VOL. VIII. TEE PEOPLE'S JOURNAL. PIHILISHED EVERY THURSDAY MORAHNg. BY ADDISON AVERY. • Terms—lnvariably In Advance t One copy per annum, • $l.OO Village subscribers, 125 TERMS OF ADVERTISING. I square, or 12 lines or less,' insertion, $0.50, 3 insertions, 1.50 " every subsequent insertion, .25 Rule and figure work, per sq., 3 insertions, 3:00 Every subsequent insertion, .50' 1 column, one year, 25.00 1 tolutuu, six months, 15.00 Administrators' or Executors Notices, 2.00 Sheriffs Sales, per tract, 1.50 professional Cards not exceeding eight lines Asserted for $3.00 per annum. re All letters on business, to secure at Lennon, should be ,addressed (post paid) to tbs Publisher.. • nut portr2. THE Itosnsra APPEAL 4, various methods are now resorted to, to prevent the killing of innocent and useful birds, we commend the following lines to the attention of thoughtless boys: 0, kill me not! Thou thoughtless boy, While singing here In all my joy ; "Pis wicked thus • To harm me now— Still let me hop Front bough to bough. 0, kill me natl.. Life's dear to me As 'tis to you, So wild and free-- , Now posed in air, Then sailin g low— How full of glee irc only know. 0, kill us not! In yonder tree My mate and I llati•e nurselings three; You would not, sure, That these should die For want of food, Up there so high. 0, let us lire! And day by day We'll utter thanks In our own way ; We'll surely come • Quite near your door, And sweetest songs Sing o'er and o'er. THE DIFORISED GIRL I= The world is so mixed and mingled! And there is such a variety of charac ter in it! And no one knows what part he may play in the drama of existence, or how he shall die, or when, or where his grave will be. Neither can ho tell his origin, and de fine the concerted causes that called him out of the world of matter to a conscious being. Man is alike igno rant of his beginning and ending—dis satisfied with the present, and doubt ful of the future. There are feW real philosophers among us. Jane Radley was quite a philosopher in her way.. She was a little girl, cruelly deformed, whom I used occasionally to meet last summer during my walks. Jane was ten years old, an orphan, and, though so young, a miserable drudge in a German family. Her face was very expressive and interesting; but her person pitifully ugly. She was picking berries when I chanced to see her for tho first time. My impres sions were unfavorable. I involunta rily shrunk from the unfortunate crea ture. Stopping, I observed her at tentively, asking myself whether life was a curse or a blessing 'to such a child. Who could love her; What was she good . for? What would she do for companionship? From what unknown fountain would the waters of her enjoyment flow! 'You ain't afraid of me, are you?' she asked in a plaintive tone. 'Why do you ask such a question?' 'Because.l know I'm such a fright.' 'Why do you think sq?' I continued. 'Oh, it's very easy tolknow it. My shadow in the glass, and in the water, and on the wall tell me. People laugh at me because I am so badly made.' `Does that give you pain'?' 'lt makes'. rue feel as if(l wanted to be alone. And sometimes 1 sit down where nobody can see me, arid cry.' am sorry there aro those so thoughtless and cruel. Have you parents living?' 'No; I wish I had, But you see they took sick and died, when 1 wasn't half so big as I am .now. I don't think they:laughed at me, do you?' 'Certainly not. You are very un happy, I suppose?' 'Sometimes I think I am the most miserable girl in the world, and I want to die and be put out of sight. tut I get over such dark spells and think in a different way. I say. to myself, I'm very ugly, and people ain't to blame for not liking me. We shouldn't like a flower, should we, if it wasn't sweet and pretty? We love to look at what is beautiful; it comes natural 7 --we can't help it. I like to look at you, ma'am, you are so nice, and seem to know so much. And I don't see anything bad or proud in • - i ----• -- ' --- '-'..,..., .: C'f. 1 , 7 , • ::. .m.:••7 1?. - _ - ."......:, - . ‘'."•.. l :_:. .::,-...•.. - ...; -„: • .•, .„ i; , :; .. 1 ;; ~ i :; , :j. 1 "ZUri :I. 11 , : . . 0E. ;:•: , )avi ^T F07..0F2 , 1 - 7 , ,Trir. . , . . .. . . . • . . . . .... - . .. ... ).-. . . . • •, , ••:. ,l . , , . ~ .1 „. , , Y . , t. . „ . , •, 1.. ir:fl ~1 ; . ... n; ' . '" :1 ••• • Cc ' . ':• .; ::, :,:' 1: - • ' .' :• . . ,' ••••,, :. : : ;::: •,. : ‘•:.:, .:,iH 1.... '.':. ',. '-: h , :. . . .: ' '' •- • V • . . f• l• • . II .... I E. L .. .. . ... ... • il . ._ . . , your face. But. isn't likely you care much fur' such 'a ho'n;tely little thing as me. • 'l'm sure I ought to. You have• a good, mind; and that is of more conse quence than the body.'.,. 'Do. you, know I have thought so, sometimes? Yet I never heard any one say it before.' My poor child, .I wish I could, help • Tx does me good to .hear you say 80, But 1 1 tn. not so very- miserable as I seem. , .1. expect there's a straight spirit. in this clooked body.- I can aread, you see. anti that,gives me com film ,After I go• to bed in my,dark attic I lay and think.. Andi have such thoughts Oh, I can't _tell 'em. forget where I am, and being in the dark don't see my deformity. •Well, then .I feel just like other people,. Pm sure. I forgive 'em for beating. me. and for calling me hunchback, too.. • Do you get good usage.where you live 1' I'm afraid not;- but perhaps I .don't know what good usage-..is. They. tell me I should be a beggar if it wasn't for them. . So I work very_hard and try to think I. deserve the blows I. get.' Don't you find it hard to do:so.r 'Yes ; it comes dreadful hard solo& times. Then Igo away and cry and pray.' 'Pray!' Yes, ma'am? Who taught you?' Nobody—it comes natural. I know what I want and-ask. for it.' Whom do you ask?' The child gazed pleasantly into my. face, and said 'Oh, you know, ma'm. Such a - nice lady as you must know a great deal better than I do.' You are meanly dressed. Do you get food enough?' • 'No—and then I go to bed hungry; but I soon think myself to sleep and dream all kinds of nice things. - When I wake up I feel quite refreshed. ' Do you expect to exist in this way as long as you live?' 'I hope not—but if I do I shall make the best of it. Perhaps I shan't live long.' • UDE 'Are you afraid to die P 'I think I should like to. If I do the best I can, I shall be an angel. And I shall be beautiful; for this frightful body will stay behind.' 'How can you exist without a body?: 'I shall have oriel? 'Have one ?' 'Yes—the spiritual body that Paul tells us about in • the Testament.— You've read the Testament, havn't you ?' I said yes. • 'I wish I knew more about it, but no one explained it to me. Older people think I can't understand such things. Oh, they don't know how my soul has outgrown my body!' Alas not,' I added with a sigh. ' I think a girl's soul may be older than her body. Mine is. It seems to me that I've lived a good while. Is there such a thing as living fast'? if there is, then I've lived fast. Think ing does it—thinking, thinking, when I'm alone—alone in the night time, talking with myself, wondering how I came to be—how the world, and the moon, and the stars came to be. Do you know that I get lost in a great unknown region, without beginning or end—a place full of life atid.trio tien.l My spirit hears voices—voices still .and_ small, talking to my -soul— my soul is so full of mystery! . r n My body is blind and dark, and hears nothing, and I cannot go with my thoughts to the bright world where my happiness is. Do you know what I mean, ma'am ? •• ' I believe so, child; go on.' • ' They call me stupid and dreamy, not knowing the life I lead. I love the stars and the. strange, still moon; I think they know me and understand me; so I talk with them and much calmness comes .over me. De you know that I imagine that God is - in all of them? He must be; and in'the wide sky, the sky so Serene on mild evenings and ,starry nights—the sky so high and so deep; the quiet, friendly sky.' The deformed girl paused. Clasp ing, her hands, she looked up into the depths with all the fervor of an en- thusiast. Her ,eyes 'beamed with a soft, saintly light. I looked at her poor body, and saw only the soul which had outgrown it. - Cut ofl - from the v,-aim pulse of human - sympathy, she had necessarily formed au ac quaintance with the inner life—the institutions—the ideal—the eternal... 1 What a lesson I learned frbm Janci ! How my pride and vanity and world liness were rebuked. The'self-satis fied smile faded fiera my lips, and wished for the angelic nature of the ,child. And this miZed and mingled world is heedless of intellect, unless templed in a beautiful body. We cannot judge from the external who is the most DENOTED ,TO. THE P,RINCIPLEB OP DEMOCRACY, AND THE DI§SEMINATAOII.9P MORALITY, laITERATURE,, AN,D NENViS., f ,j '•,.j;. , ., ,i I= COUDF,ItSPORT,.POTTER COUNTY, 18P`: blest. •It may be the, beggar: in the r ihe hunger-pinched, need'y wo 7 the 'forsaken outcast, or' the in; Valid; dying of an incurable malady. Happiness is of the mind—the king dom of joy within. An apparent evil may 'be :positive good An disguise. Our knoveledge is limited. What we really, know is unknown. What we decideupon hastily, is still undecided; /ill wisdom casts different shades when viewed. from ,didereni points. truth has its paradoxical sides. All, minds have their forta margana— Oeir hazy, atmosphere—their world of a mental mirage. The deformed girl is ill now. Her sicknes's is mortal. Before the spring months' come, she will : escape , from her bodily prison, and that part.which is immortal will be in the realm of her hopes. She-has been cared for and made comfortable, so far, as prad ticable. .She will suffer no more from unkind treatment. I shall note her footsteps down; down into the dust— no, up to the clouds. She is rejoiced at' the prospect of dissolution. Her faith may , well cast shame on older persobs and deeper pretenders to piety. And the deformed girl ins nothing to foar. She will pass joyfully unto Him . who said—' Suffer little children to come unto me.' THE "DIGGER'Y INDIANS A friend, not long since returned from the plains, gives an account of the "Diggers"—the most degraded and disgusting race on, the Western Hemisphere. They occupy a region of territory in and near the American Desert, being driven from the neighbOP ing sections by the other Indlia tribes, who have the most utter contempt and abhorrence of the race. They are dwarfish in statute, being seldom above five feet in height, dark in complexion, lean, emaciated and shrivelled, with a skin resembling leather, laying in folds over the body,, and giving them a truly hideous appearance. .They wander about, often irfan entirely nude state, and have no habitations of any descrip tion.. Sometimes they burrow in the sand for night's lodging. Roots and herbs are their principal subsistence, which they dig from the ground with remarkable dispatch, hence receiving the appellation of "Diggers." The Diggers are a cannibal race, eating human flesh whenever it cad be ob tained. They also subsist on carrion and indeed on anything that can un dergo a digestive process. Their weapons of warfare and de fence are the tomahawk and the arrow: They are a cowardly race, seldom, making an attack, except for the pur pose of procuring food, and then only in case of a great superiority in num bers. Their mode of attack is to warily surround their victim, and simultaneously rush upon him. As soon as he fires at one of the party, the others immediately transfix him with a volly of arrows, when they di rectly proceed to cut him .up, eating what they desire, and carrying off the residue ter future use. They seem hardly to possess the characteristics of-, human beings, and their identity as men, is questioned by many trappers i and hunters. Having the semblance of the human form, they possess all the. traits of brutes. They are re markably tenacious oflife, and accounts almost incredible are often related 'of this peculiarity. The. truth . of the fol. lowing incident is vouchedforon credi, ble authority. . An attack having been made on a party of hunters _and traders crossing the American Desert, and who were reduced by starvation and thirst, the Diggers were worsted and a number. of them Shot. One of them, who had received a rifle ball through his body ; raised himself up to - a sitting posture, aimed his tomahawk at one of the whites, throwing it with suchprecision as to Cut his hunting cap from his head.. The other,. in turn, walkedup to his antagonist, and deliberately stint .him through the head, and left him for dead. Soon after, on turning around; he preceived the Digger, _with a por tion of his brains pramding from his skull, taking aim at him with his knife. Ho sprang aside, in time to avoid the weapon, and then: riddled him with balls. An hour afterivard 'he yet breathe - di The Diggers are rapidly diminishing in 'numbers, as is the case with most other : lndian tribes. EXTORTION seldom' pays in• the long run. The .cazenovia Whig says: Several 'farmers in this region had large lots of hey which a few' weeks ago they refused to sell for $2O per toil, declining to sell for less thin $3O per ton. ~Buyers would not submit to the extortion, and the hay was not sold. Prices. have. now fallen' to $l5 per ton, and, that' hay finds no pur chaser, biIIPTION or TEE ORIRER OR BOILING ' SYREtie . • At" ast, after waiting till the p,e'cond day of by sojourn atGerser;the'Vdig &stied explosion 'took 'pla&3 ootif:tlie 27th of June,t.at :half-past aine:in the morning. • The peasant, .who came twice a• day to inquiro..if I had , yet seen an eruption, was with 'me when the first dull sounds whfch annthinceid the event was heard.: We hUrried to the spot,"and as the waters boiled ,over Fa usual, and., the noise died ~away, thought I was doomed, to disappoint ment again; bit the 'list" tones were just expiiihg: ivhen the •thiplosion •eud denly tool place. I have really- no words to justice to,thio, magnificent spectacle, which -once to, behold in a lifetime is enough.„ 'lt infinitely 'Surpassed all _my ek pectations. • The waters *ere-spotited with great power and voluMe column rising,above column, as if, each were bent on outstripping the others.. ter I 'bad recovered in some degiee from 'my first astonishment, r looked round at the lent—how •-small, how diminutive it seemed, compared to those pillars of, water. , And yet it was nearly twenty feet high: It was lying rather lower, it is true, than the basin of the Geiser, .but tent Mightihave been piled on tent—yes, by my reck oning, which,may not have been per fectly accurate, hbweyer—five or six, one above the other, would nut have reached the elevation of these jets, the largest of which I -think - .li'can affirm, without any exaggeration,. to have risen at least to the bight of a hundred feet, and to have been three or Tour feet in diameter: Fortunately, I had looked at my watch 'when the first •ruinbliug was heard, for I should certainly have, tor- gotten to do so during the explosion, and by the calculation I made when it wa's over, I thind that it lasted nearly four minutes-the actual outbreak oc cupying more than half that time. When . this wonderful scene was ended, the peasant went with me : ,to examine the-basin and caldron. We could approach very pear ,tliem.with r ont 'the least danger , but there Was nothing farther to be seen. The wa tershad entirely disappeared from the basin, into which we entered,. and walked clue up to the caldrup, where they had. also sunk to the depth of seven or eight feet, though they were still boiling and - bubbling with great violence. I broke off a few pieces of auk from the the intcriOr Of .the basin and caldron with a hammer. Those from the first were white, •and the' others brown. tasted the water, which had no unpleasant flavor," and n . can .contai but little sulphur . The, steam is. also free from . any sulphurous smell. .In order to ascertain how rOng it would be before the basin and Caldron were full again, I returned•to-the spot . every thirty minutes, and found that the first hour I could still stand within the basin ; but, at my next visit, the. caldron was completely' filled; and on the point of running over. As long as tile water remained in the caldron, it boiled furiously,' but . the 'ebullition subsided as it flowed into "the basin, and when the latter was full there was only an ocCasionatbubble to be seen. —lda Pfeiffer's .Touniey to lceldnd. Tupper's Philosophy is thus taken offin a recent number. of Punch: • PROVERBIAL !-By the Solomon in. Ordinary to the 'British Nation.---Other persons were born about the same• time as thyself, and have been growing up ever since, as well as thou. Therefore be not proud. The girl who is destined to "be thy wife, although. now Unknown to . thee, is sure to be living somewhere or other. Hope therefore, : that :, she is quite well, and : other wise think polite ly about , her. A traveller, journeying wisely; thay Jean. much. Vet niiich::.may also be learned by him who.stays•at,home. An insane person may lie .to thee, and yet be innocent, and thou mayest lie to him, and. be praiseworthy. Now all persons are somewhat insane;' but do thou beware •of lying as a general rule. • By a conceit a . certain red fly hath been called a lady bird, and bidden to fly away horse.'" The counsel is good, even to ber wbb is neither 'bird nor fly. There is nb place like ,Ile who always holds : his -tongyn will one day hive nothing else to.hold. Yetit is not good to be over garrulous. The weather=cock, can tell the way of thasviind; but if the weather-eock stieki; the course_ of the wind will not be influenced , thereby. Remember thii. • • • • tt If thy hetitt is in the Highlands, it is'not here: . • •• • 'Solomon kn'er SOkeralithings, allow ing for his age, but T. et;uld tench him • '1 few others. THE MANHOIMY HUTH: *,- • 1.; • i.; Paptaißnfthe.f:ygneh,schooner Aii'driCatia, Who last iuniirier was tits Peinarribudo, V;iii the folkiwing'sketCh'oft tamemonkey: ::A'shbrt tithe age; I 'dinekat ad3ra iiliammerchList.'s. The! . .coriverdatiun turned upon till well tutored chimpan zee of Mr Vatmeck, a Cyeole gentle man, whose slave had broiight him the itginkey; whiCh he had caught in'the woods;: Every -• one; praised, ceiriplished ,apinaak giving acotints,of talents so wonderful, that I not - help expresSi'ng,'Scim My hint'imiled; saying that h was not the first one-who wouldnot believe in these yesults of animal education until be had seen it -with his own eyes.- He, therefore, proposed to Me to call With him 'on " • T gladly' consented; and- ob the fol lowing morning! we:•set .out, house of the greple lie.s,on the- read, to Olinda, about an hour's ride from town:" We proceeded along - splendid hedges "ofcactus, shaded by bananaA and palmtrees, an&at length observed , the charming villa. 3 A negro receiyed . us at the enttnnce, and took us to the parlor, hastening to tell his master of our visit: • • • The first *object: which caught out attention wail the Monkey seated on a etooli.and sewing.with•great industry. Much struck, I , watched him'attentive- IY, While he, not paying . any attention to us, proceeded with his work: 'The door opened, and• Aranneck, , reJ clinitig on an easy .Chair, ,Las wheeled in. Though his legs are paralyzed,. he seemed bright and cheerful; he. welcOmed tis most kindly: ,- .The trrou 'key went On with great zeal. I could not refrain from exclaiming: • "How wonderful!" for the manner and pro* cess of the animal were those of a prac-, tised tailor. . He was sewing a pan of stripped pantaleans, the narrow shape Of which showed 'that they were in. tended for himself. A.negro now appeared, announcing Madame •Ja d smin, whom Mr: Vannecks'ie introatice - ahs'nighlini. - • Madame- • .rcv SoLicrrEp.—Norilsern Sruin was accompanied • byher little Monus Aidfor;S'outhern - Clairdhe's.Theltei.. ; , daughter, 'a girl of twelve years, who Dr. Stblei, 'Agent for the South 4u' immediately ran to the:monkey, .greet ing him as an old friend, and begn!ping Aid Society, presented the claims of. to prattle with 'hip Jack furtively that.society at.the.Old South • Church,. peeped at his piaster; , but as Mr. ,an - k' Boston, on Sunday evening, His ,ob-, ctg'y, (iste necs glance was stern, the tailor went from ` the North, o j susta ri a notin tmii-i rs)he on sewing. Suddenlybiithread broke; try lz•om, the South. -__ He said, accord-. and. he put the end to his mouthy; ing to the Bee, that the South had a smoothed it withhis and twiste great destitution of ministers, and had' it with his . left paw, anti threaded the not received her proportion of Home needle again. Mr. Vanneck 'then missfonary . turned to trim, . speaking in the same The subject he said, was a delicate calm tone - which he had: conversed with us: "Jack put .your work aside j one to handle at the North; the deli and sweep the eaev all lay - in this, that the Smith would not receive the Northern min:- -. leek hurried to the adjoining room, isters preaching the gospel, but Would and : Came back Without delaY,'a breoni i like to receive our money -to support n-his paw, and Swept and dusted a pro-slavery ministry other own. n Clever housemaid., I. could, . now I perfectly, make . out his . size, .as he al ways walked upright, not enhi.ifour hands. He' was 'atm& three feet in height and stooped a little. • 'He was Clad'in linen pantaloons, and a colored shirt,.• a jacket and a red. necketChief At,another hint from his master, Jack went and brought sbveraf glasses of lethenide on a tray. He 'first present ed the tray to Madame Jagniiii and her daughter, then to 'us, precisely like a . well-bred footman. •Xlien 1 had emptied my glass, he hastened•to,re lieve me from it, putting it hack on the tray. Mr. - Vannb . & tee - let:Mt:his watch and showed it to the nionkey,;. it was just.three. Jack went.and : brought a ,cup to his master, who remarked that the monkey did not ktinw l the move inents of the watch, 'but that he knew exactly the position . ofthehanda when they pointed.to three, and .kept it ill mind that it was . then his master res quired his luncheon. If the watch was shown to him at any other hour, he did not gb to fetChthe broth: while if three o'clock was past and the. lun cherin not being called for, he • got fidgety and at last ran and ,brought it: in.this case he was always rewarded ' , kith' a skar.plUtias... • ' You have no notioni_. said Mr: Van . - neck, .how much time•and trouble, and• especially how much patience, I hare bestowed en the training : of this ani mal. Confined. to My chair, hoWeVer, continued My task methodiCally.-- Nothing was more difficult than to ac custom Jack-to . his clothes; . , used . to I take off his i pantaleons again and again, Untirif.last I had theni 'sewed 'to his shirt.' •When'he walks cit'.with me, lie , wears a' straw hat; but never. with out; making.. fearful,; grimaces. ;He „takes:a bath every - day,..andis, osrth, :whole, very' cleanly. . • "laa," - •exclainie : & Mr. 'l r antieCk, to me;-"thiiientletrian Wahtshishand•- k' ere bi e v! • .The Monkey drewiitfretti his pockets.att4 1 140400. P; 1 41., ."Now, show your rointo my pewi t "' 'Continued Us master ;`arid JaCkripened a door,' at'Whieh'b'e'' pass, and tlabifcilloWbd himself. 'Every thing was extremely tidy in the mall MEE room: There was . &bed' with airnat trass;' a table and Some chairs; diawere and l'ariems hung The.hell was wept ( and re-appeared .with::his, Mast*, wheeling in the • chair.- 11.Ieatokhile, I had: taken the n filiiiiti`e."4orall; Mr:" Vainieck'haUcted t);iiiplo*irt who fetched the .powder flask andthe shothag, and in tha,wholeyrpoee4 of loading acquitted: liiinself a rifle man. I bad already seen that Was: , astonisbioi, that I-Waialffelv surprised at:this feat:: astikmoviiplecia himself at . th,e 9pen tuck,p.iip m and discharged the gun without being in - the least startled by :the reptift:': : ,Ele then went through .witly,,siyord,exer cises with!the same 5ki11.,,.. It wouldhe too long to jot doiliu;all . Mr. Vanneck" told us= - hlibUt method' of education and training; 'the-above.. facts, Nvitnesse&.by ; myself,. bear - eyidencc of the abilities of the animal, and: its . niastoes 7!.! The San Francisco; Californiaiinue-i Lion marts tire•crowded.with Crtlll# apjd. domestic flour : cargo,. after ~pargo is, offered, under the haniosier, to be sold to the highest kidder.. • The lqwesti4lo of a, good article of superfine has been at $5 50 per barrel. Seven vesiels— have been loaded with wheat and' flour' for the Atlantic and Australinifport4.' The TimeA :of, that ".city says' it is Abe, general „belief, ..arnoug,., farmers . cvad others Who have lad opportunities of observation, that the .heavy crops 'cir the past year will be far exceeded by those of the present ; * atid in this view of the c'ne, and impelled by the long' existing low prices .tif Erin produ6ti,' business men have at length resolved: to ship, in search of a m'arkef, a largo . . portion of the flour, grain, etc., which . , C'alifornia has. in surplus. ; The anikunt of saving to California by' this aevelop- : meat of its owu agricultural industry is equal to 512,000 annually- MODESTY IN THE RIGHT QUA RTER.- Since the death, of the late Bishokof ' Sierra Leone, Dr. Vidal,• the British Government have offered the.vacant place' to the . Rev. S. W. V% r eekle of St. Thomas's Church, Lambeth. He inti mated hie Willingness to accept the appointment upon one condition, viz : That his letters should not confer upon him any right or claim to be called:. "My - Lord," as.is the case with all the other colonel prelates: It is some. *hat remarkable that the .Government has complied with this very . remark able request, The new Bishop, there fore, is not to be addressed in any man ner or form which implies his "lording it over others." • MARE A BEGIN:km:G.—The first. weed pulled up in the garden, the firat:-seed put into .the 'savings bank, and the . first mile traveled on a' journey, are all important things; they make a beginning, a pledge . that you are in earnest with what .you have under taken. How many a poor outcast :is now creeping his way through the world, who might have held up his head and prospered, if, instead"Of putting off- his resolutions of amend ment of industry, ha had only made a . beginning. A beginning, _too, ,is necessaay. A bee hiving extraordinary cane offin the vicinity of Houston, Texas; a few days since. The swarm..ryes passing over.a train of cotton wagons, when they• became confused by the noise and decOaded, chmising as a act ; [ling - place the head 'of a , ivagouir, which they piled up somewtiat - aftr the style of a n old fa.shion ecl gien ad bear-skin. The'hat was then •remo,y- : ed to-a .wagon and conyeyed six or eight: and the bees securely hived. A ndWinode of ersing a moli has been" discovered--said •to super. cede the , fle deigity ;of a . niilitary , foree; is to pass around ; a-contribgtiola --4 R • •P . 7 " t::;:1"11.1:r Nd. MBE THAN THEY WA.I6. . .%.,71.
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