Sbe groana iMgtamv jPUBUBEKD IVXET-'WXDinaDiT BT ' H. G, SMITH * CO. H. O. Smith. A, J, Stein man TERMS—Two Dollars per annum, payable in all cases in advance. THU IjAWOASTXB DAILY published every evening. Sunday exoeptca, at 95 per Annnm fn ad.vanoe. OFFlCE— Southwest ooßm or Centre Square. TO AUGUSTA, The following exquisite poem from Lord Byron to his sister will be read with renew ed interest because of Mrs. Stowe’s slander ous article: Though the day of my destiny’s over, Ana the star of my fate hatu declined, Thy soft heart refused to dlscov, r n. The faults which so many couid find ; N Though thy soul with my grief was acquainted It'Bhrunk not to share it with me, And the love which my spirit hath painted It never hath found bat in thee. Then when nature around me is smiling, The last amile-whlch answers to mine, I do not believe it beguiling. Because it reminds me of thine; As when winds are at war with the ocean, As the breasts I believed In with me, If ihelr billows excite an emotion. It Is that they bear me from thee. Though the rook of my last hope la shivered Ana Us fragment* ai 0 sunk In the waves, Though I feel that my soul is delivered To pain—it shall not be its slave. There is many a pang to pursue me; They may crush, but they shall not condemn They m»y torture, but not subdue me— ’Tls ol thee tr.at I think, not of them. Though human thou didst not deceive me; Though wom?n thou didst not forsake; Though loved, thou forberest to grieve me: Though slandered, thou never couldst shake Though truatedrlhou didst not disclaim me; Though parted, it was not to Ay; Though watchful. It was not to defame me, Nor mute that the world might belle. Yeti blame not the world, nor despise It, Nor the war of the many with one— If my soul was not titled to prize It. ’T was folly not sooner to shun; And if dearly that error hath cost me, And more than I on'ce could forsee, I have found, that whatever It lost me It could not deprive mo of tho“. From the wreck of tho past which hath per* lshed Thus much I at least may recall. It hath taught mi that what I most cherished Deserved to be dearest of all. In the desert a fountain Is sprlnglua, In the wild wa»te there still Is u tree, And a bird In the solltudo singing, Which spooks to my spirit of thee. §)}tattUHttfoU& In the Heart of iho Kuriti, I think we created some excitement at Falmouth. Unconventional in our attire, merry In our deportment, excit ed in our demoauor, and altogether imbued with that excellent' Mark Tapleian philosophy of being “jolly under any circumstances,” it is small wonder that wo did create some excite ment at Falmouth. We have none of us a word to say against Falmouth, —a charming,health-giving, and delightful spot, in the most beautiful of all Jing rliah counties, Cornwall, —Indeed, we ‘are all of us ineliued to murk with a white Btone the day that the Falmouth expedition was proposed in a certain smoking-room, of which history know eth not, but individuals a very great deal. The little army that invaded the place of which I am speaking, where the sea is of the bluest and the harbor of the grandest description, was mixed in its lasles, luluul, umi temper. In this consisted our jollity. We gave and took; smothered our absurdities ; ad vertised our excellences; offended no one, and seldom laid ourselves open to giving offence. I am not egotistical, 'for I am apeaking of the party in its collective form We bebaved'prettlly on all occasions. It was too hot to put ourselves out of temper, and the society too pleasant to suggest boredom. If young Cecil, the budding poet, chose to read Tennysons's Idyls, —backed up most strongly by Isaline Langsworthy, with the fair hair and blue eyes,—on the pleasant cliff underneath the castle, we raised no objection. Those who cared to hear Cecil spout listened ; and those.who detested poetry went to sleep. If the famous Farquaharson, briefless barrister, orator,and sucking politician, chose to discuss Mr. John JStuart Mill and the female franchise, woman’s rights and the rest of iL, —backed up most strongly by Maude Carrutkers, with the raven hair and olive complex ion, —we allowed him to rap liis knuck les on the table, und tala us into a semiddlotio state of stupor. If Harry Armstrong found delight in bringing his London mauuers into Cornwall, and preferred the society of a certain Boft-eyed little divinity who sold news papers aud gum-arabic in the town to our sweet sodiety, we allowed him to make excuses for deserting us, aud, with the exception of a little innocent and unavoidable '* chaff,” lie was free to “spoon ” all day in the stationer’s shop for aught we cured. We excused Lilian Corner's scales and morning exercises, for the sake of her Heller, Hiller, tiohubert, aud reveries, with which we were favored in the evenlug If we behaved oyrselves very prettily. The “ irrepressible Edgar,” us we used to call the youngest mule member of our community, was allowed to give full vout to his ovorllowlug spirits all day long, provided he woke us betimes In tbe morning to get our matutinal plunge iu the blue waters that curled themselves refreshingly into "Kuminor Cove.” And what or our host aud hostess? Theirs iudeed wus a rulo of love; aud us they allowed us to do ex actly as wo liked, we were the more con siderate Iu meeting their wishes, and pulling all together. We had vainly Imagined that we had seen everything worth seeing In the envirous w Falmouth, aud enjoyed ourselves us much as is consistent with human nature, when our party receiv ed a valuable addition. A certain sweet songstress of whom the world will ere long hear a great deal more, came down amongst us to breathe her native air, aud get new inspirations and health from the woods aud caverns aud rocks •-and sea-music, with which wo were surrounded. But the songstress did not come alone. Hhe brought her sweet voice and all our old nut songs; the songH set to words wnloh were poetry, and the words wedded to inusiu which breathed of love, und wi\s therefore quite unsala ble; she brought her cheery manner and her Indomitable pluck,—she has beet; In the saddle during the late American campaign for days and days, boo this sweet sougstrees of mine,— And she brought her brother. Her brother wus suoh a good fellow that I must really introduce him with a little bit of practice. He was, If I may make use of au expression, most puzzling at school, and most useful In after life,—a walking oxymoron. He was an Englishman, and not an Eng lishman. An Englishman he was In heart, and Bpeecn. und bearing; but deßtiuy had stolen him away from his native land years ago, to shed his cheerness on other climes. Bo muoh, however, did ho lovo tho old country, thutouoe In every three or four yeare he wended hie way back again,—the luck swallow!—hla pockets full of gold, and his heart full of love, to spend a holiday In England and a little fortune In generosity. Buring these holllday trips he never left his sister of his parents; and as his sister and his parents had chosen to run down to Falmouth,like a dutiful fellow, Washington followed them thither. We were at breakfast when Washing ton burßt In upon ub at Falmouth ; and breakfast at Falmouth was not Buch an early meal as It mlght-have been. With thatgeneroslty and unselfishness which 1b characteristic of Englishmen, I will at once exoulpate the whole mule por tion of our party. The irrepressible Edgar was bound to wake us In the morning; and wo were alwuys on our backs In tho sea by eight o'olock. But the women I oh,, those dear women I Well, generally speaking wo had but little to complain of. They wore oheerful, and bore tho fatigue which strong logged men not unfro quontly lmposo upon fragile women without a murmur | but they were not proof against tho nightly exeralso of that highly nooosHary, but eminently fomalo organ, tho hutuuh tongue I At ten o'olook, deooptlvojyuwns woro cho rused forth, to take us elf our guard, and persuade us to allow them to go to bed. Not an objeotlon was urged. The poet perhaps looked somewhat more laohrymoso than usual, and the orator came to a dead strain an able harangue on the "Female Franchise j" but Isa line's hand was squeezed by the poet, and Maude's eyes followod by the ora ator, without another murmur at ten o’olook. T am bound to oonfess that I don't al together consider that the poet or the orator were quite fairly treated. Tan minutes after Isallne and Maude had disappeared In a bevy of beauty, the strangest, wildest and most dlsoordant nolsesprooeeded from tho upper regions. That strange freemasonry of women whloh exists solely and entirely In the upper regions, at a time which should be devoted to sleep and rest, puts aside all thoughts of weariness previously as sumed. Then oommenoe the monkey Sl)c puiJa|t«f futcllujcncct: VOLUME 70 tricks of women. They wrestle and they plunge, they dance fandangos in limit* ed attire, they vie with one another in featsFef agility and fancy; they talk, they do one another’s hair, they do any thing but that for which they left the sweet society of males —go to sleep! The consequence is that, having de voted the freshest part of the night to folly, they have to devote the smallest part of the night to sleep. And when the morning comes, the great hungry 'men, ravenous from fresh air and Sit water,have to flingpebbles andsand a n M gravel up at the windows in the up per regions, from which the tantalizing sirens will never emerge. And so It came about that Washing ton found us at breakfast at an unortho dox hour, and we all got outrageously chaffed. We very soon saw that there were to be no half-measures with Wash ington. He did not intend allowing the grass to grow under his feet. His stay in England was limited, and that which had to be done was evidently to be “ done quickly.” I must say that, up to the time of Washington’s arrival, we had not made the most of our time. In the' little smoking-room in which the expedi tion had been arranged, all sorts of ex cursions and drives, and picnics and sails, bad been mapped out. But, once at Faljcaonth, we dreamed away our time. It was very pleasant. We bathed till breakfast, ana basked till lunch, and louDged till dinner, and sang and strolled till tea, and talked till bedtime; and so day after day slip ped away, and Washington found us at breakfast prepared for another day’s dream. I suppose we wanted a leader. Ener gy_that is to say, personal energy— was out of the question. Washington assumed the vacant directorate and led us. It was a case of “Ibimusl Iblmua! unique precedes Wash lnglou," To tell the truth, It was Washington who persuaded me to go into the heart of the earth. He did not begin rashly or impetu ously, He did not frighten me with an accurate description of the “man engine,” and the “bucket,” and the interminable ladders; but in a light and airy way,—before all the girls, by the by, —he led the conversation gently up to the mines and mining adventures. He told us bow the Princess of Wales and a tallented contributor to “Punch” had been down the Bottallack; and then taking stock of me, after a prelim inary examination of my biceps and a general examination of other muscular developments, he asked me how I should like to be introduced to the Wheal Isabel. “ Of all things in the world,” I said, “ provided she be yonng and good-look ing. But why Wheal? Is it a sign of endearment or a token of respect ? Am I to understand from the mysterious word Wheal that Isabel is a Cornish Countess, or a Gypsy Queen ? Introduce me to the Wheal Isabel? Certainly! Wheal or woe Isabel, could anything unfortunate be synonymous with such a charming appellation ? ” “Hold hard! ” he said ; “this Cornish alrof ours has filled you too full of ozone. Restrain your ardor. Isabel is not an enchanting maiden fashioned by your poetical imagination. She is no gar dener’s daughter, no maid of Tregedna, no coast mermaiden, no Cornish beauty. She is black, deep, dirty and terrible. She will cause you a ten-mile ride, trouble, fatigue, and some littleexpense; but the Wheal Isabel iB worth know ing.” “In Heaven’s name, then,” said I, “ who or what is Bhe?” “The Wheal Isabel,” said he, “Is one of the largest mines in this magni ficent district; and if you would like to be introduced to her you shall.” “ Coal ?” said I, shuddering. “Or tin?” echoed the mucilaginous Armstrong. “Gold, no doubt,” whispered Isaline in my ear. “Nonsense,” said Washington ; “cop per.” I very soon saw that at this very early period of the entertainment there was no getting out of an introduction to Wheal Isabel. The curiosity of the women was fairly aroused. And that was quite enough. Iu au instant th/** programme was mapped out entirely to the satisfaction of the girls. We were all to ride over to the Wheal Isabel under the mentor ship of Washington, and I was to be the unhappy victim sacrificed on the copper altar. Friend Washington, who,atone time, had been all cockuhoop about tbe dan gers and during of the expedition, got out of it. or rather oi the fatiguing part of It, with that irritating air of indiffer ence peoullar to leaders of expeditions. “ You know, my dear fellow, I have seen these kind of things so often be fore, that it is really hardly worth while the trouble of changing one’s olotheß for It,” said ho, with that charming tono of superiority whloh is so comfort ing to the man who knows that he is about to make a fool of himself for the benefit of his fellow creaturcß. “But 1 would advise you go down.” ho added suspiciously thatlwould back out of it ut the last moment. “You will never regret it.” And then he cleverly magnified me Into a hero, whereat the girls said pret ty complimentary things, and the ex pedition was finally arranged. Our oav alcade was not altogether pretty to look at, but I think It may be safely termed a good one to go. Falmouth was not great in saddle horses. Wo had a ’bus-horse, a hearso-horße, a lly-horse, a wall-eyed horse, and a proken pummel. With these excellent assistants to a ten-mile ride along the Cornish roads, we started, amidst muob laughter of parents, and oheerlng of neighboring butcher-boys, on our Jour ney to tho Wheal Isabel* Very black and barren grew the land as we neared the Queen of Copperdom. The trees, somehow or other, left off growing ; the fields seomdd sown with ashes instead of grass; tall chimneys emlttod huge volumes of smoke, and deserted shafts, brokou wheels, and grimy looklDg monsters met us at every turn. When four cross-roads met amidst a labyrinth of shafts and out-houses in the centre of a blackened heath, we drew rein. “I think this'must be the place,” said Washington. He was right. A stalwart Cornlshman came out to meet us, and to him we presented our cre dentials, addressed to the Captain of the Mine. The captain was somewhat disap pointed, I think, when he found that we were not all to be Indoctrinated into the mysteries of mining. Miners are, after all, but men, and the laugh ing merriment of our joyous girls had already won over the rough heart Of the honest miner. “ No, it is only this gentleman," Bald the treaoherous Washington, with the old tone of superiority again. “ I have been down mines scores of times,” This was all very well of Washington vaunting hlB superiority In this way, but why Bhould he, by Implication, assert that I was a fool because I was a novice, and because I had not been down amine? I was qulto prepared to go through all the dirty work, but I wanted to be thought a hero, not a Jaokasß. The girls stood by me bravely. Tholr sympathy relieved me from some of the humiliation I felt, and they soemed de termined, at all events, that I should not go down Into tho heart of tho earth without a ohoor. I was handed over to tho tendar mor ales of a sub'Oaptaln, who hlntud that It would bo as well If two other minors were told of as n private osonrt, to guard me through tho lower regions. "It's us well to havo two or throo with you, sir," said he; "they troat you with more respoot down below, and thoy’ro a rough lot, I oan toll you.” I assented of aourso. At suob a time It would, by no manner of meanß, be Eollto to dissent from anything or any ody. For tho next hour or so my life was In the hands of the slaves of the Wheal Isabel. Tho Bub-oaptaln led me Into a little out-house, where he personally super intended my toilet. I had imagined that it would be neoessary to put a rough oanvas suit' over my ordinary olothes, But I was very soon disabused of this notion. " We must have everything off, Blr," said my guide, In a soothing medloal tone, as If he were about to operate on me. "It’s an awfully dirty place down there.” ; The ooßtume will beardesorlptlon. I wob first encased In flannel, clean, of coarse; and over this came an oldolay- stained, muddy, stiff miner’s suit. My feet were wrapped in two flannel dust ers and then thrust into a pair of old miner’s shoes, miles too big for me.— On my bead was placed a very stiff bil ly-cocked hat, literally as hard as iron, smeared with tallow grease. On the brim in front tbe captain dabbed a lump of clay, and into tufa hestuck a farthing rushlight. About half a dozen more rushlights were suspended to my waist, and I was then pronounced ready for action. On our way across the open to the hut in which our party was resting, my at tendant askea me which way I intend ed to go down. Asked me, indeed I as if I knew what the good fellow was talking about. I was only anxious not to look a fool and to do exactly what I was told. I must own that I felt a per fect child In his hands. “Will you go down,” said he, “by the ladders, or. by the bucket, or by the man-engine?” He might just as well have asked me the Hindostanee for Wheal Isabel. “ The ladders,” said he, by way of explanation, “are the most tiring and the most tedious. You will take a good hour to get down by the ladders. The bucket is a dirty way of going down ; besides, in this mine, it is used alone for bringing up the rubble and the ore, and any interference with this arrange ment stops the workings of the mine. Now the man-engine is the quickest way, and it is the way all the men here go down. Would you like to try it?” and then he added, looking at me, “ but you must be very careful.” This was the first suggestion that had been made to me that there was any danger in my undertaking. Now the principle of the bucket and the ladders I naturally understood, but I had no more idea what a man-enginewas than the man in the moon. My mentor, for sortie mysterious reason of his own, kept on quietly pressing tbe superior advantage of the man-engine. And so I consented. If I had only known then, at that quiet moment, -away from the laughing girls and the heroic Wash ington, what I was undertaking, and the mortal agony Iwas about to endure, my prudence would moßt certainly have got the better of my pride, and I should have been whizzed quietly down in the dirty bucket. But as it was, in my ignorance and in the innocence of my heart, I decided for the man-engine; and in a minute more I was ushered into the hut. My quaint appearance was the signal for a loud burst of laughter. Borne would “never have known me, would you ?” others pronounced me a fright: but one little soft angelic voice declared me to be “a handsome young miner.” “You’re sure you are all right!” said the same- little confiding voice. “Have you had some brandy ?” “All right,” said I, feeling very pale. “I should think so. Particularly now.” “But how are you going down?” said the sweet voice; “the captain has been telling us all about it.” “ By the man-engine.” “ For mercy’s sake, don’t! it’s very dangerous if you’re not accustomed to it. He told me so.” That tone of entreaty persuaded me more than ever that I would take the most dangerous route. It was very brutal I know, but at such a time I would Boonerhave died than shown the white feather. They escorted me towards the infernal machine like a criminal on his road to execution. “Set it a going, Bill,” said the sub captain ; and then in a few terse sen tences he explained the principle of the engine. Two parallel horizontal bars provided with iron steps at intervale of about ten yards, wore forever working up and down, up and down. The method of getting down the shaft was by passing from bar to bar, and from step to step the very instant the work “Change” was given. Itwasessentialiy requisite to change themomentthe word of command was given, and to make no bungle or shuffl.e-'about tbe operation. The engine waited for no man. There was no possibility of calling a halt, and no saving hand to catch one if a miss was made. All one’s safety rested with one’B self. One false step or false clutch at |the next rung, and it would have been all over with me. Now this fun was all very well with tbe daylight shining down the shaft, when one could see the iron steps and see the handles. but in the pitch darkness it was simply awful. The rußhilghtrln one’s hat gave little or no light; and it was ten chances to one if the water dashing off the sldeß of the shaft did not extinguish it. me at first for a turn or tws) about a hundred yardß up and dowifthe shaft, and oven in the day light I bungled a little. y You must ohange quicker, sir,” said my guide; “if tho iron Bteps knock against you, it will be all up with you.” I was very pale, I know, after the first short praotlce. I felt that I waß doiug a madoap act; I know that the men ought to have Btopped me; the lit tle voice, now quite trembling, begged me not to got but I bit my lips and vowed I would not Bhow the white feather. “ Do you think you are all right sir ?” said my guide. Will you go? You must decide now finally.” “ All right,” I said. And then the bell rung and down we went. I saw the little face,—it was the very last thing I Baw,—and upon my honor I really and truly felt that I should never see that little face again except by a miracle. But there was no time then to think of anything but my own safety. That terrible monotonous word " Change” came ringing out from the dark depths of the Bhaft, uttered by the sub-captain on the next ledge below me. And I knew that my life dependedupon every chango. Hours, days, years, yes, and oenturles, seemed to pasß between every change. It was like a bldeouß nightmare, 'lire awful suspense between every word of command; the feeling that something terrible might happen next time; the loneliness of my situation, the darkness of the shaft, the rush of the water, the glimmer of the rushlights going down ; the sad hollow eoho of the oaptain’s voice giving the word of command, and exhorting me to becareful, now kindly, now fearfully; all these things com bined made up as hideous a day-dream as It Is possible to conceive. For full flve-and-twenty minutes I was in this awful suspense, and In that time went through about five hundred changes. At last, half blinded with beads of cold perspiration and nearly dead with fright, I heard tho welcome bell ring again, and I was safe on the first ledge of the mine. The man-engine went no further, and the rest of thejourney had to be accom plished by ladders. I never told the men what I suffered, but In a rough, kindly way I was congratulated on my feat. ‘■l never thought you would have come, sir,” said one. It frlghtenßmost after the flrßt turn.” “ Can’t you signal up that we are all Bafe?” salu I, thinking of the little faoe. “Yes, Blr, lo be sure.” And they did. The Blgnul came baok again, “Thank Qod I" and alt the miners took off their lints at the last signal, They are pious fellows, these Cornish miners. I was quite two hours away from my friends, groping about, now on my hands and knees, now down ladders from ledge to leugo, now In u stooping posi tion. now ereot In the durk. mysterious corridors I found In tho heart of tho earth It was hot—stifling hot, hottor than tho vory hottest room InaTurklsh bath. But tho stalwart, lialfolad men working away at the ore wero to Inter esting. and the metal pparkled to on the ground, and the scene was so strange and fasolnatlng, that I could not tear myself away, On and on I went, Btlll forever walk ing on. I was very thirsty, and would have given anything for a draught of beer. But no stimulants of any kind are found lu tho heart of the earth. I was allowed, however, to put my mouth to the bunghole of a water-bar rel. and very refreshing was the draught, "You oan walk on like this for hours, sir,” said theoaptatn, seeing I was tired, and still determined not to give In. " Is It pretty muoh the same?” " I think you have seeq all now,” said he. go we went back. " Whloh way will you go?” said my guide. ~ J I teas very tired. " In the buoket,” I said, without any hesitation. With my pookets laden with oopper LANCASTER PA WEDNESDAY MORNING SEPTEMBER 1 1869 ore, and in the roogh embrace of a stal wart miner,—for it was close quarters for two in the bucket,—we were swung np to'the daylight. Dash went the bucket against the sides of the shaft, through which the water oozed and trickled and splashed. Lighter and lighter it became, until, at last, I saw above me the clear, blue, cloudless sky; and, half' dazzled with the glaring light, and blinking like an old owl, I arriyed safe and sound oh terra firms. They greeted me with another loud peal of laughter, louder and merrier than the last. My appearance was cer tainly not preposessiDg. I was covered with red mud from head to foot, hot. dishevelled, wild, and weary. Ana then “ I smelt so pah I” as Hamlet says. However, a refreshing cold bath, a hair-brush, rough towels, and a change of clothes soon made me presentable; and after an excellent luncheon in the board-room of the owners of the Wheal Isabel, we, were all very soon trotting away towards Falmouth. One wordmore. A brooch made from the copper ore I brought up from the mine rests on tbe neck of the owner of the little face which is looking at me as I write from a distant corner of the room. Sometimes when lam out of sorts —which is not very often —I wake up suddenly from a disturbed dream in my old arm-chair, and fancy somehow that the little face is gone, that there is a strange Binging in my ears, and from a dark unearthly vault a voice keeps moaning, “Change.” The Fisherman’s Treasure, BY E, F. Q. In a small hamlet of the Terra dl La voro, on the Gaeton Gulf within the kingdom of Naples, lived an old fisher man named Antonio Morino. He was called a fisherman because, in his younger days, he had pursued that oc cupation for a livelihood; and because, at the present time, he owned boats, and frequently joined the toilers upon the Gulf in their piscatorial cruislngs. At the age of five and twenty he had left his native land for a voyage to In dia, having promise of much better pay than he cduld possibly make at fishing. The ship in which he sailed from Na ples never returned, and Antonio Mo rino was given up for lost, and almost forgotten. At the expiration or fifteen years, however, he once more made his appearance in the hamlet, and was warmly welcomed by his old friends. He told how his ship had been cast away in the Indian Ocean, and all hands lost save himself. At tbe age of forty, Antonio settled down in his old home, and took a wife; and in time a son was born to him, whom he called Leonardo. He bought boats, and spent a portion of his time In fishing; but he evidently did this only for pastime: for he never sold any of his fish, but gave to his poorer neigh bors what he did not consume in his own family. He made no show of money, and yet he always had it when it was needed. His companions were curious, and sought to fathom his se cret, but without avail. Morino seemed to have but one grand aim of life ; and that was, to rear his son to a station of honor and independence. Now the story of Antonio Morino’s absence from Italy was this: His ship had been cast away upon the coast of Ceylon, and such of the crew as had not been drowned, with the exception of himself, had been killed by the na tives. Antonio had saved his fishing apparatus, the peculiarities of which interested the savages ,* and they spared him in order that he might show them how to use it. From material obtained from the wreck he made lines, and hooks, and note, and in time came to be a favorite in the village, and was al lowed much liberty. One day. while out in his boat alone, engaged in fish ing for the chief, he found a deep, rock bound inlet which he had never before seen, and where he was sure the natives were not in the habit of stopping. In this bay he fished ud several large oysters, the shells of which he recog nized to be such as furnished mother-of pearl. He opened them, and found pearls! He kept the secret to himself, and when he had an opportunity he went out and fished for ttyeso valuable oysters ; and in three years time, he had accumulated alargestore.many of which were of extraordinary size and beauty. By-and-by, Antonio madehis escape, by venturing to run his boat far out to sea and safely reached the Fort of Negom bo, where he found aDutchshipbound for Calcutta, in which he took passage, paying the price in small pearl. Ar rived in Calcutta, he soon found a ship bound for the Mediterranean; but be fore Bhe sailed he was waited upon by a Bengalese merchant, who asked him if he had any pearls to sell. The Dutch captain, It seems, had suspected the faot, and had told the merchant. The Benguleso proved himself an honorable man, and our adventurer offered the bulk of his pearls, and received a sum in gold equal to about two hundred thousand crowns. The possession of this sum would have made him crazy If his conversation with the Dutchman had not given him to understand some thing near the value of the property he held. With his wealth, Antonio Morino had made his way back to his home. From Leghorn, where ho landed, he had brought his gold down the coast In hiß own boat, and concealed it in his'i cellar, having dug a hole In which to place it. And this gold the adventurer was now keeplDg for his bod. He had no ideri of investments, or interest; his only concern beingtokeepaknowledge of his possession from those who would surely rob him if they knew the secret. At tho age of twelve years, Leonardo, grown to be a bright and handsome boy, was sent to Capua, to sohool; and while ho was absent his mother died. At the age of eighteen he went to Lyons, and thence to Paris, where he made himself acquainted with mercantile matters. On the very day that he was ouo-and twenty ho came home, bringing with him a beautiful girl whom he wUhed to make his wife. She was a native of Marseilles—an orphan—and her name was Cora, Old Antonio loved her at once, and the nuptial ceremonies were not long delayed. On the day Following the wedding,the old man conducted Leonardo and Cora down into the cellar, and showed them, in the pit, twelve Btout earthen jars, full of preciouß gold. And then he told them the story of his adventures In the Indian Ooean. “My son,” he oonoluded, " this great wealth I have saved for you; but we must not expose It here. On the mor row we will move It away, and Bet sail for France. You and Cora shall make a home In Marseilles, and I will be happy with you.” Cora asked If there were robbers In the neighborhood. “ Ah,” said Antonio, shaking hie head "you don’t know our oountry.— The nobles would beour robbers. Look at Gregorio Barblerl, the Count of Mon dragone, who gained a title and a castle jUBt because he discovered the famous medicinal waters: he would not hesi tate to rob us, If he had an opportuni ty." , There seemed to be a direful magic spell In the calling of that name; for within half an hour after they had as oended from the cellar, the Count of Mondragone, accompanied by six serv ing men, as evil and ugly as himself, made Ills appearance at the cot, He did not stop to ask questions, but hav ing seized upon Antonio and his son, auu bound them hund and foot, he bore thum away to his oastlo of Mondragone, wero thoy Introduced at onoo Into a torturo ohambor—a dark, dismal, un derground crypt—and whore the Count made known fils buslnoss. Ho had long suspected that Autonla Morlno possessed muoh wealth, and had closely watohed all his movomonts. He had sent a spy to be present at the wed ding of tho son with Cora, and had learned that the old man had bestowed on the bride a necklace of Oriental pearls, And now he demanded to know the truth. But Antonio would not tell him, nor would the son. Then the Count oallod In his assistants, and the old flsherman was stripped, and oast upon a raok, and his wrists and ankles lashed to the rollers, poor Leonardo standing all the while, so fettered that he ooula afford his father no relief. "Now, Antonio Morlno,” pronounced the Count," tell me where la your gold ? I ask not whether you have muoh or little; but I simply demand to know where Is It ? I will set your body on the torment, and I will rock your limbs from their sookets, If you do not tell me 1 Add If you die in your sllenoe, I will put your son In your place; and he, too, shall undergo the ordeal. Now, speak. Where Is your gold hidden ? ” Still the sturdy old Morino would not disclose his secret. He had passed throogh too many dangers in his life to be. scared at 'threats, however terrible they might be. What could the old man do? He knew that the wicked Count would keep his word. Had there been hope that his silence could have preserved the gold to hiskon, he would have died ere he would have spoken. “ For the last time I ask you, Antonio Morino, where is your gold? pursued the Count. Receiving no reply, he turned to the ill-looking attendants, and said, in a loud, stern voice, “ Is all ready ?” A nod of the head from each of the men was the sole response. “ Then give one tarn of the rack as a foretaste of what is to follow ” was the Connt’s cruel order. The men proceeded to obey; but the son could no longer look upon the scene without giving way. “ Hold—hold!” cried Leonardo, as he saw the strong men about to turn the racking beams. “ I will tell!” “No, no, my son !” said the old man. “Torture can only slightly abridge a life which has almost run its conrae. Let this vile Count and his myrmidons do the worst they can; I will endure it and defy them.” “How! Dost think Iwould havegold that had cost my father’s life? No; not a morsel of pain shall rack thy dear old limbs, if I can prevent it! Look ye, Sir Count ” The old fisherman interposed, and asked Barbieri how much gold would satisfy him. ‘The base and covetous man knew that father and son were in his power, and he would have all, or none. At length, when he saw that there could be no possible hope, old Morino spoke. “The gold is in my cellar. In the corner next the old fountain Is a flag ging-stone of a darker hue than its mates, and at the angle nearest the wall is an opening large enough for the in sertion of a hand. Raise this stone, and you will find twelve earthen jars, with leaden covers, filled with gold. It is all I possess of wealth in the world. If you will leave for my poor boy two jars— only two.” But the Count would not stop to lis ten to prayers. It was now very near nightfall; and as soon as he could get his horses ready, he set forth, bearing the father and son back, as he had brought them, bound hand and foot; and he said to them, if he found the gold, they should be free; but if he found it not, they Should suffer. It was dark when they reached the cot, and the women were not there, but Barbieri thought not of them. With lighted torohes he went to the cellar, where he found the stone, as Antonio had said ; and underneath it he found the twelve jars; and having removed one of the leaden covers, he beheld the glittering gold. He handled the pre cious pieces, that his eyes'might Dot oe deceived; and he lifted more ofzthe coins. With the assistance of his fcnen he bore the heavy jars to the yard/ and when he was ready to start away he turned to give Antonio and his a parting word, to the effect that, if they made any serious stir about the matter, they should both die. Antonio Morino and his son were left alone. The old man sank down into his chair completely overwhelmed with ?rief, while Leonardosoughtto comfort aim. “ No, no, my boy—you cannot bring joy to my soul again! Oh, how many years have I preserved this treasure for thee! For myself I care not; but for my dear son ” At this juncture, Cora and her maid entered the cot. , “Oh, dear Leonardo, have those ter rible men gone?” “Yes, yes, my sweet-wife,” he ex claimed, as he embraced her. “And the vessel our father had pro vided—is it ready for sea? ” “ Yes, my precious love.” “The wicked Count took you away that he might gain from you the secret of your hidden wealth?” “ Yes. He would have put my father to dreadful torture, ana I told him where the gold was concealed. And he has borne it all away! ” “ Not all,’’returned Cora with bright ening look. “When I knew that the Count of Mondragon had carried you away I could wellguesß his intent; and I furthermore knew that my dear hus band would not see his father suffer for the Bake of preserving the secret. That tbe wretch would return in quest of the treasure I felt very sure ; and I natur ally judged that he would bring you back with him. But I did not mean that he should rob you if I could help it. Bo I oalled Lieette, and we went to the cellar, and emptied all the gold from the jars into leathern sacks which we found In the upper ohamber. Then we refilled the Jars with halts and boltß of lead whloh we out from the old fish- log note in tho Bhed. We filled them almost full, bnl were careful to plaoe on the top a layer of gold coin, so that, If the robber should open them, as I knew he would, he should not readily dlsoover the cheat. Cheer up, dear father, and prepare for flight. The wicked Count has only gone off with a lot of worthless lead, while almost the whole of your gold is at this moment in the boat which you left secured at the landing-steps behind thecot. You know the tops of the jars were very small, and It required but little gold to oover the exposed surface.” The old man caught tbe heroic little woman in hiß arms, and blessed her, and then hastened with bis prepara tions for departure. Every minute was preolous; lor Barbieri might oome back very soon. But they had not muob to do. Their vessel, a small feluoca, was lying close in by tho shore ; and before midnight they had bid farewell to tho Terra dl Lavoro for ever. When, two houre later, the Count of Mondragone came to the oot, filled with wrath, aud swearing vengeance and death, they were far away upon the bosom of tne gulf, c&tohlng the fair, brisk breeze that tipped the wave-crestß towards the Tußcau sea—far away tow ards the new home where peaoe and comfort and joy were to be theirs, and where Antonio Morino was to be am ply blessed in the evening of his life by the love and devoted care of those for whom.he had so long and so self eacriflcingly held his strangely gotten wealth. llow tho Japanese Women Bath. A correspondent of the New York World who has been visiting Yokoha ma. describes a visit to one of the native batn-houses there. “ Here, open to the street, as usual, we found the place to be a large, square room, with the floor raised about two feet from the ground, and a partition, about three feet high, running through the centre. On one side of this room, in the custom of Mother Eve before she studied pomolo gy, were collected from fifty to seventy women and girls, and on tne other side perhaps thirty men and boys, clad in a curtailed pattern of the famous Geor gia major’s airy suit, but that even the shirt, collar and spurß were wanting.— The old joke about a ’wet nurse In a bathing house,’ was here practically realized. Borne dozen native dryads, whom I took to be the owners of the lavatory temple, were scouring the dark • haired, rosy maids with large bunches of paper, while others poured water over them from a well In the oentre of the room, by means of wooden dippers with long handles. The ceaseless din and ohatterlng of the nymphs under this process was absolutely aeafonlng. Far from feollng any sente of shame by the pretenoo of tholr own oountrymen, who were enjoying the bath In oompany, thoy gave not the slightest thought or attention to the number of foreigners who were looking on, Perhaps like the poet’s ohlvalrous defenoe of Lady Godlva, I ought t° say that they were olothed in unoontolousnets of Immod esty, It being a oustom to whloh they are habituated from lnfanoy, Tbree Persons Drowned While Balking. Atlantic City, N. J,. August 25.—Bur ton Stout, sued lO.snd Miss Annie Rodgers and Miss Martha Banter, of Philadelphia, wore accidentally drowned while bathing this morning In front of the Light House Cottage bathing grounds. There were bnt two others bathing at the time, who were unable to render assistance, as there were no appliances on hand to save life, and tho United States Hotel life boat having been hauled up for the season. Tho bodies of Mr. Stout and Miss Hunter were washed ashore ahout twelve o’olook noon and that of Miss Rodgers at ona o'olook this after noon. Their remaina were taken to Phila delphia on the 4>lo train to their respective homes, aocompanled by their relatives. At the time of the occurrence there was but little surf and the tide was down, Dali Homes tn Bright Places. When I live in the country, the front door of nay house Bh&ll be made for use, and not for BhoW; and the blinds and windows ahali be thrown wide open from sunrise until Bunset; and I will issue invitations to the bees and birds and butterflies to come in and out at their own convenience, without fear of molestation from me, or of danger 1 oj my furniture or belongings. Ifafewmus quitoes follow suit, I will accept them as a necessary evil, and hot to be com pared, in the way of annoyance, with that air of sepulchral gloom which, like a wet blanket of mist, surrounds the exterior of most country dwellings, where the men, women and children skulk round like burglars to the back of the house to effect and entrance, and the closed door and blinds are suggestive of a corpse awaiting burial. And yet I think I understand how this bad cus tom came about. It was from many babies and much darniDg and bak ing, and the dread of impending fly specks on the gilt frame encircling General Washington and the large looking-glass. But, dear friends, put a mahogany frame round the General, and banish the looaing-glass, which will, in a few years, if you neglect all that makes home cheerful, reflect only the imprint of life’s cares, instead of its pleasures and contents. “ They are so very few,” you Bay. Well, then the more necessity for letting in the sun shine. As I walk about, I notice the careworn, pallid faces of the wives and mothers about many of these country homes, and the careless untidiness of dress which, in a woman, means that she has given the whole thing up, either from overwork or lack of sym pathy from the one person for whom the shining hair was once neatly comb ed, and the strip of white collar care fully pinned, although it might be late in the day before time was found to do these things. When T see these women at nightfall, in this neglectful dress, sitting alone upon the back door steps, while the husband and father has strolled ofl to some neighbor’s, and lies flat on his stomach on the grass, with half a dozen other husbands and fathers, browsing like so many cattle, without a thought of those weary women, I fall to thinking how much life would be worth to me reduced tothis utilitarian stand ard of cow and cabbage. Then I wonder if those women were to throw open the blinds and doors and windows of the front of the bouse, and smooth their hair a bit, and let one of the children pick some grasses and wild flowers for the mantel, and then tell their respective Johns and Toms to bring into the house the men they like to talk to at that hour, so that all could be jolly together, whether it wouldn’t change things for the better. If that plan didn’t work, do you know what I would do? I would shoulder my baby, and trot down the road to tbe nearest neighbor’s, and let the old coffin of a house take care of it self. I wouldn't rust, anyhow. Now, it may be that these women wouldn’t know how miserable they were, if I didn’t tell them of it. So much the worse, then. I only know that if life were all work to me, it should go hard but I would try to catch a sun beam now and then, if it were only that the children might not be demoralized by growing up to look at me in the light of a dray horse; if it were only that my boys need not expect their wives to clo&e their eyes and ears to the beauty and harmony which God has scattered so lavishly about them. Because there are rocks, shall there be no roses ? Because there is dust, shall there be no dew ? Do you do well, my sisters, to make your bouses so gloomy that your hue* bands would rather roost outside upon the stone fences, than stay in them? Don’t have a “best carpet; ” don’t have a “ best sofa.” Let in tbe sun, and tbe birds, and the children, though it in volve bare floors and wooden chairs, and the total banishment of General Washington and that best looking glass. Eat in your “ best parlor,” and laugh in it; don’t save it up to be laid out in! Try it now, and see life isn’t a differenttning to you all. As to your “ work,” a great deal of it is unneces sary. John and the children would be much better without pies, cakes, and doughnuts. Make It your religion to give them wholesome bread and meat, and then stop and take a little breath. Nobody will thank you for turniDg yourself into a machine. When you drop in your tracks, they willjustshovel the earth over you. and get Jerusha Ann Somebody tostep lntoyourshoes. They won’t cry a bit. You never stopped to say a word to them except "get out of mywayj' Tobesuroyou were working hard for them all tne while, but that won't be remembered So you just take a little comfort yourself as you go along, and look uftor “No. 1.” Laugh more and darn less; they will like you twloe as well. If there is more work than you can consistently do, don't do it. Some times there is a little blossom of a daugh ter In a family who makes everything bright with her Anger tips ; if there is none in yours, do you be that blossom. Don’t, even for John, let your children remember home as a charnel-house, and you as its female sextoD. Fanny Fern, Tuo Dead Letter Office—lts Curiosities. Perhaps no division of any depart ment under the Federal Qovernment is engagod In more Important and re sponsible duties bearing dlreotly upon the Interests of the publlo at large than the Dead Letter branch of the General Post office Department. Here are col lected all manner of letters, coming from the wealthy and rellned arlßtoorat and the humblest and most obsoure oltlzen. The office Is under the Imme diate supervision of Charleß Lyman, EBq., coming under the Jurisdiction of the Third Assistant Postmaster Gen eral, General William H. H. Terrill. There are employed In opening and recording letters received ninety olerks, male and female. The large amount of matter received dally In this division 1b Immense It Is sent to the upper story, upon whloh floor the Dead Letter Office Is situated, by means of a dumb waiter. There are opened dally 10,000 lotters, each clerk engaged on this particular business being re quired to open from 1,000 to 1,200 letters. All letters containing valuables are re corded, and the writers Informed that they are held Bubjeot to their disposal. To give an estimate of the amount of matter that accumulates monthly in this branch of the Post-office Depart ment, we extraot some Items of Interest In the lastannualreportof Mr. Lymen. Whole number of letters received, 333, 805 ; whole number of letters and circu lars destroyed, 157,836; total delivered to owners, 156,061; total money letters reoelved, In value, $7,333 31. The prominent cause of the non-delivery of letters Is the unmallable character of many of them. The largest receipts were during the war, when thousands of letters failed to reaoh the sol diers to whom they were address ed. Many foreign letters are not delivered on account of Insufficient ad dresses. Thegeographlcal extent of the United States and Territories being as yet unsettled, and the constant arrival of emigrants in search of homes In re mote regions, and the continual chang ing of the places of abode In thinly set tled country operate to lnorease the difficulty in the delivery of foreign let ters, many bearing ouly the name, and addressed "United States.” Many are addressed without any destination bolng attached, others are not stamped, and a great many are stamped with United States lntornal revonue stamps. From a pile of letters are seleoted tho following uddressos, somo of whloh betray lgno ranee, but themajorlty gross oarlessutss; "Mlstor Makartl, Karo of Mlstor Mul doon, fornlst the Protestant Ohuroh, N. V.j” 11 James Prince, Esq., California " Harry ,0. Everzer, treasurer of the Excelsior base ball olub, Illinois"M. Gulllame Favle, Rue de Fremont, Vllle do Onslllanq, Dee Flats Unis, Notd Amerlque ;”-"For Bill Clemente, at the Cross roads, Burbun Kountl, Kin tuokyi” 'Secretary of the Insurance Company, Philadelphia"Mlkul Kel ly, hods man, Slnslatl.” "Bov. Ed ward Cartwright, England.” ” Mr. Edgar Smlth’ r (no city or State given). " To the member or Congress from Ohio.” Many others might be given, but the above are fair specimens. In a small room adjoining the main office Is contained a large oolleotlon of valuables | of all kinds, wnloh have been accumu lating for some time. During the war a large number of soldiers' photographs were reoelved through the malle, all of whloh have been preserved in portfolio form. Among the large' number on band, nearly every day some are reoog nlzed and returned to those having olalms upon them. Among the list of other valuables Is a paokage of cocoons sad raw Bilk, which was mailed from Ban Francisco to Paris and sent to the Dead Letter Office on account of non payment of postage, the person to whom the package was addressed'refusing to pay the same. A great variety of other articles are also to be seen, consisting of ambrotypes. pictures, teas, coffee, soap, apparel of all kinds, dolls, jewelry, and in fact almost everything for which the malls are considered a safe means of transmission. Every year or two a sale of miscellaneous articles of value, for which no owner can be found is adver tised in the public prints, and the an nouncements invariably attract large throngs of purchasers, some of whom hope to make good bargains, while others desire only to secure curiosities. The prices received are generally fair, and In some instances the bidding is brisk on certain articles whioh are val uable as curiosities or relics. Many of the articles, especially of clothing, sta tionary, perfumery, jewelry, &0., are really valuable and useful. — Washing ton Chronicles A JLErTER FBOJtf EAST TESAEBBEE, ROOEBSVILLE, HAWKINS CO., ) August 19th, 1869. J Editors Intelligencer l ought at an earlier day to have thanked you for your very kind and complimentary notice of East Tennessee, in your “ Editorial Notes” after your visit in April last. Your very kind mention of uS is all the more grateful* ly appreciated, from the fact that we occa sionally meet with articles like the follow ing, which I oopy from " Moore’s .Rural Acuj ForA:«*,” of June 6th, 1869, under the head of “About the South “ Roan Mountain, EastTonn. I have been traveling all over the Eastern part of this State to find a place to locate. The country is, indeed, beau tiful, but such natives you never saw.— Notone houso in twenty has a glass win dow. Houses are made of rough logs and plastered with mud. There are no schools, very few of the grown people can read, fewer can write, and not oue of them takes a paper. I tried hard to get subscrip tions for the Rural, showing them my own copy, but all to no purpose. They use the old bull-tongue plow, and mark off their corn land with a shovel plow. It is just the country for bees, but no one raises them; it is a beautiful climate for fruits, but no one has any ; and stranger than all, people seem opposed to any improvement. But If immigration from the North contin ues aB it has begun, things will have to change here before long. F. A. Rew. Ja.” I have no idea who this Rew, jr., is, or where he hails from, but I suppose he is one of tho regular “ God and ’Morality”-*- “ beat Government the world ever saw,” — sort of carpet-bagger. 1 will describe him more fully before I’m done. I once heard of a lawyer openiug a cause in our Supreme Court in this manner: “ May it please the Court, the complainant’s bill contains just forty lies.” This letter of Rew, jr., beats that bill. It contains a suppression of the truth or a direct falsehood in every line. He writes from Roan Mountain, East Ten nessee, which is at the extreme upper end of the State, near tho North Carolina line. I am glad that he was so nearly off Ten nessee soil, before be slandered us so foul ly. One would have supposed that as he gazed from that moantaln top upon some of the most beautiful, grand and awe-in spiring scenery that the eye of man ever beheld, that the truth, if if was in him , would have come out, but it didn’t. He says that be has been traveling all over the Eastern part of the State. The Eastern part of the State is all East Tennessee, and East Tennessee has thirty counties.— lb has two hundred and fifty miles of railroad, running from Bristol to Chatta . nooga and other roads running across the State, of which one hundred and 'thirty miles are in operation. If he availed him self of the mode of travel, he did not see one such house as he describes in fifty. On the other hand he saw fine, well built, comfort able farm houses and town residences, and Inside of them he would have found every comfort and many of the luxuries at | tainable in any section of the country, with fruitjlrees abundant and bees innumerable. If be had looked out of the depots, he have seen almost auy kind of agrlcultura implements manufactured in the United States. Plows from almost every State In which they are manufactured. If he had visited the various county Beats, he would huve found In each and every one of the thirty-one, well built, substantial, and In many of them, very handsome Court Houses and Academies, and besides those very many Collegiate buildings, Churches, Ac., and In every voting distriot in oaoh county a school house, built at public ox ponso, under our common school system, many of them, to bo suro, humble and un pretending but novortholOßß a nuclous of education, which la incline to make our whole people equal in point of edu cation to thoso of any State. If ho had mingled with tho bottor educated classes ot our pooplo, bo would have found them equal in any respect to any people In tho Union, and he would have found our clergy, members of the bar, and of the mod loal profession, the peers of any in the land, and more political information among the masses ofour people than those of any other State. He says “ not one of them tukos a paper.” I will venture the assertion that before tho war there wore more newspapers, magazines, ifco., &0., dtc., tuken In the town of Rogersville, from which I writo, tbnn in any town of tbo same population in Now Eogland. I don't know the liutnbor taken now, but this I do know, thoro are six dlf , ferent agricultural papers taken at this post oflloo, to wit: Agriculturalist, Rural % Quit, tfc Cb. Gent, Stock Journal, American Farmer, and Southern Planter and Farmer • Twenty Northern nowapnpors aro tuken in i the South lo oue Southern paper taken at the North, and this is why tho Southern ; people are well postod as to what Is going 1 on In your section, whllo Northern people | depend upon lying carpot-bag correspond [ outs, ol tho Rew, Jr., order, for their infor* matiou of us. But I promised to give . you a dosovlptlon of Rew, Jr. Hore it Ib. Rev. Dr. James Gallakcr, nu omlacnt Presbyterian divine, at one time pastor of the Ist Presbyterian Church in this village, was once travelling upon a Mississippi steamboat, tmd ;waa, with tho other passengers, greatly annoyed by a young man, who persisted In introducing iufidel sentiments Into a Sabbath day gen eral conversation. Dr. G. tried to reason I with and convince him of bis error, to | which he would reply by quoting garbled extracts from various portions of the Bible 10 prove that the whole was lnconsisten and fatso. Dr. G. finding it impossible to convince the shallow (patted fool, turning to tho crowd, remarked that tbo young man's peculiar viewß of the Bible reminded him of a dream he once bad. He dreamed that a great storm and flood bad passed over tbe land, and that after It two birds went abroad to vlow tho land and make re port thereof. The ono, a beautiful dove, aB it flew aloft in tbe bright and oloudless sky looked down with gladsome.eye upon the green fields and bcautoous flowers, blue mountains and sparkling waters, and turn* log joyously it guthered and boro home green loaves and fruits and flowers. Tho other enmo buck moody and sullen. It too had flown fur and wide, but it had no oyu for the bright and bountiful, for tho groon fields and flowors, lakes, moun tains and rivers, but ovorlooklng all there, it had sought horo, with oyo and nostril, for somo done} oaroasN orolhor gnrbago to prey upon, and had found but littlo. Dr. G. did not givo the name of the otbor bird, but tbo orowd made tbo application,and carrion orow and buzzard begun to bo appliod bo freely that tbo Infldol buzzard loft, at tbo next wood* yard. Nobody but a carpet-bagger buz zard could travel through East Tennosseo ] and make the report that Row, Jr., did* One thing moroand I'mdonot Row, Jr., saye we “ scorn opposed to any Improve ment.” On tho oontrary wo aro earnestly begging for Northern and foreign immi gration of the right sort, to oome and help ua develop our great resources. We think we have a great, a noblo oountry, one with a great futuro before It Wo of tbe South will gladly woloome all who oome with kind boons and words, to use and onjoy among us and with us, what is pleasant, 1 useful and good; but we want no buzzards of tbe Rew t Jr., order. We went farmers, dairymen, lumber dealers to saw up our splendid timber; mechanic* to work It up | into railroad cars, carriages, wagons, agrf ' cultural Implements and household fund ■ ture \ miners and monnfaotoriea to develop 1 1 our various reflourcea in this peoullar line. NUMBER 35 To one and all of the above clauses, we say come and look at things carefully witn your own eyes, and if you can make a good thing of it and better yourself by the move, come and be one of us, and you will meet a cordial welcome. I had intended giving you some aooount of political affairs, but my letter is already too long. Yours, ever truly, John:A. McKiifNY.l A RACE FOB UKS ON A RAILROAD. An Engineer Chased by Fire ot Seventy Miles an Hoar—a Thrilling Barra* tl ve. Correspondence Grand Rapids (Mich.) Eagle. * * • To make it an Intelligible mat ter to the reader, let me say that the Buf falo. Corry and Pittsburg road intersects the Lake Shore road at this place. The sta tion at the junction is called Brocton. Now let it be understood that from this point to Mayville, at the head of Chautauqua Lake, a distance of only about ten miles, a train is carried over an elevation of 700 feet. — From the station to the summit the grade is about 80 feet to the mile, with curves which increase the distance to four miles. It is over this road that the immense quan tities of petroleum are brought. On Tuesday evening about 9 o’clock, a train consisting of six oil cars and two pas senger cars reached the summit on its way to the Junction. Here, by some cause as yet unexplained, one of the oil tanks took fire. The passenger cars were ut once de tached and the brakes stopped them. Next the oil cars were cut off, and the locomo tive, tender, and box car containing two valuable horses and two men passed down the road, the engineer supposing that the brakemen ou the oil cars would arrest the , course of those, but what was his horror on looking back, to see the six cars In pur suit of him down the grade, enveloped in flames. They not only took him, knocking the borads-aek} men. flat upon the floor, and yet almost ihifneu* lously not throwing the engine from the track. It was now with thejengineer u race for life, and he gave the engine every ounce of steam. Looking south from the place of my residence at that terrible juncture, one of the most magnificent spectacles was wit nessed that a man sees in a lifetime. A sheet of intensely bright flame, sixty feet high, was seen coming down that southern slope, apparently with the speed of a me teor, and really very nearly the speed of a hurricane (eighty miles an hour,) for pur sued and pursuer flew over the course, or rather down it, and arouuii the curves, at the rate of more than seventy Imitea an hour, as the engineer declares, nnu aa every body can believe who witnessed tbespeetu cle. The whole heavens were illumluated, and the landscape was lit up ns by the noonday light. Onward and downward flew the engine, and behind it flew and thundered the huge fiery demon. Twice its prodigious weight was driven against the fugitive, as if instinct with a purpose to drive It from the track. It seemed as if to the heroic engineer and fireman there was a perfect environment of peril The speed of the engine was such that, it ceased to pump; then again, the Cincinnati express was aae at the junction at this time. The engineer of the oil train whistled “open switch,” and Bbaking hands with the fire man, they bade each other farewell, know ing that their lives depended on the open ing of the Lake Shore switch by their friends below, and this was to imperil the express train coming down from the West with its living human freight. The engi neer on this train saw the fire when it first broke out at the summit, and supposing be could clear the Junction before the llamiog terror reached it, he, too, put his engine to the utmost speed on a level grade. A mile short of the junction he saw that the effort was a vain one, for the flying conflagration had rushed out upon the Lake Shore track, and was roaring onward in the direction of Dunkirk. He cheoked the onward course of his own train, and brought it to a stand still. It did not proceed until 3 o’clock in the morning. The case took in another danger, and it was imminent. A heavy freight train was coming up the Lake Shore road. All I will say of the escape of this. Is that it did escape to the side track, and only escaped by tne last minute of possibility. . Banning on to a Bate distance from the depot, the engineer of the oil train detached his eDglne and left the six cars to consume. He says his situation was fully realized by him. He expected to lose his life. At every moment he expected the engino to leave the track. He saw be was going at a perilous rate of speed, but there was no help for it. The demon was behind him, ana he declares that it looked like a demon. With that fondness or real affection for his engine, which these men display, ho said, “I thought everything of my engine, and was determined to stay by It to the last.” The fireman made ono attempt to escape by jumping from the tender, but the engineer restrained him. Altogether the occurrence was a remarkable one, and In part remark able for this, that no llyes were lost. Tbo brakemen on the all cars bad gone back to the passenger cars, when the oil cars start ed. It whs well tney did. Unless those rear cars bad boon detached and slopped, their inmates would have been burned to death. Confession of n HnrUeror,—Eight Mur* uer»byn Man Twenty-two Years old. Tho Knoxville (Tnnn.i Prong gives a de tailed uccount of a murder which lutoly occurred in Fentress county, Tonnussoo, tbo capture of tho murderor and tho testi mony ugulnst him / “On tuo 20th of last November a citizen of Fontroas county went to tho houso of old Mrs, Galloway and found tho old lady, bor daughter and two grandchildren lying upon the floor with tbolr hoads split open with an sxo and tho floor dolugod with blood and brnlus. Nocortolu duo could be found. One of tbo children, a boy seven yours of ago, showed signs of lifo, and wan removed to a neighbor’s house. Two days aftor terwards the little fellow showud signs of consciousness, and wus askod. “ Who had done it T Hla reply was " Cul," This in formation, connected with olhor circum stances, directed suspicion to Calvin Log- Btonjwho had about that lirno fled to his horde on Green river, in Kentucky. “ Ho was pursued, captured and brought back to Fentress county,by which time the little boy, who seemed to bavo boon pre served by a special Provldonco, was so nearly recovered as loglvo a oorruot account of tbo whole bloody tule. From his testi mony it nppeuts that Logstoti camo lo tbo bouse with two women, his aunts, named Brown, and demanded of ’Granny’ her monoy, with threats of a presented pistol. Falling to get nny ho put up his pistol and snlzed au axe he found in tho bouse and struck the old lady on tbo bond, uud tbon served tho youuil woman and a four-yoar old boy in tho sarao manner. Ono of tho women then seized a shovel and dealt tho little witness a blow, which Is tho lust thing he recollects. "Upon the return of the prisoner to Fen tress county the citizens eroded an Ira promtu gallows for his accommodation, but by the efforts of Judge Houk, Judgo Lyncb yielded Jurisdiction. Failing to get n Jury in that county, the venue was changed to Scott oounty, whore, after a long and labo rious trial, tho verdict has boon rondornd of guilty of murder in tho first degree, with out any mitigating olrcumstaoces.’ and sen tence of death pronounced by Juugo Houk, to tuko effect on the 18th of October, proxi mo. An appeal wus taken to tho Kupromo Court, and the prisoner and his guard ar rived here yesterday. Although the pris oner is only twenty-two years of ago, ho freely confesses lo eight murders. Thrilling Ncoao on h Ntentnbonl On Monday morning, shoilly ofior tbo steamer Lady of tbo Latto bad left tbo land ing at Capo May, on her way to this city, the packing neur tho boilers, in some un accountable way, became ignitod, and sot fire to some light woodwork nenr by. A dense volume of smoke ascended from the engine- room, to tbo great fright and dismay oi tho passengers. An indiscreet lady,who happened to bo in the vicinity of the engine, ran Into the cabin crying "Fire I” at tho top of her voice. The passengers started from tbolr seats, and seeing tho smoke, a most thrilling scene ensued. Ladles screamed and children cried, while tbo obopk of many,a brave man turned pale, for tbo engines were obliged to be stopped and tbe boat was nearly out of sight of iho land. Tbo officers of (ho boat acted with tho greutest presence of mind, ami in about ten minutes quieted thooxclted pasiongers, although it took great exertions to prevent soveral young girls from leaping over bourd, A hoso which was in roudiness for luob emergencies was turned on tbo burn ing woodwork, and a very fuw minutes sufficed lo extinguish the flumes. It Is al most miraoulnus that, iu the intense con fusion, no uno wm» Injured, its many hun dreds of passengers wero ou board, many of thorn ladles and children. That such was not tho case is duo to tho efforts of the officer* ol the boat,— Philadelphia /nearer, Au Old Jnil lllrd. Tho oldest prlsonor In tho Ohio l'on* itontlary is John Gull, who has boeu In tho Institution about thirty-three yours,-- 110 was oonvlotod of murdor In thn seo ond degroo, In Stark oounty, Ootobor 14, 183(1, and sentenced to the pouttenllary fur life, Tho old man’s mind bus boon impair ed for a number of years, but ho la consid ered perfectly harmloss. Ho imagine* that he goes out ovory night and comes buck loaded down with monoy. The "almighty dollar” »oem* to bo his nocullar forto. anil ho always counts It by "touu" and "mil lions twloe over." Iu his own imagination be la tho riohost man now living* Gull, bolng a pioneer In tho prison, is, oroourao, allowed many apodal privileges not enjoy ed by tbo tbo modern donlzena, Ho works at ploosuro. eats by himself, goes to bed when bo picnics, and allowes no ono to •bridge bis rights. He Is an old fogy in every sense of tbe word, and nothing dis pleases him so much as modern Improve ments. Wbsn the directors and warden deolded to ohange the "zebra- atripod coat” for blaok, Gull was highly incensed at tbe Idea, and, to this day. refuse# to wear any thing bat the old style. -raTe oE advertising. Badness advxrtisxkxkts, $l2 a year per qnara of ten lines; ftj per year for each ad ditional square. Rxal Estate Advxxtisikq, lo cents a line for the first, and 5 oents for eaoh subsequent is* sertlon. Qxnerai* Advertising 7 cents a line for the first, and 4 cents for each subsequent inser tion. Bpxoxai. Non cats Inserted inLoeal Column 16 cents per line. Special Notzoxs preceding marriages and deaths, 10 cents per line for first insertion! and S cents for every subsequent lnsertlonjl Lixoaj. im oth e b Nonas— > RTegntora* -,otln— , rV - Administrators' nrttinAa 2.50 Assignees' notloes,_ 2.50 Auditors’ notices, 2.00 Other “Notloes/'ten lines, or less, “ w three times, 1.50 Mnte Items. Conneautvllle has a new organ for the use of the borough schools, which coat $175. Mercer county has thirty throe port of fices, three of which are money-order offices. A drum oorps of twenty members—Allen Butz, leader—has been orgaulzed iu AUon town. Samuel Wells, Esq., has been appointed Superintendent of the Pottaiowu Gas Works. Tho furnace of the Pottstown Iron Com pany has been completely repaired, and will soon be put in operation. There were 327 deaths in Phll’a lust week —beiDg ID less than during the 'preceding week. Johnny Prendegast, an ethiopian come dian of repute, died very suddenly recent ly, at Pittsburg. Hickory township, .Mercer county, re joices over the discovery of a vein of coul measuring four feet. The Beaver county fair will be held this year on the 29th and SOih days of Septem ber and the Ist of October. The Knights of Pythias are to have a grand pic-mo at Tyrone on the 27th Inst. Five hundred invitations have been sent. The Pittsburg papers are discussing the necessity of retrenchment and reform iu the municipal government of that city. The frost was so heavy in Wayne county the two eveulDgs preceding tho eclipse ns to kill whole fields oi buckwheat. Oliver Watson, of Williamsport, has pur chased tho “Little Falls Farm,” Virginia, owned by Dr. Hugh Morson, and contain ing 870 J acres, for $28,000. A man named John Buzby, living at Fort Washington, Montgomery couuty, was found on the railroad truck recently, with bis left arm suvurod nt the shoulder. •Not sinco Moses Armstrong com mitted suicide by cutting his throat ut a tavern on tho old Brownsville pluuk road about three miles from Pittsburg. Shatnburg claims to have the largest pro* ducing wells lu the oil regions, viz: Tho Lady Stewart well, 180 barrels per day ; Emery well, 150 barrels per day. The Crawford Journal has again changed bauds,-Messrs. Cbalfaut A Tyler having purohused the office from-Messrs. Hollister A Metcalf, tho former proprietors. The Clatlon RcpuMican says that several barns in tLu>t _vicinity have been burned from spontaneous combustion, caused by housing buy in an unlit condition. Allen Eggo will Jprobably loso his cyo from tho splushing of moiled iron into It, recently, at the foundry of Thayer, F.rd man, Wilson A Co., lu Allentown, where ho was employed. Harry C. Ueckoudorn, of Reading, has received letters patent for improvements to Sewing Machines, and cotuemplates the manulacturo of the improved machines in that city. Auctioneer Lyon sold 20 shares of Union Bunk stock of Roadiog ut public sulo, on Saturday afternoon last; the first tenabareH nt $3O per share, and the second ton at $29.50 per t-hure. The Farmers’ Club of Philadelphia wore entertaiued with a complimentary banquet, given by Hon. Asa Packer, at tho Mansion House on the 19th iust. A large number of distinguished guests wore present. N The OU’.Creek and Alleghonyißlver K.|R. has received as its Managing Officer, Mr. John Pitcairn, Jr., formerly Superintendent of tho Middle Division of the Philadelphia and Erie Railroad. Mr. Joseph Weaver, of Marysville, Perry county, raised from a aluglo potatoo, weigh ing two and a half ounces, twonty-threo pounds of potatoes, measuring a half bushel. Rev/J. Pastorfield, pastor of tho M. K. Church at Marshalton, Chostor Co., oat his foot badly recently. Ho was cutting wood when tbo axe slipped striking his instep, compelling him to use crutches. On the 7th inst., a man named Francis Popham got on tho curs at North Point, Dear Clinton, in an intoxicated condition and fell through between the cars onu was immediately crushed to doath. The other day a man was killed on tho Pan Handle Railroad, at Burgettstown, Allegheny county. Weary, ho nut down on tho track to rest and lell asleep, when the fast line came along and munglod him shockingly. The family of a Mr. Pugh, residing In Butler county, wero poisoned lately by eat ing mushrooms. One of tbo children died a few days after partakiug of tho poison ; the rest of the family aro still alive, but in a crilloal condition. There is a dwarf pear tree on tho premia ises of Mr. John Hykes, in Londonborry township, Dauphin county,on whicbhangs 212 pairs, measuring 7i iuchea'in curcum ference, The tree Is threo inches thick and 11 feet high. In connection with thn colobrated Qirurd estato, located In Philadelphia and vicinity, tbo nnnual reoelpts from tbo farms umount lo $7 332, and tho total receipts from roul estate in tho city, in round numberH, $2K7,- 000. William Flollli. of Lower Oxford town ship, Chester co., bad n vnluuble horse klll od Auj,, 7th, by falling from Iho Imrn brldgo, stopping on tho end of n plunk which wus somowhut rotted, ho broke through nnd dlod tnstnntly, Mr. Culob Ilaldwln, of Kust (\uln Chester oounty, lost u vnluublo inuro recently.— Hbo boonmo frightened nnd run off, throw lug tho wagon off tho sldo of Iho roud nnd Iho oeoupuntu out, nnd shortly uflorwurds plungud ovor n preolplcu nud wus killed. llooontly n lltllo girl übout three yourn old, fell from ft second slory window of one of tho housoH of tho Wost llrunnh Cump Mooting, »t Wftyno Hlftllon, Lycoming co., and broko bor neok. Dumb, us u matter of oourso, was almost Instnntnnoous. Tbo Phllodolpbla nnd Erie Hullrond In Is doing ft tromondous freight business ut prosont. A trnlnof novonty lour cum puss id Youngsvlllo one dny drawn by a slnglo engino. No wonder tho com pnny are making arrungomonts to put down ft doublo truck. Workmon nro busy In putting up 11:0 Soldiers’ Monutnont nt Norristown. Tho base Is ft lnrgo block of bluo mnrblo, wbllo tbo shaft will be pure wbllo mnrblo. On tbo sides of tho huso will bo engraved Iho numes of Iho dopnrtod sold tors of Montgotn* ory county. Altogether It will be u vory line nnd eredttublo uffulr. A numbor of cltlr.ons have organis'd therasolvos Into the “Clarion Borough Oil Company.” Col. J. B. Knox Im President, (5. J. Khea, Secretary, und Ur. James Boss, Treasurer. Thocompany huHalrondy leased ■ouio land nonr tho mouth of tho Clarion rlvor, and mado arrongoraents to pul down ono well Iramudlutoly. Philadelphia roconlly burnod up 80,000 barrolu of whiskey, Slnco thou she him not bad a drop of rain. To bo deprived of whiskey und water Is considered by some a grout misfortunes; to bo deprlvod of both Is a horror, whoso mngnltudo Is boyond any but tho descriptive powers of a ** sen satlonul” reporter. A wire rope cable, /W7S foot In length, bos boon inado at Trenton, to be used In draw ing coal trolnsovor the mountains on tho Lehigh and Susquehanna road, at Solo mon"* Gup. The cable is tho largest In tho country. Iu making wire ropo tho walk bas boon dlsponsod with, by a now Inven tion of Mr. Koobllng, which twists It In tho middle. On tho 13th Inst., ono Albert Brown, a negro, committed n rapo on Lcnora Han non,' wbilo, aged Id vears, In Troy twp., Bradford county. Tho family wore übsont, aud tho wretch In human form took this opportunity to accomplish his design. The details are of tho most rovoltlng obaructor. The negro was lodged in hill on Sunday of last week. £Tke Norristown Republican soys : “ The country Is Buffering hereabout owing to tho absence of rain. Slight showers occurred on Saturday, but the crops oro still so much parched that should no rain como libido of two or three days much damage must bo the result, not only to tho crops but from a continued suspension of buslnoss requiring wntor along tho Schuylkill river.” Tho Philadelphia Ledger attributes tho unusual hoalthfulness or that city tho pros out season to tho abundance and cheapness of fruits of all kinds. It says that some dajM recently good poaches woro as low ns twen ty to thirty cents per basket, and llvo and six cents pur hnlf peck. Tho city has not boon so well supplied with fruits and yego tnblos for rnuny years. Melons sell atone third of tho prleo of lust year. lleaonily a young son of Isaac Boar, of Mlddlusox township, Cumberland coun ty, ugod rnur or llvo years, wus playing about tho barn where tho men wore thresh ing in attempting to step over tho tum bling shaft of tho Hofmrutor, while tho rnaablno was In operation, his pantaloons wore caught, anti ho was whirled around with auen forco— striking his bond and body ugutnit tiio ground—that ho wus kill ed almost Instantly. Tho Oxford (Chostor county) Press saysi “Jonathan Miller, on Isaac Kirk’s farm, In West Nottingham township, brings us a oloso clustor of ihreo tomatoes on onn stora which aro vory lino and largo, euoh weigh ing a pound. John V, Matuowa, of Lowor Oxford township, has loft us ono wbloh wolghs It measures 18} Inches arouud ono way. nod 14 Inobos tho other, 0. K. McDonald, Esq., of East Not tingham. grow one which wolghs ovor two pounds.” Tho Philadelphia oByHOuardi,>Col. flt. Clair Mullholland. and the Vetorau Light Artillery or Philadelphia, Captain Brady, areoncampod together at Camp Hapoook, Knaus*' Hill, on the Lehigh, near Bothlo hem. The GuaVds-flfteen companlea. oon eolidated into eight—number about 875 men. The Artillery number thirty men, with four six pound guns. The command will return to Philadelphia on Saturday. The Guards have * full drum oorpa and a band of eighteen plecei.