nil ! i CHEAP! CAMBRIA FREEMAN PER! pnhllHiei Weekly fS5m'RG, Cambria Co., .Fa., "jjY 1 1. A. Mol'IKE. ..lixtted Circulation - 1,116. WIS, ,rBm Ripno." RATES. n rear, cash In advance U-M ,. If not p'ii within mo. 20 if not p'd within year.. 2.25 rcaMin outside the county , .IdiMowl per year will be charged to -n? tho above term be de ' e 'th.-" who don't consult their 'r'v,V. hv pivinir in advance inu.t not iTV n'io J on the -inv f ont irnr as those. j 1 1 vnr. A'lniinis'rHT -r"s V Autlir Ntie5.. w STrny ani fimiliir :uinp item, f rst k. fu!'pni-iit infrrtion fie. 8 inf-i'ior, or j r-(. CtiO Or i-fi.'. anti t nmtjuif at i UK -i ' IV?.- Zion riarr- r hmiU'l d ,4 in.'rrr!. muf 6f airf ,'?r a cirri tnc-ri'nM .Tor Iri mtno of n'l kfn l nat., 'v' fxi ?st,"w ouily execuieil ftt lowest price. l)on i. ju i3t it. H. A. McPIKE, Editor and Publisher. HE 18 A. FREEMAN WHOM THE TRUTH MAKBS FREE, AND ALL ARE SLAVES BESIDE." SI.50 and postage per year, In advance. ; , . ... jfHrt b distinctly anderstood ' f rir!.f I ,'r y or paper before yoa stop It. If i ,r. mi-'. None tint sculaways do oth- ( r'r)'ia t he Hciilawapr lite'a too short. VOLUME XVI. E13ENSBURG, PA.. FRIDAY, JUNE 23, 1SS2. NUMBER 22. v WW ft a -SB. fnVilllt tO SClI Ollt to make purchases for fall. k Willlt tO SClI Ollt to keep plenty work going. Je vant to sell out to make some changes. Pi! i i I OAK HALL, : p. PHILADELPHIA. t ... .: VJ" iwji. r. ai W Sou Re.J , Etffh t 5or, r --e. W do JJ Black Waiaut CaM , i r- rrr--: A?,S.?t3 Reeds, $90. ' tr "' 'T: rnnw. Remit j "-.!,.' . or R-Klnter 1 jij.. f l"hrut a Moment's ysp Ksf Jersey. TH C M or f-r it:g f Blood. Brott- . .." 'a.-rh r.f i,. t. snl ail I tie l uliuouarT 1 "' . '' rnt and 1 Od. .... . lO. l'itlburll. j , u. vi t-.i bum; 1 1 Commencing first week of June. s, , tch people and olil-time folks all know wLat is the meaning of an sue." It i1' h term used when things are to be sold out to close i' utnerships, etc. We ir-'!"-' a sale of this nature. The prosperous season so far this t!. largest we have ever had, encourages us to Ring all the Bells, vz cjr.L mi: rr.ori.iz ix to close out before THE 4th OF JULY, A.LL. OF THE OF MEN'S and BOYS' CLOTHING. e want to sell out to start ao;ain with a new stock. e Want tO Sell OUt to do a larger business than ever. o never slop at anything to c.uiy rut" mr pi. -us whin we are in the right, inn! if thu piict-s must be cut down, to gather the people, Down oo the Prices. ' v.- .-.u.-ri'.ice our profits fur one month, the people have dona jjen r m.-iuy year.-, and we are satisfied. !.'A XUT-SH1'LL,TIIIS IS IT. i !:!-t .i! j. tit r.f all this in a radical reduction in prices from T!.-y .:. t-nt, some ten, .some twenty, some thirty per cent., -n jro."N k pn-d -; rially for this sale, not at all. Compared V ''I -' '! . avc:-;i,'.' rciluctiou is twenty-fivo per rent. Of the " '" !!;.!. !:-: now 1..-M by us. about .ji0,(MX) is involved in this Ir ,u ' '.i. g:,-.t lit wliich might be ru:de we only quote three items v. Mm,, ly : ;.i ..f in- n's ".ts-:u. n- Pantaloons, made and making, strong, : .! : I.;te'y v.i.f.U .::;.."!., now 2. 12. :. :.V st;t, r.-a! i,!i!l ,iwytrs (.'assimere, made and making; 1 ti..-n"s uiis, ;ht 'l' s, evrry garment freshly made ; some of .'.it f r !y at i'rJ on, ?o-jr,. ur i:iVi.t t . ::.ij y to tell all the people that quick trade ..ire on a.'i or.,- clotl,:!:,' for this sale. BROWN. j- Corner Sixth and Market Sts., 1 .-ifSJ Sis IIIIL.VIKLPIIIA SES'GER 3IACHESE mU to anu Sinner in the Market. Th- :,w , ,it rH.rc-.-;it. t. (...(.iiutr stvie li.r i!w l ciipl,.. .,) j de iin.iT'i;t,.. cftrs li.r s1a .ii I h.- w .i . ) .-r ; ii I l iw ,r .c .' Thi m.iohine ti.i-' mm inT'iTt :i 1 1 -Cvi inn horcver ti.f.l, ami H vnrra -i.v 1 f.tr the tfrrn of thrrr ymr.t. Kmpm-l-. r din ir,- licr b!1 (In- time an 1 that vim nut Hoy h ive rverv n(. or' unity "x.itnine (ln tna i'ln ii" ii n.l it In .T ( inn. Imt ymi knn where t. r- in. t. tr.-t. yi.nr iiimifF hvk if th machine l .n'i .! "T u'ily . rt i ri e!it... Ym will tliere ('r.. ivin.-u t ii ii r own i i:tre?M hy Imy Inn the I'tnl aili'iihi. Sinjtr Iiii'tiine an.l l.uvlinf frinn oo one '"" W. j. HI K. -2 8m.j ituclTn Mills. A lltvlirny Twp. CRHSCITNT PLUG i nii nrinii in ii. ii iiv-i.. though hat a sl i.rt time on ih- niNrki-t, I air-i.tv t ii- f ivnrlte with many rhowrr. M uto from st-lected leaf n l with t.es't vM-i-r in. ir i a i-a.it.il art cie n1 iteeiaU int. lo me IVnnsylvanla ta(e. For .aln hy all i. all r. Si-ml for s imple to the manufacturers. f. A. J A( KSO A CO., PMrntbarv, Ts. EVERY ONE Jfs?" Will ge talnahle inlormallon I KIT hy j eernl i n lor circular to t. rot iUKE, iJosuin, Mips. C')f Ier e-k can te mail" In any locality. 0)t Soju-Mtinir intirlv new for BKC-st. ft.f ouuit I ne ft. tT. IXiKAHlW CU., l?oi-ton, Mass. Allff KTISKKStnenl Tor our Select List of Local .e-.,ii.er.. Oeo. V. Kowell a, Co.. W Siirucs St., Y. Q( ii H I vear to Airents and tipeowa. O.tfit AMERICA. BY JOHN BOYLE O'REILLY. Head at the Reunion of the Army of the Potomac, at Detroit, on June V., lSbt. Nor War nor Teace, forever old and yonn?. But Strength, my theme, whose song is yet unsung, The People's Strength, the deep alluring dream Of truths that seethe below the truths that seem. The buried ruins'of dead empires seek, Of Iudian, Syrian, Persian, Unman, Greek : From shattered capital and frieze upraise The stately structure of their golden days : Their laws occult, their priests and prophets Their altars search, tneir oracles unmask, Their parable from birth to burial see, The acorn cerm, the growth, the dense leafed tree, A world of riant life ; the sudden day When like a new strange elory shone decay, A golden glow amid the green ; the change From branch to branch at life's receding range. Till nothing stands of towering strength and pride Save naked trunk and arms whose veins are dried, And these, too, crumble till no sign remain To mark its place upon thewind-swept plain. Why died the empires ? Like the forest trees Did nature dooin them ? or did slow disease Assail their roots and poison all their springs ? The old-time story answers : nobles, kings, Have made and been the State, their names alone Its history holds ; its wealth, its wars, their own. Their wanton will could raise, enrich, con demn ; The tolling millions lived and died for them. Their fortunes rose in conouest. fell in guilt.- The people never owned them, never built. Those olden times ! how many words are spent In weak regret and shallow argument To prove them wiser, happier than our own ! The oldest moment that the world has known Is passing now. Those vaunted times were young : Their wisdom from unlettered peasants sorting : Their laws from nobles arrogant and rude ; Their 'ustice force, their whole achievement ! crinie. With men the old are wise : why change the rule When nations speak, and send the old to senool ! Pospect the past for all the good it know : Give lifiiiie lives ami struggling truths their a ne ; But ask. what freedom knew the common men Who served ami bled and won the victories then ? The leaders are immortal, but the hordes They led to death were simply human swords, Unknowing what they fought for, why they fell. What change has come ? Inperial Europe tell! Death's waiders cry from twenty centuries' peaks ; riata-a's field the word of Plevra speaks : The martial draft still wastes the peasant farms, A dozen kings, five million men in arms ; The earth mapped out estate-like, hedged with steel ; In neighboring schools the children bred to feel Unnatural hate, disjoined in speech and creed ; The forges roaring for the armies' need.'; The cities bunded by the people .ined With scowling forts and roadways under mined ; At every bastioned frontier, evey state, Suspicion, sworded, standing by the gate ! But turn our eyes from those oppressive lands : Behold, one country all defenceless stands, One nation-continent, from Kast to Vet. With riches heaped upon her bounteous breast ; Iler mines, her marts, her skill of Land and brain, That bring Aladdin's dreams to light again ! Where sleep the conquerors? Here is chance for spoil : Such un watched fields, such endless, thought less toil ! Vain dream of olden time ! The robber strength That swept its will is overmatched at length. Here, not with swords but smiles the people greet The foreign spy in harbor, granary, street ; Here towns unguarded lie, tor here alone Nor caste, nor king, nor privilege is known. For home the fanner ploughs, the miner rtelves, A land of toilers, toiling for themselves ; A land of cities, which no fortress shields. Whose open streets, reach out to fertile tieli.s ; Whose roads are shaken by no armies' tread ; Whose only camps are cities ot the dead ! Go stand at Arlington, the graves among : No ramparts, cannons there, no bauners hung. No threat above the Capital, no blare To warn the senators the guns are there. But never yet was city fortified lvike that sad height above Potomac's tide ; There nuver yet was eloquence in speech Like those ten thousand stones, a name on each ; No guaids e'er pressed such claim on court or king As these Piatorians to our Senate bring ; The Army ol Potomac never lay So full ot strength as in its camp to-day I On fatal Chferonea's field the Greeks A lion raised. a somber tomb thai speaks No word, no name, an emblem of the pride Of those who ruled the insect "lost that died. But by her soldiers' graves Columbia prove9 How last toward morn the night ot manhood moves. Those low white lines at Gettysburg remain, The sacred record of her humblest slain, Where children's children in their time, will come To view with pride their he roe-father's tomb, While down the ages runs the patriot line Till rich tradition makes each tomb a shrine. Our standing army these, with spectre glaives, Our foitressed towns their battle-ordered graves. Here sleep our valiant, sown like dragon's teeth ; Here new born sons renew the pious wreath ; Here proud Columbia bends, wiin tear-stirrcd llllilltll, To kiss their biood-seal, binding North and Sout li, Two clamping hands upia the knot they tied When Union lied and human Slavery "died. Who doubt our streugth or measure it with those Whose ntiiii-d millions wait for coming foes, They judge by loja.1 standards, that depend On l.iielnig h.mds to threaten or deiend, That keep their war-dogs chained iu time ot pence, And tiiead a loe scarce less than their re lease. Who hunt wild beasts with cheetahs, fiercely tame, Must watch their hounds as well as fear their game. Around our veterans hung no dread or doubt W hen thrice a million men were musteted out. As scattered seed in new-ploughed land, or flakes Of Spring-time snow that fall in smiling lakes, Our war-born soldiers sank Into the sea Ot peaceful life and fruitful energy. No sittn remained of that vast army, save Iu field and street new workmen, bronzed and grave ; Some whittling teamsters still in at my vest ; Some quiet citizens with medalled breast. So died the hatred of onr brother-feud ; The conflict o'er, the triumph was subdued. W bat victor kinjj e'er spared tje vanquished foe ? IIow mucn of mercy did etroDg Pruwia show When anguished Taiis in the dust lay prone ? The German trumpet rang above her moan. The clink of Uhlan spurs her temples knew ; Her Arch of Triumph spanned their triumph, too. Not thus, O South! when thy proud head was low, Thy passionate heart laid open to the foe, Not thus, "Virginia, did thy vietois meet At Appomattox him who bore defeat ; No brutal show abased thine honored State ; Grant turned from Richmond at the very gate ! O Land, masmanimnns, republican ! The last for Nationhood, the first for Van ! Becanse thy Hnes by Freedom's self were laid, Profound the sin to change or retrograde. From base to cresting let thy work be new ; 'Tw not by aping foreign ways !t grew. To struggling people give at least applause ; Let equities, not precedents, subtend your laws : Like rays from that great Eye the altars show. That fall triangular, free states should grow, The soul above, the brain and hand below. Believe that, strength lies not in steel or stone ; That perils wait the land whose heavy throne. Though ringed by swords and rich with ti tled show. Is based on fettered misery below : That nations grow where every class nnites For common interests and common rights ; Where no caste barrier stays the poor man's son, Ti'l. step bys'ep, the topmost height is won ; Where every hand subscribes to every rule, And free as air are voice, and vote, and school 1 A Nation's ypars are centuries ! Let Art Portray thy First, and Llhprty will start From every field in Europe at the sight. "Why stand thpse thrones between us and the light?" Strong men shall ask : "Who built these frontier towers To bar out men of kindred blood with ours 1" O, this thy work, Republic ! this thy health, To prove man's birthright to a common wealth ; To teach the people to be strong and wise. Till armies, nations, nobles, royalties. Are laid at rest, with all their fears and hates ; Till Europe's thirteen Monnrelos are States, Without a harrier and without a throne, Of one grand Federation like our own ! REMARKABLE TREES. BY JASrER T. JENXtNOS. The vegetable world produces many strik ing examples of wonder and admiration. The study of botany is a deep one ; and the strange and mysterious processes of plant life has ever been a subject of research and ! investigation for the philosopher and student of science. The manner in which the ele- j nients are drawn f rom the soil and prepared i in ten thousand different forms and combi- I nations by the little chemical laboratories of Nature, has ever engaged his earnest atten tion. There is yet much to be learned in this department of physical science, and as we delve deeper into the subject we soon become convinced how small a part of the mighty laws and operations of Nature are really known. Every r.ew discovery made, how ever, and every new principle that appears to unfold itself to the mind, proclaims more and more the grand and harmonious work of the great Creator. But we have not space in the present pa per to enter into a description of the strange and curious processes of vegetable life, and so we proceed to present an account of a few of the more wonderful examples to be met with in this branch of external nature. We will commence the list with the stately and beautiful niasinolia of Florida. This re markable flowering tree, concerning which so much has been said and written, is a gi gantic species of southern laurel. When covered with its large white flowers, "some of which are said to be eight or nine inches in diameter, it presents a magnificent appear ance ; and its fragraee fills the air with per fume to the distance of half a mile away. It is often tall and graceful in form, though its ! size and beauty has frequently been much exaggerated. The largest specimens are said to attain the height of one hundred feet; and the top forms a perfect cone. It will hardly compare in size with northern sugar maple, or sycamore, the Cottonwood, or the stately ash. The wood is soft, of little value, and the thick bark is smooth, like that of the beech, and of a whitish color. The leaves somewhat resemble those of the orange tree, though larger and thicker, and, while the upper surface is smooth and glossy, as though it had been oiled, the under side is covered with a soft, yellowish down. The live oak is also a remarkable tree, ex ceeding in the number and magnitude of its branches that of any other tree on the Amer ican Continent. These put forth at the height tit about fifteen feet from the ground, and spread out. In some instances, to the distance of fifty paces on a side. The wood, which is hard and tough, toims a valuable material for ship building. It is a native of the Southern States. The tallipot palm, of Ceylon and the East Indies, is chiefly noted for its immense leaves. The largest of these form stupendous fans, often twenty feet in length by fifteen across! and are the largest leaves of any known spe cies of vegetation. They are large enough to shelter a whole family ; and the natives often use them for tents and umbrellas to shield them from the rain, and the scorching rays of the midday tropical sun. The tree grows straight and symmetrical, to about a hundred feet in height, and is said to blos som and bear fruit but once during its exist- The upas, or poison tree of Java, has been rendered famous by the many marvelous and ' incredible stories that were once told con- ' cerning it. It was said, and believed by I many in former times, that its poisonous fumes struck dead every hv inp crerf n r. i I,-., t came within a circle of many miles of where it grew: and that the ground al! about was strew n with the dead carcasses and bleaching bones of men and animals. IIoijv people could go and see and come back alive to tell the story, was not told. Scientific travelers. nterrified by the reports of the superstitious natives, finally visited the spot and the fab ulous stories were soon set at naught. The region was found to be of great fertility and beauty; and tha design of the natives in spreading terrible stories about the dea.ily upas was, in all probability, to keep foreign ers away. The tree is tall and beautiful in appearance, and produces a sort of yellow frothy juice, which is said to be poisonous. There is a curious specimen of the vegeta ble creation, found growing among the rug ged and barren mountain sides of South America, denominated the cow tree. Warm summer showers, generally so essential for vegetable growth, are rarely known iu the vicinity ; yet this singular production, with apparently dry and withered branches, is a reservoir of human food. The natives make incisions In the bark, and a milky Juice, Borne- what resembling that of the miik-weed, ex udes in abundance. Most vegetable juices of this description are nauseating or poison ous ; but the milk of the cow-tree Is said to be sweet and nutritious. In the West Indies there is another curious production, termed the cabbage-tree. It Is a largo tree, from four to six feet in diame ter at the base, and generally rises straight as a plumb line to a height of from one to two hundred feet. Scarcely a leaf or branch puts out until near the top, where it assumes a different color, and a thick cluster of light, leafy branches, about fifteen feet in length, set out in all directions. The light, zephyr like beeezo causes these lofty branches to rise and fall In gentle undulations, like an immense plume of feathers ; but in times of high wind the tall trunk sways about, and bends over as though it would bow to the earth. Above the crest of waving plumes, crowning the summit of all, is the cabbage ; the taste of which closely resembles the com mon vegetable of the same name, raised in our gardens. As every one of these wonder ful cabbages obtained destroys the life of the tree, it has become a very rare and costly dish, prepared only on some grand entertain ment of the rich ; and the time is probably not far distant when this already rare tree will be unknown among the living existence of vegetable productions. Some of the most remarkable exar: pies of vegetation found on the globe are produced in China. Among these 13 the tallow-tree ; a small tree with brilliant red and purple leaves. When seen from a little distance it presents a strange and beautiful checkered appearance. The blossoms are yellow, and the little white grains of vegetable tallow, which are enclosed in husks, are picked out and manufactured Into candles. The most universally used wood in China is the bamboo. This is an immense reed, which enters into all the occupations, trades and professions of the empire Chairs, ta bles, bedsteads, and nearly all the articles of furniture, from that of the humblest fisher man to the richest mandarin, are fashioned from this material ; and by splitting and grinding it is worked into ropes, cords, and twine, and it is even manufactured into sail cloth and paper. Probably no tree on eo is wotked into a greater multip' thnn the buniboo : and wen great reed, it would seem tl cliinery of the Chinese c Stop. The camphor-tree is onr the Chinese trees. It Is f, or less in scat tered pntel of the river. It is a giga re!, sometimes attaining or six feet, and with brn feet in circumference. generally very broad a specimens can now lie f feet in height. The CI to a height of three hn circumference so grea their arms extended it. The wood ia dry, used somewhat In bi taincd by steeping th The varnish tree, frorfi which the beautiful Japan varn'sh is male, is also a native of China and Japan. It is a smallish tree, slightly resembling the nsh in appearance, with light-green, laurel shaped leaves. The varnish exudes in the ninht, from incisions made iu the bark, and as it is very poisonous, the workmen are obliged to perform their labor with caution, often rubbing their bodies with a prepared oil, inclosing their hands in long gloves and their heads in linen veils. It is thought by some that an exaggerated ac- count of these precautions concerning the poison varnish tree might have given rise to the fabled story of the deadly upas. Still another remarkable production of China is the oil-tree. This is a small shrul like tree, often cultivated on the tea planta tions. The seeds are said to yield a great abundance of pure and esculent oil. It pro duces a profusion of beautiful white blos soms, and, when in full bloom, an orchard of these trees appears like a grove covered with snow. In size and general appearance it greatly resembles the American cherry-tree. Near the little town of Orotava, on the is land of Teneriffe, is the famous dragon-tree; seen and described by numboldt, the great scientific traveler. Near the ground it is forty-eight feet In circumference, and at the height of ten feet its diameter is twelve feet. At a short distance above the giound the huge trunk divides into a great number of curious branches, each bearing a single tuft of bright green leaves at the top. The entire height is only sixty feet ; and the maze of uplifted branches, all appearing so nearly alike, and all uniting to the huge trunk at a single point, presents a strange and peculiar aspect. Its growth is very slow ; and some have thought it must have required a thous and years to have reached maturity. Hum boldt calculated it was one of the oldest specimens of vegetable life on the globe. One of the most wonderful productions of the vegetable world Is the banyan-tree. It is a native of Hindostan and Cochin, China ; and has been looked upon with reverence and wonder in past and present ages. There is no other tree that resembles it in outward form or general appearance. The strong lateral branches that reach out from the trunk send down numerous shoots that take root in the ground, and form new trunks. In this way a grove is soon formed around the parent stem, and eventually a forest, as it were, arises, all connected, ai d formed of a single tree. One of the. largest of thee cu rious trees now standing, is on an island in the Nerhuddah River, Hindostan. It has three hundred and fifty large trunks, and three thousand small ones ; covers seven acres of ground, and furnishes shelter for seven thousand people. In clearing away these trees, the numerous trunks are all girdled, or cut, when it withers, and soon commences to decay. When it becomes dry, fire is applied, and often the whole mass is consumed. One of the most stupendous trees in the world is the African baobab. Near the mouth of the Senegal Hiver there is a huge specimen of this tree, thirty feet in diameter. The massive tiunk is short, and the ponder ous branches spread out in all directions, producing a vast, rounded top, large enough for a small forest. It is supposed to be near ly ten thousand years old. When covered with a luxuriant green foliage, and a profu sion of snowy blossoms, it presents a truly magnificent appearance; and the traveler can hardly believe, until he has made a near inspection, that so great a mass of verdure and flowers is owned and upheld by a single stem. The superstitious natives often gather about the spot and celebrate the opening of Its flowers with religious rights and heathen ceremonies. r t f 1 i 1 1 1 m 11 1 m t The tallest trees on the globe are said to be in Australia. A fallen tree in Gippsland measures four hundred and thirty-five feet in length ; and in the Victoria section two forest monsters are now standing, one of which is estimated to be two hundred and thirty-five, and the other four hundred and fifty feet in height. In Skowhegan, Maine, there is an Immense russet apple-tree, over four and one-half feet in diameter. It was planted in C2. Seven feet from the ground five huge branches put forth, each averaging some thirty five feet in length. The entire top is about sixty-three feet across ; and the average yield of apples has been about thirty bushels yearly. In 1825, an enormotn black walnut-tree blew down near the sight of the present vil lage of Silver Creek, in Southwestern New York. It was hollow ; and eighteen feet of the but-end was sawed off, roofed over, and fitted for a saloon. Ten or twelve persons could easily stand within at the same time Although so majestic in proportions, the sheli was thin and light, and, after remaining for some time as the wonder of the region it was carried to several of onr Atlantic cities where it drew crowds daily, and, ultimately,' it was transported across the ocean, and ex hibited in London, Paris, and other Euro pean cities, where it was represented as a specimen of American vegetation. The largest chestnut-tree in the country is faid to be growing on the farm of Solomon Merkle, in Berks county, Pennsylvania. It is described as being forty feet in circumfer ence at the base, and is estimated to contain seventeen cords of wood. Steps are fasten ed between the limbs, by means of which an easy ascent can be made to the top. Trees of enormous proportions are men tioned by the ancient writers ; among which were the far-famed cedais of Lebanon. The mountain was probably once covered with a giant forest composed of this noble tree ; but when Solomon built his great temple thirty thousand men were sent among them with their axes, and the glory of the renowned t Lebanon forest was soon leveled to the dust, ; Only a few specimens are now left standing, and these arc- " Vr much smaller than some r-e. e temple. The larg- upon the spot may een feet in diameter -et In height. At a round large spread- ing the trpe a som- e. The topmost imilar to those of ood works free '. The Temple the seven won- built of cedar. in which Ln- enty soldiers, eh the night. trees is the ut is heavy ins spread a arii a vast area, that iierous oaks of the forest appear gnificant in comparison. It often grows in the most inaccessible situations, and the best timber is procured only by great diffi culty. The largest log ever cut in Honduras was, when squared, seventeen feet long, four feet and nine inches wide, five feet and four inches thick, measured five thousand one hundred and sixty-eight feet, board measure, and weighed fifteen tons. Its uses are well known. The wood is firm and solid, and susceptible of a Inch degree of polish. Some times, when the grain is unusually beautiful it commands a very high price. On or.e oc casion, we are told that three logs, thirty- eight inches square, and fifteen feet long, j brought fifteen thousand dollars. The wood, which was of exquisite beauty and closeness, was cut up into thin veneers for the most costly piano-fortes. The celebrated taxodium, of uhapultepec, in Mexico, was one hundred and seventeen feet in circumference, and was thought to he over five thousand years old. The largest tree of which history furnishes any record is the great chestnut tree of Mount JEtna. It was said to be sixty-four feet in diameter ; and so great, was its re. nown that it was marked in all the ancient maps. As late aslnO, when it was visitec by Brydone. the interior of the huge trunk was all decayed ; and it was divided into sev eral monster trees, with bark and branches only on the outer side ; though traces of its having once been united in one prodigious forest monarch were plainly apparent, both above and below the surface. Later a pub lic road was made through it, wide enough for two coaches to drive abreast. A hut was alo built in the interior, for the accommoda tion of the wandering nut gatherers of the vicinity. This noted tree was probably sev eral thousand years old ; and quite likely it had passed its meridian long before the ty rant Nero reigned in Kome, or before Julius Cpesar went on his eventful journey to Gaul and Briton. But time in its steady and un deviating march finally levels all things ; and the great chestnut has long since passed into a venerable ruin. Centuries ago, before de eay had commenced, it was looked upon as the glory of the forest ; and it was visited by thousands, from all Quarters of the then known world. But Its fame and greatness are Jknown no more. Like the mighty em pires of Greece and Kome its grandeur and magnificence has passed away, and we know of its former existence only as we read tl,e records of the pas,t. Ballou'i Monthly Maga zine for July. A Sagacious Donkey. In no part of the world, probably, is tr.e patient animal, which is too often treated w ith cruelty, so well caied for as in Spain. Iu this country the donkey and the mule are petted and become great favorites, and among the peasantry they are almost looked upon as members of the house hold. As showing the wonderful influence which kind treatment will exercise, espec ially on the donkey, we are told that a Span ish peasant who possessed one was iu the habit of journeying from his home to the city of Madrid for the purpose of conveying milk to the customers wliotn he supplied there; and every morning he and his donkey with laden panniers went their accustomed round. One day, however, the peasant became ill, and having no one to send, was in rather a serious dilemma; whereupon bis wife sug gested that the donkey should be dispatched alone. Accordingly the panniers were filled as u-Ojal with the pans of milk ; a piece of paper was attached, requesting customers to measure their own milk and return the cars, and the donkey started tiff. In a short time the faithful creature returned with the emp ty cans, having duly performed his errand ; and not only did it cont inue to do so for sev eral days, but its nihster afterward learned that it did not merely go the usual round, and trust to the customers coming out to it in the road, but had the sagacity t- go np to their doors and ring their bells (which in Spain often pui! downward) with its mouth, 1 M U ADL HLTTEN. STOIIY OF THE MASSACHF. OF THE MOItAVIVN inuuxs. Gnadenhutten. when translated, means "tents of grace," and at this quiet stot with a holy name was perpetrated a wholesale ouicnery or innocent people which will al ways remain a foul blot on the early history of Ohio. Twenty-nine men, twenty -seven women and thirty-four children were slaugh tered. Two buildings were relected for the howihle purpose, the women and bain s be ing killed iu one, the men and boys in the other. It is recorded that they died almost cheerfully, the hymns and prayers of those about to perish mingling with the dea:h : groans of their unhappy companions. The story of the crime and the circumstances ' which led up to it form an interesting bv.t i awful chapter in the chronicles of the time, j In order that our readers may thoroughly i comprehend the significance of the event It ! is necessary' to go back to the year 17"-o. It I was then that David Zeisberger, the Mora- vian missionary, a man of rare piety, faith ! and purity, was pursuing his great work among the Indian tribes. He suffered hard- j ships in the wilderness ; he endured ill-treat- I ment at the hands of the savage tribes whom ! he had resolved to convert, and never was heard to murmur a complaint. He worked : wonders. Going among the heathen he found j them demoralized by whisky sold to them by ! white traders, wicked and unscrupulous. He gently persuaded them to relinquish liquor, and pointed out its evil effects so forcibly that whole tribes yielded to the fascination of his eloquence and the weight of his argu ments. From being frenzied brutes thev became sober and reasonable people. His Influence spread raridly from nation to na tion. Thousands, in fact, embraced Christi anity; Zeisberger's enthusiasm and piety carried all before them. In 17"0 great pro gress had been made and the missions were flourishing. But that same year events oc curred which greatly put back the work of 1 conversion. The Moravian Indians were accused of being concerned in Pontiac's con spiracy. He was a brave ami famous Ottawa j chieftiin, who organized a plot among the 1 various Indian tribes to murder at a given time the English garri-ons at all points. 1 This was discove red, and, though it was nev- er proved that the Moravian Indians took i the slightest part in the conspiracy, they ' were per-ecuted ns much as if they bad. ; The Scotch-Irish settlers on the Pennsylva : nia frontier treated them with great harsh ness and severity. They p'vU udi il to bei'eve j or perhaps were, in fact, so ignorant and I bigoted lo believe that the Indians wire 1 the C'anaanites of the New World, hi, it that the existing war had come upon the colonies as a judgment for failing to totally extenni ! nate the native tribes. The Moravian In dians, being kind and pi ntle, were very 11a- turally fit and fair quarry for these highly civilized white settlers. An interes'ing chapter in the history of their early persecutions is that which treats of the narrow escape from extermination of a considerable body of the Moravian Indians. The threats jigain-t tho-e who had settled on the Pennsylvania frontier were of sr. deadly a nature that David Zeisberger advised them to deliver up their arms arid march to Phila delphia. They sought lefuge in the military quarters there, but the soldiers threatened to kill them if they did not go away. The poor refugees were ni.rbiied by an excited and angry rabhle, and the streets rang with yells and shouts which sounded as fierce as the warwhoop of the savages. Zeisberger was with them all the time, standing by them and encouraging them. A good I y nuuiber of Quakers, who had suffered their share of cruelty and persecution not so long before, also took t s poor Indians by the hand, heedless of the gioans and curses of the mob. They were finally removed to an island in the river as a measure of precau tion. Their lives were providenlially pre served. A body of Scotch-Irish, several hun dred strong, from Lancaster, calling them selves the "Paxton Boys," after butchering a number of Conestoga Indians, who had sought protection in a jail, marched toward Philadelphia with the avowed object of kill- ! ing all the Moravian refugees. Zeisberger and others prevailed upon them to relinquish j their murderous designs, and so the poor In- j dians escaped with their lives on that oc.ca- j cion. Some of them, it is true, were rescrv- ed for a worse fate and wt re brutally killed ' in the Tuscarawas Valley. Meanwhile the ! Indians were taken off the island and con- ' veyed to the upper Susquehanna region, be- yond the Wyoming Valley, where they built the hamlet of Frledenshutten, or "Tents of Peace." About 1708 Zeisberger established stations on the Allegheny and Beaver rivers, j It was in 17i0 that a number of Moravian Indians settled in the Tuscarawas Valley. j They worked hard tilling the fertile soil and j living lives of exemplary frugality and Indus- try. The settlement flourished, and Indians i flocked from the extreme West to the pleas- j ant tract in eastern Ohio. For ten years all went well. The country abounded in rich fields ot waving corn. Each house had its garden arid orchard ; peace and prosperity prevailed. In 1780 the British incited a j body of Delawares, commanded by Captain j Pipe, against the little colony of Gnaden : hutten. They were joined by a piirty of i Wyandottes, anil they broke up Uie scttle i merit, carry ing the Indians to Sandusky, and j their teachers to Detroit, the scat of the I British headquarters. It was iu the foilow- j ing year that the slaughter took place, and : this was how it came about. The poor ,eo- j I pie, who had been so cruelly kidnapped . ; lrotu their homes at Gna-Iciihut ten, 1. ft l acres and acres of corn standing in the ; fields. A party was cliosen to rtturu tiihar- I vest it, and they accordingly took up their ; I quarters in their old houses which L.ul not i been destroyed. Just at the time of their1 j leturn some hostile Indians murdered a white ! I settler arnl al! his family. The lroiitiersnien I were immediately up in arms. Although j : the Moravian Indians were guiltless of blood, ' ; they accused them of aiding and abetting ! i the crime and determined to make an x un- j pie of them. David Williamson seemed to: ; be the moving spirit among them. He or- ! i ganized a band, and with craft in the head ; j and murder in the heart torle into the Tus- ' . earawa VaMey ami surrounde 1 the Indians, ! 1 With friendly smiies and smooth promises : ; they greeted their victims. Dissembling j i their true purposes they pretended that they weie solicitous as to their safety and wished j tliein well. They finally induced them to I give up whatever arms they had, under the pretense of taking care of them, and promts- ed to conduct them to a place where they would be free to pursue their avocations w ithout moiestation. The guileless Indians, to tne number of ninety, were completely deceived They trusted implicitly k tt.e ! word of the white men, and at their sugges- ! . , , ... . . , j tions set fire to a number f their hcuM-s ia j order to Virevent them becoming harboring ! places for the hostile and righting Indians, j After they had surrendered their arr.is, the j f,.n purpose of their captors soon t;- tme manifest. They were made prisoners, bo-:d hand and loot, and confined to several of the houses. Then a council of war was held and vari ous methods of putting theni to death were discussed. Their fate was soon decideu,it it took a little fm titer time to determine the fittest mode of butchery. One excited fron tiersman siisgested that thay should be se curely confined in two large houses and burned alive. The idea was met with shouts of approval, but one who bad an eye for fu ture glory advised that the victims be toma hawked and scalped. He said that it was only right and fair that they should have some trophies of their campaign, and what more appropriate than the bleeding scalpsof the doomed Christian Indians? Thouch ap proving cries were accorded to the man who proposed burning them to death it is written that the scalping and tomahawking sugges tion was received with even a greater dem onstration of delight. It was at once adopt ed. The following morning was appointed for the bloody deed, and the Indians were told that they must die on tlie morrow. At first they were inclined to treot the affair as a joke. They could not beMeve that the whites were capable of mi-1i barbarity. Th j demeanor of their raptsrs, however, swn showed that it was 110 laughing matter. They realized that they must die. How did they behave? Ntv,r was truer heroism ; mai,ife,ted than by that band of unlettered Indians who had nothing but faith to buoy them up. The right was passed in praye. Iljnms of praise were ch-nted and each one Vied in encouraging the t' er tc foe death with Christ! 1:1 f,.: tit ;..!. Tiiry 1 id been divided in two part V end Pupiisojod in two large hos.--s. The nuir.lc.-crs kept wst.j outside. The 1 -. iiti v i. inns c.r the doom ed Indians astei i1. d heavenward, but pro duced no softening t fiVet upon the haidened he.nts of the white savages. At tunrisc preparations for the crime were made. Two buildings w -re selected, and were most appro pi iat ly failed "slaui ter houses." The men and boys were to b? killed in one, and the omen ana babes !ii the other. All being ready the slaughter be gan. Never had the sun risen on a more I: -human spectacle. The butcher were wtiiie men, picsumaniy Chi i-tians ; the vk iims red men. women and children, who had done no wrong. Babes weie tnrn from their mother.-.' anus, luaiie-,', wit!i tonnhawka and scalped in sigh; of th. ir shrieking and heart, broken parents. The slayers almost waded" in blood. After the chi'drcn ha I been dis patched came the women's turn. Dragged one hy one by t!., ir long dark hair in the centre of the shambles they were soon hur ried into eternity by one quick and stunning blow from a tom ilei n k. Their se.ps wera then cut off aft.-r the most approved Indian fashion. The white teen were Intoxicated with the s-Wnghter. Wl.i'e t!;- women and babes were being thus brutally slain in one house, the men and older boys met with a similar fate in another. It is useless to dwell on the horrible crime. After ninety victims had been dispatch-',!, David William son and his gang marched back to their homes Divi isberger was ilorr0 trick- en w hen be I.. ;U. of the massacre. He did not, how ever, 1 .'i; t;is efforts to convert and civilize the Indir.i.s. it is recorded that af ter a lapse of sixteen years some of his con verts led by Zeisberger returned to the Tus carawas and settled there one more. Their stay was short. The influx of the wh.tes was so great, the temptation of mm so strong, the outrages so frequent that the fertile valley wa- si,ou forsaken by the In dians, who retired first to Canada, and then to the Moravian mission station In Kansas, The good and pious Zeisberger died in ls-is. having labored for sixty years among the red men. WisRWonns. Nothing comes of violence. Without grace the works of the law are naught. Happiness is always the inaccessible castle which sinks to ruin when we set foot on it. No furniture is so charming as books, even if you never open them or read a single word. The power to do great things generaliy arises from the willingness to do little j tilings. I In ail sciences the errors piecede the i truth's, and it is better they should go first ! than last Without courage tiiere cannot be truth, and without truth there can be no otl.ei vir tue. We judge ourselves by what we fee! capa ble of doing, while others judge us by what we have already done. He who conies up to his own idea of great ness must always have had a very low stan dard of it in his mind. Instruction does not prevent waste of time or mistakes; and niistt'r-s theus..-iv.s are often the best tf-ac!i.-! o:" ail. Beware what you iv of c: rrs, because you only reveal y if N-nby. A man doesn't think to look 1-el hid the door snlees he has sometimes st-ifnl t!i,;re h'msclf. Experience always leads to modesty when wisely used. It never leads to b'j.istf u! ?on fidence or to self-idolatry. It has been koo often rebuked to claim infallibility, and too often humiliated to ?c.t xip a prima-.-y that may not be challenged. Sometimes there are living beings in na ture a.s beautiful as in romance. Peality surpasses imagination ; and we see breath ing, brightening and moving before our eves sights dearer to our hearts thaiU auy we ever beheld in the land of sleep. As exchange thinks there is something In advertising after all : "Ask some men for an advertisement and they will answer that they don't believe in advertising a paper Is never read. Let a man be taught kissing his neighbor's wife or trying to hold up the side of a barn some dark night and his tone changes immediately, and if a printing office is in a garret of a seventeen-story building he will climb to the top to !eg the editor to keep quiet don't putni.h it in the paper." An aggrieved party wanted a certaia ed- ' itor to apologize for saying that he was half i drank on a certain occasion. The editor j agreed to do so, and this is the way it ap- ! peared : "We stated last w eek that Mr. B. was not fit to be a public ofiicei ash? was half drunk all the time. We wish to eorrvct the above, as every one knows that Mr. B. never does anything by halves." s