pi hi-ic vtiox. m r,.RTKBis published every Thursday Moru \ 1 0. GOODRICH. at 52 per annum, in ad- KKTISEMENTS exceeding fifteen lines are i a tfn crvrs per line for first insertion. ** l , . k , i sts per line for subsequent insertions. 1 nut is made to persons advertising nart> r. half-year or year. Special notices 1 .uie-half more than regular advertise- Vii n xolutious of Associations; eommuni ,,i limiti d or individual interest, and no • jbivriagi s and Deaths exceeding five lines, tn r,.,l tex cents r r line. 1 Year, ti mo. 3 mo. i luir.ii • SSO 535 S2O , spiiire, 10 " 4 5 lV Caution. Lost and Pound, ami oth ,'ii. rti-einenls. not exceeding 15 lines, weeks, or less $1 50 ..i-trutur's and Executor's Notices.. 200 tnditor's Notices 2 50 ,Cards, five lines, (per year) 5 00 lIS .iii.l others, advertising their business ,-barged >io. They will be entitled to 1 •urine 1 exclusively to their business, with dl. ee <>f change. - vP-otising ' u il 'l cases exclusive of sub to the paper. I'IllXTINti of every kind in Plain autlFun . i, ue with neatness and dispatch. Haud .n • < ards, Pamphlets, Ac., of every va . -nh . printed at the shortest notice. The J filer", has just been re-fitted with Power evert thing iu the Printing line can •, i in the most artistic manner and at the . I Eli MS INVARIABLY CASH. fdwtei pSligZ lIVJIK TO I'EACK, UV It. T. TfIKEItMAN. I .1 th> tinted umbrage now, ; ~ iilet vines and yellow weeds, • us smile and pensive brow. \r,tn!i:n tell her crimson beads. i.tst I watched the deep'uiug blue . :. and skv. her tranquil glow - -,t until by battle's lurid hue, \ : :1 darkened by a nation's woe. | . i.iii- ..n<-<- more her blazoned crest ol j up], bars and amber fleece I K ii- < the vistas ol the West With Nature's heraldry of Peace. : il. fragrant smoke from burning leaves With incense fills the crystal air, I -hr. and upland clustered sheaves fl harvest's mellow Instre wear. i p. no listless spell is thine, I in st. rile end of aimless strife. : • f. udly linger at thy shrine ! . hallow, not to dead U late. j | . |.r hide Bethlehem's sheperds heard, its lioly . .-lioes never cease, ■r tin Redeemer's parting word, His w.-lenmi and farewell, was "Peace!" bid when the hard whose lofty lame • In exile won, by age renewed, i - the lone convent's porta! came, WMl'ill and wan but unsubdued : in the friar's hand he laid f.. "iuing twie thi precious scroll. * any boon for which he prayed i-I '. - tranquillity of soul, ■ ■ i lie whose wild and fitful lay f: aI. mty. love, and scorn was bred. i meekly in his reckless way, v. h. i on a maiden's tomb he read ! •>■••• /Voce; "If far from kin ! .lied, i t this be writ," he cried, nm lust that death may win what ht'e and love and fame denied." ■ /. | : >rs, m their gentle play, uigiily east the downy seed, : the ugh the quiet summer day 1 - wis electric currents feed. pi.a id lake reflects the skies, i'i.- . din drift yields the alpine rose, Truth's pure image ever lies its that own thy blest repose. km - is fruition's brooding sleep passion's lull bids thought awake, - i' -m her patient vigil keep, k 1 1,-ve her sacred mission take : 1 stay the ruthless hand of crime Viul awv the rage of lust and fear, In- fruits of Nature and of Time Ygain to ripen and to rear : >nr country's rankling wounds to heal By 1 aith supreme, with tender pride, i guard with consecrated zeal liu cause for which her martyrs died. " ACROSS THE CONTINENT." Loture of Hon. .Schuyler Colfax. M uilay evening, Nov. 27, a large and at audience greeted Hon. Schuyler iv. it the Academy of Music, Philadel- i He i evasion ol liits delivery of the ■Me—■"Across the Continent." No led- : ■ tits season, wc think, has been so - y it< -in li-il, ttiid none where the speak - rt-ccived more enthusiastically. ' i\ was introduced in complirnent '".uis l.y Mr. E. W. (' Greene. ■ hearty applause with which he 1 gnrted had subsided, the lecturer pro-1 He said that he regretted very I B ii niistaken telegraphic despatch ' this lecture had misled many to j that lie was about to speak, > ci v other subjects,on the duties ■ling Congress. He had spoken j 1 ipital, hut a few nights since, brief h ;u.kly,he would trust,on the duties 1 ! icsi nlatives of the American peo tiu* most important Congress eVer assemble at Washington. [Ap- Ih* hail nothing to take back from had then said, and he had nothing j applause], except that thife is one ■ W: v in which every patriot, at this ' hi' 1 walk, and that is the pathway *'} to our beloved, but imperilled I r y renewed applause J; and he regret-! .11* i*ui ore, that he had noticed in the , iaj- i s the announcement that he was j .' in ui-liver a great lecture this even- i [ 1 - would he great only in its length. ! 'dd be an attempt to bring before the '1 the audience some scenes aud in ' •■j* in the long journey across the con w ha:h consumed four or five months ' _"*••"? summer and fall. It was the i glitlul, instructive and invigora •'irney he had ever made. Instead lecture being great, therefore, it' 1 e seen to be devoid of gems of V m l llowers of rhetoric. The position IVv nations with the ocean, which •" 'a-tween them, almost encircling Ihe "• fie- republic of the United States, ! 'Ved la: d imperilled, hut,thank j " ■-* i v. d, extending from the Bay of a tin- Atlantic, to Behring's Straits aciiic Ocean, and the Russian em -I' liding beyond, presented a subject "iiy to the civilized world. The 1 ■ sis have forms of government en ihj.' and even antagonistical. .. tv " ' " re "iany striking coincidences i tiie two encircling nations. Both E. O. GOODRICH, lubliHlier. VOLUME XXVI. abound in mineral wealth but partially de veloped, and both resemble each other in the magnitude of their boundless plains, ami both having, as their crowning glory, that they are the great emancipators of this era [applause]; both have broken the doors of the prison-house of slavery, and lifted millions of human beings into the dignity of liberty. hen our country was strug gling for its existence against the banded conspirators who sought to bayonet the prostrate form of liberty, when other Euro pean Governments, nearer to us in kindred as well as in commercial ties, looked coolly on our contest, mocking us in the hour of ' trial, the sympathy of Russia was open and hearty, and was so boldly expressed that the wide world was compelled to hear. It is not too much to say that her friendly of fices prevented foreign alliances against us. When the Old World and the New speak together through the Russo-American telegraph stretching across our country in to theirs, St. Petersburg and Washington j city will exchange cordial greetings. He 1 would trust that our first despatch would ! be to indicate how we appreciated Russia's unwavering and unfaltering friendship,both as regards monarch and people, displayed towards us when our ship of state was buf feting the storms and waves of treason and war. [Applause.] Mr. Colfax next proceeded to describe mi nutely his journey to the Pacific ocean and back. lie said that for several years he had an almost iriesistable longing to visit the Old World and its historic regions ; to scale the Alps and travel over vine-clad France, and Italy ; to cross over to Russia, visit Siberia, and leave no spot of Europe unvisited. But he thought it was wiser to postpone this trip until he had traveled over his native land, and learned more thorougly, by actual observation,the grand eur of its more than imperial domain and the vastness of its almost illimited resourc es. He had received repeated invitations from numerous friends on the Pacific coast, and these drew his desires more and more in that direction ; and when, at the close of our four years' struggle for the salvation of the nation, victory crowned our banners, thanks to our brave defenders, who took their lives iu their hands, faltering not in the day ot battle,and sacrificed all for their country,and the rainbow of peace spanning over the horizon gave assurance that the demon of secession was crushed,and crush ed forever [applause], he concluded to uu dertakc the journey across the face of our country, to view its grand mountains and jilains, and explore its beauties, as well as j its great natural resources. He was so fortunate as to have with him three gentle- \ men—personal friends—and their little par ty started forward bent on information as well as pleasure. They went through all sorts of fatigue. They found the scenery such that it was not in his power to describe, aud such that he never could forget. Thirteen thousand miles was the extent of the journey, during which time the party lived on about half rations. They had returned invigorated, and pleased with what had been seen. They passed through Colorado, where some of the finest roads iu existence were seen.— The plains spread before the eye in mag nificent beauty. It will not be long, he thought, before cities and towns would spring up all over the boundless plains of the West. The prolonged twilight, the clear atmosphere, the exquisite sunlight scenes on these plains, were delightful to look upon. The speaker described the ap pearance of the Rocky Mountains as they appeared to him on his jeurney. At Denver he remained for several days, and enjoyed its pure atmosphere and glorious scenery as he never enjoyed anything before. He visited the mining cities, groped his way into the bowels of the earth, studied the machinery of those mines, and drank in instruction at every step. The future des tiny of Colorado was pictured in glowing colors. From Denver the speaker travelled to the northwest, and the journey in that direction was described to be exceedingly dangerous. The Indians were not of the most friendly character. The race of Indi ans which we read of in Cooper's novels, is entirely extinct, ho thought. [Laughter.] The mountain scenery along the journey was described minutely. The mountains were like the ruins of some gigantic cathe dral, but grander ami even more impress ive. He indulged in a snow frolic with his comrades in the month of June, in these far-off mountains. It was on a beautiful morning, while whirling over a rocky road, that he viewed, for the first time, the city of Great Salt Lake, lying in all its beauty before him, and shining like a flourishing garden in the sunlight. He did not wonder that the Mormons were proud of their city, for it is one of the most beautiful cities with which his eyes had been gladdened. Its fruits, its gardens, its shrubbery, seemed almost like a Palmyra in the desert. He stopped at Camp Douglas, on the prairie, which overlooks the city, and beheld the starry banner of bounty and glory waving in triumph before liirn, as it waves in un questioned triumph over the entire repub lic. Of the peculiar institution which ex ists there, he would probably speak before he concluded. He was now taking a hur ried glance at the face of the country over which he travelled. Between Salt Lake and Sierra Nevada,thirteen ranges of moun tains crossed his path. The past and fu ture prospects of mining were also touch ed upon. Mining in that country, as else where, was a speculation. One company he knew spent half a million of dollars without finding anything, and out of one hundred companies,on one ridge, but twen ty pay dividends to their stockholders. The Sierra Nevada wore the Andes of the North American continent. His first view of them was amazingly grand. Ho gave an interesting account of his journey across these mountains and the dangers through which he passed. He spoke of the drivers as being safe and experienced, who manipulated the reins as if their fingers were guided by magic, and despised the obstacles of the journey as if they had been "born and bred among them." These parts of the lectnie were listened to with corisid , erable interest. Six thousand feet above the sea lies Lake Tahoe ; upon the moun tain-top,—its water clear enough to see to the bottom, one hundred feet. Soon we had a magnificent view of the Pacific slope and Mount Diavolu in the distance, and the fertile fields of California at our feet. 1 felt almost as Christian felt on reaching the House Beautiful and the Delectable Moun- TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, B Y., DECEMBER 7, 1865. tains. [Applause]. Then we reached Placerville and the Sacramento road, with its two hundred tons ot freierht a day.— 1 here we saw the first locomotive, after two thousand miles of stage-coaching', and were whisked away to Sacramento, the cap ital of the Golden State, and thence by riv er to the queen city of the Pacific coast, San F raucisco, the metropolis of California. Fifteen years ago of a few mean houses, and now rivalling Chicago, Cincinnati or St. Louis in population, welcoming the stran ger to magnificent hotels and palatial man sions, to crowded stores and warehouses, to churches and libraries, and all the luxu ries ol civilization and life. This is a great, remarkable and noble State. In all my journeyings 1 have never met such a com monwealth—a smiling garden throughout the year. Manufactories are her greatest need, but mills are last going up, and a woolen mill there is using one million lbs. of wool a year. Every where we meet the Chinese labor ers working in every menial department. The ladies say they make the best baby tenders in the world. [Laughter.] They make good laborers, working on the Pa cific Railroad or extracting a living from refuse-diggings, where white men would starve, and saving money enough to take them to their homes, or convey their corps es thither, for the Chinaman must be buried iu his native laud. The first locomotive built in that State commenced running last August. Hers is an enterprising people. The long caravans that wended their way there, to develop her gold mines and other mineral wealth, have left their indelible stamp upon the character of the State. She needs but increased capital, manufactories and popu lation to bring her more greatness, pros perity and power than was thought of in her palmiest days. [Applause.] Thence to the upper regions of the l'a cific coast, through the cities of Yreka and Jacksonville, over the vast agricultural plains of Oregon, six hundred miles long and one hundred and fifty wide, to J'ort land, a city of six thousand inhabitants and four thousand five hundred miles from its namesake in Maine, and to Fort Vancouver, once the station of Ulysses S. Grant, j Ap plause.] An excursion trip on the Columbia river, through frowning mountains and overhang ing cliffs, with the water deep enough at their base for a frigate to float. At the cascades, where the river falls thirty-two feet in a mile, the steamboat company built a railroad five miles in length, to a point above the falls,where steamboat navigation is resumed. Iu full view of this railroad is the blockhouse where Phil. Sheridan,then a lieutenant, six years ago, defended him self and party against a horde of howling Indians. [Cheers.] Still later, we reached the northwestern town of the United States, Olyinpia, with Puget's Sound in the distance. Timber is plentiful there, and vessels are loading there for all ports of the North and South Pacific, for Australia and for Prance. Van couver's Island, 100, is close at hand, in joint occupancy of the forces of both Gov ernments, the soldiers only to be disting uished in their frank interniingliug by the royal red and the loyal blue. [Applause.] The valleys of California are as fruitful as they are beautiful. Chief among them all is Sonoma, famous for its wines. Thete too, we meet the wonder ol the continent, the Yo Semite valley, never trodden by the white man's foot until 18">1. and shut in by high walls of rock on every side. Its ro mantic beauty and wild sublimity surpass the fondest dreams any of our party had conceived of it. We might have thought of the home of the genius of Solitude.— From the cliffs we looked down into the valley eight miles long, and averagiug half a mile wide, with the Merced river winding gracefully through its length. On either side rise mountains from three thousand to six thousand feet above the valley it self, and is four thousand feet above the sea level. Here are the yellowish granite walls of El Capilan, surmounted with a beautiful dome, grander than the dome of capitol or cathedral : other rocks rise from the perpendicular. Such an aggregation of remarkable mountains fills the soul of the beholder, aud awes him with the sub lime magnificence of the scene. It. seems af if iu the creation the rock had been ploughed through,and the fragments thrown away. It seemed like the happy valley of Uasselas, where, shut out from the rest of the world, peace and contentment could be found. [Applause.] Here is the Bridal Teil, a creek ninety feet wide, falling from a rock ninety feet high at a single leap, dissipated first into lace-like strands and then into mist, and decked with the beauti ful colors of the rainbow. Hi re, too, are the Yo Semite Falls, 2,600 feet high—six teen times higher than Niagara—where for the first time I saw a circular rainbow.— [Applause.] No horse can scale these steep ascents, and the journey on foot is tiring ; but fatigue and danger are forgot ten in the sudlime display. Not less im posing were the gigantic trees, 90 feet in circumference and 300 feet high, estimated at three thousand two hundred years old. They have braved the storui since Moses wrote and David sang, outliving dynasties whose histories have almost perished from the history of man ; there they have grown on and on, to maturity and vigor. lkit we are back to San Francisco. The last good-byes are said, we embark on the steamship Golden (Jity, and move along the Pacific coast, past the shores of Cali fornia, along the shores of the Republic of Mexico. [Applause.] I call it a republic, [cheers] —1 call it a republic, because 1 re cognize no rightful empire there. [Great applause.] Then into the land-locked port of Acapulco, where, three hundred and thir ty years ago, Alvarez built the ships with which he sailed to Peru ; and finally, when we had sailed 3,300 miles, and steamer's wheels had made "214,440 revolutions —1 like to be exact—we cast anchor in the har bor of Panama, and crossed the forty-seven miles of railroad on the isthmus, which is doing an immense business, paying thirty three per cent, on its large capital, and yet scarcely receiving more than a tenth of its income from the travel between New York and San Francisco. All along the route are the residences of the wealthy inhab itants of the country, who all crowd on their piazzas to watch the passing steamer trains. On the Atlantic side the steamer is waiting ; we are on board, and in six and a half days we are in Yew York bay. REGARDLESS OK DENUNCIATION FROM ANY QUARTER. Hut the two great topics of the day are the I Mormon question and the Pacific Railroad, i And first of my individual experience of j the Morniaus. Concentrated in the valley j of Utah, with a population of a hundred j thousand people, bound together by a most j powerful ecclesiastical system, and under the control of one man; they present an in teresting study. They form a compact and powerful organization, but polygamy is their strongest bond of union. Nowhere else in the whole civilized world can they live, and Utah is their only home and only hope. There we heard a discourse in the Bowery by Brigham Young, who defended their system, and said that the Gentiles who did not become Latter-day Saints would remain in eternal misery, while the chosen would possess the earth. He is no ordinary man. He has natural administra tive talents, exercising a supervision of the whole church and his success has proved this. His own wealth shows him a busi ness man, and the industry of the valley shows him to be a good organizer of la bor. \\ e called at his house, where he de fended his peculiar system, saying that he had received a revelation from Heaven com manding him to adopt it. j Laughter, i 1 told liiiu it placed him in antagonism to the law of the land, and that it would be well for him to have another revelation com manding him to discontinue it. [Laughter.) He said he would be glad to get such a revelation. His conversation impressed us with the idea that he wou Id soon have to give it up or to array himself against the Government. Visiting among the Gentile people there they told us that this conversation had been reported through the streets, until it had grown to such a magnitude that it was commonly believed among the people that the Government had sent ne to instruct \ oung to have a revelation to discontinue it, and caused great excitement. Soon after we left, an editorial appeared in the daily Mormon paper, stating this conversation, and then in a paragraph, evidently written or inspired by high au thority in the church, declaring their read iness to defend their peculiar institution with their lives if need be. 1 did not see much of the Mormon women to ask their views of the system. Their religion teach es that no woman can enter Heaven except through married life. The "Gentle'" ladies all tell me that the experience of those liv ing in purulity. who are at all pnsesscd of j refinement, is indeed unhappy. How is this to be preveutcd ? No jury there can convict a man, controlled, as it would be, i by the Mormon church. The growing army of children with which Salt Lake Gitv is swarming, are being educated to consid er it as Heaven inspired. But they should be taught that there is a limit to pretended revelations, and that the Government can not permit these so-called revelations to j conflict with tlie laws of the United States. This line is being drawn by many of the Mormons themselves, who are seceding from the clinch, and journeying from its jurisdiction. The law against polygamy : should be repealed,or they should be taught that it is a violation of the statutes. No man who practices it should be allowed to bold office under the Government and an oath to obey that law against it should be i required. There are dews and miners there, and they are all anti-polygainists It is the only country where the Saints are all sinners and the Jews are all Gentiles, i [Laughter. : But the whistle of the locomu- * tive will sound its requiem, and the shovel of the miner will dig its grave, j Ap plause. ] But the grandest ol all our national mea sures is the great Pacific Railroad Al-1 ways an earnest advocate of that scheme, i my long journey has convinced me of its! incalculable necessity. It is a national necessity, lor all are interested in it : it is a political necessity,for it will bind the At-1 lantic and pacfic States into an eternal bond of union ; it is a military necessity, for were we engaged in war with France j or England, it is there that our enemies would strike and endeavor to obtain a foot hold, and without this great road how long would be the time required to convoy troops i and stores across the plains. The interests i of the nation demand it even in this light. But more than all this, it is a commercial ! necessity, for then the line of communica tion between Eastern Asia and Europe * will be across this continent : it is essen tial to our national success and for the proper development of our grand internal! Territory and States, with their immense I stores of precious metals and useful min erals. Their development is now retarded by the slow-process of transporting ma-1 chiuery and supplies to those regions ; but i once constructed, it will be but a trunk-line j from which hundreds of branch lines will penetrate to every corner of our Western | land. It is the first and last hope of C'ali-1 fornia ; it is their daily hope and their i nightly dream, and all they ask is. When will it be done, and cannot the Government j help to finish it? Then, they say, they can j visit "home," as they a'ways call the At lantic States. It was the measure of the ; speedy construction of the railroad, and the love of the people for the laud they left behind, that crushed out the idea of a Pa cific Republic that had already been agitu- , ted among the politicians there. Leaving out the receipts of the Sanitary Commission from the great fairs of this city, New York and Chicago, California sent more money to that noble charity than any other State in the Union. [Applause.] This grand line of national communica tion completed, our country will be bound together then as never before. Then the iron horse will speed his way along the rails, while tiie increased facilities will cheapen transportation, and enable the population, with the aid of more complete | and easier attainable appliances, to develop the immense wealth of the mountains with new processes California will then be come, indeed HS our beloved martyr Presi dent predicted to me on that day when, having labored so faithfully for us, he was to die for us, that the great far West, with its immense agricultural re-ources, would become not only the granary of the woi Id. but, with its illimitable mineral w. alth the treasury of the world. BABIES resemble wheat in many n-cq>. Firstly, neither are good for imu-L uni;i tl.-> ar rive at maturity ; secondly, both an e, • > M 11-. house, and are are also the llmnr of the fannlx thirdly, both have to be cradlrti ; fourthly. ■ are generally well thrashal before they are dot e with. <■' FUN, FACTS AND FACETIAE. F ; A I.UTI.K boy running along stubbed his j toe and fell on the pavement. "Never mind, my | little fellow, ' said a bystander, "you won't feel the | | mill to-morrow.'" "Then," answered the little * I boy, "I won't cry to-morrow." YOLW; MAX, when your sweetheart, on a . | Sunday night, begins to yawn, and intimates that ' ! she usually retires at ten. it is time for you to take -i | your hat and state that pressing business requires ; | your immediate attention. 'j- "AIXT it wicked to rob this chicken-roost, ' I Sambo?" "Dat's a great moral question, nigger ; ; | we aint time to argy it now : hand down annndder | j pullet." > | WHAT is the difference between a bed s : bug and a man sleeping with snakes under his bed? . ! One creeps over the sleepers, and the other sleeps 1 over the creepers. -1 SOME wretched benedict perpetrates the , j following : Why is a bridegroom worth more than I I a bride ?—Because she is given away, and he is 1 | sold. ; Miss TO KKR says it's with bachelors as | with old wood, its hard to get them started, but j when they do fake flame they burn prodigiously. . j "PA, they tell us about the angry ocean. ; What makes the ocean angry !" "Oh, it has been 1 reiissi 'I so often." ;j FINNY —to see a young lady with botli" hands in sott dough, and a mosquitoe on the end ! of her nosi. THE young gentleman who "flew into a | passion has had his wings elipjed. i ! TIIE decadence of waterfalls will cause a ! i i great falling oft of hair. HEAVEN* —aland of joy, and light, and t love supreme. .S I VNAY is the golden clasp that binds to- 1 ,gf (In rth volume of fit" week. "STL'TTERINO BEX,'' who was toasting his t shins, observing that the oil merchant was cheat ing a customer iu some oil,called out to him, "Jim, I can tell you how to s-sell t-twice as much oil as I you d-do now.'" "Well.how?' groaned-Tim. "F-flll your measure." WIIY is the letter P like original sin ?--- ■ because it makes all fall. IHE most and best that is done for you, must be done by you. A Yol'Ni. lady was asked how site could possibh afford, lit these awfully hard times, to ! take music-lessons. "Oh, 1 confine myself to the j l< if notes," was the answer. A COXTKMI'OKAUY says : "The lirst printers were ritaus. There are ,t good many "tight uus" among them siili. A .M'tK.E iii Indiana threatened to line a lawyer iur contempt of court. "1 have expressed no contempt for tho court," said the lawyer ; "on the contrary. T have eerefnlly concealed mv l'eel jings. Ax itinerant preacher, who rambled in • his sermons, when requested to stick tohisjtext. replied "that scattering shot would hit the most birds." I Vr a so .ore the other e voting one gentle- j man pointed out a dandified looking individual to I j his friend as a sculptor. "What, ' said his friend, j "such a looking chap as that a sculptor ? Surely you must be mistaken. "lie may not be the kind of one you may mean," said the informant, "but I know he (7.;- lei I a tailor out of a suit of clothes last week. < MABI.ES LAMB, when a little boy, walking with h.s sister iu a church-yard, and reading 1 lie epitaphs, said to her : "Where arc nil the naughty people buried ? ' LOOK at the pages of your own heart and you will so* a dim reflection of what the recording | angel has written of you in his book. 1 HE guilty man is doomed to earrv and i lodge his fiercest accuser in his own bosom.' LAY your hand upon your mouth when 'the rod of deserved chastisement is upon vour back. IF a man will play the loafer, he had bel ter do it in a coffee house than in a church. AANITY is the produce of light minds. It is the growth of all climes and of all countries : it i is a plant often nourished and fostered, yet it nev -1 er bears fruit pleasing to tiie taste of an intelligent mind. THE man who boasts of his knowledge is I usually ignorant, and wishes to blind the eves of his hearers. Merit and intelligence are always dis covered in few instances unnoticed, unrewarded. Ii a mail who takes a deposition is a de positor, docs it necessarily follow that the man who : makes an allegation is an alligator ? A i. ATE heavy tall of rain showed one ludicrous sight an attempt to crowd two fasliion ! ably dressed women under one umbrella. ... \\ txTEM - a correct standard for meusur : ing the height of an absurdity, and the slipper t from the foot of a dancing moonbeam. j AT a young* lady's seminary recently, dur ; ing an examination in history,' one of the most promising pupils was intorogated : "Mary, did : Martin Luther die a natural death ?" "No," was the reply, "he was excommunicated by a bull." •IOSH BII.I.INGS says that "if a man pro- i I'esses to serve the Lord, he likes to see him do it i I when he measures onions as well as when he hoi- j lers glory liallelnyer." I IF the wife ola Japanese don't suit ! im, i lie can send h r buck to her parents and try again. | i That is to say. all wives art- "warranted" in Japan, j SHOCKING IMMORTALITY. —How often do we ! : hear of people lyiw/ at the point of death. TOOTH DRAWING is an operation that should i be performed with seretc-pnii-mis (scrupulous) cure, i "SIR," said an old physician to a shallow ' youth who had been assailing him with a string of j ; impertinences, "I cannot Vie angry with you, fori j ( see you have an incurable disease.' "An incur able disease ! what it ? "Foolishness." was the' reply. I AT a recent masked-ball in Norwich a ' young lady was completely dressed in newspaper, j She made a good "impression. " A CF.N ri.EMAN* was once arguing with a la-' I d)\ when at length he stopped. "I tell you what, ! ma'am, said he, "1)1 not argue with you any j longer : you're not open to conviction." "Not open i lto conviction, Sir ? was the indignant reply ; "I j scorn the imputation, Sir; lam open to conviction, j But, she added, altera moment's pause, "show ! me the man who can convince me." BROWN is a married man now. A few ' I days since he thought of taking a trip to Paris.- j One of his friends meeting him iu the street in- I I quired, "Well, Brown, my boy.when are you off ?" "Next week." "Going to take your wife with vou ?" "No : it is a voyage of pleasure." GENERAL MOWRlE, after struggling through n Carolina cypress swamp for several days, asked ■ a long, lank, butternut-dyed native hoy how far it , was to ierro.finna. "I hain t hern ono such place ; about yer,' was the cheering reply. i \V HAT is the difference between a spider I and a duck?— One has its feet on a web, and the other a we > on its feet. INSURANCE. —The following toast was re cently pronounced at a fireman's dinner, and was received with great applause : - The ladies—the r eye.-, Gndle the only flame against which there is • ■ usiirnnce." A I*l.ll ARM in window of a patent med * vendor, in tl:- line St. Honore, Paris, reads follows : "'J he publi - are requested not to niis c j taki this-in.p for tli.it of -mother quack just op ! posite. S#!i per Annum, in Advance. FACES ON THE BATTLE FIELD | After the battle of lukerman the faces of many of the dead still wore a smile, while others had a threatening expression. Some lay stretched on their backs as if friendly hands had prepared them for burial- Some were still resting on one knee, their hands grasping their muskets. In some instan ces the cartridge remained between the teeth, or the musket was held iu one hand, and the other was uplifted as though to ward off a blow, or appealing to Heaven. The faces ol all were pale as though cut iu marble. As the wind swept across the battle field it waved the hair, and gave the bodies such an appearance of life that a spectator could hardly help thinking they were about to rise to continue the fight. Another surgeon, describing the appear ance of the corpses on the field of Magenta, says that they furnish indubitable proof that man may cease to exist without suffer ing the least pain. Those struck on the head generally lay with their faces on the ground, their limbs retaining the position they were in at the instant they were struck, and most of these still held their lilies, showing that when a ball enters the brain it causes such a sudden contraction of the muscles that there is not time for the hand to loose its hold of the weapon before death. Another peculiarity observed in the j case of those who were wounded in the I brain was the suddenness with which they : died when suspected to be out of danger. During the battle of Solferino, a rifleman was wounded in the head by a ball which passed through the skull and buried itself in the brain. His wound was dressed, and lie was stretched on straw, with his head resting on his knapsack, like his wounded j comrades. He retained the full use of his i faculties, and chatted about his wound al- j must with indifference, as he filled his pipe and lay smoking it. Nevertheless, before i he had finished it, death came upou him, | and he was found lying in the same atti tude, with his pipe still between his teeth. | He had never uttered a cry, or gave any i sign that he was suffering pain, iu eases where the ball had entered the heart, nearly j the same appearances were presented as in ! the cases of those who had been struck in j the brain ; death was what we term instau-1 taneous, but it was not quite so swift as in j the former case ; there was generally time j for a moment in the act of dying. There was a Zouave who had been struck 101 l in the breast; lie was lying on his rille the bayonet was fixed and pointiug in such away as showed that he was in tiie act of charging when struck. His head was up lifted, and his countenance still bore a threatening appearance, as if he had mere ly stumbled and fallen, and was in the act of rising again. Close by him lay an Aus trian foot-soldier, with clasped hands and upturned eyes, who had died in the act of praying. Another foot-soldier had fallen dead as he was in the act of lighting, his ii.-ds were closed, one arm was in the act of warding ofi' a blow, and the other was drawn back in the act <>f striking*. On an other battle field several French soldiers lay in line with their bayonets pointing in the direction of the foe they were advanc ing against, when a storm of grape mowed them down. — lJieLen , a All The Year lioitm/. 'I'N E STONES OF SOLOMON'S TEMI I.E. —The marble stones which composed Solomon's Temple were said to be forty cubits long, twelve thick, and eight high. Supposing* a cubit to be eighteen inches, which is the lowest estimate, they would be sixty feet long, eighteen thick, and twelve feet high. And supposing* a cubic foot of marble to weigh 2,700 ounces, one of these stones weighed 2,725,038 pounds and twelve oun ces. If one man were able to raise 200 pounds, it required 13,760 men to raise one of these, and also a little boy who could raise 38 pounds 12 ounce-. Suppose one man requires a square yard to stand upon, it would require 5 acres, 3 rods, 11 perches, and twelve yards for them to stand upon while rising it, besides a place for the lit tle boy to stand. What floats must have been necessary to carry them across the sea to Joppa ! AVhat kind of teams, as well as wagons, do you suppose they had to carry these stones from Joppa to Jeru salem, which is abou thirty miles, and a mountainous country? What skill was necessary to square and dress these im mense stones, so that when they w >re brought together they fitted so exactly that they had the appearance of one stone ! THE POWER OF THE HEART. —Let any one, J while setting down, place the left leg over j the knee of the right one, and permit it to t hang freely, abandoning all muscular eon- j trol over it. Speedily it may be observed , to sway forward aud backward through a j limited space at regular intervals. Count- j ing the number of these motions from any i given time, they will be found to agree ex- ; aotly with the beatings of the pulse. Every j one knows that, at fires, when the water j from the engine is forced through bent hose, , the tendency is to straighten the hose, and I if the bend be a sharp one, considerable j force is necessary to overcome the tenden cy. Just so it is in the case of the human j body. The arteries are but a system of j hose, through which the blood is forced by the heart. When the leg is bent, all the arteries within it are bent too and every time the heart contracts the blood rushes through the arteries tends to straighten them ; and it is the effort which produces the motion of the leg alluded to. Without such ocular demonstration, it is difficult to | conceive the power exerted by that exquis ; ite mechanism, the normal pulsations of | which are never perceived by him whose , very life they are. A FACT. — A man once drove up to a New Hampshire tavern, and coolly asked for a cent's worth of hay. The landlord led eis j horse to a shed, and then filled the wagon I with loose hay. Meanwhile, the owner of | the horse called for a basin and soap ; and I alter washing his face and hands thorough ' 1)*, wiped himself dryon a " spandy clean ! towel, laid down his cent, and was moving off. | " I say !" said the landlord ; " won't yon | take a drink before 3*oll go?" i " W ell, seein it's you, 1 don't care if I | do," was the reply ; and back he went, and ! took a drink. You don't live in these parts, I believe, stranger," said the tavern-keeper. '• No," was the reply ; " 1 don't ; but i fro bv occasionally, and as you've treated ine so well this time. I'll call awl //otroniw 1/1)1/ P///1H) GLASS MANUFACTURE- The "Local" of the Pittsburg' Poxt de scribes the process of making glassware in one of the establishments of that city, a* follows : The pots in which the "batch" of mixture is melted, are thirty-nine inches high by forty-three inches iu diameter. They are made of the finest Missouri and Allegheny clay, and the greatest possible care must be excercised in their manufacture. A housewife may gM. an accidental atom of dirt into the bread she makes and be for given, but there is no pardon for the man who mixes ever so little dirt with the p >t clay, and his sin will surely find nitn out, for a piece of dirt less than a pea will ruin the pot. About one hundred of these pots are kept on hand ready for use. They are not fit to be used until they have tin- sea! <>' age upon them. The materials used are principally sand, lead, pearlash, and nitre. The sand is of the purest Missouri,and before it is used it is washed thoroughly, and when it is put into the "batch" it is pure enough for the neatest housewife of old to have sprinkled he "best room" floor withal. NUMBER 28. A furnace provided with a large iron pan byway of a bottom, is used for pulverizing ■ the lead. On the floor near by is piled a : quantity of pig-lead, and into this iron bot ! turned oven these pigs are placed for roasl | ing. A little long-handled hoe is kept stir j ring the melted lead. A scum of hardened ' metal appears on the surface and is shoved | back into a second division, called a "burn j ing oven." Here the lead is thoroughly | burned, and when it is taken out it is sift | ed, after which it is a fine, red powder. A large tank holds a saturated solution Jof pearlash. It is left iu this tank until all | impurities settle to the bottom, when the ! clear portion of the liquid is decanted into another tank through which a coil of steani | pipe passes Here it is boiled by steam j until the liquid evaporates, and pure ash ; remains as white and stainless as snow ! The nitre employed in the manufacture is treated in the same manner. These ingre [ dieuts are now ready to be mixed into glass j "dough." The batch is made up of the following ! proportions : 2,000 pounds of sand, 650 j pounds of lead, 500 pounds of pearlash,and ' 200 pounds of nitre. The "batch," when it is ready, is of a : pretty, cinnamon color, and does not look in : the least as if in tweLty-four hours hence it j would be shining beautiful goblets and | fruit dishes. When the ingredients ur. ' ready for transformation the mess is shov ! eled into a little dray and hauled to the pots. The next that we see of this pretty, cin : namou-colored mixture, is when it is taken, iu little melted bits, on the end of rods, cut jof the glowing mouth of the furnace. It is | glass now, and no trick of art or iucanta ' tion of science can make sand and lead and | pearlash and saltpetre of it again. Staiul j ing all about the different furnaces are ma | ny presses, all provided with distinct and i different moulds. Each press is tended by ! a workman, assisted by two or three boys . A boy runs from the furnace to the press with a little wad of melted glass twisting | rapidly on the end of a rod. lie holds the | rod over the open mouth of the mould and lets the glass run iu till the operator clips ( it with a pair of shears. By the working | of a lever the mould is closed and the "fol ' lower" pressed into it. Wnen by another ; motion of the lever, the mould is opened, the glass article is taken out complete, pcr ' haps it is goblet, or a tumbler, or a dainty wine glass, or a celery glass, or a lager beer mug, with a handle on all complete. - Whatever it is, it is perfect and complete. The articles made are not all pressed.— Perhaps it is for cut glass ware, and then it is blown and worked up smoothly and deftly by hand The larger jars also are 1 blown rather than pressed. These jars are taken, by some strange attraction, on the ends of rods and thrust into the mouths t the "glory holes" till almost at the melting point again, when they are returned to tin workman, who gives thern the final shaping touches. After they have been formed, all the glass, both [tressed and blown, is placed in the annealing oven to temper. In the finishing-room little grind-stones are whirling in all directions. One man has a stand near him filled with all manner of the liner bottles for druggists, lb seizes a glass stopper, fastens it on a kind of spindle and fits over it a kind of iron mould lined with fine etnory. In this mould which is stationary, the stopper whirls rap idly, grinding its surface down true as a die. The mould is taken off and the mouth of the bottle which the stopper is to tit i.s smeared with wet emery and held over the whirling stopper till the two surfac s lit with absolute accuracy, and that istiio way that ground glass stoppers are fitted. An other man holds the rough bottom of a tumbler against the grind-stone until it is smooth? another is fluting a goblet or a pitcher. For this he uses smooth-blown ware. He holds the different parts skill fully against the stone until the requirt d shape is given,that is the way glass is'Vut " BLUOHER AND HIS PIPE Here is an incident uf 1815, which the English journals are relating: On the morning of the memorable battle of Water loo, Heuneinan had just handed his master (Blucher) a lighted pipe, when a cannon ball struck the ground close by, scattering earth and gravel in all directions, and caus ing the white charger on which Blucher was mounted to spring aside, a movement that broke the pipe into a thousand pieces before the owner had time to lift it to his lips. " Just keep a lighted pipe ready forme ; I shall be back in a few moments, after i have driven off the rascally French churls."' With these words Blucher gave the com mand, " Forward, boys !" and off he gal loped with his cavalry. Instead, however, of a chase of a few minutes, it was a rapid march of nearly a whole hot summer day, as we all know from history. After the battle was over Blucher rode back with Wellington to the place where first he got a glimpse of the combating armies, and 1 nearing the spot where Blucher had halted ; in the morning, they saw to their surprise ; a solitary man, his head tied with a hand ■ kerchief, one arm in a sling, and calmh ■ smoking a pipe. " Donner and Blitz !" cried Blucher, "wh\ that is my Henneman. llow you look, boy; what are you doing here alone ?" • Waiting for your speedy return," was ; the grumbling answer. " You have come at last ! I have waited for you here, pipe in mouth, for the whole long day. This is the last pipe jn the box. The cursed French ' have shot away every pipe irom my mouth, have ripped the flesh from my head, and shattered my arm with their dueced bullets ! It is well there is an end to the battle, or you would have been too late even lor the last pipe." Saying which he handed to Blucher the ; pipe, to enjoy the remaining l'umes of the weed. Wellington, who had listened at tentively to the conversation, here remaik (od to Blucher, •' You have just admired the unflinching loyalty and bravery •■! mv I Highlanders, what shall I say to this true ; and devoted soul" But your Highland ' ers had no pipe to regale themselves with," cooly replied Blucher.