,n ii i ii iiiwiimii ii an 'imi '- --- " 'SW iiiim u mmmm in mi mill in iiiiiinlini .Wfwwi ihipp i im mitm w PMwwt.i.r-aiw.ww " Ipi'ifwi'nw niii':f,l"lwwDl isiissiw--" 'vammmwal Ht i.miii mil" ' ""m ihwB y i .ty, frei 'wiipijwwwiWMWPiwwwwwwfWPW" I j if Ifi CUK) If )f 3 V Mill T TifW 'VXy vyu - J. H. lAMUMER, Editor. VOL Villi. NO. 2G. ffrmi of nbsrrlptloii. fl 'l A At- toll hi, 'tlll-llva mi.a.fll.1 tl 9 rr .n tiinn 111. ill thfl Vtal-. . - . 1 Ad 1 .1 ( I " J v ......... - . I - Sf paid l'ter the expiration of the year, - J 1)0 Terms of Advertising;. ViWertlnementa nre iunorted in tbo Republican Vl-tme luliowmg raios : 1 Insertion t5qnr, (U lines,) $ 40 a eqimros, (2Slines,) 1 00 2 do. t 75 1 60 2 00 3 do, f 1 00 2 00 2 50 12 mo $7 00 10 00 12 00 14 00 18 00 Xh iiuaroi, (4Z linen,; i au I month. 6 mo'i. Oie Squire, Two squares, : : Three squares, Four iijuarei, : Half a column, $2 60 $4 (10 4 00 C 00 8 00 : 6 00 A 00 : 8 00 10 00 12 00 0e column, 11 00 20 00 85 00 n.r thron weeks and loa'than three ino&tha 25 oentl per iquare for each Insertion. Business notices not exceeding 81ineg are in sorted for $2 a year. AdvertiseinonU not marked with the niimher or Insertions desired, will be continued till. forbid charted aoeording to these terms. 8 J. II. LARRIMER. 1 W. HAYS, DAOUEUllEAN, Melainentyrdrt, Amliroty pist. and JUSTICE OF XllE PEACE, Ker.-ey, Elk County, Pa. DENTAL CARD. AM. SMITH offers nil professional sorviees . to the I.ailici and C;entlenien of Clear field and vicinity. All operationi performed with neatness anil desputi-li. Heing familiar with all the late iinprovmenU, he is preparod t make Artllirlal Teeth in the best manner. 0fl.ee In Shaw'i new row. opt 14th, 1858. 1yJ- DR. R. V. WILSON, n AVISO removed his office to the new dwel ling on Seoond itreet, will promptly answer p rofs lional calls as heretofore. jas. . LAnnmitn. I. test I A it HIM Kit A TI'ST, Attorheyi at Law J Clearfield, Pa., will attend promptly to Col tiotis, Lahd Agencies, Ac, 4c., in Clearfiold, Centre and Elk counties. July 30. y JOHN TROUTMAN STH.T. eontinuoi ihe businesi of Chair Muking, and House, Sign and Ornamental Painting, at the shop forinorly occupiod by Troutmun it Howe, at the east end of Market street, a iliort distance wist of Lits'i Foundry. June 13, 1355. TumrPSON. IIAUTSOCK N CO. I roil fr'duudert, Curwcnsville. Anextonsive assorts of Castings wade to order Dee. 2, 1861. L. JACKSON CRANS, ATTORNEY AT LAW, oflioe adjoining 1 is e sidenc on Second Street, Cloa1 kid, I a. June 1. 1854. II. r. THOMPSON, -- t.i... . l. fVurwl tkitliAi at tun office at Scofield'i hotol, Curwensville, when no xrofcts onally abecnt. vw- , r i?T T is inU'lM Ar SONS. , . lt LJ 1 U ' - ' AT the mOllin OI J.ln j.uh, mw muu. iiMi Clearneld, MERCHANTS, and extensive Manufacturers ol i,umocr, July 23, 1852. J. D. THOMPSON, it loi-ltmltli. Wimmi. Ituircies. tc. it.. Ironed Jj on short notice, and the very best style, athis Id stand in the borough or curwensviue. Dec. 29, 1853. DR. M. WOODS, having changed hisloca tion from Curwonsvillo to Clearfield, res pectfully offon hit professional services to the Cititens ot tlie laiier place aim miuiii. Hesidence on Second street, oppoait ti it of J. Craus, Esq. my I P. W. BARRETT, H fEUCHANT. l'HODVf'E AND LUMBER l DEALER. AND JUSTICE Of THE PEACE, Lutherihurg, Clearfield Co., Pa. J. L. CUTTLE, 4 ttorncy at Law ind l.aml Aent.offi adjoining hii residence, on Market stree lleurfield. March 3, 1S53. A. B SHAW, RETAILER of Foreign and Domestic Mcrcb. andiie, Shawsvillo, Clearfiold county, Pn. . bhawsville, August 15, 1855. 1 PHYSICIAN Offico In Curwcnsville. -May WM. T. CHAMBERS. CARRIES on Chairmaking, Wheelwright, and houne and 5ign painting at Curwuiisville, Clear9cld cn. All orden promptly attended lo Jan. 5, 1858. R0T1ERT J. WALLACE, Attorney" at Law, Clearfield, Pa., Ofllre In Bhaw'i How, op posito the Journal office. doo. 1, 1818. tf. 1)I.ASTr.KIXfJ. The mbscriber, having located hiiusolf In the borough of Clearfield would infvrm the public that be is prepared to do work ii? the above lino, from plain lo ornamen tal of any f'cril'tion in a workmanlike manner. Also whitewashing and repairing done in a noal ynanner Red on reasonable terms. EDWIS COOPER. Clearfield, April 17, ISST. Jy. YOUR TEETH. TAKE CAKE OF Til EM It nR. A. M. IIILI.M, desires to announce to - a. i. 'Mian .nil i.MWUI, VII 1. b Jl U IB UU. Ming all of his time to operations in Dentistry. hose desiring his services will find him at his iffice, adjoining hli residence at nearly all times, Od always on Friday and Saturday, nnlesi Mire to the contrary be given la the town pa r the week previous. ; N. It, All work warranted to be satisfactory. . Clearfiold, Pa. Sept 22nd, 1868. To all wantiwj Farms, t advertitemfnt 'j thtlottrjj. MY W I I 'll. WHITTXJt r AN IXVALID. Jheard her, oh how cautiously, Upon wiy tsed-Toom doors heard hor step as noislossly, To my couch acrosi the floor ; folt her hand upon my templei press, Her lips just touching mine: , nd in my anguish and distresi, 'Twere siuful to repine, ur pilgrimage is noarly through We've passed life's mountain brow; thought I lovid her years ago 1 know I lore her now. ur face was hovering ovor iniue, Her warm tears on my cheek j or whispered prayer o thought dirino, Itote fervently but moek. Ber bosom rested on my arm, I felt its tremulous throe; knew Ihe cause of its alarm, And felt its sourco of woe. ind then the blood my system through, Came pressing on my brow thought I loved her years ago, I krow I lovo her now. Thus watched that tried and patient one, Hy night as well as day ; In fadnoiis and almoat alone, Here ft of sleep deprived of rest Oppressed born down with oara, 'Till ob, her labors have been blest, FurGud has beard her prayer. Her chek reaumos its wonted glow, And placid is her brow I thought I loved her yean ago, I know I love her now. HisccIIaiuons. The Russian General Suvarof His Peculiarities. Tlic most active nn J terrible of nil the figures ol t he Court of t lie Emprens Cathe rine of Russia, was old .Suvarof, the con oueror of Bessarabia and Poland. This old man, whoso instinct for blood was that of the tiger, exhibited in public and; private tho manners of a btiiloon. No one who saw the weather-beaten ami shrivelled figure tracing the streets of 8t. ' Petersburg, liopping on one loot, nnd gambling with a train of boys at his heels to nhom he threw tipples to make them sctnmbleand fight while ho cried out, "1 am Suvarof," would have imagined it was the same man, the successful general, the ferocious despot, who conducted in person the massacre of Warsaw, twenty thousand of whose inhabitants he rut to pieces; and fe.di'd on a heap of bodies, in the market-place, granted pardon to tho refet. Sinco At tiln, perhaps the world had not witnessed so barbarous a warrior; indeed, his savngo conduct in the field, his eccen tric manner nnd course of lifo, seemed to indieato the pre.-ence of insanity. A sketch of his mode ot lifo may not bo uninter esting. Suvarof rose from the ranks and advan ced step by step to the rank of commander-in-chief, and, whether with the army or at court, his life was that of an ancient Scythian. On such occasions as he came to St. Petersburg, he refused theclium bers in the palace, and slept in the car riage in which ho traveled, livery even ing at six he retired to rest, nnd rose at two o'clock very morning. After a bath, administered by half a dozen soldiers, armed with pails of cold water, he break fAsted u;id reviewed his troops. His dinner was in readiness at eight every morning, and this, like his first meal, consisted of ox flesh, brandy, and coarse rye bread. All who were invited to such repasts and he was passionately fond of company trembled at the pros pect of such eavage fare. His appetite was enormous; anu oiten, in the nmuiio of nn entertainment one of his aids-decamp was seen to approach him, and bid li i in in an authoritative manner, not to eat any more, "liy whose orders am I forbidden T" the General would then de mand. "J5v order of Marshal Suvarof himself," was the reply. Upon which tho General rising would say, "He must be obeyed ;" and, in like manner, he cau?eJ himself to bo commanded in his own name, to walk, drink, sleep, or perform any other business of the day. Sometimes ho visited the hospitals in the character of a physician. .Such ns seemed extremely ill he ordered to swal low quantities of rhubarb and salts, hut those who wore slightly wciisposca he treated with a few dozen lashes. Hu was frequently known to drive all tho sick out of tho hospital faying, "it is not permitted tho soldiers of Suvarof to be sick." He was accustomed to drill his men himself, nnd ut tho siego of Ismail wai seen mount ed on a bare-back Cossack harse, in his shirt, putting his soldiers through their exercise, ana cutting at inetn witn ins cone, in tho midst of the snow, and of the shells fired from the Turkish batteries. When in camp his soldiers were never awakened by the drums beating reveille, but instead, the General nmre.hod out of his tent, and crew three times like acock ; and this woa alwuys the signal used, whether his army were to rise, to march or ruh to battlo. His hatred of the French was extreme, and his feeling toward the huropenu powers generally was evinced by tho different ways in which he made his soldiers oharge with the bayonet. When he said, "March again& the Folos I" the soldier plunged bis bayonet oncoi "March against the Prusssiansl" and the soldier struck twice; "but when he said. "March against the excrable French J" the soldier made two 5 "EXCELSIOR." CLEARFIELD, PA WEDNESDAY, JULY thrusts forward, a third on tho cround. and there stuck and turned round his bayonet. With all this ferocity, he was extreme ly superstitious. He made his nlliccrs pray loud nnd long before their compa nies and like Ciesar, wus fearfully punc tilious as to which foot ho placed first on his carriage step, or first put in motion when commencing a march. In his do mestic relations this barbarian displayed tho samo -eccentricity ns marked every other phase of his lifo. llo quarreled with his wife nnd son, to whom ho preferred his nephews, tho Princes tlortseliakoh", and he refused to see or recognize his son ; but when Catherine mado the young Su varof an oftieer of her Guards, the father said, "As tho Empress chouses I shall have a son, bo it so; but, for myself, I know nothing of the mutter." He had also a daughter, a maid of honor nt Court, and who was chieHy remarkable for her idiotism. Afternn abxnceof twelve years, the Marshal, having appointed a meeting with her, in tho hoii.e of a third party! tho girl looked at him nnd said, "Ah, fa ther, how hi you have grown since I last saw you!" In French this would have been a p'.ay upon wo:"l, hut in Russian it was a laughable blunder. This horrible brigand, who was said to have tho body of nn ape, tho eyes nnd mouth of a wolf and hyena, was, with res pect to mono" tho most disinterested and Kenerous of men. l'rom time to lime Catherine offered him splendid presents, all of which ho rejected. " He gave away handfuls of money in charity ; und it was only when men asked him to grant him their lives that ho refused. One of the most peculiar traits related of him, is, that he used frequently to shut himself up for a month to study the dead lan guages, and that ho spoke Hebrew better than German or French. After a victory he was fond of sending an epigrammatic bulletin to tho capital, a:-.d once plagia rised Ciesar's famous despatch. "V-ni, vidi, vici," I came, I saw, I conquered appropriately omitting, however, the sec ond word, for ho despised 'nctique, and merely rushed at his olj'-ct like a bull ? . , . ,i , i i Aimin, contrasting the rival generals. with himself he sa.d, Kan.cnskoi knows I lthcm they crowd the cells of tho watch war but war knows nothing ol h.m. I do : hoUse very ni )lt ai, f,.om froqilont not know her, out she knows me. As tpipructico tiey becotiio so hardened that As to nor is OUiWMUl, HU IH;illM- RIIIM13 llll, known by her1" Upon the accession of Paul, that Emperor having changed the dress of his soldiers from the Kussian to tho French fashion. Suvarof, disgusted nt a costume which he considered too cH'emi nite, exclaimed, ''Hair powder and curls nre not cannons, nnd tails nre not bayo nets." This sarcasm, which, in tho Kus sian tongue, forms nn apothegm in rhyme, having spread through tho army, was tho cause which induced the Emperor to re call Suvarof, and dismiss him from the service. A Balloon in a Storm Si nuclar Phe nomena. Mr. .Wise, 'he great teronnut, made his tvo hundred and twenty-eighth ascension, nt Lancaster, Pu,, on Tuesday last, nnd furnished to tho editor of tho Erprets, the memoranda of his atmos pheric observations, from which wo con dense the following : "When I got up several thousand feet 1 observed four distinct rain storms at dif. ferent distances around me, one of them not far off. As I ascended a little higher nnd hnd moved slowly onward, my mind was turned to atmospheric phenomena. A little to tho north cast of mo there hung a huge cloud, spread out uliove, as near as I could judge, about two miles in diameter, and terminated below by a great cul de toe of the vaporous mass I had no idea that this, or the moro distant storm clouds, were giving out rain, hut took it to be nn incipient storm, preparing for a thunder gust, and thus 1 approached it cautiously. As this remark may create surprise from the impression that tho same altitude of cloud and balloon would necessarily cause the same velocity of bodies in motion, I must say that that is not the case. There aro positive and neg ative powers at work in the upper regions that often make it otherwise. When 1 got near it J. tounu iv giving uui .lujiiuusj shower of rain, first indicated br the rust ling noise it produced in falling upon tho earth below. It was to me a very singular formation of rain a storm-cloud piving out rain without accompaniment of thunder and lightning, and Us great ucder, suspended Irom ino mass oi vapor, nung uuwu near-1 ti10ri expired on tho oth ot May, in Ber ly to tho earth. In a few moments more iin) Prussia, nt theadvaneed age of nincty the balloon had reached tho outer large Ono years. He had out-lived three gener drops of rain, and ns they glanced over ationa, his reputation as a man of science tho side of tho oiled surface, they flashed j Wfls world-wide, and ho had been a witness like shooting stars, and so luminous were 0f tj,e most thrilling events that had ever several of them that I could not divest transpired in the history of the world. myself of tho alarming impression Hint .jjewas born in 1709, seven years before there was fir pelting ngainst tho balloon, (i,e American revolution, and had een and I made a precipitous descent, so much I 01)r COnntry emerge from tho condition of so, that in a few minutes 1 found the ftir-!ftfew jparsoly settled colonies to an indo ship crashing into tho npplo orchard of i ,,Cndcnt empire, extending from the At Tobias Kreider, and the grappol catching ' (an'io to the Pacific Ocean, numbering hold of one of the trees, obliged mo to; thirty millions of inhabitants, nnd second cut tho ropo nnd bound over tho tree ' j0 ,lono jn ull that constitutes truo great- tons, when I threw a line to jur. uenry Landis who held on to it manfully, until we got more assistance. "Upon resting here a few minutes tho storm cloud had passed on several miles ahead, and in a few minutes more, Mr. Metlarand Mr. John Landis had secured me the grapel and I rose a second timo. Tho balloon having now lost a considera ble quantity of gas, which being compen sated bv an adequate disposal of ballast, put it in order for a higher ascent than the first, and un 1 went accordingly, short time i overtook the storm In a cloud n.ruin Knt urns nnur mounted to a hciahti where I could reconnoitre it more thor- Alexander Von Humboldt received a onghly, and found that it had a long high education in the University of Cot downward protruding neck, and was tengen, where his taste lor tho scienoes muoh the shape of a balloon with along was cultivated with assiduity. HU fame peck to it. It was a water spout trailing as a minerologist was early established, r.. tRAO "1 ft VU1 over the land, uniquo in appearance, and mo nuge. elephant with suspended trunk, it moved slovenly along. Above and about it large emulous clouds in de tached mpsses were Homing around, av parent! mingling with its top. Custiii'is my cyo to the sonthwost I beheld another or these meteors approaching the former, ana tho balloon between them rnado mo eel at loat cautious of a concussion, and besides that I was sure tho two combined would bo more likely to make a violent thundertsol in than 0110 nlone. This phe nomena was so interesting to behold that 1 could not persuade myself of the dan ger Biitheient to muko it prudent to de scend until the largo ram drops aain alarmed mo by their luniinoun corusca tions as they glanced over tho surface of tho balloon, although the sun was shining on it at the time. All tho time of obser vation of the two clouds, I could discov er no uprising current as is the case in thundeigusts, These meteors, which I take to be of the water spout class, had certainly very dillerent actions, and evi dently depended upon verv dillerent means for their sustenance. I have here simply stated tho facts as observed, r.nd must leave the deductions for moro scien tific minds, and for mote extended obser vations. Ah above stated, tho fiei v rain drops caused mo to make a sudden de scent upon the farm of Mr. David P.ear, in East Earl, about 13 miles from Lancas ter, when Mr, .Tnmil. A .. I. !...!!.. j furnished me with am.nnr fi , Concord, where I intercented the,,,..;.. ol cars, and reached Lancaster at dusk - -f I . l , a I . I was one hour and thirty minutes engag ed in this most interesting atmospheric voyage." Facts to he Pondered. A recent writer makes some points about tho bad state ol morals .hat the young men of the present day in too many instances give evidence of, w hich merit tho attention of parents us veil us young men themselves. Ho asserts that the young men of our country tiro retrogading rapidly from the truo stan dard of manhood, and says that juvenile rim inula una i-k...A . - ! l IT. l"-"1"1"""' o "iviv uuimri kus in wit U in I ted ten Qimrs, proportionately, man in any riti,. ,,,',' Ti. ....;:.., ...n J,- they court an opportunity for the commis sion of enmo; wickedness is rooted in their natures; for them the dark dun geons of a prison have lost their terrors, and they become resigned to their fate with all tho composure of veteran crimi nals. He attributes this partially to the fact that the influence of home is slackened at too early a poriod, ind tho romantic and vicious tendencies of youth are allowed full scope. Parent and child beconio en tire strangers ; thrown on tho world w ith out constitutional firmness to resist its in fluences, they become tho victims of such influences, Another cause of this deueneracv. is t!.e intellectual styleof education followed by j mental toil, whereby the sphere of man's our schools, to tho exclusion of tho moral, j information has been greatly extended In the fear that many of the schools will and enriched. His memory was prodi berome sectarian, they d:scard tho Bible giotn, his intellect active nnd acute, nud entirely, abandon religious instruction, 1 bis taste exquisite; and over everything nnd leave scholars to pick that up for which he wrote he threw the charm of a themselves. Meantime children aro edu- ! genial dipooition and a generous heart. cated to become "smart men," to the det-! For the past fifty years lie has been the rimcnt of morality, physical health, j Nestor of Science, and has gone down to und everything dse that is desirable. the grave bearing the esteem of all nicli, This is all wrong. A boy, he says may and "laden with wealth nnd honors no ne educated intellectually, and yet may be morally depravod, and the present el ucationul system is inaugurate precisely this state of things. There aro other children, nnd young men, whose parents aro brutalized by rum, -leaving their off spring to grow up in idleness and dissolu tion. These must bo approached by the friends of education and reform, and treat ed as huniati beings, and when it is possi ble, elevated above tho degraded position that their parents confine them to. Then our school education must be improved, so as to combine moral with intellectual instruction, and parents must devote more attention and care to tho nome-trainina of their children. Unless these suggestions, 1 ai . - .. . neconio me ruie oi practice in this coun uy, n requires no propnei s cyo to pre dict, me disastrous enu uiai ino corrupt channel into which tho young men of A merica are falling, will ultimately lead them to. Baron Von Humboldt. 'i'hia great philosopher, traveler and au- Iiefsg Ho saw the old French Jlevolution rise in glory and go down in blood and gloom ; ho witnessed the rise of Napoleon the Great, and beheld his own hind (Prus sia) crushed boncath the despot's heel a mere serf lo France; ho again saw; tho Corsioan Conqueror chained a prisoner in St. Helena, and his rvholo kindred ban ished from Gaul; and now, just as his eyes were closing forever, tho tramp of armed mon fell upon his ear, going forth once more to battle under tho banners of a Bonapaite and a Cmsar the Gaul and the German aud who can tell w hut the end will be? and at 23 years of age, he was appointed to tho important government poet of Su perintendent of Mines in Frnnconia. Having lelt a strong desire to visit distant hinds, ho soon resigned this situation, nnd sold a largo estate to furnish means lor traveling in America. After many disap pointments, ho wai at last enabled to visit the New World tinder the patronage of tho Spanish government, and in 17'J0 commenced to explore the great valley of tho Oronooo. During the live years he was a traveler on our continent, ho visit ed tho sources of tho Amazon, climbed the snow-capped peaks of tho Andes, nnd under a hurtling sun traversed vast plains, pestilential swamps, and barren deserts where tho foot of white man had never trod before. It allbrds ns much pleasure to state that Baron Von Humboldt included a portion of our own country within his extended American tour, llo visited our principal seaboard cities, and was personally known to some of our distinguished men. He quitted this country in 1804, and returned So his native land. Our institutions made a most favorable impression upon his mind, and he ever afterwards retained a pleasant recollection of our people. His published accounts of these travels at tracted the attention of the whole civili zed word. The field was fresh, the power of the author's description was vivid ; they were filled with thrilling incident, and contained a mass of new geographical, bo tanical, and mineralogical information of the most interesting character. His fame was at once established by their publica tion, and honors poured in upon him from the scientific associations of ull lands. They were printed in seventeen large vol umes, richly illustrated with figures of tho suljects. They embraced geography, zool ogy, botany, mineralogy, the natural his tory of animals, astronomy, geology, cl -matology, in thort, every brunch of sci ence. So varied and profound were his attainments, it was at once felt that he stood out in bold relief as the most ac complished traveler that ever lived. We would be neglectful, however, of a sacred duty, if wo were to forget to stato, in con nection with this subject that he bad for an associate tho celebrated French servant, Donpland, who accompanied him in his journeys, and assisted in his literary la bors. Of late years, tho name of Humboldt was made moio widely known by his "Cosmos," a work written during the long nnd pleasant twilight of his life, in which he considers (and in this view ho is right) nil created things as linked togeth er forming one uniform whole, and afford ing evidence of ono great creative mind as the author of the visible creation. This work has been translated into several lan guages our own among tho number and is repleto with curious, varied and pro found information. Of this great man wo can truly testify he was a benefactor to the human race, nnd his career is a noble example of a Ion a lifo well snent in severe physical and j tIy won." Visit to a Powder Magazine. The precautions in visiting powder magazines in Europe aro greater thon in this country, where tho "free and equal rights, democracy" would hardly submit to such rigid rules as nre enforced. It would be considered quite condescension enough on the part of an American "sov ereign," particulary ono of tho Young America school, to throw nway a lighted cigar. He would have to do something moro than that before gratifying his curi osity with a sight of tho stores of powder in some of the fortresses on the other side of tho water. Yet, with a rigid obser vance of "the rules," established nnd printed, perhaps a century ago, danger of being blowed up is not always avoided, A friend tells us an anecdote illustrative of the fact that rules are not always ap plicable to a new stato of things, lie vis ited a largo fortress in tho northern part of Holland, and being the son of an old soldier and an artist, in pursuit of objects of interest to sketch w ith his pencil, ho was permitted to look into the powder magazine, where more than a h und rod thousand pounds of powder were stored. The strong stone building was fenced a round with a strong wall, outside of which wii3 a little anteroom, whero tho appli cant tor uumission entered and rapped upon mo woouen uoor witu a wooden KiiocKer, wnen a iimo wieKot opened up on its wooden hinges, nnd the keeper snowea ins visage anu uo-nanueu his pass. This being all right, ho was directed to pulloll'his boots on tho further side of the room, the wooden floor of which was kept free from all possible isignofdirt. Then, after brushing his stockings nnd dasting all his garments, he wus furnished a pair of cloth slippers, and then put through the course of questions that wero tied up with "red tapo" at tho "WHr-of-fiee" in the time of his great-grandfather. "Do you smoke ? Then leave yonr pipe and tobacco, nnd your Hint, and your steel and tinder." Each of these articles had to be deposit ed seperate. so as to bo shure the flint and steol should no', by any charm got togeth er, although a hundred feet from the pow der, and behind two thick stonewalls. Happily our friend had none of these in ilamable articles. "Have vou any knife, key or article of steel ? lit hud, and was required to lay TERMS-$l-25 per Armum" NEWSF.niES-VOL.IV.NO 24. thorn nway carefully In sopaiate places. Have you any gold, silver or coppef coins? J ortunntely, although a travel ingnrtist, ho had some of these needful accompaniments of a traveler. He wS required to show what he had, and make a special deposit, without retaining a in glo red. "Have you Any other pieeo of melal, Hint, glass or mineral of any kind about you? 11 bo, you must leave that behind-. Haying pone through with all "tho for malities," the door opened upon its nois less wooden hinges, Hnd tho "safo visitor was permitted to outer Iho oourt-yard which was crossed upon a path of ntitr friction material to the wooden door dt the magazine, which he entered and walk ed up and down with noisless tread be tween tho long rows of powder casks, pi led tier on tier, in quantity suOicieut to destroy as many lives and as much prop, ertyas tho late great explosion atUn vana. "You are very particular," said the vis itor to the keeper, "to avoid all possible chance ol accident?" "We simply obey the rules," he re plied. How those rules do need amen ling ami adopting to the present age of the world though our friend, just at that moment, as he drew his hankerchief from his pock et and applied it to' his face, more to hide any change of countenance than for any other purpose, at the same time declaring himself fully t.otisfied with what he had seen, ond expressed a wish to retire, and, without wasting any timo, made a doci ded movement towards the door. "Here,' tho'the, "under the rules, they have di vested me of every harmless copper, lest I might carelessly drop ono upon the floor and ignite n grain ot loose powder. They have questioned mo as they did and old Dutch burgomaster a hundred years ngo, about my habit of smoking, so m to take away my flint and steel. They have or dered me to divest my pockets of all mer lallic substances, lest by some possible nischance some of them should ignite.- 1 wonder why they did not inquire wheth er 'saltpeter will explode.' Fortunately they allowed me to retain my cambrio handkerchief, and in feeling in my pocket for that, I have discovered tho box of friction matches that I used to light my cigars, I think I will retire, resume my coppers and my keys, my and finger rings, put on my boots, nnd give the customary coins to the attendants, and go away quite satisfied that I huve conformed to all the rules, and have visited a powder mngazina with a box of friction matches in mt pocket, It is nil right; but thank Heav en I urn now on the outside of the ontef wall." Antecedents of Leading Actors. Mrs Siddons was formerly a lady's wait ing maid ; Forrest, the American "howler"' was an errand boy in a Philadelphia cro cory store ; Murdock is the son of a bakor( nnd used to serve his lather's customers from a largo basket which he carried on his head; Billy Burton was oncea "printer' devil" in a London printing office; Barney' Williams was, for many years, a regular New York " dock-wolloper;" J. R. Scott,, when a "peevish" boy served as cabin "flunky" on an oyster vessel in the Fhila dolphin trade ; Charlotte Cusbman, before" she turned actress, made a living for her self, and mother and sister, by tho needier (all honor and praise to her!) Collins, tho Irish Comedian, served an apprentice1 ship under a Dublin barber, and is ever unto this day reckoned a good 'shaver,' Charles Matthews was a gentleman born but was so unfortunate as to lose his title t .T Tl IMItat-lai in Ilia "wn ftf it minemtth ' I still living in Wilmington, Deleware; J. lJt i'M. V- aVSU-1 1 1 I'M 11 " IllVi ij m uuwuci T and used to "kill for Keyser," whosi' slaughter house was in Spring Garden. Philadelphia; one of tho California "stars'T is a native of Newfoundland, and is th( son of a "mackerrcl catcher; " (we would not give his name for the world he'd be tho death of us;) Ned Bingham wai first a gallant soldier, next a clever ac tor, and now a vender of first-rate clgSrr and tobacco; Georgo Jordan, the hand' some and talented "fop" actor served af apprenticeship to tho printing tade, and is said to be ono of the most rapid type stickers ever "turned out" of Baltimore" (en pnnia'U, we hear that George has be- come disgusted with the stngo, nnd in tends resuming his "case" at tho stand ;) Pl.icido commenced his public career b playing second-fiddle on a Missisippi flat boat ; J. E. Johnson was once a pill-maker in London, but finding mirth to bo th better kind of medicine, he cast asido hii mortar and pestlo, and turned his atten tion to comic singing, at which ho is "sltln ning ; Oarrick's fathor kept a tertpifi alley i Laura Keono was once a bar-maid in a sa loon, and could mix a "gin-sling" and a "brandy smash,' with the best of thcin j of McKean Buchanan's early lifo we know nothing like "Topscy," we "guess Ja was'nt born but prowed ;" Bouroicault ir tho sou of a Worcestershire gardener, which pursuit he followed sereral yearc beforo going on the stngo (this will ac count for hit "cabbaging" propensities;) John Brougham was raised in a charitable) soup-house, in Dublin, hence he is called a "broth" of a boy; Chnnfrau Is a carpenter by trade; Charles Whoally serv ed several years at tho taylorng business. A number of California actors rose fram obscurity. One of the most "airy " '( thorn sold "swill-milk" on the Fine Points, New York, several years prior to his debut on the stage. It will be seen from the above that "pouerty and law birth, th twin jailors of the daring hea t," are not' barriers to the attainment of fame and position in tho dramatic profession. Ex' ehangt. Tui trees of Washington county, Vfc, eye alive frith locusts.