TERM* OK PUBLICATION. KE POBTER is published every Thursday Morn ' f v O GOODRICH, at $2 per annum, in ad mg. b - v t " V lU "vFBTISEMENTS are inserted at TEN CENTS ■or first insertion, and FIVE CENTS per line r jiu'iit insertions. A liberal discount is j ~, rsons advertising by the quarter, luflf -11 lt vear _ Special notices charged one-half • ' t'li-iu regular advertisements. All resolutions " 1 SOCIATIONS ; communications of limited or in '* ' a interest, and notices of Marriages and ' 1 " EXCT . E DING fi ve lines. ttre charged TEN CENTS i- llll**- 1 Year. 6 mo. 3 mo. foluinn, S2O " lie C . 30 25 15 ! . inare .' 10 7i 5 '' i-ninistrator's and Executor's Notices.. S2 00 j'-htor's Notices 2 50 pu-iiiess Cards, five lines, (per year) 500 \i'rebants and others, advertising their business, v charged sls. They will be entitled to f •i confined exclusively to their business, with of change. <- \dvertising in all cases exclusive of sub . r ;ion to the paper. • I'LLINTING of every kind in Plain andFan done with neatness and dispatch. Hand inks, Cards, Pamphlets, Ac., of every va ,l s tvle, printed at the shortest notice. The en OFFICE has just been re-fitted with Power 7'" an d every thing in the Printing line can ~cited iu the most artistic manner and at the v mt es. TERMS INVARIABLY CASH. Yoctviu OVER THE WAY. (jolie in her child-like purity Out from the golden day; Puling away in the light so sweet, \\aere th e silver stars and the sunbeams meet, iU g away for her waxen feet, Over the silent way. Over the bosom tenderly The pearl-white hands are pressed ; :' r lashes lie on her cheeks so thin— l\" . ;<• the softest blush of the rose hath been— -kitting the blue of her eye within, The pure lids closed to rest. Over the sweet brow lovingly Twineth her sunny hair ; >'■ - was so fragile that love sent down, To talis heavenly gems, that soft crown, To siiaJe her brow with its waves so brown, Light as the dimpling air. Ortue to sleep with a tender smile Froze on her silent lips ; , t!a farewell kiss of her dewy breath, ,i i in the clasp of the angel death, .ike the last fair bud of a faded wreath, Whose bloom the white-frost nips. Robin—hushed in your downy bed Over the swinging bough— io you miss her voice from your glad duet, ,'iieii the dew in the heart of the rose is set, ill its velvet lips with the essence wet In orient crimson glow ? Rosebud— under your shady leaf Hid from the sunny day— i, i miss the glance of lu-r eye so blight, - blue was heaven to your timid sight ? : is 11..niing now amid a world of light. Over the starry way. If arts 'Where the darling's head hath lain, H Id by love's shining ray— 1> . know that the touch of her gentle hand, 1 brighten the harp in the unknown land? 1 >l.' she waits for us with the angel band Over the starry way! ptefleUmttous. TWO WHO WAIT. ■There's rosemary—that's for remembrance." I l'-ved Robert as i never could love again, iv. ~saii orphan, and friendless. Being . k with a needle I had come to Boston ;. i.g to find work there. Somehow chance : ■ red me—no, 1 don't mean that—l mean ; who promised to be a father to the la de.ss was good to me. I found a com . table-hoarding place, aud, by means of j y landlady, a paying run of custom. 1 i ■out out by the day to finish off dresses, \ wing with dress makers sometimes, and ; .. often after the}T had got though and ; :ne away. Robert Eden boarded in the j lame house with me, and he liked me from j he first. How proud 1 was of his liking, the hand- i one, manly fellow ! He was clerk in a tore, and he got through every night at j ■ x o'clock ; and often, if he could find out ahcre I was sewing, he would come and ; v. ilk home with me. This was before we re engaged. Afterward, of course, he •.me every night, as a regular thing. But I never shall forget how it used to be dur- j ing those first months before he had asked | to marry him. 1 never quite know , whether he would come or not, so it was - mi-thing pleasant to think and wonder ; about as ] sat over my work. Then, when j saw that he was reall}' waiting, how shy tse I like to go over all those old days j my thought, and every one of their little "ii ties seems bright and sweet as fresh -SOtUS. 1 iiad known Robert six mouths, when ; : night, instead of going home at once, j usual, he asked me to go out to Mount | '•'it urn with him. The days were at their ■Vest; it was only hull' past six, and | •"i'e would be plenty of time for a ramble "g those flowery plants before they! ■ : -hut he gates and leave the dead , •to their still night-slumber. I was - < enough to go any were with him ; and ,s very pleasant to get out of town,! -P' mi the long June twilight among 1 :, ntry sights and sounds. So we set off! •t once. w beautiful it was, walking about in | -f ' vely grounds, with the day just * wing to its close. There were flowers " -y where—flowers growing up joyously, : -baking udurs out of tiieir crimson and •■■'lo cups upon the still air, emblems of j - G. grateful life--and flowers, too, broken 1 iu their stems, aud laid upon the graves, J ""rings of love and of memory, to give 'V there the sad sweetness of their ex k jig breath, and then fade,emblems these ' atb and of woe. 't was there, among the flowers and the -'faves, that Robert told me how dearly he • grown to love me, and asked me to bc- Vto him forever. Yes, I remember he joiumt—belong to him forever. That tn t, did it not, through life and through 'V ? Surely it found me—when Iliad .' • "raised him—for all time, and all eternity W( dl. It was strange, but in the midst niy gct-at, deep joy a thought come over —what it this troth-plighting among the -laves were an omen—what if it should be : 'math aud not for life ? But I tried to ainsli this foreboding. I knew I was ■1 'T'stitious, naturally, so 1 would ' Jet myself utter the haunting thought ' hobert. '■en the time came for the gates to be we went out arm in arm, we two who 111 ged to each other for evermore. We E. O. GOODRICH, Publisher. VOLUME XXVI. walked about for awile under the trees there in old Cambridge before we went back to town, and the moon poured down on us a flood of silver light. It seemed to us that we had never seen such moonlight. It seemed to us that we had never seen such moonlight—that we walked under new heavens and upon a new earth. When we got home we told our landlady —good Mrs. Colesworthy, who had been so kind to me—of our betrothal. Robert said frankness was best in such matters, as in all others. We could not be married just yet. His salary was small, and he must save enough to begin housekeeping in a quiet way. In the mean time he would want of course, to be with me as much a6 possible, and so it was well our relation should be understood, and then there would be no room for gossip. That New-Year, however, the firm he worked for raised his salary, so that he saved the money we needed sooner than we had any hope, and we were married the next summer, a year after our betrothal.- - Then Robert took me home. We had three rooms—a chamber, a kitchen, and a little parlor. We thought of a spare bedroom at first, but I bad no friends who were like ly to come and see us, neither had Robert ; so we saved that expense. What a bright, cheery home we had ! How much pride and pleasure we took in every little con venience and adornment! We thought we were just as happy as we could be ; but when another year went by, and with the June roses came a baby girl to look up at us with her shy sweet eyes, full of strange baby wisdom, we found that we could be happier still. 1 wanted to call the little thing Rose, because she came when the roses came, and Robert wanted to call her Mary, because that was uiv name ; so we compromised and called her Rosemary. I think you never saw just such a baby - -never, surely, unless you have had a first baby of your own. She was such a round, rosy, fat, dimpled, loving, sunny, bird-like little creature, with wise, still ways too, tliat kept you wondering how the world looked to her, and what she was thinking about. She was a perpetual novelty and entertainment to us. We never tired of speculating about her future, watching her growth, playing with her. And so ten months went by us most happily, until it was the March after little Rosemary came. Then Robert look a sudden violent, cold. It came on to rain one day while he was at the store. He had to go out to attend to some business, and having no overshoes or umbrella,went carelessly without them,and came home to rile at night so hoarse he could scarcely speak. It was his last day's work Let mehnrrv over these few terriblejweeks of suffering and suspense through which I nursed him. He died in the last of April. Before he went away from us little Rose mary had learned to say "papa." She said it.to him just before he died, and I never can forget the way his face kindled with a lifelike brightness which made me almost hold him back a little longer from death.— He reached out his arms, those thin, weak arms, and I laid the child in them. " God bless you," he said, " my darling, my little darling ! God bless you and keep you from all evil!" Then he began to cough, and I took her away, and tied her into her tiny rocking chair, where she had learned to set patient -1- hour after hour, never troubling any one. When the coughing-spell was over he clos ed his ej'es, and I heard him say in a low voice : "Their angels do alwajm behold the face of the Father and I know he was think ing of his little one,and what her lot would be when he was gone. Just at the last he turned his eyes to me, and said in weak faint tones : " You have been my true wife, Mary. You have walked with medown to the very brink of the river. You must go back alone." With those words he made a sign for me to kiss him,and bending down I pressed my lips to his. that even then quivered beneath my touch,and faintly returned my pressure. When 1 lifted up my head he was dead. 1 had been alone a month before I had courage to look about me, or think at all what 1 was going to do. The firm had been very kind. They continued Robert's pay through his sickness, and for two months afterward, making up the half year. Of course that was all 1 could have expected of them, or more—l must take care of my self and my little girl. Robert had left a little mouey, but that 1 did not mean to j touch. I felt that it ought to remain as a 1 provision against anytime of peculiar need, Sor for Rosemary if I should die. So I went ' round among mj T old customers and pro I cured the promise ot as much work as I ' could do to take home, for it was of course i out of the question to leave my child and ,go out all day, as 1 used to do. \\ hen 1 ! saw how kind the}* all were to me,and how , sorr3' for me, 1 began to realize how many ! good hearts there are in the world. For two years 1 got along nicely. To be sure it left an awful void in my life to 1 take Robert out of it, but I remembered that 1 had promised to belong to him forev !er ; so I felt that 1 was only waiting. My I little one was a great comfort. She looked at me with her father's eyes, and there was a curious likeness in her words and ways to his which some times gladdened and some times saddened my heart, i Her constitution was very frail. She ; had been a fat, dimpled baby enough ; but 1 after she could run alone she grew slender, and her skin was almost transparent. But | she was never really ill until the summer 1 two 3'ears after her father died. Then she became so delicate that she required a j great deal of 1113' time. I thought at first ! it was because she was cutting a long-de- I ia3'ed double tooth, bnt soon I began to fear there was graver cause for alarm. 1 ! sent for a doctor, a kind, fatherly man— jDr Grant his name was —and he told me ! that her spine was affected, and the disease was of such a nature that she would re -1 require the closest care and attention to | save her life. And even then— But he , did not finish the sentence. Looking into my face I think lie could not nerve himself to do so. I used to hold her in my arms more than i half the time by' night and by day. Of course 1 could not sew much, and the mou ey Robert had left dwindled away. I be j gan to wonder how I could keep want from ' | the door. One day Dr. Grant came and j seemed to have something in particular to TOW AND A, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., OCTOBER 10, 1865. I say. He had been very kind to my little Rosemary, and she and I had both grown fond of him in a certain way, and were al ways glad to see him. But I never could tell you the shock it was when he asked me to marry him. I had known nothing of his history hitherto, but he told me now that he was a widower, and a lonely, childless man, and that he had learned to love me and mine better than any thing in the world, lie wanted to marry me at once, and take us home with him, where Rosemary could have every care and luxu ry, and where my lot should be eased of all such burdens as he could bear in my stead. While he talked I was terribly tempted. The home he offered seemed to promise such rest, such relief from care, and the tortur ing anxiety how to do my duty to my child and get my daily bread at the same time. 1 thought of my little one most of all. I knew she needed so much that I could not give her. Perhaps it would save her life. Had I a right to refuse ? And yet I knew I did not love Dr. Grant. I dared not an swer him on any momentary impulse. So I told him if he would go away and give me time to think 1 would see him again on the morrow. He held my hand a moment with grave tenderness. * " Remember, Mrs Eden," he said, " that whatever way you may decide I shall not be the less your friend If you can find it in your heart to come to my home and let me care for you I shall be happy indeed, and 1 will do my best to make you so." All that night, until the gray dawn light ened the heavens, I sat holding my little one in my arms and thinking. I went over and over all the advantages of the case— most of all what it would do Rosemary to be in a home of plenty, surrounded with ev ery appliance of ease and luxury ; const antly watched, moreover, by a kind and skillful physician, whose interest in her 1 knew, would be only second to mine. All this on one side. On the other the stern fact that I did not love Dr. Grant—the holy, ever present memory that I had promised to belong to Robert Eden forever. Could I break that vow ? Would he forgive me if, even for his chi'd's sake, 1 suffered any other man to press the lips on which his dying kiss still lingered '! Then I thought farther. Filled as my heart was with fond memories of the dead, thrilling to that remembered love as it nev er would to the strongest utterance of any living man's passion, should I not be wroug i lg Dr. Grant's noble nature unpardonably if 1 gave him a hand which held no heart— vowed a fealty which was only lip-deep ? At last, just :n the gray dawning, 1 made up my mind that I would be faithful and true at any cost, and trust all to God, even Rosemary. I would not sin against my womanhood by purchasing comforts for her at the price of my fidelity to the vow I had plighted to her father. I knew that I had decided rightly by the great peace which flowed into my heart. I lay down on the bed, with my little girl still in my arms,and I seemed to feel—was it all a fancy ? —the presence of one I could not see, to hear a well-known, well-loved voice murmur, " Through life and through death ! My beioved, thou hast been faithful." Then I slept the long, deep sleep of ex haustion ? and when I awoke Rosemary was watching me with her great wide-open eyes, and it was almost time for Dr. Grant to come. 1 showed him honestly all my heart, and, when he understood fully that I never could have given him such love as he craved, he told me 1 had done right—that any other course would have been injustice to myself to him, and to the dead. But if I could not be his wife, he said, I must be to him as his sister—l must suffer him to provide for all my necessities, for he should not let me sew any more until—he stopped an instant and then finished his sentence—until the little girl is better. But, in spite of his attempt to spare my feelingc, it struck in one moment to my heart that he felt convinced she would nev er be any better in this world. With that thought all my independence, all my sensi tive pride, was silenced. Ift It as willing to accept the help he offered as I was grate ful for his kindness. I could not give one hour more of my darling's short life to any thing but care of her. I knew he wanted to assist me—was alike willing and able. I took his generous hand and raised it to my lips. '• May God reward you !" I said. •' I know 1 never can, and I accept your offer ing as frankly as it is made." So all the rest of that summer I tended my poor, little fading flower, and I)r. Grant supplied our wants like a brother. What days those were !—those long, still ones, in which I held her from morning till night, clasped in arms which never wearied of their burden ! A Strang, almost unnatural wisdom seemed to develop in the little three-year's child who was living her short life so fast. 1 had long talks with her about death and heaven, the home where her father waited—where she, too, would be waiting for me very soon. At last the end came. She had been growing more like an angel every day,and at length the angels called her home. Her little arms clasped my neck for the last time—her lips pressed mine—and her baby voice bade me good-bye. My darling, oh my darling ! She has slept these two years beside her father. lam looking forward always thro' all the tumult of life to the day when I too can go home. 1 bear life's burden patiently —I try uo do my duty in the station to which it has pleased God to call me ; but my heart and my hopes are where Robert waits, and with him my little Rosemary— not sure, I think, that heaven is heaven un til I join them there. TRI E. —The man who ' does not take the paper or who takes a paper and does not read the advertisements, can never be said to be well posted. The advertisements, in dicate not only the business enterprise of the place in which they are published, but the enterprise of the advertiser. When you see a man who advertises liberally, you may be sure of finding a good stock in his store—that he keeps up with the markets, and can always sell a little cheap er than those who do not advertise. MEN with red noses should never be re" ceived as workmen in powder mills. You can train your muscles but not your oysters. REGARDLESS OF DENUNCIATION FROM ANY QUARTER. THE WORKING. The noblest men I know on earth Are men whose hands are brown with toil : Who, backed by no ancestral graves, Hew down the wood, and till the soil; And win thereby a prouder name Than follows king or warrior's fame. The working men, whate'er the task, Who carve the stone, or bear the hod, They bear upon their honest brows The royal stamp and seal of God ; And worthier are the drops of sweat Than diamonds in a coronet. God bless the noble working men, Who rear the cities of the plain, Who dig the mines, who build the ships And drive the commerce of the main; God bless them ; for their toiling hands Have wrought the glory of all lands. UNDER LAKE MICHIGAN- On the 10th of August I was in Chicago, and thought I ought to visit the tunnel. I was told that I could see the shore shaft, hut they would not let anybody go down. 1 did go down, and I saw the whole thing. For this privilege I am indebted to one of the board. During iny journey there were times when I doubted about its being much of a privilege. Mr. Rose took me to a shaft near nine o'clock at night. A sort of elevator filled it, and it is worked by an en gine, with a strong wire-rope. They had been bringing up dirt, which is sold at ten cents a load. The two miners stepped on the platform of the elevator. He inspects the brick work for the city and examines every brick- The city keeps at least one man in the tun. nel every moment to watch the progress, and to guard airainst bad work and danger. For there is danger. Of course there is It is in case they come to quicksand, or springs which rise up to the bottom of the lake. At that time they had advanced about three-quarters of a inile. The waves of Lake Michigan are over them. When steamboats pass, they plainly hear the working of the engine and paddle-wheels. The miners told me they were ieady, and pointed to the place on the platform where 1 was to stand. It was something like the platform where they hang folks, and a rope was over head, but for another purpose. — Then we started. The motion was swift and easy. It was 77 feet to the bottom, and we soon reached it. The tunnel was before me, and not much larger than a good sized brick oven. It was profoundly dark within. Out of it came cold, damp air.— Leading into the tunnel is a railroad track, and there stood one of the cars on which they haul brick, lime and dirt. Usually they have a mule, but there was none down at the time. One miner sat on the front of the car with his lamp in his hand. They gave me a little board to sit on. I partly sat and squatted on the middle of the car. The arch above was so low 1 had to stoop, or my head would have touched. The oth er miner was to walk. He bent forward and pushed the car. Then we started. Immediately a cold blast came out of the tunnel. I almost re gretted I had come, but I knew there was fun ahead, and I would not lie frightened. Alter we had gone a few rods one of the men said we were under the lake. I asked him how far it was to the water, lie said it was about 40 feet. The lamps flared in the blast, and almost went out. The car rat tled, and its echoes rolled thru' the tunnel like a constant peal of thunder. On the right side of the wall, every live feet, the distance was marked in black figures. At the upper turn of the arch extended a black six-inch pipe, made of sheet iron, through which the engine 4!raws the bad air out of the tunnel. Not only is there bad air, but they And inflamable gases. Once they took tire ; there was a great light through the tunnel and one man was badly burned, but he still lives. There seemed 110 end to this black pipe, to the black figures, nor to the tunnel, as we rolled through the chilly and damp air. It was the blackness of dark ness before, and the same behind. The scene was like that in a sick dream, like a nightmare in which there is no relief and no change. Unless a man's duty lead him he can have no business here. Had I not wanted to describe the place I would not have went down. One can visit no other place in the world where so suddenly he i may be cut oft" from human help. Should they strike a vein of quicksand the wa ters rush in; immediately they roar through the tunnel, they pass beyond one, they rise beyond one, they rise in the land shaft, and he will be seen 110 more. Some say that if one can swiu well ho may be saved. He j will swim with the advancing waters, and he will rise in the shaft ; but such will be ; the pressure of the water of the lake, that jhe will be propelled with the velocity of a I cannon ball, and he will be thrown out of I the shaft in a monstrous jet of water and | foam. Should he escape here, the chances j are that he will he torn to pieces by strik ; ing against the sides of the tunnel, or be j flattened into a mass against the sides of i the shaft, or be rent gsunder in the whirl pool made by the reaction. I confess that I felt solemn. It was cold. : Naturally one would tremble. It was a i good place to pray. A short, fervent pray -ler can be said as one rides along, even as | one talks. It seemed to me like standing I on the brink of eternity- like preparing | one's self for taking a long farewell of the jjstars and the sun, of the world, of wife, j children and friends. After a long time, we came to a chamber dug out on each side, braced with timbers and plank ; here mortar had been made and brick deposited. We did not stop. — The figures on the wail showed that we were 1,000 feet under the lake, and still the black pipe was overhead. Still the tun nel echoed with thunder. I looked back whence we came. There was no returning. Again we passed another chamber, and the figures showed we were 2,000 feet from the shore. It was 40 feet to the water, and the water is 40 feet deep. We have wondered at the stores of enchantment in the Arabian Nights. It has no such stories as'this. The cold, nightmare scene was unchang ed ; and still under the waves we rolled on. After a long time the car went slower. A few words were spoken, and we saw lights ahead. We approached, and found men in a chamber making mortar. Everybody was busy. A man brought a broken hoe to one of the miners who came with me ; it was his hoe. He swore. I never was so shocked to hear an oath. I thought it strange. And yet I was informed that not long ago two men got to fighting here, and one killed the other ! Here we left the car and went oil foot. We could see men at work in the distance. This was 3,300 feet from the shore. The water overhead shoals, and is only 35 feet deep. Then we reached the spot where the masons were laying bricks. We had to pass a mortar-car, and it so filled the space it was difficult to get by. My conductor still led me on. 1 told him 1 did not care about going further. Yes, 1 must see the whole of it, since I had come so far. We passed by the side of a pile of dirt 15 or 20 feet long, and came to where men were picking and shovelling in the hard blue clay. I remember taking up a lump. It was damp but solid. I could not have seen much else, but my recollection is not dis tinct. I know 1 talked a little. I bade them good bye, and remarked, what I then happened to think, that God would prosper the work because they were engaged in getting pure water. Then we went back by the masons and those making mortar, and again I was on the car. 1 was glad to return. I was glad no accident happened. At last we reached the land shaft, the elevator was ready, I stepped in it, and again was in the world. Mr. Rose was waiting in the office, and said I had been down only about an hour. It seemed to me a century. — Cor. of N. Y. Tribune. CORAL ROCKS. The coral rocks, which grow from the bed of the ocean, were formerly thought to be ola vegetable nature ; but subsequent investigation has demonstrated that the foundation of these immense masses is el fected by certain species of polypes. A portion even of England is based on a foun dation of coral, many of our transition locks containing an immense number of fossil corals ; and many islands between the tropics appear to rest entirely on mass es of coral rocks. The order uud regulari ty with which these vast accumulations of solid matter are constructed, by means apparently so inadequate to the end, are no less astonishing than the amazing num ber of such masses which are known to exist. Thousands ot islands in tin* Eastern Ocean owe their origin entirely to this source ; and particularly those in the In dian Archipelago, and round New Holland, are produced by various tribes of these an imals ; especially by the cellepora, isis, ma drepora, millepma, and tubipora. The aui- j nials which lorm these corals work with j such rapidity, that enormous masses of i them appear where there were scarcely any I marks of such reefs before ; and the navi- j gation of the seas iu which they abound is rendered every day more difficult by the continually increasing number of coral reefs, which will bee me the basis of future > islands. These reefs have Hat tops, and rise so perpendicularly from the bed of the sea, that the officers of vessels, within only two ship's length of them, have found 110 bottom at the depth of 150 fathoms, or nine hundred feet ! It is -an interesting object of geological research to trace the progress of these foundations, by the minute but combined labors of millions of these marine zoophitcs, which occupy the lowest rank in the animal kingdom ; but which have been instrumental in giving to the earth its pres ent form. The following interesting ex tract from " kot/.ebue's Voyages " gives the best description of the mode in which the islands consisting of coral reefs, may have been progressively formed : " As soon as the ridge or reef has reach ed such a height that it remains almost dry at low water, at the time of ebb, the poly pes cease from building higher. Seashells, fragments of corals, sea hedge-hog shells, and their broken off prickles, are united by the burning sun, through the medium of the cementing calcareous sand, which lias arisen from the pulverization of the above mentioned shells, into one whole or solid stone ; which, strengthened by the contin ual throwing up of new materials gradual ly increases in thickness, till it becomes at last so high, that is covered only during some seasons of the year by high tides. — The heat of the sun so peuetrates the mass of stone, when it is dry, that it splits in many places, and breaks off in flakes.— These flakes, so separated, are raised one upon another by the waves, at the time of high water. The always active surf throws blocks of coral (frequently of a fathom in length, and three or four feet thick) and shells of marine animals, between and up on the foundation stones ; after this the calcareous sand lies undisturbed, and of fers to the seeds and trees of plants, cast upon it by the waves, a soil, upon which they rapidly grow, to overshadow its daz [ zling white surface. Eutire trunks of trees | which are carried from other countries and islands, find here, at length, a resting place after their long wanderings. With these come some small animals, such as lizards and insects, as the first inhabitants. Even before the trees form a wood, the real sea birds nestle here, strayed land birds take ' refuge in tlie bushes, and at a much later ! period, when the work has been long since j been completed, man also appears, builds j iiis hut on the fruitful soil, formed by the I corruption of the leaves of the trees, and i calls iiimself the lord and proprietor of this j new creation." As AUTHENTIC ANECDOTE. —Talleyrand was once in the company <>f Madame de Stael and another eminent French lady, whose name we do not remember. "You say charming things to both of us," said Madame de Stael to hiin ; which do you like best ?" The wily statesman artfully replied that he was delighted with both. "Ah ! but you prefer one of us," contin ued Madame de Stael: "suppose we were both drowning in the Seine to-night, which of us would you help first ?" "I would extend my right hand to Mad ame de Stael, and my left hand to Madame yonder." "Yes ; but suppose only one of us could be saved, which would you attempt to res cue ?" Talleyrand's diplomacy was pushed to its severest test, but not a whit discompos ed, he turned to Madrme de Stael, and re plied— "Madame, you know most things, doubt less you know how to swim." SfjlS per* Annum, in Advance. TEMPLE OP JUNO AT POMPEII Mention was lately made of the discov ery made at Pompeii of a temple of Juno, with more than three hundred skeletons. Those remains, which crumbled to dust by degrees as they were brought to light,were those of woman and children, who had been buried beneath the burning ashes thrown out by the volcano at the moment in which a sacrifice was being offered up in the tem ple to the Queen of Gods, no doubt to implore her to avert the terrible calamity which menaced the city. To the arm of one of these skeletons,which, from the rich jew els with wnich it was covered, is supposed to be that of the High Priestess, was still attached by a gold ring, a censer of the same rnetal filled with calcined perfumes. This vessel is of the form of those now used in the ceremonies in the catholic churches, and is of beautiful workmanship and in laid with precious stones. The statue of the god-dress is one of*the most magnificent relics yet found in that city ; its eyes are of enamel, and on the neck and arms, as well as the ancles, are jewels and bracelets of precious stones of the most exquisite finish and elegance of form. The peacock placed at her side is almost entirely com posed of precious stones. The tripod be fore the altar is like the censor held by the High Priestess, magnificently worked gold. The temple also contained lamps artistically chased, of bronze, iron, silver and gold ; branches of foliage, vine-stems, interspers ed with flowers aud fruit of the most beau tiful form. The space around the altar is paved with splendid mosaics in excellent preservation, and the rest of the temple is inlaid with small triangular blocks of white aud purple agate. The spot on which the sacrifices was made is alone paved with marble. A GREAT CURIOSITY. —The Jacksonville (Oregon) Sentinel, gives the following par ticulars cf the discovery of a great sunken take ; " Several of our citizens returned last week from a visit to the Great Sunken Lake, situated in the Cascade Mountains, about seventy-five miles northeast of Jack sonville. This lake rivals the famous val ley of Sinbad the sailor. It is thought to average two thousand feet down to the wa ter all around. The walls are almost per pendicular, running down into the water and leaving no beach. The depth of the water is unknown, and the surface is smooth and unruffled, as it lies so far below the mountain that the air currents do pot af feet it. Its length is estimated at twelve miles, and its width at ten miles. There is an island in its center, having trees upon it. No living man ever has, and never will be able to reach the water's edge. It lies silent, still and mysterious, in the bo som of the ' everlasting hills,' like a huge well scooped out by the hands of the giant genii of the mountains, in the unknown ages gone by, and around it the primeval forests watch and ward are keeping. " The visiting party tired a rifle several times into the water, at an augle of forty five degrees, and we were able to note sev eral seconds of time from the report of the gun until the ball struck the water. Such seems incredible, but is vouched for by some of our most reliable citizens. The lake is certainly a most remarkable curios ity of nature.'' THE .MISERIES OF A RICH MAN.— The New i York correspondent of the Rochester Demo crat is responsible for the following ; "Alexander T. Stewart clears one thous and dollars per day, Sabbaths excepted, all the year round. Cornelius Yanderbilt pleads to double that sum, while William B. Astor rates his income at four thousand three huu •dred and thirty dollars par diem. Sleeping or waking, the latter gentleman finds a three dollar bill dropping into his hat every minute of the twenty-four hours. He can not sit down to talk with his physician without having a little more wealth if not health ; he cannot unburden his mind for ten minutes without feeling the burden in creasing into his pocket, and lie can't walk Broadway however the weather may be, without meeting a shower of money. At every turn cash stares him in the face in the most insolent manner. Banks liing their dividends at his head ; ruthless finan ciers beat him with coupons ; unpitying and soulless corporations dump their filthy lucre at his door step, and contemptuous bill stickers plaster his house with green backs. One might inquire what the fellow lias done to merit this treatment, and the only charge that can be brought is that he was a rich man's son, and therefore must sutler." SMALL BEGINNINGS.— FrankIin had but lit tle early education ; yet look at what lie became and how he is reverenced. Fer guson, feeding his sheep on the hills of Scotland, picked up the rudiments of learn ing, but subsequentls rose to be one of the first astronomers in Europe. Herschell, the great astronomer, was in youth a drum mer buy to a marching regimeut, and re ceived but little more than a drummer boy's education ; but his name is associated with the brightest discoveries of science, and is borne by the planet that his zeal discovered. A host ol instances rise up to satisfy that, by properly improving the small and per haps imperfect beginnings of knowledge, they may become perhaps as foundation I stones a temple of learning which the future shall gaze at and admire. OCR MISTAKES ABOUT EACH OTHER. —Not ouc man in ten thousand sees those with whom he associates as they really are. If the prayer of Burns were granted, and we could all see ourselves as others see us, our self estimates would in all probability be much more erroneous than they now are. The truth is that we regard each other through a variety of lenses, no one of which is correct. Passion and prejudice, love and hate, benevolence and envy, spec tacle our eyes, and utterly prevent us from observing accurately. Many whom we deem the porcelain of human clay are mere dirt, a still groator number of those we put down in our "black books," are no further off from heaven, and perchance a little near er than the censors who condemn them. THE reason why negroes are not allowed to testify in Courts of Justice probably is that colored men might probably give a coloring to the truth. THE SIBOOOO- A correspondent of one of the Paris pa pers gives the following account of a si rocco in Algiers : " Almost all the summer we have been congratulating ourselves on the coolness of the season, and when letters from France complained of the heat, we recommended our friends to come to Algiers tor fresh air. But we reckoned without our host—the si rocco; and now that has come with a veng ance. It was prefaced by a tremendous thunder storm, which broke the windows, and roused the population from their beds. An hour later, all was calm ; but the old colonists knew what was coming, and sure enough, next day the sky assumed that pe culiar violet color which so astonishes ar tists when they venture to pass a summer on the other side of Mount Atlas. A few burning gusts of air, feeling and smelling like that issuing from an oven when the ba ker opens it to take out the bread, served as the advance guard of the enemy. The temperature rose rapidly. On Friday, the thermometer at Duchassing'a Club, with a northern exposure, marked 113 Fah. in the shade. At El Biar, at the same time, an other thermometer, also in the shade, but exposed to the full blast of the sirocco, went up to 124. The most robust man could not have crossed the sunny side of the Government-place without danger.— The ground burned the feet through the shoe leather ; the hand that touched any object whatever—a cane or a coat sleeve —smarted with pain ; the nostrils con tracted, and the eyes closed under the in fluence of the torrid breath of the simoon. In many houses, furniture fell to pieces, ta pestry dropped suddenly from bursting walls, and ceilings crumbled to pieces and descended upon the heads of the inmates like flakes of burning snow. Never, within the memory of man, had such things been seen in Algiers. At night a frightful spec tacle was seen. From Gyotville to Cape Matifou, along an extent of twelve leagues of coast, a lurid glow suddenly appeared, became rapidly more and more intense, and it soon became apparent that the whole country was on fire. Entire mountains burst forth in a flame like a volcano, aud burning forests lit tip the waters of the harbor, and made the stars look pale. It was a sublime horror. There are rumors of loss of life, and the damage done to property is necessarily enormous. Many farms, barns and stacks have been entirely destroyed." NUMBER 21. DON'T RUN THE COWS. —Now, buys, we have a word to say to you. When we were of your age we always had to drive the cows to pasture, and go bring them, too. Sometimes we got a little late, or we were anxious to get ofl' to play, or a eow found a bit of good sweet grass, better than she had found all day in the pasture, and would stop to take a bite and fall behind the rest. That was provoking, and we were apt to give her a pretty severe lesson. In fact, we were guilty of hurrying up on many occas ions. It was all wrong, but we little knew how much injury we were inflicting ou our selves as well as on the cows. Now it is perfectly well known that over driving causes the milk to be heated and feverish, especially in hot weather, and this milk is not a healthful article of food either as milk or when made into butter or cheese. Cows that are abused, kicked or rougldy treated, cannot give good milk, and no pro cess of manufacture can make it into so good an article of diet as milk that is not injured by such treatment. Never let the dogs chase the cows. A worriment of this kind not only lessens the quantity, but injures the quality of milk, and it snould be carefully avoided. Dogs are generally a curse among a herd of cat tle and particularly so among milch cows, unless they are trained to drive and tend them, as few of our dugs are.— Plaw/hman. WIFE AND SQCAWS. —I heard an anecdote of Kaffirlaud to-day, which, though irrevel ant to our adventures here, is so amusing that I must record it, particularly as my informant vouched for its truth. At an outpost far up the country resided an offi cer and his wife. The latter was warned by her husband not to venture alone far from the house ; but one day imprudently going beyond her usual limits, she encoun tered a wild looking Kaffir, who took her by the hand, and would be moved by no entreaties to suffer her to depart. He made her sit down, and untying her bon net, let down her long hair, at which he ex pressed rapturous admiration. He next took oft' her gloves, and appeared enchant ed with her white hands ; and then pro ceeded to divest her of her shoes and stockings, and wondered at her little white feet. The next morning the lady uud her husband were awakened at an early hour by a chattering under their window ; and on enquiring the cause of the disturbance, the gentleman was aeosted by the hero of the previous day, who had been so impress ed by the charms of our fair country-wo man, that he had come with twelve squaws to make the liberal offer of exchanging them for the gentleman's wife, and was not a little surprised when his generous terms were refused.— Mjor Paget'* ('amp am/ Cantonment. NEW WAY OF APPLYING LEECHES. —" Well, my good woman," said the doctor, " how is your husband to-day ? Better no doubt." " Oil yes, surely," said tiie woman. "He is as well as ever and gone to the field." " I thought so", continued the doctor.— "The leeches cured him. Wonderful of feet have. You got the leeches, of course ?" " Oh, yes, they did him a great deal of good, though he could not take them all." " Take them all ! Why, my good wo man, how did you apply theiu ?" " Oh, I managed nicely," said the wife, ! looking.quite contented with herself. "For 1 variety sake, I boiled one half, and made ' a fry of the other. The first he got down ! very well, but the second made him very | sick. But what he took was quite enough," continued she, seeing some horror in the doctor's countenance, " for lie was better , the next morn'ng, and to-day he is quite I well." ! " Umph," said the doctor, with a sapient j shake of the head, " if they have cured i him, that is sufficient, but they would have ! been better applied externally." The woman replied that she would do so the next time ; and 1 doubt not that if ever fate throws a score of unfortunate leeches into her power again, she will make a , poultice of them. AN UNHEALTHY HOCSE. —A dark house is always an unhealthy house, always an ill aired house, always a dirty house. \\ ant of light stops growth, and promotes scrof ula, rickets, etc., among children. People | lose their health in a dark house, and if they get ill, they cannot get well again iu ! it. Three, out of many negligences and I ignorances in managing the health of lious ! es generally, 1 will hero mention as speci ! mens. " First, that the female head in | charge of any bnilding does not think it necessary to visit every hole and corner of !it every day. Second that is not consider ed essential to air, to sun, and clean rooms, j while uninhabited. Third, that one window i is considered enough to air a room. ft