V HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr , Editor and TrBLisnEn ELK COUNTY -THE REPUBLICAN PAIiTV. Two Dollars tkr Annum VOL. I. RIDGWAY, PA., THURSDAY, JUNE 15, 1871. NO. 1G. UHT8EY AND I AKK Ot T. ST WILL M. CARLETON. Draw up the papers, lawyer, and make 'cm Rood nnd stout ; For things at borne are crossways, aud Betsey nnd I are out. We, who have worked together so long as man and wife, Must pull in single harness for the rest of our nairni me. " What is tho matter V sny you. I swan, It's hard to tell I Most of the years behind us wo've passed by very well ; I have no other woman, she has no other man Only we'vo lived together ns long as we ever can. So I have talked with Betsey, and Betsey has talked with mc, And so we've agreed together that wo can't never agree ; Not that we've catehed each other In nny ter rible crime : Wu've been a-gathering this for years, a little ilk a lime. There was a stock of temper we both had for a Biart, Although we never suspected 'twould take us two apart ; 1 had my various fallings, bred In the ilesh and bone : And Betsey, like all good women, had a tem per ui uur uwu. Tho first thing I remember whereon we disa greed Was something concerning heaven a differ- eiiuo in our creea , Wo arg'ed tho thiug at breakfast, we arg'ed the thing at tea, Aud the more wo arg'ed the question the more we uiuu i agree. And tho next that I remember was when we lost a cow : Bhe had kicked tho bucket for certain, the question was only How r I held my own opinion, nnd Betsey another had: And when wo were done n-talkiu, wo both of us were mau. Aud the next that I remember, it started iu a joKe ; But full for a week it lasted, aud neither of us spoke. And tho next was when I scolded because she broke a bowl j And she said I was mean and stingy, nnd had n't any soul. And so that bowl kept pouriu' dissensions in our cup ; Aud so that blamed cow-critter was always a-comiu' up ; Aud so that heaven we arg'ed no nearer to us But it gave us a taste of somcthin' a thousand times as hot. And so the thing kept workin'and all the sclf- sume way ; Always somcthin' to arg'c, aud somcthin' sharp to say ; And down on us cauio tho neighbors, a couple dozen Btrong, And lent their kindest sarvlco for to help the thing uloug. And there has been days together and many ii weary wecK We was both of us cross and spunky, and both too proud to Boeak : Aud I have been thlukin' and thinkln', the wuuiu oi mc winter anu mil, Ii I can't live kind with a woman. woman, why, then, I won't at all. And so I have talked with Betsey, nnd Betsey has talked with me, Aud wo have agreed together that wo can't never agree ; And what is hers shall be hers, and what is mine shall be mine ; Aud I'll put it in the agreement, uud take it to ner to sign. Write on tho paper, lawyer tho very first par agraph Of all the farm and live-stock that she shall have her half; For she has helped to earn it, through many a weary uay, And it's uolhin' moro than justice that Betsey has her pay. Glvo her the house and lioruestead a man can thrive and roam : But women are skeery critters, unless they nave a some ; And 1 have always determined, and never failed to say, That Betsey never should want a home if I was tuken away. There is a little hard money that's drawiu' tol'rable pay : A couple of hundred dollars laid by for a rainy day ; B.iio in tho hands of good men, uud easy to get ut: Put In another clause there, aud give her half Ul bUUL Yes, I sco yon smile, elr, at my givln' her so much; Yes, divorco is cheap, sir, but X take no stock in such ! True and fair I married her, when she was blithe and young ; And Betsey was al'ays good to rae, exceptin' with her tongue. Once, when I was young as you, aud not so smart, perhaps, For me she mittened a lawyer, and several other chap ; Aud all of them wus flustered, and fairly tuken down, Aud I for a time was counted the luckiest mau iu town. Onee when I had a fever I wou't forget It soon I was hot as a basted turkey and cruzy as a loon; Never an hour went by me when she was out of sight. She nursed mo true and tender, and stuck to me day aud night. And if ever a house wa tidy, uud vcr a kitchen cleuu, Her house and kitchen was tidy as any I ever seen , And I don't complain of Betsey, or uuy of her acts, Exceptiu' when we've quarreled, aud told each other tacts. Bo draw up tho paper, lawyer, and I'll go home to-ulght, And read the agreement to her, and see If it's all right ; Aud theu, in the morals', I'll sell to a tr.uliu man I know, And kiss the child that was left to us,' aud out In the world I'll go. . Aud oue thing put in the paper, that first to me didn't occur; That when I am dead as last she'll bring me back to ber ; And lay me under I be muples I planted years When ha and I wa fcappy before wo sjuor reled so. And when she dies I wish that sho would bo laid by me, And, lyln' together In silence, perhaps wo will agree ; Aud, If ever we meet In heaven, I wouldn't think it qneer If we loved each other the better because wo have quarreled here. Toledo Blade. i AUST JEM'S UOXXET. Did you ever watch a canary flying about in its cage, and turning its Lead knowingly from side to side, as if it were in deep meditation upon some' subject through all its restless hurry? Well, very much after that same fashion, Miss Jemima Veer went Hitting abont in the little drab house under the hill one bright spring morning. (She shook out the white muslin curtains with a tender re spect for their old age, and arranged them so that the darns sttould not show,, placed a cushion carefully over damages wrought by little feet in the seat of the old-fashioned rocking-chair, and dusted the tall clock in the corner as faithfully as if its long hand were not missing. In truth, that room was a sort of hospital for disabled furniture ; but then the in valids all had such a cozy, well-cared-for look that one never thought of noticing their deficiencies ; and the little brown eyed, brown-haired woman who bustled about among them was as bright and cheery as need be. But this day there was an unsolved problem looking out from the eyes, and no v and then Miss Jemima would come to a momentary pause in her occupation, and strike an interrogation-point attitude at the end of some mental question. At last she stopped by one of the windows, and drew from her pocket a somewhat faded green-and-silver purse a lean, dyspeptic-looking purse, that flopped about in a downcast way, as if uware that it would be called upon to deliver up .what it had not got. Miss Veer's thorough fingers searched its utmost depth, then turned it wrong side up and shook it, that no shirking penny might be hidden away in its corners. The amount in her hand was small enough when nil was done. She counted it forward and back ward, but it didn't grow any either way ; so she closed her fingers over it, with the faintest breath of a sigh, and suid, with a decided shake of her head : " I can't do it. Teddy wants new shoes, Hob mutt have a jacket, and a bon net isn't to be thought of." Which didn't follow at all ; for she thought of it more vigorously than ever after having ascertained beyond a doubt that there was no money to buy a new one. She did not need to look at the one she had worn all winter to see how shab by it was ; she could feel that, even with it. away up stairs in the bandbox. It hud been twisted and turned, made and remade, from year to year, until it was " poor but respectable" no longer, besides being all out of season ; and so her head, berett of its ancient shelter, went seeking a new covering. When the housu was all in order, and Rob and Teddy lauda bly employed in trying to plow up the back yard with the flour scoop, she went up stairs, and from among the cast-off treasures of a certain old red chest in the attic iished up a straw bonnet immense in size, yellow in color, and of shape in describable. She laughed at the effect as she tried it on before her tiny mirror ; but, after all, it was not a laughing matter; indeed, it seemed more like a crying one as she turned tho antique affair on her hand and wondered soberly what it would be possible to make of it. Upon her meditations there suddenly broke the slight rustle of a stiff dress, and the sound of a footstep that spoke of dignity and one hundred and filty pounds, and announced the coming of Aunt Hester. It was the only announce ment that lady thought it necessary to make ; for she entered without the for mality of a knock, seated herself in the rocking-chair, or attempted to do so, but immediately resumed her feet again. " If urn ! I advise you to put that chair out of the way, Jemima. One can't be always remembering that the bottom is broken out," she remarked, severely : " unless, indeed, you intend it as a trap to catch your friends in." " If that was the object, I'd set it just outside the gate, and try to catch them before they got in," Miss Jemima whis pered, rebelliously, to herself, as she arose to bring forward another chair a sound, substantial wooden one. Aunt Hester surveyed it doubtfully, as if she suspected some deception, but finally settled herself in it, shook her black alpaca into proper folds, and said : " I thought I would call to see how you were getting on." It did occur to Jemima that if she bad known of her coming she would have got so far on as to be out of sight ; but she only answered, quietly, " About as usual we are, thank you, Aunt Hester." "Aunt Jem ! Aunt Jem!" cried Kob and Teddy, making a rush from the yard, getting terribly mixed up in the door-way, and each trying to explain the other's remarks before he had made any. " 'Deed, Aunt Jem, we won't hurt it any a rumbreller to build a barn with ; 'cause we can't put our horse i no where : and we want it top o' the chicken-coop. Say, may we " Yes, dear, yes ; but don t be so noisy, boys. Don't you see Aunt Hester is here '(" answered Auut Jem, indulgent but distressed. " Yes ; that's why we don't want to come in for," answered Teddy, with re freshing frankness. " Won't you please to nana the ruiuoreiier out, Aunt Jem f Aunt Jem produced the umbrella, in full consciousness that her visitor was watching with grim disapproval, and was prepared for the speech that came next. " You are spoiling those children, Jemima completely spoiling them. I am really astonished at you." It was a point upon which the lady's astonishment had become chronic, so Jemima did not attempt to lessen it, and a momentary silence ensued. "Ah !" said Aunt Hester, in a more gracious tone, after her eyes had scanned every other article in the room, and rested finally on the bonnet. " W bat do you propose to do with that, my dear'r" "I don't know," answered Jemima, rather disconsolately. "I recollect that bonnot. I thought it looked familiar, and I remember now. It was one my daughter Susan wore for a season or so, and then gave to your mother," pursued Aunt Hester, growing complacent over the memory of by-gone benevolence. "It is a very excellent braid, with a great deal of wear in it. Out of shape, to be sure, but I think it cculd bo made over into a very suitable bonnet for you." The " very excellent" article had ap peared old enough and ugly enough be fore, but it looked a trifle older and uglier still to poor Jemima now, though Bhe scarcely knew why. She turned it about on her hand, and fell to wonder ing a little drearily why it was she never had any thing new any thins all her own. It seemed to her that all her life she had been obliged to build upon other people's foundations, to make straight where others had blundered, and take up things where others had stopped. Her work never came to her in the raw material ; it was always what somebody else had used, or spoiled, or begun. Back through the twenty-eight yeurs of her life, so nearly as she could remember, it had been the same. House keeping cares had fallen early upon her childish shoulders, when her invalid mother died. Then there had been the constant planning and working to pro cure what her careless, improvident father did not provide, to eoonomize where he wasted ; a pretty sister to bo snubbed by and worked for, until she made a runaway marriage with a gen tlemanly scamp ; and the same sister to console and care for during what re mained of her brief life, when she came back, deserted and broken-hearted. Kob and Teddy were the legacies she left. Well, they were not Jemima's own, ei ther ; but they were a wonderful comfort to her. The very thought of them made ber pause suddeuly in the midst of her questioning whether she would not have builded better and more successfully if she could have laid her own corner stones reared a structure of her own instead of filling breaches in the broken walls of others. Those two little faces stopped the train of " might have beens," and made her murmur, woman that she was, " Dear boys ! I wouldn't give Hum up for uny thiug !" "It can be whitened, prtssed into Bhape, and made very presentable," broke in Aunt Hester's voice. " True," answered Jemima, slowly, thinking of her life instead of her bon net. " Yes, I hope it will be made pre sentable at last, though it does uot look so now." " Why, it's tho best of braid," inter posed Aunt Hester, with some severity. She fancied the remark was a slight dis paragement of daughter Susan's taste a thiug not to be tolerated. That tone aroused Jemima from her reverie at once. She discovered the good qualities of the braid immediately, and Aunt Hester, somewhat mollified, took her departure. " Send it to a milliner's, and have it bleached nnd made over ; advice very easy to give, but not quite so easy to take, under -the circumstances," com mented Jemima, left to herself again. " No, most excellent bonnet, you will have to submit to being sewed over by my own fingers, and no others, and take such bleaching as I can give you. Pity, considering your past grandeur, but it can't be helped." She was an energetic little woman, and so in a very short space of time she had arranged in the back yard a closely covered barrel, with a pan of coals sprinkled with brimstone placed in the bottom of it, and the antiquated straw fastened near the top, aud left to whiten in the smoko. Bob and Teddy were duly advised of the contents of the bar rel, and warned not to molest it ; and theu Miss Jemima went cheerily back to the house and her work of darning small stockings and planning for diminutive jackets. The out-of-door world was very lovely that spring morning, and sho stole glances at it now and then through the little window delighting in the fresh green grass and blossom-laden trees of the tiny yard in front, and watching with kindly, human interest the oc casional passers-by on the road beyond. These last were not many, for it was only a quiet village road ; but presently there passed a team with an unusual load a large, heavy millstone. The driver walked beside it as it moved slowly along, aud following it a short distance behind was another person, whom Jemima scanned more closely a man some thirty three or four years of age, medium-sized, bronzed and bearded, aud dressed in a plain suit of gray. There was nothing very remarkable iu his ap pearance; nevertheless, he was a person age of some interest to the villagers as being tho new owner of the mill over the hill. The former owner had failed to make it profitable, and for a year or two it had stood idle. When, therefore, it was known that it had been sold, and was to be repaired aud put in running order, there was a variety of opinions and some shaking ox beads among the sages of the little place. There were some who carried their disinterested kindness so far as to inform the new comer that it " wouldn't pay," he would "sink money," etc. To all of which Cade Barclay listened good-naturedly. answering but little, except with his frank, sunny smile, and then went steadily on his way, apparently quite undisturbed by their predictions. Of the merits of the Question or the man Jemima knew nothing; but there was a quiet, resolute air about him, a certain self-reliance and determination betraying itself even in his firm, quick step as he passed, that gave her the im pression that he saw quite as clearly into his own affairs as others could see for him, and made her fancy that she should trust bin judgment as soon as that of the wisest of them all. The road wound around the little house, and up over the hill at tho back of the gar den, so that the great wheel and its owner disappeared from her view at the front window while she was still think ing of them. So little that was new came to disturb the serenity of the place that it wag not marvelous that the peo ple indulged in speculations concerning this enterprise, or that Jemima, in her nook, should feel some interest in it. Her meditations were still tending in that direction, when suddenly there came a rushing, rolling sound, a crash ing as of breaking bushes, a scream from Rob and Teddy that would have done credit to two Indians, ad then some thing struck the corner of the house so heavily as to make it all jar and tremble. Jemima sprang to her feet, and was out at the door in an instant. The boys were certainly not killed ; she saw that at a glance; neither were they injured in lung or limb, for the shouting and gesticulating were wild and furious. "Aunt Jeml Oh, Aunt Jem, look I Just look !" Aunt Jem did look at the broken back fence, leveled currant-bushes, flat tened flower-beds, and last at the front yard, where reposed the cause of all tho mischief the large millstone. " It corned tumbling the hill right down on to our back yard, and some of the fence was there besides the currant bushes, nnd Rob and me we yelled, you'd better believe !" lucidly explained the astonished Teddy. " It is a mercy you were not killed," began Aunt Jem's trembling lips ; but Rob interrupted her with another vocif erous " Oh, look !" and pointed to a brisk bonfire that was springing up in front of them. Jemima's bleaching ap paratus had been overturned, and the coals emptied out of the pan had sot the barrel in a blaze. A bucket or two of water soon extinguished the fira ; but alas for the bonnot I it was wofully blackened instead of whitened, and burned beyond all possibility of making over. The group gathered about the ruins in dismay, for the children were quick to detect the look of trouble in Aunt Jem's face, and even they understood the case well enough to know that arti cles destroyed were not always easily replaced. " No one hurt, I hope V" said a voice just beside them a manly voice, though a trifle hurried and anxious. Jemima looked up, met the kindly, questioning glance of a pair of blue eyes, and recognized Mr. Barclay. She started a little, not having noticed his approach, but she answered, promptly, " No, Sir ; no one hurt in the least." " Really, I don't know how such an accident could have happened," he re marked, as if even yet bewildered by tho affair. " There must have been some carelessness in loading the stone, I suppose ; for when we were part way up the hill the wagon tilted a little, and tho stone slipped off and came crashing down. Its force was mostly spent be fore it reached your place, but I see it has done damage enough as it is ;" and swift, comprehensive glance swept flower-beds and broken bushes. " Nothing very serious nothing but what a little labor will make right again," courageously and politely re sponded Mis Jemima, noticing the di rection his eyes had taken. " No, it won't," interposed Master Teddy ; " 'cause Aunt Jem's bonnet what she had a-bleachin' in the barrel is all burned up. It was goin' to be her Sundayest one, too ; an' now she can't go to uieetiu' nor nothin' ; only I'll lend you my hat. Aunt Jem." " Hush, hush, Teddy I ' whispered Aunt Jem, pressing the little fat hand that slid into hers, iu appreciation of the offered sympathy, though her faco grew suddenly rosy, and it required some effort to betray no discomposure. " No, Sir ; there's not much hariu done. I am thankful it is no worse." " So am I. Some one might have been killed by it," he answered, gravely, stealing a curious glance at the charred barrel, meanwhile, and pondering Teddy's remark. Not very well versed in millinery matters was Cado Barclay. A sister he had never had, and his mother had been dead now nearly a year. Where the neat, Quaker-like bonnets she had woru during her life time came from it never had occurred to him to inquire ; but ho felt tolerably certain that they had not been conjured out of a barrel in the back yard. He knew that there were places where such articles were sold, and fancied that most Indies bought them. Brewing them at home, in barrels, over a -ire, struck him as rather an original plan, and be strong ly suspected, Teddy's lament taken into account, that it indicated a shortness of funds. He was very sorry for the mis chief his rolling stone had caused, and this particular part of it seemed tho most difficult to remedy. " You must let me compensate as far as possible for the trouble I have caused you," he began ; but Miss Jemima so quickly and decidedly declared the in jury of no consequence thut there was nothing more to be said. His honest heart was still perplexing itself over the problem when a Bin all specimen of the canine race presented itself to view, and Teddy caught it up. "This is my dog; he came to live with us without nobody askin' him. Aunt Jem don't like him much 'cause he ain't a Newfounder ; he's a rat terror." " Ah ! is ho '" said Mr. Barclay, be coming suddenly interested. " Such an animal is very useful about a mill some times, where there are a great many rats and mico. I wouldn't mind giving five dollars for him, if you were willing to let him go. Would you sell him for thaff" " Yes, Sir," answered Teddy, prompt ly; and a bill was pressed into the little palm, and the dog transferred to its new owner. Miss Jemima viewed this proceeding rather doubtfully ; still as she was not consulted in the matter, and the gen tleman appeared as much interested in tho bargain as Teddy himself, she did not quite see how to interfere. The dog might be valuable ; she really did uot know. Mr. Barclay Beemed won derfully well satisfied himself, and held fast to his purchase as if it were a rare prize, while he discussed .with ' Miss Jemima the removal of the ponderous ornament from the front yard. " You will, at least, let me come and help put this garden into order again," he said, aa he turned away a proposi tion she could not hardly have declined, even if he had given her a chance to do so, which he did not. " Now, Aunt Jem, now you can have a bonnet ; and not an old smoked one, either," said Teddy. And Aunt Jem did have a new bon net a pretty white chip, with fresh, spring-like green ribbons, that it seemed a positive luxury to her to put on. You would think a respectable bonnet could scarcely be purchased for so small a sum. Mr. Barclay bad entertained some fears on that subject too, though he had of fered as high as he had dared for the dog ; but he was perfectly satisfied when he saw her come into church the next Sunday, leading Rob and Teddy. Was she to blame for enjoying the whole service better because of those soft, be coming ribbons that framed her pretty brown hair and quiet face ? No ; she did not think about her bonnet ; she only felt it ; but when she was at home again, slowly untying the strings before her little mirror, she whispered softly to herself, " I do believe the Great Love that blesses all our lives cares for our happiness even in such little things as these, else all this wouldn't have hap pened so strangely." It took a good many evenings to get those flower-beds into perfect order again, but Mr. Barclay persevered in his work with praiseworthy fidelity ; and having bestowed so much labor upon them, it was natural that he should feel a more than ordinary interest in them, and visit them frequently all through the summer. There were many happy evenings spent in the tiny moonlit portico, with the conversation wandering to deeper than floral Bubjects ; and he learned to look upon that spot as a little haven of peace, and gentle, thoughtful, unselfish Aunt Jem as the pleasantest of companions. So it happened that when the autumn came he won her con sent to his taking care of her flower-beds and buying her new bonnets always. Aunt Hester, who, like many another worthy lady, was an unconscious wor shipper of success, greatly approved of Mr. Barclay. She was very gracious in her commendation of the arrangement, remarking, with an unwonted attempt at facetiousness, that she did not know that she could " ever believe again that rolling stones gather no moss." Franklin and lVhitcflcld An Interest ing Itoininiscencp. In his biography of the celebrated evangelist Whitefield, just published in Loudon, Mr. J. P. Gladstone gives this anecdote : It was not only the ignorant and ex citable that yielded to the extraordinary fascination of Whitefield's oratory. No shrewder listener ever stood in front of him than the celebrated Benjamin Franklin ; and how little even he was able to resist tho charm is shown by the amusing story which he tells of himself. Whitefield had consulted Franklin about the locality of his proposed orphan house, but had refused to act on his ad vice; aud the refusal had determined Franklin not to subscribe. " I happened soon after," eays Franklin, " to attend one of his sermoiiB, in the course of which I perceived he intended to finish with a collection, and 1 silently resolved ho should get nothing from me. I had in my pocket a handful of copper money, three or four silver dollars, nnd five pis toles in gold. As he proceeded I began to soften, and concluded to give him the copper. Another stroke of his oratory made me ashamed of that, and deter mined me to give tho silver; and he fin ished so admirably that I emptied my pocket wholly into the collector's dish, gold and all." If any one could have resisted the spell, one would have thought it must have been Chesterfield ; yet even of him it is said that on one occasion when Whitefield was describing a blind mau groping his way unawares towards a precipice, till he stumbled on the edge m the act of taking the last fatal step over, the peer could not help springing forward in an agony from his seat, exclaiming, " Good God ! he is gone I" Something About Teeth. Why do some people's teeth come out more readily than others ' The reasons for this are probably many. About the middle of the last century Peter Kalm, a Swede, visited America, and wrote sensi bly about what he saw. He observed a frequent loss of teeth among settlers from Europe, especially womeu. After discussing and rejecting many modes of explanation, he attributed it to hot tea and other hot beverages ; aud came to a general conclusion that " hot feeders lose their teeth more readily than cold feed ers." Mr. Catlin, who some years ago had an interesting exhibition of Indian scenery, dresses, weapons, ifco., noticed that North American Indians had better teeth than the whites. He accounts for the difference in this strange way that the reds keep the mouth shut, whereas the whites keep it open. The teeth, he says, require moisture to keep their sur faces in good working order ; when the mouth is open, the mucous membrane has a tendency to dry up, the teeth lose their needed supply of moisture, aud thence come discoloration, toothache, tic-douloureux, looseness, decay, and eventual loss of teeth. Mr. Catlin scolds the human race generally for being less sensible than the brutes in this respect, and the white race specially in compari son with the red. We keep our mouths open far too much ; the Indian warrior sleeps, hunts, and smiles with his mouth shut, and respires through his nostrils. Among the virtues attributed by him to closed lips, oue is excellent when you are angry, keep your mouth shut. Cltamher' Journal. Sheriff Morse, of Portsmouth, last fall took possession of ten barrels of liquor in that city on au attachment, stored and locked them up. It is said a few days after he went to get the liquor, and found a gimlet-hole iu each barrel, and all as dry as when they came from the cooper. An opening had been made in to the cellar from a narrow passage-way, aud now the State is f 1000 out by the operation. The "Old Soldier of tlio Revolution." An old New Yorker, in relating his recollections of the city, tells the follow ing good story : Many years ago, a little withered old man might have been seen seated on a box, standing on the sidewalk, on the northerly side of Chatham square, just at the commencement of the Bowery. I had frequently noticed him in passing along the square, and thought him the most pitiful and disgusting-looking ob ject that I had ever seen. A coarse piece ot brown pasteboard bung suspended from his neck, upon which was inscribed in large capitals the following : " I am a Poor Blind Soldier of the Revolution." With uncovered head there he sat, day after day, silently soliciting such contri butions as the charitable public might see fit to bestow upon him. His general appearance denoted him to be a very old man, and very much enfoebled by age. Indeed, some of the Sunday papers had said that he was a hundred years old, but if he was he was certainly a very smart person for one of his age. Nobody seemed to know him, or from whence he came, but everybody talked about him, aud wondered how he had managed to live so long. His head was one-half bald, and the other half was profusely adorned with long, flow ing snow-white hair. His faco was shriveled and wrinkled, and of a pallid and death-like hue. He looked, iudeed, an object of pity, but more of disgust. Sotno of the papers had declared that he was a leper, aud cautioned their readers uot to go near him ; others said that he was just what ho purported to be, an old Revolutionary soldier, aud that it was a disgrace to the patriotism of the country to allow him to be seen in the streets begging. This state of affairs continued for mouths, without anybody being able to obtain a cluo to his history. Some few shunned him as they would the plague, but more pitied him and contri buted to his relief. One day I noticed a party of Bowery roughs skylarking on the sidewalk just below where the old veteran was sitting, and I hauled up for a few minutes to see the sport. They soon arrived in the vi cinity of the man of unknown years, when one of tho heartless scamps, losing all his love and veneration lor things holy and Revolutionary, seized the whitened locks of the old mau in his iron grasp, when lo! the centenarian, forgetting all his assumed infirmities, sprung upon his feet in a trice, and the next moment he went bounding across the square at a rate of speed never be fore witnessed in that locality, leaving his venerable locks aud the outer skin of his face dangling in the hands of the brutal rowdy. And so this poor old blind soldier of the Revolution turned out to be a slender youth of seventeen, with hair as black us night, and with racing abilities that it would be safe to bat on. The old Continentaler pointed down Oliver street, with several hundred dirty ragged urchins close upon his heels, and shouting at the top of their voices : "Stop that old Revolutioner crackee! how he runs 1" The roughs had a jolly time over the Revolutionary relics left in their posses sion, and the lookers-on had a good time. It was, I doubt not, the laBt appearance of the young rogue upon that or any other stage in the character of a Blind Old Soldier of tho Revolution. John Wesley's First Sermon in Ameri ca History vs. Romance. A short time since we copied in these columns a btatemcnt from the Bruns wick (Ga.) Appeal, to the effect that a number of Methodist divines, togother with some friends, proceeded recently to St. Simon's Island, to visit and have photographed tho venerable live oak un der the umbrageous branches of which John Wesley, the founder of Method ism, preached his first sermon in Ameri ca. It is probable that the picture will be engraved ou steel and offered for gale. The live oak referred to, says the Sa vannah ltepuUUan, is a magnificent one, and has cast its shadow upon many a lively group in the Husu times ot St. Jsi mon's ; the Farmers' Club House, to which all the islanders were accustomed to resort on one day of every week, hav- iug stood in immediate proximity. For its own sake, as well as tor its social his tory, the tree should be photographed, for there is nothing approaching it on the Atlantic coast. But we never before heard that this monarch of the forest had a religious history. The Church of Frederica, es tablished by Charles Wesley, not John, was originally located, and still stands a portion ot its original timbers being yet incorporated with the-oftentimes re newed buildings in a beautiful grove ot live oaks, some bait mile or more iu the rear of the town, or the site once oc cupied by the town, nothing of which remains but a few brick and tabby ru ins. John Wesley, the great founder of Methodism, was occasionally at the Frederica settlement, aiding in tho work ot bis brother wbicb, unfortuuatelv. was not a very successful one but his "first sermon in America" was not preached ou St. Simon's. His firs re ligious ministrations in this country were delivered on Tybee, on tho arrival of the immigrant ship that bore him hither, and consisted ot thankserivinar to God for the safe deliverance of himself and fellow-passengers, having landed for the special purpose. This wag in Feb ruary, 1736. The party then came up the river, and John Wesley' "first ser mon in America," according to his own private journal, was preached in . the Court House in Savannah, on Sunday. March 7th, 1730, the text being the epistle for the day, the 13th chapter of 1st Corinthians. We dislike to spoil a handsome little photographio speculation, but this is nistory. A Springfield (Mass.) man has collect ed 1,200 specimens of the eggs of 400 of the 700 varieties of North American birds known to the ornithologists, and nas collectors busy sun in gathering. MISCELLAKEOUS ITEMS. Among the emigrants recently ar rived iu this country from Scotland is a Collie dog, said to be able to control five hundred sheep. Ho is to be taken to Colorado. Some very elegant parasols have just come into the market, which cost front 1 200 to S300. The tops are of lace, either black or white, and the handles of some ore' of carved coral, while others are of gold, with a vine of silver and gold leaves. The Commissioner of Internal Rev enue decides that " the dust produced in the manufacture ot smoking tobacco, and which cannot be used as tobacco or snuff, may be sold by the tobacco manu facturers to farmers as a fertilizer for tho land." In Os weero county, N. Y., the ladies of a village have met and resolved that they " will not accept the company of any young man who uses tobacco in any form, unless the night is very dark and the road muddy, tor tho space of sixty days from date." Henry Allen, of Pittsflold, Mass., who has been growing deaf gradually tor tho last six years, had a wanp removed irom his ear recently, which he now remem bers took up its abode there at the time the deafness commenced to trouble him. A New Haven paper gays " there is ft horse chestnut tree iu front of the old General Green place, on Water Btreet, which blossoms ouly ou the north side one year and the south Bid the next, while every seventh year it blossoms treely on all its branches. This year the blossoms are on the south s:de. The most learned woman in the world is said to be Princess Dora d'lstra. She reads and speaks fifteen languages, has writen novels, historical and philosoph ical works, is au honorary member of ten learned societies and is, notwith standing, quite good-looking. The rules of a Portland savings bank prohibiting the drawing out of a small er amount than $1, a boy took the fol lowing mode of getting only 23 cents, which wus all ho wanted. He took tho $1 and went out. In about five min utes he returned, deposited the ex tra 75 cents, and took his departure, highly satisfied at the success of bis financiering. One of tho most costly and magnifi cent and probably much the largest photographio portrait lens ever made is one produced for Mr. Mayatt, tho cele brated .hnghsli photographer. It is an achromatic- lens, ten and one-half inches iu diameter, and will take portraits of any size, from the smallest miniature up to very nearly the full life stature. It is made of glass of the whitest and purest description, and its size admits so large a volume of lip ht ta"t photographs covering a space of ten inches by twelve inches may be done in eight seconds. In the open air, groups of fifteen to twenty persons each faco about the size of an English sovereign, aud the whole picture two feet long and two feet wide can be taken with uu ex posure of ten seconds. The cost of manufacturing this lens was upwards of oue thousand dollars. The production of sheet iron plates coated with copper and brass is a now branch of industry in England, which has excited considerable attention among manufacturers. It is claimed for this product that the plates present great advantages to the makers of fin ished goods, compared with tinned or galvanized plates, as they can be an nealed as much as requisite during tho process of stamping, without injury to the copper or brass coating ; aud that they also are superior to sheet copper or sheet brass, because articles manufac tured from them are not so readily bent or dented as when they are mado of brass or copper, and they can be bur nished, planished, or spun, and so brought up to any required degree of finish. On this account the material is specially adapted to the manufacture of lamps, candlesticks, and all kinds of goods hitherto made by stamping from sheet brass or sheet copper, aud at a greatly reduced cost It appears from recent statistics of the industry and manufactures of Birming ham, that the following wonderful re sults comprise the aggregate of oue week's labor in that vast British work shop : 14,000,000 pens, 6,000 bedsteads, 7,000 guns, 300,000,000 cu1; nails, 100, 000,000 buttons, 1,000 saddles, 5,000,000 copper or bronze coins, 20,000 pairs of Bpectacles, six tons of papier-macho ware, 4,000 miles of iron and steel wire, ten tons of pins, five tons of hair pins, hooks and eyes, and eyelets, 130,000 gross of wood screws, COO tons of nuts, screw-bolts, spikes, and rivets, fifty tons of wrought iron hinges, 300 miles' length of wax for vestas, forty tons of refined metal, forty tons of German silver, 1,000 dozen of fenders, 3,500 bellows, 1,000 roasting-jacks, 150 sewing-machines, K00 tons of brass aud copper wares, besides an almost endless multitude of miscel laneous productions, of which no defi nite statistics can be given. What is called " Leliographio print ing " is proposed to be accomplished by the following method a recent foreign invention caseine or curd of milk being prepared in a peculiar manner for sub sequent use in the formation of casting blocks, printing blocks, and in treating the gurfvees of paper. The plan is to take the milk which has become sour and get by keeping and separate from it the grease and other extractive matters by the following process ; The milk u churned when sour and set by natural c lUBts and put iuto a bag and allowed to drain for about twenty-four hours, when boiling water is poured upon it, and it is then subjected to a squeezing process ; after this the best result is ob tained by pouring water at - about half boiling temperature upon it. It is aguin squeezed and allowed to stand until it in cooled down, aud then washed welt in clear, oold water, with continuous squeezing, to remove all the grease and milk as effectually aa possible. When dry the residuum becomes hard and granular, and is the substanae casein which is the object of the invention,