"HI f Iff fulfil ill l T ... v , i( vit. ins inii tr 1P: mtmt m u n m m n m m n u i 3 13 fl Iff li AN INDEPENDENT FAMILY NEWSPAPER. TZi"tDZlx Vol. ,V. Now Bloomnold, Pn Tuesday, October 84, 1871. TVo.'-lfl. Uoomfitlb (imrs. - Is Published Weekly, At New Itlooniflcld, Tenu'a. " BY FHANK MORTIMER. . SDIIBCIUI'TION TEltMS. 75 Cents for i Months ; 40 Vents for 3 Months, IN ADVANCE. THE AUTUMN FOLIAGE. I1T W. li. WATEKTON. Tbougli September's suns shine brightly, And September's skies are blue, "though Autumn breezes lightly Stir tho leaves of varied hue, Still a not unpleasant sadness Stealeth softly o'er our hearts, While we mouru the vanished gladness Of the Summer which departs. Though the Autumn foliage glory In its green and gold arrny, Yet its splendor tells a story Of Inclpleut decay. Let us listen to its teaching, For analogies profound, And throughout all nature reaching, Are within us, and aronnd. Yes, the Autumn foliage gaining Tints of beauty as it dies, Like the setting sun, which waning, . Spreads new glory o'er tho Bklcs, Tells the Christian that as nearer ' To the grave his footsteps tend, All his graces should shine clearer, - And beam brightest at his end. AN ODD PAIR. 4fc "VTHAT a' figure you are, ' Harry !" ' T l Then, stopping midway in a laugh, musical and unrestrained an a child's, the speaker went on. ' ' "- '. " I never should dream, never, that Har old Fletcher's figure was to he found under that disguise." "Don't triumph, Roso. I saw you in a gardening suit this morning that worked quite as complete a transformation, I im agine." " ' ' ' 1 " ' ! ' Ho was passing her, hut he turned back presently. "It seems a pity,' dressed as you are now to spoil such exquisite effects, but, just to please mc, will you put on your gardening array, and we'll institute a comparison." " It's a deal of trouble, Harry. " " I know, Hose. Well, perhaps it isn't worth while. ; ' I : : i She stopped short, looking at him with a gleam of mischief in her eyes, i , I'll do it, Harold 1 On one condition !" " What may that be, cousin ?' , j , " That when I am transformed, as you all it) you go to walk' with mc, Just at you are." . ... , "Agreed." ' The young lady repaired to her room and commenced her task. "I wonder what put it In Harry's head to ask me ? But I've a plan. I suppose I must look as unlike my self as possible, so I'll try to make my hair straight to begin with," and; , sho worked uway at the bewitching crimps and other rippling myiiterics of feminine head-gear, till she had produced quite a Quakerish effect. ' ' The face reflected in her glass was a very pretty one sho could not help seeing that even with the hair patted smoothly down, covering two-thirds of tho broad white fore head. She put on tho morning s costume, but it looked far too jaunty in tier eyes, The boots, though tho oldest she ' had, were yet perfect in fit, -displaying to advan tage the high-arched, slender foot. Bhe glanced out the window at Harry,' who was stalking up and down the lawn in front. He did make a queer figure.' i He was just home from a day's Hulling had been arrayed for the trip- by the boys of the seaside ' form, ."hi own clothes, in . their judgment, being utterly unlit for the undertaking arrayed in old odds and ends of apparel, pulled out of certain quests In the garret. 'The coat with its big, old fashioned collar, completely altered the ap pearance of his fine shoulders. An anciuut straw bat, with 'high crown and broad Uim, completed the metamorphosis. He grew impatient. ' ' " Come, Rose !" he called, looking up at her window. " Bridget," ho said, coaxlirgry, as a fo inulo llguro emerged from the siilo-iloor, "won't yon please ask Miss Hose to hur ry? It's getting latOi" ' A burst of laughter front under tho close suubonnct ho turned quickly. " Well, Hose, I must say you'vo more courago than most young women. You'vo dared to throw away tho advantage of pret ty feet. Whcro did you get thoso boots?" " Borrowed, as is tho most of my cos tume, Harry ;" and dropping upon tho doorstep, she held out for his inspection a pair of feet eased in coarso leather shoes with broad soles and half heels, tho squaro toes a perfect Contrast to her usual wear. "Now, Hose, what is going to be done?" " First, wo are going to the villago to mail these letters ; after that Well, I've not made tip my mind." Twilight was approaching when the merry pair set forth. "I believe it is impossible for her to look other than fresh and neat in any tiling," was Harry's mental comment, as ho sur veyed tho Blender figure beside him. It was quite dark when they entered Mil ton, having achieved a two-miles' walk in half an hour. On her way, Rose had ren dered to Harry a reason for her freak of to night, thus "I've always had a fancy, Harry, that I would liko to know just how much of tho courtesy I teceivo in Milton is genuine paid me asatributo to my womanhood,pure and simple how much is duo to tho fact that I am Miss Amcsbury, a well-disposed, well-born, and well-dressed young woman, with property in my own right. You see, Harry, like the queen of Shcba, who waxed so confidential with Solomon, I've told you all that is in my heart.' " "Doubted," and Harry smiled down into the sunny face whoso swift blushes the poke bonnet did not entirely conceal just now ; she had pushed it back for air dur ing her rapid walk. , Miss Amcsbury had two lovers Charlie Weir, a resident of Milton, and Leigh Crawford, who was quite ready to become so for her sweet sake. Weir was a drug gist, had built up a good business in Milton by four years' steady effort. Crawford was boarding at tho hotel for. the summer, at tracted to the neighborhood by Miss Amos bury's presence. He was reported to be rich and a speculator, which name convey ed a vaguo idea of greatness to , the more simple country people, while another class were less dazzled by his display of wealth and his profession. Whatever his duties were, they did not bear heavily upon him. On the whole, he was rather popular than otherwise. - He scattered his money with a liberal hand. , i . : i His blood horses hod stood many a morn ing this season at Mr. Horton's' door, when Miss Amesbury chose to ride, , Bbo was fastidious in her tastes ; there was a longing of hers gratified when she rolled along luxuriously, leaning baok upon the rich cushions of Crawford's elegant carriage. . . , ' But when Charlie Weir stolo in at night fall, and she walked up and down under tho stars by his side, listening to his ' deep voice, she felt the gratification of a higher need in her nature than the desire for luxu rious surroundings. She was barely twenty one, and younger than her years indicated. Still she was liberally endowed with will and energy sensitive on one point, almost morbidly so. That development she ow ed to an aunt, a narrow, bitter woman, who had received her into the only homo her childhood had known. She had learned from her to distrust those who approached her as socking her for her fortune Tho two wore nearlng the post-oflice, Looking up, Hose saw tho usual crowd of loungers occupying tho piazza of tho build ing. This piazza was only accessible by means of a flight of . wooden steps, few in number, but ruinous from ngo, uud steep withal. There was always, this throng about the ofllce on summor evenings. She kpew well enough how. Miss, Amesbury would have been received, if slio.Jbod pome up the struct in her own proper per son. Theie would havo been a uofcreutial raising of huts, a drawing back, right and left, to leave a broad space for her passage- perhaps even an outstretched hand t as sist her over the worn boards in caso of need. She was known personally to many of the village peoplehad a speaking . ac quaintance with nearly all. . i . . ,! Presently she recognized, partly by his voice, Leigh Crawford. lie trtood directly in front of the doorway, the oentre of the thromr: ' She took a sudden resolution. : ' " Don't stop, Harry. Go to the end of tho block, nnd wait for mo by tho drug store On tho whole, I'll go down with you and walk back alone. I can mail the let ters well enough, but if there's any tiling in our box, we'll have to devise somo plan of getting it. Mr. Gaines would not en trust our mail to oithor of us unless we re vealed our personality. Now wait hen', please ; I'll lie back in livo minutes." ncconnoitcring through tho window, she had seen that her lover was within. Harry obediently seated himself upon a bench in front of tho store, and waited. Miss Roso walked back with a step less springing than usual tho still' boots were getting li re sume. At the foot of the stairs sho paused slightly. Two or threo moved to givo hor room to pass, gray-haired men these, tho fathers of the town, instinctively polite to all women, as is tho won't of gentlemen of tho old school. Leigh Crawford, standing directly across her path, looked supercili ously down at tho sunhonnet without stir ring, little dreaming whose dark eyes wcro Hashing beneath. Sho made a littlo im perious gesturo with one hand, a character istic movement of Miss Anicsbury ; she was forgetting her disguise. Sho revealed her coarso thick glove by tho motion. "Move, Crawford ! this person wants to pass," whispered a young man at his side, tho words perfectly audible. " Too much trouble," drawled Crawford, lazily, tracing a design with his cano on his polished French boot. "The person may as well go round." Miss Amesbury acted on his suggestion ; she walked " round" tho obstacle and into tho office. With all her liking for Craw ford, nnd his fascinating ways, she had al ways distrusted his laugh ; she heard it now with a thrill of indignation, knowing it had followed somo witticism at her expense. She dropped her letters into tho box seventy-one was empty. Sho retraced her steps to find Mr. Crawford still blin king the way ; she crept around him as before, but the narrowness of her foothold made it insecure One of tho clumsy boots caught in a splinter, she never knew just how it was ; she made a tremendous muscular ef fort ; n helping touch would have saved her, hut it was not forthcoming. Sho fell from top to bottom, not far, but tho fright and mortification made hor powerless for an instant ; so, though unhurt, she lay quite still. There was a tardy effort to assist her of that sho did not know. Sho only hoard Crawford's mocking laugh ; his sug gestion to a poor half-crazed - fellow who stood by,' that there was an opportunity to show his gallantry. Another peal of laughter, in which several joined. Itoso felt herself lifted to her feet, with sudden disgust, by crazy Tom, she , supposed her special aversion but she knew the voice presently. It was Charlio Weir's. Though in his store when she looked in a few min utes before, ho had betaken himsolf to the office just in time to witness her fall. Ho nearly carried her for a few yards, , then she was able to walk, still supported by his arm. , , " Do you think yon are hurt ? Go into my storeand I will yive you a cordial." , Sho assured him, faintly enough, that she was not hurt. She hail no need to fear recognition from her voice, it sounded strange evcu to herself. , i Harry rose as she approached him ; with a murmur of thanks to Mr. Woir, she took his arm and walked away. "What next, Rose?" , , " Nothing, Harry. I'm through. Tako me homo I'm tired to death." ,, , ' "An old-looking pair," was Charlio Weir's comment as they disappeared round the corner ; " but thoso fellows might have helped her tip, renumbering Bhe was a woman some one said that Crawford's boorishness was the cause of her fall. I wish Iloso Amesbury could have seen that spectacle !" . Mr. Crawford's superb pair of bays paw. ed the turf in front of Miss Amesbury's parlor, next morning,, while , their owner beggod the honor of taking her to ride. He drove away alono, and with furious sjiced, an hour later, muttering as he wont an un intelligible found, but two this effect " I don't know what possessed the girl. I can't carry, out my plans without her thirty thousand. ; I shall hare to succumb that's plain, just as I thought the, game was all in my own hands." One June evening, Just a year later, Charlio Weir was driving from tho station a bright face was laughing up into his. Miss Amesbury had bedomo Mrs. Weir the autumn previous, and Charlie had trans. leiTtd his business to the city' As usual, she was spending tho Summer In Milton, driving to the depot for her husband every Saturday evening. 1 To-night they stopped in front of the post-oflicc, while a boy brought out tho mail. Mrs. Weir leaned back in tho carnage, her faco suddenly shadowed. "I hate tho odor of horse-chestnut blooms." " Why, Kose?" with a swift glanco at tho Bolier face. "They have, with mo, an unpleasant as sociation. See, tho trees nro full of them, and those bruised, trodden flowers on the sidewalk it reminds mo of a year ago." " I nm reminded of a year ngo, too, Rose, nnd tho memory is very sweet just a year to-morrow, darling!" , "Charlie, I'll going to tell you some thing I never have. I've been ashamed to tell yet thnt opened my eyes. You ro momber helping somo one up who had fallen on those steps?" " Yes ! What of it? I remember now an oddly-dressed woman or girl, I could not tell which." " That was Koso Amesbury." "You Koso?" " No one else. 1 had a fancy to test tho courtesy of Milton pcoplo. It was ordain ed that I should test Leigh Crawford's at the samo time. That night ho was ' weigh ed in tho balance and found wanting.' " "And ho never know?" " No," she replied, " ho never knew !" A Splendid Building. A short description of tho Vanderbilt Depot in New York, will undoubtedly bo interesting to our readers. The building is used as a depot for the Hudson River, the New York Central, tho Harlem and the Now Haven railroads. In point of con venience it is ahead of anything of tho kind on this continent. It is G05 feet long and 240 feet wide, and covers nearly four acres of ground. More than two-thirds of this space is devoted to tho grand car house, in which and from which nearly two hun dred trains arrive and depart dally. This iinmcnso room presents an uninterrupted superficial area of 050 feet in length by 200 in breadth, a grand parallelogram of a triflo less than throe acres, without a wall, pillar, or post to disturb its entire ty, This colossal room is surmounted by an arched roof, made wholly of glass and iron, sup ported by 81 iron truss girders, each form ing a complete semi-circle and resting at their ends on the foundation walls of the structure. Tho apex of this lofty dome is at an elevation of 112 feet above tho floor of the room. . ' ' . All trains arrive and depart through the north end of the building, which is finished with ten lofty arched openings, having iron doors or blinds made to roll up like the blinds of a store window. In the center of this end, and nearly half way up to the peak of the lofty dome is a little apartment like an old-fashioned pulpit, euclosed with glass, and giving observation over the entire in terior of the apartment and the yards and track without. This perch is reached by a light spiral staircase, and is devoted to tho use of tho depot master. From it he not on ly directs the movement of all trains,but an nounces their readiness to the several wait ing rooms. By a system of electric signals, entirely under this official's ' control in his isolated and lofty perch, ho" communicates with switchman in the yard, with conduct ors and engineers of trains, with doormen through the building, and directs all the servants under his control. , Each track in the building is numbered. When ho do- sires to send a train out on No. 3 he directs the switchman to connect that track with the main track. The accomplishment of this order is announced ou a signal, towor outside tho building. Then he orders the engineer ot the train to go, Tho engineer on receiving his order has but to glance at the signal tower directly before him to know whether his track is right or not. When this depot shall be fully in nst by all tho roads there will be eighty-two trains arriving, 'and tho samo number leaving it daily. In order to provide as far as possi. ble from accidents from such multiplicity of trains, and also to obvlalo danger at the street crossings, cleetrlo signals have .been placed at all the street crossings up to the Harlem River. These are the same signals that have boon iu use at the drawbridges aud stations on tho New Haveu road, and work anatoinatieallyi . Thus, as at rain, ap proaches a street crossing, , when, yet thousand feet away, it so,taa bell ringing at Uu) crossing, which continues to ring until the train is passed. ,. , . i ' . Each company using this ;dopot, .has its own suits of wailing rooms, ticket offices, tRgngo room, &c, with the usual ap pointments of tclegrnphofncors,news stands and retiring rooms, nil fitted up with taste and every convenience. These occupy tho ground floors. A bovo arc the general offices of tho Companies. The Maaiic Needle. 1 T first, the made ncedlo was used with amusing clumsiness, as we learn from a manuscript, dated 1203, in tho Roy al Library in Paris. An ugly, black stone, called marinicre, we aro told, which sailors valued highly, was taken out when nights wcro dark, and a needle rubbed with it lightly ; the latter was then cunningly placed upon a straw, and set afloat in a basin, when tho point would indicate the north. ' , iVnothor peculiarity of the magic ncedlo was a cause of much anxiety and peril to tho discover of our continent. , When tho great navigator had ventured about two hundred lcagnes into tho Atlan tic Ocean, on tho 14th of September, 1492, ho noticed, for the first time, that tho nee dle, at evening dusk, no longer pointed due north, but deviated soveral degrees in a northwesterly direction, the next morning the deviation had increased. Full of anxie ty anil wonder, ho watched it carefully and, to his consternation, tho farther west ho sailed, the more tho ncedlo appeared to deviate. At first ho kept his discovery to himself, fearful lest ho should alarm his crew aud defeat his purpose; but soon the man at tho helm noticed the change, and were filled with grievous apprehensions. They fancied that they had penetratod into a now world, ruled by other laws than thoso to which they had been accustomed. If the magic necdlo lost its power, what was to bocomo of them on the boundless ocean ? Never, perhaps, was Columbus greater than when, sternly suppressing his own fears, he told them that the magnetic nee dle pointed, not toward the north polo on earth, but toward an invisible part of the heavens, which changed Its place, together with all tho heavenly bodies. They believ ed tho man whose vast knowledge and mar velous energy they had learned to appreci ate ; their minds were calmed, the voyage continued, and a New World discovered. Henceforth the magio needle achieved tri umph after triumph. With such aid, Diaz, Cabral and Garoa could cross vast oceans, and Magellan and Sebastian Cabot sail around tho wholo earth thus ending for ever tho objections nmdo by superstition and bigotry, and teaching man the truo form and nature of tho globe which he in habits. Wuilo, heretofore, the majority of vessels, in the Mediterranean even, had lieen wrecked, or at least had reached thoir desired haven only with a small part of their cargo, now insurance companies were formed in all the huge seaport towns, and the premium, even for India voyages, be came soon so small as to make insurance the rule. AXES. . ; T III E ax is one of tho first edge-tools .known to have, beep used. It is fouud among the remains, and named in the early tales, of nearly all nations.' The Aztec peoples of Central and South America, not knowing how to extract iron from its ores, made axes of copper and other metals, which they hardened almost to tho consist ency of iron. Under the wicked rule of their Spanish conquerors, the knowledge of this hardening process was lost. Its re-dis-covory would confer a lasting benefit on mankind. Tho Spaniards still make axes by hammering out a bar of iron and turn ing it so as to form a loop around tho handle, tn ancient times tho use of steel, and its combination with iron, were almost unknown. The cutting edge of most axes is now made of steel. ' American axes are made by boating , to redness hammered bar-iron, cutting this to the proper length and punching the eye for a handle, re-heuting and pressing between concave dies. ' Being ngaiu heated and grooved on tho thin end, it receives Into this groove the piece of steel that forms the edge Borax is used as a flux, and at white heat Uie tool is welded and drawu to its proper sha)e by trip-hanimors., It is then hammered out by hand, ground nnd shaved.' It is next ground on stones of fine grain. The temperer hangs it on a revolv ing wheel in a furnace, over a coal fire. At the right redness, judged by his skillful eye, he plunges it Into brine, and completes the cooling in fresh water. 1 Tho tomperlng is finished in another furnace, whoie- tho heat is carefully regulated with tho aid of thermometers.:. Then it is finely polished, so that it con resist rust and .easily enter wood. Finally it is stamped, (the head blacked with turpentine' nnd asphalt to keep it from tho air), weighed, labeled and packed. i'i li, -; l et-.,, i , -i,,, . There are many small ax factories, In Kurope, which supply ,ner)y tho whole of the old world. According to the Custom House re-turns, American manufacturers seem to hold possession of the home mar ket and to confine themselves to it. i