toll . - • : . 7 . , ,, ,i_•_,_ . ' 1114 7 -34 r -.. .. .. .. . ~.. :- .. . . . 'l ll l 3 lllll A •. • , . - \ 7 • . - ::: ' .. - .... . ilk . .. - . 7 . , . . . . • . . . 4,-,NE., . Naffs - la II FM SAMIT2L WRIGHT, Editor and Proprietor. VOLUME XXXF, NUMBER 27.1 PUBLISHED ETERY SATURDAY MORNING o,7iee in Carpet Hal, Korth-west corner of ".91.0;it and Locust streets. Terms of Subscription. MC Cops pc r annuina r 'di “th•unce. • • itui puid withinihree vt ontli commeneemenion lie year.. G".itsitsc ra copy. ~,,- ertatton I evnived tor is legg tu.tne than gli ii ad tlo lisper will ha• ligeontinued unlit Mt re relld 3,111,...at thin Optiollol the pub• t• , -mittedbytnoilauliepublisli r' rl,l =fates of Advertising "I . lar.LG ines)one week. MINZZECI cach , oro.cquentinerlion, 10 : 1 ine ]one week LO Three week's. 1 00 . , •ael,,il)4cqueniiw?t , Won. ri Ivrrti.erricalqn proportion r i l lic••mntt ‘ll,l ilia made to rinaiTerly,ltalf. • irk ..lveri3,3r.,,rlto arc strict]) confined uv -111C•F DR. UOFFER, T)ENTIST.—OFFICE, Front Street 4th door tram Locum. over Saylor & McDonald'. Honk Plore Columbia. Pa. Ml — Entrance, • atm. Joile3 , e Niro. iego aril) Gallery. [A iigit-a t!t, THOMAS WELSH., USTICE OF THE PEACE, - Columbia, Pa. ~,f OFFICE, in Whippers New Budding, below illarb*,. lintel, Front street. 4D -- Prompt attention given to all business entrusted In his rare. November 2P, 1857. 11. M. NORTH, TTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW Colambi:L.l'a. CoHectic:mot romptly made i n Lanea , tel and Vorl lomaleg. Columbia. %Tay 4,1950. J. W. FISHER, Attorney and Counsellor at Law, Coluanbia, Pct. •coiumblu, piember r, !KA., lt S. Atlee Bockius, D. D. S. vnAcriccs the Operative. Surg lea! and Nre lunn Vtpar4llll'lllN Or De ()MVP. 1.0e11.1 SirCIA, betwert& he Franklin llou=e mid l'o.t (Wire, Columbia, l'a Nay 7 1.439. _ . Harrison's Coumbian Ink. /Well i. a Auperi or a [link:, riertnaiteittle black, and ant corro hair ate pen, eau lie had in nos omatity.ai the l'atutl) SlOre, Lind 111110I.e1 ye! in that Itlnglkli Boot 1 1 015-11. 9.1,59 We Have Just Received R. CUTTER'S Improved Chest Expanding su-peuder Tool shoulder Itraee , for betillemeu, rotd Patent skirt Supporter mul Bruce for Ladle , . jam the °mete that i, wauted ut till , : lime. Come :nut t.ee them at Family Illediente Store, Odd Pellowsl [April 9.1830 Prof. Gardner's Soap TAT E have the New Englund Snap for thoce who die VT 1101 obtain it front the I" :imp Man; it 1.. filfm-tint to the ebtit. and will tube gretvie vot€ from Woolett 4; nod+, it is thereiore 110 1111111 . 0u4'. for you get the worth of your money at the Family Medicine Store. Columbia, June It, 1651. aRATIAIII, or, Bond's Boston Crackers, for Dy=repllt•R, mid Arrow Root Crneke.r., I'm and ehlltlien—new artICICS In Columbia, of the Flintily Medicine Stole, April IG, 1n59. SPALDING'S PREPARED GLUE.--The want of ,uull on article is felt in every family, nod now il en. fie tupphed: for ❑a•udulq 11111111 We, eleina ware, mita:nem:Bl stork, toy. NI- , the, e 1, nollinlg tupelior. We juice 101.111 II useful 111 lepairing nolny . tt Melt:4 which have been useleee for 1110111 Ile. You Jell! ww It 011110 lat.o..iA:. PAULI! MEDICINE: STODE. IRON AND STEEL! 1111171 Sub,cosbeNhave reeewod u New and Large 'Stock or di kno. nod cirri of BAR IRON AND STEEL! They are coil-wade suppneit ‘vith ,tool: till. branch of Ina laetine,. and Can 10.11411 it In ellAtOln,r- of large der small quantities, Eli lee toac,t rule. J. HUAI l'1.1: & SON. I.oeu•tt street below Second, Culitiallta, A pril t!J, laiU. ItETTER'S Compound Syrup of 1 'or and wild Cherry. (or to ,;;.t-. ttold•,&e. F.r tale a Lr (;otdcu 110 nor Dragmortt. front it. J I ttlyt2 A TER'S Compound Coventralrd 1 tract Sar-apat :Oa for the ea re of rzeroll , a • ti.ag'r V.vol and WI .terofttiott+ alreetiont, a fit: 41 at, just received mid for ',dr by It. WILLIAM'S. l'roat of , Columbia, ,ept FOR SALE. .2 00 rricuon Matches, very love for cocl, ~ n oo 25 70. H. W/ 1.1.1 A %N. Dutch Herring! A Ny one food goad II vt ring all 11 , . tippl!ed at F Ett ER 1.13 No 19. 1859. Grovery •No.e, N 0.71 I.oru .1. 11 T O N'S 4 PURE (UIO .CATAWBA BRANDY .".., e•pe,i.illy for Airdleille. lid Sar1:1111eilllillill11/0,-. nl III.• .1;1.1 . 2S ‘lll.l* NIE:131 , 11 NE STI-1111.1. VICE RAISINS for S cts. per pound, are In v 114 0111) Groecry Slow. No 71 Locti.i ,ort•et• =I SEEDS.--Fresh Garden Seeds, war IT , I, ot k•is leceiV, 41 41 EIJI:HLEIN', 4 •ravery Slorr, No 71 LO-0-I -Iwo POCKET BOOKS AND PURSES. I.A it.t. tot of Fate mat Common l'aeket Lid I'ur.e.a. tram 15 cent• to two dolior- each Ilt atqaurter, and News Depot. I . l•lttunttia, April 14.1 165, EEW mon; of Mow beautiful Feints Whieti Will he .old SAYLOR & Alt DON Colombia. Pik. MEE Just Received and For Sale. 15U0 S. "s„, LLI Gruml . Alum Salt, in large A PrOLD'S Warellou Cneitol 11 al Zi. GO I OLD CREAM OF GLYCERINE.—For the cure ‘Nj and prevention In chopped hand•. in the DOLIAN :MORTAR DRUG STORK Dec 3.1959. Front .irrei. enlumina. Turkish Prunes! ,FOR a lint rate aolieleof Prunes you null gn to E1111:RL EIVS Grocery ttpre, No 71 I..ovtou st, N0v.19, IS :,9 (TOLD PENS, GOLD PENS. VlSTreeeived a larze and fine ntteoroneist of Cold U Pew, of Newton and Unswold'e mu o ufae ou re, at SA YLOli h .ILoDUI A LAYS Book Store. ogrii 14 rectal etre(' t. *have Lottu.t. FRESH GROCERIF.S F: continue to :ell the I.e-t "I.ev," Syrup. While 0 1 he C .; U t Il a fl a iA " arg 'Cif; C a anti n o e r T e jytosae 00 Fellows Hall, sad at ihr old ,ag Ike nk. 11. C. FONVEPZSMIIII4. Segars, Tobacco, &c, A LOT of hrserate Seurtri. Tobacco and Snuff will IL be found at the store of the eubec caber. Ue keeps nut). a fir-t rule oracle chill it. ft. P. EUERLEI VS Grocery Store. Locum et, Columbia, fin. Oct 43,1; 1 CRANBERKUES, EW Crop Primes, New Citron.ut . Out. 2 0 , Deno. A. Al. RA:1111M8 SARDINES, Itroreestertlice ifig;c:. Defined Corn:s.a.e....lust re VT caved aad Air sale by S . Emil/A.6m (Mt. 8), No.:1 L i 0c44,4 $4. CRANBEARIES. UST received a !rr•b tot of Cramterries mad Nee- Covrant.;at IVa_ Lotto.: ti'lreei. Oct 11. Viet 1 - .I:ItECLEIN. • The Cream-Cheese Two travellers occupied a first-class car on the railroad from Corbeil to Paris—a man about thirty years old, and a lady who might have passed for ten years younger, though the baptismal register proved her to be twenty-five. It was a bright morning in June, not a cloud veiled the deep blue of the heavens, and the sun, shining obliquely through the window, inundated with its rays the side where the lady was seated. "The sun incommodes you, madame," said the gentleman; "I should be happy to exchange places, if it would be agreeable to 5 3 7 50 MU yon." The lady showed by a smile and bow that she was pleased with his courtesy. "I am exceedingly obliged to you, sir, but [cannot ride backward. It is not for my self either, that I fear the sun, but fur this basket." She pointed to a charming little piece of wickerwork on the scat beside her, from be neath the cover of which the edges of some vine leaves peeped out. "The sun does net injure fruit, madame; and this appears, besides, sufficiently pro tected." •"It is not fruit, sir; there is only a simple cream-cheese in the basket; but I should be distressed if it did not arrive in Paris per fectly fresh." Then, as if to be certain that she had not compromised herself in talking with a stran ger, "To whom have I the honor to siseak?'! she added, taking care, however, to conceal, by a smile, the distrust which suggested the question. '"To a future inhabitant of Corbeil, mad ame. I hare recently purchased a house there, and hare just completed its furnish ing. My name is Delannoy." The lady inclined her head with a satisfied air. There was no great information, it is true, in the name of Delannoy; but it was evident to her that a man who had just bought a house must be respectable. Delannoy thought that he had a right to ask a question in his turn. "Does madame reside at Corbeil?" "Yes, sir." "I shall be happy if my property is in the neighborhood of madame. It is situated in the nee de Quatorze." "Indeed, sir! We should have been neigh bors six months ago. I occupied at that time the first story of the Nogenlet mansion. Nogeniet is the name of my husband's Gamily." "Madame is married then?" "I nal a widow, sir." De!annoy looked more closely at Madame Nogenlet. llc observed that she had glossy, black hair, expressive eyes, ruby lips, which disclosed two magnificent rows of pearls, a small white hand; in short, that she was a very pretty widow. "The sun is shining full upon your bas ket," lie remarked, after completing his ob servation; "allow me to place it upon my scat." It would have been difficult to refuse, for the hand of Delannoy, more prompt than his word, had effected the change before he had completed the offer. "So much trousle about a cheese! lam afraid that I seem very ridiculous to you; but I have an old aunt in Paris, Rue de Varennes, whom 1 love like a mother, and e•ho is very fond of these cheeses, which are made in great perfection in the neighbor hood of Corbeil. , I never visit her without carrying one With me and 1 am naturally anxious that she should receive it perfectly fresh." "It only justifieF., madame, the opinion one would form on looking at you." An examination of a few seconds bad shown Madame 'sloganlet that her compli meutary neighbor had a pleading face at d a tine form. ••Is it.is a permanent dwelling, 6i only as a summer residence, that monsieur has pur chased a house in our do not know as yet, madame. It will depend upon the effect which a change of air may produce upon the health of my wife." "All! monsieur is married!" The conversation became more languid. Perhaps Madame Nogeolet found some cause fur regret in the information she had just received; perhaps Delannoy. discovered that there was danger in becoming too in timately acquainted with a widow as attrac tive as Madame Nogenlet. But these details arc foreign to our story. The train stops. It is the station of Choisis le Roy. Madame Nogenlet utters a cry of surprise. Among the persons who await the arrival of the train, she recognises a boarding school friend whom she has lost sight of fur several years. She alights hur riedly. She can go on by the nest train.— A delay of an hour and a half will not do any harm to her old aunt. Delancey remains alone in his compart ment of the car. While he is congratula ting himself upon having come out with ;Amor from this perilous rencontre, his eye falls upon the basket of the pretty widow. In her eagerness to hasten after her friend, Madame Nugenlot has left upon the seat the precious cheese, the object of so in itch solici tude. Happily, she has given her name to Delannoy. She has even indicated the dwelling of her aunt, for whom the cheese is destined. Dclannoy can do no less than carry the basket to its address. It is an imperious duty of politeness, which it would be impossible fur a wolf-bred man to ne glect. "NO ENTERTAINMENT IS SO CHEAP AS READING, -NOR ANY PLEASURE SO LASTING." COLUMBIA, PENNSYLVANIA, SATURDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 2,,1861. That he may not, in his turn, forget the basket, Delannny places it on his knees, and, while thinking of matters and things in general, half mechanically, he raises the lid. Perhaps he had a little desire to see the physiognomy of this precious cheese. We must not imagine that curiosity is the ex clusive privilege of the daughters cf Eve. The parting vine leaves allowed him to rerceive a golden surface of a very tempt ing character; but his attention was soon diverted from this to the corner of a sheet of paper, in which the cheese appeared to have been at first wrapped. On this corner there is a signature, and it is that of Valen tine, his wife. "This is a singular accident," he said to himself, "and, what is more singular,ls, that VLilentine has never spoken to me of this Madame Nogenlct, with whom, how ever, she is corresponding." A simple signature cannot satisfy him.— "Let us see, then, in what terms my wife writes to this lady." lie half turns the cheese, and succeeds in d3taching the paper. It is only a fragment, containing, on one side, two lines of the third page of the letter, proceeding the sig nature, and on the other a portion of the address. Two lines only! Yet these two lines suffice to draw from him a cry of sur prise and indignation: "I shall never forget how kind you have been to me under all circumstances. "My love is thine forever. On the back is written, "To MJnsieur —." The rest of the address is wanting. "No matter," he cried, trembling with rage, "the guilty wife must be punished first. I shall find means afterwards to reach the accomplice." The train stops at its destination. Delan n6y, holding in one hand the basket of Ma dame Nogenlet, and pressing convulsively in the other the tell-tale paper, jumps into a coach and soon arrives at his dwelling, where his wife is awaiting him. Ile had sent on before ;Harriette, the servant, to in form tier that the house was ready, and that he should come himself for her in the course of the day. The young wife remarks, with terror, the strange expression of her hustaturs counte- mince. "What has happened, my love?" she es- claims "You will soon know, madame; but, in the first place, answer my questions. Du you know any one at Corbel?" The eyes of Delannoy darted such light ning glances that Valentine remained a mo ment stupefied. •• "Remember," lie resumed, "that I must know the whole truth, and it will be useless to attempt to deceive me. When I decided to remove to Corbel, in preference to nny other place, it was.owing to your entreaties. There must have been a reason for those entreaties, and that reason I will know.— Well, madame! how long must I wait for your answer?" "If I have hesitated for a moment," re plied Yalentice, with the must perfect calm ness, "it is because I was trying to under stand the reason of your questions, and your evident anger. I know no one at Corbeil. I begged you to remove there because many persons recommended the climate as very healthful." "You deny, then?" "D any what? Your questions are per fectly enigmatical." "I will enlighten you, madame. Here is apiece of paper which comes from Corbeil." Dclannoy unfolded the paper and placed it before Valentine. "D.) you rec..gnize this handwriting?" "It is mine." "Yes, your writing., madame. I did not need your confession to be sure of it. And you pretend to know no one in a place where some one lives to whom you write-- •My lure is thine forever!'" "Nu one, I repeat it; and I cannot under stand—" "Enough, madame. I will hear no more. There is no possibility of justification.. As I have a horror of scandal, I shall endeavor to control my indignation. I wish no vio lent scenes or disgraceful lawsuits. I will show great indulgence, but it is on two con ditions: within twenty•four hours you will leave my house and return to your family, and you will tell me instantly the name of the scoundrel to whom this letter is ad dressed." "Sir," rep \ fied Valentine, with an air of dignity, "you are not in a condition to listen to Inc anti I confess, besides, that I am not able at present to justify myself. I cannot deny my signature, and these lines were also written by my hand. There is a mys tery about it which I cannot understand, and to which I am obliged, at present, to yield. Your first command shall be obeyed. To morrow I will seek an asylum with my mother; but my obedience can go no fur ther. Whatever right the law may give you over me, it does not authorize you to require an impossibility." Delannoy was confounded. Ile bad not suspected such audacity in a woman who had always hitherto appeared perfectly gentle, and even timid. Ile shut himself up in his chamber, and gave full vent to his rage. Dcath!—death alone could revenge him upon the wretch who had ruined his happiness. how could be discover that name which Valentine' refused to disclose? Ile would give half his forttsne to know it. ShOuld he apply to Madame Nogenlct? Perhaps she was ignorant of the existence of the letter; but, then, how did it come into her possession? Ilis excited imagina tion soon invented a fable to account for this. Madame Nogenlet was pretty, and a widow, with, no doubt, many admirers—her choice had fallen on some Lovelace—a lost letter had revealed to her his infidelity— there had been a quarrel, then a reconcilia tion, on condition of the sacrifice of the cor respondence. Other letters were, undoubt edly, in the hands of the widow. So convinced does he at length become of the reality of his fancies, that he determines to go directly to Madame Nogenlet. The basket will furnish an excuse for a visit.— lie already knows the street and her resi dence. Ills determination is immediately carried into effect. After a few inquiries the house is found, and he is soon ushered into a drawing•room, whore Madame Nogenlet re ceives him with the warmest expressions of gratitude. "How very kind of you, sir, to take so much trouble to repair the effects of my in excusable carelessness! My poor aunt will be delighted. Yon cannot imagine the pleasure which the return of this basket gives me." "I am very happy if it is so, as I trust it will lead you to some indulgence in my favor." He then related simply that he bad not been able to resist the temptation of n peep at the cheese, and the result had been the discovery of a piece of paper, on which were written the line—"l shall never forget," etc., etc. VAT.ENTINE." "Indeed!" said Nl.tdame Nogenlet, laugh ing; "was this on the envelope of my cheese? A love letter! It is charming! What a a pity that there is only the end of it." "The commencement cannot be far off." "Do you think so?" "Madame, the imprudent person who wrote those lines—who never should have written them—•belongs to a respectable family with whose friendship I am honored. You will easily understand that the entire letter must be of a still more compromising character, especially if the writer is—a mar ried woman." "I can imagine that such a passage would not sound pleasantly in the cars of a hus band." "Ilow the letter came into your hands— with others, perhaps—l have certainly no right to ask, but permit me to represent to you the grief which this secret, if divulged, would excite in a respectable family. Let me supplicate you. madame, to make the generous sacrifice of this letter—or rather of those letters—it is to be presumed that there are others." Aladame Nu,senlet looked at him with some surprise. "It would give me the greatest pleasure," she said, "to oblige you, if it were in my power; the kindness I havo received from you is assuredly worth a few scraps of paper; but, unfortunately, the one you have shown me is the only one that has been in my pos session; and that was without my know. ledge." "Then I was mistaken iu my conjecture'," cried Delannuy, in a tone of vexation. "And dues this trouble you much?' "Assuredly. What can I do, now? To whom cant apply?" "To the grocer who sold me the cheese, at Corbeil, Rue St. Spire." "True. I did not think of that. I will go there immediately. A thousand pardons, tnadame, for hosing troubled you." The impatience of Delannoy had yet to suffer ono trial. When ho arrived nt the railroad station the train for CJrbeil had just left, and he was obliged to wait two hours. While he was waiting, a train ar rived from Corheil, and one of the first per. suns who steppe 1 out of the cars was Mari• ette. "Where have you been?" he asked. "To Corbeil." "Who sent you?" "Madame." What fa•?" "To get some articles that had been sent on there which she wanted." The answer was so simple and probable that De'annoy did not inquire further. "You can go," he said. Marietta did not wait to be told twice, and the haste which she showed in depart ing, awoke some suspicions in the mind of tier master, who remembered now, or fan cied; that she looked embarrassed, and that her face flushed when she saw him. But the train was about to start, and ho had no time toßillow her. Bestdpped into a car, and in an hour was at the grocer's, in the Itue St. Spire. "Madame," he said to the woman who stood behind the counter, "you hare a stock of old papers in which you wrap up your goads. How much arc they worth?" The woman looked across - her spectacles with surprise at the individual who asked this unusual question. "You do not understand me?" "Perfectly, sir; but it would ho difficult to tell the value without weighing them." "If I should offer you twenty francs would you be satisfied?" "Sir?" "Hold, here are forty; if you will give them all to me immediately, without 'ex cepting the smallest scrap." The best days at the grocery never brought bar in the half of this; and Do an . noy soon found his arms full of papers, which, she assured him, were all that she possessed. lie hastens to his house, turns over carefully bills, college themes, business letters, etc., by the dozens; not one escapes him, and ho arrives at the last, fatigued and exhausted, but without any result. lle re turns to the grocery. "Madame, you have deceived me:" "I, sir!" "You have other papers besides these." "Look for yourself, sir—under the coun ter—in the drawers—l defy you to find one." "It is very strange that among all the papers you have given me there is not one of those which I wish to fiml." "Perhaps the person took them that was here before you." "What person?" "Some one came an hour or two ago, and paid me to let her look over them, and take what she wanted." This revelation struck Delannoy with surprise. "Can you tell me who this person was?" he asked. "Tho servant of a family who have re cently come to Corbeil." "Marlette?" "I believe that was her name." Mariette! It was very strange. How could Marlette have anticipated him in his search, when he had not uttered a word which could reveal his intention? "I will interrogate her," he exclaimed. "This mys tery must be cleared up." Iraving passed over, for the third time, the road between Corbeil and Paris, he ar rived at his house. Mariette opens the door: "You have been to the grocer's in Corbeil to get some papers. D.; not attempt to deny it—you see I know nII." "Sir—." "Did madame order you to do this?" Mariette looks down—twists her apron in her fingers—and utters some unintelligible u•otids. Delannoy had hitherto restrained himself; but the increasing embarrassment of Marlette enraged him beyond all bounds. "IVill you !Teak?" he shouted, in a voice loud enough to shake every window in the house. Mariette sobs. "Old sir—pardon—pardon—do not think rue' dishoneSt—do not turn me away—l thought it was my perquisites—l did not know it was wrong." Delannoy strides across the room with his fists clenched. "The girl has loot her wite," be mutters "I cam get nothing out of her." A door opens. Madan.° Delannoy ap ME "No sir, Marietta has not lost her wits. She is right in blaming herself for a fault which might have had very serious conse quences; but you will pardon her, I hope . , at my request." Delannoy felt the blood boil in his veins. Pardon her! and at the request of a wife who hal so much need of pArdon herself! "Go!" said Valentine to Mariette. Before leaving she wished to make one last effort. "I assure. you, sir, that I never did such a. thing before." De!annoy uttered an exclamation of impa tience, that male poor Marlette take flight instantly. "1 await, madame, the termirmtion of this comedy." "Here it is, sir." Valentine presented a p , ece of paper to her husband. This paper is a fragment of a letter, and fits, with the most perfect ex actness, the fragment which Delannoy has in Lis possession. On the last was, as we have said, the commencement of an address; the end was on the other. Delannoy utters a cry of joy. and fulls on his knees before his wife. The whole address was this:— To Monsieur Delannoy, poste reciante, Ton• louse." Dell - many had taken a journey to the South of France some years before. "I am happy—a thousand times happy! but I do not yet understand." "The explanation is very simple. Mari ette, in arranging the furniture of the house at Corbeil, found a package of old papers, which she thought she might sell for her own benefit. Among them were the letters which I wrote you at Toulouse. The poor girl, finding by the scene in the morning what trouble she had caused, came in tears to confess her fault. I sent her to Corbeil. You know the rest." After the explanation came reproaches. Valentine, ill-nsed in the morning, had so good a chance to revenge herself in the eve ning! and vengeance is so sweet to a woman —even the most indulger.t: And then—when she had scolded him well, she did, what the most severe will do --13:1111 pard.med. Odds and Ends of German Life If one could only go barefoot, and live without eating, Ilohenbraten would be a most charming residence. But so long as two feet and ono ''chest”—as a scrupulous friend of mine always called her stomach— form normal portions of our mortal frame, one lives and moves in this pleasant city under great and particlarly German difficul ties. Oa, as I suppose, the broad principle of compensation, while meat is tough leather is tender—soft, lachrymose, and susceptible of every outward impression, as any senti mental heroine of an old-fashioned novel.— "Eating one's boots" would really be by no means an impossible, nor even, I fancy, a very unpleasant achievement, in this good town of Llobenbraten. I am certain at $1,50 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE; $2,00 IF NOT IN ADVANCE lea t that I have often swallowed things much tougher and blacker under the delu sire title of "English bifsteks." One day when our delighted artist had suspassed herself in cooking, and had quite the air of having achieved a gastronomic success, could not help remarking to my friends: "Well, at all events, we cannot complain of having wanted variety to-day, for we had at first an innocent sort of soup tasting of nothing in particular, then beefsteaks like the soles of our shoes; and finally a dish of pancakes, in color anal consistency exactly resembling the upper leathers." ••I wish," replied one of the party, laugh ing as heartily as his aching jaws would permit, "that my last shoes were of a tex ture half as tenacious as that tecnctutsddes Fleisch." What a comfort it is sometimes to say a naughty word in a foreign tongue. We had,likewise a fowl that day fur din ner—a most remarkable bird of which it might truly be asserted, •'that even in its ashes glowed its wonted fires;" for although thoroughly burned up, it apparently retained a pensive memory of its congenial element, and came to table with legs and wings ex tended, flying all abroad, and evidently meditating a skyward expediti an. Besides shoes, one is apt to retain British prejudice in favor of wearing stockings.-- Hine dice lacleryntte. I was at first greatly puzzled to think why every German female --of all ranks, from five years old to eighty --seemed to make the unintermitting use of her knitt ug needles the be-all and cud-all of her out door existence. I say out door advisedly, for within, cooking alternates with knitting. Now, I du not exaggerate in the slightest degree when I say that in Southern Germany you never see a female native unprovided with her Strid: zeug. At the beer gardens, at the cafes, at places of public aniusement, the ?rams and frazdei as knit, and knit, as if their whole soul, like an Irishwoman's money, lay wittiin a stock ing heel. For it is none of your pretty, young, lady-like, fancy fairy looking fanta sies which those five resolute needles perpe trate; no, the works of their points aro solid, uncompromising coverings for the feet of her husband, brother, son, and daughter. Hood's song of the Shirt describes nothing like the - unwearied industry of German fin gers, for I verily believe Teutonic maids and matrons knit in their sleep. The rise and progress of a pair of German stockings strongly reminds me of a certain Irish glass , of punch. A jolly old squire whom I re member, in my childhood, was wont to boast that lie never on any occasion drank more than ono tumbler of punch at a sitting.— This was perfectly true, but it was equally certain that lie never was known to go to bed sober. The explanation was this. The old gentleman, after dinner, used to manu facture a potent glass; after sipping a few spoonfulls, he would complain that it wanted sugar, A lump or two were added, then it was too sweet, so a little more whisky must be poured in. Too strong now; water was I needed; and a somewhat too liberal infusion of the pure liquid required s second dose of spirit; then a little more sugar, and so on, until, under the delusive name of one tum bler, a round dozen or so had been imbibed. Now, in a somewhat analogous manner is a German stocking preserved by its thrifty owner to a somewhat old age. When the foot, after careful mending, is irretrievably goete, a new ono is knit on the upper part: and when this, in its turn, becomes super annuated, a new leg is joined to the foot.— This operation being several times repeated, the article in question enjoys an immortelity of etockinghood, although, like the frame which it helps to cover, its subsistence is! I perpetually being renewed. The German ladies hold in high contempt all females unskilled in this peculiar branch of industry. "English women are so lazy," I they ray: "they spend their time in reading and music, and fancy work, instead of good useful cooking and knitting." And when we pour female natives of Britain come to purchase stockings, relit bad and very dear we and them. Even in public mcetings, re ligious or otherwise, whenever ladies attend, they seldom go unprovided with the indefat. I igable needles, which seem to fill up every unoccupied moment of waiting, and work away with as indomitable a degree of per severance as if they were bona fide the great reformer's "five thorny points." Ono ad vantage, or disadvantage, as the case may be, of this mechanical industry is, the free license which it permits to the exercise of the tongue—a privilege by no means ne- I glected by either Frau or Praulein. I re- member once to have heard a certain Irish village described by an eccentric tourist as the "say-bathingest and tay-drinkingost place lie had ever been in in his life." With equal truth might llehenbraten be described i as the "knittingest and smokingest place in the world." As to smoke, cigars may deed hero be truly called "weeds," seeing that very tolerable ones may be purchased 1 at the cheap and easy rate of three a penny. I have sometimes wondered whether there I is a building in llohenbraten, except the] churches, whore they don't sell cigars. 1 know that,.soon sales my arrival, I went I into a millinery establishment, with a view to the purchase of sundry elle of ribbon; and 1 being then new to the ways of the place, I was rather surprised at the potent smell of 1 tobacco which pervaded the premise!, until I perceived that boxes of cigars alternated on the counter with cartons of feminine head-gear, and thtit rolls of tobacco and of mover ribbon reposed amicably side by -ide. [WHOLE NUMBER 1,539. Without exaggeration, the pretty r,, , :e-huo I Rand which 1 purehaged imparted ,1%.r !•et eral days to its wearer's dre4s an aroma f , f that most hateful plant to which King Jamie published a counterblast. Here, howe%er it is no use to dislike tobacco; the sooner one makes up one's olfactory nerves to en dure the infliction of the German's remorse less smoking, the better fur one's peace of nose. Smoking in the presence of ladies permitted everywhere, indeed. pulling a cigar full in a gentlewoman's faceis regard ed by a German Herr as rather a mark of delicate attention than otherwise; so, as Ow French proverb says: "Qoand on n'a pas ce que l'on aime, it taut aimer ce quo l'on And having already reached that placid state of passive toleration, I hope at the end of some time to arrive at a full appreciation of the cloudy charms of a meershautu. Bread Making in Spain Finding myself about two leigurq from Seville, in the pieturesrine village of Alea de les Panaderos—ot Fakers—as almost all the bread consumed in Seville is made there, I determined to know - how it was made.— No traveler who ever travels the south of Spans ever fails to remark, "how dtlie.i.ml the bread It is as white as snow, as cake, and yet very light. The flavur i• moot deindous—for the wheat iq good and pure, and the bread well kneaded. A practical demonstration is better than hearsay or theory. I would not content myself with the description of the process of making, but went to the house of a baker, whose pretty wife and dang,hter I had often stopped to look at, an they were sorting the wheat, on very low stools in the porch of their house. It was a pretty picture; their dark sparkling eyes, rosy cheeks and snowy teeth; their hair always beautifully dressed, and always ornamented with na tural flowers from their little garden in the background; their bright-colored necker chiefs rolled in at the top, showing their necks; their cotton gowns with short sleeves; their hands scrupulously clean, and so small that many an aristocratic dame, might have envied them; surrounded by panniers fill el with wheat, which they took out n handful at a time, sorting it most expeditiously, and throwing every defective grainjnto another basket. When this is done .the wheat is Le,round between two large circular stones, in the way it was ground in Egypt two thous and years ago—the rotary motion being given by a blindfold mule, which paces round and round with untiring patience, a bell being attached to his neck, which, as long as he is moving, tinkles on; and when he stops he is urged to his duty by the. shouts of "erra . mula" from someone within hearing. When ground, the wheat is sifted through three sieves, the last being so fine that only the pure flour can pass through it —it is of a pale apricot color. The bread is made of an evening, and after sunset I returned to the baker's and watched his pretty wife first weigh the flour and then mix it with only just sufficient water, irixed with a little salt, to nuke into dough. A very small quantity of' leaven is ' added. The Scripture says "a little leaven leaventh the whole lump;" but in England, to avoid the trouble of kneading, they put as much leaven or yeast, in one batch of household bread as in Spain would last them a week fur the six or eight donkey-loads of "bread they send every night from their oven. When the dough was made, it was put into sacks, rind carried on the donkey's back' to the ovens in the centre of the village, so n , to bake it immediately after it was kneaded. On arriving, the laugh was divided into portions weighing three pounds each. The long, narrow wooden tables on the trussels were then placed down the room, and to my surprise about twenty men came in and ranged themselves on one side of the tables. A lump of dough was banded to the nearest, which he commenced kneading and km.ck ing about, and then passed it to his neigh bor, who did the same, and so on success ively till all had kneaded it, when it was soft as new putty, and ready for the oven. Of course as soon as the first baker hands the loaf to his neighbor, another is given to him, and so on till the whole quantity of dough is kneaded by them all. The balser'.l wife and daughter shape them for the oven. Some of the loaves are divided into small ones, and immediately baked. The ovens are very large end not heated by fires under them; but a quantity of twigs of the herbs of sweet mnjoram and thyme, which cover the bills in great pr o f u si o n, are put in t!:: oven and ignited. They beat the oven to the extent required; and as the bread baked the oven gets gradually colder, so the bread is never burned. They knead the bread in Spain with such force that the palm of the hand and second joints of the baker's fingers are covered witii corns; and it ro effects the chest that ti.cy cannot work for more than two hours at time. They can be heard from some dis tance, as they give a kinder guttural sound —ha, ha—as they work, which they say eases the ches,t. Our sailers hare the saw, fancy when hoisting a sail. Laro kept a small loaf of Sparn-1, bread for sererai months in a dry place. nt: then immersed it in boiling water, and re baked it, and I can assure my readers !La: it was neither musty nor sour. ia..liair-cm soar em fellows—the MOH who endeavor to look fiercely by cultivating 'r.,fu'.• wllbdcers.