TUB "CLEARFIELD REPUBLICAN" poslisisp ivr.HT niiDAr, it GOODI.AXU12R HAflKHTY, CLEARFIELD, PA. ESTABLISHED IN I98T. Th larft-eet ClrcuUtloa of my Newipaper In North Central Peuneylvunia. Terms of Subscription. rf paid In advene, or within monthe.., If paid after end before II aionthl If pid aflor tht eapiretion of 8 niootbl.. Eate3 ol Advertising. 9 M a ot Trnilnt ndvertlaeinenti, per o,iAre of ,B "?M ?' ill, t tlmea or lo.l - For eaeb aubecqnent Iniertion ilninlitminn' an Eieeutore' noticei Aodltori' notice Cautlona and B.trayl .'. Piiaolutkon nniicei - Proteaeional Cerde, 6 llnoa or leee.l year.. Local noticei, par line YEARLY ADVERTISEMENTS. .11 40 0 t 40 I 50 t 60 I 00 I 00 to I iqonre.... I equarol.- rjijuxi ,..$8 00 I ) oolnma. 00 ,..16 00 I f column.. ., 4a 00 -.10 00 1 column.......... 80 00 ' Job Work. BLANKS. . giggle e,ulr,......M 40 I II quire,, pr. qulre.ll 71 a oaire,pr, quire, 1 00 Over 6, par quire, 1 40 . HANDBILLS. .f.atrii or leal, SI 00 1 ihaet, ti or te,tJ 00 aheet, 14 or leia, a 00 1 aheet, lo oHeia,IO 00 Orar 34 of eaen or above at proportionate ratee, GEORGE B. GOODLANDKR, . GEORGE BAQERIY, Puhll.horo. IT" ' i TfSf!??!"?! - (Card. jotarl . n'MiLir. D.uiat w. a'ccanr, McENALLY & McCURDY, ATTORN EYS-AT-L AW, Clearffleld. Pa. SMr-Wal lnaaa atteoded to promptly with delitr. 0ce ea Second atraat, above the Kirat N.tiitnel HenK. ....... William a. WAixira. . hm-dixo. WALLACE & FIELDING, ATTORNEYS - A"11. LAW, ClearUeld. Pa. Legal hualneel of all hinde attended to wl(h proraptneM and fldolity. Offioe In reaidenee of William A. WelUee, Janl:71 G. R. BARRETT, Attorn it and Counselor at Law, clearfield, pa. nevlng reeigned hit Judge.hip, bin retnmed ft, practice of the law in hie old ofnoe at Clear field, Pa. Will attend the aonrta of Jenereon and Bit eeaatiea when epooiatly tetained in connection alia relident eoun,el. 1;U:73 T. H. MURRAY, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELOR AT LAW. Prompt attention (Wen to all legal bueineil lotruilod to hit aare in Clearfield and adjoining aoantic Offloe on Market it., opposite Naugte'i Jewelry Store, Clearueld, Pa. jel471 A. W. WALTERS, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Clearfield, Pa. ..0I8 In the Court House. ' decj ly H. W. SMITH, ATTORNEY-AT-LA W, tl:l:7l Clearueld. Pa. " WALTER BXRRETT, ATTORNEY AT LAW. OBoe Seoond St., Clearfield, Pa. noTll,00 ISRAEL TEST, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Clearfield, Pa. r Offloe In the Coort Fooie. (J,-ll,'6r JOHN H. FULFORD,. ATTORNEY AT LAW, . , Clearfield, Pa. Oltst o Market St., oer Joieph Showen' Grooery itora. J an .3,1873. T101. t. 'OCI.W. " H'CrtLOlOB. T. J. McCTJLLOUGH & BE0THEE, x ATTOUNKYS AT LAW, ..Clearfield, Pa. Offlte on Loenet it ret t, nearly oppoilta the rei Idfoce of Dr. R. V. Wilton. We hare in our of ire ona of Rieieck A Bro'i largeit lira and bur lu proof aalei, for the protection of booki,deadt, and other valuable paper, placed In oar charge. JOHN L. CUTTLE, ATTORNEY AT LAW. And Heal F.etale A Rent. Clearfield, Pa. OCoa oa Third itreet, bet.Cherry A Walnot. f-Reipeotfully offer, hii lenlcea In iclling and buying land, in Clearfield and adjoining eeiBtleai and with an experience of o irtweiitT yean u a turreyor, Hatter, hlmxlf that ha eaa t4ir atlifaocion. Feb. JS;f3:tf, J. BLAKE. WALTERS, REAL ESTATE BROKER, akd ratLia in Naw Ijogs ami Iiiuiber, CLEARFIELD, PA. Ofiea la Waeonio Building, lloom No. 1. 1:24:71 J. J. L INGLE, ATTORN EY-AT - LAW, 1:11 Hateola, Clearfield Co., Pa. y:pl ROBERT WALLACE, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, . Wallaeeton, Clearfield County, Penn'a. fA.AII legal bueinoa promptly attended to. D. L. K REB S, Sueecnr to U. B. Swoop, Law and Collfxtion Office, Pdt1,l'73 CLEARFIELD, PA. John II. Orvia, C. T. Alexander. ORVIS & ALEXANDER, ATTORNEYS AT LA W, lleilefonte. Pa. eeplStt-y J. S. BARNHART. ATTORNEY . AT - LAW, Belleronte, Pa. Will practice in Clearfield and all of the Conrt, of (ha 34th Judicial di.trict. Heal aetata bu.incn and eolleotion of olaim, made peoialtlea. nl'71 DR. T. J. BOYER, f UY8ICIAN AND SURQEON, Offloe on Market Street, Clearfield, Ta. 40fflca hour,! 8 to 11 a. ra , and I to 8 p. m. JJR. E. M. SCIIEURER, IlOMCEOPATlIIC PHYSICIAN, Offloe In Maionle Building, April 24, 1872. Clearfield, Pa. DR. W. A. MEANS, PHYSICIAN k SURGEON, LCTIIERSBL'RO, PA. M attend profciaional call, promptly. aug10'70 J. H. KLINE, M. D., PHYSICIAN 4 SURGEON, HAVING located at Pennleld, Pa., offer, hi, profeaiional jerrioe, to the people of that r'Moend aurrouiidingeoonir. Ail cane prompuy mdrd to. Oct. 1 tf. 0r. J. p. BURCHFIELD, Lata Bargeoa of the K.ld R,f Iment, Pennaylranla Volaauert, baring relorned from (he Army, e"i bia profeaiional (errleaa to theeltlaen, 'Clearleldmtiily. A Prof,lenalealle promptly attealed to, I I " Saaond atreet, foimarlyoccapled by w.JToade ( pr4,'u eaAvaiiBrc iu n RESTAURANT, Second Street, CLKARFIELD, PBNN'A. .''"'J' an hand, Fre.h Oyetare, Ioa Craam, Cu H,'' J""' CraobeM, Cakaa, Cigara, Tobaoao, air. "ti. Orangee, Lemooa, and all kind, " la aeaaon. IU.IAKD ROOM oa aeeond Moor. --2 hM.Vli lEMMElD GOODLANDER & HAQEETY, VOL, 47-WH0LE NO Cards. i. noLLoaamu ..... a. uavii cauiv H0LL0WBUSH & CAEEY, . BOOKSELLERS, Blank Rook Manufacturers, AND STATIONERS, . . 319 Market St., Philadelphia. em.Papor Flonr 8aoki and Rag,, Foolfcap, Letter, Note, Wrapping, Certain and Wall Pa pen. fel.34.t0lypd GEORGE C. KIRK, Juitlca of the Peace, Surveyor and Convcyanocr, Lutheraburic, Pa. All buelneei intrnated to him will be promptly attended to. Percona wlihing to employ a Sur reynr will do well to give blm aeell.aj he nation bimaelf that be can render ullifaotlon. Died, of eonvoyanoo, articlea of agreement, and alt legal pnpera, promptly and neatly eioouted. t2imurlt JAMES 0. BAERETT, Juitlca of the Peooa nnd llccnaed Convoyenccr, Lutlieinburp, Clearfield Co., Pa. S-a-Culleotlanl A rvmlttanere promptly mado, and all kinae OI legal inairumeui, exeoeieu vn abort notion. , may4,70tf DAVID REAMS, SCRIVENER & SURVEYOR, Lutlierabnrt;, Pa. THE lubiorlher offer! bii lorried to the public In the capacity of Scrivener and Surveyor All call a for Mirreying promptly attended to, and the making of drafta, doeda and other Icgnl in.tru. menta of writing, executed without dvlnr. and warranted to ba correct or no charge. I VjT3 J. A. BLATTENBEEGEB, Claim and Collection Oflice, OSCEOLA, Cicnrfleld Co., Pa. arr(nTTnc.n(r tn.l all legal imnrri drnwn with aoruray and divpnicn. viaiia on aim j'" nir lie-iaU to "o! n Point n EJf oetV . K. ARNOLD Co., BANKERS, Lutheraburs;, ClearAe eouuty, Pa. Money loaned at rcaa-able ratrai ex.hange bought nnd aold. d.po" a rece.rca, a earl banking buaiaa- win w cam .... ...... abora plaoc. :":":" JOHN D.THOMPSON, Juilica of the Peoca and Scrivener, Curwenavllle. Pa. fcajuCollectioni uiade and money prom.tly paid over. .f!h?i'.7 E. A. & W. D. IRVIN, nCll.KRI IX Seal EBtate, Square Timber, Log3 AND LUMBER. OBea In new Corner Store building. novlt'71 Curwenavllle, Pa. oan. aiaunt aaanr Ai.aanr. w. Ai aaar W. ALBERT & BROS., Manufacture ra 1 eitenaive Dealcrain Sawed Lumber, Square Timber, &o., WOODLAND, PENN'A. e-Ordert lolicltrd. BUt filled oa ahort nolloe and reaeonable tonne. Addreaa Woodland P. O., Clearfield Co.. Pa. Je24-ly ALBERT a BROS. FRANCIS COUTRIET, MERCHANT, . aVrfiirhvllla. Clearfield County, Pa. Keep, eonatantly oa hand a full aaiortmcnt of II. k.n. In ntl.il atnre. which will ba aold for ca,h, aa cheap aa elaewhere in tbe county. I rencavuie, June ti, ioui-ij. THOMAS H. FORCEE ntALea in GENERAL MEUC1I ANDISE, GRAIIAMTON, Pa. Alao, eitenaive roanufnolurer and dealer In Square Timber and Sawed Lumber of all kindl. e-Ordori aollclted and all ball) promptly fillod. l-jyio CHARLES SCHAFER, LAGER BEER RREWER, Clearfield, Pa. TTAVIXfl rented Mr. Entree' Brewery he XA hiipca by etrlet attention to bniineii and tho manufacture of a aupcrlnr article of BEER to receive the patronage of all tbe old and many new euatnmnri. et25a,uei2 "' J. K. BOTTORF'S THOTOORAPII GALLERY, Market Street, Clearfield, Pa. iTCROMOS MADE A SPECIALTY.- "VTEOATIVKS made la eloody aa well aa in 1 clear weather. Conatantly on band a good aMortment of FRAMES, TEHEOSCOPKS and STERKOBCOI'IC VIEWS. Framee, from any atyleof moulding, mado to order. aprH tr JAMES CLEARY, BARBER & HAIR DRESSER, KECOND STREET, 1K CLEAHFIEl.il, PA. ti REUBEN HACKMAN, House and Sign. Painter and Paper Hanger, Clearfield, Penn'a. V.Will aaecutejob, la hla line promptly and la a wurktnanhke manner. arra.or henry" r i bli n gT IIOU8C, 8ION A ORNAMENTAL PAINTER Clearfield, Penn'a. Tba freecoina and nalnting of churehea and other publio buildingl will receive particular attention, a well aa the painting of carriegea and aleibi. Uilding dona in the nealeat alylea. All work warranted. Shop on Fourth atreet, formerly occupied by Kiqulre bhogart. octIV TO G H . HALL PRACTICAL PUMP MAKER, NEAR CLEARFIELD, PENN'A. TPumpe alwaya on hand and made to order on abort notion. Pipea bared oa reaeunable tcrme. All work warranted to render lalinfurlioo, and delivered tr deaired. myl4:lypd TlT l II ARM AN , PRACTICAL MILLWRIGHT, LCTHERSni RO, PA. Agent fur the American Double Turbine Water Wheel end Andrew, A Kalbacb " heel. Can rnr niah Portable tirlit Milla on ehnrt nolltin. JvlI'II eTaTbTgle r&Tc d7 naALana it SQUARE TIMBER, aad manufacturer! of AM. Kl N Wt Otf II AW KI) Ll'MRKR, 8-T7I CLEARFIELD, PENN'A. J""" TROUTMAN, Dealer la all hind, of FURNITURE, Market Street, ' Ona door aatt Poat Office, ug1'7I CLEARFIELD. PA. I. 1 aauaaaraia. a. aaauxaa. REIZENSTEIN d BERLINER, Sueccatori to D. Oana A Co.,) wholeaala dealeri la GEMS' HRISIII GOODS, II, Llapanard Mreet, between Cbwrek itreet and W Broadway New York lly. JST73 Publishers. 2306. THE REPUBLICAN. CLEARFIELD, Pa. WEDNESDAY MORNING. FEB. t, I87S. IT MIGHT HAVE BEEN. Led bj a witter hatitl than oun W Journey through tbii wrly uone, And should not In our wear? boura Turn to rtgrat what might hira baen. And yet tbetc heart, when wrung by pais, Or tun by dtMpptilntment kro, Vtiil m-k relief from present cara In tbuunhti of Juj-s that might have bevn. Cut let ui it HI then wlibri rain i W know not tfaat of whieb ra dreau j Our lite might hare Keen ndder yet, Uod only koowa tibat might hire been. Forgive ui Lord, nur liitlo fulfil, And help ua all, fmtn in urn till e'en, Still to believe that lot the ltt Which ! not that which might hara been. And grant we may no pat theao days. The oradle and the grave between, Thnt dcatb'i dark hour not darker be lly thought! of what life might hart been. Drift8of Death. Few ol lid people in tliia section of. our country enn liaro any idea rr nufleriiiL'rj r-miurod liy '. "'ln'.w0 men. .ml cl.ildm, (on of Min ncsotu tliii-l-r. i'1.0 I;"" frribto snow- OtOrm .UUIIH IIKU IV lllll. UVVII HIIUWH I,,. . rnra. Tint Inns of lifo wild friirlil- Ail, while the Jcs!niction of property Wui jmmonne. I ho lollowin in a tie- aer'ption of l ho horror ol the htim- .dni', iik acnt by a currefponuont Ironi Wiiiniiu, MintK'solii, on January IS, t the Kcw York Hitahl i I wua in Minnesota after tho nwlul ttiHfsacin of len jnirn ago, when the rod wave of Indian invaaion turpi over tho 'intiiuiiif land and lull II a waste ol naheaftoiiked with blood ; but the Hcalping-knifo Hinl bullet of the Sioux did not do sneli havoo at the snows li live wrought this year, nor wero all tho torliireH of the red Bonds productive of moro mjnny than I have wiineoscd within the punt ten days. What haa been niH.i'L'd and how many have been itliiin hax not yet been ifCk'ilained, lor the eolllumenU arc lar ii pint and communication ia diffi cult; but by every mail come purllcu lura that chill the blood, and wo can now fairly estimate tho extent of the calamity. Up to Ihut fatal Tuesday, al whose mention many u heart shall ache In Minnesota for yearn to come, thore hud been Winter weather ol tho usual sort, clear, cold, with occasional storms of enow, gome of which had seriously blockaded the railroads and induced considerable sufferinjj from seaiiity of fuel. . Tuesday, the 7th, was a lovely and mild day. The sun was bright and the air balmy. Every pulse of the country was astir under the genial influenco, and tho wild swans that clanged overhead once or twice from their meres must have seen the prairie roads alive with teams. The farmers were all out at the nearest settlement. Thoy were fretting short of fuel ; there was but a handlul of flour at the bottom ol tho barrel j not a scrap of meat wns left. Hut the snows had ceased, their shaggy little horses wero well again, so every farmer hitched his team for tho town. In tho liitlo cottages of wood were women and children; the school houses wero full of little ones. Such was the country, thus its dwellers, when the blow fell. Nature would soem to have arrogated lo herself all the savago attributes which had marked her lirst children there, their careful nnd pulionl watch for an easy opportunity, and their sudden and relentless onslaught. Ho utterly unprepared woro tho pcoplo for the change in tho weather, and so suddenly did it come upon them, that one man at Winnebago City describes it os (,if a man had clapped his hands so, and the snow came in our faces." Knowing what the htirricitno boded, men leaped into their sleighs, una with voice una lush urged their cowering horses out into the storm. 1 hen the work ol death begun. For moro than filly hours, till Into on Thursday, tho freezing wind and falling snow continued. It was not a steady full of snow, but a howling hurricane, tho wind some times attaining a speed of twcnly eight, thirty, or thirty. two milca. Tho snow came in fill'iil Hurries, with wild screech and a slinging whiz. The thermometer fell steadily, till at Champluin It registered hlty-lour do gross below icro. A I other places tho mercury or spirit markod from eight lo lurty-lwo degrees below, homo ol the farmer nt.o mat nut soon found thai if they valued live they must turn buck, ilicy were enveloped in sheets of snow ihal blindod them. The wind came so liercely that they were fain to slop nnd turn round till a momentary lull came. Tho road why, tho Icvol prairie was all road now. without one truck ol wheel or runner to indicate tho path of safety Whcrover thoro wits a ah Hit knoll or a troo tho driving snow-sloct curled round it and brokoover it liko ycasly billows over a wreck, and fur to lee ward grow up drifts ol ececntrio form. Thon the snorting horses thai toiled along, pressing with their heaving flunks closer to each othor lor warmth and dumb protection and sympathy refusod to iro forward ; the driver fell liimsolf becoming listless, his cold limbs were growing warm, and warned of the swift coining of death, he turnod and retraced his steps. Happy they who did so liolitnes 1 Thore were many who held on stubbornly till it was too lato. Thoro were many moro who. irooded on by a dreadful fear of tho fate of their w ives and little ones, left alono In thoir trail citadels, forced on through tho drifts that grew deep er at every slop, and cold that beenme more Intense every moment. And thore were other who grow weary el the contest, and, lying down in their robes, were lulled by the elomontal rage into a slumber which know no awakening. Somolimo the horses gave out, nnd the unhappy driver, be numbed and chilled, his movomonts impeded by his henvy clothing, had to abandon nit team and take to the drift. Tfao moans and sbrjcki of the PRINCIPLES CLEARFIELD, PA., WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, horsos that found themselves deserted by their masters are said by some few who survived such scones to have been ugoniaing lo hear. And at their homes things were no better. There was perhaps scant supply of fuel in the corner, and but a day's food In the larder. Night trod closely on the heels' of noon. Perhaps the mother was alone with bor suckling child, hor nusouna ten miles away in one Uircc- tion, her children two miles awav in anoiner. -j neso napless parents suf .1 rtll a . . fered countless deui lis. Tho wooden buildings creaked and rocked in the wing i,f tho btorin like ships al sea. Tho timbers cracked wilh tho frost liko rifles. Beads of frost stood on every pieco of wood work, the small panes ot glust wero ao thick v. ttu tee that there was no chance that tho lamp set in me casement could send " it has been noticed, also, in its feeble light lo the belated slrug ."""is kinds of mineral coal; and it . -1 . ...!lt.n..l t a. ..IV ' git;rs wiuiuui. ji was unpossioin io opou tlio doors, so high had iho drV uucuniu. Alio me grew low. ' , . it was replenished with ',i.i,..a furniture Day siiccec (i ,,t 01, but tho day was f10 0n4 ,ppcBro'd tho cliim;-.;!,. -ii, , "A'ew that her children luy dead, hand in hand, on the prairiu, and that her husband's corpse was somewhere en tombed in a giant drill. The little baby's blue lips wero laid against her ompty breast; tho soul had sped from between them in a little cloud of fro. r.on vapor. Sho lay down and died, and tho relenting winds wafted through tho apertures of tho room a decent drift of diamond snow fi.r her winding sheet. Theso pictures, ter riblo as thuv may appear to the read ers of tho IleralJ, who sit by warm Ores and nnd the music ol the snow as it tinkles ncaiiiht tho .class a musical and a cheerful sound, aro less than the reality. The advanco of death wns liko that ol a lorturor, who comes with all his horrid engines to the vic tim bound at the stake. Only they wero to be envied who met a swifter fate In the raging storm without, and were spared tho sight ot thoir children dying buforo their eyes ot hunger as well as ol cold. On iho railroads thero was not ab solute suffering. Of course trains woro snowed in for days in drifts that towerod to tho telegraph wire, and passengers had to shiver and bo scan tily fed. Hut litis was only a tritle. When Friday, tho 10lh, came, the sun rose npon a land of snow and si lonco. Drills many foot deep and many square miles in extent were thero. Here and thero the chimney of a house stood np like a tombstone in a vast cemetery. The land lay like a corpse under a winding sljuct ihut had moulded itself into occasional wrinkles over Iho dead limbs or set foil I a..a TCatea nnmn t It a iei 'l tit I ,. Imp lUatUICO, A. V tt - l iiiw tv uiutu it vwa of clearing away Iho giant drifts and tieUinar free tho imntisonod trains, and i .i.,..Vi.i..ri..i.nrir.,.i...rii.pnl..ri. ti.I prairies the steps of tho dead. F.very where they woro found lying still and statue like in the icy cmbraco of death. Somolimcs tho searchers would find man nnd horses together, tbe lormer lying doad, wrapped in his robes, with tho whip in his hand, in the sleigh, ono horso down, the other standing in Iho spot where lie was fastened by bis partner's full till ho shared his part ner's fato. Sometimes tlio sleigh was found overturned, with the truces cut. Then to rtirht or left would be discov. IK" ! ""' ored, tho driver, who hud wandered round In a despairing circlo to die. Occasionally the beasts showed in thoir dilated nostrils, widely spread j lips, and staring eyes, tho signs of "v,u '." D",u "'. . im mortal terror. And tho men, too, 1 Yn n Wl'l1'1' r1"!,rcdP wero sometimes Lnocoons of i.e-Ii1" '? h. ?'"red "'i1' of. statues of writhing despair. Hut, as a rule, death enmo quietly, as it gene rally does in these cases, lirst robbing tho victim of tho consciousness of ap proaching doalb, which begets an agonixr-e- struggle for life, and stilling ki ..hi. . in I... ... .l.ii cions as il is deadly. Thn .lenlh roll einnnl , rl l, mniln up with any reasonable degree of ccr Ininly. Wo aro only now getting de tailed reports from iho nearer settle ments, and il will bo fully a week ere these aro so complete as to bo trust worthy. Many of the missing will not be found until Spring; bul it is! sufo to set down all the missing as, dead. After carefully collating the various reports received thus far, and I u'"u V 'lr " ua "r ' making all allowance for Ihe remain-1 Grecn' P,B.un .""'y !-M?i.r.i.si.i.. in... i,.,li.w.,.n.'l''i'"'',i"'J 'I'slhis subslaiic that ,..huL thnt tho loss of life in Minnesola will run no lrom two hundred and tifly to three hundred. It is just possible, though not probablo. thnt the higher) nguro may lio readied. Almost nil ol theso aro moil, and tho very largo proportion of them lathers ol families in straitened circumstances, Tho sur viving widows and children will thus bo left without meant of support of any description. The chnrltablo of the RaHl will hero find nil ohjocl for their sympathies. When a citizen of Louisville cannot procure Iho real old bourbon to irri gate his alimontary canal ho stculs an old whisky barrol and splits il up into small pieces, which ho chows as be would licorico root. A woll snaked barrel slave Is equal to two drinks, and a bung holo affords sustcnunco for weeks. It was at Kvansvillo, lnd , so the Courier says, that a woll dressed young man entered tho portals of a decoction puluco, an evening or so since, and stepping up to tho "gonllo munly bitrketpor," requested him lo mix him a "red hot toddy, for he was going to soa his darling's father, and meant business." Agassis niiyi Uiero is nutriment in one pair of boots tuffluiunt to sustain a full grown man ton days, and yet tho hungriest man wo ever knew wits a clork in a lloston boot and shoo store. Ho would stand in front of a pie shop, gazing into iho show win dow, and wocp for hours. A new "papa" in Ishpetning ob jects to his wifo culling tbo "Young Amorica" a "precious liitlo lamb," be causeIn what kind of llflhtdocs thai plaep him before flie wprd J NOT MEN. 1 Arsenic Arsenio is a mineral clement of a steel-gray color, crystalline in its strneluro, and exceedingly brittle and friable. When exposed to tho uir il assumes a dull blackish hue, and when rubbed bctwoen the fingers emits u garlicky oder a property belonging to no other metal, wilh the exception, perhaps, of xinc, and thon rather at ' tnuuted lo the prescneo ol nrsomu in III. .Ik. ll.-. , .. ..It.. .... nF I. A the tine thnn to any poculiiirily of the latter metal. Arsenic is nearly al ways, found combinod wilh other min erals; though tialivo arsooio bus been founi mines in Kuror:-;.; - . i.ttil II Ull'IIIILT UIHL-UVlirL'll II III J " wiVl u,,d mjner walora. M r. "'.l fllU.d it in tho ashet of vnrious Li said to occur naturally in the hu mun body. Tbo only uso to which tho metulio arscnio ia applied in tho urts is in the manufacture of the leuden shot of tho vuiious sizes, when its prcsonco in small quantity in iho load ronders tho latter much moro britllo than il ordinary ia. Arsenic is widely diffused, but seldom found quite pure, usually containing antimony, from, silver or gold. When it unites wilh cobalt and sulphur it forms a com pound culled cobultine, and wilh co bull, alone, it is known as smaltino; these two combinations are used fur the preparation of bluo colors on por celain und ttonewaro. Arsoniottt acid, composed of arsonio and oxygen, is the arsenical compound most familiar ly known. It is prepurud chiefly in Itiihemia und Saxony during the smel ting of cobalt ores. Aa it occurs in ceminerco it is in masses of a milk white color, but as found in tho shops lor medical uso, it is often in Iho form of a white powder as fine as flour. Liko everything else it is often adul terated, ft possesses but little taste, hus no odor, and is soluble in water. As a medicine, it is said lo be altera tive and febrifugo ; when applied ex tornally, violently irritant. The dose internally must be exceedingly small, if taken with impunity, and, then the propriety of its administration in any ilisense would seem exceedingly doubt ful. Its c fleet upon tho system rauses tho faco and eyelids to swell, with a fooling of stiffness and itching of the skin, tonderness of Iho mouth, loss of appoli'.o, uneasiness, and sickness of the stomnch. Sometimes salivation is produced, and occasionally the hair and nails full off. It is highly proba ble that tho accounts received" of the habitual use of nreenio by tbe peasants of Syria aro wholly untrue. Many persons have resorted 'to Its use t'o boaulify the complexion, but nearly al ways with the moat dangerous results , r a a at J " Often used by des,gn as a poison, buV l,P!"''. U,. ' detecting in ntmai substances aro so uner ring and trustworthy that it is hardly within the range of possibility thul an individual could como to his death from this poison without its being easily detected by a chemist. Arsonio is tho chief ingredient in nearly all tho empirical remedies for the euro of cancer by external appli cation. In casos ol an over-doso of this most virulent poison, a powerful emetic should bo taken; demulcent drinks, afterward,' freely given, such as milk, white of eggs and water or -. ll T i' .!.:. !. . , """ " "" onvelopo the poison, until tho antidote (hydra ted sesriuioxide of iron) can bo procured. hen arsenious woigni. ui uiuigti, or i-io oi us weigui of soot ; tlio object of this admixture being to render any liquid lo which tho arscnio might be added, with murderous intent, of a black or bluish black hue, nnd thus indicuta the prcs- umlK "uo nnu v nus tnuicuto i no pre 'once of somothing unusual. t h on j f scio P.1"11 cl '!J heated, il VolutlllXOS and condenses III rystult on any cool vessel placed above, and in ibis way it can be dis tinguished from flour, Chalk, stucco, buking-Boda, tooth-powder, nnd other while substances which uro non-vola-lilo, und would either remain in tho vessel as a while rosiduo or leave a coal behind. NA compound of arsenious acid nnd I.- : i.. . i i 1 "'tmuluctiirors of panginga use to pro- (1 iioo grcon decorations on wull paper It should be everywhero known that grcon decorations nn wall jpnpar are prndiiwl from arsenilo of copper, whirh poison is easily detached lrom tho walls by tho slightest friction, and ditfised through Iho room, when it is inhaled into the lungs, proving, il not fatal, highly detrimental to health. In 1Mo2 a caso of fatal poisoning undo? the conditions in question oc curred in London, Iho victim'being a chilil Tho cause ol death wus mado tho lihjcctof an investigation beforo a col mcr's jury. In iho course of the evidence it transpirod that the deceas ed wus tho last of four children who hud d ed within o period of four months, unilur the exposure to tho poison con taint! in the pupcr-rangings of the room. Ihey habitually occupied.- Tli roo grains of arsenio were found in a sqsnre foot of the pupcr. Hut, greens aro not Ihe only colors whicli conlnin arsenic, nor wall-paper the cnly f.ihric colored wilh arsenical compounds. It is said that tho Fronch uso a number of pigments, containing arsei.ic, in calico printing, and thul they are equally suilahlo and doubt less lised in Iho color of paper-hangings. The prcsonco of arsonio hus been demonstrated in red as woll as groen-onlored wall paper. Aeie Jertty Mechanic. An old gentleman in Alamance coun: ty, North Corolina, knows somothing about Iho blosslngs of a home and fam ily, lie has four wivos, eight dungh tors and one son, sevonty-three grand children, four hundred groat-grand, children, fifty grent-greU:grandohiJ. dron, fifteen great-grent-groal-grand-childrcn, and nino great-groat great great.grandchlldroq, thinks Ol . fjjjsrrylD nguin. beSblican NEW 1873. The Story of a Singular Character. On a drive vith some friends over '0mfretUil.H,Ct.,lho other day, wo called on a si-i!"l,''1r charactor- man who is 30 ,T hl. ho is di al, dumb and blMid Whether ho would have been du-t or not hud he been blessed wilh Llo sense or hearing, il is impns-sihlo-'o U'I'i bul hi-glintmeringsol iii toilet are evld. ntly ruthor feeblo -fho man is w-'l doveloped physicully; j, of oidinii-y hight ; has u stout thick neck and ,ook lrf "nd robust; has P''l'r ?"ten unything but milk ; I,,,, never lusted woter nor a particle ul food but milk. Ihirty years on dear millo and' muscular system to correspond " " Cnn 'wei any now- that. nilk is fur babies and calves, and not Air strong men. This man had a full set of strong douhlo teeth clear round, und every one of them hud lo bo pulled out, as ho loro his clothes lo pieces wilh them. As ho didn't uso them to chow milk wilh, he probably thought ho must muko some use of them, as they wero ovidently mudo for some thing, und his clothes furnished excel lent materia! on which to exercise them. Another peculiarity of this strange being it that through all his life long he hus chewed a rug or rather, I should say, has j,u mined it since his strong teeth wero UiUen from him. From infancy his mother lias had to Iilueo a rag in his mouth us soon as he tad taken his food: She said ho gavo her no peace till alio put it back, lie distinguished strangers from tho neigh bors and those who bad visitod him before. I took hold ol hit hand and ho took it in both of hit and seemed to bo considering; then bo passed his hand up the length of my arm, and patted bis head and chest and made a singular cutterul noise. Ilia mother suid that was hit wav of expressini; joy of showing that be was pleased. llis principal enjoyment scorns to con sist in having his mother got through with her work and sit down by his sido. He has s swing in the room, in which ho spends a good part of the lime swinging. Sometimes when his mother steps oul, he will lock the door so that sho can't get back again which shows that he has somo wit about him, or trickery ut least. 11c it always very wukeful at night and rouses bis mother out of bed many times in tbe night. Sho says ho has lived thus without a good night's rest for 30 yours, with the exception of Saturday and Sunday nights. Every Saturday night ho culms down like a lamb, and keeps that night nnd all day Sunday alter in the strict letter of iho old "bluo luws" of Connecticut. Hit mother attributes this hebdomadul to tho fuel that she changes his clothes on Saturduy night, liut il it probably owing lo tho mere fuel of change from tho ordinary rou tine This slight ripple of change ia a chungo lo him, nnd the rest a sort of woekly landmark in the dreary, mono tonous blank of his lifo. Forhaps through the cloud and mist of his v sen nt mind he welcomes this slight ripple, and thus in his poor way com putes the flight of time. Whulmcan elh il to such a mind as this? To wako and sleep, lo draw the breath, lo luko n pint of milk. The sun goes round, the seasons chungo, but nuught of this knows ha. Nations arise and nations lull 'tis the same to him. linn rirnnrv rnnnn. inroeer niuna wi,i i ,l..ll. imh,ra bin ntatef Tha b rd improve that flies, the fish thul sim, bus bet ter lifo lhan this. How Starring Men Feel, Starving reveals many curious psy chological facts. . As a rule, il de velops, in an unnatural dogrco, the strongest qualities thai a man posses ses, but circumstances modify this rule much. Among undisciplined massos, ferocity and demoralization are certain results, but when its np p roaches arc gradual und directed, and governed by noble example und the strong hand of authority, its effects are quilo different. Una phenomena is the expedition of Strain at an early day in Darien, especially as it was not confined lo one, but was exhibited by nil the officers, not excepting even Strain ol the last, doserves csprciul notice From the timo that food be oamo scarce to the close, and just in proportion as fumine increased, they did not gloat over visions of homely fare, but reveled in gorgeous dinners. So strangely and strongly did this whim get possession of thoir minds, that the hour of halting, when they cuuld Indulge undisturbed hi llieao rii.-h revelries, became an object of the deepest interest. While hewing thoir way and through Iho jungles, and wearied ovcrcumo until Ihey wero ready to sink, they would cheer each other by saying, ".Nover mind, when we go into camp we'll havo a splendid sup per," meaning, of course, the imagin ary ono they dosignod to enjoy. Truxtonand Maury would spond hours in spreading lublos loaded with every luxury they had ever seen or heard of. Over ibis Imaginary feast they would clout with tho pleasure st a gourmand, never seeing the incon gruity of tho thing. They would talk this over whilo within hearing of the moans of tho men, and on one occas ion discussed the propriety ol giving up in the future nil stimulating drinks, us Ihey had been informed it weak ened Iho appetite. As hereafter they dosignod, it they over gol out, to do volo themselves entirely nnd exclu sively for tho rest ol thoir'llvcsto cut ing, they aoborly concluded it was wrong to do anything to lessen its pleasures or amount. A San Francisco pnlirem in saw a copy "of Gorome's celebrated "Sluvo Mart" In a plcturo dealer's window. He informed tlio shop keeper that the pxposuro of suoh a picture was against tho luw, and accordingly mado way wilh the disgraceful thing. It was found afterward by the dealers npon tho walls of that functionary's own house. A New York street-oar conductor who said "yes mtdara," to a lady, has been presented with a now overcoat, ind tboy lullt of a ilatua of ulin. TEEMS $2 per annum in Advance. SERIES - VOL. 14, NO. 6 rt in Japan. ' What has really astounded me moro perhaps, than anything here, is nrt, The little hands and arms nf the Jap a rest) seem lo fit thorn tr nice execu lion : bul they would not make t'i nretiv screens, or pie lures, or inlay popper, or lucquer as they do, if taste did not accompany them. 1 havejust seen a bi? boy. only thirteen yenri old, who is paiuling lor foreigners Janancso costumes, and his execution is wonderful. 'Tho pnpor-hangings of Jjpuii uro unrivalled, l liuve seen nothing in the world that I remem ber, that oqunls tho famous fun room of tho llamagotcn in Yeddo. Wo. doubtless, got all. .our ideas of beauti fying paper, In Japan. Tho bronze work of this people is wonderful, as well os their lacquer. They put years of work often into a duitnio's room. When wo of English doscent wero barbarians in art, these people were all they are now. We see bells, and bronzes', and inluid work hundreds ol years old. Tbe iron and steel work of Japan, too, it fur in adrunce of many "civilized" nations. Tbe fa mous Damascus stcol, the renowed Toledo bludo, doet not surpass, if cquul, the steel sword ol tho Japanese officers. It may nnt bond us the Da mascus blade, out it has a strength and tenacity beyond il. The old ar mor of the Jupanoso knights it won derful work for Iho age and timo. Thoir work in silk nnd satin is won derful, und also in crapo. These peo ple, forming pcoplo, loo, who uso only tho old spinning wheel und the reel of our graudinolhcrrf, who have no Lyons or Aubtiston looms, turn oul real works of nrt in embossed silks and satins. I tell tbe administrators of government bore, if they will only send out their nrlists to sludy and copy Lyons fashions, or to imbue themselves with Kuropein tastes, iheir silks, and sunns, and crapes, will com mand the market of tho world. What they most want to pleaso us now is tho knowledge of our caprices, and fashions, nnd tastes. From their long non-tntrrcouree with the world they havo not advanced in 'all that, and it is hurd to persuade them to do aUL-ht save what their great groal- grundfulhersand mothers worebrought up to do. 1 be (foreign) Curio street of Yokohama is a gallery of art. J could speed days there, if I hud time, to study them up. A people who hive thoir capacities can be taught to do anything, and the marvel is, when they learned il or who taught them. Is not art inborn 1Broofo' "Seven Month'l Ran." Carrying Concealed Weapons. The Kvansvillo (Ind.) Journal!, re snible for the following : "Thero is absolutely no sufo way to carry a pistol except lo carry it with out a charge. A young man lost his wife, recently, by trusting to tho di rections of a friend who told bim bow he could carry a pistol without danger. "His Mary Jane resided somo dis tance lrom the city, nnd ho had a great horror of dogs, so he put his re volver in tho hip pockot of his Sunday clothes, one evening, when he started lo sco her. The prosper tivo mother-in-law mol him al tho door and told him lo lake the rocking chair, and us ho did so, tho report of firearms cuus. od tho old lady to scream and full to i uo Door, winio a uro in me rear iMiiImfil l.hnr ia llnnrv a Atti.nlinn mid consumed a portion of his best doeskin 'smalls.' The old lady swoon id ; the girl ran in, forgetting bor dis ordered drees and hair, and followed her mother's example. Tbe old mnn and his double-fisted boys run in, and, seeing mother and daughter lying on the floor, went for that young man, and ho wont through Iho window, carrying sash und glass with him as ho went. A big dog, aroused by the noise, mado lor tho IulmiUvc, who in his turn mado for the city, altout milo, a mile nnd a half or two miles distunt, emptying his revolver at iho dog as he wont. Tho dot: was dead lor that young man in more than ono sense; lor he dares not approach the honso now, lest iho old mun muy re veniro iho loss of his dot; on him- The old man says ho will never forgive Iho murderer of hit dog. If any one asks that young man bow he likes Mary Jane, he rays that her nerves aro too delieato tor a country trirl, and b trays an anxiety lo drop the subject ; bul ho confided to a friend thul in sitting down tho hammer of his ro volrer caught upon Iho rocker, and it wns in I lint way diaehnrgod, w here upon thai house and his clothes bo. cumo too hot for him." The Dostruotion'of Pompeii. In the year A. D , G3, tho ancient city of South Italy, I'ompeil, was vis ited by two earthquakes, occurring ut an intorval ol a luw months, by which many publio buildings were thrown down, and an Immense amount of dumago done ; and it had nol entirely recovered from tho effects of these disasters, when It was overwhelmed by the famous eruption of Ycssuvius, August 24, 7U, winch involved it and the neighboring towns of Hereulano urn and Slnbia) in n common destruc tion. Thenceforward, for nearly seven, teen contuiies, ihe city vanishes from history, although tho name seems never to huve been totally forgotten. A villago, constructed from its ruins, subsequently arose upon its situ; but, after tho destruction of this by tho eruption of 502, the Campus Pompoius, as it wus long called, remained, until tho middle of the last contury, an un disturbed and uninhabited plain. Tho eruption of "9 produced strik ing physical changes in tho vicinity, and the sea, which formorly laved the I walls of the city, it now npward of a nolo lrom Its silo, while the neighbor ing river Sarno hat been considerably diverted from its ancient course, lfunoo, the geographor, Cluvcrius, who investigated ihe ubjeoi in th early purl of ihe seyontccnth centnry, billowing tht dosorintjun of apcient authors, was Induced U locate 1'ain peii al a distance of several njilos from its actual position. Vint ii ttf ru'liS with Ink appears to" . have oiigmuted among the ureoa oo cupants of Kgypt "f"-' h conquett of thut country by Alexouder tho Urvnt. lWloro that lime lb was cue lomary among the O recks ana Homunt- to paint tbe letters on rout oi pmvu meiit or roed paper (papyrus) wito a nnu cumui s-uuir pencil, a v ut the probeni duy ue this method, which accounts for the shape or t'ir Killers. Among Iho (i reeks and Ro. mans the uso ol a metal stylus io scratch words on wuxen lubluts long survived tho introduction ol ink nnd paper.- The upper end of the stylus was flutlonod, so that when a memor undiim marked on the wux hud served il purpose, it would be rubbed out wilh Ihut end, nnd the wax could thus bo mudo reudy for another inscription. Tho "iron peu" of which Job speuk was a steel graver for cutting letters in stone or metal. Tbe flrnt pons were mado nf a small hurd reed, about the size of a swan a quill, which grew in Kgypt and Ar inonin, and found a ready murkct in Cairo and Alexandria. ' lieodsaro still used for this mirooso in Oriental coun tries. Tboy ore gathered on tboaliorcs of the Persian gulf, und burned ttndor dung heaps fur several month. Tho heal and tho gases generated by tho decomposition, of Ihe manure dry up the pilh, smooth and harden the sur fuue, and give ii a mixed Muck and yellow color. Tho introduction of our modern pa per made needful n finer pen tbun reeds would furnieh. nnd the auilU of geese and swans met the new demand. ror tbe finest writing tho quills ol crows nnd other smaller oirus were used. For centuries the quill trado was immense. In Poland and Russia greut flocks of gcose wero ruisod main ly for their their quills. " In ono year iwcniy-soven millions of tbe luttcr were exported to Knrlund from St. Petersburg. The trado was also very lurge in Holland and Germany. Kuch goose would yield from both wings (Ihe only part lrom which quills could be) obtained) but twenty leathers at the outside, and often not more than ten. The Dutch process consisted in sorting the fresh, suit, tough feather into three sizes (primes, seconds, nnd pinions), according lo the length aud thickness of the barrel ; burying them for a short time in hot sand, which dried the outside skin nnd loosened lite inner one. The outer was then scraped off. Aflor this tho quills were dipped in n boiling solution of alum, or into a rnixturo of nitric acid and water, which hardened them and col ored tho barrel yollow. A part of lbs feather was then stripped olf, and the quills lied up iu bundles for sale. The growth of population, and the spread ot knowledge ol the art or writing since the bchool-master bat beon abroad, producod toward ihe end of tho last contury a great increase in tho nood ot pons. Dr. Johnson, who wrote tho whole of his English dic tionary wilh a singlo quill (which was afterward preserved in a gold caso'l, laughed nt this demand ; but it devel oped in 1803 ihe first metallic pen. Despite tho greatgrowth 01 this latter industry, it is staled by those best in. formed that Ihe price and tbe produc tion of gooso quills has hardly fallen off; so that the metallic articlo would seem simply to have supplied tbe ad ditional murkct lately created. How They Get into the Senate. There was a timo when nn election to Ihe Senate of tho United States was regarded as next to the highest honor the country could bestow whan nono but Hie ablest and most honorable mun were sent there lo rep resuM their States, and w hen none bul honorable meuns were used at ihe election. Hut bow all ibis is changed now I Thoro uro no less thnn four Senator in that body who are directly charged wilh having got there by cor rupt ion, and at least iwo ol them on trial upon charges of having bought their elections wilh money. Anolhor under like charges is on tho way to Iho Scnalo, wailing for the reassem bling of Congress, and at loast four more will maku their appenrance on the coming fourth of March. In sev eral oi the new Wct-lern Stales there seems to lo but ono wy of settling Senatorial clocliond, nnd that is to. settle in cash. In iho pocket Seuat of Nevada they have a onnvsss oa hand nt this timo, nnd so bitter is il Ihut one party threatens in make II "a conflict so memorable and terrible" us to deter all future attempts lo buy tho legislature, liut that Legisla ture wilt bo bought all the same. The people of ibe Slato are lost sight of in the contest, the whole business of who shall be .Senator from Nevada being sottled outsido of tho Slate, In Sun Francisco by a few individuals. Tho ' next Nevuda Senator will probably be the immediate personal reprcsen 'utivc of the San Francisco owners of a silver mine, just ns the now Oregon Sonnlor is the immediate personal representative of a great builder of subsidized Government railways Anybody may bo represented in tho Senato now who will spend cash enough. I'hilddelphla -fifijcT. 1 as . A Reasoning Horse. A remarkable instance, says the Janesville, Wis., Gazette, of equine sagacity was exhibited.' This borse story comes lo us toaiifled by several reliable witnesses. Thos. Drummond, a teamster in our city, owns a horse which has beon afflicted with Imnoness for Iwo or three weeks past. This morning Mr. Drummond turned him out upon the common, hoping that fresh air and exorcise would benefit the animal. Upon gaining his liborty, Ihe cripplod horso hoppled along on throo legs direct lo Iho blacksmith shop of William Eager, entered Ihe shooing department, and stood thero holding up his Injured foot, wilh bit head turned and hit eyes intelligently Gxod upon Mr. Eager. This peculiar act on tho part of a brtilo attracted Mr. l'.titjers attention nnd induced him to examine tho foot held invitingly up for inspection wns tho discovery of a long iiuir driven into the lrog,which was the cause of the lameness. Of course Mr. Eager removed tbo null. I here wns something moro than in. stinol in tho net. It was trood sense Mr. Drummond generally has hi horses shod nt Mr. Eager' shop, and Iho sufforinif brute undoubledlv rea. toned that Ibis wns the place lor him to go for relief. Equine inlolllironce. according to the common acceptation of tho term, is not ao rare, but when a horse deliberately concocts and exo oulos a plan for roliorlng hit foot of a rusty null, lie certainly can lay claim to a small portion of the reasoning faculties which aro supposed to ele vate tlfo human race above the level of bruU "