, .maun-. ;'-'" ..,,;, tub " CLEA1FIKLD EEPIBLICAV eoSUtSB BtBBV WaBBBSDAV, 1 : OEORCB B. UOOIH.AHDKB. CLKARFIBLD. PA. i . BUTABLIIHBD IN IB!. rhe largest I'lrealatlsa ifu; MiwtfiH' la Nortk Cealral Feaaejrlvaal. . - Termiof Subsoription, If paid In idrutM, or wlthla I nontbt....99 (HI If potd kfur t and Won 6 monlh..u 9 50 rr Hld Altar tbo oiplratloa or uoatba... S OU it; 1 Rates oi Advertising. . . frutlant adrortltontntt, par tquaroof lOIinoioj 1MB. hum r . 1 L..l..u....ll.l.n ldmtnUtn.Ura'aad Exooutort' aoUoot...... I ) Auditor' notio - Caution aod E'trty M .,., I Di notation notloaa t Profaaaionol Corda, i Hot or Ifia,! year...- I Loeol n-.tleaa, por 11b...... .. W YKARLY ADVERTISEMENTS. 1 ar....v W M I oliimiH.,.,HH,M I aquaru U 00 1 ft eoluni..M.H. ft I iqun M I ulu 120 Ot OBORQI B. OOODLANDKR, K.tiior Hi Pobllahor. (Jarfls. not. i. ai et.r. ctbub eoaaos. MURRAY & GORDON, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, 1:107. CLKARFIKLD, PA. ' ' 1 FRANK FIELDING, ' " ATTORNEY-AT-IiAW, Clo.rUeld, P. . Will illial U .11 kuaiiiH. e.inutrf lo hi" ptoupUj .nd 0iuin.ii. WILLI. A. WALLAOl. TIB I Kft.M. Ar r. W4LLAl:. J w- W.IOL.T. WALLACE 4. KREBS, . (BuKMion M WtllM. A ri.ldi.(,t . ATTOBNK Y8-AT-LA V, 111I7S ClMrfl.ld, Pa. ' . . WILIOf, . . . TA TALIAI, . . DBS. WILSON & VAN VALZAH, ClMrn.U, P. 0m la rt.ij.ac. f Dr. Wlltoa. " Orrira llofaai From It U 1 r. . Dr. Van Taliak caa b. fooad at tifbt In hi. room", nil door to lhruwlca A Irwin'i Draf Stor., p lain. " . rTjefferson litz, WOODLAND, PA. Will proapU jf attaad all call! la la. Ha. or hli pr.fia.ioa. a.r.l-IB nun s. a'aiAur. Aiaa w. coaor. ' MoENALLT k MoCUEDY, ATTOKNBYS-AT-LAW, Claarneld. Pa. -Legal baiinni .it.ndtd I. promptlr wllaj i.l.l.tr. OBo. oa Heooad itrwt, .l. tk. Fir.l Natlooal Ilwik. Jawl:H G. R. BARRETT, ATTOHRir AND CoDMSELOR AT LAW, CLKARFIKLD, PA. llaTlat r..ind kit Jadgaihlp, kal Mil.! th. praalio. or Ik. U la hi. old olio, at Cl.ar lleld, Pa. Will atl.ad tho ao.rtl or Jefanoa aad Klk oo.otlu wb.o apMiall; r.talal la M.antioa .Ilk mldeat kuuwI. I: Mill WrVT. M. MoCULLOUGH, ATTORN KY AT LAW, Claarneld. Pa. -Ofllo. la Court tloooo, Mkarliri ono. b.alniu prompllr all.adtd to. R.al tat. bought and lold. A. W. WALTERS, ATTORNEY AT LAW, . Claarneld, Pa. Vt.0fflct la Or.h.m'i Row. dMl l; " H. w.'sWth," ATTORN EY-AT-L AW, tlil.ri ClaarHeld, Pa. W ALTER- B 7r R E T T, ATTORNEY AT LAW. IBM bb S.ad St., CI.arB.ld, Pa. a.rll.M ISRAEL TEST, ATTORN KY AT LAW, . Clearfield, Pa. jaw-OSe. IB Plt't Opera llo.aa, t JjrliaJT JOHN H. FULFORD, . ATTORNEY AT LAW, ' : ' ' ' Clearfield, Pa. aC-OBot'la Pie a Optra lloaa., Room No. I. J... I, l7l. - JOHN L. CUTTLE, ATTORNEY AT LAW. lad Heal Batata Agent, Clearfield, Pa. OBe. .a Third tlrttt, hel.Cherrj A Walaat, ay-t.apMtr.ll tftrt hit MrrlMfla a.lhag lad ku.lag laada la Ol.arl.ld sad adjolalog waatlaa Bad wltk aa tip.rUa...f ..artwtatT rem aa a aarvayor, tattara klma.lf tkat k. tea renter aallafaelioB. : I'tb- llil:tf, FEEDEEIOK O'IaEAET BUCK, 8CKITENER & CONVEYANCER, General Life and Fire Ins. Agent.' Dttda ot Coarejtnot, Artlelu of Agra.ta.at aad all legal pantra at.aptl. Bad aaatlt e.e aled. OIKo. la Kei 0Mra Hoauea, Rwta Ma. 4. Claarltld, Pa, April 1, W. J7BLAKE WALTER 8 , REAL ESTATE BROKER, ABB DBAUB II Haw Log and I.untber, CLBARFIRLD, PA. Ot ta Srakaai'i Row. l:tiTl LTngle V aTTOBN!! - Al - IiAW, 1:11 Oeceela, Cl.arlleld Cow, Pa. j:pd ROBERT. WALLACE, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, rTallaeeloB, Cltarield Ceaaty, Peaa'a. tA.AII Itgal bulla... proaiptlj atuadtd to. . DR. T. J. BOYER, PHYSICIAN AMD S 0 RO EON, OBot aa Htrbtl 8tmt, Cler.ld. Pa. '"OBm koarai I ta II a. m.. Bad I lo I p. BV D R. E. M. 8CUEURER, HOMfKOPATltIO PHYSICIAN, 00a. la ratldtaea em Market at. April U, H71. CltarA.ld, Pa. DR. W. A. "MEAN 8, PHYSICIAN k 8DKOKON, LUTUKRSBl'RO, PA. Will altead profeailoatj ealla prnmpllj. auglOTI J. 8. BARNHART, ATTORRRT . AT LAW, Belief..!., P.. Will p net lee Ib l'learl.ld ed U "f Ik. Ce.rlt af tk. 14lh Jadieial dl.lrtel. KeeJ MtaU kulaee. bad -olleollo. .1 tlalaaa aaad. aptalalllM. al'TI C. BAKER, BARBER AND HAIK DRES8ER, CLBARFIRLD, PA. hep Ib .Id W altera Hotel, earaw of Market Bad rjMad etreeu. lJoa' JAMES CLEARY, BABAEB ft HAIB DEESSEB, BIOOD ITRKRT, )yl CI.RAIFIBin, PA. (U JAMES 0. WHITE, BARBER AND HAIR DRESSER. Raeai Ib tkt IaMaard Ho.a., bepit'Ii Cltarield, Pa. T. M. ROBIN80N MaBafaetarer aad doaVar la Oarness, Saddles and Bridles, C.llara, Wklpa, kraakaa, Fly Ntta, Ttlaaaiaga. Herat Vlaaatta, t. Vanaa, Fraab MIIHri aad KtaufMt 011a. Ara.l far B.lle. aad Wllna'a B.niM. Orden aad r-p.lriag prmptly tua dad la. Shop ea MarBat ItrMa, vieoraoi., ra., ia re-n ftraaarly aMapead ky Jaa. Alaaaadar. (I:'7d MITCHELL WAGONS. The Bert ii the Cheapeat! Tkwat RaiJIi aea e.e.lrad aMaor larg. let ml "MIWa.ll WagMa," aklek are aaraaf Ike .aey kl aaaaarMawd, aa4 arkltfe be will tall at the ot. rauraaWo ralta. lllaauak laaladaa alaae all aheartpliaaa M w.geat lawgaaad Baaall, wade Bad aarraw lra.k. Call aa I ad. Ihaaa. epre 'a IUOMAB RRILLT. JAMES K. WATSON A CO., , . RKAL B9TATI BR0KBR4. CLRARHgLDPBrlBA. H-ataa aad 0aea I. M, CelUrtW biiu.II. aiade, aad tratlaaa Cal atal Flia-Qlaa Uoda aad Taw. area arty I OB. La ki BeUI B.IMlag II f I .dm. (aaylrray (IE ' " iii in ' i i " ii , i " i ; i ' 1 ii i i i i i i ----- i " ....,.-,. ' ' ........ - " -' " " - ' " - ' " " :"-- f"T' GEO. B. COODLAJTDEB, Proprietor. . . , , I . : . PRINCIPLES, NOT MEN. , 1 ,,: ' ;! ; , ; ; 1' , "i 7 " TEBMS-$2 per annum in Advance. . - i " : ; "7"T7 'f.f"nr " " ' ' . . , (- r - -? - VOL! 49-WHOLE NO. 2405. ! CLEARFIELD, PA., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 27, 1875. ''..: 1 ; "', . : NEW SERIES-V0L. 16, NO.1 4. ", , , i ,, ; ,;. ,, . ,::.)... i . I ' r .! , i I -iM . i . .1 1 ..,fl," ; ; ....... !! ' "' '' ' tst&t. A. G. KRAMER, ATTORNKY-AT-JjAW BmI lilata aad OoIImIIo Au'i CLBARPIELU. PAM WIH pttwptlr all.ad I. all lf.l kailaMa i ptrOtu la Pid'i Optra M.ae aHd oor. apru i'ia l.ka 11. Orrll. O. T. ALaaadar. 0. M. Do.tn OEVIS, ALEXANDEB & BOWIES, ATTORN BYS AT LkW, Balleront., Pa. JaalBlt-; J. H. KLINE, M. D.,1 PHYSICIAN 4 SUBGEON, TTAVINU looaUd at P.natld, Pa.. olT.rl kit I I pro'taiional urtlo.1 w uit pw.pi. '" plu. aad turroaadial raaalr;. Alloall. prompll tlanriad to. " 7 i.. p. nvm, . . . PBALBB IB . GENERAL MERCHANDISE, lvjiber, auMjrai.Ea, tit., -AT THE CORNER STORE, Carwaanlllt. N.r. , 1174. JOHN D. THOMPSON, JljitlM .f tkt Ptae. aad 9.riT.o.r, CarwuBTlllt). Pa. M.C.IIulloaa aiada aad noat- promptly p.ldT,. JHXL .ao. AUaar aaaar Aum Aaaaar W. ALBERT A. BROS., ar.nna.tHr.r. A axbnriT. Dwltrala Sawed Lumber, Sauare Timler, &o., . WVUVhABUi rn. . w-Ord.n wllclltd. Bill! tll.d aa akarl aoliot ana rhvd.u.. i.... Addrau Woodlaad P. O., Cltarlltld Cs., Pa. ,jj.ly W A.LBKHT A BROS. FRANCI8 COUTRIET, MERCHANT. fr.uh.llla. tl.arntld Coaaty, Pa Kttp. aoaitaalljr B kand a hll auortmtnt .r Dry flood!, Hardwan, Orot.H.a, aad aTwylhinf naoally kt la a ntail- ator., wkltk will b. .old. ror tub, ai taaap at .itawntr. ' Pi.n.klll.,Jua. , 18Mj. THOM A8 H. FORCEE, BBALBB IB GENERAL MERCU ANDI8B, c:R AHAMTtlN. Pa. AlK, .ll.a.l.t aiaDara.tar.raad daalar la 8aara I in. oar aaa oawo. -" . -Ord.rt aolltUtd aad all killa pranptl; Dlltd. I ' " ncilRFN HACKMAN, House and Sign Painter and Paper Hanirer. o - I'lAarflaM. P.nnrau tam Will a.ayula Uk. la kia llaa BnCUptl tad .. a wvr.naraiiK. aaannvi. " G. H. HALL, . PRACTICAL PUMP MAKER, MAR CLBARFIRLD, PKNR'A. u t.rf bk .I aiaJa I. ant. .a akort aotiee. Plpa bartd oa raaeoaabla Uraia. en h ..rraBtad ta ranHar a.tlafaetioa. Bad dallrarad II dtalnd. a.jl.:l;pd E. A. BIGLER A CO., SQUARE TIMBER, . . . - -a . ALL KIHDBOPBAWED LCHBKR, ' (.HI CLKARFIKLD, PBNN'A. JA8. B. GRAHAM, dealer la Beal Eatate, Square Timber, Bo&rdi, 8UIHOLB8, LATH, riL'BKia, t:1071 Clearfield, Pa. f AM.KS MITCUELL, aaiLaa ib Square Timber & Timber Lands, J.U"TI CLKARFIKLD, PA. 4 DR. J. P. BURCH FIELD, Lata Sargaaa ef tkt 13d R.gtaeal, Peaaejliaala VtlaalMrt, ka.la r.taraed frea. Ik. Amy, ofara kit ar.faaal.aa) atnlasB la tktaillaaM of ClearteU ooaaty. aaarPrcfe.alon.lcalla preaaptly attaaitd to. OBe. oa Baaoad atr.et, toraeritetaplid by Dr. Woodl. ar,'-U Ha Fe N AUGLE, WATCH MAKER & JEWELER, aad dcakr la Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Silver ana natea ware, sc., 1 Jtirrt CLBARFIRLD, PA., 8. I. 8 N Y D E R, , PRACTICAL WATCBMAKRR l iB BBAtaa IB L Watcbei, Clocki and Jewelry, oVaaaa't Jfetr, Marktl ArMf, CLKARVIELD. PA. All klada af naalrlaf la Biy Hat promptly al aiiMto. April M, UTS. RBMOVALa ' REIZENSTEIN & BERLINER, . . wboUwto datvlcro m . CETS' FlRMSHIIiG GOODS. Hotb ronuTMl to l7 Chirek BtrMt, Witii rrtnkl.B bb(J WhIU iW., Maw York. 71 Miss E. A. P. Rynder, Oktkorlag'a fiulaway 'a aad Kaaoraoa't Floaooi BoiU't, Htdtoa a naania a o roiowaot'a Orgaat aad Mtlo4ooaa, aad 6 ror or A Bthor'a Bowiag Moohiaoo. a MO TWACBBB OW m aj. uaiiev, ufMi aiaTaaatj mmm tbwi mo aU. No popU Ukoa for loot thaa bolf a Urai. mr Kooow -pp" oua raraiiara mora. Oloarltid, May , B6f.tf. I. IOU4WIVH . a. I -.) BoftATiaCAaat HOLLO WBUSH A CABE7, BOOKSELLERS, Blank Book1 Manntbctoiren, AMI ITATIORBRJ, , SIS JdrM Ma, riUlmdelpMm. bata-PaMr Flavr gaaka Bad Bega, ftoteaaa. Lallar, ja.ee, wrappuag, ayaruia aa. nan Paper.. f.bli.JI S' TONE'S SAW GUHUER8 AND 8 AW UPSETS. , Wt havo rooolvod tho agoaoy M tho ahovoaad wmtollthoBaAmBafaotBror'tprtooa. Ooll aad ot mb too thoak Tbay art tho boat. )0lf-TI " N. . tVIULBH m vu. A. M. H I LL8 W.ald rarpeetrelly aellfy kit aalleala that k. kat rwleeed Ike prlao tl ARTI- riv.nuia,a,ini. a.vn par wmt or (SI M for a double eat. For asy Iwa partoaa a. M aaast IIBSt, 10 .... ,UI BB Bppet art, will get tka two tell for J tO, el taek. Tertat lararlably Cata. Clearlald, Martk It, tin. 'con Lire Insurance Company. OF HARTFORD, COBB. Atetd... . ...t3tH,H tkatl. t. aaeOT. a. atiewiiiueau.. g fm aleket lata raw ta at tko my lowttttat FelUiy betden pwlielpal. ia Ik. prtdu ef tk. Oeaapaay, tkaa aaatlaaaliy padaalag tkeaaaaal Fee rata., At., tail oa or addraaa R. M. MoKNALLT. Ataat. OBe. la Bkawa Boa). Olaardati. Pa. floTd WILLIAM II. HENHY, a Paaaa aaa aMrraaBa, MTMBBB CUT.' Oaai.Mut aaaata waB a.aa., pataprly atad a-..teltaaaa aalaiaaaal aad daada of lalaa aaa warraaled ear. BajyTt AMI . THI OLi FARM NOUtC Tbo tMf obklr, all ptxttbod wltfc w j Ii pUeW ky Iht td kprt-.rtOBo With wMohiag graet, Ib Um oW lrv-plMf, Tb OTtrfTMtU BP ItraWB, Ab1 plotttm hB( tbt wbiUnod bII, Aad lb old ctock tiokt ta tho oottag , Mofo IotoTo Milt, oa tkt wiadow III, Tko im9f4 lowort not, White sttUl tho loofoa oa too Moat-grom mtm, Bbo aaartia balldi bor owt Aad all dy long tho an mar brooao ll wbliparlng ko lo tho bondod trota. ' Om tho door, an eororod o'or i WIU aaeh af dork grooa bIw, Loti a aiaokot m4, vkvoo worth ia told Ib tho ovtnta of othor cUya ( Aad tho powder loth, aad ibo haoUr'i hora, . Ilavo bs bootdo It for uaaj ft aiora. For yoaro havo flod, with doIhImi traau), Lifco fairy droaoii wy, Aad ia thalr flight, allihoraof IU ailght 1, A flhtr old Bad arav i . - And tho toft winda play wllh tho mow whlU bolr, Ana tM ola aii uoopa ia bit oatj oaair. Iaildo tho door, oa tho untied floor, ' L.gda. tj dpitpa - And a mairlta firf with floiaa hair, Kaeola by iho old ataa'i aide An old oak wroekod by tho angry atom, ft biU tho try oltaga to ita IromhllBg form. WINTER SPORT W THE MIS SISSIPPI BOTTOM. BT rABBAB WTDB. The extensive tract of lowland, for (wt and swamp, known ait tho Miwig- ippi "Bottom, is one of the various regiona. m ctirroront qunrtcm of the l'Iodo to whicli, at one timo and an other, 1 have resorted in search of sport j for there, at certain seasons of the year, an abundant variety of game is to be found. The Bottom is not to lie recommended to anybody as tho rilit plneo to go, cither in the Hummer or In the Pall, tor at these seasons the nnlortunnto sojourner w so soroly af. Dieted with the tropical heat, the ajjuo, and .1 ho mosqmtoeii and othor blood sucking insects, as to make life seem well nii;h intolerable, and death a bless ed relief. Hut with the first month of Winter the lileasant time boeiii. and for two or three months thereafter the man who love a genial sky and brac ing atmosphere, a rough labyrinth territory to explore in, work for his gun 'in variety and abundance, and last, though not least, vory irood living, that man will find in the Missis sippi liottom all these attractions. It has been my lot to shoot on both sidea ot the river; but 1 prefer the eastern shore, although the mallard in Arkan sas has always teemed to mo to be a bird ot bigger size and brighter plum age than his kinsman of Mississippi Of course, that ia nothing more thau a mere ihney. At a distance Irom any of the towns, the country on the Ar kansas side la sparsely settled, and my recollections oi are not inc pieasant ost. Many a weary mile have I ridden in search of a cup of cold water, and often have I turned away from mile cabin and log huts almost always with the same answer a scowl, and a slam of the rickety door. But 1 have found an excuse lor such rude treat ment, similar as It was to the inhospit ality Goldsmith's "Traveler" may have experienced, wktrt tht rutt Cerlntbl.n boor Agaiaat aa. aoaaeitta meager abare tb. dar. I say I have found an exense for It, in the sickness prevailing among the peo ple, for all seem to be wan and yellow, worn out and shaking with the fever and ague. ' Ho such miserable exiienencca min gle in my recollections of Mississippi only happy memories recur to me In thinking of that rich Rtate. It cannot with propriety be called an Arcadia, bnt there ia nothing in it to repel any one somewhat used to roughing it, and not afraid to wet his ankles. The temperature at this season of tho year ia apt to be changeable, and the ice of the morning la melted at noon. . A roaring log Are is very desirable at nigbt, especially In tho airy frame houses of the liottom, raised oft the ground on trcascla as they sometime are, to keep them free Irom tho damp. Nevertheless, it i no difficult . matter to pnt oneself in a perspiration tramp ing through th woods in tho daytime. But what a country It is for sport, when once the aquatic birds begin to fly south I Hore they find great scope ot open water ana great scop or corn- fields. The crops that are grown in tb riottom are corn, cotton, and sorghum the corn averaging eivht feet high, and the cotton five feel, and the fields are now no doubt whit with cotton not yet gathered. But the cultivated land Is a mere patch in comparison with the extent oenpied by the swamps, the woods and the cane brakos. Let me try to describe the features ot the region. Immediately behind tho levee, con. structed tokoep tho "Father of W atcrs within bounds, there is generally a cy. press swamp, a belt of Cottonwood trees, or a canebreak the can being so dense that a man on horseback has a hard and painful job of it to get through their ranks, tho while they conduct a vigorous bastinado onevcrv port of hia luckless bofly. After all, be may fail to penetrate. Behind these swamps ana cane-brakes lie the culti vated fields and the tracts of "deaden ing," in which the troe trunks lie rot ting, or stand upright, black, charred and spectral, amid the tall rank grass. now tine ghotiiB lueau rjincK trunks look in the dusky twilight, aa they loom up from the vaporous irround and are dimly ontlined against the murky heavens 1 And what a bard time you would have getting a "colored brud der" to pans in their awful vicinity after dark I In these fields of "dead ening" the deer lie ruminating, and doga give tongue era they tiava been in their covers many minute. Deer are to be had either by still banting them or by running them before the dogs : bnt a the former method re quires not only great experience, but also an accurate knowledge of the country, a stranger will find tho other the more productive and satmutrtory of the two. Although some of the planters In the liottom keen their own packs or bounds, yet It will be aa won tor the sportsman, if be go south with the intention of running deer, to take along a couple or dogs, 'lbs pooplo are generally very readyto point out the deer passes, or "stands, and 1 acknowledge that with or without dogs I never found myself in a difficulty, or came away disappointed. Howover, it should be borne in mind that a letter of introduction, though not absolutely requisite, will he found a never failing "open sesame to the hospitality and goon omcea oi tne people. jtonma tne swamps ana cane-DraKeH, behind the cultivated field and the tracts ot "deadening," stretches the great forest, encroarboa upon at Inter vals By patches of cleared land, and in- teraected by lengthy bayous and broad lagoons. These are the winter haunts of aqnatie birds, and tht is a veritable sportsman's Mradia. rlvalinv the hv potbatieal hunting grounds of the red "era tne sportsman may i aB and gaes Innumerable, i (Wat also, IT h can find them. All kiads of water fowl are as thick aa blBckherrle n August, and may h .1 . shot in many places where they are easily recovered at tho cost of a wet ting ; but when one has to thread his way among the lagoons and bayous, a good retriever is an almost indispensable assistant, some oi the lagoons are oi great extent, and are almost invariably provided with a skiff, a dug out, or a floating machine of some sort, the use of which is generally to be had without any trouble by an application to the neighbor planter, whoso property it is. To my mind, duck shooting afloat is better than duek shooting on terra firma. Pushing out from tho littlo cove where tho skin has been moored, let the sportsman paddle towards ono of the clumps or reeus which dot tho sur face of tne water here and thero like little Islands, and let him run tho skiff close by Its edge, or even a short way among the rocjs, so as lo leavo a fringe or them between his craft and clear water. By these means ho is placed fairly in concealment. Tho birda in the neighborhood have of course been distributed by this manicvre, but be fore very long a string of ducks flies overhead, and when onco the firing has begun all the water fowl on the luke are set in commotion by the noise, and ono train after another sweeps past within easy range and in rapid succession. Indeed, it very soon be comes necessary to sot about removing the dead ami wounded birds, and though it is with considerable reluct ance that one proceeds to paddle to and fro to find the birds ho has hit, especially when the game is so plenti ful as to give even a breech loader lit tlo rest ; yet the' duty should not be omitted or too long postponed, and no disabled bird should be allowod to creep into sodgoB or linger on in pain. When the birds have all boon picked, the position should be changed to anothor clump of reeds ; fur ducks muy soon become shy of the spot where their enemy lies concealed when onco it ia discovered, and are certain thereafter to give it a wide berth. Swan are also to be found in considerabio num bers on these lagoons, but are not easy to net w-ithin range of : yet I have seen thorn very readily tumbled over by making a bullet ricochet along tho ice. The best sort of place to post yourself to shoot ducks and goese in the morn ing and in the evening is among the rows of cornstalks in some field wilhu pond in it, as many fields in the Bottom have ; or, at least adjacent to some water. A man with an observant oyo very soon discovers the right spot, and is successful In his sport accordingly. Flocks of wiltl turkeys are often to be met in the woods in the Bottom, and, for my nart. I nrefor them to come across my path, tor 1 have not been very fortunate when I set out to hunt them with premeditation. Ullen I have invited them to my neighborhood with dulcet notes blown upon the shank bone of one of their own kind, but my invitations have been in vain. They either did not hear my call, or, having heard, deigned not to give it the slightest heed, a circumstance mfIiisiV. h-!.!! It l.aa '..ii.n.l ma In aWa some it my pretensions to be a master of tho SKrting craft, has unquestion ably raised the turkey in my respect as a bird poe cased of some small mod icum of sense, all reports to tho con trary notwithstanding. 1 bavo nover had an opportunity to entrap them by means of a docoy bird, but at dawn ol day I have lain in wait for them at their roost on the persimmon troe, and have carried on most oi the brood, it ia the early bird that gets tho worm, and this early method of circumventing the turkeys is tho only satistaciory method I havo learned in my experi ence. There is only one difficulty abont it tho difficulty of finding out their roosting place, but tho roost found, one must be a vory Indifferent rartaman If he do not flnu the turkey so. If the visitor to the Bottom ran enlist tho aid of any of tbe local nim rods, he may probably vary tho monot ony of hia snort with an occasional bear nnnt. J no Drum oi tne liottom is far Irom being a formidable animal, and ia rarely in a humor to molest anything bigger than a ahoto, or suck in if pig : but when he haa been smoked out of his hollow tree, or teased out of bis cor.y quarters into which ho has retired to bybernate, or when, possibly, lie has been slightly wounded with a bullet, or bit upon tho nose with a heavy missilo, then ho is no gentle cus tomer for dogs to encounter, or men either, for that matter. Bear bunts in the Bottom are all much alike, and they invariably have one issue; a tedious search for the bear the provo cation of bim to combat, sometimes as todious a short, sharp tussel with the dogs a few bold strokes with the knife and that kt the death of bruin. The fight with the dogs is the exciting part of the business, and if the animals seem in danger of faring badly, the bear receives tbe coup ae gract so much the sooner. The country in tho neighborhood of Austin, Duuvar cuuiiiy, iuiBuianmin, aiiu in the vicinity of llclcna, Arknnsas, some twenty or thirty miles below . .! Tl 1 1 . ... .If .... t Austin, answors very closely to the de scription givon above. Indood, in writing this article, I had these two district chiefly In my mind! This winter three years ago I was hunting in Arkansas, a hundred miles or more north of Helens ; but it i a mnch long er period since last I was in Mississippi in search of game. The folks then were trying to reconstruct and rocu pcrate, and toiling very bard, with varying luocess, to grow a bale of cot ton to the acre. The sport then was as good as I doscrib it, "and from all 1 can learn it Is little inferior now. But tbe sportsman has this groat advantage in the Bottom : It is impossible he can be cribbed, cabined, and confined in ono spot, for he has only to hail the first steamer In order to transport himself to "Jrcsh fields and pastures new." forest an nm. California Rttlb. Not long sinco, a German was riding along Hansom street, near Sacramento, when ho heard a pistol shot behind him: heard the whining of a ball near him, and felt his hat shaken. Ho turned and saw a man with a revolver In his hand, and took off his hat, and (bund a fresh bul let hoi in It "Did you shoot at mof" asked the uorman. "Yes;" replied the other party "that's my horse ; it waa stolon from me recently." "You must bo mistaken," said the Gorman, "1 have owned tho horse for three years." "Well," said the other, "when 1 come to look at bim, I believe 1 am mistaken, Excuse mo, sir, won t you tako drink f SwBBTBKiHa Old Laid. Take small bunch of slippery elm bark and pat it in th lard, and cook one hour. ' Iloll closed Or repairs" waa tb uua or ma nev. air. iiuu sermon, in new Haven, on New Tear night . . . . . ' - 11511 FASIIIOXS W YALEXT1SF.S. 1 Thero was a time when valentines wore simply love-letters wrifton on very fancy note paper, with somo poo try and a bunch of forget-me-nots at the head. Years ago my dear old grandmother made me happy by send ing mo one of these, which 1 have still, and very pretty It is, although the ink is faded to a yellow. Tho poetry is especially nice, but tho punctuation marks are lett out, as they didn't care abont these troublesome littlo things in the good old days. I think it said : ' "Whaa tka tuBikiBe It aroond thee ' la tbt dark aad alltot aigkt Ia tbt eotltgt and lue palte. May thy way balwaye bright!" Of course 1 couldn't imagine who sent it, nobody Who gets a viilcntiiic ever can, but t strongly suajioctcd Sally Lawton, aril she hud a bite out of all my apples Initil I found out my mistake. '1'oinrnV Jones whs her . val entine, anil I gave liim a punching un it, too, as no was mean, and pretenden all the timo that lie didn't like her. However, the old fashion has passed away, and valentines arc- now. very elaborate things, employing thousands of skillful workmen in their manufac ture. . They serve as the covers of a 1 sorts of coetly presents, and somo of tuein are real works ot urt. never designers are constantly employed in tho invention of the new combinations, pleasing effects of grouping or color, and whimsical surprises. Tho most careful labors of draughtsmen, lillio graphem, wood-engravers, painters, color printerSjCardboard, arlificiul flow er and feather makers are spent upon them, to say nothing of the assistance given by workers in silk, silver and glass. Kven tho tropical (uresis of Uracil and tho depths of the sea arc ransacked fur fresh materials. Thero is n firm in London which has three hundred and sixtv-oight dif ferent kinds of valentines, 'i'he cheap est are two cent each, and the finest cost nearly sixty dollars. All are pret ty, and some are magnificent. . One is called "Lovo' .'holograph." A tiny mirror is hidden beneath a bunch of flowers, and some dear girl finds that tho reflection of her own face is your love's photograph. Thero are true lovers' knots painted on tho softest satin ; birds of bright plumago under Sauzo; girls in silver frames, paper owcrs which bloom when tho valen tine is openod and close when it is shut; more paper flowers hidden behind screens of silver and in little wicker baskets, with exotio flowors painted by band on tho finest silk and framed in silver lace. No florist ever succeeded bettor than tho modern valentine-makee does in putting together the prettiest colors. Blush rose and forget-me-nots; ca melias, with rich dark groen leaves ; lities of tho valley, water libra, ferns and pansies aro combinod with a won drous degree of taste and skill. Home- times tho valentine is tho miniature of a transformation scene in a theatre. It ia folded and unfolded by an ingeni ous arrangement, which roveals a gar am, wltk - not of birds flvint it, and a lake of mirror-glass, with a swan upon its shining surt'nee. Sometimes, too, the flowors aro neith er painted nor made of paper or muslin. Far away in Brazil, there is a largo convent, in which the sedato nuns make gay artificial flowers eutiroly out of tho leathers of tho gorgeous birds that haunt tho forests ul South America. I cannot give you an idea of how rich and lustrous they are. More than this, marine flowers gathered from tbo bot tom ot tho Mediterranean Sea arc used in valentines, and real bfhls aro quito common. As Lucy opens the box that comes for her with a whole string of postage stumps upon it, it is possible that sho will find the ciinningest of humming-birds in a little nost, holding a message in its beak. Not tho pic ture of one, mind you, but a real one, that has been caught and slutted tor the valcntino-makcr. Tbe latest fashion in valentines Is to combino them with useful articles. A lace or pearl-handled fan, costing sixty dollars, is secreted beneath flowers and mottoes and Cupids. A fine silk neck tie, for a gentleman or boy, is wrapped in whit gauze, with tho tender senti ment: "Through cloud and sunshine I am thine." Articles of dress or jew elry often are enclosed. Hometimes a smoking-can or a pair of embroidered slippers. '1 be descriptive catalogue of, Mr. liimmel, tne jjonuon pcnuiner, in cludes valentines containing Japanese ornamental hair-pins, cravats, pin-cush ions, chatelaine bottles, brooches, gold watch trinkets, lockets, turquoise a'"1 garnet rings, silver filigree brooches, ear-rings and bracelets, head-dresses and double smelling bmtlo. Then, too, there are musical valentines In the form of glove and handkerchief or jewel-cases. ' One magnificent affair costs forty dollars. 11 is made ot blue silk, and trimmed with gilt. At one sido is a compartment for gloves, and at the other a place for handkerchiefs, with two beautiful smelling bottn-s in the middle. As tho lid is raised, a musical-box, hidden underneath, plays a favorite air, such as, "Then you II re Miawnbo. an.," or on air iVom an opera. I am not suro that the now custom of making expensive presents is better than tho old ono of writing a love-let ter, and It certainly Is not a proof of greater anection in the senders. A pleasant Improvement might be made upon both the old and new cus toms withont sacrificing tho observ ance of tho dar. Let the boys and rls mako their own valentines, dur ing the long winter evenings. All the noccssnrv materials may be purchased for twenty-five or thirty cent at a stationer's storo. Suitable designs aro to be found ill many books, and some tinBcl, crayons, water-colors, and laco pancr would enable clovor young fin- 5crs to nioduco vory pretly things, 'here might, fur instance, ho a simple Grecian border around a sheet of laco papcr. and. inclosed within this, a lily. a rose, or somo inuminnieu verses. Docnlcomanio would do very well, In case thovalontine maker could not draw; or, better still, pressed leaves might be called to the service. A rod autumn waif or two, carefully dried, pressed, and mounted on tinted paper, and snr- by a wreath ol ivy, would uo pi rutty. Or one might mako something lovely out of vory delicato grasses, mosses, lichens, arranging thorn at the head of the paper, leaving spaco for a letter beneath. This would call lor a tasteful box-envolopo. A littlo care, taste and patience would work wnndors with th simple materials. Valontinas of this kind would be more highly priaod by a sincere friend, too. than the finest productions of the professional valentino-maker. At tbe name timo. their preparation would af ford yon many hours of amusomont, and exorcise in the us of color and from that would bo profitable to you in oountloM ways Alexander n am- right, !n ft. Nicholas fhr February. REP TURKEY HlhVTTXO BY MOOS- LIGHT. Having beeu sent aft era load of corn lo Tyos bend, Rod Itivor, where we would havo to slay over night, C. and I placed our guns in tho wagon and drovo liko Jehu to got there in timo to go hunting. Arriving some two hours before night, and mine host not being in, wo shouldered our guns and march ed down a deep ravine to Red River bottom. After starting several doer without getting shot, wo started back, traveling single tilo up tho ravine, C. in tho advance. Huditcnly turning an angle, wo cume upon a flock of wild turkeys, anil almost instantly C.'s rifle broke the silence of twilight, and a moo gobbler was fluttering on tho ground. Hastily reloading, wo ad vanced but a littlo distance, when ('. droppod bis turkey and brought his ritlo to his lace. 1 hen turning to me he said :' ' 'Must 1 shoot?" 1 replied, "1 seo nothing." . ' There, across the gully : don't you see thul object ?" , . , ' 1 eel, shoot I Bank goes C.'s riflo again. The small white object, that had been partly ob scured, now became clearly visible, and it was evident that C. had missed 1 now brought old Spitflro to a poise and fired. From tho movements of the littlo animal, I was sure my shot had taken effect. Hurrying to the spot. C. said : . " Well I isn't it pretty ?" "Yes; what is it? , i 'I don't know; what do you say?" "I don't know ; unless it's a polecat. It liH)ks liko the picture of one. "rsliaw I said u. "1 have soeu many a polecat in T , but they were not half so big as this. o'll have ifs hide, any how." Abont this tuno the stranger made somo struggles, and C. commenced stamping on it with his heel. Suddenly wore our olfactories' saluted with a scent that sent us off as lttst as our legs could carry us, C. crying out- it is a polecat : wo won t skin It, will we?" On arriving at the houao we found our friend Mo., who, on hearing of our adventure, exclaimed, "Green from the States," a term commonly applied to persons not up to all 'iexus tricks. After supper, Mc. said: "n ell, now get your guns, and we 11 go down in the bed torn and kill somo turkeys." I bis idea was quite novel to mo killing turkeys with a ritlo by moon light. Tbo fact is, I doubted killing by moonlight myself, and thought best to let Ma. and C havo tho first shots. The moon was not quito full, and just about thu right height for shooting. And lust hero 1 will stute that not only 1, but almost every man on the border of Texas, feels a strange, sad feeling at lieholding tho full moon, lur ho knows Unit by the light oi almost every moon flic stealthy savago assails the sleeping frontiersman. Hut i digress. We had not traveled fur until Mc. pointed upward and wnispered, "There alio. HIV. ., I. .1.1..., In .U. .. -C some tall onks I saw two durk objocu tollentblvplain. Mc.and C. already hBil their rifles pointed, and 1 thonglit I would try my luck at a venture. Mo I raised my gun, and bang, bang. Thump, thump, came tho two turkeys. iow ensued quarrel between V. and I aa to who killed ono of the tur keys, which was only settled upon 0. 1 finding that hia gun had not been fired. We now hunted but little longer, as we had about as much aa we wished to carry. i In this same locality, somo novs in vited a learned divine, recently Irom the Stato, to accompany them. Of courso the gentleman accepted the in vitation. The' soon found a troe full of buzzards, and yen- generously tendered bim the first allot Imagine bis chagrin at killing an innocent buz zard, and the boys crying, "Green from tho ritales. ' , ABOUT THE II AIR. Men beeoino bald I Why ? Because they wore close hula and caps. Wo men are nover bald. Sometimes, from long-conliniiod headache, heat in the scalp, bud huir-d reusing and soma other causes, women may nave pare spots i hero and there; but with all those causes combined, you never see a wo man with a bare, shiny, bald head, i And you never seo a man lose a hair below where the lint touches his skull. It will take it off as clean as you can shave it down to exnetly that fine, but never a hair below, not u uo lias been bald fifty years. Tho common black stiff hat, as impervious as sheet iron, rotninstlio heat and perspiration, ihe littlo hair glands, which bear tbo sumo relation to tho hair that tho seed wheat does to tho plant above ground, ho como weak from the prosenco of the moisture and heat, and finally become too weak to sustain the bnir. it falls out, and baldness exists. A fur rap wo bavo known to produce complete baldness in a single winter. A man with a good head of hair needs very little protection when the hair grows. Women who live much w llhlti doors, and who aro therefore peculiarly susceptible to tho cold, oil their hair and plaster it down hard and flat upon their skulls, so as to de stroy nine-tenths of its power as a non conductor, have worn for years postage-stamps of bonnets stuck on tho back of their heads, exposing tho whole tops of their skulls, and then going out of furnace liented parlors, have ridden lor hours in a very cold temperature without taking colli and without com plaint Man, with his greater vigor and habits of outdoor life, and with his hair not plastered down, but thrown up Inoso and light, could no doubt go to tho north polo, so far as that part ol his person is concerned, without any artificial covering. And yet we men wear immensely thick fur cnjis, and what amounts to sheet-iron hats, and do not daro step out in a chilly atmos phere a moment lest wo tako cold. It. is silly, weak, and 'really a serious orror. 1 ho ueator Know wnat no was about alien he covered a man s skull with hair, it has a very important function In protectinii Iho brain, nam ness is a serious nuslortnno. it will never occur in any man who will wear such a hat as wo do a common black high silk tint with flvo hundred hole through tho top, so that thero shall be mora hole than hat. una costs notn- ig ; tho natter . will uo mat inr you when vou nurchase your hat. If the uap be combed back the wrong way, and if after tbe holes aro made it bo combed the right way, noon will ever omervo the peculiarity. Iho hat will wear quite as long th halters say considerably longer because it is dry instoad of moist ; in brief, thore is not a single objection to it, while it will certainly prevent baldness and keep tho top of the bead cool and prevent much headache. BUC.-YN. Tim POST OFFICII AS A TECTIVF. AO EXT. DE- "You have no idea how tiianyof those lellow who prey on other people come about us," said an old poatoflice clerk, "l'ooplulhiuk wo don't see them when they inquire for letters, silting a w do Inside of a gloss box, and nothing of us visible but tbo fuc ; but if they can't see in wo can sue out, and wo tako note of what we see. We get to know faoos by sight as well as the owners of them do, and take a certain sort of interest in thorn.. 1 havecaught myself feeling sorry enough for a young Miss who i-uiiw daily for letters anil never (bund any, until I bud a groat mind to write her one myself, so that she shouldn't bo disuppointod so often. That was at tho ladies' window, a long timo ago. Khedisappcared attorawhilo; don't know what became of her; city swollov. ed her up, I reckon. "There was another woman lady, I almost said who lived in Newark, and I knew it, and knew her too, who camo regularly once a week and in quired tor letters in another name. They were for her too. 1 knew well enough sho. had no such eager inter ests as her voice betrayed in another person's letters. Once whon she re ceived one 1 asked her if she was Mrs. Statira, and sho said 'Yes,' and then I knew she lied. "Once a detective cuuio in and asked me if a certain man, whom ho described, called for letters. I knew him as a person 1 had set down as a rogue with out knowing anything of bim, and said, 'Yes, ho is hero nearly every day. Ho comes at such an hour, and if you slay hero I will give you the wink.' So ho stayed where he could not bo seen, but if you will believe it, the scamp never camo near the place for a week; a f ;real pilo of letters accumulated for dm. Finally tho detective begun to feel tJio lellow had 'lit out,' as be ex pressed it, and said he would 'just stretch hia legs a little and como back.' Of course at that Very momont tho rascal upieared, and I was in a sweat, you bet. First thing when I saw him 1 sent a messenger alter the detective ; tho next thing I stayed away from the window as long as I dared. When 1 did go to it 1 couldn't hear very well, and nad hard work to catch his name. When that had to be stopped I couldn't seem to find any letter, though there were a hundred or so right under my hand. I shuffled them all over, both of us all tho while on pins and needles, he to get away and I to keep him so he shouldn't. "How do you spell it." I asked. Ho spelled it. " Where do you expect a letter from ?" "Now Orleans." 1 throw ono, two, three, down. "Ain't there no mora?" he said. "Wait a minute and I'll oe. I stretched the minute all 1 could, till finally just as he was going away curs ing mo ftir my stupidity, 1 throw down the wholo of them, and began to push them out to him ; he turnod to gather them up, but was bimaalf gathered up by the doteotivo who camo back just id nine, jao was one oi uioee sawdust swindlers." A PPEA RA M'ES VECEITFVL. EZEKIM, WHITMAN'S APPEAR A NCR IN Til X OLD C1TV TAVERN OF noSTOS. When Maine was a district of Mas sachusetts, Kzekiel Whitinnn was chos en to represent the district in the Mas sachusetts legislature. He was an cccentrio man, and one of tho best law yers of bis timo. He owned a farm, and did much work on bis land; and when tho time camo for him to set out for Boston, hia beat suit of clothe was a suit of homespun. His wife objected to his going in that garb, but he did not care. "I will get a nico fashiona ble suit made as soon as 1 reach Bos ton," he said. . . lieacliing his destination, hitman found rest nt lloolittlo's City tavern. Let it bo understood that ho was a graduate of Harvard, and at this tav ern ho was at home. As he entered tho parlor of tho house ho found sev eral ladies and gentleman assembled, anil be heard a remark Irom one ol them. "Ah, hero comes n countryman of the homospnn genus. Hero's fun." Whitman started at tho company, and then sat down. Say, my friond, you aro from the country," remarked one of the gentle men. Ya as," answered Kzekiel, with a ludicrous twiBt of the face. Tho ladies tittered. "And what do you think of our city?" ' "It's a pootY thick settled place,any- how. It s got a sweeping sight of houses in it. . "And a good many people, too. ' "Ya as, I should guess so." "M any people where you como from?" "Wal, somo." 'Plenty of ladies, 1 supposo ?" "Yaas, a fair sprinklin'." "And 1 don t doubt that you arc quito a bean among them. " r a-as, l Deaus 'era homo tow meet- in and sintcin schcwl. "l'erhaps the gentleman irom the country will tako a glass oi winer " I hnnk.t. AJo.rt lf u A do." Tho wine was brought. 1 "Yon must drink a toast." "Oh. irit ciout, 1 cat toasts never heard of sich a thing as drinkin' it. But I kin true ye a sentiment Tho ladies clapped their nanus ; nut whut was their surprise when the stranifcr, rising, spoke calmly and clearly as follows: "ladies and gentlemen, permit me to wish vou health and hniiiness,witli ovory blessing earth ean afford; and may vou arrow better ana wiser wnn advancing years, bearing ever in minu that outward appearances are often deceitful. You mistook me, from my dress, for a country booby, whilo l fromtliosamosuiiernciul cams), thought, you wore Indies and gentleman. Tho mistako has been mutual. He had just spoken when Caleb Strong, the Govornor of tho Stato, en tered and Inquired for Mr. Whitman. "Ah, hero 1 am, Govornor. Glad to see you." Then turning to tho dumb founded company he said. "1 wish "you a very good morning." Hard times are beginning to toll on I the small boys of Akron. A physician tells 01 a ntuo Aaron ooy who cama mi him and said, "Doctor, I want some enicue." . "What do yon want II lor I "Nevor mind, just give it to inc." "Who sent you here! "iNououy sent me. camo mvsolf." "I cant let yon have it unlos you leu m wnat you are going to do with if "W ell, uoc tor. our hired a-irl has swallowed a ail- nu- nuarlAir and she said if I would give her aomothing that would bring It up 1 might have it. Tn Diannisx Castor Oil. Rub two drops oil of cinnamon with an ounce of glycerine and add an ounce of castor oil. Children will take it and ask for more. MASOXRY STALACTITES. Tho North Bridge, which spans Ihe ilocu valley lying between tho Old and Now Towns of Edinburgh, Scotlumt, was built upwards of a hundred year ago. Between the arches of the bridge and the roadway above aro a numlicr of chambers or vaults which have nut been opened, till recently, sinco Ike hridgo was built. Ono of them has been visited by rrofessnr tieiklc, who says: ....I ' : "From the vaulted soiling, and cs- Ecciully from the joints of the masonry, ung hundreds of stalactites delicate 1 spar icicles of snowy whiteness. In many cases they reached to tho floor, forming slender thread-like pillars. Usually they wore slim stalks, some what like thick and not vory weil made tobacco pipes; but towards the sides of Ihe vault they became thicker and stronger, one winch we carncil off measuring ubout four feet in length, and ns stout as an ordinary walking stick. The same material as I hat form ing the stalactites spread in ribbed sheets down the aides of the vault. The floor, too, was dotted allovcr with littlo monticules of Iho same snow white crystulino spar. "A more illustrative example ol a stalactite eavoni could not be found. Tho whole process was laid oiien before us in all it stifccs. Along the ioints of tho masonry overhead could be seen here and thero a drop or clear water ready tofall. At other places the drop bung by tho nd of a tiny white stono icicle, to which it was aJding its own minute contribution as it ovaHruted. From tho mere rudimentary slumps, the stalactites could bo traced of all lengths until they were found firmly united to tho spar hillock on the floor. livery one in mese niitocKs, loo, lay directly beneuth the drip, catching the remainder of the stono dissolved in the dropping and evaporating water. In every coso the stalactites were tubes ; even the thickest' of them, though it had undergone great changes from de posit on ita outer surface, retained, nevertheless, its bore. Usually there hung a clear water drop from the end of the stalk, ready to descend upon its white stony mound beneath. for a hundred years this delicate tapestry has been hanging and grow ing and breaking and growing again, quietly, in darkness, beneath the grind of our carringo wheels, and yet high in air, with tne stream ol human lile flowing underneath it too. As tho bridge is built ol sandstone. wholly or almost wholly tree from lime, it is evidont that the material which has converted these vaults Into such picturesque caverns has been durived Irom the mortar. All nun water, as is well known, takes up littlo carbonic acid from the air, and of that acid thero is in the air of a town nsally more than tbe normal proportion. Filtering through the masonry, it dissolves tho lime, carrying it downward in solution, and, if made to halt and evaporate, depositing it aimin in the form of the white crystaline snbstanco which we call spar. . It would be a curious ques- .V.. -JdlOl,. A. !-- Ll. masonry could resist this action. Cer tainly, in spite ot what these vaults in tho North Bridge reveal, the ma sonry of that atnieture is, to all ap pearance, a solid and firm as ever, it is evidently impossible, however, that the mortar, if necessary at all, can be piecemeal removed without in tho end causing the destruction of a building," SOUTH AMERICAS BEAUTIES. A chopter on Arcquipa, in Mnrcoy's 'South America," just published, con tains somo amusing accounts of the manners ot the society oi that Peruvian city. ' Ho speaks highly of the beauty ot tho women. JUarcoy notes tho pre ference for foreigners, and espocially for Kuropcans, which tho young ladies j evince: 1 '.'In cosmonolitan snirit. vorv flatter. ing to the self-love of Kuropcans, they prefer foreigner to their own country men, with whatever eminent qualities ford, of Plymouth Colony, he related tho latter may be gifted. A foreigner, ji, good news just received from Kng though ho may bavo neither youth hBnd as the occasion for observing sin h nor beauty in his favor, und nothing whatever be known or his antecedents, instantly throws in flutter tho whole crowd of mammas and marriageable daughters. They dispute possession of him, ono with another; they snatch at him as at a morsel or the truo cross : bequests and teeadot (presents) of all kinds, Irom the toilet soap ot 1'iver t tho silk handkerchiefs of Lyons such aro tho tokens of friendship peculiar to theso countries pursue linn even to his apartments, h tasks nfrdu itecoloqne littlo attentions, flatteries, everything is done to catch in the net of marriage this fino bird from distant Knrope. whom innocently cruel hands would pluck alivo soon allorward. Iho Louses at which ho culls are forever heating to arms, tho fumitifuro is re lieved of its covers, jewels aro taken out of thoir boxes, the family plate is displayed upon the sideboards and tables, the servants, propel ly trained, have orders tomakc themselves agreea ble to their future master, tho cats aro commanded to purr and the dogs to wag their tails when ho approaches. From tbo venerable gmnd-mut lior lo tho youngest child in the family, the only question is, who shall show the highest appreciation of the stranger's merits, who shall flatter him most with sweet words : the claws are hiddou in tho velvet paw, the lips distil choice honey, tho teni!erost rose color and the bluest ar.uro Is spread over all, and guitars tuned to' tho bymencul pitch twang Incessantly tho happiness of two devoted hearts. Kverytlung, in fine even lo the air impregnated with the perfume of burning pasliles, conspire to charm the soul anil tho senses of tho stranger, in tbe midst ol the mice tn nmif, of which our poor pro can hardly convey an Idea, the goddoss oi the lete, the virgin of the hearth, is iircnarnd like a shnno. Seated upon her sofs, her arms supine, her hands modestly crossed, her eyes apparently fixed upon a flower of the Aluncolia carpet, sho is In reality devoutly at tentive to the effect produced upon the visitor by tho marriago-niaKing pro gramme. Somo Europeans, Whose hearts are cnirasscd In that oca fn'nr.r of whieh Horace speaks, como out vic torious from those trials ; but the great number succumb, and, meekly bowing their shoulders to Iho conjugal yoko, harnmn established in the country. where they presently loso not only their illusions, hut their hair and their teeth." "Oh I your nose is aa cold as ice," a Boston father thought ha beard bis daughter exclaim tho other evening, as he was reading in the next room. Ho walked in tor an explanation, but tho young fellow waa at one end of the sofa, and th girl at the other, while both looked to innocent and unconsci ous that tb old rcntlemaa concluded that his ear had deceived him, and so retired from the scena without a word THE ' KOItltrk rorvLATiox. A recent import .from the United ' Slates Bureau of Statistic at Washing ton, contains an Interesting tablet! the population of the earth, taken chiefly from tho work on that subject, issued ibis year at Gotha, by Drs. Behm and Wagner, and founded on the most re cent authorities. By this statement the aggregate imputation of tho earth is given nt 1.8!H,uX',000, Asia being the . most populous section, and containing 70S.0Otl.lMI0; whilst Ktinipchas.'iftlJ.rilM 000; Africa, 2ftJ.W0.W0, America, 81, SOO.000, and Australia ond Polynesia, 4,500,000. In Kuropo the leading na tions are credited with the following numbers: Russia, 71.000,000; the Ger man Knipiro, 4 1.000,01)0, Franco. 3ii,000-000;Austro-lluugttry.3!i,nt)O,000;Grcut Britain and Ireland, 32,(lOO,OUO; Italy, nearly 27,000.000: Spain, I,500.0(KI, and Turkey, nearly 10,000,000. Tho other countries do not exceed 5,000,000 each. " In Asia, China, which is by far tho nvoat populous nation of the eurth, is credited with 425,000,000; Ilindostan with 240,IWO.O00; Jau.- M.UOO.OOO; the fast India Islands, U0.500.000; Bunmth.Siam and ihrthor India.nearly 20,000,000; Turkey, 13,5110,000, und Hussia. 11,000,000. Tho Australian population is given nt 1,074.500, and tho. Polynesiun Isluuds at 2,763,500, .New Guinea and .New Zealand being Included in the latter. In Africa, the chief divisions uro West Soudan and the Central African region, 3P.0O0,00; South Africa, 20,250.000; tho Gulln country and tlio region cast of the White -Nile, is.mio.ooo; Samanll, tf.ouo, 1100; Kgviit, 8,500,000, and Morocco, (i,000,lKHi. In America, two-thirds of 'the population are north of tho Isth mus, where the United States has near ly 3!l,000,0OO; Mexico, over U.000,000, and the British Provinces, 4.000,000. The total population of North Ameri ca is given at nearly 52.000,000. and of South America. 25.500.000. of which Hrazil contains 10.0o0.0oO. The West India Islands have over 4.000,000, and the Central American States not quite 3.000.OO0. - According to these tables, London, with 8,254.200 inhabitants, is tho most populous city in tho world, while Phil adelphia, 071,022 inhabitants (in 1H70) is the eighteenth cityin point of popu lation. i'heso eighteen cities, in their order, are tho following : London. 3,- 254,200; Suit-hull (l hina 2.000,000; Paris, 1,851,7:12; Peking, 1,300,000; Tscliaiits-clian l'u, 1.000,000; llangts-ta-fu, 1,000.000; Canton, 1,000.000; Sang, nan-fu, 1,000.000; New York, 42,2'J2 Tientsin, 000.000; Vienna, 834,284; Ber lin, 820.341; llankau, 800.000; Tschin-tu-fu, 800.0OO; Cnlcutta, 704.G45; Tokio, i eddo, 0,4.447, and riiilndclphio, ti4- 022. Of cities smaller than Philadel- hia, the leading ones arc, St. Pcters nrg, 0fi7,!lfi3; Bombay, 044.405; Mos cow, 611,970; Constantinople, 000.000; Glasgow, 004,B3(i; .Liverpool, '1!KI.40D, and Jlio do Janeiro. 420.000. RA Tli IXLOSl)OX. Inn few yean' time, sajs tho i9iVf- er, unless some active measures are ta ken, London may expect great trouble from rate. It ia a startling taut that ono pair of rats, with their progeny, will pmduco in three 3'enrs uo less a number flinn 010.808. A doc rat will have from six to eight nests of young each year, for four years together, and from twelve to lwenty-1hree at a litter ; and the young docs will breed at three months old ; and thero aro ninro le males than males, at au average of front ten to six. If they ron about the streets liko cuts and dogs, tho pub lic would no ten-mod, bnt as they hide and work in the dark, men seldom see or think of them. Brick drains are their chosen haunts, skirting boards, backs of firoplacos, under the flooring, or between the rafters aro their place of breeding. The London scwermen state that brick drains aro the rats' best friends, and that nowia, ... r:r-u ",tIJ tivw.j aluk uaHi will atop the sewer rata from getting into houses. They will uot go up pipes for the fear of being drowned, knowing they havo no means ot oscnpe. They are seen In tho sewers miLrrattni; in communities to some discovered quar ter for food, and the sower-men believe t hat t hoy huve a language of their own. Jf builders were to case skirting boards with galvanized plating, particularly at each corner, it would stop the ver min considerably. Cure should bo to ken nlso to fill with concrete and small stones or broken glass tho space under and about fireplaces, as the doe rats choose that quarter for breeding on ac count of the warmth. The First Tiiasksoivi-io dav. It was in tho early summer of 1032 that Governor Winlhroo. of the Colony of Massachusetts Bay, made tho first pub-, lie proclamation for a day of thanks giving. In a letter to Governor Brad- a day, and invited tho neighboring colony to unite with the People under his own jurisdiction in the celebration ot it As the good news related as much lo tho Plymouth people as to the people ol lioston, ana as Wmlhrops words 'I doubt not but you will con sider if it be not fit for you to join in . it express confidence in the action of Plymouth, it may be presumed, al though wo can find no distinct record of tho fact, that the day wAs observed in commoii by the two colonies. At any lute the Boston people kept tho -day on Iho lth of Juno, 1G32, as wo learn irom tne journal oi o inviinq,. Thus the example ol a day or inanKS giving was first set, winch has sinco Iwcn liillowod by so many of the com monwealths of the United Stales, and at last by tho nation ilsolt. To recognize tho character of a per son by his laugh is not difficult. Thero are as many kinds of langh as there are vowel sounds. Persons who laugh in A arc frank, inconstant and fond of nois0 and motion. Tho hutgh in K be longs to phlcgmntiee and persons dis posed to nu'kmcholy. 1 he () indi cates generosity of sentiment ami bold ness in movement. Tako care of its possessor if you belong to tho opjioeito sex. Tho laugh or giggle m I ol chil dren and Innocent persons denotes a torrid, Irresolute devotes! and pliable nature. 1 ho blondes laugh in 1 but tbuL-Uoce nol any that they aro all in nocents. Avoid liko the pest Uiose who IniiL'h in U. Theso aro the avari cious, the hypocrites, the misanthrope. r or them t lie joys ol lile nave noriinrm. An Knelish teacher, enjoining upon (he members of a training class their duty in giving to children bright and happy thoughts ol religion, illustrated tho danger of an opposite course thus : A little girl, ho saiil, onco inquired of her elder sister nliout heaven. "Do they play in heaven ?" she asked. ''No, they do not play t here." "What do they do?" "They sing, and are very good." "Aro thero no plaything there ?" "No, not any." "No dolls, kittens, nor Noah s arks?" "Oh, nol" "Then," said tho little ope. "I'll toko my dolly nnd go lo hell." Ha riu Transit of tiir 1iad. The dead arc to bo furnished with "rapid transit in lenna by means ol a pneu matic subterraneous railroad, with tor mini extending from the cellars of een- , n. H ,. (M-0H ahnna a in II.. nl.B ,nll,a cemeteries. After the funeral service in th cliuNl tbo coffin will be placed lengthwise on a small platform-car moving on rails, and then shot off through the tunnol to tbe cemetery at the rate of Ibrty mile or so an hour, where tli undertaker will receive it. Then the mourners will disperse IVom Ihe ehspel and the funeral will be over.