THE LANCASTER INTELLIGENCER thYBLISEIED VVISILY WEDFESDAY BY 11. G. SIIITII•& co A. J. STEINILA_N 0. SMITH Ilara per annum payable in all mire In advance. • TILE LANCASTER DAILY INTELLIGEXCEE. published every evening, Sunday excepted, at tr, per annum in advance. OFFICE-SOLTTIIWEEST CONIC EP. OB CENTRE QUARE. V carp. They are falling, slomvly Thick upon the forest side, Severed from the noble branches, Where they %raved in beantreus prid, They are falling In valleys, Where the early violets wring, And the birds In runny spring t Inn• "trot their dulcet mush; ring. They are falling•, sadly falling, CloNe bralJr oar euttngc dour; Pale and faded, like the loVed They have gone forever more. They'are falling, and the sunbeam, Rhine in beauty soft around ; Yet the faded leaves are falling, Falling on t mossy ground. They are falllnu 01 the slxcalnlct, 'l'hcre t hc slier) salon A 11,11111.11 ITS placid bosom Onward with tho waters gn. They are falling In the church-yard Winn , our kindred sweidly slccp \\'h', Ntlllllll, 11 . 01 . tln loved .M'S swop. Tin.) . aro falling, Wik. tin: .11.1111111 Sigh, When gU Bright upon the midnight idly. falling, whrn the 11 . 1111/I,L Mauna roar, Wheal winds :mil billaur Sadly nigh l'll‘.y are fa 1111 1 ,,, they are Ili 11111 \VIJIIf , our ...T , ilent•T 1.1.0.4111, , still To Iltl• sunny of chIlditoo:1, LII 1.111. 11r.,111 . 1, 1.,r14 And U1..11 - 1/0141 1,111111.1 lIY iill• I,llght , cl 1101111 .:111:1 Faded HI, Ho. falling 1 4. 0 1 ..: , I . .L.st, pon the Icy 3I roam.. =IR i• 111 a,.,1111 11191: ut to yoa.lk . peavr•fal t - Vaailag .%tal all Elm ,!:y par.. will al a main. hlowA ht...,.•3111‘,4 “ut Cho last Nwcct that - Pale NVfl, iii 16titel.• i If ifffiff.f.,l, Tlio smitrti,r, 111,1,,1. p 1 ho 11,110 I . r', r n '" ,lr !I.! 1 1'11. , erickvt's chirp 11111 tnalt,s hilem, more. Ult. ' s 1114 . 1.o:1 v., begin I, fall ,l.prza . ..; Nwatill•rposvaNvay The gl,ry alai 1111011,, II:ty clay I le par I alai S,/011 I 11l qulct gravt . folds all. Ii thoughtful gl,y, how roan) eye, in vain A, lifted to sour laetuts . , lull of learn! How 111:111y loetrt, g Intel; through all the I Ivavy‘vit cager with I nneSt OEI ig Iwiit r... 1 111.• din) 11.•rall obi:tilt (111, gl I itu...t• Is t,rlllly I' u rinlu th..y 111:ky l• or.,.,•1•111 .Ili.ftlii.• 141111== /111ff,eI \OM: , 1110110 \VW:VI! 1/'‘..1 . 1111 . ili• H.llllle. T 1 .11.111,1 . 11/1. 1/1/1:1, 111111 . 111111 . ...1 I/1 It , 4, Ii,v...1,11:111o, A .ItsoNvsy I.lslrll HS., Hts.l.., An.1111.:LVI•11111•1 . illlll, t herd-510115 1.1 ty.ll Than chin: Inuit! \oll, istiin•. The grain Inn' 1,14011 :1 .4.h14-11 411111 - The grape, 1111 nntlos..f.nt tint I , nun Sunnnors hrstins sinl; Ana l'lns•rnil I . meta, rnllllll 1111 tip 1~l :In~l iley:tri I. 1.1,111 y 1,1%1'110,1 In niney saw 1 Inesll.l,l-s The vllisters ra111.14 v:t1o, who!. And With Shepherd MUSIC ron“, A lovellor SI . 1•1,1 . 1 . 01/1./ nhn Th.U.lrt • olit-light ho of (lola ...hi on llold :ul.l fold, On col InE4.• roof nod hold. r In Illio.-worn .•r.1.4 aIIII ruin old. dire., nail 11....v01'y ,vii , ll a Itl-41:ty, \VIII blurs the 1011•11,11 virteya.rds ,111.1vt•I ill Ills Irrl,tlll, .Iml i,II 1111. 1,,111,11i1 • M[ONVeii thr.vll by 1111 Dcatli litlts,Lll 11arv1 , 1 111 ! 1:11,11.1 old clvit.•:ilix 41:.m1.1 I ....It.lll r lend. Wht•ri• are lb , - •I Lin ; 11:1111; Wit gory 1.111 Rnnu•yo for : ••yo Lai This Is A mint iWI 'I•:II-- ICI snryt• Inn ninl. of I 00-.1,n1 nrood, Vl . ollllViliCh „'ell Ow h wore Irood Anis! itnrkOw yo In Mtd..oll' alihatoir. ftliuctlanrous. A Verlloui Honeymoon CI Iye :11111 / Wt . ft• engaged to tie mat.- ried, tool had been so about three months. We had known melt other a great many ; and he °Dell eAllle down to the rectory, till one day, in a very unromantic manner, he asked me if he I would be his wife; and though there had been none of the sighing's, and jealousies, and heart burning , we read about. I knew that, in toy foolish lit tle way, I was very fond of Clive, and feeling how good, :Lod true-hearted, and strong he was, and how glad I ought to l , that he would sloop to such a poor, little, insignificant girl ins I was, I look ed up in his bravo, handsome face, which I could hardly see for the team swimming in my eyes, and then I said yes, I would ; :did then for a while I was clasped close to his breast; and it seemed to me that there could be no Car,: or trouble in this world, and all that I hail to do was to nestle there to be safe from till life-storms to come.— Ire kissed me then, gently and lovingly, and somehow I felt very happy---so happy, that when my uncle, who hail brought ine up nom a child, came into the room, I did not flinch hastily away, but went to him quietly, and clung to his arm, while Clive, iii his bold, open way, said : " Mr. (trace, Mary has pro mised to lie my wife." (inch, shook hands with him warmly, and patted my cheek as he drew me closer to hint ; and after that, matters went on in a very quiet, unexciting way for three months, Clive coining down on Saturday night, and slaying till Monday morning, when he return ed to his Mlle,: in the city, and in those days we quietly to talk about the future; how in years to come we were to be married, and how we were to plan and contrive about our little income, taking a cottage somewhere six or eight miles from town, and living very spar ingly, :nit' Charley's salary was any thing but high. Our planing though was needless; for one day Clive came down in great haste, imil I could see by Ids face that he had important news to . - communicate; and so it proved. 11. e had 10!(.11 aAkcd by Ilk employers, a large merchant firm, NviteAlier he would like to accept another appointment. " Rut it advantageous?" I asked. " Yes," he said in a (miet, strangv way; " six hundred a year." ''Six hundred a year, Clive!" I eK vlainlvd; " why, we shall be rich," " Rich? yes," he said, taking my hand; " but there is a drawback." "A drawback'!" " must sign ILII agreement serve them for six years eelLai n." " Well;" I said, " but not that ad vantatzeous " Perhaps," he said, looking very hard in lily eyes as he spoke ; " hilt l have not told you where it is." " Not abroad, Clive!" I exclaimed as a sudden pang shot through me. " Yes, love, abroad—in Java—at a Dotell station." " But you cannot,novept i t, years—you will not leave nu, 7" Then I checked inysolr, ai I thought of my sel,:,,liness, and it struck inn that I woo gon.„; to be a sturnbling.bloek in his Bath, when fortune was within his grasp. " Do you wiAli ow to give up, Mary ?" he said. " Yes—nn, no, Clive; I ant selfish, exclaimed ; ` you mtv.:tnut throw it up --!t would be destroying your future prospects. It seems hard to bear—hard to wait for six years; but we must be patient." 1 could say no inure, for the tears I had striVell to keep back would come; but the next moment he held me sob bing in his arms as he whispered, " Is there no way of getting over the diffi culty, darling?" I looked up in his fare, for, for a few moments did not see_ what he meant; but the next minute I was clinging to him, weeping silently ; and so it fell out that at eighteen I was my dear hus band's girlish littlewife—so girlish that, as we ascended the side otthe great ship Balavian, at Gravesend, I saw the sail ors whispering to one another, and I felt my cheeks burn, because I kitew that they wee saying I was Buell a mere child. For a was all like a dream—that hurried wedding, and the hasty prepar ation for our voyage. My uncle had said that it would be suicidal for Clive to give up so good an appointment; and though he felt it bitterly, he considered with Clive that six years was too long a separation. "Had it been three," he said, "ho would have considered it our duty to wait;" but as it was for the longer period, he yielded easily to Clive's solicitations, and in one short fortnight all was settled—farewells had been said, and the great ship was slowly sailing down the ever-widening river. daw XatttaOta Aradlityrt?ett VOLUME 71 It seemed so strange, so wonderful, that it required at times the reassuring touch of Clive's hand to make me rea- lize the Let that we were bidding fare well to the old country. But so it was ; and th gh my heart was sore at parting from my uncle, yet that sorrow was min led with so much happiness that I fet r I did not think enough of his pain T 1 e days glided by even as the great shit glided past the shores of the old country, and soon we had seen the last of the great rock-point which they told me was the Lizard, and we were at sea. Had I been a queen, I could not have had more attention paid to me; the captain, mates, and even the hum blest sailor, always had a smile for me ; and as we reached in time the hotter re gions, there was always a summons,and the best place reserved for poor little are, whenever tlyingdish, or dolphins, or a shark was in sight. The days grew into weeks, and with almost invariably pleasant weather, the ship sailed on. There seemed no dan ger—nothing to apprehend ; and as I sat with the soft breeze fanning my cheeks, all the perils of the sea of which I had read seemed so distant and im possible, that I could hardly believe the gentle rippling waves, mid the soft cloud necked sky, could possibly be guilty of the cruelties of which we hear. At last, though, came a cloud, and that oud seemed to settle upon my hue unl's brow. I asked him the reason, id he unwillingly told inc that it was aeeount of the vessel. waiiupon one soft tropical tivening that I elicited that reponse from hint; mid hcspoke,Redrewuucloser•tohimo him •,.s we leaned over the side, looking down at the glittering starlight reflected from the dark bosom of the sea. Are you keeping anything from me, VC I said gently. "Am I not to kre the trouble as well II.A the happi •s ol• life "Trouble, little one," he said—"trou . ought lit •Vll tO Conie near you." ' should not he happy if I felt that I did not siuur. all, Clive. By keeping; me ill ignoranee, you ww•ould be inflicting the very trouble front Nehich you screen me." "Beaten with my own ;IN" lie said lightly; and then, in an undertone, I am uneasy, darling, ❑Lout the ves sel." "But, why I said. " What is there to make you uneasy "Look along the ,teek, and tell roe what you see." " \Vital do I see • The man at the steering-wheel, the men of the watch, and the four men pumping." Clive was silent. " What makes you uneasy, then I asked, after a while. Darling," lie said, " you lottl not asked use, I should not have told you ; but 1 cannot bring my , elf to seem want ing, in confidence. I lave you not no ticed any change in Captain AVelister and Mr. ( "They have scented a little more cheerful and merry than usual,'' I said. "In the cabin—yes; but when on leek, it has not been so. Mary, dar ling, I fear there is trouble at hand; those four men pumping, looks outti-i7 ous." " Omnious." "Wes, love. 'Pim. days ago, dme man was employed pumping; the next day, two men were at work at once, and they were relieved again and again ; yesterday, four men were pumping all day till evening; to-day, it was com menced at day-break, and orders have, I know, been given that it is to be kept up all night." "And what does that mean '."' I asked, though I felt that I knew what the an swer would be. ' It weans, love, that we are :t thuu nl front any land, cunt that the p has sprang a leak." only a Neat( . Ltirl then, and very young, so I hat. perhaps my emotion may be excused; for I felt a strange catching of my breath, and it sense of dread steal ing over me ; but I tried liard to ntaster it all, and don't think my voice shook as I laid my hands on Chives breast, and said: "Dear husband, we are in the hands of the Almighty ; let us hope thaS in our weakness we are magnifying the He caught my hands in his, and held gazing lit) \VII in my eyes. "And I've been thinking you a (Mild little girl, Mary !" lie exclaimed at length. "God bless you Yours is indeed a brave little heart." We were interrupted by a little dis play of excitement forward, and in the dim light we could see that the captain and both the mates were there. Orders were hurriedly. gdven, and soon there was the clanking noise of another pump hard at work, with the splashing of the water as it streamed down over the side. Lanterns were busily moving :Wont, now disappearing below. Then I heard calls for the carpenter, and the captain giving loud orders ; and soon after there was a good deal of bustle. close to the ship's bows ; and Clive explained tome that they were ilrawing, a sail under the bottom, of the ship, so as to try and stop the flood of water, for it was evident that the danger was growing greater. All through that long dark night we staid on deck, listening to the clanking noise of the pumps, and the rippling splash of the water as it ran over the side ; but when morning broke, it was evident that tie danger was not lessen ed. The captain looked pale and anx ious, and there was a sullen, discontent ed look about the men, who could only with difficulty .be prevailed upon to keep to their work of pumping. About mid-day,they broke out in open mutiny, and refused to pump any longer; for the carpenter having been sent below, came up with so had a report that the men left their work directly, and in spite of commands, and even threats, they set their officers at defiance, and began to make preparations for leaving the ship. " Look lucre, Cap'cu• Webster," said an old bluff-looking sailor, "we're ready enough to obey, only it ain't no good to stop here, with the ship sinking under us. The murder's out now, and what's the good of lighting again' it:' She's started a plank, that's what she's done; and all the pumps, and twice as many more, could not keep the water under." "John Jackson," said the captain, "you're the last man I should have thought would torn against your cap tain." "So I am cap'n —hang me if I ain't,', said the man. " no good, lads; I'm under orders again : who's coming on toy side *."' - Three more men came out of the little group, and followed the bluff old sailor to where the captain and the 'notes were standing in front of us; but the rest of the crew went on stolidly plac ing water and provisions in a couple of the boats, and at last launched them, and were :thou( to push off without a word, when Captain Webster threw them in a compass, and gave theca di rections which course to steer. Five minutes after they were rowing swiftly away, when for the first time Clive spoke : " Is there no chance of saving the vessel, Captain Webster.." "No, sir," was the reply; " not the slightest. In two hours she will have gone down." I shivered as I heard these words; lint I tried to smile as C m ive glanced round k ti, at e; : then. fort to next hour, busy Old preparations for leavit g the vessel were carried on. The boat left was large and roomy; and upon its being launched, sails, toasts, and cordage were placed inside, with quite a heavy store of water and provisions, every man working hard ; and though they smiled at my ettbrts, I ran backwards and forwards from the cabin carrying necessaries for our use. But at last all was declared to be in readiness, and I was lowered over the side. Clive quickly taking his place with me in the boat, where there were already the four sailors ; then came the two mates, and lastly the captain. " You bear witness, gentlemen," he said, " that I had left nothing undone, and that it was not until every effort had failed that I left my ship." He would have said more, but something which caught his eye made him shout to the men to seize their oars, and then, altogether, they rowed hard away from the ship's side. At first I did not know 'Why this was done, but I soon saw that it was to avoid the vortex which the sinking vessel would cause ; for, before five minutes had elapsed, the great ship began to roll slowly from side to side—and then, in spite of myself, I uttered a cry as it gave a plunge forward, and seemed to dive down ought of sight, leaving us alone upon the surface of the great waters. The night came on, and passed slowly away, affecting us all with a deep feel- ing of awe as we thought of the frail de fence we had against death. To us the vast ocean, heaving so slowly and regu larly beneath, seemed then like the threshold of eternity; and I know that I trembled as I clung to poor Clive's arm, in spite of his encouraging words. But very little was said that night; and I know that no one slept ; but we all sat watching and longing for the morning. At another time, I could have remain ed rapt with wonder and joy at the glo rious sunrise, which flooded the whole surface of the sea with orange and gold, but there was the sense of the great soli tude oppressing me always, while around me were the pale haggard faces of men who knew the perilous strait in which we lay. As the morning broke, though, the captain rose upin the bows, and stood looking around in every di rection, to try if he could make out where the other boats were, but, though he tried again and again, he could see nothing ; and we felt that we were alone. It was not a time for repining, however, and every man set busily to work, ar ranging such things as we hal in the boat ; then a little mast was set up, and a sail hoisted, which the soft breeze gently filled ; and the boat began to go lightly over the swell. After a short consultation, the captain determined to sail for the island of Amsterdam, a tiny speck in mid-ocean, but a place that might prove to us a haven of refuge till a passing vessel could take us off; for, though at the present time the sea and sky were serene and bright, we did nut know how soon a storm might arise to engulf our little frail boat. One—two—three days Nye sailed on and then Caine a change--a fierce wind blowing from the very direction in which our island lay. First, the sky grew black with clouds, while the sea became white and foaming, the waves each moment curling up inure and inure fiercely, till they beat against the sides and splashed over. The boat's course was altered, the sail lowered all but a tiny portion, and then the little vessel began to ride swiftly over the waves, now leaping up tt great hill of water, hanging balanced on the foamy ridge, :Ind then plunging and gliding down into It depth from which it seemed im possible that we could ever rise. Then came a time when every one except the captain, who sat lade and stern, steer ing the boat, began to bale out the Wa ter which constantly dashed over the sides. Even I would have helped, but every uric smiled, and tried to make the part of the boat l was in inure comfort able, by putting up a portion of the sail so as to screen me from the spray, which was now icily cold. It might be thought that in such a time of trouble men would Have been moved by selfish thoughts; but it was not so, for again and again it seemed to me that I was made the first considera tion. When biscuit and water, or wine were passed round, I received always the first share; and all through that wild and fearful time, even the roughest sailor there was ready to show me re spect, and try to do some little act to prove his willingness to serve me. • For a whole week we were borne along through that great chaos of trou bled waters, each moment expecting seine huge wave to engulf us; and then slowly the tempest began to abate:— First, the wind went down, and then by slow degrees the waves--so slowly, though, that losing care, now that the peril was supposed 'to be great, one of the sailors, who was steering, allowed a wave to wash right in, deluging the boat from end to end, so that it seemed about to sink, and I clung, to Clive, feel ing that our last hour had come. The confusion caused by this sudden danger made matters worse ; and two of the men plunged overboard with au oar each, to keep themselves afloat, for they felt that the boat was going down. But a few words from Captain Webster re stored confidence; and, in spite ,;f fa tigue, the water was attacked, so that each moment the vessel rose higher, and at last was entirely free once more. It was two days, though, before the sun once again shon;_, out to cheer our disconsolate state ; disconsolate, indeed, for in the time of peril the little water casks had been washed or thrown out, while the greater part of our provisions had floated 21WIIV, at a time when every thought had been devoted towards keep ing afloat. The biscuit was saturated, and we were all cold and numbed with being so long shivering iu the water. It almost scented to chill our very hearts, when, upon examination being made of each bag and case of provisions, tley were, without exception, found to have been destroyed by exposure. " Looking will not mend it, my lads," said the captain bravely. "Let us be hopeful, and tight through it all is well as we call. Never despair; and recol lect that, we have a el large here to save as well as ourselves." Ile pointed to me as he sfioke, and the en gave a faint cheer, as, in accord- anee with Lis orders, the sail was once more well hoisted, the l,oat trimmed, and we were once more, skimming over the sea. Night, morning--night, morning, succeeding each other, for I don't know how many strange and misty days of horror, with a gnawing pain of hungor tormenting us, Lipid the pains of thirst becoming hourly more and more un bearable. Capt. Webster held up brave ly, and encouraged us all ; but we could oily see that we were sailing on to our death—a death of torment with the burning sun above us, and the mocking water around, ever tantalizing, aud, as it were, asking us to drink, as it lapped musically against the frail sides, foam- ing, sparkling and pure. But the cap tain's advice was not always taken, and though with a faint smile upon his lip, Mr. Green, the first-mate, owned to his weakness, he persisted, during one fran tic fit of agony, in drinking desperately the draught that should hasten his end; for soon he grew delirious, starting as if spoken to, then leaping up, and want ing to alter the direction of the boat's head ; while when a couple of the sailors tried to restrain him, their weakness was such that he thrust them aside, and they sank back in their places, help lessly gazing at him as lie climbed over the boat's thwarts, pushed the rope which held thesail aside, and muttering angrily, trampled upon me as he made at the captain who was steering. Clive tried to stay him ; and in spite of my effort to restrain it, I uttered a loud scream, for the poor creature secured to catch his foot in my dress; and before we were aware of it, he made a lurch sideways, and fell heavily into the water. For a few moments we were all petri fied; but the captain altered the boat's course, and run back to the spot where the mate had disappeared ; but though we ran to and fro fur sonic time, and every eye was gazing intently upon the limpid water, we saw no more of the poor mate ; and for the rest of that eve ning I sat with my head bowed down upon my knees, praying that help might come. little boat was almost startling; but it engendered of despair, and when in the pale moonlight I looked up again, it was to have that despair which was in my breast augmented by the fixed stare in poor Clive's eyes. 1 did not know it then, but I learned it afterwards, that my share of the food and water had been daily augmented by the half of his, aril now it seemed that he was dying, and that I was to lose my sole protector. 1 flung myself frantically at his feet and tried to speak; but my mouth was parched and dry. I looked round for help, but it was only to gaze on four impassive stony figures, Whose fixed and heavy eyes responded not to my appeal. There was a smile though upon poor Clive's face as he felt my arms clasp him and slipping from his seat, lower and lower, he sat at last in the bottom of the boat with his head resting upon my breast, while the sigh of content that he gave sent a shudder through me, for my heart whispered that it was his last. "Throw some water in his face— moisten his hair," whispered a harsh voice, which I did not recognize as the captain's; but I tried to obey it, and bathed my husband's forehead, though apparently without effect, for he lay motionless, his arms lightly circling me and his eyes half closed; and then it was that with my bodily power momen tarily growing weaker, my mental fac ulties seemed to, become more active, and my tears fell fast, as I thought how hard it was for him so young and brave to die thus early. At times I asked my self whether I was to blame—whether I ought not to have dissuaded him from accepting this post—to have been con tent with less brilliant prospects at home. I felt that it was to be the end That long, long night passed ; and with the rising sun I gazed upon Clive's face to find It still and placid as if in sleep. The captain, who was the only LANCASTER, PA., WEDNESDAY MORNING OCTOBER 5, 1870 man who moved, seemed to me—for all I saw was in a dreamy, misty way—to secure the rudder, and then crawl for ward, when he i lpressed a scrap of bis cuit into my hand, and from a bottle would have poured a few drops between my lips, when one of the sailors snatched at it. There was a moment's struggle, and the precious liquid fell over the side, the sailor making a dash at it, and fall ing half over the boat's edge, to lie with his faco in the water, too weak to strug gle back till the captain and the stout old sailor dragged him in—but the bot- tle was gone. A time of bright golden mist, with a red-hot globe seeming to scorch my head, and a time of dense black dark ness, the one mingled with and running into the other. Then pleasant visions of green fields and bubbling streams, with delicious melting fruits hanging over the bright glistening waters. Then the old days, with Clive half supporting me as we wandered in the pleasant lanes, talking of the happy future. Then, again, the golden glowing haze, and the burning heat, the muttering of voices, the soft fluttering of the sail ; and then once more the black darkness, mingled now with the hissing as of mighty winds ; and then it seemed as if my head sank upon my husband's neck - , and I went to sleep. And it was so; but it was almost the long sleep of death ; and so near had been the end, that it was not until after days of unremitting attention that rea son returned, and I found that I was ly ing in a cot in a dimly shaded cabin.— For a long time I could not realize the past—could not understand where I was. There was the heavy motion of a ves sel, the " wash-wash" of the water hur rying by, and occasionally a heavy foot step upon the deck overhead. But at last came a sign, apparently close at hand, followed by a rustling noise; and turning my curious eyes in the direction it was for them to encounter my hus band's face, but so careworn, pallid, and anxious, as to be almost unrecogniza ble. The next moment my feeble arms were round his neck, and the tears of thankfulness were flowing, fur I knew that we,werc saved. Saved, indeed; but how near had been our end may be divined when I relate that the merchantman which picked us up passed us in the night ; but the white sail of our boat attracted the attention of a sailor ; and upon the vessel's course be ing changed, the impression at first was that the duty to be performed was to af ford Christian burial—a rite, indeed, needed by the three sailor:4 ; Captain Webster and the second-mate being the only other survivors. A month later, weak, and the shad ows of our former selves, we were land ed :it Madras, the destination of the ves sel which had picked us up; and soon after, but with many a striver of dread we re-embarked, to reach Java in safety. It was not for many months that I re covered from a strange nervous depres sion, whose effect was constantly to bring before me, in all the vividness of reality, those terrible hours when all seemed shrouded in a golden haze, whosescorching heat burned and wasted the life within me. But by degrees came restored health and the calmness of strengthened nerves. We learned afterwards that the two boats with the crew were also picked up, after many days of fearful suffering, similar to that which marked with indelible lines the forehead of my husband—a glance at which at any time is sufficient to bring utck to memory our fearful ppril, and he manner in which we we're saved rem death. How Dreams are Caused In order to prove that almost any dream can with tolerable certainty, be excited by special classes of stimulants, Mr. Maury caused a series of experi ments to lie performed on himself when ztsleep, which allbrded very satisfactory results. First ex periment le caused himself o be tickled with a feather on the lips uul inside the nostrils. lie dreamed hat hi was subjected to a horrible pun slimend A mask of pitch was applied o his face and then turn roughly off, aking with it the skin of his lips, nose tml face. Second experiment—A pair of tweez ers was held at a little distance from his ear, and struck with a pair of scissors.— He dreamed that lie heard the ringing of bells. This was coon converted into the tocsin, and this suggested the days of Juue, 1848. Third experiment—A bottle of eau de Cologne was held to his nose. Ile dreamed that he was in a perfumer's shop. This excited visions of the east, and he dreamed that he was in Cairo, in - _ he shop of Jean Marie Farina. Many urprising adventures occurred to him Isere, the details of which were Ibrg,ot- Fourth experiamnt—A. burning luci fer match was held close to his nostrils. Ile dreamed that he was at sea the wind was blowing in through the win dows), and that the magazine in the vessel blew up. Him experimen t—lfe was slightly pinched on the nape of the, neck. He dreamed that a blister was applied. And this recalled the recollection of a physi cian that had treated him in his in fancy. Sixth experiment—A piece of red hot iron was held close enough to him to communicate a slight sensation of heat. lie dreamed that robbers had got into the house, and were forcing the inmates by putting their feet to the lire, to re veal where their money was. The idea of the robber suggested that Mme. d'Abran les, who, he supposed, had taken him for her secretary, and in whose memoirs he had read sonic ac counts of bandits. Seven th sx periinen t—T h e word para lagaranills was pronounced in his ear. He understood nothing, and awoke with the recollection of a very vague dream. The word niaman was next used many times. He dreamed of dif ferent subjects, but heard a sound like the humming of bees. Several days af ter, the experiment was repeated with the words ...Iz.or, Castor, Lconore. On awakening, he recollected that he. had heard the last lieu wonh+, and had attri buted them to one of tine persons who ad conversed kith 111111 in his dream Eighth experiment—A drop of water was allowed to fall on his forehead. He dreamed that lie was in Italy, that he was very warm, and that he was drink ing the wine of Orvieto. Nii th experiment—A light, surround ed by a piece of red paper, was repeat edly placed before hiseyes. Ile dream ed of a tempest and lightning, which suggested the rememberance of a storm he ,had encountered in the English clifinnel;in going from Merlaix to Havre . - These observations are very instrue ive, inasmuch as they show conclusive y that oue very important class of our Ireams is due to our bodily sensation.— Once a Wcck. 110 tin: . People of .tinnee and Lorraine Wish Anexation to Prossto? The Boston Traveler says: Alsace and Lorraine, notwithstanding all the German cant about their German char acter, are of the most thoroughly French of the various parts of France. They are as much of the great country to which they belong in every sense—and which belongs to them—as aro Brittany and Burgundy, G Monne and Normandy. Had the question been submitted to them before the war, they would have voted to a man against transference to Germany. They would sooner have been transferred to Russia than to Germany. Like all borderers, they hate their neighbors. What has happened in the last two months is well calculated alike to intensify and to justify their hatred.— The hand of Germany has been laid heavi ly upon Alsace and Lorraine—and her hoofs have been stamped all over their soil, Was ever more cruel and more useless war fare waged than that which has been carried on against the fair city of Strasbourg? That city has been pounded to pieces by the very people to whom it is proposed to transfer it! One hardly knows which to admire most, such a proof of Germany's love of Alsace in general and Strasbourg in partic ular, or the mode taken to attach the peoplo of Strasbourg to their proposed future countrymen. There was not the slightest necessity for proceeding against Strasbourg. There were only eighteen thousand French troops in the city, and they might have been watched by a slightly superior force; but the Germans, as if resolved to prove they aro the same barbarians that they al ways have been in war, began regular siege operations in an irregular manner, destroy ing the city in order to compel the surren der of the fortifications. They spared the French soldiers, and poured their bombs and balls upon the houses of a people whom they call German! Such brutality cannot make a very favorable impression on Strasbourg, and a vote in Alsace and Lor raine would be dead against them, Gen. Banks has received the nomi nation for Congress of the Labor Re formers of the Sixth Massachusetts Dis trict. Hietory of FIiMOUL Man-to-Men Fighte in the South. A description of a duel is always fas cinating to most readers ; to those where they prevail, because the duel is the sen sational fact among their local customs; to those where they do not prevail, be cause of the wonder and dramatic char acter of such a custom ; and to all, be cause a duel supposes peculiar personal courage, and is sensational in the high est degree. It requires resolution and animal pluck to stand up to be shot at; but it by no means follows that a man who fights a duol possesses any unusual amount of courage, and after all, fight ing a duel is not so risky as most people think. Either those who fight are wretched shots, or else their nerves are by no means steady; for the firing is notably uncertain, and few are fatally hit. A shot in the leg is far more com mon than a shot in the head. • . Among those who look upon the duel as one of the reasonable possibilities of their lives, practicing with the pistol is a regular study, and is reduced to sys tems. " Taking aim," in the usual manner, by deliberate sighting of an object, is not the mode accepted. The whole thing is made a mechanical method, looking to the habit of bring ing the weapon to a certain line and level by long practice, and pulling the trigger with little regard to the "sights." Some men fire after bring ing the aim and pistol down to a level with the antagonists; others by raising the arm and pistol; and sortie by rest ing the elbow on the hip, and firing without sight, relying upon long prac tice to hit an object. The author once knew a gentleman who could cut a twine line at ten paces, without sight ing, and by "tiring from the hip." The object of firing from a downward aim is mainly to protect the body. Iu Henry A. Wise's duel with Colton, he fired front a raised weapon ; Colton's arm was broken by the shot, but i t saved his life. "Regular duelists always use the " hair trigged! It is just possible that Broderick - lost his life in his duel with Judge Terry, in California, from this cause and carelessness. Ile had a glove on his hand, and before he could raise the weapon it exploded. This left Terry an undisturbed shot, and his hor rible accuracy and coolness were shown by his remark when he fired, and Brod erick dropped : " I struck him a little too much to the left!" His shot, in his opinion, though fatal, was not exactly artistic. Duelling in this country prevails as a custom only in the Sent ern States, and is manifestly, though slowly, dying out. There were men, however, formerly who were known as professed duelists --that is, you were constantly in danger of being challenged by them, for good cause or for . none at all ; and to go out with them was simply to arrange your mortal affairs and speak to the sexton, for they were " dead shot "—they could put a dozen balls in the same hole suc cessively. Such men were haughty and insolent, of course; and, of course, were treated with distinguished consid eration. Of this class was one Gholson, of Mississippi, and of one of whose duels we now propose to speak. It was somewhere about IS4U that an "unpleasantness" of a political origin occurred between Gholson and, a gen tleman who had never fought a duel, named Prentiss. Gholson had tilled half a dozen graves with his victims.— He was a Democrat and Prentiss was a Whig. A very large and highly re spectable audience attended the light, and betting was lively—Gholson having great odds in the "pools." Some bets were made that both would fall, as Prentiss had a high reputation for cool ness and exhibited the utmost calmness and self-possession, especially in "strip ping" for the work in hand, whale Ghol son seemed less cool and was airy. At the first tire Prentiss fell, shot through the hams, while Gholson leaped three feet into the air and came down dead, shot through the heart. Prentiss pos sessed the great quality aimed at by all duelists, that is, he fired quicker than Gholson--say aLout the twenty-mil lionth part of a half second ahead. The recent death of Mrs. Anna Cora Mowat Ritchie recalls the facts of a duel which her husband almost fought, but which finally added and which not only created a great sensation in Virginia at I the time, but became interwoven with subsequent events, which terminated in a bloody encounter and the death of one of the principals in the affidr at the hands of Ritchie's brother. 'Fhe facts never got more than a casual notice in the papers, and are here detailed for the first time. To understand the whole case, it is necessary to say that Thomas Ritchie—or Father Ritchie, as he was generally called—was the editor of the Richmond Ewprir( r and wielded about the whole power of the Democratic party of Virginia. John Hampden Pheasants was the editor of the Rich mond Whig and the representative edi tor and writer of his party in that State. He was the sort of Gov. Pheasants, and a bold, chivalrous, and generous-hearted man, who held " to the code of honor." Ritchie was not a fighting man. For years a hot antagonism progressed between these two editors ; engendering an intense bitterness at last, as might have been expected. About the year 1541, something unusually heated arose in these papers; and in an editorial Pheasants said, submissively, the follow ing: "We have been engaged iu con troversy with the editor of the Eriquirtr for twenty years, and it shames our manhood to know that we have never used any weapon sharper than a pen." According to "the code," this sarcasm was a deadly insult, which nothing but pistols, ten paces, and blood, could wipe out. Ritchie had two sons—William F., the elder, who married Mrs. Ifowatt, and Thomas, jun., the younger—who killed Pleasants in a tight about four years ago afterward. The mortal offence was taken up by William, and a chal- lenge sent to Pleasants. Being prompt ly accepted, and the terms settled, every thing was lovely between the two gen tlemen. Perhaps it would be as well here to speculate on what the result of the duel Nvould have been, provided it had been fought, so us to decide how we would have been on the issue, if we had a bet on it all. The terms were— shot guns, loaded with twelve buck shots; laid uncocked at the combatants' feet, 'nuzzles outward; the parties to stand back to back, and at the word, wheel, to seize their weapons and lire— distance, twelve paces. This was sure death to somebody. Who would it have been We put the interesting problem and solution, thus Ritchie was tall, near-sighted, wore spectacles, and was wholly unused to the weapon selected. Pleasants was short of stature, one of the very best shots in Virginia, and per fectly familiar with the weapon to be used; so much so that with a double barreled gun he was sure of a front and rear partridge on a fair "rising." Hence it would have taken Ritchie longer to stoop, longer to get his gun into posi tion; and he would be slower to tire, and uncertain in aim. Ergo, Pleasants would have killed Ritchie stone dead before Ritchie could have fired at all ; and on this we are ready to bet, two to one. But, happily—or unhappily, per haps—luckily for Anna Cora Mowatt, at all events—the duel never was fought. The sore between Pleasants and the Ritchies was far from being healed by the settlement of the affair with Wil liam. On the contrary, a.duel once ad mitted, and the sons thus coining into the area of controversy, blood was sure to flow, sooner or later. An afliti r be tween Hugh Pleasants and John Tyler, Jr., son of President Tyler, and which had its origin in the Enquirer, only fed the flame. About four or five yearsafter the difficulty with William, John H. Pleasants became involved in a quarrel with Thomas ;Ritchie, Jr., which cul minated in a bloody and fatal fight. In an intemperate article, Pleasants was grossly insulted by the younger Ritchie, who called him an abolitionist and a coward, with a sneer at his course in the affair with:his brother William. Such an outrage could have but one result—blood. For several days an encounter in the' street was imminent, for Pleasants would not admit the duel to wipe out such an insult. A street fight was his settled purpose; but friends came for ward, and a fight in form was agreed upon. The encounter took place in Manchester, across the James river from Richmond. At six o'clock, on a calm, soft, sweet and sunny moraing, the combatants, seconds, surgeons and a few friends of each, were assembled in a secluded spot, for one or two to be murdered. Pleasants was placed sixty paces distant from Ritchie, armed with a sword cane, two dueling pistols, a re volver in his pocket, and a bowie knife. Ritchie was armed with seven dueling pistols in a belt and a short, strong, sharp, Roman sword.—He also held a lighteane; using it as a "rest" fur his pistol when firing. Pleasants made no ' use of his bowie nor of his revolver in the fight. He bad also drawn the hall from one of his dueling pistols, the night before as he declared afterwards. The combatants wers placed In position —the terms being that Pleasants should advance upon Ritchie, and make the assault—and some negotiations were in progress; but Washington Greenow was there, as Ritchie's "friend," and no peaceable settle ment could of course be made. The signal was given—Pleasants ad vanced—Ritchie commenced and con tinued firing until his seven pistols were emptied. Pleasants fired but once while advancing, was wheeled nearly around by one shot which struck him— pushed ou under the murderous tire un til he came face to face with Ritchie— firing his still loaded duelling pistol di rectly at Ritchie—made a lunge with his cane sword, which was parried—and then fell to the ground with five pistol wounds, one fatal in the groin. He died within three days. Young Ritchie took to violent drinking and died in about two years, leaving his property of sonic S:13,000 to Pleasants' daughters, who re fused to accept it. A pistol ball killed one; but remorse and whiskey were no less fatal to the other. Both were esti mable, amiable, and generous men, and had been cordial friends. General Dromgoole, once speaker of the House of Congress, was a North Carolina militia general, and one Bug ger, an esteemed and wealthy merchant of Petersburg, was Dromgoole's dearest friend. Bugger was a Whig and the general a Democrat. Of course they failed to harmonize politically ;and both being essentially " tight" (the papers said they had taken too much wine, but it was whiskey) on one occasion, and getting into a noisy political wrangle, Bugger gave Dromgoole a blow. The next morning, being cooled off and so bered, a mutual friendly explanation and apology occurred. Both knew the whole thing arose from their being tipsy, and there was no oifense intended, felt nor harbored; but the militia officers of his North Carolina command got wind of the airlift ; their honor (?) required that the blow should be requitted by cold lead. Dromgoole yielded, went out with his friend Bugger in the most honorable manner, and shot him mor tally, and in a style highly creditable to his skill. Dugger was buried within the week, and Dromgoole became a total abstinence man, but remorse ale out his peace and life in about two years —according to my present impression. James Bowie, the inventor or discov erer of the terrible weapon which has immortalized his name, was as utterly a fearless man as ever was born. He was full of enthusiasm over the fatal superi ority of his knife, and discussed the matter with all the zeal of an inventor, and the erudition of an expert. A huge Spaniard once argued the case with Bowie, claiming that a good old "Span ish knife" was not only the equal of the new weapon, but its superior. Finally, as wordy and windy argument only hardened the opinions and confidence of each, it was proposed to settle the doubt in a practical way, by a knife fight. There was no enmity between these two worthies ; they differed, and they wanted each to prove him self right in a fair and 'unanswerable way. The left arms of these philoso phers were tied together from the wrists to the elbows—there was a moment's pause, each nerving himself for the hor rid work ; the word was given—au in stant and sudden "jerk" by Bowie gave him the chance to drive his knife into the body of the Spaniard, sinking it to the very hilt. The Spaniard dropped, Bowie catching the body on his knee. Then, to make sure work, he gave his knife a scientific turn in the Spaniard's I oody, drew it out, followed by the spout ing blood, eat the cord that hound their arms, and allowed the dead Spaniard to fall to - flre earth as indifferenty as though it had only been the carcass of a hog. Thus was the supremacy of Jim's knife fairly, fearfully, and triumphantly vin dicated—and it remains unchalletiged by rival until this very day. Queer Marriages The "most married" woman of which there is any record was undoubt edly the Harlem woman spoken of by Evelyn in his diary, whose propensity for remarrying had finally to be check ed by law. " r3he married to her twenty lifth husband, and being now a widow, was prohibited to Inctriw in future, Many years ago a man in Hartsville, N. Y., became attached to a young and beautiful damsel, who died before their intended marriage could be consum mated. Ile then married the mother of the deceased, who was some twenty years her senior, but with whom he lived quite happily until she was eighty and he sixty years of age. As the wife had by this time become quite decrepit they adopted a maid of some thirty summers, who had lived with them a year and a half when the old lady died. Before the time appointed for the funeral the man himself was taken sick, on which ac count the funeral services were post poned four weeks. But in less than two weeks he sent for a justice of the peace and was married to the maid he had adopted. The next day the couple ap plied to the town for support, and week later the man himself died, his funeral being attended before that of his first wife, and the women he had so recently married being the only mourn er. Human folly is "vast and illimita ble." When Socrates was asked whether it were better for a man to get married or live single, tie replied; "Let him do either and he will repent it." With due respect to Socrates' we must object to the above. We once knew a fortune-hunting young man who mar ried a maiden lady on the wintry side of fifty. She was worth about one hundred thousand dollars, and died in less than a month after the celebration of the nuptial ceremonies. He inherited her property, and he never repented his marriage. Among the ancient ( iermans it was death for any woman to marry before she was twenty years old. By the laws of Lycurgus the most special attention was paid to the physical education, and no delicate or sickly women were allow ed to marry. In the Royal library of Paris is a writ- ten contract, drawn up in 1297, between two persons of noble birth in Armagnie. The document bound the husband and wife to faithful wedlock for seven years. It stipulated that the parties should have the right to renew the tie at the end of that time If they mutually agreed ; but if not, the children were to be equal ly divided; if the number should chance not to be even, they were to draw lots for the odd one. In Borneo, marriages, which gener ally succeeds a lengthened routine of enigmatical courtship peculiar to those people, is celebrated with great pomp and considerable originality. The bride and bridegroom are conducted from op posite the ends of the village to the spot where the ceremony is performed. They are seated on two bars of irons symboli cal of the vigorous and lasting blessings in store for them. A cigar and a betel leaf, carefully prepared with areca nut, are put into the hands of each, One of the officiating priests advances, waves two fowls over the heads of the be trothed, and in a long address to the Supreme being and a short one to the couple, calls down eternal blessings on them, implores that peace and hap piness may attend the union, and gives some temporal advice, sometimes of a character more medical than saintly. The spiritual part being thus concluded the material succeeds. The heads of the affirmed are knocked together three or four times; then the bridegroom puts his betel leaf and cigar into the mouth of the bride; and thus they arc acknowledged a wedded couple,with the sanction of their religion. At a later period on the nuptial evening, fowls are killed, the blood caught in two cups, and from its color the priest foretells the happiness or misery of the newly mar ried. The ceremony is closed by a feast much dancing and noisy music. The following romantic story is told of Lord March (grandson of Charles II.,) who afterward became the second Duke of Richmond, and who, while yet quite young, was engaged, without be ingconsulted as to the choice, to a lady still younger. The bride was Lady, the daughter of the Earl of Cadogan, Marl borough's favorite general. Their union (according to Napier's account) was a bargain to cancel a gaming debt between the parents and the young Lord March was brqught from college, the lady from the nursery, for the ceremony. The bride was amazed and silent, but the bridegroom exclaimed, " Sure ly you are not going to marry me to that dowdy"' Married he was, how ever, and his tutor instantly carried him off to the continent. A few years after this event Lord March returned home from his travels a most accomplished gentleman, but having such a very dis agreeable recollection of his wife that lie avoided home, and repaired, on the first night of his arrival, to the theatre. There he saw a lady of so tine an ap pearance that he asked who she was, and on being answered that she was " the reigning toasts, the beautiful Lady March," he hastened to claim her, and they lived together so affectionately t hat one year only after his decease, in 1750, she died of grief. On Shaking Hands The London Saturday Reel, u , has a very entertaining article upon the cus tom of shaking hands, from which we make the following extracts: The hot summer of 1870 must have set many people thinking whether it is not possible to invent sonic mode of sal utation more convenient than that of shaking hands. When the thermome ter is at 90 in the shade, and when the only hope of escaping a sunstroke seems to he to drink so much tea and to wear so little clothes as shall best promote perspiration, then the tyranny of the social law which compels us to grasp the hand of a casual and very hot ac quaintance, and to give it the establish ed vibration, is fully felt, and becomes almost insupportable. But the incon venience of the practice of shaking hands is not confined to the season of hot weather only. There is probably no mode of salutation commonly prac tised by any civilized nation which is so encompassed with difficulties and embarrassments. The difficulty of mak ing a correct bow is no doubt consider able. There is the difficulty of know- ing how to bow ; how to draw the artis tic hue between the unceremonious nod and the obeisance ; and—for people who aim at doing things in good form—the difficulty of apportioning their due an gle of reverence to the different sexes ; and to the different social positions, ages and degrees of intimacy of persons in each sex. And there is also the dif ficulty of knowing when",t.o bow, so well described by Steele in the Si,celator.— But all the difficulties that cluster round the bow are as nothing compared to those that encompass the shaking of hands. The difficulties of knowing how to bow are, after all, only the difficulties which beset the attempt to do anything well ; and difficulties of the same kind, not inferior to degree, will be found to beset the practice of shaking hands. As for the difficulties of knowing when to bow, it is obvious that they must be at least doubled in the case of band-shak ing, for this simple reason, that that mode of salutation requires the consent and co-operation of two persons to exe cute it. Hand-shaking ❑s a mode of salutation has the fundamental and fa- tal vice that it necessitates personal con tact. Hence it is subject to objections the same in kind, though certainly not the same in degree, as the nose rubbing of the Polynesians, and similar modes of greeting employed by savages. If any person should be inclined to doubt whether hand-shaking is a diffi cult operation, lot him consider the dif ferent modes in which the custom is observed among his various friends and and acquaintances. There are negative modes and there are positive modes of shaking hands. There are, first of all, the people who seem to fear that if they once give you their hands they may never get them back again, and who manteuvre so that you may not possess yourself of more than the tips of their lingers. 'Phis mode of hand-shaking may be called tipping, and those who use it, tippers. Closely allied to them is another sort of half-handed shakers— those, namely, who do not clasp your hand, but finger it with two digits. This mode of shaking hands is some- times adopted by men political and literary notoriety. But it is very apt to give otlence ; and the most serious con sequences have been known to ensue front its having been practised by a young author upon a critic whom he he had Mistaken fur a rival writer.— These persons, who, failing to give the whole hand, nevertheless do not touch your hand with the tips of the fingers only, but finger It with the whole of one or more fingers, may be called lin gerers. Then there are those who give the whole hand, but give it in a limp, flabby mariner, as a New Foundlatut dog gives its paw. Those people seem to think they have discharged the duty of hand-shaking when they have put their neighbors in possession of their hand. Were it the oustom to make our ;Meaux to a dear departed by shalt hadds with his corpse, the sensation would no doubt be very like what we experienced when we salute these nab by shakers; who, as they use their hands much in the same way the mock turtle used his flaps, may be called Hap- pers. These negative modes for shak ing hands are disagreeable enough. Iki t the positive modes are still more un pleasant. Among these the least distressing is probably the thrust ing mode. There are seine people who, when you oiler them your hand, take it; but take it only to put it from them, as if it were something coalmen and unclean. They seize it with quick de. cision, as brave children seize a snap dragon or an earwig. Then, by a rapid thrust forward in tierce, they return it to your side; and having got it there, they drop or shoot it into space. These thrusters are a numerous class, and, od dly enough, their mode does not seem to give so much offense as that of the tippers and lingerers. More physically painful, though ethically less injurious, is the mode of those who squeeze. This mode is chiefly practiced by Methodists, by fervid preachers of evangelical per suasions, and by other persons of power and piety. Torments arc sometimes suffered by small boned or rheumatic men, and by fragile women, who have fallen into the hands of one of these fervid giants, and who happen to have rings on their fingers when the cruel clutch is effected. But worse even than this class of squeezers is that of the ;lingers; the people who having once got hold of your hand, refuse to let it go, but use it as they would a button hole, or as the ancient mariner used his glit tering eye, to compel you to hear al they have to say . ; giving it at interval little pressures,. motions or vibrations as a running accompaniment to their twaddle. Of all the kinds of shakers above described, these clingers are un doubtedly the most pestilential ; and when, as is occasionally the case, they combine squeezing and clinging, they are simply unendurable, and ought to be treated as creatures that outrage ciety. There are very few people who do not partake, in a greater or less degree, of one or more of these faults in hand shaking. If any reader has hitherto been accustomed to think that hand- shaking is a less difficult form of saints tion to execute well than a bow, let hin consider carefully, in oneof his moments of deepest consciousness, his own mode of shaking hands; arid when he has done this, let hint consult a candid friend on the subject. It is just possible that the result of such consolation and and self-examination may be favorable. He may still be able to believe that he has mastered the accomplishment of shaking hands, and that his shake is free from all the defects above named— that he neither tips fingers, flaps, thrusts, squeezes nor clings when salut ing his acquaintance. But at any rate he will not continue to underrate the difficulty of the accomplishment, and will probably be prepared to ad mit that he who can shake hands well should be able to bow better.— In truth, the conclusion that hand-shak ing is a more difficulty mode of saluta tion than bowing is established by two distinct, but equally convincing, lines of argument—by the argument from the reason of the thing, because, as we have said, it necessitates personal contact, and requires the co-operation of two per sons to execute it ; and by the argument from facts, because it is found that fewer people do it successfully. Even, how ever, if we suppose that the difficulties of bowing or of shaking hands are about equal, there remains one more eonclus , ive argument against the shaking of hands. It is this. Granted that, if bowing took the place now occupied by shaking, the number of bad bows would be about equal to the existing number of bad shakes, yet the amount of social dis comfort would be materially reduced. For there is this important difference between the bad bow and the bad shake, that the man who bows badly embar rasses himself only; whereas the man who shakes hands badly—the thruster or clinger, for example—causes annoy ance to others. Common politeness, therefore, ought to make us prefer the NUMBER 40 bad bow to the bad shake ; and this one consideration alone ought to be stint cient to persuade society to discard hand shakiug, as au ordinary mode . pf saluta tion, in favor of bowing, or souse form which is similarly free from the evils of personal contact. Reference has been already made to Steele's paper on tho difficulties of knowing when to bow, and his descrip tion of the troublesome circumstances in which the indiscreet bower finds himself. No man who mixes in society can hope entirely to escape embarrass ing situations. But it may be safely de clared that bowing Call never involve so much embarrassment as hand-shaking. Who has not at some time or other been staving with a large party in a country-house, and felt the necessity of shaking hands all round with an as sembly of or twelve persons every morning before breakfast, and every evening before bed, to weigh upon his mind like a nightmare? On such oc casions there is often one of the party who, from what is supposed to be lazi ness, never makes his appearance at breakfast, but keeps his room till the company isdispersed to the business and am usements of the day. It would be curi ous to know how much of this supposed laziness is really nervous horror of the hand shaking ordeal. In like manner some old fashioned people, who think it necessary, whets they are at a large gar- den party, to shake hands with every one they now, will sometimes endure ' any amount of wailing and weariness rather than be the fuel to leave, and run the gauntlet of the salutations of the whole company. Or again, who has not often found himself in some such si tuts- - - lion as the following : llis carrying a book in MlO hand and a walking stick in the other, when he suddenly nieebi a lady of his acquaintance. By a rapid effort ho transfers the stick into the left ME=EME2=IB hand takes off his hat. Whereupon she offers him her hand for a shake. What is lie to do? To choose the moment when a lady is offering him her hand to put ou his hat has :most uugraeism.+air. To transfer the hat to the left hand is a physicahimpossibility. To drop the hat on the ground would seem theatrical. The situation is simply insoluble, and enough of itself to damn hand shaking as a polite mode of salutation. But it would be endless work to describe all the horrid situations which;th is custom occasions. The man who does not bit terly feel the nuisance of it, both in the bosom of his family and when he takes Ncalks abroad, must be either inorti r less than human. Not lung ago the newspapers contain ed a description of .:Nlarshal MaeMalion embracing one of colonels before or dering him to a last :mil hopeless charge at Reichshotlitn. Au English under such circumstances would have offered his hand. But who would nut feel that a clasping of hands, however fervent, would be quite an inadequate symbol of the emotion which would oc cupy the hearts of men in such ei remit stances as those? And su it is with :all of us, on all occasions of deep and special emotion. The Robbery of the Northrtroberlonal The Williamsport Bullet in .says:—We aro informed by a gentleman who was stop ping in Northumberland, .in Thursday night last, that the First National Bank of that place was entered by burglars, and from twelve to fifteen thousand dollars in coupon bonds carried otr. It spurred in this wise: About hathp,st eight o'clock in the evening„ as the watchman, a one-armed man, entered the building, he was roughly seized by four men, who were concealed inside, gagged, his hands tied and fastened to a chair, when, after all was joint, they went to work. They were armed with a sledge and commenced operations on the brick vault surrounding tho safe. Af ter working linhistriously for sonic time, the :troll of the vault suddenly gave way, precipitating a great mass of bricks nil mortar on the safe, completely bury. ng it liencitth the ruins. the abor to remove this in:L.:S.I . I, W(11.111.1 • Intsulnc were t . itne than they nut La spare, .her ahandened the idea of getting into the ale, and eeturnenceil tither ilames tor money and valuables. 'rhey i•ille 'eedVd ill a private parties, as near as •ould be ascertained, to between twelve nd fifteen thousand dollars, which they •arrieil Our informant, who visited the banking house on Friday morning, says that the room presented a complete if ruins. The, watchman wai-i found sitting in the chair tied, where the burglars placed him, gagged and unable to move. lie says that there were four of them, and that they threatened him with his life if he attempt ed to make any noise. It is supposed that they gained :wens: to Lhe building early in the OVellill{4, through a hack window, :mil laid in wait for the vatehrnan, When, on his appearance, he Va... 1 seized, as described aL,ove, and after all was quiet went to work. It is supposed that they left on thedown train which pass es the place about two o'clock in the 111,111- l'here is great excitement in Northtun erlaml neer the robbery. Illaelt Rats vs. White fints--A Skirmish In Street. Wall street, New York, that famous financial pandemonium, has long been known for its singular outbursts and tierce wars which fictions, tinder the names of " bulls - and " bears," have waged upon each other for plunder. Latterly, however there has been a sort of social classification among the stock brokers, the distinctive badges being the white :01,1 black hat,' ( stove-pipe I now worn. 'rh) black hats have posted and threatened the Whitt, hats, and jibed each other until .Nlontlay last, when matters reached a crisis. A Now York paper says: "When the last formal session of the board was over the demonstration against the White Ilats, which had been a rather desultory skirmish all day, took the form of all organized movement. At a signal the White Hats were suddenly dashed from the wearers' heads and kicked and knock ed in every direction until tho stir wILs filled with flying fragments of white felt and beaver. TIM struggle certainly brought out the best points of the brokers charac ters, for the destruction sects attended With the utmost good feeling, and the victims took their discomfiture It.s a matter or course. 'l'he \Vhite flats made a vigorous defense, and even sought to carry the war into Africa by daring sallies on the Illack but numbers and critic fr.:hi-SDI wore against them, and the whin) colors trailed in the dust. lint the warfare extended be yond the Stock Exchange. The Black Ifats, flushed with victory, poured up the stairs of the government board, and sally ing ir. among the brokers there repeated the destruction of the offensive from this apartment they next repaired to the tiold ltoom, amt taking the place icy ',Lorin finished the aehievements or the day by de molishing every white hat within reach, or forcing the owner to beat a precipitate re treat. of course the leisure which permit tell so prolonged and boisterous a frolic is a striking commentary 011 the business ac tivity of IVaIl street just now." Emigrants are flooring into the State by thousands, and lands are being rapidly taken up at from three U, lifteen dollars an acre. The various projected lines ~f rail road are already under was. The line from Brenham to Austin has now 00 Chinamen and ifeutioliVicts at work upon it. The Suite receives pay for the labor of the conviets. There will be fi,ouu Chinamen at work on the railroads in various parts of the State by next Spring. f , Land in Texas that vest $3 an acre produces on an average a bale of cotton to an acre. This cotton Is sold at 43) a bate on the place. It can be hauled hut) miles in ox-tunas, at two cents a pound. This cheap rate is owing to the cattle feeding en the grass on the way, thereby saving the expense of feed. When the railroads are completed, Texas will be a great country in itself. They now raise enough cattle to feed this entire country.— The difficulty is in bringing them to market. Fine steers :ire sold at ten cents a pound, and now many persons kill the steers fur the hide and tallow, throwing away the meat. Large droves are now en route to Kansas and Illinois, where it is proposed to Winter them, and let them refattem and thus introduce a good stock of steers into those Status. When the railroads are fin ished, Texas will send hundreds of thous ands of steers to the Northern markets. A Mad Casualty On Monday morning last the keeper of the elks in Judge Packer's deer park, at Packerton, was found in the park dead and his body literally torn to pieces. The dis covery was made by Mr. Lafayette Lentz, who was driving past. The appearance of the body of the unfortunate mini and of the surroundings indicated that he died a most horrible death, having been gored and trodden to a bruised mass by one of the elks. The murderous beast was shortly afterwards found with his horns bloody and portions of the dead man's clothing clinging to them. The keeper was a one armed man, named Adam fleinblinger, a German. Ho was unmarried and had no relatives in this county. There were three of these monsters in the park, besides sev eral deer and antelopes, at the time the ac cident occured. A coroner's inquest was held by Thomas Kemerer, Esq., and the body decently interred. The affair throw a gloom of horror over the whole communi ty, as he was a genial follow, and much thought of for his good nature and pleasant manners. He had none hero to mourn for BATE OF ADVERTISING BUSINESS ADVERTISEMENTS, $l2 ft year p r sonre of ten lines; &Spar year for each addi tional squaie, • REAL '^•ATE A nvstritSlN(L 10 cents aline tar the (fret, and 5 cents fer.enoll inthetlinent lasell.lon. UANF.ILAL ADVKIZTISING, i cunts n lino for I I 0 first, and -1 cents for each suhgentiont tlon. Spl:clsl. Norwas Inserted In Local Coluinua Is cents per Line. SPECIAL NOTICEB proceiling marriages and deaths, 10 cents per line for first insertlotil and 6 cents for every subsequent Insertion. LEGAL AND OTIIEIt NOTICEs— Executors' ..... . ...... Administrators' notice Assignees' notices Auditors' notices Other" Notlees," ten lines, or less, hint, but the whole town was saddened his terrible thte.-31 - attel Omni, Denl,4, The Loss of the Captain rts:noutlt Currespondcnrk• uC cite Standard. Front the statements of the few who have been saved, sonic of which are sohjoilie.l, it appears that about midnight, on the inst., the ship was in company with th.. Channel fleet, about forty miles o Cape Finisterre, cruising under doubic reefed fore and maintopsails, and forctcp• mast staysail and mainsail, and the ti re viii hauled up, there being at the time a very stronc ' breeze and a heavy sea. The star board watch had been called at l o'clock, and were being mustered, when a squall struck the ship on the port side, causing her to give a heavy lurch to starboard. As she did not right herself, Capt. Burgoyne .vho was on the bridge, gave the order to lower the forotopsail, but in consequence of the yards being braced sharp up, the ship at the time being un the port tack, it did not come down. Orders were prompt- Iv given to let go the lea braces and man the topsail dowilaul, but by this time the ship had been again struck by a heavy sou, and she was nom plotety hove on to her beam • ends, with the water pouring down the fun nel,and she then turned bottom u pwari I,an. I gradually sank stern tirst. Front the limo the ship was struck to her going dow n univ Iron, live to ten minutes elapsed. 'rho number on board at the time WM 520.--• When the Captain tats first lost sight of it was thought that she had missed the fleet, which Is not an unoommon oreurrenee on a dark night, and when it is blowing hard, and no ono imagined she had gone duty le. But, alas, the sad fact soon bec:uuo mum rent, whon first was plokoil up a boat, [him a spar, and subsequently ono of the men, who had lashed 'Unison' to a grating, but did not suoceed in salving his licit. t m the morning of Thursday last the Monarch, sown-turret (coven-nun, dial hie-turreted, ship, ('apt. John E Cominerell, V. C., C. which had been searching round the c0..51, brought intelligence to the flag-ship lit one warrant °Meer and I? men had Lindell from the Captain. Thu Monarch went back anti picked them up oil' Cape Enlister, at noon on that day, and they were traiti4cr red to the Volage. Mr. James May, gunner, second el,,s, states that he was invoke about 12 o'clock on the night of the 11th by 501110 illarilleS making a noise out his cabin, and tinkl ing the ship more than usually unsteady, he tressed himself to go on deck OW guns wore all right in the turrets. passing the engineer's bath-room he 0x chan,,,,,1 a remark with the engineer odic, who had Mille ~Ii the first ,wateh, and dots ha is certain as to its being just past Ii o'clock. When he got Up illt“ t h e ;utter tur- ret, the ship gave a heavy nill t, starboard, tint! continued In that position, gradually heeling over More and Inure, Until ho Gnutd the voter curving into the port-hole in the top or the turret, through which he 'raw led, and then found himsull• overboard. I lc, however, succeeded, with live others, in elution; t'aptain Burgoyne, ill reaching ho steam pimmee, which was lloating mttom upp‘rtm,st, 11.1111 51 rcin Hir atunch pa.vsing within a low yards of (3111. lie cried out, " Now en ; this Is your cutly chance." , lave others di.l SO, ;Uhl succeeded in Rul ing into the boat. They in vain cieleaN to regain Cho pinnace, to 5150 lbcir .aptain, but the sea running so very high ,revonted them from fulfilling their laid:, and in the attempt they were struck by a heavy sea, nearly swampinit ' the boat, washing the roan (I icorge Meyers 1 over hoard. It was then tiotermilll'd to let. the boat run before the sea, as the land Was known to be leeward of them. About o'clock they sighted the light on Cape Fin isterro, anti afterward oliservoil They made for it, and succeeded in hurtl ing, about noun of the 7th, at Finisterre, and at I o'clock, after making all 111,1,- sary inquiries anti drying their clothes. proceeded to Ilercultion, Whore they found they found the Vice-Consul, who telegraph ed and sent the news of the eat disaster through Corunna to England. The mm,- arch's boats picked them up. I was awoke just before 12 o'cloek by the ship making a heavy lurch to starbeard, but she presently righted again; the middle watch, to which I belonged, was then call ed, and I Wollt 011 deck. While the watch was being mustered, I Burgoyne called me on the bridge and desired we Ltl tal:El steady and trustworthy man with me, int I put the iron covers on the turrets, and I'o - to him when it was done. I then heard loin ask how much the ship was "heeling.'. did not hear the reply, hot afterward card that it was l.ti fit ww-i generally lolly . St. CB h apt. urgoyne then gave the enter . lower the foretef.sail, and chip plenty of hands on the "down-haul." Directly afti r ho gave the order to lower the nutintopsail, but the yard being braced sharp up the yard did net is,ino down, whereupon t'apt. Burgoyne ordered the Ice top-sail sheets to ho let go. These orders were all rapidly given, while I was preparing to is.iver the fore turret. I called Jam. Frost, A. 11.,t0 00010 with mo, hut I never saw him after ward. I Nvalkod - forward in the weather gangway, and, finding a lower sail on the turretgrating to windward, weld round to leeward of the three foremost boom boats, stowed inside of each other, and endeavor ed to lift ulf the grating. While doing so the ship gave a tremendously heavy lurch, , throwing tier quite on her heamends, the water coining over the seanettings, and up through the iron grating which I was (.11- eavoring to lift. I thought then that the hip must he sinking, and, holding nn to ho gratings, felt the boom boats graze my MME= ship. '1 ho Portsmouth correspondent of T 'ForteN gives some additional particulm,: " Robert Hirst, an able seaman, was sta tioned ion the forecastle, and mustered with the starboard watch. There was a strong wind, and the ship W 11.4 under her three topsails, double roofs in ouch, and the fore topmast staysail. The yards were liracod sharp up, :mil the shlp did not seem to hav inuen way upon her. As the watch teem mustered, heard ('apt. Burgoyne give Ow order, ' Let go the forotopsail halliards;' followed by, ' Let go fore and main top,ad sheets.' By the time the men got to the topsail sheets the ship was heeling over to starboard so much that the limn were wash ed away off the deck, the ship lying down on her side as She was gradually turning over, and trembling with every blow wider; the short jumping seas (the sea now was white all round with the squall) struck. her, :Ind the roar of the steam from the funnel roaring horribly above everything, nml continuing to do on, Oren When under Wat er. Hirst, with twin other MIMI, 111,1110 d t,O the weather forecastle netting, anti jumped overboard, and immediately:Mont . :it'd they found themselves washed un to the bilge of the ship's bottom, but had no sooner got there than the ship went down. Hirst awl his vompanions went down With the Ship, but the need feeling or conwioosoo , , by the former was coming in eelltaet With a thaltillg Spar, to which he tied himself with his black silk neckerchief. lie NVII, soon afterward, however, washed away from the spar, hut got hold of the stern of the second launch, which was floating as it - . WILY stowed on board the ship—the second being stowed inside the first launch, the galley inside the second launch, and a rim vias Cover laced over and lashed round all. (niter men were there on the top of Lliit CallVaS covering. Then fell in with the iiteain lifeboat pinnanee (built by J. S. White, East Cowan, Isle of Wight), liottoni up, with Captain Burgoyne and a number of men on her bottom, but could not distin guish how many. Four men, of whom Mr. May, the gunner, proved to let one, Jumped from off the bottom of the steam pinnancii to the canvas covering of the galley and tau riches. The canvas wars immediately cut away, the galley thrown out, the firqt launch floating away from underneath the second, and the oars got out in the second launch to pull up to the steam pitman," to take elf ('apt. Burgoyne anti the TIICTI re maining there. Hirst says it was soon Mimi impossible to do this. As scull as they ell deavored to get the boat's head up to the sea to row her up to windward to whore the capsized boat, with their captain a ill W shipmates with him, was lloating, the beat Was swamped level to her thwarts, and two of the men were washed out of her. The pump was set going, and caps used for bailing the water out, and a second at tempt wali Made to row the boat up against the sea. This proved as unsuccessful as the first. There were only nine oars in the boat, the remainder having been washed away, and ono being iu use for steering, only eight remained for pulling the boat. It would be useless to prolong the tale. Nothing could be done under such conditions, with a heavy boat such as the second pinnace, and her head was out for the shore before the wind and sea, but Captain Burgoyne was away to windward, clinging to the bottom of the boat, in all thatstorm of broken waters. " It is important to notice that the gen eral opinion of the men appeared to be that, with the ship having a slight heel over, the pressure of a strong Wind upon the IlltdCr part of the hurricane-deck had a greater I/- feet, or leverage, to put the Math, 1110 PC plainly, upon the hull of the slap, than the pressure of the wind in her three lop -sat is had. They also appeared to be nearly unanimous in their opinions that when the Captain got her starboard side well down ill the water, with the consequent weight of water on the starboard side of the turret deck, and the pressure of the wind blow ing from the port hand on the under sur face of the hurricane-deck, and thus 'push ing' the ship right over, she had no chance of righting herself again. Ono man says that, in answer to Capt. Burgoyne's inquiry as to how much the ship WILY heeling over, ho hoard the answers given ' 18,"23,' and '2s' degrees. This movement was never chocked for a moment, for immediately the heel of the ship had been given as 25 degrees she was keel uppermost, and about to make that tremendous downward plunge, with the roar of the steam from her boilers still forcing upward, and outscroam ing the noise of the storm.' BEIM