; and posi tive inconvenience to the rich, would lie caused by a faildrl of the potato crop in this country. The potato is both bread and meat in many households, and deserves all the consideration of a prime staple, as well as a luxury in human food. - Potatoes for table use should not be stored at all in a wet cellar. In such a place their starch is hydrogenized, thereby spoiling their finest quality for food; they become soggy, and will never cook dry pr mealy. For the same reason, where pota toes are stored in heaps out of doors’and covered with earth, avoid placing them on any other than land which is naturally dry, nnd where water will notsfrmd. Qa sandy land potatoes will keep very well in heaps, if properly covered from the winter rains and secured from irost. Cellar storage is most common among farmers, and most convenient for house hold purposes; but the cellar should be dry. if the potatoes are free from disease, they may be stored in close bins, with the tops covered with dry sand or loam, which will insure perfect preservation. Potatoes which are tainted with rot must have their sore spots dried up by exposure to the dry atmosphere and a dust of slacked Umep— Such potatoes are not fit for human food, and should only be used under protest Hn case of dire necessity. - liv? In the storage of large quantities of potatoes for stock use, say in the bfffn cellars, it is well to use a dust of lime- We saw a good example of this practice in the barn cellars of the famous oldagri culturist, James Gowcn, of Germantown, near Philadelphia, last full. Mr. Gowen feeds laigely of roots to his stock in winter. His ample stone-walled cellars were heaped with potatoes jind other roots, all iff'the nicest order. Before putting in the stock of roots for winter, Mr. Gowen bits the walls and paved floors nicely cleaned and sprinkled with lime dust, and, as the po tatoes are put in other dustings are ad ministered, by which all foul vapors are avoided, and the place is free from the noisome atmosphere usually encountered where vegetables are stored in any quantity. Thk Great Tragedian.^—The Califor nia editors are a queer set. A sample of their treatment of McKean Buchanan proves it. When announced to Visit acei - tain up-country town, oue of’em spoke of him in this wise : “ The Legitimate Drama. —We are happy to state that the talented American trage dian, McKean Buchanan; supported hy a talented stock company, will shortly pay our town a visit, etc.” On the return trip, Mr. Buchanan hav ing failed to come down,” as munificent ly as was exacted, or having exhibited evident partiality for a rival hewspaptlr, we have : , ‘ “Buckean Muchauan, w ith hi* one horae show, was Lera a few nighta ago, we understand. As usual the attendance was slim. Buckean is about played' out'with our intelligent and discriminating commit mty.” The Paris correspondent of the London Star writes as follows: Restaurants for the working classes ip Pans have, nowa days, recourse to every species of invention to attract attention. Last week, one jhst opened ip the Faubourg Monturatre prom ises a dinner of two courses an i a deswt to whoever writes, in a legible hand, answer to a rebus offered every morning for solution by the dame de cemptoa. 1 ■ - ' 'y.'.-j ®T A woman possessed of gcniuiar>d|U~ terature, is perhaps unnatural; so a£» the garden rose', the l **que«n of be “ flower of loveFia, by the laws ofbotany, a monster, yet a lovely one. v; , >/;*- MM. t" ,■ s. v - NO. 33.