, r ___. . ... ~ E . . ,1..!'i.;-....-4 . :-. .... ~ _,..., . ... -,_ . _ $. - -- 0, --.. ‘ • , . 1 . r.-1 ~ .. , .rT. :it 3 < ... , 9 3r•, : ‘ .... , T . . . .. . . ..... -; • . . : • , ' .., - .:', . . -.. . -.. / 7 i ~ • , l'\44111) . '1 -- , • ;(T, ~.. ~ ' ..._-„, •:. , „. - _-.. : ...: 1 ;.. .i :,,.. Lt• ..;..•+•: . . —•u_ Ws . 1 t i .: 1!.P!.. , :-."........ ,*:.'. ::''. .I , ' —• .., *-:,-, .... ' f -,; c„ , .. l i _ _ ~...... ~ . ~ • _ _. • • . . - ... - ._ . , . : ......,.......17: :, -, .. _ . , .:. .'... . . .- :•,... .:, • -. , :. \ - . r ... k ...., . . , _ , r ..... ' . -- . Ilk r . 7 lii- - SAMUEL wirinir, Fiitor and ProprietOr. I , •OLUME XXXIII, NUMBER 37.] NALISRED EVERY SITURDIY MOR?f1310. 0 Wee 1* Carpet 11211, .11'artic-secsicorner of Front and Lacteal strode: Terms of Subscription: One copypeynnnum,l(paitlin ad ranee— • • . t(nolpaidwithiothree month afforacomnseiseemestiorthe rear, 200 •at °slobs . ..a, csoi=o37". N 04 un.eripiton received tor a Jess tine than six atanthft; aildiao paper wilt be , ilkeentitittetl until all Ivrea rage Este patd,unlessat the optionoft he pub -I.her._ 0 -stoney na e•cimittedb yinail au .._ • • et a risk. • Rates : of 'Advertising. qaartp irtesjone week, three weeks, 75 • este hgubsequeniinsertion; 10 1172 lace joneweek. 50 " three weeks, l 00 • , eaciasubsequentinsertion. 25 ir,,,rgertelvertiserrient.in proportion Alitieralliscoantwillhe mode to rinarterly.holf e, 0.0. really iilyertisers,erno are strictl)eonfined iostr busines's. gelecting. A Soldier's Story BY MARY KYLE DALLAS. My college days were over. Alma Mater had done with me, and the - strong arms of the law were open to embrneepnew neo phyte. -.llPriweek r l' s eh - otild 'd - ceujifit desk in n. girtalp, dingy ?office, and: enter at last into the profession of-which,l expected (as what : Toting,' than does 'hot!) to becdme distingulp i lted,mehaber,- - . My grand-aunt, Briggg, writing to her friends, inforMed them'that "Albert knew enough, 'and had left college." I did not exactly coincide in Aunt Briggs' opinion; but, nevertheless,- I certainly considered myself a miracle of erudition, and felt , a strong disposition to explode mines of learn ing at the foot of unwary - listners. I titter ed apropos quotations in Greek' and Latin, in the course of conversation with elderly gentlemen who did not understand them, but always bowed or smiled, or said ''very goodindeedim tir conceal their ignorance.--' I astonished Disitil6Vlui Mad r e my fire, by informing her-that charcoal and diamonds were, so to speak, one and the same thing, and, that -it was within the power of sci ence to change the former into the latter, nr vice versa. The names of acids rolled unawares from my tongue, and every mod ern event was made the gateway by wiilch which I lugged in the old Romans, as it were, by the'napes of their necks, thrusting them headlong at people who cared nothing about them,-and were much more interested in the of. living Smiths or Browns. When I caught a friend nudging his neighbor With his elbow, its I deigned to en lightened them as to the remarks of those learned ancients whose' names were forever on my lips, I believed it to be in' admiration or astonishment, and never 'gtiessed that they were laughing at me. II id I been offered the freedom of the city, or the thanks of the civilized world, I should 'have felt it ' only my due. Had' a service of plate been presented to me by the humble admirers of my deep researches in the care of learning, I should, according to custom, have returned thanks in a neat and tippropriate speech, and felt that; at last, the world begin to ap preciate me. In this mood, I took my seat upon the enshimis'of the railroad car one fine spring morning, attired in a span new traveling costume; bearing a glossy portmanteau in my hand, and bound for a new home and n' new life. I was twenty-one. B myhood was already far in the distance. I did not even consider myself ayouth. Had it not been furl the 'slOw growth of the lemon colored mous tache which I was assiduously cultivating', , I shOuld hive had no Mere doubt of my ma ture years than I had of my learning or of my poirers of fascination. I felt a sort of contemptuous pity for the poor ignorant souls around me: the fat man opposite, in his,greatcoat, with a, lunch-box sticking out of the breast pocket, the young (land, sitting near hint, with the eye-glass; and the 'plain, blunt-fsatured mechanic, epelling out the contents of a newspaper, who sat near me. Even the bustling busi ness man,. arguing with another still more bustlipg,imsittess man; ;was not worthy of my notice; 'and the Methodist' who was improving the time by distributing tracts to his neighbors, was a mere nolmey. I should liked to have tackled them with a little Latin, to have posed them with a Greek quotation, or to have asked them a question or two in chemistry. How blank they would have looked. How their selfeonceitwould have abated had they known that they were in the presence of Albert Bonnycastle,;Esq.. a graduate of —College 7 —an embryo law yer—a yonng_rnan who, in the opinion of his grand-aunt.Briggs,"knew enough." As for, the women, I took no notice whatever of them. I never did. A , casual glance in formed me that there was the usual number of elderly ladies, muffled in shawls and tippets. as though there ; was contagion in fresh air; of young mothers with broods of of small children, and of maiden ladies io green spectacles. The inferior sex, as." de nominated it, was very well represented.— rreatit Trot-4'46 ,another,, closed my eyes, and composed my self Tor a nap. I• had hardly fallen into a doze when the train came. to a pause, and the bustle of new passengers coming ,iti; and old pas sengers going 'out', awoke me. I •did not 'stir, beiverer, but remained in my recut's bent position until a lady, in a - blue veil which 'hid her 'features as effectnay as a mask could hare done , stopped . sunight be fore me, and said, in a tone more suitable to a command than a request. "Will sou please to more your feet, air, and let me sit down." .. I had a good mind to say, "No!" but, somehow, I had not. the courage, therefore I slowly put down one foot after the other, folded my arms and turned to look out the window, while the lady squeezed herself in, spread out her crinoline, and _proceeded to make herself comfortable. She had a reti cule on her arm, and carried a little poodle wrapped in a white merino shawl. At in tervals she inserted her glove into the open ing of the reticule, and drew forth Small pound cakes, with which she fed herself and the dog, alternately. The poodle vas a pink eyed caterpillar looking concern, and I made up my mind that the veiled lady was an ex ceedingly ugly old maid. I felt a sort of unaccountable spite towards her. Why need she have squeeezed herself into that p ,rticular seat, there were others vacant.— It was a plan to disturb my nap—probably to attract my attention—and I longed to punish her for it. 31 SO $039 In the next seat was an old gentleman— a farmer-looking person—who had already made sodable advances. Under cover of tt conversation with this individual, I talked at my crinoline neighbor. I remarked on the disgusting 'practice of tnking pots upon journeys; I commented on the absurdity of the female costume, and expressed my opinion of intrusive women who considered public vehicles their especial property, and wound up.by a denunciation of the whole sex as inferior animals. Looking aronnd, nt last, to observe.tho effect upon my neigh bor, I thought I heard a faint giggle pro ceeding from the depths of the blue veil.— This irritated me still more, and I revenged mysnlf by opening the window. It was a cold day, and the draught was very disagree ' able; but I bare the discomfort like a herm fur the female in the seat beside me had to suf fer likewise, and the thought made me happy, Fur awhile she went on fondling and feed ing that detestable poodle, without taking notice of my tit:lnce:tyre; but soon little shrugs of the shoulders, ehort coughs, and additional foldings of the traveling shawl, gave taker, of her displeasure, and finally she turned the blue veil towards me, and made the cool request that I would shut the window. My blood was up, and I answered superciliously: "There aro other seats, madam, where you will not feel the air: I preter having the window open." The blue veil fluttered, as though the head beneath it was tossed indignantly, and the lady gathered up her poodle, reticule, andlparcels, and crossed to a seat beyond the reach of the draught at which l rejoiced. For form's sake, I kept the window up for ten minutes or so, and then, closing it, put up my feet, and composed myself for another ' nap. This time.l slept. I awoke with a start. and sat bolt upright, wondering who I was. where I was, and what had happened to tne• My first distinct imoression was, that I had somehow taken a terrible cold. Then I re membered the window, and knew how I took it. Opposite, with some five seats be tween us, sat the lady in the blue veil. She had put it up at last, and I saw her features. No high-nosed, sallow countenance, such as I had expected, but a charming, rosy-cheeked, black-eyed face, encircled by a mass of black hair that coiled itself up in links and waves and ringlets, every one a heart-snare by itself. I had never seen a beautiful wo man before. I would have shut twenty windows, moved my seat twenty times, done vtlii 64:1 it fait, " to' 111 . 64 . hid 'her agativ sating beside met - I wanted-to- apolo gise. I longed .to a"ntore favor able Cut all in vain. • There she sat, still , feedhather poodle &mit that inexhausti ble reticule, and never, even looking towards At twilight the train stopped at the Now York depot. I had not moved my eyes from her face since I first saw it, and I sigh ed as she vanished in therrecieis•of a cab.— If she ever remembered me, it . would be as that insolent, disobliging fellow who made such rude speeches and would not shut the window. Portmanteau in hand, I selected the mist convenient stago',' end was soon on my way to Aunt Brig7,v. My cousin opened the door for me, and, after the usual greetings, ushered me into my own room with the information that dinner would be ready in ten mitiutev. In the hus tle of unpacking my clothing and complet ing my toilet, I did not nt first notice that the door,of the adjoining room stood ajar, and it was to late to close it, when I heard my /WM.'S voice utter the words: , 1 . "Mercy, what a bear! how different from Albert." "But if you had heard him! Description will never do him justice. Oh, Mrs. Briggs! if you could have heard him: 'There are other seats where you will not feel the air, I wish to have this window open.' And he was shitering with cold all the while, I as sure you." Good gracious! It was the voice of the lady in the blue veil that responded. 'She was there in the house-4 should meet ,her at dinner time. I had wild thoughts of seiz ing my portmanteau and taking passage that very night fur Ireland or Africa.,cr,the reject ,lelaadi, or apy other locality where our paths Ixduld . npvet:•crpsica.ekother. In the midst of _my . consternifipp ono crossed My mind—she might not recognize me. .Sontenlitt.,cTafurtcd,. I - obeyekthe "NO ENTERTADDIENTIS SO CHEAP AS READING, NOR ANY 'PLEASURE SO LASTING." COLUMBIA, PENNSYLVANIA, SATURDAY MORNING, APRIL 12, 1862. stinmens - of the dinner bell and descended "Miss Earle, my nephew, Mr. *Albert Bminycastle." I bowed—she curtsied—and I read my fate in the first gleam of her black eye. She knew me, and she meant to pun ish me. What I endured that night no one knew. My aunt recited the story of the rude young man in the cars for my benefit, and Miss Earle—Kitty was her christian name—asked me, with a meaning glance, if he "wasn't a bear?" I agreed heartily, and was laughed at fur my pains. Over and over again were my remarks upon the poodle, crinoline, and the softer sex com mented upon, and innocent Aunt Briggs never guessed the secret wifich Miss Kitty Earle was driving into the remorseful soul of her nephew Albert, the young man who "knew enough." Oh, that envious blue veil! how I anathematised it! I was in love with Kitty. No one could hare helped loving her; and it was terrible to feel as I did, and never be able to ap- proach her freely and frankly, with a friend ly outstretched hand and a friendly inter change of sentiment. When we bad been under the same roof three long months, matters had not changed. llrith others, she was as merry as a child; with me, stiff and cold as an icicle. My ap proach was the signal for the discharge of a thousand unmerciful little arrows, all remin iscences of our first meeting. The greater my anxiety to conciliate, the more revenge. ful she became. It was a cruel ordeal, but it did not cure me of my love.. Meanwhile, I studied and worked hard at my profession. As time passed on, my opinion of my own acquirements because more rational. I was maturing into a more sensible man, and looked back almost with contempt upon my former self. At the end of a year a great change had taken place in me, and yet I loved Kitty Earle only more fondly, and stood at just as great a distance. She lived with my aunt still, and would remain with her until the return of her father, a lieuten ant in the navy, from the three years' cruise which he had just started upon at the period of our first meeting. Daily intercourse must have taught her that I was only too anxious to serve and please her; but she persisted in considering me a rule ungrateful being, and treated me accordingly. At last, amongst her admirers—and she had many—appeared o:se who seemed, in my jealous eyes, more favored than the rest. Us was a fair, light whiskered, smooth spoken young gentleman, who might have been described as the pink of politeness and propriety. Miss Kitty used him as a foil to set off my supposed rudeness and want of amiability; she praised his manner, his face and his voice, until I woe well nigh distrac ted. Many a troubled hour hare I passe I in my offize, mmy a long night have I tossed to and fro upon my pillow. pondering on soma method which might obliterate the bad impression which I had made on Kitty. It was all in vain. Sometimes, when I had striven my best to make her like me, I would begin to hope that I had succeeded, and fancy kindness in her eye and softness in her voice; but the old spirit always broke nut again, and blighted all my dreams. It was just about this time that the cloud which had been hovering over our land so long burst over it in the black thunderstorm of war. Oar m other country called upon her sons for aid, and she was answered.— From the desk and counter, from the work shop and the forge, went troops of valiant hearts to battle for the right. I could not stand unmoved amidst the tumult, and I had no wish to do so. ose night I frightened my aunt into hysterics by making my ap pearance in a captain's uniform. I had not thought of' Kitty E trle —for the fret time I had forgotten her—and when, after my aunt had been somewhat comforted, they found her lying senseless upon the fi for of Isar own room, 1 never thought of ascribing her sor row to my sudden announcement: the thought was too absurd. In a week we were to leave the city, and I was very busy, so that I saw her but once in all that time. The night previous to our depaiture I went home, to bid them nll formal farewell for the last time peril:it:m.- 1c was a solemn thought and I walked on pensively, so absorbed in my own medita tions that I did not even notice a lady who crossed my path just beside the fountain in Madison Square, and she uttered my name. and touched me on the arm. It was Kitty Earle. • . "Albert," she said—and there was not one touch of the old mockery in her voice— " Albert, is this you? lam so glad that I. have met you." filer beautiful face Gni never seemed so lovely as it did now, with that softened light upon it, And when. I offered my arm, she took it frankly, and we walked on together. Twilight had fallen—the child ren and • nurse maids were all gone home, and the plane w•ts very quiet. She did ,not speak, and . I was the first to break the si lence. "I leave to•morrow," I said. "I wonder when I shall return?" I thought who drew a little closer to me as she answered—`•Sohn, I hope." . "You say that as if you meant it," I said beqiqg down to look into her face, "Have you .really forgiven um so for? I should he glad to know it." tier h3CF, hand lay within coy , ,own..and her right one cause softly and met it.— Tel still she did not speak. "Lek one hear it Imps your own, lips," I said. "Shall we be friends hereafter? Do you quite forgive pier , . "It is you who shouLi • forgive," the sue- BM werecl. "I have used you shamefully.— Listen to me, Albert. All along I have known you better than I seemed to. I have pleased myself with tormenting you, I have acted an unwomanly part. Yours was a slight offence, and I punished it as though it were a great one. If—" and here her voice broke down, and her eyes filled with tears—"lf you should never return, 'cannot forgive myself." I took the soft hand which had crept up to meet its follow in my own. She did not draw it back. I pressed my lips upon it, and she was not angry. "Kitty," I burst forth, "dearest, dearest Kitty, you cannot tell the load that you have taken from my heart. To be despised by you was almost more than I could bean to know you are my friend is bliss indeed." "I am your friend," she answered—"your true and earnest friend." The shadows had deepened about us, and in our walk we had come back again to. the fountain. No one was near to see us, and my arm stole about her waist. "A friend is very dear," I said, "but there is something dearer. Will you be that dearer thing to me, one day, Kitty? will you some time let me claim you for my wife?" I could not see her flee, but I needed no answer save the drooping of her head upon my shoulder. My Aunt Briggs nearly went into hysterics again from sheer delight, when I led Kitty up to her chair an hour after wards, and said—" This is my treasure, now, Aunty. Mike good care of it until I claim it of you." I sit beside the camp fire now, and think of that sweet night. A little blue veil lies folded against my heart, beneath my soldier's unit' ffra, and when Kitty give it to me she whispered such sweet words that I cannot write them here, but can only think of the happy day which is to come, if life is spared to me until this war is over.-11r. Sandal/ Times. The Unfinished Man But first let me explain that a fairy man is a man that is hand and glove with the fairies; their Mend, you see—not a fairy himself, but a sort of a kind of agent, hn Irish agent, who stands betwixt the Christ ians and the fairies, fetching and carrying, doing a hand's turn fur one, and a hand's turn for:another, now and again, but taking his own share from one or the other, and that not the stn illest. Ni one ever went fur advice to a fairy mln empty-handed; they expect sontztlan7, be it what it will. %Veil, there was in old times wonderful pearls found in the Slaney, and the reason, above all others, that the people believed Barney R' an was a fairy man, was that fur every paarl any ()le else Btrney &he I up ten. '0 le sal I, "It w m't la.t, Barney," and another; "It can't last, Bar ney,"—hat it did last; though the "luck neither did gml t Bracy nor ilk tiends, fur he wouldn't give the pearls, and he wouldn't sell the pearls. Be always had the ugly suspicion that if he sold them he'd be cheated—lie was such a miser; and pearls were as plenty is Barney's cabin as Week berries about it. Time went at a hand canter; and if Bar stey wasn't rich, why, it was his own fault. Some said it was only the kelpies, the bad water fairies, that took any notice of him. Anyhow, he was sitting very quiet and can tentel in his little ralin one mid-summer eve, dressed in his best, too, out of coripli meat to the day—as if it was a saint's day, the of l sinner!—and wondering, when the moon rose, if be should see the Etiries dance an the beautiful beams that spread their silver threads over the waters of the lovely river—midsummer eve ,being,the fairies:, de light: And bewai . itlso, eimnt ingibe number of 'peaile lie Vatl: tind • 'khat he should get for them, when a poor, broken down fellow creature asked him for a bit of food. "I have nothin' to give you in the house," a ys Barney; "I had only the, praytee that did my own dinner." , • • "Then give me a fippiny bit," be - RaYs.— In those days the fippiny bit was our six- - pence. "Give me a fippiny bit," he says, "fur luck!" "Oh, murder, where would I find it!" ex claimed Barney. "Do you think, it, is coin- ers like you that have the right to take the shine out of a poor laboring man like me? A fippiny bit!—get out o' this with your "Get out o' this with me, is it?" says the beggar, "and no welcome—no rest—no taste of meal or milk—not even a cup of cold unzther, which, given in the name of Him who gives nil thing', is a blessing to him that gives and him that takes. You're en unfinished man, Mr. Barney Regan. You're not a bad looking ould fellow—your legs and *arms and head are all sound enough—but You've no !martin your body, 'Barney Began, it's a wet potato that !coops triblling abiut there, instead of a heart of flesh." 'Pio twin Was fine spoken, end Barney felt as he had never, felt before. "You're an unfinished man," he says again; "Barney, 'leaven help you: and indeed you're not worth the finish • ing now; but. for fear you shouldn't under stand the little good there is in unfinished things, look to your tine boa pearls•lyinfi by, Barney—look at your fine' pearls, onee moot! And without another word the beg - -", gar turned away;• and as Barney's eyes fob lowed him, be saw the ould. gray coat. be- comcatll over like a coat of silver, and the fiat (in Ireland a- poor man's hat is called a cawteen,) swell out into a golden ,crown. and bif stick, grow into a glittering wand; I and 'Barney began to - see the rights of it.— Ar.:l he called to the stranger to come back, begging and praying him to turn, and he'd give him all lie had in the house; but it was too late. Whatever the stranger was, he I faded and faded—fainter and fainter—and fairly melted away into the moon-beams. "No heart," thought Barney, - "l've heard that before; but Lion% believe it. I'm sure I take great care of myself, and I pay my rint, and I call myself a careful man:" and then he bethought himself of the pearls, and off he started to look after. them. Now, the pearls were in a box, and the box was in one of Barney's old night-caps, and that was in another box, and that box was in a hole under Darney'a bed. SJ lie took it out of the night-cap, and laid it in the moonlight. of the sweet mid-summer eve; and he put in his great red finger and thumb to take out a pearl, and instead of the pearl -he felt something cold and slimy—and what should come out but a mite of a frog. "Bad luck to ye." sail Barney; "he off with yerself—there, hop over the wet grass." "Lean't, Barney," answered the frog, "I can't. I've only three legs—l'm not fin ished. What use am I to man or mortal— apo 3r unfinished frog? But I•ve a. heart in my body, Master Barney, and so, mlybe, I might be a help or a comfort to your not pearl—ah, ah!" Well, in went the red finger and thumb again, and out came a snail with no eyes in its horns. "Away with you," said Barney to the snail; "away with you up the window." "Alt, sir," says the snail, "I'm like yet honor—Unfinished; I've no eyes. We all feel fur you, sir, because your worse titan any of us." ' "But look here:" says the frog, "if you'll let me lane on you, nuld fellow, I'll be your eyes, and your shell will be my leg; 'and we'll be so gay together! I'll tell yi] where the leaves are, and while-you ate I'll sleep; you'll be my leg, and I'll be Your eyes, and so we'll help each other. And now we'll lz.tro.this poor man whose heart is withered in his body; or, otherways, he was made without one." ,• Barney kept' diving into his box, but he broUght out nothing only caterpillars with- out teeth; moths wanting wings; and fish without fins—slimy, useless things—and all fell to pitying Barney because of his avant I of a heart. "To think of one of the lords of creation being worse finished than our selves," says one, "and we are all able to pity him," says another; "an I not a pearl left him," says a swaggering cockchaffer. Barney began crying and tearing his hair, and roaring—"Oh, what will I do far my pearls? What will I do without my pearls?" "They were no more to you than haw stones," said a blink of a fairy, looking down on him from the crook in the chimney, where she glittered like a star in the dark ness of night—"not a bit more good to you than so many jack-straws; such hoards are sure to turn into slime and snails. Stag nant water grows bad, and so does unused wealth. Da you understand me? If not, the lazy pond at your door will tell you what stagnant water is." "Oh, my! oh, my!" exclaimed Barney. "If I knew hew to 'do better I'd'do tt!" : ; "Are — Yoil in Caraeii?" saia"the . bright star, cutting a step on thla pot-hoolt. put you taltearay the wet-praytee, and put a heart o"fleili in"my hoopla!" ".No, / can't; but - you pray for it, and raynounce all your miserly ways, and there's no knowing what you may come to. Every prayer is a pearl of mire value than I can tell." - • . "And troohlyou get mete hack Mee pearl:32' "1:11 ere you ono more trial, Barney." And as she spoke B trney gave :a start" and rubbed his eyes hard wid the back of his hand, and jumped to his feet, and there went the moonbeams dancing in Abe itlayr bush, and under it stood the beggar be had told to "get out of thit;" and Barney fund he had slept and armed. "Come in, mete poor man," he says to the beggar, "and take an air of the fire, and a draw at the pipe; and though I'm as poor—" (oh, such a griP as came to his throat as he said that)—"l mean, though I'm not as poor as you, yet I'm. not rich." (Another grip) "Anyway, you Shall have a sharp of what I have, and good luck to you!" That was Barney's first step.on the right ladder; and he made the poor matt welcome; and he (the beggar) was 'a knowledgeable man, and told him much be never knew be fore, and taught him the value of pearls; and Barney found his boa all right, and whenever be felt the wet prnytee feel in his bosom he knew thins was going wrong, and he'd pray against it, and that would put it ail right again, and then, his heart would set beating. A Curious Chapter on Food. The diversity prevailing in different na tions in 'reference to articles of food seems t) confirm in its literal sense the proverbial saying, that '•Clae man's meat is another man's poison." ,Many an article of food which is in high esteem in one country is regarded in others with abhorrence, wisidli even famine can hardly surmount. Jo the Shetland Islands it is raid that c•zat= an. labstars abar.nd, crUieb the people catch for tbeLnotiontnarket,' but refese to oat oven when.half-starved. •. - The John , Dory is beckoned by epicarsni one of the choicest of fish; but in Deconshire, where it abouude,. and also in Ireland, it, 81,50 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE; $2,00 IP NOT IN _ADVANCE I used to be thrown away as unfit for food.— There seems to be some superstition con nected with this, as it is said that a DCVOI3- shire cook flatly refuses to dress it." Eels, which are abundant and of good quality in Cumberland and Westmoreland; and also in Scotland,, are regarded by the people there with as much disgust as snakes. Skate, which is in high estimation in England, in Ireland is hardly ever eaten ex cept by the fishermen. Scallops, on the other hand, are'hardly erer eaten in- England, and, ale/Gogh etey Ilia abundant. on many of the coats, : few of the English have any idea that they are eatals:e. The euttle-fish (that kind which produces the inky fluid), although found on-our coasts, is not eaten by us. But at Naples, it is highly esteemed, and travelers report that it tastes like real. Cockchafers are candied, and served up with other confectionery, by the Italians. The hedgehog no one thinks of eating in England except the gypsies, and some who have joined the.n, report that it is better than rabbit, a - The sailors in the- English and Dutelt whaleships do not eat the flesh of the whale: but those in the French whalers (With their well known skill in cookery) are said to make a palatable dish ofit. By almost all the lower classes in Eng lanevenison-and game of all kinds are held in abhorrence, and so are fresh figs. By the Australian savages, frogs, snakes, large moths, and grubs, picked out from the wood—all of which the English settlers turn from with disgust—are esteemed as dainties; but they are shocked at our eating' oysters. Milk, as am article of- food (escept fur sucking babies), is loathed by the South Sea Islanders. Goats have been introduced into several of the islands; but the people deride the settlers with using their milk; arid ask them why they do'not milk their sows. Oa the other hand dog; and rats are favorite articles of food with them. Those last, as is well known, are often eaten by the Chinese, whonlso eat salt earth-worms, and a kind of sea-slug, which most Europeans will turn from with disgust. In the narrative of Anson's voyage is full account of the prejudice of the South Americans (both Creoles and Indians) against turtles as poisonous. The prisoners captured on the prize ships warned the sail ors against eating it, and for some time lived on bad ship beef; but seeing our men thrive on the turtle they began to eat it—at first sparingly and at length heartily. And when set ashore and liberated they declared they blessed the day of their capture, which had introduced to them a plentiful supply of wholesome and delirious food. Horseflesh, which most Europeans would refuse to eat, except in great extremity, is preferred by the Tartars to all other; and the flesh of a wild ass's colt was greatly es teemed by the It mans. As for pork, it is on religious grounds that Jews' and Maltommedans ab4tain from it, as the 'Undoes do from beef. But the Christians of the East seem to have an equal aversion to it; and the like prevailed till lately in Szotland. The large shell snail, called escargot, was a. favorite dainty with the ancient Romans, and still is so in a great part of the south of Europe, though nalst E Iglishmen would .be half starved before they would eat it. In Vienna the large wood ants are served up and eaten slice. Small land crabs are eaten alive in Chinn The igauana, a large species of lizard, it reekonetha great dainty, in some of the West InEa ?sleuth , . Maize (the Indian corn of . America) has been introduced into New Zealand 1,3 , the missionaries, and the people cultivate rind highly esteem it. But their made of pre, paring it fur food is to' Europeans most dis gusting. They steep it into: water until it is putrid, and then make it into ekind of porridge, which emits a most. intaterable stench. Unman flesh has been, and still is eaten in many parts of the world, and, that by people considerably above the lowest rank of savages—such as the Fijil Islanders 'and an Indian people called the Datta, who are said to have a written language. And even in cannibalism there arc great diversities— some nations est their enemies, and some their friend's. Ilerodotus relates that n Persian king asked the Indian soldiers that were, in his service what reward would induee them to burn the dead bodies of their friends instead of eating them. They replied by entreating him not to mention anything so shocking. Oa the other hand the New Zealoci:tars before their conversion, who seemed to have considered that the proper diet of mankind is man—seem to have eaten only their enemies. . Among the Australian caltages, on the 000trary, it is said that-if. a-mother finds a young baby troublesome to carry about she will eat it (although she -would not allow any one cite to do so) under the full perms sion.that she bite merely deferred ,its birth, and that the:next child she bears will he a reappearance of the eaten one. 'Whew re. m o nst rated with she wi I I ply "Oh, maim, ho plenty comeogitin." gerOld:sgs is liad fur the T.tee; bat good for head. Every lsee has ihs.seores_:Td,. isi a :nap of life. • 4, [WHOLE NUMBER Gems and Precious Stones. Notwithstanding the .edictilLy_which he en deavored to curb the fullies:ofzothers, CILAIT was himself an indefatigable, collector of pre tious stories, chiseled vases,,Statmes, pictures, , etc., especially„Then they had beo . the,,Work of famous ancient masters The quanity.nf gems the Cesare had at their command mud have been enormous. Caligula bu It ships en= tirely of cedar, with sterns inlaid with gims. 4 These were probably fine stones such' as 'Wel. onyx. The emperor's mantle was heavy with precious stones and gold embroidery; and In citatus, his favorite horse, was covered with „ purple housings, and wore a pearl collar. - •.6.• In the golien house of Nero, the panels ' were of i gnother-of-pearl, enriched with gold and' gems. At the Great Games instituted. tiy-this • emperor, as many as a thouasand lottery- tisk- ' ets were daily thrown to the people; thavrizins consisted.of quanites of rare birds of Vanithsa., kinds, corn, gold, silver, robes pearls, precious ,stones, and pictures; during the.last days, even. ships, houses, and lands. . But it was under the reign of the Antonini.% that luxury was carried to its greatest height. Luxery in edifices, gardens, furniture, banquets and dress, found historians to panegyrize or satirize them as far back as the reign of_ Agustus; but Pliny was the first writer who spoke of precious stones. When the mania for jewels reached its max, it was not enough (or the canny oftheae' masters of the world that their trinket■ crerai valuable on account of the _workmanship and beauty octhe gems; they were not content un less they Colild:boast of-possessiny, such as had an illustrious origin. A rin - g,ri vase, a !tag of pearls, or a cameo, had ita,genealegy,,and,. was traced back to a Cleopatra, an Antopy„ or, some other illustrious owner. Tiha vanity (arms the text of one of Martial's . epigrams., Alen and women vied with each other in their fondness of jewels. Pliny indignantly relates, that women, not content with wearing fold on: their heads, arms, tresses and fingers; in their. ears, and around the corsage of their tunises k yet wore pearls on their bosom, in the dead oC of the night, that even in theii steel) th.y might be conscious of the iiosseSslon Of. inestimnble . gems. Ile complains, moreover; 'thit" they wore *old on their feet, thus establishing,"between'thei stole of the matron and the plebeian'tunic,4 sort of feminine equeitrian order. This was but a trifling piece of extravagance, however when compared with the whim of the Empress Iloppwa, who caused her mules to be shod witti gold. Indeed moderation could scarcely be expect ed from wives of the patricians who bad sub dued empires, made kings their tributariesiand reigned as sovereigns over the wide domains wrested from surrounding nations to„be prov inces of Rome. .1 haye seen," pays .I.ollia Pauline, who was the Wife of the Empe7 ror Caligula, and this not on the occasion of ir solemn festival, e r, ceremony, but merelyA the supper of ,ordinary betrothals,l have scan Lollia Pauliae . covered with emeralds and pearls arranged alternately, so as to give each othei additional' brilliancy on her bead - , - ne'ck . , hands, and girdle, to the amount of 10,000 seat; erces (1230,000 sterling), the wich value she was prepared to prove on the instant by Prot ducing the receipts; and these 'Pearls cairre,iwt from the prodigal generosity of an imperial hus band, but from treasures which had been the spoils of provinces. Marcus Lolling, her grand father, was dishonored _in all the East ore cc. count of the gifts he, had extorted from kings, disgraced by Tiberius, and obliged to poison himself by the light of the lucernie blazing with jewels." The Greek and Roman jewelers have varied the form and style of ornaments to such a.de: gree that, according to archreologisA, our : meat skillful modern artists are merely. copyists or imitators. The works that. treat oft tbciewool ry of the ancients furniiM inexhiustj . ries to those ilho explore their scientific depth: Diadeiris, neck laces,. c,arrinis,:bia4l . eis,irfngs, pins, biooches;iliiips of 'all ehakoeilnirtlinien sioris;iuimounied with busts,StatuetteiGanimari birds, insects, flowers, etc., were indespensablls to the Roman ladies, and were frequentlyprired far more for their 'artistic merit than (or the substance of which they were composed., Hair pinrconstituted• a.very impact' tit..artigla of the toilet, and were elaborately , finiaheilkthe head usually represented figures delicately. wrought : Mention is made of a hair-pin that cost ,t: Among the relics of Pompeii and Herculaneum now in the Royal Musenm of Naples, is,a pijt that had belonged to the Empress of Sabina; it represents' the Goddeis of Plenty, Hearin' in one hand the horn of Archelans, and cm reisingi dolphin with the other. This pin is described by Winkelman in his letter on the antiquities of Herculaneum. The nucklacc usually wound several times round the neck, the last circle falling oaths bosom; the-clasp was a rnagnificent.carneo.— We may judge of the delicacy of the workiiin ship, and of the beauty of. the design,' bithe antique gems preserved in European calk.- .. Cont. . , , • The very garters of the "Roman ladies were spl!ndid trinkets, on which gold, silver, anii precions Monis were prodigally employed. Sabina, its younger, possessed a pair of garter" valued at nearly .f40,000,' en account , of the rich cameos that clasped them. .The patrician dames, in their mad endeavor's - M rival rich other in this species of ornament !Tent re large part of their fortunes: The , gertevraf. those days were not used to fastn stOeltiap the R 013211115 wore no .stockinips—lint a kind-of drawers of fine limn. Sometimes the •gatter was worn on the naked leg. as brattlettora wort on the arms. Nero offered to Jupiter Capitolitrus::thisfint cuttings of , his beiird ini.goidetrveseceniidscd with very waitAppeniiw.- —lieliogsbahts wore saruhils adernediwitbipte