HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and rem; isilEn k couxTY-'Tin: . nnrvi; wa .v pa n r r. Two Dollars jbr AmTOM." VOL. i. RIDGWAY, PA., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1871. NO. 29. I ' A WOMAN'S CONCLUSION!. nr rn(EBB cxnv. t. I paid, if I mlpht go back apain To tho very hour and place of my liirth ; Mipht have my life whatever I chose, And, live it in any part of tlie earth ; I'ut perfect sunshine into my sky, Bnnlsh the shadow of sorrow and donM ; Have all my happiness multiplied, And all my Buffering stricken out ; If I could have known, in the years now gone, The best that a woman comes to know ; Could have had whatever will make licr Most, Or whatever she thinks will make her so ; Have found the highest and purest bliss That the bridal wreath and ring enclose ; And pained the one out of all the world That ray heart as well as my reason chose ; And if this had been, and I stood to-night By my children, lying asleep la their beds, And conld count In my prayers, for a rosarv, The shining row of their golden heads;' Yes ! I said, If a miracle such as this Conld be wrought for me, nt my bidding, I would choose to have my past as it Is, And to let my future come as it will ! I would not make the path I have trod More pleasant or even, more straight or wide; Nor change my course the breadth of a hair, This way or that way, to cither side. My past is mine, and I take it all ; Its weakness lis folly, if you please ; Nav, even ray sins, if you come to that, May have been my helps, not hindrances ! If I saved my body froth the flames Because that onee I had burned my hand ; Or kept myself from a greater sin By doing a less you will understand ; It was better I suffered a little pain, Better I sinned for a little time, If the smarting warned me back from death, un mo ouug ui Bin wiinucia ironi crime. Who knows Its strength by trial, will know What strength must be set against a sin : And how tcmptntion is overcome He has learned, who has felt its power within ! And who, knows how a life at the last ruav show t Why, look at the moon from where .we stand I Opaque, uneven, you say ; yet it shine?, A luminous sphere, complete and grand '. So let my past stand, just as it stands. And let me now, as 1 may, grow old ; I am what I am, and my life for me Is the best or it had not been, I hold. PEAUI.S OF THE OCEAN Pearls of the ocean, tho dark or the fair, Choose as you wish, they are each of them there; With tresses of jet, or with tresses of gold, With shyest of eyes, or with saucy aud bold. Pearls of tho ocean, fresh from the sea, Brilliant with merriment, sparkling with glee ; All! who is tho jeweller fated to tit, Such pearls in n mounting gold ring to wit. Pearl of tho ocean, soft, fair, and blight, Pearl of the ocean, dark as the night : You each have admirers, either is prized, The fair fondly loved, the dark Idolized. London Society. SHAKES. Everybody in and around Norway Flat was acquainted with Shakes. Shakes was every one's favorite, and every one's laughing-stock. What his real name was, no one on the Flat, excepting the Postmaster, knew or seemed at all anxious to ascertain. In outward ap pearance, he was a specimen of debased humanity. Debauchery was indelibly stamped upon every feature; It was deemed a rare sight to see him with a clean face. Btreaks of gray forced them selves through the accumulations that clung to his long matted locks and un trimmed beard. A coarse blue woolen overshirt, with tattered sleeves, covered his back, from whence many doubted whether it had been removed since the day he first put it on, in Griffin's store, twelve months ago. His duck pants had completely lost their original white ness, and were tucked into a well-worn, much-patched pair of gum-boots. The veritable felt hat, worn by him in 52, still maintained its usual position on the side of his head. The only change it had apparently undergone since then, was that a piece of an old rubber coat now constituted thecrown. Shakes's history, outside of the pre cincts of Norway Flat, was wrapped in complete mystery. Even the time of his arrival in the camp was unknown. Brown.the proprietor of the ' Occidental" Norway Flat's principal hotel, drink ing and dancing-saloon and also one of the pioneers of the place, asserted, "Shakes bummed around here when I fust 'rived, in '5'2." It was generally be lieved that he hailed from the temper ance State of Maine. Shakes, however, was no " temperance man " himself ; to the contrary, be had earned the unenvi able reput ition of being an inveterate " whiskey bummer." No one had ever known him to pass a single night ou the Flat " out of his cup9." It is true that these constant imbibings had so en feebled his system as to cause him to readily succumb to its influence. a A lonely log-cabin stood on the hill side. Shakes owned it, and professed to be its occupant; but seldom, if ever, crossed its threshold. The bar-room of some one or other of the numerous drinking-hells was his home; the floor, a bench or a faro-table was his bed. Although a slave to his appetite for intoxicating liquor, none its venders on Norway Flat were much the richer for having Shakes as their customer. It was seldom that a coin passed from his hands to the barkeeper's drawer; but drink he must have, and somehow or other he always managed to obUin it. The manner in which it was obtained was but a seoondary consideration to him. Nothing was too humiliating or too degrading for him to do for it. When begging failed, strategy was immediate ly resorted to, and in this ha was invari ably successful. He would enter the saloon, go up to the bar with thumb aud forefinger inserted in his packet, aud address the bar-keeper thus : " I say, bar-keeper, hurry up ; give me a ' brandy straight. The bar-keeper would first cast a glanoe at the position of the hand, and then tender the bottle to Skakes, who would unconcernedly drink, "jleres luck," and retire from Ihe counter with out paying. " Ho, Shakes :" Eh ?" " Come and see mo." " No, thankee ; don't feel like it now ; jest had nn." And the bar-keeper learned that he wus duped once more, but dared not at tempt to punish his deceiver. The in dignation of tho entire camp would most assuredly fall upon the individual who dared to abuse Shakes. Ho was Norway Flat's " privileged character." " Likes his whiskey, I know ; but he's ft harmless, good-natured old devil for all that," was the sentiment universally ex pressed by the members of that little mining community. Inebriate as he was. Shakes was not indolent. He whs always, in sunshine or rain, engnged in chopping cord-wood, or in riving shakes long shingles ; from which latter occupation he received his nickname. The sun rose on Shakes en tering the woods ; it set upon him ma king a " bee-line" for the " Pony Saloon." Fire-wood was worth $0 a cord, and shakes $10 a thousand, in those days, on Norway Flat. Shakes always chopped from two to three cords per day. Three dollar-) a cord he paid " Billy the boat man " for hauling it, which, of course, considerably diminished his earnings; still, there was a good margin left How it came to pass that he should always be poor, could never be satisfactorily ex plained. His condition of being, what he termed " flat broke," was patent to all, and was considered another of the mysteries of his peculiar life that no one cared to solve, and accepted unquestion ed. Norway Flat, since the time of its dis covery in ol, had continued to be a prosperous mining camp The fabulous yield of many of its claims had been re ported in the columns of the leadiug newspapers oi the civilized world. Num erous opportunities had been ottered Shakes to become tne possessor of ground of a promising character, subsequently proving rich. Mining, however, pos sessed no attractions for him. There ex isted no aflinity between his nature and the excitement of the average gold miner's life. He never owned a foot of mining ground, " and didn't intend to," he was acc stoiued to say ; " I go fur the sure thing." Even when the Wako-np Jake Company struck a two-ounces-to-tke-pan prospect, Shakes declined stak ing oif the adjoining ground, then va cant, and upon which he was at the time chopping wood. The same piece of ground afterward proved the richest spot on the whole Flat, nearly 1,200 ounces being obtained from it as the proceeds of one day's washing. This lack of enterprise this disinclination to ven ture was supposed to be the morbid offspring of his dissipated career. The only things for which he appeared to have any care were his axe, cross-cut saw, and frower. These constituted his entire stock in trade, and for them he cherished something bordering upon affection. Shakes was viewed as ono of Norway Flat's fixtures. It had been settled long ago in the minds of its inhabitants that his bones would decay in the little ceme tery on the knoll overlooking the Flat. The idea of his removing was never for a moment entertained by any one in that secluded community. Shakes and Nor way Flat had grown up with one anoth er. Norway Fiat was Shakes's home. If he possessed a home elsewhere, he had never been heard to speak of it. The winter of '39 had set in. It was about the middle of November. The ground was covered with several inches of snow. The tinkling of sleigh-bells was heard in the distance, aud the little town on the Flat was instantly thrown into a commotion. It was all occasioned by the arrival of '-Barnard's Monthly Express." The arrival of the express was an important event in the otherwise monotonous routine of every-day life at Norway Flat ; for be it remembered that the era of wagon roads and railways had not then been inaugrated, and commun ication between that mountain retreat and civilization was at best infrequent aud uncertain. Among the anxious faces awaiting the opening of the little wicket of the Post-office and the distribution of letters appeared that of Shakes. Shortly afterward he wag observed intently perusing a letter. "Dam'd 'f I don't make tracks fur hum," he suddenly exclaimed, and as suddenly bade farewell to Norway Flat and its surroundings. That evening Shakes was missed from his usual haunts, and it soon became generally known that he had left the Flat. This was an unprecedented epi sode in Norway Flat's history. Nothing had ever occurred before to disturb its uniform equanimity, excepting the shoot ing of lied Alick by Russian Bill in a moment of frenzied excitement, produced in the heat of a discussion as to the merits of tho parties then engaged in the Crimean War. His departure was the universal topic of conversation around every fireside and in every bar-room in the camp. The speculations as to the cause were as varied as they were im probable. The thermometer at Brown's that eve ning, indicated 13' below zero; but no fears were harbored in the mind of any one as to the safety of the one who had so unceremoniously left the camp " home ward bound." - Weeks passed on, and nothing had been seen or heard of Shakes since his departure. Norway Flat had almost forgotten him. Brown, the landlord of the " Occidental," was standing in his doorway, gazing abstractedly at the dis tant wiudings of the " down country" trail. It was only the previous day that a prospecting party had passed along it from the Flat, bound for the deserted mining camp of Diggers' Delight, situ ated about ten miles distant. His thoughts naturally recurred to their de parture and : prospects. Suddenly, his quick eye detected in the distance a group of men slowly trudging toward the Flat, and was somewhat astonished to recognize in them the prospectors of Diggers' Delight returning, bearing with them a heavy burden. The news soon spread that Shakes had been found dead at Diggers? Delight. It was'evident.that night had overtaken him thero, and that he had determined to spend it in one of tho deserted shanties. The fire-place had been filled by him with wood, ready for the match ; but it remained unkindled. W hy, no one could answer. The verdict of all who heard tho story was that he had fallen a victim to the severity of the weather on the evening of the day he left the Flat, or, us they expressed it, "friz dead." In an inside pocket of a vest worn underneath his ragged overshirt', a packet of letters was found, all of which were written in the 'same handwriting, and addressed to " James Wilkinson, Esq., Norway Flat." Sundry photographs were also discovered in the same pocket one cf an aged lady, another of a wo man in the prime of life, and the rest of three beautiful girls of from ten to fifteen years of age. AH the letters bore the same post-mark, " , Me." Each en velope was indorsed in pencil mark, " Reed, (date,) J. W." One of them was indorsed, "Iiecd. Novr. 17, 1859, J. W." That was the duy that Shakes left Nor way Flat. Its contents explained tho mystery of his life and poverty, and ran thus: , Maine, Aug. SO, 1839. My dear James : Your last remittance of ?250 has been duly received, and tho mortgage on the farm is now paid. Have you not impoverished yourself to keep us in com parative luxury? We have wanted nothing. Mother Is ailing mid rapidly declin ing. Doctor says she cannot possibly live through the coming winter. She longs to see you, James, before she dies. Emma, Annie, and Gerty arc all well. O, James, do come home at once; if not, I shall sell the place next spring, aud come to Norway Flat myself. Your otfectionate wife, Ei.lex Wilkinson. The bright side of Shakos's character, which he had so carefully concealed from the sight of his folio w-men, was here re vealed. And he had now gone to anoth er home to receive his reward. The Over land Monthly, September. The (rcnt Indian Famine. Ths Gazette of India has just published a painful but deeply interesting report of the tir l al or threefold famine of grass, gram, and ram, which fell in 18G8-69, with frightful severity on 100,000 square miles of Rajpootana, surpassing in in tensity any which has occurred since 1812, and almost equalling that of 1701, of which the record is preserved that three-quarters of the cattle died and that man ate man. The visitation having been chiefly in native States, accurate statistics are not forthcoming ; it is im possible, therefore, to come to any accu rate conclusions as to the mortality which the famine caused, directly or in directly. The scanty crops which in fpito of drought struggled up, were swept off the earth by a plague of lo custs; cholera fastened ou the starved people, and a terrible fever followed, striking down tho entire population. The deutbs from this latter cause alone are put down at 20 per cent, of the in habitants, while in some cf the Marwa ree districts they rose as high as one third. Taking the most moderate of the statistics furnished, the local authorities calculate fiat in Marwar and Aiuiere and the other districts, no less than one and a quarter million of human beings died ot disease and starvation. What could be done to alleviate suffering was done; but it was very little, for the stricken districts were cut off from the Eossibility of adequate aid. How this appened is explained in the report, which says that the Rajpootana iuuiine bore a strong resemblance to the Orissa famine in one particular ; that for some months, though for a different cause, Rajpootana, like Orissa, was shut off from tho receipt of supplies et the most critical period of the year. In Orissa this arose from the impossibility of ships approaching the coast to unload during the monsoon months. In Rajpootana tho same result was produced by the ut ter failure of forage, the price of which was in many cases dearer than grain, so that no carts could travel, nor could the pack-bullocks of the Bunjaras, of which there are hundreds of thousands in Raj pootana and Central India, traverse the country. The result was the same. The sea in one case, aud the want of grass in tho other, isolated the famine tract from tho rest of India. It must be udmitted that great efforts were made to relieve the sufferers. The chiefs of Oodeybore aud Jeybore set a noble example, which was followed by almost every other chief whose States were stricken, and by many who were beyond the famine. Famine relief works were started and maintained at comparatively enormous expense du ring the whole ot the visitation ; the United Presbyterian Mission, which has made Rajpootanp, its held for missionary enterprise, labored both in purse and person ; the Marwarees in Bombay, act ins with the Bombay Government and the Chamber of Commerce, sent liberal contribution ; and the government of India expended in relief works for the 420,000 inhabitants of its own province of A j mere, fifteen and a quarter lakhs of rupees, or ntarly three years' gross reve nue of the country. It is perhaps, a pity that, in justice to itself, the Govern ment did not publish the report earlier, as till now, while many have seen the suffering, but few knew what had been done to alleviate it. The moral to be drawn from the history of this and other famines is that though scarcity may prevail, uctual famine is preventa ble by the two great measures to which Lord Mayo and his government have so steadily addressed themselves, namely, railroads and works of irrigation rail ways to convey grain to the great cen tres of population, reservoirs to store the rain bupply and canals to direct it. The famines or periods of unusual scarcity which atllict Rajpootana, have hitherto recurred at intervals of some ten or twelve years. Long therefore before an other visitation may be looked for, the railroad from Agra to Ajmere, which is the heart of the country, will have been completed, and reservoirs, of which there are even now some magnificent examples, will have been constructed wherever the greatest need for them has been shown. A Story of Clmrles Picken. BY J. T. FIELDS. " I chanced to be travelling some years ago," he said, " in a railroad carriage between Liverpool and London. Beside myself there were two ladies and a gen tleman ocqupying the carriage. We happened to be all Btrangers to each other, but I noticed at once that a clergy man was of the party. I was occupied with a. ponderous article in the 2'imen, when the sound of my own name drew my attention to the fact that a conver sation was going forward among the three other persons in the carriage with reference to myself and my books. One of the ladies was perusing ' Bleak House' then lately published, and the clergy man had commenced a conversation with the ladies by asking what book they were reading. On being told the author's name and the title of the book, he expressed himself greatly grieved that any lady in England should be willing to take up tho writings of so vile a character as Charles Dickens. Both the ladies showed great surprise at the low estimate the clergyman tmt UDon an author whom they had been accustomed to read, to say the least, with a certain degree of pleasure. Thoy were evidently much shocked at what the man said of the immoral tendency of these books, which they seemed never before to have suspected ; but when he attacked the author's private character and told nion strous stories of his immoralities in every direction, tho volume was shut up and consigned to the dark pockets of a trav elling bag. I listened in wonder and astonishment, behind my newspaper, to stories ot luyEelt, whicn it they had been true would have consigned any man to a prison for life. After my fictitious biographer had occupied Himself for nearly an hour with the eloquent recital of my delinquencies and crimes, I very quietly joined in tho conversation. Of course I began by modestly doubting some statements which 1 had 111st heard, touching the author ot ' Bleak Houee, and other unimportant works of a simi lar character. The man stared at me. and evidently considered my appearance on the conversational stage an intrusion and an impertinence. ' You seem to speak,' I said, ' from personal knowledge ot Jiir. JJickens. Are you acquainted with him i tie rather evaded the ques tion, but, following him up closaly, I compelled him to say that he had been talking, not from his own knowledge ot the author in question ; but he said he knew lor a certainty that every state nient he had made was a true one. '. then btcamo more earnest in my in quiries for proof's, which he arrogantly declined giving. The ladies sat by in silence listening intently to what was going forward. An author they had been accustomed to read for amusumc-nt had been traduced for the first time in their hearing, and they were waiting to learn what I had to say in refutation of the clergyman's charges. I was taking up his vile stories one by one and stamp ing them as false in every particular, when the man grew furious, and asked ma if I knew Dickens personally. I re plied, 'Perfectly well; no man knows him better than I do ; and all your stories about him from beginning to end, to these ladies, are unmitigated lies.' The man became livid with rage, and ask efl for my card. ' You shall have it,' I said coolly, and taking out one, I presented it to him without bowing. We were just then nearing the station in London, so that I was spared a longer interview with my truthful companion ; but, if I were to live a hundred yearu, 1 should not forgot the abject condition into which the narrator of my crimes was in stantly plunged. His face turned white as his cravat, and his lips refused to utter words. He seemed like a wilted vegetable, and as if his legs belonged to somebody else. The ladies oecame aware of the situation at once, and bidding them 'good day,' I stepped smilingly out of the carriage. Before I could get away from the station tho man had mustered up strength sufficient to follow me, and his apologies were so nauseous and craven, that I pitied him from my soul. I lett him with this caution, ' Be fore you make charges against the char acter of any man again, about whom you know nothing, and of whose works you are utterly ignorant, study to be a seeker after Truth, and avoid Lying as you would eternal perdition.' " The Suez Cuiml nud Ihe Pacific Railroad. The trade of Asia with America is a good deal overrated, and the reason seems to be because it has latterly been in the bauds of a few houses. There are, however, single dry-goods houses in the city which annually sell merchandize to twice the amount of all the China trade of the country. Our tea trade is not so large us it is supposed to be. We use but 40,000,000 pounds a year, the value of which is about $25,000,000. The quantity of silk exported to us from China is $ 3.000,000 in value. The rest of our trade with China does not amount to much. They send us yearly gome $3,000,000 worth of matting, camphor, drugs and fire-crackers. We have no trade with India at all. It was onoo thought that the Suez Canal would interfere with the Pacific Rail road in the transportation of goods from Asia to New York, but there seems to be no ground for this. The reason why there is not likely to bo my competition is because the canal route is so much slower than the railroad. The shipping often begins in June or July, although the bulk leaves China in August aud September. So that by the time the ves sels carrying the Asiatic freights have passed the canal and reached the Straits, of Gibraltar, the storms of the Atlantio have set in, and the voyage hither is de layed. The smallness of the steamers engaged in the canal trtffio is also against it. The canal is ieen enough for large steamers, and to sustain these there must be a large passenger bust- ness. Very few passengers pass between China and the Atlantio coast of this country, and so small steamers are em ployed to carry tne tea, ana these can not make quick passages, ofteb. consum- ing thirty days from Gibraltar to New York. JY. X. evening rout. Country Life For Women. Tho following extracts are auoted from an address delivered at Stookbridge, Mass., recently, by Mrs. Henry M. Field, wife of the editor of the Ewngelkt : Everywhere now the voice of woman is heard claiming new rights, advocating new theories as to her future destinies ; and in her newly-awakened ambition she is in danger of overlooking or des pising the opportunities for good and tor happiness within her reach. To assert to-day that the limited sphere of country life can afford her these oppor tunities, would perhaps accord little with the spirit of the time. But here, women possessing talents and social advantages of no common order, have thrown such a charm on secluded life, have stamped it with such a character ot cultnre, refine ment, and dignity, that, thanks to them, Stockbridge is known all over the land as a place of social and intellectual pri vilege, as well as of natural beauty. Here then, and on this occasion, country life for women may well become the theme of the hour. To be born in the country is a great advantage. Not only it prepares the strength and health of the body, but it b.rgiiis the moial and intellectual de- velopement in the right direction .Nature is an admirable teacher, and she has lessons for all ages ; she speaks to the imagination of the child with as much power as to that of the poet and the artist. At the outset in the young life, truth and simplicity are the founda tions of the character. And as to the training of the mind, the district school, with its inexorable lev eling democratic spirit, is, I am inclined to think, the most favorable beginning of education. It has a rough strength which tells well on the character. With no smoothing of difficulties, no false pre tense, it asks from the child what his good sense tells him at once is of absolute necessity tor his success in lite. V e go very wrong in the city in this matter of elementary education. The poor little city scholar cannot, as well as his country cousin, comprehend the ne cessity of his task. Why, he asks. learn this French jargon or thrum piano for hours 'i Do we half the time know ourselves? And when we see in the child indication of great talent, we often put on such a high pressure that we destroy the germ in the bud ; while in the mind of the sturdy free child of the country it slumbers and grows in silence, and bursts forth at last in all its vigorous individuality, for in this coun try opportunities for this dovelopement are never wanting. In the village school a girl learns what is absolutely essential ; she is in spired with no morbid or exaggerated ambition. It ot dull limited faculties. she is contented with her lot : harmoni ous and healthy in every point, she prepared for her humble work in life, and will do it well. But it her ambition is quickened, it is in the right direction on no false pretense, but on the strength of her character, aud based on her love for knowledge. She does not dream of being an accomplished woman of socie ty, or of writing for magazines, she wants to learn tor the sake ot knowledgi itself. For society has not yet tempted her, has not offered her a stage for the display of a frivolous vanity. 1 have known some ot these brave New-England girls and such I have seen nowhere else who worked two or three years in a factory to earn the means for better schooling; who taught patiently tor a paltry salary so as to so- cure better opportunities of instruction, They were in the right path. They had still a great deal to learn, but very little to unlearn. " Oh !" said to. me one day a pretty girl of New York, speaking of a youth ful millionaire. " These young men give us bouquets, escort us to the Park, or to the opera ; but they love and marry country girls '." And J said, " They are right r But let us imagine woman settled in' the country ; living no longer in a land of dreams, but in her own home, with her simple household duties belore her. A Iwme in the country what a vision for some of dullness and monotony ! to others of sweet, pure, tranquil happiuesa, The woman married to the man she loves and respects, mother of children who promise to fulfill the desire of her heart, is so blessed by Providence that she ought to be happy in any sphere, Household labor, " doing her own work. is not drudgery when done for those she loves. Country life was for jour forefathers a 6tern reality, an incessant struggle for existence ; but Nature, even m her rudest aspect, is always a loving mother, and she gave them the strength of char acter, the steadiness ot purpose, which they have transmitted to their descend- ants. Our country homes are very different rroui wnat they were in the old time. In accepting the advantages of the pres ent we ought to guard jealously the modest simplicity which belonged to the past. In the country, whatever her circum stances of fortune, woman finds that which is an imperative want of her na ture a rejined Junne. In a city, if poor, she cannot escape, or shield her children from, the noisy vulgar life swarming around her ; the tenement lodging, or the second rate boarding-house only re main to her. But under a pure sky, in a balmy atmosphere, the humblest cot tage nestling at the foot of the mountain, or under the shadow of one of our ma jestic elms, can bo the fitted home, I will not say of a lady the word is asso ciated with too many vulgar pretentions but of a gentlewoman. This just equality between the cottage and the more costly residence, establishes at once easy social relations. If the circumstan ces of position and education may modi fy them, they never alter the kind feel ing which renders the name of neighbor almost synonymous with friend. When a young woman living near by, and whom you all will recognize, guided by a natural artistio instinct, formed over her door a simple arch of the golden rods and wild flowers of our forests, she gave pleasure to all who passed her dwelling, and revealed to them in the work of an hour of inspiration one of her most charming characteristics. In the same manner many little gardens, kept with care, increase every day the charm of this place, and indicate the presence of women for whom flowers are a love and a delight. Yes, the appear anco of our homes is of importance in the summing up of our social influence ; and the little details, however simple in themselves, may speak powerfully to the imagination. One evening this spring we were in one of the cosiest homes of the village, sitting around a table, a group of women and children, the lamp lghting brightly the whole room, when one of the family came from outside, and elolaimed, " What a picture this makes from the Btreet I I will not clone the shutters, it does the heart good to see it." So it is, the "light in the window" cheers many who are in the darkness. in attempting in these lew words to point out the pleasures and resources of country lite, 1 would not be supposed to ignore as unworthy ot attention the just claims of women for better chances of culture and work ; but the question is too important, and demands too serious consideration for the place and the hour. Wnat X have tried to prove is, that troni the country woman starts with real ad vantages ; that thero her life, beautiful in its security and refinement, does not dwarf her intellect or the developement of her talents, for it is from rural re treats that come the best works of our feminine literature. The Society of the Cincinnati in France. Americans observe many pleasant changes in J) ranee since the essabliBh mcnt of the Republic. Among them is the fact that the descendants of the French officers who assisted us during the war of independence appear on pub lic occasions displaying the American decoration ot " Ihe bociety ot the tin cinnati," and wear its badge constantly, Among them is the Marquis de Lestey- rie, grandson ot the JVlarnuis de Liatay- ette, who received the medal originally from George Washington, the first and only President ot the Society during bis lifetime. The former recently stated to Dr. Evans, the eminent American physi cian of Paris, that although he had been decorated by Napoleon with the Grand Cross of the Legion of Honor, he was prouder ot the American decoration re ceived by his illustrious grandfather from the hands of Washington, aud handed down to him, than any other. Marquis do Lavalette has always worn his badge even during the rule of Louis Napoleon. The decoration or medal of the society is a solid, highly wrought gold eagle, about the usual size ot such decorations. Upon the breast of the eagle is a delicately raised representation ot Umcinnatus at the plow. It is sus pended from a rich blue ribbon with white margin. This decoration is only worn on public occasions on the left breast. Accompanying each decoration is a neat badge made of the same kind of ribbou described above. 1 1 forms a sort of rosette button, and is worn on all occasions, when it so pleases its posses sor, in tne uppermost button-bole ot the coat on tne lett side. Several American residents in Paris, members of the Society, wear the badge. Among them is Dr. Evans, referred to above, and Mr. George S. Patridge, who received tne decoration trom Ins grand father, Col. William Few of Rhode Island, At the time of the coup d'etat of Louis Napoleon, the original French members of the society were makmg an angements to revive it in France, but tho success of Napoleon's dynasty put a stop to their efforts. So distasteful to petty tyrants was this American decoration, that Gus tavus III., King of Sweden, forbade of ficers la the French army who had been in America, and were his subjects, from displaying the deooratio or wearing the baugo, on the ground that the So ciety ot the Cincinnati had a ReDubli can tendency not suited to his govern ment. Hon. Hamilton Fish, Secretary of State, is now President of the Society. Among its honorary members mav be mentioned Benjamin Franklin, Robert Morris, Chancellor Livingston, Gouvcr neur Morris, Rufus King, Stephen Van Jtennseiaer, donn u. Warren, W. ix. Prescott, and Daniel Webster. The So ciety was formed after the peace of 1783. It was originally composed of oftioers of the American srmy and continued in their kinsmen and representatives Walt Whitman. A Washington correspondent of the Philadelphia Preet thus describes Walt hitman I take it for granted, reader, that you have been to Washington. If so, you have certainly seen upon the Avenue a medium-sized individual, whose pants are baggy, whose ooat is much too big for mm, wnose hair is white and long, whose beard, of the same color, tlow far be neath his chin ; whose shirt is open, dis playing to the admiring multitude a naked breast, and whose enormous slouch hat is not the least remarkable part of the attire of this remarkable man. His bat he carries in his hand as frequently as he wears it upon his head. In answer to your inquiries you will be told, if your companion knows whereof he speaks, that it is Walt Whitman, the poet, the author of " Leaves of Grass," "Drum Taps," etc., and government clerk in the Attornev-General's ofnoa. The time Walt does not give to duty (for he is a faithful, hard-working officer) he passes upon the street and iu other public places. He delights in being seen. 1 have seen him on a warm day promenade the Avenue iu his shiit sleeves ; have passed him near the Dost office, seated upon the curbstone, reading his mail ; have looked at him drinking soda-water with the maiestio air of h sovereign. - He has a high opinion of his powers, but Knows that he is not aimre u .1 jl.I-il. . . . now uvuw wee to deliver au ongi- uttipucm t uie pemog or cue American oaniu a. a.urVu ue u uiougot nnioh this saving at ugt less than 50,000AH)0 a of. lie is not now at any literary work year, and it iusisU that everything de that 1 Can hear of, although he erbea to manria a general adnnti MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS. Minnesota is at work on ten railroads. Missouri has an enormous grape crop this season. One of the best doctors at Columbus, Ga., could not read when twenty-three years old. Pianos are mounted now on glass cas tors, which is said to improve the tone very much. Here is a new sort of casualty. A boy has just been killed in Boston by the explosion of a beer barrel. Liquor bar rels usually kill in a different way from this, but the expeditious method is per haps to be preferred to the slower pro cess. Several girls are now employed in Milwaukee as carriers of newspapers to city subscribers. They are prompt, quick, and so for have been found relia ble. A French sewing machine is now on exhibition in London which is driven by clock-work arrangement, to be wound up in the UBual way. The speed is in geniously regulated by a set of vanes, which may be adjusted to otter a greater or less resistance to the air. The inven tion saves both time and trouble, but the price is so high as to prevent its coming into ordinary use. If we are to believe the medical ex perts and official returns, upward of 3,000 infants are yearly murdered in England. In London itself as many as 481 infants were found in the streets in less than a year and a half, and numbers disappear without any trace. The re sults of a government inquiry, as just made known, are a scandal to the coun try and the age. Beverly, in Massachusetts, is known as " Bean Town." No virtuous citizen of that place thinks of passing Sunday morning without baked pork and beans tor breakfast. Formerly they went to the different bakeries Saturday nights, each man with his bean-pot. Each pot was numbered with a check as received, and the number given to the owner.and crowds would gather around the bakery door Sunday morning, each man calling his number and receiving his pot. But now they have a pottery in the town, and each householder has had his bean- pot made to order, with his name or ini tials baked into the sides, and the plan works beautifully. The bakers charge six cents for baking beans, and it is no mean source of revenue The Wabash (Indiana) country has always been celebrated for the persist ency and quality of its fever and ague. A local physician thus describes the genuine Wabash article : " It comes creeping up a fellow's back like a ton of wildcats; goes crawling through his joints like iron spikes, and is followed by a iever which prohibits the patient from thinking of anything but Greenland's Icy Mountains. It isn't the ' every other day ' kind, but gets up with a man at daylight, and sleeps in the small of his back all night. -His teeth feel about six inches long, his joints wobble like a loose wagon wheel, and the shakes are so steady that one can't hold a conver sation except by putting in dashes." The Toronto Leader says that an asso ciation of French gentlemen has Altered into arrangements for the purchase of fifty thousand acres of land, in one of the counties on the north shore of the St. Lawrence, between Quebeo and Three Rivers, for the purpose of establishing a colony of Alsatians. Many of the in- habitants of Alsace view with abhor- rence the idea of living under German rule, and it is thought a sufficient num ber to form a large colony could easily be persuaded to emigrate from their na tive land to Canada. They would form a valuable addition to the population of the .Province, tor the Alsatians are an industrious and peaceful people, differ ent altogether from the turbulent classes who keep Paris and some other parts of France in almost constant turmoil. The difference between the diet of the ancients and that of us moderns is very striking. The ancient Greeks and Ro mans used no alcoholio liquor, it being unknown to them ; nor cottee, nor tea, nor chocolate, nor sugar, nor even but ter, tor Galen tells us that he had never seen butter but once in his life. They were ignorant of the greater number of our tropical spices, as clove, nutmeg, mace, ginger, Jamaica jpepper, curry, pi mento, xney used neither buckwheat, nor French beans, nor maize, nor toma toes, nor spinach, nor sage, tapioca, arrow-root, nor pumpkin, squash, potato, or its varieties : not even the common, but a sort of marsh-grown bean not many of our fruits, as the orange, tama rind. On the contrary they ate sab stances which we now neglect the mal low, the herb, ox-tongue, the sweet acorn, the lupin. They liked the flesh of wild asses, dogs, the dormouse, the fox, and the bear. Chicago claims to be able to compete ia the sale of foreign goods with New York. The Tribune argues that foreign goods can be delivered at Chicago twenty per ceut. less than they can be Eurchased from New York jobbers, cr )ss than tbey will cost atter going through our Custom House. There has just been an importation of dry goods iroin Liverpool to Chicago, by steam all me way, in twenty-two days, and even this time can be shortened. The Tribune thinks " there is no reason why St. Louis should not import through Chicago all the foreign goods it now gets from New York, and upon which it pays such ex cessive tolls the freights from Montreal to Chicago, and thence to St. Louis by rail, being as cheap, if not cheaper, than from New York to that city by rail." A very large proportion of the imports at this port find a market in the West, Northwest, and Southwest, and all of these goods may be imported directly through Chicago at a large saving of ume ana money, iub irxuune estimates Lawrence route by. the merchant of Chicago ana the West for thair foreitm i