VOL. 48. The Huntingdon Journal. J. R. DURBORROW, PUBLISHERS AND PROPRIETORS Uce un the Corner of Fifth and Washieyton streets. Tan HIMINGDON Janette'. is published every Wednesday, by J. R. DURBORROW and J. A. NASH, under the firm name of J. R. llneeoneow k Co., at $2.00 per annum, tx ADVANCE, or $2.50 if not paid lor in six months from date of subscription, and $3 if not paid within the year. No paper discontinued, ruless at the option of the publishers, until all arrearages are paid. N paper, however, will be sent out of the State unless absolutely paid for in advance. ' " • • • • • Transient ad;te'rtisements will be inserted at TWELVE AND A-HALF CENTS per line for the first insertion, SEVEN AND A-HALF CENTS forth° second, and FIVE CENTS per line for all subsequent inser tions. 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Dan. 4,11. S. GEISSINGEIt, Attorney -at- L• Law, Huntingdon, Pa. Office with Brown dc Bailey. [reb.3-13. K. ALLEK Loviu.L. J. Hsu. Muss.. L OVELL & MUSSER, Attorneys-at-Lan, HUNTINGDON, PA. Special attention given to COLLECTIONS of all kinds; to the settlement of ESTATES, ho. ; and all other legal basinen prosecuted with fidelity and dispatch. Enov6,'72 - PP A. ORBISON, Attorney-at-Law, • Office, 321 Hill greet, Huntingdon, Pa. imaY3l,7l. JOHN SCOTT. S. T. BROWN. J. X. DAILEY cICOTT, BROWN & BAILEY, At torneys-at-Law, Huntingdon, Ps,. Pensions, an .l all claims of soldiers and soldiers' heirs against the Government will be promptly prosecuted. Oboe on Hill street. [jan.4,'7l. -WILLIAM A. FLEMING, Attorney at-Low, Huntingdon, Pa. Special attention given to oolleotions, and all other legal bus Mess attended to with care and promptness. Office, No. 229, Hill street. [apl9,'7l. Hotels. MORRISON HOUSE, OPPOSITE PENNSYLVANIA R. R. DEPOT HUNTINGDON, PA J. H. CLOVER, Prop. April 5, 1871-Iy. 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JOB PRINTING ALL KINDS OF JOB WORK DONE NEATNESS AND DISPATCH, AND IN THE LATEST AND MOST IMPROVED STYLE, SUCH AB POSTERS OF ANY SIZE, CIRCULARS, WEDDING AND VISITING CARDS, BALL TICKETS, PROGRAMMES, ORDER BOOKS, SEGAR LABELS, RECEIPTS, PHOTOGRAPHER'S CARDS, BILL HEADS, LETTER HEADS, PAPER BOOKS, ETC., ETC., ETC., ETC., ETC., :o:-------- Our facilities for doing all kinds of Job Printing superior to any other establish ment in the county. Orders by mail promptly filled. All letters should be ad dressed, J. R. DURBORROW a CO A spectre stalks across the radiant face Of man's most lucid principle, Distorting by a hideous grimace The beauty that his thought reveals. O'er every sphere of life we see it loom, A dimming shadow, to eclipse The roseate tinges that in nature bloom, And mar the product of the eager lip. In youth's gay morn,when nature's powersyield Abundantly the mind's rich fruit, How darkly rankle on her verdant field The scions of this poisonous root. When time's hoar tinsel on the brow appears, Denoting clearly death's approach, When bows the frame beneath weight of years, Mark the defacing monster's touch. No high condition, from its ban exempt, Can claim entire purity, Though virtue's nobles make'the stern attempt, Succeeding only partially. No power deep innate in mortal man Can serve to check its swift advance, Like the black cloud which boundless ether spans, And dimly shades its blue expanse. The Wild. hunter. IT is ten years ago, said Mr. Belden, and at that time the country back from the Missouri way not much settled. The fame"of the Big Blue lauds had spread far and wide, and every week scores of farmers from lowa, Illinois and Missouri came in and settled on the rich bottoms, almost invariably writing back to their friends in the States that the land was one flawing with milk ani honey, and urging them to come and take up farms. So the settle ment prospered amazingly, and Beatrice, Neb., which had only been a town "ou paper." became a thriving village in re ality. Among the farmers who came to settle in this new country was a Mr. Thompson and his family. They had formerly lived in lowa, on the Big Sioux River, six miles from Sioux City ; but, not prosper ing there, they sought to better their con dition by moving to Nebraska, and selected the Big Blue as their future home. Mr. Thompson's family consisted of his wife, his daughter Mary, a sweet girl of sixteen, and old man who had spent the best part of his life in the service of the family, and now that he was old, was retained for the good he had done, and that be might have a home in his declining years. At one time Mr. T. had been well off in the world, but unfortunate speculations in Western lands had ruined him, and. at the time of which I speak, he bad little left besides a few horses, a wagon or two, and a dozen head of cattle. Near to where Mr. Thompson had set tled on the Blue lived a wild young man who had won for himself the name of the "Wild Trapper of the Blue." He lived all alone on the headwaters of a little creek, and was rarely seen except when he came, once in every two or three months, to the traders to exchange his furs and skins for flour, tobacco, matches, coffee, and such other articles as he needed. On these occasions, after having made his purchases, he would lounge about the tra ders for several days, drinking bad whis ky, and quarrelling with every one he could get to quarrel with him. When under the influence of whisky he would mount his horse, and, with two large navy revolvers in his belt, ride up and down the village, defying every one to come out and fight him. For the slightest offense, either real or imagined, he would fire at a man, and if he had a grudge against any one, that person's cattle or horses were sure soon afterward to be missing. It was more than hinted that he was the princi pal or accomplice in many of the thefts, and, if he were so minded, could tell where most of the valuable horses stolen from time to time on the Salt Lake stage road had gone. Yet such was the reputation of this young desperado for courage and wickedness that no one cared to meddle with him, and wherever he went his society was tolerated rather than preferred. No ten men could be induced to go to his rattail to search for stolen stock, and so the matter was allowed to rest—every one blaming him with all sorts of crimes, but no one being able to swear the suspicions were correct. WITH One evening, just as Mr. Thompson and his family were sitting down in their hum. ble cabin to a supper of cornbread and venison, a tall young man mounted on a wiry pony, rode up. He was scarcely nineteen years of age, and wore the inevi table leggings and long frock of the West ern hunters, fringed with buckskin. His face was brown as a nut, and, when he raised the broad brim of his slouch hat. his countenance betrayed unmistakable signs of dissipation. Mr. Thompson politely invited the stranger to dismount and partake of their frugal meal, and, springing from his horse. he prepared to enter; but when he saw Mary he drew back, blushed, and would have mounted again, had not Mr. Thompson in sisted upon his stepping long enough to eat something. It was not long before Mr. Thompson discovered from the con versation that his guest was none other than the famous young desperado of the Blue, and the discovery was attended with considerable anxiety and alarm. The quick eye of the hunter detected in an in stant the alarm his presence had created, and, rising from the table before he had finished his supper, he said, with a digni fied air: BUSINESS CARDS, CONCERT TICKETS, LEGAL BLANKS, "I am indeed the Wild Trapper of the Blue, and, like every ene else, you think me bad ; but I am not so bad as they say. Oh ?" he added, after a moment's pause, ''if some one in the world would only be- lieve me good, I might become like other men." PAMPHLETS Then, fixing his piercing eyes on Mary, he gazed at her a full minute, and, turn ing on his heel, he left the cabin without saying another word. The family, through the open doorway, saw him swing his lithe body across his pony, and gallop swiftly away over the prairie towards his cabin. From this visit Mr. Thompson augured bad luck ; but, as day after day and week after week passed they saw no more of him, they began to think they had done the young man injustice. True, they had often heard of him in the village, where he continued his drinking and fighting; but, although the nearest way would have led him by Mr. Thompson's house, both in going and coming, he always crossed the prairie some miles above, and never came near the place. Wottru. Egotism, BY THE BARD OF THE MOUNTAIN, Zin gtorp-Ztlitr. BY BEN. J• T. BRISBIN HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1873 Mr. Thompson, who had once been a kind husband, an indulgent father, and a man of good habits, disappointed by re peated failures in business and vexed by poverty, had of late years taken to drink, and now was little better than a common drunkard. His wife and daughter had persuaded him to move from lowa, hoping, when his old associations were broken up, he would do better in Nebraska and make their new home a happy one. For a time their most sanguine wishes seemed about to be realized. The farm they had taken up was a good one, the crops were abun• dant, and all seemed to promise a happy future. Mr. Thompson had left off drink ing entirely, and was again the kind and affectionate husband andfitther of former years. The happiness of this little family was unbounded, when, in an evil hour, a cloud darkened the bright sunshine of their rude cottage, and finally buret in a destroying storm. A man named Cook opened a traveler's ranch, or hotel, near Mr. Thompson's, and between this man and the farmer soon subsisted the warmest friendship. Night after night Mr. Thomp son would go to Cook's, and sit in the so ciety of bad men until the small hours of the morning. The wife and daughter, alarmed for his safety, redoubled their ef forts to4make his home attractive, and re sorted to every womanly device to keep', him with them ; but, despite their eater tions, he spent more than half his time at 1 1 Cook's. Fur a long time he resisted every temp tation to drink; but at length the evil of keeping bad company became apparent, and one morning Mr. Thompson came home to his family reeling drunk. His downward course was now rapid; he was drunk every day ; and to the vice of drinkino , he soon added that of gambling. The land on which he lived was a home stead, and the title could not be perfected for five years, so he could not gamble it away ; but, one by one, the horses, cattle, farming implements were put up and lost, until at last all thit was left were two horses, a wagon and harness. Among the persons who visited Cook's was a person called Long Ned, a flashily dressed individual, an ex-stage driver, a drunkard, a gambler, and an unprincipled scoundrel. Ned had won most of Mr. Thompson's stock and money, and was now waiting to finish up his devilish work by taking the last thing the poor man had. He had not long to wait,. fir, one evening Thompson with his team and wagon, came over to the ranch, and after sundry drinks had been taken Ned proposed to play for the team and horses. At first Thompson refused, saying it was all he had left, and he meant to keep that; but a drin)c or two more and the exhibition by Ned of a hun dred dollars in money changed his mind, and he sat down at the fatal table ; he was so sure he could win this time, and then Ned said he only wished he would, fur he wanted to see Mr. Thompson get back some of his property. In one hour the last horse was gone, and Mr. Thompson rose from his chair and staggered to the wall, where he stood with his head hanging upon his breast, ponder ing his misfortunes, and realizing at last that he and his family were penniless, and he had not even the means of getting, home. Ned came up and, slapping the farmer familiarly on the shoulder, said, "Come, cheer up, old fellow, and let us take a drink." Thompson moved mechanically to the bar, and, filling la's glass to the brim, drank it off. Again and again he drank, and at each swallow of the vile stuff seem ed to grow more desperate. lie was now maudlin drunk, and Ned led his victim to one side, and said he had long wanted a wife, and as Mary was a fine girl he would like to marry her. He really sympathized with Mr. Thompson in his losses; and as it was the custom in new settlements for men to buy their wives from the Indians, he would put up all he had won of Mr. Thompson against Mary. At. first the farmer was shocked and surprised ; but the more he thought of it the more reas onable Ned's proposition seemed to be, and after another glass be sat down and staked his own daughter on a hand of cards. Ned won, and the farmer burst into tears. The gambler made light of the matter, and assured him if he had lost a daughter he had won a son-in-law. Again and again they drank, and, Ned calling for a bottle of whisky, the two got into the wagon and started for the farmer's house. On the road, Thompson drank heavily from the bottle, so that when they arrived at the farm, the farmer was so drunk that he had to be helped out of the wagon. It was very late, but the wife and daughter were still up waiting for his return, and Mary was clad in a neat white muslin which made her look charming. They were both much surprised to see a stranger with Mr. Thompson, but received him kindly, thinking, no doubt; he had merely come to see Mr. T. sale home. Ned turned out the team—his team— and then entered the cabin. He was a repulsive looking fellow at beet; but now that the night wind had puffed and flushed his bloated face, he looked perfectly hide ous. Fixing his bleared eyes on Mary, he stared the girl out of countenance, and she turned away. Wherever site went Ned fol lowed her with his ferret eyes, until the girl became so nervous and uneasy she went into the room and waked up the old man. When she returned to the outer room, she found her mother had fallen into a swoon, and her father, who had been asleep in the chair, was now sitting up, apparently quite sober and talking to Ned Mary ran to her mother, and raising her in her arms, placed her on the bed, where she sprinkled water in her face until she recovered, and began to sob bitterly. Her father now called her to his side, and said : "Mary, we have lost everything; this gentleman has won all, and wants you for his wife. I have promised him your hand. Go to him. The surprised and confused girl ran to her mother; but Net; called to her, in a rough voice : "Came here to me, girl; you are now my little woman, and I want you." Scarcely knowing what she di 1 , with one bound she reached the d,or, and in a moment more was out io the dark night and flying across the prairie towards the barn. She heard her father call to her to come back, and then halloo to Ned to run round the house while he west to the barn. Mary had intended to take her pony from the barn and ride she knew not whither ; but, hearing her father's voice close behind her, she slipped out of the stable by a back door and ran across the prairie. For an hour she ran on, and then sank down completely exhausted. Long and bitterly she wept, lying prone upon the cold, damp ground. „Then, startled by the howl of a wolf, she sprang up and tried to think. Where should she go ? What should she do? It was not far to the riv- er, and she would cast herself in, and be neath its dark waters end her troubles.— Arrived upon the bank, she stands like a statue, gazing down at the gurgling flood. Her purpose is firm; one plunge, and all will be over. But bark ! what noise is that? It is the dip of paddles; and, as Mary stands on the very brink of the river, in the light of the new risen moon, a canoe, with four Indians in it, rounds the bend of the stream within a few rods of her. Why does the warrior in the bow ef the boat rise, and, with a gesture. impose silence on his comrades ? He believes this white and statue-like figure is no human being, and even the oirs cease to dip while the boat floats silently by and the savages pass on their way to the settlement to steal stock. Mary stood perfectly still, little caring what became of her; but the sight of the Indians had changed her purpose, and no sooner had they passed than she hastened from the river. As she turned about, a gray wolf rose from the grass within a few feet from her, and slunk away with an angry growl, while a night-owl, perched on the limb of a tree over head, flapped his great wings and uttered dismal cries as be flew affrighted up the river. Mary had been thinking for the past few minutes of 'The Wild Trapper of the Blue," and she had now determined to go to him. She knew she was not far from his cabin, and why should sho not go and chum his protection. Perhaps he was not bad; indeed she had always believed he was nut so wicked as they had represented The night qir was chilly, but she. felt not the cold, for her blood was full of fe ver. The wind tossed her brown hair around so that she took her shawl and put it ever her head, and then ran briskly along the trail In an hour she neared the fierce hunter's cabin and her heart beat wildly as she knocked upon the door. Again and again she knocked, but still no response, and then she went to the lit tle window and peered into the cabin.— She listened, but all was dark and silent within. Returning to the door she rapped louder than before, and a voice whispered through the key-hie "W h 0 is it ?" Fur a moment she knew not what to say, then, summoning courage, she replied : '•lt is I—Nary Thompson—who wants you to protect me." _ _ _ - Cautiously the door was opened, and the hunter looked out and stared at Mary, to whom ho said : "I thought it was Indians or Regulators ; but come in, girl, and I beg pardon for having kept you out in the cold so long." Then he lit a pine knot, and handing Mary a chair, drew out his sharp jack-knife and whittled some shavings to kindle a fire. There was soon a bright blaze roaring on the hearth, and, with all the politeness of a courtier, he moved up Mary's stool and bade her sit close to the burning embers. "I heard you," he said, "even before you knocked, for my ears have become somewhat practised to the soma.' of ap proaching fo-Asteps ; but I could not make you out. When I saw your head at the window with that shawl over it, I thought it was a squaw's head," he added, laughing and after a moment's- pause, inquired, "Any Indians down your way ?" Mary simply said "No," and he pressed her no further. The kettle was boiling, and he made a cup of tea and gave it to her to drink.— Then he said : "Now, young lady, I know not what brings you here at this time of night, nor do I wish to know; but something dread ful must have happened to cause any one to claim protection from the Wild Trapper of the Blue, and of all others, a young girl. There ! There !" he added, seeing Mary about to speak, "Don't say a word, but just lie down on that bed, and take a good sound sleep while I go outside and keep watch over the house. You can shut the door and bolt it after me, if you wish," taking his gun, "but you need not be afraid, Mary, for I would not harm a hair of your head; and, as for others harm ing you while under my protection, they must Srst cross the dead body of the Wild Hunter. Now, don't fret, girl, but sleep as sound as if you were at home and hap py; and, mind you don't cry and trouble, or you'll be having a spell of sickness in the morning after this night's trip, and I can tell you I'm a mighty poor nurse," be said, closing the door behind him, and laughing heartily outside. Was this, indeed, the Wild Hunter of the Blue, about whom such terrible tales were told, and in whom there was nothing but wickedness? Mary thought she had never met a more polite or gentlemanly person ; somehow her fears had all disap peared, and she felt singularly safe and happy. She did not lock the door, for she felt not the slightest uneasiness; but she peeped from a little window, and saw the tall bunter, with his gun across his shoul der, walking up and down before the cab in like a sentinel, and then she laid down on the bed and soon fell into a deep sleep. Next morning, when she awoke the sun was shining brightly, and, springing up, for she had not removed any of her cloth ing, she ran to the window and looked out. There was the hunter pacing up and down, just as he had been doing the night be fore. "How polite in him," thought Mary, "not to disturb me ; and how considerate of my comfort and safety he has been ever since I entered his humble abode " She made haste to open the door, and the hun ter bade her good morning and hoped she rested well. Then he made up the fire, and, bringing Mary some water in a basin, with a comb and brash, said he would conk the breakfast while she made her toilet. To this Mary objected, saying she would do the cooking herself, -ld, as soon as her simple toilet was made, set about the work. The hunter brought the things far her to cook, peeled the potatoes, and showed her where everything he had was kept. Every few minutes he would burst out laughing, and say, "How funny to have a woman code for me !" Mary's heart was heavy, and she was constantly think ing of her mother at home, and wondering where they thought she was; but her po ' sition was so novel for j a young girl, and her companion so cheerful, that she could not help blushing, and at times, despite her troubles, her small, steel-gray eyes would sparkle with mirth. When they sat down to breakfast the hunter thought he had never seen so charming a creature as Mary, and somehow she never seemed to mind the great brown eyes constantly fixed upon her. Strange she should not be afraid, for she was alone with the most desperate man of the West ; but, so far from fearing him, she thoroughly believed he was her best friend and protector. After breakfast she told the hunter her tale, and again claimed Ms protection. He listened respectfully and attentively, and, when she had done, said : •`So you thought you could trust me ?" "I did" replied Mary, while the hot blood.rushed to bet temples. For a moment the muscles in the face of the hunter worked convulsively, and, rising, he went to a small cupboard and took from it two daguerotype,—the one of a young girl, and the other of a middle aged woman. Opening, them and placing them in Mary's lap, while a tear dimmed his eye, he said : "These are the pictures of my dear mother and darling sister, and I swear to you by them I will always be to you as a brother." Mary held out her band, and, as be grasped it, two hearts met in that clasp, never to be divided again on earth. The bunter told Mary that she must go back at once to her mother, and, now she had placed herself under his protection, she need not fear Long Ned or any one else. Placing her on his pony, he walked by her side and led the little brute, who, not being used to such a burden, was dis posed to be a little vicious. Carefully and tenderly, as if she were an infant, he guard ed her until they came to her father's house, where they had scarcely arrived when that most startling of all cries on the boarder, "Indians !" was heard, and a man dashed up to say that the settlement below had been attacked and all of Long Ned's stock stolen. Waiting to bear no more, Long Ned, who was still on the firm, leap ed upon a pony and dashed away across the Yttrium Mary in the arms of her mother, the Wild Hunter left her to tell her own talc, and rapidly followed Ned. The In dians were driven off and all the stock re covered, but Long Ned did not return. Some said he was killed by the savages ; others, that the Wild Hunter shot him ; but, be that as it may, he was dead, and no one seemed to care by whose hand he had fallen. Nearly all the recaptured stock had once belonged to Mr. Thompson, and, Ned being dead, the Wild Hunter took it upon himself to return it to the farmer, saying he was Ned's heir; a decision no one objected to. What was most surpris ing, however, was the fact that the Wild Hunter did not drink any more or quarrel with any one. When pressed for an ex planation, he simply replied : "I have quit that sortlof thing." . . _ Little moreremains to be told of this true tale of border life, and it may be sum med up in tl.ese words : Soon after the In dian raid there was a wedding at Mr. Thompson's and the fanner, influenced by his new son•in-law, stopped drinking- and became a prosperous and useful citiz If you ever visit the Big Blue, just above Mr. Thompson's place you will find the brown haired, happy-faced woman, with her four little curly-headed children playing about her knee. The owner of this fitrm is a quiet, orderly, well-to-do man; and, if you will wait until he comes home from the fields, you will recognize in him none oth er than "The Wild Hunter of the Blue." attading for Me inion. Notes of Travel NEWPORT, August 26;1873, When, we last wrote, we had a trip through Lake George, in anticipation of which we promised to tell you. We land ed at Ticonderoga, and such a pushing, rushing, elbowing and jostling of one per son against another, and all for what? to get a seat on top of the stage. I ceuld'nt help wondering whether traveling didn't make one more selfish than anything else. On steamers, people rush pell-mell to get the first seat at the table, again to get seats on the top of the stage, then to get to the hotel first, and to be first to pro- cure the best rooms, and so on to the end, the unselfish, patient man, gets no thanks and fares badly. We pushed on (with the crowd) none•of the meekest, nor slowest, and got to the top of the hill where stood half dozen stages, all full en top but one, and didn't we rush for it, just as three Englishmen scrambled up before us ; for tunately, there was room enough fur two more, and as our seats were in front of them, they managed to make a rug out of our dress, however we were only too glad to be seated outside where we had fresh air and an unobstructed view. Soon the baggage was arranged and the array of coaches moved off. The drive from Ti conderoga to Lake George, is a eery pleas ant one of four miles ; almost at the be ginning of the ride is Fort Ticonderoga, around this Fort, and all along the road, was the general rendezvous of General Montcalm and his army. We thought as we rode, of the scene here about this time years ago, July 1758, when a bloody bat tle was fought between Montca!nt and Ab ercrombie, how fearfully the English were slaughtered, here too was the noble Howe killed; remains of fortifications are to be seen all along the road and still called the "French lines." While taking this his torical retrospect, we reached Lake George. It would be impossible to accurately de scribe the beauties of this lake. All that artists and authors can do, there will yet be wanting the reality to do it justice. So calm, so beautiful in its Blear depths; so transparent that the Indians gave it the name o' "Silver Water—such lovely and numberless islands everywhere, some so tiny and rich in verdure, they look like beds of soft green mo a set in glittering gem', for the sun shining on the water makes thousands of flashes. One of the beauties of' the lake is its seclusion, like a fair bed it lies between high mountain ridges, some as high as 2,000 feet, and too steep for even the skillful hunter to climb. Some of the peaks are covered with fir, spruce, pine and tamarak ; others are rug ged and barren, over which we saw sever al eagles soaring in proud fearlessness Almost every island, bay and bluff has its history connected with the Colonial wars and the war of the Revolution. They were either quarters for soldiers or tha Iscene of skirmishes. After the loveliest sail of about two hours we reached Fort William Henry Hotel—at the head of the like—a large, handsome house, built on the site of Fort William Henry, where was a bloody conflict in 1757. Monroe commanded the fort and was obliged to surrender, for want of aid, to Montealm, who promised Monroe and his 'limy pro- tection, hut we all know how that after the surrender the 2,000 savages that Kontcalm had in his army were enraged, and paid no regard to the promise, but fell upon the helpless and unsuspecting English with fury, of demons, and the massacre was ter rible and indiscriminate ; Montcalm refu sing to interfere; the fort and all connect ed with it was burned and destroyed and was never rebuilt. The road to Glens Falls—nine miles from the lakeis through a wild and ro mantic region. We passed a pond covered with water lillies, it being near the battle ground, the French made it the sepulchre or the slaughtered English, and it still re tains the mune of "Bloody Poud" then given it. And now let us pass over a bit of railway travel and 'bide a wee . ' at New Haven, for our week there was too pleasant to for get. It is truly a lovely city, and is well named the "City of Elms." We never saw so many and such stately elms, every street is bordered by them, some, whose graceful boughs being arched entirely over head, form beautiful and natural avenues. I know of no other city whose improve ment is more rapid ; there are many hand some, even magnificent., buildings going up all the time, and there is room to ex tend in every direction, so that it is desti ned, ere lows ' , to become an immense city. We enjoyed some lovely drives, one to Edgewood, the home of Ike Marvel. This farm is situated'on a high ridge of land overlooking the city, and gives one of the finest views of the Sound and the surround ing country; part of the house io built of rough stones, just as they were found on the farm, indeed the entire house, inside and outside, is built according to the own er's unique taste, and without regard to any conventional mode of architecture.— Yale College and its extensive grounds were descrted, and we missed the jolly songs, the whooping and' general noise of students, that every one expects to hear in that city. • From the classical shades of New Haven we went to the pretty village of Westerly, in Rhode Island, about seven miles from the Sound. It contains one of the hand somest horde we ever saw, but is especially noted fir its granite quarry, which is one of the best in the country; of all monual labor, I think I never saw aught so tedi ous, or that required so much patience and perseverence, as the working up and car ving of granite; constantly working, and Iyet the progress, to a looker-on, is not per ceptible. We saw the great "Soldier of Antietam," an immense column twenty-one feet high—the features, form, gun, cap and martial cloak, are yet scarcely recog nizable, though they have worked at it one year, and expect to work another, ere it be completed. From there we had a nice drive to Watch Hill, which is right on the seashore. It is a great resort, and in the warmest days of summer it is cool there; from every hotel one can see the ocean and hear its unceasing roar, and great throbs as it lashes the shore. It has the finest facilities for bathing, having an unbroken sand beach of five or six miles. Here it was the Metis was wrecked last year, and some of the fragments still re main. This year every hotel is full, there are six large and several small ones. The air was so cool, the beach so lovely, we thought we should like to tarry there awhile, but time wonld not permit, and back again to Westerly we 'hurried, and from there by railway to Narragansett Bay, and from there, by steamer, to Newport., where we soon looked and after two miles of a charming drive we reached our desti nation—a lovely residence—from which one has the Enest view of the ocean and bay. Such delightful times we do have ! reading, lounging, dreaming, driving and snuffing the cool sea breeze and fishing in the "briny deep ;" and what fish we do get, flounders and black fish, weighing from two to five pounds, and there are plenty of black bars too, (but we did'ut catch any.) The finest drives are the ocean drive and to the Fort; the first giv ing a fine view of the ocean all the way— the other, to Fort Adams, is quite inter esting, it being one of the oldest forts and kept in good order. Twieo a week a very fine band entertains the throng of pleasure seekers, who go there in• the afternoon, and by the way, that is the best time to see the bsau monde. We watched the handsome carriages drive round the circle, one by one, and thought we never saw so many homely and sickly noes. Money is a great potentate, but it cannot a lways bring health and hapriness. Newport is noted for its handsome sum• mer villas, they are numerous and of great variety. Belmont has a splendid residence here, George Francis Traiu, Royal Phelps, Charlotte Cushman, and many other noted and wealthy people have also. We missed the stout, rheumatic form and still fair, tho' not handsome, face of Fanny Fern, that we were wont to see last season as she took her daily drives; her essays were, even then, so piquant and youthful that one conld'nt think of her as old, until she died. The whole island is an Eden, the almost constant fog is the only damper to oar enjoyment; everything feels damp, snd one is bound to be cross, for the fog here is no fleeting vision, but lingers from early morning till late evening; but some days are bright and clear, and then the skies are the bluest, the air the freshest, and the world the fairest here. All over the island are quaint little wind-mills, kept in motion by the wind alone, and used for grinding wheat and corn, while from every point one sees the ocean, these, together with its historical associations, make New port a romantic.and interesting, as well as a fashionable resort, and now, with the memory of the pleasant times we had there, still fresh, and once more in the old Key stone State, I bid you adieu. GIPSY WILDE. Tit-Bits Taken on the Fly They have hickory-uut parties in Illi nois. Scarlet fever iv prevailing iu a portion of Luzerue county. Terms of the Liberia Advocate per an num: One bushel of unhulled coffee. Sharpsville is puzzled to know how to get at incendiaries that infest that town. A cat at Nicholasville, Ky., has three kittens and three squirrels in her family. There are now eight young American ladies studying in Milan for the operatic stage. Four men have been arrested in Clear• field county, charged with poisoning hor ses. A Minnesota guzzler drank seven glass es of beer in two minutes and a half on a wager. A colt at Springfield has but one fore leg, and one lung, but has a lot of extra ribs and double joints. A stock company has been formed at Griffin, Ga., for the manufacture of coffee from persimmon seeds. Some California farmers recently held an indignation meeting to protest against the ravages of the squirrels. Five fossilized shells, each nine inches long and shaped like a ram'shorn have been dug up at Menomenee, Wis. A Memphis woman who was afraid of the yellow fever, sold a piano fur $25 in order to get means to leave town. NO. 45 A swindler calling himself Rev. Charles Goodheart has been raising money out West by bogus subscriptions for Bibles. A New Orleans correspondent report. 4 that General Longstreet is organizing a fillibustering expedition to annex Cuba. The Virginia (Nev.) Enterprise chroni cles the recent elopement ea "handsome and well educated young lady" with a Piute Indian. Queen Victoria was recently presented with a horse ridden by one of the "Noble Six Hundred" in the famous charge of Balaklava. General Jubal •Early and M. Victor Hugo are both incensed beyond expression by the report that they exactly resemble eaah other. A Peoria barber has a valuable parrot whose appealing Have a shave, sir ?" often induces passers by to enter and indulge in tonsorial delights. Tha advent of a wild cat broke up a wedding in Missouri the other evening. The cat wanted to introduce a new claws in the marriage ceremony. Nols Neilson, Neils Nelson, Nelson Neilson, Neilson Nelson, and Nel Nei son were lately fined $l5 each in Des Moines fur drunkenness. Miss Minnie ;Sherman, daughter of the General, arrived on Saturday morning at New York, her health completely restor ed by her year's sojourn abroad. It is now definitely settled that the tel egraph wires in Germany are no longer to be affixed to poles in the open air, but are to be buried in underground tubes. Mr. W. G. Grace, the great English cricketer, has taken to wife a Miss Day. He proposes devoting himself in future to 'the cricket on the domestic hearth. Check Harlan commends certain officers of the New York Custom House, for not accepting a "paltry bribe of one hundred dollars.' , Harlan's figure is in the thous ands. • Five thousand persons are thrown out of employment by the suspension of the Har mony cotton mills in Cohoes, N. Y. The pay-rolls of the mills foot up $BO,OOO monthly. It is said that the mill will be opened in two week.. Miss Steerungambah, a ilindoo iady, has been delivering lectures on female ed ucation in Madras While in the business why doesn't she educate her name up to some civilized standard? A man named J. Preston, a plasterer by trade, was found dead ou Monday in the old jail at Scranton. He had gone in there on Friday to do acme repairs, when he took a fit of appalexy and died. The contest in Minnesota is realy over the United States Senatorship- Senator Ramsey wishes to be bi;own successor, and C. K. Davis wants the place. At present the odds seem to be in favar of Davis. A movement has been started among the ladies of the South and West to aia. card extravagance ;n dress and to confine themselves in the purchase of material to home manufactures. Sensible. The latest physiological discovery is that the human liver distills alcohol from the food as it passes through the system. We know of several distillers who are good livers, but we never heard of a liver that was a good distiller before. New Tork, with only 1,000,000 of peo ple. has more crime committed within its borders than London, with 3,000,00.1 of people. while against less than 73,000 criminal arrests in London.each year the, e are more than 75,000 in New York city. Switzerland supplies a large portion or the asphalt used in the construction of roads in Europe, and also exports it t America.. About 100,000 tons have been extracted flow the mines within the past thirty years, and during that period the price has increased from 54 cents to $450 per ton. Wrestling may be dangerous sport, even when practised '•in fun," as was shown at New Haven, Ky., last week. Two young men took a friendly hold, and one fell, re ceivinc,' injuries of which he died in four afterdays, fter suffering great agony. The druggists of Philadelphia on Tues day last appointed a committee to bring before the United States Court a test case in regard to the stamp tax on labelled medicines, and took measures to have the entire stamp-tax, as applied to medioines, abolished at the next meeting efCongress. Most of the mills at Pawtucket, R. 1., began the present week with a reduction of hours. A few hold unexpired contracts, and will make no change fir the present. One or two are preparing to run extra time, and will try to meet incoming orders by night work. The short time mills will run on half time, on two-thirds , and some on three-quarters. Mr. Joseph Walkup, who died at Au burn, California, recently in his fifty-fifth year, was at one time Lieutenant Governor of the State, and on another served credi tably as State Senator. lle was proprietor of the Placer Herald (newspaper), and was one of the' most popular men iu his State. "Jo" Walkup, as he was familiar ly called, was an original "Argonaut of 49." The $855,000 in double eagles deiivered by the Philadelphia mint, on Thursday, was the largest single delivery ever made at the mint, but the largest amount of coin ever delivered to the Treas urer in one day was $l, 098, 900' in gold coin, by L. R. Broomall, chiereeiner, in two deliveries, on the 24th of July, 1861. So far as is known, this has never been equalled by any other mint, at home or abroad. Flax culture is now an important indus try in the northwest. About four thous and acres were sown this year in Marshall county, lowa, and in Waterman county, Minn., there are seven thousand acres against one thousand last year. The plant also does well in western Oregon. Very few of the growers in these localities make any use of the lint, the production of seed being their object. Robert Siabury died last week, in the town of Le Ray, Jefferson county, N. Y., aged one hundred and ten years and seven months. He had acquired a great repu tation as a hunter on John-Brown's track in Northern New York, where he bad killed over two thousand two hundred deer. When past . eighty years of age he met with an accident which necessitated the amputation of one of his legs, and he assisted a country doctor to perform the operation without iiinehintr. His funeral was attended by several children, aged be tween eighty and ninety years.