ill WDkm HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and rcm.isHEn. ELK COUNTYTUX klCPUULlCAN PAIITY. TWO DOLLARS EE ANNUM. . VOL.1. 1UDGWAY, PA., THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 1871. NO. 5. THE HAWK' NEST. ItV BRET II411TE. We checked onr pace the road sharply round ing ; We heard the troubled flow Of the dark olive depths of pines, rexoumling A thousand feet below. Above the tumult of the canyon, lilted, The gray hawk breathless hung, Or on the bill a winged shadow drifted Where furze and thorn-bush clung ; Or where, half way, the mountain side wan furrowed With many n scam and scar, Or some abandoned tunnel dimly burrowed - A mole hill seen so far. We looked In silence down across the distant L nfathomable reach, A silence broken by the guide's consistent And realistic speech : " Walker of Murphy's Mew a hole through Peters For telling him he lied, Then np and dusted out of South Hornitoa AcrosR the long Divide. " We ran him out of Strong's and up through Eden, And 'croes the ford below, And up this mouutaln (Peter's brother lendin'), And me and Clark and Joe. " He fou't u game ; somehow, I disremember lest how the thing kern round ; Soino say 'twas wadding, some a scattered ember Krom fires on the ground. " But In one minute all the hill below him Was just oue sheet ot tiame ; Guardin' tho crest, 8am Clark and I called to him, , And well, the dog was game. " He made no sign tho llres of hell were round him, The pit of hell below. We sat and waited, but we never found him, And then we turned to go. " And then you see that roek that's grown so bristly With cbapparel and tan Sntliin' crept out it might have been a grizzly, It might hev been a man. " Suthin' that howled and gnashed its teeth and shouted In smoke and dust and flame ; Nnthln' that sprang into the depths about it, Grizzly or man but game ! " That's nil. Well, yes, It does look rather risky, And kinder makes one queer And dizzy looking down. A drop ol whit-key Ain't a bad thing right here !" Chicago Art Jierieic for Marih. TOO BASHFUL. 11V HARLAN' E. WARD. " Hang it all, what can a poor fellow doV" A great, handsome, good-natured, honest-hearted fellow was Charley Win ter, but so very bashful, that in the Eresence of the gentler sex he never could ave told whether he was standing on his feet or on his head. Just now his failing was immensely aggravated by the fact that he was over head and ears in love with Clarico Wilmer, the sweet est, prettiest, most bewildering little beauty in all the region round about. O dear, I wish I knew a way to tell my love, and not be there myself. Deuce take the girls I they bother you on pur pose, I believe, and always manage so your courage oozes out of your fingers' ends before you are quite ready to ask the fatal question 1" " Why don't you write '(" " Write 1 I shouldn't know a word to say ; and then I'd never dare to look her in the face again." " O, what a spoony I Simply say you love her, and ask her if she will make you happy. Then face the music like a man, and meet her next time as if noth ing had happened unless she answers yes, and then, of course you'll act as if something had happened. Charley groaned despairingly. " Kasy enough for you to talk," he muttered, dubiously. " You who have been married seven years with me the case is different. I tell you, Tom, you don't know anything about it." " Yes I do. Didn't I have to do my courting just the way you've got to do yours r Didn't Nell act just as Clarice does, bewitching me at one moment, and driving me almost to suicide the next ? You're a lunatic, you are, and I hope Clarice will give you the mitten." ' I'm afraid she will." " ' Faint heart never won fair lady, " quoted Tom Ridgely, indignantly, as he arose to take his leave. " Seriously, however, Charley, I advise you to put your heart on paper, and forward it to Clarice by post." Charley thought about it after he was gone. The more he thought the better pleased with it he was. " It's terrible, but I suppose I must !" he groaned, seating himself at his writ ing desk, and clutching wildly at paper, pens and ink. An hour of torture. Charley began a dozen billet-doux and tore them up, then wrote a dozen more, and tore them up also. " It's utterly useless," he moaned, at laBt ; and then the great booby laid his head upon the desk and fairly sobbed. " I'll write and ask her to go to the opera with me to-morrow night, any way, and then, perhaps "he dared to think no further. " My dear no, that never'll do was ever a mortal so perlexed as I am P I wish the girls were all at the bottom of the ocean, and Eve had never been created. Well, I'll begin again." This time he was successful. His note was short enough, and some young ladies might take umbrage at such an invita tion, but Clarice knew his bashfulness. It read as follows, and was not dated at all: " Will you be kind enough to honor me by the acceptance of my escort to the opera to-morrow eve ' And that was all beside the signature. " Well, there," said Charley, as he got it done, "I promised lister Minnie I would write to her this week, to I will do it now while my hand is in." ' And tossing the note one tide, he loon began bis letter. " Sister Mine :" (it read) Yours of the 17th came to hand, and I have meant to answer it before. The fact is, I am deep in love with a young lady Clarice Wilmer, of whom you ve heard me speak, and am afraid she don't return it. You know that I am so oonfounded bashful I daren't speak a word to her about it, and neither can I write. Some times I think I've got the necessary courage, but when I meet her it vanishes like dew before the sun, and I'm a big ger fool than ever. I know Bhe thinks that I'm a fool, but I can't help it I'd rather face a battery of mitrailleuses, or any other engine of destruction, than a pretty woman, any time, and Clarice is the fairest, sweetest, and most beautiful young lady I ever saw.'' Here followed three whole pages of lover's rhapsody, interspersed with wail ings of despair, and then the letter wound up thus : " I've asked her to the opera to-morrow night, and if she goes, 'tis possible that I may learn my fate." " Three o'clock can it be possible r" cried Charley, glancing at the clock, and stuffing his letters into two envelopes, which he backed in awful haste. " The mail goes out in half an hour. I shall be late, as sure as fate." And paying no heed to the rhyme, and little to the letters, he grasped his hat and started for the post-office. Clarice smiled her brightest when Charley called for her next night, but he fancied there was mischief in her eyes, which perhaps was not quite all a fancy. At the opera she talked and laughed between the scenes in such a way that he was quite bewildered. He did not learn his fate, and after he got home felt worse than ever. Next day he got a lettvr from his sister. " I am very sorry," wrote she, " but I could not well come on two hundred miles, simply to attend an opera. I suppose, however, the invitation was in tended for another person, and it " " O Jove, I am undone !" said Charley, dropping the missive to the floor, and breaking out in a cold perspiration. " I sent the letters wrong, and now I have done it brown. What will Clarice think of me?" Driven to desperation at last, he plucked up courage and hurried to Clarice's residence. " Is Miss Wilmer in?" he asked the servant who answered the bell. " Yes ;" and he speedily found himself in the parlor, anil face to face with his inamorata. " I I did you receive a note from me the other day, Miss Clarice V" he stammered, wishing the floor would give way and precipitate him into the cellar. " Ah ! Yes I ask your pardon, Miss Wilmer, for the inadvertency. I meant " Oh, you need not apologize, Mr. Winter. I rather like it, 1 assure you. You did not try your fate at the opera, though. Why didn't you '" How mischievous her eyes were spark ling I A faint crimson dyed her cheek, and, altogether, Charley looking at her slyly, thought he never saw her look so pretty. " But the annoyance " " It wasn't an annoyance. 1 was pleased." Charley's heart thrilled suddenly with hope. He took one Btep forward. ",You say that it was no annoyance. Dare I believe you care for me ':" The faint glow deepened suddenly. " You may," she said. If Charley's friend, Tom Ridgely, had dropped in five minutes later, he would have thought Charley's bashfulness was all a sham. It never troubled him again. Candy For Children. It is ever a matter of wonderment how people seemingly possessed of a fair amount of judgment and information will persist, year after year, in commit ting faults so grave as to be, in fact, crimen. Parents and guardians who give doses of strichnia or arsenicum to child ren, and kill them outright, are some times brought to tho bar of justice to answer for the murder. But what can be done with those criminal adults who tamper with the health and life of child ren in buying candies, in any one of the thousand forms for them to eat, and which they do eat? Like many other divices of the devil, (which is a word signifying with us, evil, only the d be fore it give it an - emphasis we some times like), these bon-bons of poison are deadly dyed to give them an attractive look to the eyes of the innocent and ignorant, and delude the steps of the unwary into the stalls where they are sold. If children were educated to re gard confections as poisons just as they are taught to avoid poisonous plants and reptiles, do you think they would ever plead with papa or mamma to buy them candy ? Now and then one finds a father and mother intelligent enough to be intrusted with children who would hardly sooner give them candies than the berries of the deadly nightshade, and yet who are constantly annoyed by visitors and relations giving candy to their children, it is hardly necessary to remark that such proceedings on the part of friends or Btr angers is a matter meriting the most vigorous rebuke. If you cannot give your children all the good things of this life which you would wish, you can at least withhold a few evil ones, in the shape ot abominable con fections. Ah 1 if we were only a sovereign, what a dav of emancipation we would evoke 1 We would emancipate, by issu ing such laws as never as yet have gird ed the world like bands of sunlight freedom laws forcing men to be men, in acts at least, if not in truth and laws giving ringing Anglo-Saxon names to Anglo-Saxon things such as, " Candy a delectable poison purchased only by fools and idiots. To what stultification will not intem perance lead its victims. A poor devil at Hartford got an order from the select men for a cotfin for his little girl, and then tried to Dawn it to get money to buy rum with. Meantime the "deceased" was at play in the street. THE (LIGHT OF THE EMPRESS Ft'. UtME. Hlnlisp nicllvnine'a Account. The following account of the flight of the ex-Empress of France from Paris, when the population rose and threw on the yoke of her husband, was given lately by Bishop Mcllvaine, at a meet ing called by the students of Kenyon College, in (iambier, Ohio. It resembles in most particulars nn account which has already been published, but the in cidents related are given with such striking particularity, coming from such a source the Bishop had received them from one who aided the flight of Eu genie that our readers will be inter ested in its perusal. We copy it from the Cleveland Jlerala : "It seems the safety of the Empress' had been assured to her by General Tro chu, who had solemnly promised to in form her ot the approach ot danger. or some unexplained reasons he failed to do so, and when en Sunday the mob began to assemble about the Tuileries, three of her friends, Prince Matternich, the Spanish ambassador, and M. Lesseps formed a plan for her escape and went to her rescue. M. Lesseps stood outside and harangued the mob for the purpose of detaining them, while the wo other gentlemen went in search of the Em press. They found her partaking of a very frugal lunch with one of her ladies, and her fears could not be aroused. Seeing it impossible to persuade her, the two gentlemen used force to remove her. At this she consented to make a slight preparation, and without at all changing her dress (for the mob had al ready entered the Palace), catching up a small leathern reticule, she put into it two pocket-handkerchiefs, and two books, the New Testament and a prayer book. On her head she put a riding hat, and then by that time thoroughly aroused, she fled through the palace; through long corridors, down, up flights of stairs, through chamber and salon, a long walk before they came down to the Hue liivoli, on which side ot the 1'alace the mob had not collected. Here a cab awaited her. She, with the lady in at tendance, was put into it. Now,' said the friends, ' we must leave you ; too well known, our attendance would but bring destruction upon you 1 Make good speed I' Yes, good speed, for she heard tho cries of the furious mob, and as Bhe was entering the cab, a little boy ex claimed, ' There is the Empress,' and she thought all was lost ; but it proved that there was no one there to take notice, and so the two ladies drove off. Soon they came into the midst of the excited crowd, and the lady accompanying her questioned on this side and the other the meaning of it all, and appeared to be greatly interested in the proceedings, while the impress sank back out ot sight in the carriage. They had a long ride out beyond the Champs Elysees to the quieter parts of the city, when they alighted, dismissed the cab, to avoid giving any clue m case ot pursuit, and walked some distance. Where should she go ? To whom flee ? What friend trust.-' 1 here was but one to whom she would venture, and that one an Ameri can gentleman of some note, who with his wite had long been a friend ot both Emperor and Empress. So they took another cab for the house of this gentle man (whom we will call Mr. W ), ar riving there to nnd mm away irom home, and his wife absent for the sum mer at a small seaport on the coast. The servant, under these circumstances, was extremely ungracious, and quite re fused to admit these strange ladies, and when at last, upon their insisting, they were admitted to the house, she was un willing to show them into an apartment suitable for them, and it was not with out some difficulty that they were al lowed to wait in the library for the owner's return. When at last he return ed and entered the room, judge of his surprise at the sight of the Empress. You must get me immediately out of t ranee, this very night, exclaimed the Empress the moment she eaw him. Out of France that very night ? He told her it was impossible. He was expecting a party of friends to dinner, but would plead sudden business and excuse him self, and make preparations as quickly as possible for her flight ; but, in the meantime, she must be quiet and rest. This she was prevailed upon to do, and supplying herself from Mrs. W 's wardrobe, retired for the night. " The dinner party, receiving the ex cuses of the host, and overcome with a sense of mystery, soon withdrew, in spite of the cordial message and wishes of the gentleman, that they would make themselves merry in his absence. At four o'clock in the morning a carriage stood at the door, into which Mr. W put the two ladies, and driving himself, set off on their way out of France, pur suing quiet streets, then unfrequented roads and lanes of the country, avoiding the more publio highways of the king dom ; and so on, until the horses were worn out. They were near a little vil lage, but then came the question how to get a carriage brought to them, and ex plain why they could not go to it. Mr, W went to the inn, and having found a private carriage, which was waiting over there, agreed with the ser vant to come out a mile or so, and carry his party, Mr. W 's two sisters, one of whom was very lame indeed, and could not walk a step, some miles on, till they should come to a railway. This done, and the lame lady, with much difficulty, put into the carriage by her 'brother' and 'sister,' they proceeded for a distance, until they came to a rail way, where they left the carriage to break up the clew, and rode a short dis tance in the rail car without attracting attention. Then they took another carriage, riding in roundabout ways, until at the end of two days they came to the little seaport where Mrs. w was spending the summer. How must Mr. W conduct the ladies into the presence of his wife without their being observed by every one ? After some re connoitering, this was successfully ac complished, ana tnrowing her arms around the neck of Mrs. W , Eugenie exclaimed: 'You and your husband are the only friends left to me in the world.' She, with the lady who ac companied her, remained in the room of Mrs. W , lest some one should see and recognize her. No servant could be allowed to enter the room. Mrs. W brought food to the two ladies and served the Empress in everything, who expostulated at the inconvenience she was causing nor mend, and insisted up on waiting upon herself, her behavior being of such a sweet character as still mere to endear her to her friends, who were risking nearly all they possessed in her cause. " Their plan was now to get her across the Channel to the Isle of Wight, and thence to England. There, were but two conveyances in the harbor both private yachts and only one able to go out to sea. The owner of that one flatly refused to take the two ladies over, but at last, after the identity of the ladies had been made known and much per suasion used, he consented, and Mr. W and the two ladies, with the reti cule containing two pocket-handker chiefs, set out the day after their arrival in the little town on their voyoge to England. " This is a journey usually made in a few hours ; but a terrible storm arising, it was prolonged to twenty-seven. The same night and in the same waters The Captain went down. But although the gentleman in command lost all control of himself and ship, they weathered the storm. " During this time Eugenie showed the most remarkable self-possession, and evidently looked upon deuth as a relief from her woes. But this was not to be, and after a passage fraught with the most imminent danger, she was landed on the Isle of Wight, to find on English ground that asylum which had been sought by so many lugitives before her. And to add to her reuet, her - son, of whose whereabouts she knew nothing, was found to be in Hastings, not far from her. " Such is the truo story of Eugenie's escape from Paris and France. What a sad, sad tale ot tallen greatness 1 How much must she have suffered in those few days ; the fury of a Paris mob in her ears ; the fear of pursuit at her back ; how otten did she start and give herselt up for lost ? What threatening mean ing did many an accidental phrase as sume ! No wonder her courage sus tained the fearful storm ; the thunder and lightning, the waters, however dark, and cold, and deep, would be far more merciful than that dreadful mob that called out her name, the mob that had shown no pity to the little child or ten der woman, and derided with the bit terest insults the fond Marie Antoinette at the guillotine. Oh, France ! when we remember thosa days of terror, can we wonder at this retribution ?" Power of Memory. A singular, though not unprecedented, instance of the power of memory is that of Daniel McCartney, a laboring man, living at Salem, Columbia County, Ohio. From a long account of him in the St. Louis Journal of' Sjxeulatite Philosophy, for January, 1871, we condense the fol lowing : Mr. McCartney was born in estmore- land County, Pennsylvania, September 11), lHli, and is nearly blind. He can read tho largest print only by holding it within two inches ot his eyes. His memory is exceedingly retentive and minute, and he claims that he can recol lect the events of every day since Jan uary 1, 1827, when he was about nine years and a half old. He nevor kept any record of occurrences, and has no system of mnemonics. An examination by D. W. Henkle, Commissioner of Public Schools in Ohio, showed that McCartney's assertion was true. Mr. Henkle has a journal with him which recorded the events of forty five years past, and found that McCart ney's answers tallied with the records of the diary. His questions related to the day of the week ; the state of the weather, and occurrences coming under McCart ney's observation. In reply to an inter rogatory in regard to October 8, 1828, McCartney in two seconds said : " w ed- nesday. It was cloudy, and drizzled rain. I carried dinner to my father where he was getting in coal.',' Question: "February 21, 1829?" Answer in two seconds : " Saturday. It was cloudy in the morning and clear the afternoon ; there was a little snow on the ground. An uncle, who lived near, sold a horse beast that day for $35." Question: "October 13, 1861 ?" Answer, after fifteen seconds : " Monday. It was kinder pleasant like weather. I staid all night Sunday night at my brother's, and next day I went to the depot in Cardington to saw wood." Question: "May t, imo t Answer, in two seconds : " irnuay. it rained some. The Saturday before I attended a quarterly meeting in Iberia." (He is a Methodist) Question: "July lb, 18ti6 ?" Answer, instantly : "Monday A very hot day. I sawed wood that day, and the next day went out into the country to hoe potatoes." The same ao curacy and laciiity was shown in re spect to many other dates, some con' nected with important publio events, and others having no such association, McCartney likewise showed wonder ful quickness in mathematics. Being asked to multiply 32 by 45, he returned a correct answer in two seconds, doing the sum "in his head," multiplying first by five and then by nine. In the same way he multiplied 93 by 97 in twelve seconds, 81 by 53 in eight seconds. 450 by 123 in thirty-five seconds, and 182 by 3,756 in four and a half minutes, becoming confused, however, in the last attempt. He displayed a good know ledge ot geography. On subsequent occasions Mr. Henkle again examined him as to dates and in cube root His accuracy and powers of computation were as manifest as on former trials. His spelling was found to be rather faulty, but he knew some thing of German by hearing neighbors speak it ' McCartney is certainly a curiosity, and deserves the attention of those learned in psychology and the collateral sciences utiwmnati Uazetle. A GHOST AT COLLEGE. Uproar In a TenneMee Female Kdacatlonal Inatttnte A gpecnlalive Apparition Who Owns the Fropertv T Digging for Evidence What wan Found Coder round. From the irempht Aralanehe, March 5th. South Memphis is in a furore of ex citement over occurrences of a supernat ural nature recently made public, and which concern the Brinkley Female College and its inmates. The college is a spacious frame structure, with rather a sombre and dreary aspect, situated at or near the intersection of Georgia and De Soto streets. The school at present numbers between forty and fifty pupils of various ages, and of teachers, includ ing the principal and his wife, there are eome six or seven. Many of the pupils come from afar and are boarders at the institute, but not a few who reside in the city, and near the college, are but day attendants. Among the latter is a Miss Clara Robinson, daughter of Mr. Eobinson, an attorney residing on De Soto street, between Vance and Linden streets. Her age is about 13 years, and her temperament is of the nervous kind, while her health is rather what might be called delicate. Her experiences with affairs claimed to be supernatural within the last two weeks are more wonderful and startling than the " Mysteries of Udolpho ; or The Horrors of Kenil worth Castle." THE SlYSTERY. One week ago last Tuesday while Miss Clara was alone in one of the rooms of the institute practising her music lesson, an apparition suddenly appeared before her in the shape of a girl of about eight years of age, with sunken, lustreless eyes and strikingly emaciated form and fea tures. The object was virtually a skele ton in appearance, clad in a dingy and tattered dress of faded pink, which was partly covered with a greenish and slimy fold. It seemed also to be trans parent. A Bad expression rested upon the features of the strange visitor. Nat urally frightened, Clara ran into an ad joining room and sprang into bed with a sick girl, at the same time motioning with her hand to THE UNSIGHTLY OBJECT to begone. The apparition advanced, however, with slow and noiseless steps to the bedside, and laid an emaciated hand on the pillow, while Clara, aghast and speechless with terror, was never thrown into spasms, but all the time motioned away the object, which finally disappear ed through a side door, as noiselessly as it had entered. The apparition not ap pearing next day, Clara's tranquility of mind was about restored. Un Thursday, however, while again practising at the piano in the music room, two other young ladies being present, she was Btartled by an unusual noise, as if by some water being dashed over the floor, and on turning her head in the direc tion of the sound, was dismayed at the appearance of the same spectral-looking visitor ot two days before. It was seen by all three, more distinctly by Clara than the others, and the trio fled in ter ror from the presence of the fearful ap' parition, ghost, goblin, or whatever it might be. The story was again told. and was ridiculed as nonsensical, as in the hrst instance, notwithstanding the tes' timony of the two young ladies who were in the room with Miss Clara, to whom, however, the figure appeared rather shadowy, though to their friend it was well dehned and distinct APPARITION THE THIRD. Last Tuesday the ghost appeared at the same place and under like circum stances. Miss Clara ran down stairs in great affright, and, trembling like an aspen, related the occurrence to Miss Jockey Boone, one of the teachers, who induced the girl to return with her to the music room. As they opened the door the figure stood plainly in view to Clara, but only lmperteotly in the eyes of Miss Boone. Induced to address her strange visitor, Clara asked what it was doing there and what it wanted. Point' ing a thin, ghastly-looking finger in I southerly direction, THE GHOST REPLIED that under a stump, some fifty yards trom the house, were secreted some vat uables which she would have Miss Clara take possession of, and UBe to her ad vantage. Miss Boone heard a rumbling noise, but could not distinguish any words, but a pupil present at the time relates that words similar to those beard by Miss Clara were distinct to her ears also. Having spoken as above, the ob ject vanished through the garret door as on tormer occasions. Dismay now pre vailed throughout the institute, and there were none to ridicule or to ques tion. Clara Kobinson related the full particulars to her father when she went home on Tuesday night, who next day visited the college and had a consulta tion with Mr. and Mrs. Meredith about the matter. It was agreed that the af fair should undergo a rigid investiga tion, as it was doing no good to the rep utation of the college, while little Clara was much troubled and disturbed in mind. THE FOURTH VISITATION. Mr. and Mrs. Meredith believing they were being duped by some practical joker, undertook to investigate the mat ter. With this object in view, they on Thursday last had every pupil of the college assembled in one of the halls. Miss Clara was sent into the yard while the remaining scholars were being ques tioned and examined. She walked qui etly around the house, and while en gaged pointing a pencil some fifty yards from the building, the apparition sud denly appeared before her, not more than half a dozen feet away. She at tempted to scream, but the vision spoke quickly, in a mild, pleasant tone, and said : "Don't be alarmed, Clara, MY NAME 18 LIZZIE. I will not hurt you." Clara stood trans fixed with terror.. The vision spoke again, and in a distinct tone related that the Brinkley College property was hers by right, title, and deed ; that its pres ent pretended owners held it illegally, having no shadow of a claim to it what ever ; that there was no one else to claim it, as her people were all dead, and she herself was the last one that bad died. She desired Clara to obtain the papers which she had previously mentioned to her, and with them in her possession, claim and retain tho property iu her own name and right. Unless she did so she nevor would do good to or for any one. Of course all this soon spread among the usually quiet people of South Memphis, several young ladies wont home frightened out of their wits, and several others were affected with illness, some it was feared seriously. Clara was naturally more excited over the singular event than others, and remained at home last Friday to compose her mind, but she was told by her father that on Mon day (to-morrow sho must be prepared to return to school. She replied that she WOULD RATHER DIE than go there again. Of course her father was interested in these strange and to him unaccountable fancips of his daughter. Having some legal business at his office with an old lady who was reported to be a spiritual medium, he related the story to her. She replied that she would, if permitted, visit the child and see if anything could be made out of it Last evening, when Mr. Eobin son went home from his business office, the spiritual medium accompanied him. shortly atter she entered tho room where Clara was, a table was placed before her. Several neighbors dropped in to witness the expected developments. All seated themselves about the table, placing their hands on its surface. Mr. Eobinson, always sceptical and doubting the truth of the story, watched with the eyes of a hawk to detect Iraud or collusion His doubting mind with that of several others, who had during their natural existence ridiculed ghosts and spirits, was soon awe and wonder struck at the strange actions that followed. The lit tle girl, in all appearances, swooned, falling back in her chair apparently lifeless, and certainly insensible. Her eyes stood wide open, fixed on vacancy. Her bands began to move. Soon they moved faster, and in a short time their violent action frightened the parent, who caught hold of his child's arm to prevent her doing herself harm. Those present (some dozen or more) were amazed at the child's behavior and ap pearance. In due time they became tranquil, as did also the hands of Miss Clara, though not in the latter case un til all the skin had been barked from the knuckles of her hands. She never spoke a word, but when the medium placed a pencil in her band and paper on the table beneath it, SnE BEGAN TO WRITE with astonishing velocity. At first the characters were strange, indistinct, and unreadable. Gradually the scratches assumed shape and form, and finally be came readable. Sentences were read from the several sheets the girl wrote upon which corroborated all she had previously related. Questions were ask' ed by persons present and replies were instantly written on the paper, the writer never uttering a word, and all the time totally insensible. The same as has been previously told was all writ ten in words clear and distinct. The ques tion was asked, under which stump the valuables were buried r The reply was, five feet under the one upon which the vision had stood. The question was asked, why it was desired that Clara should become the possessor of the pro perty? The reply was: "Because by recognizing and speaking to the vision, sho had become relieved ot a trouble that had long weighed upon her. HER SPIRIT WAS NOW FREE, and as all parties were then searching diligently for the secreted papers, unless they were resurrected without delay they would fall into improper hands, and become worthless to all except the illegal holders of the place." The ques' tion was asked, " suppose those now in possession refuse to release their hold : The answer was written, "I WILL SEE THAT IT SHALL DO THEM NO GOOD IF YOU ONLY RECOVER THE PAPERS." Other sentences were written which we think it imprudent to publish, but hav ing the paper upon which the girl wrote in our possession, in the editorial rooms of the Advance, they can be prodnced as ocular proof of the correctness of that part ot the storv to which thev relate. The medium wrote that the name of the spirit was Lizzie Davison, and closed by malting the sentence, "GOOD NIGHT; KISS CLARA, for I love her." Thereupon the female medium bestowed the kiss as requested. Miss Clara immediately raised up, rubbed her eyes, said she had been asleep and dreaming, and was utterly unconscious of the strange proceedings that bad been enacted, or that she had so completely dumbfounded, bewildered, and astonished the persons present. The result of tho affair, as far as we have beard, was, that about 9 o clock last night a party of four or five gentlemen repaired to the college grounds, where they found every inniate a firm believer in the story of the vision. The gentle men, atter consultation, determined to excavate the stump, to see if the prom ised secret valuables could be found. As we go td press news come up from the lower end of De Soto street, that the burrowers are working like Trojans, with shovel, pick, and spade. They have got the stump up, root and all and have descended some four feet or more be neath the surface. The work goes brave ly on, ana we expect to nave a message before this meets the eyes of the reader, to the ettect that untold beapa of valuable treasure that will fall into effectual noth ingness as the wonders of Aladdin or the uncountable riches of the celebrated island where the Count of Monte Cristo kept his store to purchase corporations, cities, ana nations. LATER. At 2 o'clock this morning the diggers had struck a brick arch-work near tne stump, and excitement ran high. The cottage of Anna Hathawav. where Shakespeare wooed and won her, u uuereu tur hub. MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS. One of the papers contains an adver tisement : " Lost a large black silk um brella, belong to a gentleman with a curiously carved head." " Have you ever broken a horse ?" in quired a horse jockey. " No, not ex actly," replied Simons, "but I have broken three or four wagons. A New York wife writes to a New York paper that the men of New York make poor husbands. There is a hotel at Espyville Station, on the Erie and Pittsburgh Railroad, called the " 8x9" House. A Boston woman declares herself happy and contented, because she has thirteen cats, and loves them all. A Quaker Indian agent has made the discovery that female Indian can be elevated and got into hoop-skirts. The cost of leeches sold in Europe ex ceeds $10,000 per annum. The finest are said to come from the Murray Eiver, Australia. Mr. Thillman has brought a suit for $10,000 against the Woman's Medical College, of Cleveland, for dissecting the body of his wife. The London Times for Dec. 1, 1870. had for its leader au article ten columns in length, containing 13,000 words. An anti-kissing society has been foimed by the Galena, 111., girls. "No kissing before marriago is their motto. A young Boston woman, wife of an army othcer, became romantically in terested in a noble red man on the fron tier. He stole her jewelry and pawned it for fire-water, thus driving the ro mance out of her soul. The court house and jail, at Sepere, Wis , were burned on the 12th instant, and two young men, named Howard and Buckly, who had been locked up the night before for drunkenness and disorderly conduct, perished in the flames. It is supposed the jail was set on fire by Buckly, one of the prisoners. The chaplain, on opening a session of the New York Legislature, at Albany, recently, very appropriately prayed that " the men who are in the habit ot loiter ing about the halls of the Legislature with bribery in their hands might be in duced to see the error of their ways, and that their wicked designs, if they had any, might be thwarted." At a recent meeting at Danbury, Ct., where a contribution was taken up, a wealthy member of the congregation dropped twenty-five cents in the con tribution box. The amount realized be ing a little more than that required, the wealthy member quietly suggested to the deacon who passed the box, that his little amount might be returned. And it was. This remarkablo advertisement lately appeared in tho New Bedford Mercury : " Instruction in Cooking. Ruth Russell is ready to receive scholars for instruc tion in cooking. Special attention to be given to bread-making and pure, good yeast. N. B. Persons at service can re ceive instructions in one or all the vari ous branches of cooking on favorable terms." Rochester is distracted, through the columns of its papers, over arithumeti cal problems. Here is the one pro pounded by the latest idiot: If one hundred yards of cord be wound in a single coil upon an upright post an inch in diameter, what time will it take a man to unwind it, he holding one end in his hand and travelling in a circle whose radius is the unwound cord, sup posing he walks four miles an hour ; and what is the length ot ground walked over ? A Miami county (Ohio) settler objects to a proposed railroad in that region in these words : " The people is gone wild on this 'ere railroad queschine. Hosses that is now wuth f 40 wont be wuth f 5 hed. Waggin makers will starve to dcth. Oats wont be wuth nuthin, and we'll have to quit raisin on 'em. Coon skinB wont be wuth a cent, and the bei- lerin steam waggins will skeer all game out of the country. I'll sell my forty and git for Arkansaw if you don't stop this 'ere railroad." In a recent lecture upon " The Rights and Wrongs of Children," Mrs. George Yandenhoff claims the right of a child to a good physical training, a good happy home, and kind, courteous, truthtul treatment in that home. While she did not believe children could always be governed without punishment, she de nounced whipping, and looked for the time when some of the savans en gaged in new translations of the Scrip tures would find out that Solomon, so often quoted in favor of the " rod," would prove to have meant " Spare the rod, and save the child." Among the dreaded results of the late European war, one of the most terrible has already appeared. The poison taken up by the atmosphere from the multi tudes of the battle-fields where the thousands of dead, either unburied or very insufficiently so, has commenced to reach the air of the cities and villages of the blood-stained country. Recent tele grams announce that in many parts of France and Prussia typhoid fever, and even more teartul types of disease, nave appeared in very aggravated forms ; and there is much cause tor the apprehension that, unless most vigorous measures are employed, the blast of pestilence will sweep the face of the continent. Mrs. Van Cott lectured in Chicago as t revivalist Pausing in the middle of her discourse she turned abruptly to the reporters' table, and said she hoped these gentlemen would desist from taking notes. It always made her feel nervous. She knew her speeches would look funny if printed. She did not wish to say anything, however, against the repor ters, God bless them. " So go along gentlemen, with your notes. 1 don't care. God bless the reporters." Several clergymen responded with a load em phatio " Amen," whereupon the audience tooK up uie uuraen, ana there was good deal of applause, the only expree- I sion of the kind indulged in during the I pruueeuxuirc.