" CLEARFIELD IEPIBLICAV O BONG B B. UOODlAl)E, CLEARFIELD, PA. . I. HaTAteLlaBEB IN Ib)1. ra largest Clrealatloa af eay Kiwipinr la Horth Csatral Pennsylvania. Termi of Subsoriptioni f antd la ulTMoa, or within 1 aoatha.... Ml If paid after "J before aoalba SO (( pold KM toe aspirant) w aooiae. Kates ot Advertieinf. ttuilm edeetleeaeata,Bef eq unroof I.u, 1 tinea or Iota " ror mob i""i k.it.t.irkina'Mil KBeoalors' BOUea......w a AaJUari' oilot. ' J JJ Oaatloai H' H.lreye...,.,. J " Dlttolalloa notleet - - J " rniteaatoaal Corde, I Um oi year.... i Looal notloee, per lint " .Ultl.t ADVKRTIgKMKNTH. - I MM ."....... M I Nlm.JM M j MUM.. l I ' '! " t .. -. M I "- 1J0 UKOHUK D. OO0DLANDKR, Edlter mi Pnblliher. SarM. T.OI. . siranar. crane aoanoii. MURRAY & GORDON, ATT O.B NETS AT LAW, ;J0'74 CLEARFIELD, PA. FRANK FIELDING,. ATTORNEY-AT-DAW, Clani-SaUt. Pa. Will attend to all bnilaeel eolrutled to Ua aioaptly Bad rallMAlly. wll'ia W1U.IAS A. WaLlACB. BAtria L. johr w. waioLar. WALLACE 4. KREBS, IHlwian to Wollooo FioldiBf.k A T T O R N E Y 8 - A T -1. A W , ll-ll'7J ClaarBaia, Pa. iTiTmnM, a. . a. v vAtaas, a. a. DBS. WILSON & VAN VALZAH, , , ClearRalel, Pa. j " ODIm lo retidenoe of Dr. Wilwn. .. to ... o . m. tor. V .D - orrica uoceei ruw - . - . . V.leab o.a be foond nigbt la hi. rooae. Ball. door to Iluliwlok A Irwia'l I)r Slo'O atolr tp "Vp'pk'KiisoN LITZ. I I tvttnnt.ANII. PA. r bu a i j ii Ti. ! tba liao ii in urvnpwj - , prof...iua. ' . "''- loaara a. B'aiu.r. "iat w. a'ccaof MoENALLY & MoOUBDY, ATTORN EYS-AT-LAW, '..rHalil. Pft. arUal baalaaai atlaadad to proapUjt wlthj IjJhla. OrJoa oa Baaoad olraat, obora tho Pint Natloual Dank. jao:i:ia Q. R4 BARRETT, Attorn iy and CouMnRtoR at Law, nl.lD.IDUI PI. lUrlaf raiiiwad bia Jodaa.bip, baa raaoaiwl lha praoUoo at tao law in . 010 . . w:n ik. anarl. rtf J.Boraoa ADO t3 Klh aoontlaa wbao apooially lotaiaad la oonnoetloo with roaldoot oooaial. WM. M. McCULLOUGH, ATTORNEY AT LAW, ! 1 ClaarRold, Pa. - t. , 11...M. (HhflrtrT'a Oraoa) I .lTkn.l.... nron.nl W tl.Dj.a to. Rral a.Uta boof bt aad lold. jaU'7t TTwrwAL t"e R 8 , ATTORNEY AT LAW, . -' Cloai-ttald. Pa. ! , kfA,Oaoo la Orabaai'a Row. IdoaM H. W. SMITH, ATTORNBY-AT-LAW, ail:l:7 rieartial. Pa. WALTER- BARRETT, iBaa oa Raaand Bl, Ooarlald, Pa. (aoatl , ISRAEL TEST. ATTORNEY AT LAW, . Clearnela, ra. Olea la Pia'a Opora Doaaa. Jyll,'" JOHN H. FULFORD, ATTUKKBT-'il liflTT, . . ri.....ll sift. 'OSaa la Pia'a Opara Uoata, Boob Ko. t. J... t, 1874 JOHN L. CUTTLE, . n ...... n . r . ti t . 1T AIlUKriEil AiAiav. tad Raal Katata Acoat, tlaarlold. Pa. .. TklpA .trooi. bat. Cbarr A Waloat, adr-Raipaotfallj affara bla aaraiaoa la aalllaf iadou;laf laada la Olaarlald aad aajalalag .alar aallafaatloa. I'ab. Il::tf, a rarvayor, u.. - FBEDEBIClt O'LEABT BUCK, 8CRIYENER & CONVEYANCER, General Life and Fire Ins. Agent. Daoda of Cooaoyaaoa, Artlalat of ApoaBaat aad all teaal pajora aronptl; aad aaalll aia. OalOO. UBIOO IB I vri (,'loartald. Pa, April M,Jia74. jT'bUa k "ew alters, BEAL ESTATE BROKER, ' ' ' ABB BBAkU t Haw ILopt and Lumber, OLBARFIELD, PA. ao IB Orabaa'a Row. ' l:iTJP J J . L I N G L E , ATTORNEY' AT LAW, 1,11 Oacaala, Clarold Co Pa. J fd ROBERT WALLACE, ATTORNEY -AT-LAW, VYallacalaa, ClaartaM toaaly, Poaa'a. tafAII taial baaiaaaa aroaaplly altaadad la. DR. T, J. BOYER, PUViilOIAK AND SURG BON, Oflaa oa If arkat Slraot, Claarlald, Pa. pm-om- hoara i to II a. , aod I lo I p. jyt., E. M. SCHEOBER, , J" '.uoJiatopAimo pursictAR, '' Oo ta raaldaano oa Markat . " April 14, 1171. . ; Claaraald, Pa : DR. W. A. MEANS, PIIYSICIAN k SURGEON, LUTUER8BUR0, PA. Will attoad profoaaloaal oalla promptly. aaftt"7 J. 8, BARNHART, ATTORNMT AT LAW, Will praatlao la Claaalald and aU af lha Coartl of tba zaia Jaaiolai aiauiai. . omw o.ift aad aollaoUoa of olalaia aaaJo aaaalallloa. al'll C. BAKER, i BARBER AND H.AIK DRESSER, CLEARPIKLD, PA, Skap la old Wntarajllolal aaraar of Markat ana saeoaa atroau. jBBBia JAMES CLEARY, BABAER 4 HAUL CBESSEB, CORD STRKRT, Jy CLEIiri BI. , PA. I" , JAKES 0. WHITE, BARBER AND HAIR DRESSER SooBia la lha Lataard Daaaa, aapil'74 ' Claarlald, Pa. : fr M. ROBINSON If aaafaatarar aad daalar la Harnrsg, Sftddlcs and Bridles, Collaaa, Whlpa, Rrkk llr alt, THaatafA aoraa Biaaaota, aa. Vaooaa, Praak Miliar'! aad ajaaUfoot Olla. Arntajr Pa,L,yAiai Wllaoa'a Ragglaa. , -OfJ.nJ AA ptpattfc'ara.rlT aavaadaA t, tboa aa Marhat ttroal, ClaarilftlJ, Pa, la room fonaoriy oaaaptod by Jaa. Atoaaadar. fl.'4T4 MITCHELL WAGONS. Th Bert it Cheapert I Tbdtau tlolliy boa narfiad aaotkar larta M af "iwwftw WBroB, wbiob aro BBlOBg m totj baat aaahotarad, aad wtloa ba will aoH al ao aoal raaaoaaba) ram liu atawa atotaaaa aiaooi all aAaortptlaal of wafoaa larfftaad aaal, wld aad aarrow traak. Call aal boo una. aMjtd ,(i f THOMAS RKILLT. JAMES B, WATSON CO., ' RIAL BTATI RROIItlR, " . CLlAPn., PIKPJ'A. Iloaio b 041 MO ta tot, Ootlaatloaa troatpUy o.. ooi- trat.rraaa Caai aad Ptra-CIn Laada' aad Tawa arwpany far ao lo. Odbaa ha Wootarh lata! IslMHni (M tmrt), faaaad rH. ayllldy CLEARFIELD GEO. B. GOODLAHDER, Proprietor. VOL 49-WHOLE NO. A.Q.KRAMER, ATTOBHEY-AT-IiAW, R.il Ettale ud OolleotlOB Ageat, CLKARPIKI.b, PA., Will moronity alteod to til l.l buiiuM trailed to hie eare. t-drumoo la rie'e upon uoaee, aceono iw. aprti i-o- Kh.ll.Or.lt. 0. T. Aleieador. C. M. Bowera OBVIS, ALEXANDEB & BOWEBS, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Bolleieate, Pa. lJaoJ8,'47-y jrHKUNE "mT'd., PIIYSICIAN & SURGEON, RAVINU loeatod at Peanleld, Pa., offere bla nrofeuional eorYleee to tba people of that puueaorf aurrooodingooontry. Alloalla proaplly atteadtd o. ,:J. !'.. GEORGE C. KIRK, Jaalioa of too Poaoo, Surrajor anil Convejanear, Lutheraburir, ra. All bmlnata latraitad to him will ba promplljr .ll.n.l.d to. raraoot wl.blnf lo ampluy a B.r- j .ii n ir him 1. oa ha aalttra aoyor win wu.. a ,t , , hlamll that ha ana randar aall.faatloo. Boajla of oo.r.j.n... artlaloa of a''. "'''! popart, prompllj aad aaallT aloooUd. ail(lrw.74 JOHN D. THOMPSON, Jaalioa of tba Paaoa aad SerlTanar, turweaarlllo. Pa. wCollaotlona rnodo aod . P"P'' paid ovar. . rabzz T 111 ... nanar ALBBBT- w. AI-aBBT W. ALBERT v BROS., UaTiiifarlnPira AaaUnilTaDoalertia Sawed Lumber, Square Timber, 4o n n a u A ItKNN'A. -0rderi wUclM. Bllli on ihort aotlo fUUVUaila', a. FRANCIS COUTRIET, MERCHANT, m, A.m. I.r8eld Coonty, Pa Knp. ooailABtly oa baad a Ml aaaorli..l of " " . .. a iLftftAtlAi mnA awarv thine Dry uoodi, narowar, w... i - - ..all k.pt t f ' . 7h'?ih Wl" ioM for SMB. 0DUp aVJl VIHwaaaa.. . y-Pivil.t.Jui7a lm-loT' THOMAS H. FORCE :e, bilbb la GENERAL MERCHANDISE, :H AUAMTtlN. Pa. Alio, oitoailto naaufootarar aad 4aalar la fcaara Tiaabor ana bawoo i,ooinr-, jat-Orlara aollolud and all bill; protapllr Iliad. ' " o enntTM HACKMAN, House and Sign Painter and Paper Hanger, riftuaiM. Paaa'a. a will .etoto lobe la kia llaoproaptly aod . ..7 ' .ri.A7 la a workaaaliaa aanner. Q. H. HALL, PRACTICAL PUMP MAKER, DEAR CLEARFIELD, PENN'A. jatfPoiBpa alwaya oa baad and aiado to ordor ..Tbortaotioa. Plpaa borad oa paaaoaowa uraia. , n l .i.A u rondar aalialaotioa, ana dallrarod If daatrad. '''L'f-1' 1 E. A. BIGLER CO., tilALIM I SQUARE TIMBER, aad aaanraetarare o A1.L KIND 4K AWED LURIBKII, g.7-71 CLEARFIELD, PKHR'A. JAS. B. GRAHAM, dealer la Real Eitate, Square Timber, Boardi, BHIKOLKS, 1.ATII, a rn.ift :tl'7l Clearttld, Pa, nrr am MITCHELL. JAMES Mm-iUSLOJ, aanaa ii Square Timber & Timber Lands, jam. CLEARFIELD, PA. ' no J P RURC H Fl EL D. Lata Beraaoa af tba 3d Roglaoat, FeaalylTaaia . .. i i ...hhaA Imm Ik. Arm... VOIBBieero, ..tivb T , , " afera hie pnfoaeloaai aerileee lo Ibaailiaoaa atoiaarneiaeoaBiy. , ,i- .HB,i ftll.ftd.dlo. JAarrroieeeio... r- . . L Olio, oa Soeond elreet, foraarlyoeeapled by .. u r.nrA.'aa.if UT.nooae. . ' H. F. NAUGLE. WATCH MAKES & JEWELER, aad dealer la Watcbee, Clocks, Jewelry, Silver a ara aj m.wr i - ana I'latea vy are, sc., (.lOTi CLEARFIELD, PA, B5 PRACTICAL WATCHMAKER (g9 " - "-'-'"- (.lochs ana joweiry Oraaoa'a ilea, Jforatl Slrnt, rLBARP'IF.I.n, PA. All kladl of repairing la I aaded lo. tETS' HBISHIG COODS, rtoaa roaoved lo 1S7 Chareh ttroat, botweoa Franklla aad White lta., Mew York. Jyll'71 Miss E. A. P. Rynder, Aaaat roa Ohlakorlag'a, Sulaway'a aad Eaaraoa'a Plaaoa, gall a, Maaoa a hbbiib i bbb rowwoora Orgaaa aad Malodeoaa, aad Oreaer A Bakar'a Bawl.g Maohiaea. Aua TBAoaaa ar Plaaa, OaltAr, Orgaa, Haaaeay aad VoooJ Ml ale. Mo aaall lakea fat loot Ibaa half a btra. aglHa, eppeeil Uftll.h l FBrallara Vtora. Clearleld, May t, ISSt.lf. I. aoLAAiwauaa a. BAT IB fiABBT HOLLOWBDSH a OABET, m, BOOKSELLERS, Blank Book Mnnfactnrers, ADD (TATIOHIRI, 918 JKmrM Ml- rhUmdtlmkl. naa,Paner Floor Baokt aad Baga, Faalaeap, Latur, MoU, Wraaplag, CarUia aad Wall . : Tr t.i.i to rftpere. . " s TONE'S SAW GUMMERS AND SAW U PSKTB. Wa haaa roeoiaod the agtaay for Ike aboTeaad win all tkoa al aaoeloalerai'l prieoa. Call aad eiaalae Ibaa. Tbey aro the boat, yeia-ri II. F. BIULER A CO. A.M.HILL8 -va-asav Woat4nifMtfaU"Bpt.iy a-.fpaliftaU AlVwitbat U aa. rrdoo! the ftt AfcTi ""FiClAL TBKTH t $10 ft mi, or 4S(,M fur aloabla Mi. iVnr aa tw fttom eatatog at ta aaaa lis a, la hart aak aa pfr tat, will (tt Ikva iwt Mi for at $1T.M laen. Trai laTarlakt? Caib. . Claart.H. Marefe It, IITI. 8. tiUMm, tntX K. t. Biichm, Bd'- CONTINENTAL Life Insurance Company, , OP BAaTFORD, CORK. Aetata- SJH,H Ratio of Aeeata lo Liabilities Itl Faraltboa laaaraaaa al Ibe rerr lewawi aaa Poliey-boldora aartleiaalo la Ike polla af the Ceaaaar. that aoallaaalty redaelag taa aaaaal Mm raiaa. .. tan wr mmnjwm ft. M. MrlNALLT, AMI p la SteWt ftw. OtaariaM, ttm, f;U'74. WILLIAM af. HENRY, Josnci oao laua abb graaaBaa. LUMBER OITT. Colleowoaa aaada aad aoaay aroaplry (al eror. ArUoMaaf agmaiat aad daada af aatraayaaaa taatly aaaaaaael aad nrraaaad ear. "II 10 y llae nraaplly al April 11, 1ST. REMOVAL. . f RuJZENSTEIN & BERLINER, aakAlaaaala dlaahrtl ! 2103. NCW YEAR'S M LLR. Rlai, bolla, rlaf, with yoar aaalloa dla, Rlaf lha old yaar oat aad lha aaw yaar la! Liba Iba aolaaa of blrda from lha old fray apira, Lot yoar allrory Baala rl alhar aad blfbar i PloatiBl abroad o'or tba hlllalda baro In blllowa of aoaad on tbo troaiulooa air, Ut II riaa aad fall la Iba Itral (la i Toll ovor ally aad wood tbo tola t Ray Ibol lo oljhl the old yoar dloa I Rid tba watahara looh to tbo oailara aklaa, Por Iba uaaalllall halo that tella afar Of tba waloona riaa af Iht bow yaor'a alar t Rlaf Iba old yaar oat, with Ha .Ifhi aad laan, lta wlihahag hrart-aahaa and tireaoma faara ) Away with III aaraorlaa of doakl and wroag. Ita aold daoalli aad ita oavyiagi atroag, All Hi panderln( larta la Iba fallariag itnie, All lta pitifal tbaoii oad oold prolaaaa. Wo will boap Ikrai togalhar aad bind Ibra rait Totba old naa'a load aa ha lottara paal, The ilia that ba broaiht bo aay taka afala Kaap wa lha joya, lal kia bory Iba pala i HiBg aofl, ok Lalla, aa ba gooa to rest Far In lha tbadaa of Iba dnrbrolng wall I Ring, balla, riag, wilb tba aerry dla ! Tbrjild yaar haa gnaa with ill aara aad tint 8millBg and fair At tho aaatora ffAlftt,.,. Clad la tlnlad lifhl, tba Bow yaar waila ! Wataoaa bia la with tba roay baad, Wbo wait tba wavo of bla aookonioi band t Ilopa, with harwraalbaof awaat tpring flowarr, Joy lor too tumniara glowing sourv, Planly and paaea for tho fraitrnl fall, A nil lova fur all toaaona boat of oil. Riog aerrily, belli I o'er the bluabiog tklea 8oo Ibe boantifal atar or tho aaw year rite I "poet iktAlrtim or iJertat&ar. STAKTKD OUT 0FKAXSA8. A JOI'RNKY OP FIFTEEN HI Nnsr.D MILES IN A WAGON. The 21st day of November there passed slowly through the street of tho on let little village ol lirsncuviiie, in Sussex county, N. J., a covered emi grant wagon, drawn by a bay horse aud a gray mare, evidently not in the best of spirits, wbilo a third horse fol lowed behind at its own sweet will. A young, red-wbiskervd, sun-burned man drove tho steeds, and a young woman, with light bairand bright blue eyes, sat bosido him, holding a baby. A lively bint k anil Ian terrier com. pleted the cavalcado. "What's that, Bill? axked a villager of his conipan ion. ''Dunno ; gypsies, 1 reckon ; looks like em. "By tieorgol it am t though. It's young John Wyker a drivin'j I'll bet lie's just come from Kansas, I heard ho was a comin'. (lot a wife aud baby, too." It was John Wyker, wife and baby, anil they bad just come from Kansas, having niado tho entire journoy in tho wagon in which they sat. Tbo reporter found them at the fileasant farm house of the young man's ill her, Mr. David Wyker, alxiut two mile from Branchville. "Yes, wo camo all tho way by wagon," said M r. John Wyker. ' I suppose it seems a big thing to Eastern people," but it ain't much after all. They wouldn't think of it in Kansas, where they start for Oregon and California in wagons drawn by oxen. Jlow did 1 come to start? Had to, or starve. I'll tell you all about it THE TRAVXI.I.ER S STORY. Soven yean airo I went to Kansas and located throe hundred acre of land in Leavenworth county, in the town of Tonganoxie. I only staid six months, but lour years ago 1 went back again, and commenced to break np and partially fencomy farm. Of course the Bret year l (lulu l ao much in the way of crops. Tho. second year the result was fair. I bad built a house and was batching it. But I got tired of that, and so 1 got married. Well, 1 worked hard, and was potting along 5 roily well, getting a little ahead. 'bo last season promised well. 1 put in sixty acres of corn, a few oats, some wheat and rye. J ust before tho small groin was ready to cut the chintz bugs came. You know what they are, Well, tbey went through ouronts, and wheat and rye quick enough. At first they couldn't fly, but they crawled lively enough. They covered the grain sucked the juico from the stalks, and quickly fiiiisbcd it. Then they got big enough to fly, and went to tho corn fields. They destroyed 'a good many acres for me before the corn got too big fur them. Then the 13th of June the dry weather commenced. For three months we didn't have a drop of rain. The corn uff'red. Tbo nay crop failed, and it looked pretty dubious, 1 tell you. A new pi. Afire. "But that wasn't tho worst, 1 can tell you. The 13th day of August 1 noticed a good many grasshoppers coming slanting down from tho west They began coming as a snow storm commences a tew at first, then thick er and faster, until the wholo air was full of them ; the ground was covered with them. In six hours they' had oaten every green- thing the chintx bugs and the drought had left. They stripped the corn of leaves and husks and then ate the corn off tho cob. They devoured all tho grass. They swarmed ovor ovcrything. 1 counted 240 on an 8x9 window pane. Thoro were a great many mora bushels of grasshoppers to the acre than l ever saw corn. We had to cover up our clothes in the houso. They clung to the aide of the house in millions, and ate holes In the clapboards. Thoy covered a barrow an that you could't tell, for the life of you, what it was made of. It was simply a gigantic A of grasshoppers. The only thing they wouldn't eat was tomatoes. Thoy say the love for tomatoes ia an acquired taste, and I suppose the hopper hadn't acquired it then j but they'd eat to bacco). Tbey were the greatest ehow ers yon ever saw. Karmers lost their entire tobacco crop. And then they were CANNIBALS 1 of the worst kind. The minnto a hop per got killed there were a half dosen going for the dead body, and it didn't take long for 'em ta finish it. Home of the tarmers, hearing of their ap proach, went to work cutting up their corn, and so saved a little. I didn't save a thing. And in six hours ftor the hoppers came 1 hadn t enough left to winter a cow. It was rough, mighty rough ; and I thought the best thing we could do would be to start for old New Jersey, for it was certain starvation to stay there. I had a good, strong lumber wagon. I put a floor on the top of the box, and then side boards above that. Over all I bent hoops and covered them with double sheet. So I bad a two-story wagon. Under the floor w packed what goods w had to take and some provisions. We carried a sheet-Iron stovo, and lecd buxea ftir tba hiirseo. Bv the 21st of September we were ready, and, with two other teams starting for the East, we Degan our Journey, nut my wiif can tell you more about the journey than 1 con. She kept a diary and put down tba dutlanoe we travelled each day, the town we panned through. ami an account of all expense." Mrs. wyker wa liaiiny to tell of their trip, bat abe would first Intro- daoe Mum Margery Wyker, the young lady who had made the trip with the, and wbo wa eleven month old when they started. Mrs. Wykor wa sorry not to be able to introduce the dog, but he had recently been shot. Tbey CLEARFIELD, hud enough tioi8 nt tho hnmetttvail without him. APl.rWKr LITTLE WOMAR'g NARRATIVE. "Wo croBscd the WiHtioiiri river at Leavenworth citv." said Mm Wykcr, "and then sot out aoroog tho Sliite of Miwiouri. After leaving tho bottom lands of Missouri, wo went through the hilliest country I ever saw, right straight np and right straight down all the time. We eroHscd twenty ono hills In five hours. In Missouri wo found the fields for fifty miles as hare aa the mad, not a green thing to bo neon. Tho grasshoppers had boon there. And thev will bo tliore next your. 1 believe, for just under tho surface of the ground everytrnoro one couiu nnu millions of ffraashiiPDcra' eggs. We could turn thum up in vnxt nuiuititics with the-blade or a penknife. After travelling tho fifty miles wo camo to crreer) irraH and grasshoppers, and rtxlc lor flhreirv through grasshoppers and over grasshopper. We wore glutl enough when wo saw tho lustnf thein, I can tell you. In Western Missouri wo met a man going West whosnitl he hail mot over a hundred teams going Host. Another man saitl ours was tho fifty-second team lhat hail passed that tiny. And tho week we started there woro 150 wagons, encampod on tho l'latte county luir ground. All these people, liko ourselves, woro driv en out of! he country by tho grasshop pers Bnd drought. "WecrosBedtheMimissipiiiatQiiint'y bv ferry, going thence to Springfield, III. The finest country I ever saw is Illinois. Indiiina is too level, ami tho people wore very inhospitable nntl re served. "I n Ohio the people woro vory geniul and kind, ami all refused to tnko pay for the hay for our horses; but they didn't any ot them seem to know the distil neo from one place to another. Yet tbey would pretend to know, anil would sav it was twenty miles when perlifis ft was only five. Wo camped ono night on the top of tho Allcghanics, and bad to go without breaklust for want of water. Pennsylvania is by far the roughest State wo came through, but tho ciiplo aro just tho reverse. Tho Dutch farmers arc the very souls of kindness. THE DISTANCE. "We reached here tho 21st of No vember, being out sixty-one days and sixty niirhtH. Tho actual number of days that wo travelled was ftirty-iiino, lur we hk.-iiI a wcck at a menu in Ohio, and only travelled two Sundays, and then only becauso we could get no teed lor our hoi-si's. J no whuie ui. tanco travelled was a little mora than l,500milcs. Our smallest day's journey woe eighteen miles, our largest lorty three, and that in rough Pennsylvania. Wo crossed six Status and thirteen rivers. We bad only one rniny day ; hut it snowed tho last two day out He camped in our wagon torty-six nights, though some of the time John slept under tho wagon. No, wo had no adventures. Nothing romantic nor exciting. We woro often taken for gypsies in Pennsylvania, and the chil dren used to hoot after us, that was all. It got to bo very tiresome ruling, I assure you. n e tlitln t even have a spring seat; but tho trip agreed with uk, lor John gnineo nine pounas ana l fourteen. Ourcxpenses wcrcjust $l)ti." "Yes, I drove tho sumo horses all tho way," said Mr. Wyker. "I had a third which tollowed, hut never drove it. 1 got one shod once, the other wears tho same shoe with which he started. The horses were poor when they started, and they haven t changed much one way or tho other." THE CONDITION OF KANSAS7 "What have you dono with your farm? asked the visitor. I routed it to a man on share, hut have hail a letter saying ho must have aid. And there are thousands Ilk him. It' all wrong for tho Kansas pniers to say that Kansas can take care of her own people. I sny sho cant. There are threo classes in Kansas. One class who have friends to whom they can go, liko myself. 1 he second class can not get out ol the State, and will stnrvo unless helped. like my tenant Ibe third tlva are the moneyed men, tho capitalists who are getting rich through other people's misfortunes ; who aro buying land aud stock for almost nothing. These are the men who say through the pros aod who write East that Kansas is prospering and can tnko cam of her own unloi'tunato. Mio can t do it, 1 repeat, and unless aitl goes to those farmers there will be untold misery throughout the country. There is now an incredible amount of suffering. All that has been written has not nor cannot, put the condition of things in too strung a light AN IMI'KyDJya OYSTEJl I'AM- The English newspapers unite in a dolorous wuil over an impending oyster famine. It seems lhat both the natural and artificial oyster-beds on tho En glish coast havo been "dredged to death" by their avaricious owners, ant! the consequence is, that this delicious niollusk has grown alarmingly scarce and expensive. Only tho most pleth oric purses can now afford the luxury, and there Is a prospect that, in no long tlmo, gold Itself will bo powerless tx procure the treat, for the reason that it is not to bo had. The natural oys ter banks in the Frith of Forth used to be so productive that oysters Were sold in Edinburg at the rate of 10 pence per 120. Sow, there, as else where in (i reat Britain, they cost 3 pence apiece. The hods have been so reduced by overfishing that the prt ent yield is only a fourth of what it wan ffirtv vcara arm. Onlv ' seven year hack, the oyster -fishories in the Ubannol Islands employed zuu until and smacks, and the annual harvost wa 4,680,000 gallons. Now, the crop amounts to but 78,000 gallons, ami is gathered by the crew ol 23 boats. ' t 1 he same process or exlianstion is going on in I ranee. A I (Janeale, twenty-seven years ago, thodrctlges brought In with littlo trouble, a crop of, 71,000,- 000 oysters. To-day, thoy can secure but one-seventh or that amount. Pans lias, for a long time,dopcndcd anon the artificial herder of A reaction, Maren- ncs, the Islo de lie and other place, for it supply of bivalves; but these men are also killing the goose that lays the goltlon egg, by drawing toe heavi ly upon their stock. It Is only a ques tion of time how noon the oyster will bo wholly run oat in France. " A rev month ago, Mr. r rank Duck- land raised a lanwntable try over the waste In American oyster-nsherios, predicting, if there wore not a wiser economy practiced, our hod would be prematurely exhausted. - There was abundant reason lbr hi warning, and American ovstermon should give it due heed; but, from present appear- anon, no and other adept naturalists need to turrt their entire attention to the restorattoR ot the productive force of the impoverished English oyster-banks. '1 . i PRINCIPLE8, NOT MEN. PA., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 13, 1875. TEMPER.. Ou no part of tho chiiructer has eilu cation more iiifliioiuto than on temper the duo regulation of which Is un oh iect of so great iniwrtmiee to the cn joynieiit of tho present life, and to tho preparation of a better. An au thority, such as has been desciil firm, but afl'ectiuujito deii'iled, .yet mild imposing no, unnecessary re straints, but encouraging every inno cent irocuom ami gruiiueaiimi, exer cised aceordinir to tile dictates of judg ment judiciously dispensed, is the best means of securing (fjod temper in our children, and evinces that hcII siuijoc tion on our part, which is essential to its successful cultivation on theirs. This at once will put au end to those impulses of temper iR ourselves, which are the most fruitful sources of irritation to others: for ft 'V gurnriainir how 'TrmVklv ''lur nwit'iiTitnlilHty wHt -tie reflected in tho little ones around us, Npenk to a child in a fretful maimer, and wo shall generally liutl that his answer partakes of the same character. Wo may reprove wo niny punish wo may euloivo obedience ; out nil w bo done with double the effect, if our own temper remain perfectly tiiiriimYd for what benefit can reastmublv he fx pcctetl, when we recommend that by our own injunctions, which wo renounce hy our cxiimpler Tho variations ami inconsistency to which character of impulse aro ulso liable, are particularly trying to clnl drcn. There are tow teniors that can resist the effect of being sharply re proved at one time lor w hat, nt an other, is passed over without notice of being treated ono day with excess ive hiduWiice, and the next with fret- fulness anil severity. We havo all our weak and irritable moments; we may experience many changes of teniicr and feeling ; but let us beware of bo- traying such variations in our outward conduct, if we value the good temper and respect of our children ; for these we bare no right to expect on men sitlo without consistency on ours. If a fault be glaring, it must be seri ously taken up, but in the impingement of the temper, especially in early child hood, much may be effected by a sys tem ol prevention. A judicious attend. aut may avert many nn iniicntling naughty jit bychango ol ohjoot. gentle amuscmertt, and redoubled care to put no temptation in the wny, if sho ob serve any of her little ones wenry, un comfortable, or irritable. This, for instance, will generally be the caso with children when they first awake. They should, therefore, then be treated with more than common tenderness; never roused from sleep suddenly or violently, nor exposed to any little trials, till they have hail time to thor oughly recover themselves. It is soured' necessary to odd how pecu liany tins tender consideration is re quired, not only in illness, hut under ths various lesser indispositions so Ircqiient in infancy, Children ought not to lie unneces sarily thwartbed in their objects, which, at a very early ago, they pur sue with ' eagerness. Let -tlmm; rf possible, complete their project without interruption. A child for example, before no can Biieuk, is trotting niter a ball ; tho mother or tho nurse snatches linn up at tho moment, to bo washed and dressed, and tho poor child throws himself into a violent passion. Where as, had sho (mother or nurse) first entered Into bis views, kindly assisted him in gaining his object, and then gently taken bim np, his trial would have been spared, ami his temper un injured. We should avoid keeping children ill siispcnso, which is often done from a kinti motive, though with a very ill effect. If a child asks his mother for a cake, and sho can give it to him, let hor tell him so at once, and nssuro him that he shall have it ; but, should she bo unable to grant his request, or know it would be improper for him, do not let her hesitate ; do not let her say, "1 will think of it ; wo will see;" but kindly ami decidedly refuse him. If; ho sous bis mother going out and petition to accompany her, it will be better she should sny "No," or "Yes," at once ; for ho will rcceivo with case an immediate but kind refusal, when, probably, be would cry bitterly at it denial, idler his exitcclntions hail been raised by suspense. hen a child is to go to lied, we ought not to fret him for tho last half hour, by saving evert' few minutes, "I shnll soon semi yon to bed Now, my dear, it is time to go Now, I hope you will go;" but let him ho told that, at such a time, ho is to go to bed, and when that time arrives, no com mon excuse should prevent it. lly such measures as havo been rec ommended, accompanied by a quick sympathy with tho jwculiar characters and peculiar Infirmities ot children, inui h may be done toward forming among them a habit of good tonqier. Hut such is the irritability both of tho mental and bodily constitution in child hood, that with our best effort wo must not expect unvarying success.- I' rnui some hidden cause, generally to be traced to their bodily slate, many children, perhaps nil occasionally, arc prone to a certain fro! fullness or irrit ability, which will ballloovery attempt to ovorcumo it, and w hich, tueroloro, is rather to be borne with than opposed never to ho humored. , Thr Vii'Ksinmi War. In pninu- anca of a resolution, recently adopted by the lower House of Congress, pro viding Sir tiie appointment of a select committee of five members to visit Vicksburg, for the piiriKwe of ascertain ing mill making rc,oit as to tho nature and cause of tho recent disturbances in that city, the Speaker appointed the following gentleman mcmncrs of said committee : Hon. Omar I. Conger of, Michigan, lion. Stephen A. lltiilliutt of Illinois, Hon. Cliurles fl. Williams of Wisconsin, Hon. H. Milton Spear of l'onnsylvnnia.and Hon, i m. J.U linen of Maryland. Tho first three named members of flic committee nrc Kepuli Means the Democrats being represent ed hy Messrs. Spccr and O'Urion. We hope the committee will give the mat ter a thorongh ' investigation, and see that tho guilty are exposed to the world antl punished for their hcnlous crimes. The Pacifln Mail Company's steam ship Japan, from Han Francisco and I okohaniR lor Hong Kong was burned on the 17th, when sixty miles out from l okohama. A few ol the crew and passengers havo arrlvotlat Hong Kong. It is feared that ninny lives have been lost. Tho Japan left San Francisco November Uth, arriving at Yokohama December 10th. and sailed thsnre on the 12th for Hong Kong, with throe cabin muuongers, r. W.Crocker, P. M. Tindefl. Mary Hcntt, and four hundred and twenty lliur Chinese in the steer age. The steamer left Han Francisco with 078 tones of freight and 1375.000 treasure. REPUBLICAN, DEATH OF GEHRETT .SMITH. New Yoiik, Pec. 2R (ierrctt Smith. in comnanv with his wife, arrived In town last Thursday, lor the purpose of spending the holidaysamong uisti ionds. lie was in modorato good health ; his check being as ruddy, his eye as clear, his voico us free, his step as elastic as it had been tor many years. II o had lnado arrangements to meet Charles O'Connor on (Saturday. lie arose early and said to Mrs. Smith that he had slept uncommonly well, stilting ho had not spent so merry a Christmas lor a long time as on the day before. While dressing, hi utter ance suddenly became indistinct, and ho wus gently homo to a bed, barely able to sny in a iitint tono "Very weak." lie immediately bocamo un conscious, and thus remained until his death, which occurred at hall' past KwehrfftVcrock trwlrvy ab-tiia laiidonoe of (ienentl John Cochrane. Tho cause of his death was a combined attack of apoplexy and paralysis. (ierrctt Smith was widely known as n great philanthropist ami a writer. lie was born in I'lita, N. Y., March (1, 1707, ami wa consequently in bis 78tb year, lie graduated from Hamilton College, N. Y.; in 1818. His liither left him ono of tho largest landed es tate in tho I'nited States, the man agement of which has principally oc cupied his attention. In 1N23 he was admitted to tho bar, and subsequently took part in several importunl triuls. In lb-f) he connected himself with the American Colonization Society, and contributed largely to its treasury, but in 181)5 lie withdrew from it and joined tho American Anti-Slavery Society. . UlS All MH t..T LllltlUl.lTV. Jlo practically illustrated hisoposi tion lo land monopoly by distributing 200,000 ox-res of land, partly among institutions of learning, but most among poor white and black men, in parcels of about fifty acre. His largest gills of money havo been in aitl of emanci pation ami to buy homes for tho poor. In 1852 ho was a member of Congress, and was for a long time a prominent advocate of a largo Utterly ef opinion, and freedom from what lie believed to bo the bondago of sect. In 18G1 he muilo some speeches in behalf of a vig orous and uncompromising prosecu tion of the existing war, and ulso wrote niuiiy articles u)Mn this subject for tho press. Among the works of which ho is the author, is a volume of his speeches in Congress in 18U5 ; "Service and Speeches of Genvtt Smith" published in 18C1 ; "Nature the Huso of a Free Theology," 1807 ; Heligion of Hcason," 18G4. Since tho close ol tbo war ho has not taken a very active part in politics, liikc tho other leading Abo litionists, Win. IJoydtiarrison, Parker I'illshurv and others, ho found that his thirty years effort to free the negro had not bettored his condition, niter Mr. Pillsbury made a pilgimage of tho Sothcm State ant) camo back and made his report to his oo-adjiitors, all of whom woro too cowardly to go South and seo ibr themselves. Mr. Pillsliiiry'r report in 1805, upon the social and political status of Ibo freod man, effectually closed tbo mouth of every red bot A boll lion ist in tins coun try. Although one of tluunost tealous oi tbo anti-Slavery leaders, .Mr. Ninth became one of Jefferson Davis' bonds men, and sent Gen. I,cc $2,000 to help build up Washington lollege. Ills eccentricities arc numerous : hen old John Drown and his raider were ar rested at Harper's Fern', In 18IUI, and put upon triuf, Cierrett Smith feigned insanity, aud was locked up in a luna tic asylum until after Jtrown was hunir. There was no question but what ho knew a great deid about Drown movements, besides having furnished him with moury. i , , Smith, liko nil other men, governed by sentiment rather than principlo, was a moral coward. Those men al wftv mount their bobbv. in tbeoloiv. social science, or political economy, and invariably ritlo them to tlenth. Smith straddled all tbree,and bail it not been for his immense wealth in real estate, his anti-slavery xeul wonltl have brought him in conflict with tho government. This alono matlo bim circumsticct lie was a violent assailant ot all mon- nnolien. vet ho was the frreatest land monopolist in ineMiaieoi cw iot'K,u ' f . . 1 not In tho I nion. SIXOULAR CASE OF PAIWOX. At September term, In Westmorland county, James AV. Hlackbnrn wns tried for the offence of barratry for foment ing vexutious law suits and quarrels, Ao. His guilt was fully established, but as tho costs amounted to two or threo hundred dollars (a hundred wit nesses having attended four terms of court) the jury, indulged in a ireuk that is ton common, brought in a ver dict of "not guilty, but tho defendant, to pay costs." Gov. llurtranft now attempt by pardon totVoo tho defend ant from tho costs. How tho Governor con pardon a man lbr au offence of which a jury declared bim not guilty tines not seem clear. If ho can, tho effect is to punish the witnesses, (the most innocent parties In tho transac tion) for tho defendant will not pay them because the pardon in so many words remits tho cost, ami tho Com missioners claim that the pardon can not niako the coiiuty linlile. When W outer Von Twllcr found himself nn ablo to decide between plaintiff anil defendant bo, as ho thought wisely, dismissed tho caso and sentenced the const able to pay the costs. Von Twiler Uartranft doos bettor, and practically sontenecs tho witnesses to pay tire costal ' M '- : , j . . . -..,.'. Hut the question is raised and ilis cussitl, csrt the (hivomor remit costs by paction ?: Neither Constitution nor law confers such power. Tho point was raised some years ago in Dauphin county, in tho caso of Capt. Donovan, convicted of assault anil buttery upon a member of tho Legislature, Gov. Packer pardoned Donovan, but Judge Pearson directed liu-prison keeper not to givo up tho prisoner until tho costs were paid or secured. Donovan enter ed security and appealed to Attorney General Knox, who at first inclined to tho opinion that tho pardon carried all consequences of conviction with it, but after carefully examining the authority of tho Governor in tho premises he gave a vo-y positive opinion that the Governor could not remit costs, and Donovan w as compelled to pay. '. This pardon wns undoubtedly a political one made to gratify party friends. This evil will be abated after tbo now officers elected st the Into election take their office. ' The advis ory hoard will then be e ompnsed of tho Lieutenant Govprnor, Hoerotavy of the Commonwealth. Attorney General and Secretary of Internal affairs; throe of whom must conear in recommending a pardon before t he Governor can grant it As two of them will ba Democrats and two Itepnhlicana, strictly political pardons will be out of the question tor a rear st any rate. 1 NEW PAXOER OF MATERXAL VEPTIOX VE- Ever since liebekuh, tho prime actor in maternal deception, played off her successful plot upon her blind and aged husband, tho patriarch Isaac, tho world has not lieon destitute of mother who intrigue with their sons against the husband ami the father. Sometimes the plot is to secure a greater portion of the paternal estate for a favoriloson hut more frequently in matters of s, iidl cr amounts. Tho son wants more money to spend than the fat her is will ing to furnish, antl the mother plots to obtain it. Sho may honestly think tho father is too close-fisted with tho boy, and doos not give him the amount which true parental regard would dic tate; and so, impelled hy her maternal love, slio seeks to make up tho deli ciencv bv some scheme. which will nut- wit wia. father, and get the money out ol linn by deception. Such a course is detrimental in the greatest degree. It tentls directly to injuro the olijcct of her muternal love by breaking down all nice distinctions ol honor mid honesty. 1 r a boy may deceive his father for selfish ends that father whom ho is bound to respect, love, reverence, antl obey above all other men unit does this with appro bation and assistance of his own moth er, how can that boy bo expected to have any line sense of honor and hon esty toward other men ? The inevi table result of all such practice of do ception will be to destroy in the mind of that boy all high restHX-t for tho truth, and load linn to seek to obtain bis cutis by any means, however un justifiable, which soeni to promise suc cess. And thus ho grows up to man hood, with a character noticeablo for lieing tricky, dishonest, antl dishonora ble. Hut it is tiol necessary to wait until he arrives at manhood to sec the fruit. Having learned, hy maternal assistance, to deceive his father, ho contrives like plots against his mother. Alter a time, she is grcutlv surprised to find that same boy plimtig oft' the grossest deceptions upon horsolf. At Hint she is astosished above nieasu rc,ainl grieved bovond expression. She cannot con ceive impossible that the son for whom sho has done so much should mm against her with so much ingratitude. She' does not stop to think that bo is only practicing on hor tho very lessons sho has taught him ; that sho herself has been ono ol the chiol incuns ot tie stroying within him all nico sense of honor, and all tmo parental respect. And yet, such aro the exact facts in tho case, nor is it anything uncommon to hear boys justify the deceptions they practice upon their mothers by saying. "Uli I pshaw I sno clients the old man, and I client her. ll'sallonlhesquarc!" Too great care cannot be observed in maintaining tho strictest honor and hnneelv m nil home transactions. Everything tlone and said should be tho very soul ot truth. Jloro bov and girls too ere morally ruined in their homes, and by homo influence aud example, than anywhere else, or in any other way. It is dono by the lulso lessons there taught them ; by tho loose ideas there engendered in their minds ; by tho deceptions there practiced ; and by tho "white lies" there spoken and enacted. Under the influence of those they grow up with no high sense of honor, w ilh no staunch adherence of integrity, with no firm principlo suflicient to bind them to the right, and to barricade thorn against tho assaults of temptation. And this must be tho case, when homo Ufa is not the soul of honor iu all its ways tbo correct practice ot truth and ut in tegrity in all its acts. If tho tather deals by trickery, and seeks gain by fraud, and win "hy in trigne, how can the son reasonably Is) oxpectod to do any better? If tho mot Iter deceives her neighbors : is glad, lieyond expression, to see visitors,,w hen siH'nking to their faces, but berates lliem scandalously as aoon as they have departed from the doorstop, and thus practices the thousand and one enacted lies of social ami domestic life, bow can it bo expected thill hor daughters will be guileless and truthful? In view of these facts, wo feel that is of the greatest Importance that moth ers should ho brought to consider tho danger to their children, which grows out of those maternal deceptions which are too prevalent in ninny homes. 1 There is another point on which we should liko to sny a lew words in warn ing and caution to mothers. It is to enjoin them to check any tendency which they may obsorve on tho part of their children towanls cruelty. ,. Children are not born with an in stinct of cruelty. They aro gentle a angels, ami it is the fault ot their pa rents if they become monsters when men. From sheer thonghtlessnessjind before they begin to reflect, it is com mon lor them to do many cruel things to tear off tho wings of insect, or to trannflx them with a pin; when a lit tle older, to kill small birds for pleasure or to put small animals to grief. These short mot, towards haiiil lead on to great etiitios. Nero had the mild and philosophic Seneca for the instructor of his intellect, hut Agrippa for his mother. The records ol our own times, from day to dav, are stained with deeds of blood and violence equal, in enormi ty, to those which marked tho worst periods of declining Homo. Heathen ism, in its most gloomy phase, could exhibit no instances of more glaring de pravity than those nn account of which is to bo found in every nowspapor we tsko up. All will havo their small beginning ; the child who tortures dumb I things grows np to bo a wife-beater ami a ruflluii. VhilaMphia Cammon wmlth. A Tana Man. Show us tho young man who can quit Um society of the young, ami tako pleasure in listening to the kindly voice of age; show ns the man who is ever ready to pity and help tho deformed; show us a man who covers tho faults of others with a mantle of charity ; show us a man who bows as politely aud gives tbo street as freely to the poor sowing girl s to tho millionaire ; who values virtue, not clothes; who shun tho company of such aa gather at public places to gaxe at the fair sex, or make unkind re mark of tho passing girl ; show us the man who abhors a libertine ; who scorns lite ridicule of his mother's sex, and the exposure of womanly reputa tion ; show us a man who never forget for aa instant tho delicacy due women, as a woman, in any condition or dsns and yoa show us a true gentleman. ! Corpulent old lady should liko a ticket for tho train." Booking clerk (who thinks bo will make a joke) "Yes; will yon go in the passenger train or cattle train?" Duly "Well if yoa are a specimen of what I shall experience in the passenger train, givo me a ticket for the rattle train by all means." ., i TEEMS $2 per annum in Advance. SERIES - VOL. 16, NO. 2. XEW ORAIX WXPEli. Prof. Dana iu D'esfmi Xao Yorker thus talks of it: A new era has dawn ed in the culture of the cereals, tho golden ago of farmer and farmers' wives, a day of deliverance (rem a crowd of hungry, high-priced laborers in harvest time. Mr. Daniel Mcl'her son, of Caledonia, N. Y has invented an attachment to tho Marsh harvester which bintls securely, with No. 19 an ncnlcd wire, tho grain as fast ss it Is cut. A trial of the machine was held on the farm of tho inventor, in the presence ol several grain fnrmcm and machinists. The trial was a perfect success. Jso bettor work was ever dono in a harvost field. Every spear was bound in tho sheaves; no rukiiigs were left. This strip, fifteen feet wide, between tho stundiiit; grain ami the straight line of bound sheaves wasper- feetly oloan and smooth,:-' The line of sheaves, arranged with military preci sion, looked like a battalion of soldiers. Tho Iron fingers of the machine bind thistles as ensily as grain, without gloves. The draft is about the snme ns that of ordinary reapers which do not bind. A team of medium weight make very easy work of it. In going six times around a flvo acre field of oats, not a failure occurred which could ho attributed to any fault of tho binder. The wire, which wa of poor quality and budly reeled, was broken a few times. One circuit was matlo without missing a single sheaf. ' Mr. i. A. MacKinncn, a skillful ma chinist, who has repeatedly examined the machine, says that it cannot possi bly fail to do its work jKsiloctly, and that, if well made of good materia!, it will last a lifetime. Tho machinery is very simple, very strong, and works with very littlo noise or friction. Ma jor 11. T. Brooks thought that the bind er would suvo the wages and board of live stiiuig men, say fifteen dollara a day during harvest time. With it a man can cut, rake and bind ton acres a duy. It can be set to bind a sheaf once iu any required distance, and, if tho grain is very unction, the distance pat over can lie varied for each sheaf oy means oi a lever women iy me foot. Sheaves may be bound tight or loose by varying the tension on the wire. All objection to the use of irou bunds is obviated hy the use at thresh ing time of a pair of nippers which cut tho wire anil hold it fust bv one end until it is dropped into a basket. The wire bands can thns bo removed as ra pidly as straw ones can be cut Not au objection could bo raised by any one present, which was not fully removed. Thcinventorhusbcen stndy ing and working npon his invention for fifteen years, and has expondeti fifteen thousand dollars upou it A bushel basket would hold tho result but fifty thousand dollars would not buy it. The mother, wife and sister of the inventor wore present at the trial. Their de light over its success may be imagined. Tbo nation and tho world will reiter ate their joy. McFhcrson's binder must bo as world-renowned a MtCor mifk's reaper. That the inventor may not, in any way, lose the honor or the f-pecuniary reward of his labors is the earnest wish ot tho writer., , . CURIOUS KUPERHTITIOXS. On the anniversary of tbo battlo of Blenheim, each year, a gentleman may lie seen getting off tho train at Wind sor, and carrying a white flag np to tho castle, depositing it into the hands of some court otlioiul with groat solemnity and ceremony. On the uuuivcrsary of Waterloo, another gentleman proceeds to tho snme place, also with a ling. iknn,rk iki. Hnxa ik h,,T,ii ! il 1 oolor. On a certain day in every Oc- tober, should you happen to bo iu tho I offlooofhcriu:ycsty'"lemcmlirancer," m London, vou would see threo very dignified gontlemen, with heavy wntoh souls and bristling side-whiskers, dili gently ongagod iu splitting fugols of ntHHi, uttti eotiiiung noiuu uorsu snoe and hob nails. Such arc a few of tho lingering relics of tho poetry of feudal ism in Knglnnd." Blenheim was given to tho great Duke of Marlborough, antl Btraiuneitisayo 10 jno gronier duko oi Wellington, on condition that the ccr- emony detailed alnive should be per-j"1'! formed nnntinlly forever. Tho city of Ijondon holds possession tn the shire ol Salop so long a certain officials make wood choppers arid nail reckoners ot themselves oucc even- your. What would occur if these flags did not ar rive at Windsor, or those nails were not counted, is as mysterious as the conse quences of "naming a momber" in tho House ol ( ominous. It nun nt least bo taken for granted that some worthy old Tories would bo hoard to deplore the fact that England was "going to tho dogs." ' Noboiy--cxcept, icrhaps. Itrstllaugh and a lew others ol Ins sort thinks, of abolishing these absurd, though nut unpietiiivsijiie perform ances. Keen lemple Jlar Is allowed to totter on its feeble fonndatitm, though it threatens to fall on the heads of tie Iisssers-by any hour of the day ; and lore seems to bo the limit passed be tween a harmless keeping alive of quaint old customs, and tho dangerous preservation dl what Is old simply on account of its ago, i ! , . p A CLEVER GOOSE.,, , ',' ' A correspondent of the Hartford Timr writes: "A lady in East U canity obtained ot a friend Big goose eggs said set them under a favorite hen., After (bar weeks' incubation, under great difficulties, the hen camo off with one healthy gosling Who caused Irer mneh trouble in corooqnonce of his reckless ness in gulling hi feet wet i Still there was great -afleotiou manifested bv both iiureiitaud child... lint thuhen. gradually grew oshanied, cither trf herself or of her strango chicken, (that hail outgrown her), ami she Sought another nesl, in a retired place, and 1 commenced sctluig fur another brood, Tho grading, wandered 'Jonoly as , a croud' until she ut lost matlo her ap-1 penryncfl with a fine brood of chicks, The gander st this lime had attained considerable shot, and labored hard to help lo support tho large family of his half brothers anil sister.. He would spread his wings antl brootl tho Chicks ami protect them from tho rain, and drive off all thb other fowls who inter fered with, his adopted family.: 11 would go out to tlie held and bring an enrol corn ami shell it off for tho chick, and woe to any other biped who at tempted to share the meal. At last tlie Industrious hen a gam went to work tor another nest, and then the whok charge oi the lamily devolved upon tlie gander. ' J hat s a JVeW England goose story. ' ' " ... A gentleman 1 said tn hi ganltrnet i "Oeerge, ths time will come when a man will be able to carry tb manure of an acre of land in one of hi Waist otrat pocket."' ' To which the gardener replied t "1 believe, it, sir; but he will be set io carry all the crop In the oiner. A RATTLE! KIM VllAlJZ., As 'soon as uM had iukun their scut we rowed off silently with double bank ed oar. Five largo boat were all wo could man, as many of tho fishermen had gone to the bunk in tho morning. Though their brown sails were in sight, tiiuo diti not allow their recall. Our armament was almost ludicrous ; be sides gun we carried axes, lances, old swimls nml HOVerui keillea for making1 a noise with. Several were busy im- " proving a formidable wcaHn by fasten ing scyiiio nioues to snort polos; one man culled, whilo mowing, sat in the bow, holding his scythe. As wa left tho rovo the women kept calling after us and wioiiliig us good luck, ana then . hurried to the cliff, where Uiey watcb- ...1 . 1 . I. .i ii i. : viiu iiiouii-nn i inn iiiuihi. juaninir a long detour, tho boats were quietly formed in a semi-circle to sea-ward of the dark group, which armeared uu- couscious of our approach ; as soon aa all woro placed, the leader fired a gun, and we Lore down upon tho whales with ull speed, nhoutiug and splashing the water. A movement is seen among tho whulua, dork form disappear and presently emerge again; tbey move slowly at first, then, increasing their sliced, rush in a foaming crowd toward mo shore. e lollnw nt our utmost speed, re gardless of the spray that dashes over -the bonis. Suddenly tho fish pause, feeling, perhaps, by instinct, that they are getting into shoal water; they turn, seem to deliberate, and select tbo weakest spot for a charge ; our speed . is slackened, and . all prepare for a slrturirle. Allot- a momfnl'a natisn. headed by tho largest of the herd, they rush at my boat, which hapiicned ' ,,. 1 l , l. ......,., !:.. n - they camo, raising a wall of foam, be hind which are dimly, seen arched . backs and agi tilled fins ; we shoot fire our guns, throw stones and dash the ours iu the water. They hesitate ; a few plunge under the bout ; 1 foci their uiiohs neiiipu netttiisi iiiu kv.i iu are thrown over and half filled with water; the next is received with tho blow of an axe from a gigantic fisher- . man ; terrified and spouting blood, tho wbule rushes back into the herd, and heads for tbo shore in his blind agony. . no redoiiniu our exertions, and mo fish, finally yielding, follow their wounded companion and fling them selves on tlie shore, where they lio wallowing in the shallow water. ' With a cry of triumph borne back from tho women who stood on the cliff, lancing and waving their arms in de light at tho prospect of an nbundant supply of winter foot), all the boats rowed for the shore, each striving to ' be first to commence tho fight. W'ith a final cheer tho men drove the boats in nniomr the fish, leaned out aud be. gan striking right and loft.-. Quite sat isfied with my exertions 1 sat in tba bout aud watched the strange combat, already closing, as the poor, stupid fish, ignorant of their strength, fell easy victims to their determined cnomiee. The sight was strange and striking, tho cloudless sun was shining on tlie waves of tho bay ; blue, except ovor a largo patch, many yards ui extent, lived red with blood. Each wave ' showed a stream of crimson as it wash ed over the glistening bodies, rejoicing that it could insult the strango forms that hail lately swam lords of the deep. Helmut the narrow beach rose the steep cliff, down which the women and chil dren were running, their shrill cries rising above the shouts 4 the men and tho roar of the waves. Gradually tbo , tumult ccanotl, except where a whalo in the last throes, wrapped himself In a cloud of bloody spray, and deluged the men who stood watching ibr an other blow, . ' . , i! LIGHTS UX HEALTHY, , It is not generally understood that burning lights are unhealthy in sleep. ing rooms. The combustion of gas, oil, tnllaw or whatever material is used for illuminating purposes, renders the air impure ; for it consumes oxygen, tho great life sustaining element in tho atmosphere. Man cannot live, only for a few moments, in a room deprived of its oxygon. (It should be remem bered tliut air is composed of oxygen . 23 parts and nitrogen 77 parts.) Now when this clement is anyway reduced below the standard of pure ont-door , air, it is sure to interfere with the healthy functions trf life and lay the foundations ol disease. ! , Suicnoe teaches ss that lesniration . , and oombustir.u require tbo same clo- .. mont to support them, namely, oxygen. ' 'ul a , burning lamp in an air-tignt room and when this element in the air is used up, tho lights will go out ; and unttor the seine conditions, a man would die. . Ever" ono has noticed what slow progress a firo will make When confined to a closed room, and how soon it will blare np when a door is opened and free air Is admitted. They have also noticed how dim a ' light will burn toward morning in a Mii - ed sick-room. Ao ono. need be that burning light in a sleeping .. room is unhealthy, if they bav ever entered ono from the pure air, Into at ' ' night, where two or three persons -' were sleeping with a burning kerosene -lamp and smell tho foul and noxious ,, air, , that , bus been deprived of its-, oxygen and poisoned by carbonic acid and naif burned kerosene lamp smoke;1 ' which charges the blood with noxious matter and so perverts tho action of . tho brain and nervous centres that , ; neither the phywieal nor mentalpowers ' oan ho duly irxorcised. 1'ooiJo who-' sleep iu this way will rise in the morn-.,,, iiuf, tired soil unfrcslied, with a bad taste in the month, and a sense of heat "' and aching fn the head.-1 Their heads '' feel dull and hot, their minds ar slug- . gWi and tbey are unfit .for .study or i, labor until thoy have reeiiperatod their , system with some of God's pure air, '' which can'' I had Ibr nothing any- ' Where out of doors, . i. A room which roqiiiros an artificial , ... light, should be well ventilated., If yen must keep a light burning all night opeu your windows antl keep a constant supply of fresh air in your room; then you will sleep sweetly,'..; nWako in the morning, refreshed and -, , invigorated, with a clear 'head and strong arm ready lur .the duties of tho Uour. , i) ;q . r .. ,.t ., ,.v Ar Eiutor Ku.i.E.-r-A ftital affray necurod at New Oilcan on Who 2Gth of .. DooembfT, " in a tight hetweeu Dan U. tfycrly, anapy'of the' IMIeHn. " nod iwc -Governor l ui inouth, on Canal ' , smart, Hyerlv knocked VV armouthdown , wnn a sut'f; nun jmnpen on mm.- '' Worutuutlt .'thou ' drew hid knift and : '' stiilrinrd Dyerly several- times ia the , abdomen.' Wsrmoaith was-arrested luiimediatoly'aiter the fight and enn- " vcyod to the Third 'Precinct station.' He tifts been transferred tn Ipriseni trt await tbo resnltof Dycrly's wounds. , Mr. Dycrly received six wounds in tho lalslomon. Miortiyullcrncuigwoiintica, Mr. Dycrly wns removed to the Or-' leans Infirmary on Danphln street Dyorly died of his wounds, lie was formerly a citlaon "of Westmoreland county, In this Htste, and well known uy us erair, in riusiiurgn, , . ,,,,. ' Jennie Juno has the following good " counsel for girls :" " f ' Girts, hike bold of the first iWurlt r that comes to your bsuU no matter,,,, what it is. Yon will soon find ont if , it is the thing you want to do, or can ' do best. ; Tho most promising yoottg" " actress In America to-day rwmtminati -t by being s aiirao-maiil. and a Well.,.,, known artist, only found out abs could,. , paint by ombreijoring for a lip'ng.-r Tho exerclso of tho Jacurtlea In ani ": useful occupation I good,' antl Most-"'' reive in te .aiog it But thatv4 . -it ia, brifig all there i (rood ia y to,. boat upon, it, that the record may in, ,- no way rte iliacreditaM to you."