i 1 1 Willi 1 1 t ?v .1.1 ;t..-j. - j, 0 :. r :-.'! r--, jfrjrf- COUNTY THE RSPVRLICAN PARTY, Two Dollars l'En Annum. HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor aud Publisher, I , 1UDGWAY, PA., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1871. NO. 36. VOL. I. I NETTING. IIT ISAAC T. BATON. All I could find I poured at her feet Of brown nuts fulling before the frost ; A harvest ripened with summer's heat, High on the limbs that twined find cross'd Too strong for summer winds to toss. Upon the mossy bank she sat, Which carpeted an old oak's base ; The curls escaping from nor hat Framed in with gold as fair a fuce As over did a maiden grace. She sitting there, I found for her The butternut with its mellow rind, The chestnut with its shaggy burr, And nuts of every shape and kind I In the autumn woods could llnd. The old tree moaned because so few The leivesupon its branches bare, Envious to let the sunbeams through To nestle in her wavy hair And gather brighter color there. " As if the poor Imprisoned fawn Close held within the forest's shade, With loving eyes was looking on The nymph who to his feet had strayed, And longed to clasp the dryad maid. And I, while adding to her store, (My love did deem it all the less,) bid long to offer something more A gilt of name or wealth's largess ; A' crown, it crown's gave happiness. Ah, did she know, with maiden's art, Which reads our longing looks so plain, That I had given her my heart, And could not get it back again, Nor so desired, for that wore pain ? But with my lips close to her cheek This did I tell her as I could : With stammering tongue I dared to speak, While silent all the forest stood As though its mute heart wished mc good. from attempting to abate the price, he added to the money he gave ner a small flask of lavender-water or cake of scented soap. He wanted to know how Father Hugh was, and all about Barquette, the cow, whose excellent milk maintained the rosy hue of the milker's cheeks, and about the sheep providing the wool with which to knit those pretty stockings eo snugly fitting those little feet M. Fir- nun, in his tour through, l" ranee, naa De- come very impertinent ; nig presump tion might have offended the young rustic had not her interests obliged her to dissimulate, and to be somewhat tol erant. Ho asked her to bring him eggs who sluill tfw the ter to the one whitest hands." , . . Father Hugh uttered theso last words with marked emphasis. , . . Miooutet was almost reauy to aie witn Yet tn the ecstacv of the blissful sea son that comes but onoe, such thoughts can have but brief duration there is but little time to spare out of the hap. piness. out of the marvel, or mis new erief. Working in the fields had made being starting on its course like a new his hands drier than so much pumice- stone. The baker and barber, on the contrary, always working in butter or soap, had hands as soft as the satin folds of a duchess s dress. The poor rustio felt that he was set asido, regarding the forthcoming strug gle as calculated oniy ior city gauanss. The latter, animated by equally well- founded hopes, spent the week in getting star. Death fled from the place a mo ment Bince the great breath of life blew in there ; ana their neans nave just oecn set beating in time and tune with all humanity. Their heart have caught the key-note of the lives neiore ana the lives that are to come; for certainly the childless must be aware that they drop out of the world like dead leaves, that they send liK'L IV UHllti 111111 fLK3 I AUUlUJ'-i uv-uv -t ...... I 11 . the next day, and butter every time she their hands in proper condition, using no strengtn or viwiiw uu "" emptied her churn ; and, notwithstand- unguents of the most mollifying charac- they have no bond with it, no part in ing his impertinence a fault in young ter, and they became as fragrant and as it, no right or room in the great ana i..; o. a.n,in nhixh f.imulnfeA their perfect race which one day shall blos- pride to the highest degree. Micoutet had not even the courage to wash his hands in the brook, so inferior did he regard himself to these town gentry. His grandfather Simon, per fectly familiar with the world ever since li liad etnmnprl through it on his old j u:. :ii -1 iii,t tj. ..,tol.op and nhnvu oovnrtlv regard- that child lite: and they fancy that, nadotte; and he became so worn out by ing him through his white eyelashes, carrying their noblest hopes and their this way of living, that he resolved to comprenenaea u euiuinrouicu u . " " . .6," get back both his sleep and usugal tran- came to his assistance. virtue and heroism of its own, it will Micoutet, my boy, said ne, nanuing him a little gray bag covered with dust, " put that in your pocket and keep your appointment at Father Hugh's. When tho time comes to show your hands, plunge them into this bag, and fill them men which young girls often complain of to satisfy their consciences uer nadotte found the hair-dresser quite as agreeable as he was attentive. Micoutet, the ploughman, was daily in the field, no matter what might be the state of the weather, and at the earliest hour, because he could not sleep som out of this ; they fall by the way, and are no more. But that first baby is a plodgo and an assurance of perpetuity to its parents ; it links them, little creature that it is, with the destinies of the planet as noth ing else can do ; they will live again in quillity. He betook himself to the father of her who had robbed him of his renose. and, cap in hand, with down cast eves and a stammering voice, spoke to him for a longtime about Bernadotte, nraisinc her vigorous arms, made for THE WHITEST HANDS; OR, WHO Mil ALL, WIN TUE r ltl7.fi f This is not the story of a king, but of a humble peasant girl ; the scene is not laid in a camp, but in a village, at a timo when Bonaparte's wars had not vet given to the simple name of Ber nadotte (little Bernard) the historic glow which etill surrounds it. A man and his wife had an only daughter, and they were so proud of her that she had scarcely come into the world when they began to think of her marriage. The man, laboring with the greatest perseverance, sought to accum ulate for her one of those attractive doweries which fascinate rich young bachelors ; the wife seconded his efforts so courageously, grabbing in tne ground all dav and scheming all night, con stantly preparing the bride's outfit, that she tell sick ana aiea, not Deing wiiiins vo call in the doctor, that she might save the cost of the remedies. Father Hugh, left alone with his daughter, was only the more anxious to have a son-in-law. some sturdy laborer possessing a competence, one who would insure both the prosperity of his house and the happiness of his beloved Ber- nauotte, work, and the good health apparent in every form and feature, and finally de manded her haud. Father Hugh did not say yes, and still less no. He knew full well the value of those little words of few letters ; like his coins, he would not let them go without certain guarantees of their be' ing properly placed. He put off the young man to the following Sunday, and. in the meantime, communicated the proposal to his dauehter. L . . . . " Micoutet is a very nice young man, said Bernadotte. " I stop and talk with him every morning on passing his farm He has fine oxen, good fields, and an ex cellent vineyard. Casterez, the baker, however, appears also to good advantage ; would it not be well " ' Casterez, the baker ! replied Father Hugh, in a reflective mood. " By Our Lady, thero is always bread on a baker's counter I " And tarts on the dinner table, add' ed Bernadotte. I will find out, my child, what tho baker means before deciding. "His meaning, father, is plain enough. He buys every morning all that I take to town, and without higgling about the price, please you. If I were to to ask him double, he would not niaice tue slightest objection. " Without higgling about tne price i with the uncuent it contains." . 0 . . . 1 " liut, granttiatuer, my bkiu is as uik and coarse as tne oarit 01 an 01a Tree. How can vou V "Follow my advice, my boy. The washball I gave to you is so efficacious, that the most obdurate spots will not re sist its action. Its use is ot very ancient date, and time has not diminished its virtue." Micoutet took the soap-bag, and re sorted to Bernadotte's house. The baker and the barber were not far behind him. CaBterez first showed his fingers ; they ... .1 . 1 p 1 were wniter man tne Diossom 01 tue dosrrose. The hair-dresser then display ed his, and they looked as fresh as a lily but lust in bloom, it now came Micou tet s turn. H irmin ana uasierez oegan to laugh as he drew his huge hands from his pockets and held them forth, when Father Hugh uttered a cry of admira tion, for they were filled with bngnt anu beautiful crowns. " Ah I my boy, that is the real dur- ablo whiteness which I love. Bernadotte is yours, for you have courted her with out leaving your field, and you know the whiteness most appreciated in the hand of a son-in-law. The two abashed and mute candidates returned to their shops with their oars hanging lower than a nound after losing a hare, iiernadotte ana micoutet gooa- glorify their passive and undeveloped traits into splendid deeds, vital charities traits that have slumbered unstirred in them as the seeds of oak and maple slumber beneath the shadow and density of dark primeval pine forests. Well, little perambulators, as we look at you trundling on in the sunshine, we can not help thinking something of the same thoughts that your owners think concerning your laughing and cooing inmates. Your little wheels are wheels of fortune and wheels of time ; the world waits upon you. And if those who guide you understand as much, and guide you well, calling health and wisdom to their side, it will not wait in llaiyier t Bazar. comes from the oven door a suspicious smell of smoke his biscuit are burning. All sorts of things in pots are boiling over. She rushes to his assistance. Both burn their fingors. lie has mislaid half the stove-covers, and cannot find them. One is discovered a fortnight afterwards upstairs, under the bed. How did it get there ? He says he didn't know he was carrying it up at the time. Absent minded. He was looking for a clean towel. His wife, in despair, goes to her room and cries, and thinks of her happy girl hood days. The Great raymcnt. repeated Father Hugh, who did not do naturedly invited them to their wedding, hnuinnsH in that wav. " That vounar fel low is very much Bmitten I We will look into the matter, Bernadotte ; and if his granary and bis purse are as well stocked with flour and cash as his heart seems to be with love, we will try to make some arrancements." When she not to be eichteon years of . ?tner "Sn r.?uo." " BB0 -o there was no lack of suitors. Father the baker, who, dolignted witu tins pro- A 4 nQ 41, a ranufa.- CeUUUlE, SUOWUU miUUBll UUUIUV rnuiu- ureu. " Which of the two?" exclaimed Fath- ago Hueh tion of a man in easy circumstances; one who had cleverly turned his pennies to account by making short loans at a rate of interest not sanctioned by the code ; but all young men wishing to marrv took very eood care not to re Tiroach him with any infraction of tho atatuto ; the sin would remain with the father-in-law, and the profits with the grandchildren: so they rubbed thoir hands and repeated the universal pro verb. " 'Tis an ill wind that blows no body good I" Bernadotte, worthy of her size in economy and in activity, trudged to town every forenoon to sell her chickens, eggs, and fruit. She frequently en countered young Micoutet, the plough man, who would drive up his oxen to the end of tho furrow by the roadside, and keep them standing a long time to bid her good morning, and to chat with hr about the rain, and the fine weather, and the chickens, and the cows, and the growing corn, and the beans that wore about drviner. Bernadotte, 110 matter and they had wit enough to go, as townsmen hardly ever neglect to enjoy what is good in the dwelling of a dis dained peasant. The happy couple, happy as everybody is with as much money as eood tomper, labored through out their lives to swell tho contents of the soap-beg, tho gift of their venorable grandfather. 'flic First Baby. er Hugh to himself. " The thing works well. We will set them to competing ; goods in demand increase in value. He returned home, and communica ting the baker's sentiments to his daugh ter, promised her to decide quickly which of the two it would be the best to marry. " The baker is a very nice young man," said Bernadotte, the same as she had said of the ploughman Micoutet, " but there is another, the hairdresser Firmin. He buys something of me every day, and keeps me an hour talking about hu tour through France, the yarn my stockings are muae 01, ana my gooa mucu cow. He assures me that he has never seen any one more engaging than she whom he has the pleasuro of looking at when he looks at me. "The compliments of a barber I in terposed Father Hugh. " Everybody knows what they are worth I Ho mat ter the work progresses ; competition what might be her haste to get to mar- among three makes the profit all the ket, always had a few moments to spare for her talkative little friend, and even after leaving him to go back repeatedly in answer, as far as he could make her hear them, the last kind words which he u.mt nftar her over the hedges. Arrived at the market place, the first customer whom Bernadotte usually found there was the young baker, Gas t(ppK. who. nnde.r the pretext of 6 amiuing her eggs and fruit, prolonged the conversation a full hour, praising the bright feathers of the chickens, their remarkable plumpness, and bestowing thousand compliments on tne cievur greater I We will see the hairdresser, my dear, and find out what to expect from his admiration." Hugh again returned to town, where he had an interview with M. firmin; and, as ho knew that the larger the com- I11 these pleasant days, when peram bulators fill all the pleasant places, pushed by their neat attendants, and nuea witn a priceless parcel mut, um 01 all its foam ot laces and emoroiaeries, winks and wonders at the world around it, we are constantly led to remark upon the transcendent qualities, not of the sixth or seventh half as much as of the first baby. The lovely little beings that follow may tumble up in such clothes as are alruady at hand, with only here a rulile and there a scollop of their own good enough for vagrants but the first heir is to be, and is, a mass of delight- fu'ly dainty newness, flannel is not warm enough for it, swan's down is not soft enough, and, if the hoar frost of the hedges, bediamoned with the dew of the morning, were available, lace would not bo good enough for it. What a rapture that first baby is in the house where it comes. What impor tance belongs to all related, with their new dignities and weighty titles, while the voung mother. iuBt escaped from the awful gates, Bees the little bundle on her pillow, composeajy sleeping or starting, as if it had an equal right there with any An Editor's Misfortunes. A special from Chicago to the Cincin nati Commercial says : " One of the first men 1 met on landing from tue train. early yesterday morning, was one of the Mcuuiiagn tirotners 01 tne vinicago ue- jmblican. He had both pockets of his overcoat stuffed full or currency, tne pro ceeds from the sale of what he called his " morning handbill." Ho said he didn't know where he could get his breakfast, 1 witn his pockets full ot money. " Mack " lost $25,000 invested in the Reiiullican and $15,000 cash in the Traders' Bank. The office was insured for $45,000, but how much of any of these sums will be recovered remains to be seen. The contents of their safe ledgers, subscription list, and insurance policies wero charred to indistinguish able cinders. Mr. Henry Reed had a tin box iii the safe, containing some silver coin, all of which was melted and run together. Mr. Reed has determined to leave Chicago permanently. " Mack " is undecided as to his future course, as his partners seem to be discouraged on the subject ot future investment, lie eays he worked up the RepuUicun. to a paying point, the edition that was burnt con- . . .. . . . taming nearly a thousand dollars worth of city advertising. The city owes the Republican six thousand dollars, and the owners have recently sold their job room for $22,500. The man who bought it lost all in the tire, and, like his sureties, can t pay a cent ; and the notes he gave are burnt up anyhow. The Traders' Bank, in which " Mack " had his fifteen thousand dollars cash, loaned its capital to Chicago merchants, and they are bank rupted. This is a sample of the accum illative losses that nave overtaken bo many thousands of the industrious and enterprising business men 01 Uhicago, literally compelling them to return to the point where a living is made by one's wits. Tho Man Who Cooks. Every old Californian, having in '49 baked his own bread and boiled his beans, writes Prentice Mulford, deems himself a good family cook. He main tains even a greater conceit than this He deems himself a cook superior to any woman in the world, when he chooses to concentrate his mind on culinary af fairs. On such a man, when, duly married. there breaks out once or twice a year a culinary mania. He must cook ; ho will cook, lie watches tne opportunity ed her af ter- The largest sum of money ever con tracted for in one bargain is the indem. nity to be paid by France to Oermany in consequence of the recent war. It is so large that its payment disturbs the money markets of the whole world ; and no intelligent forecast of the financial future, even in New York,' cannot be formed without understanding tho progress already made in it, and that soon to be made. Reducing the payments in every case to American money, the account, ac cording to the last advices by telegraph, stands thus : .Franco has paid, as a con tribution for the city of Paris, $40,000,- 000; for the maintenance of German troops in France, from March to October 1871, f uo.ouo.ouu ; ana ior a nrst pay ment upon the national indemnity, 235.000.000, besides $05,000,000 allowed as the purchase money for the railroads Alsaco and Liorraine; in au f wo,- 000,000. Of this, perhaps $5,000,000 must be deducted, as spent in France by the German troops for supplies, leaving $330,000,000 for the amount of specie ac tually moving to Germany, and causing the present disturbance. Thero are due to Germany in the spring of 1872, $100,000,000, to be paid in six instalments of $16,000,000 'each, beginning with January 15 ; the re mainder of $1,000,000 to be paid April besides more than $30,000,000 for in terest, at five per cent, per annum, upon tho remaining $U00,0UU,UUU. The total amount of money to be transferred from country to the other for the year ending April 1, 1872, is, therefore, more than $4U0,00U,UUU. England u the only medium through which the payment can be niado, iu the present disorgan ized state of tho French currency, and is indeed, the only market in which French credit can obtain cash on a large scale. Hence the alarm of British financiers at the prospect of a heavy drain of coin and bullion from their vaults. It remains to be seen how London is to escape a " Black Friday " of her own, which now threatens to come to her be fore February next. According to all precedent, thero will bo a severe strin gency iu the money market there, a panic in securities, a long list of mercan tile 1 allures, a minimum uanic rate 01 ten per cent. all as the consequences of a drain of specie from the Bunk of Eng land ; and then, alter endless miscniet is done, the government will step in, sus- Eend Peel's banking act, enabling tho ank to expand its loans and circulation without so much coin in its vaults ; and publio confidence will gradually return. X110 DHUK lost ?zo,uuu,uuu iu cum uunug the month ending October 7, and $29, 000,000 in its total reserve; and this seems to have been but the beginning of the drain, since the German government is very slow to restore the funds to gen eral circulation, and there is every pros pect that, by February 1, it will have $300,000,000 locked up irom use as care fully as is the coin reserve in the United States Treasury. But publio attention has been called to the subject in England, and in full view of the dangers yet in prospect, tbo alarm which the first great movement of coin caused has subsided. If the confi- one else : and she feels a surprise as great as if she had never expected it, together when his wife has prolongei panv of buyers the more activo the bid- with, perhaps, something like an awe of noon visit a little longer than usual. He ding, he invited each of the competitors herself on account of the great mysteries invades the kitchen. He kindles a firo . i it., .n : tj..., I . . , i i . i . i s i.j h ii i it. i ii ii. m to come vu uib uuukj iuo luuumug uuu- tnrougn wmcn sue was passeu. auu i iu iuo stove. na unugs n vuu iryiug either parent looms in the other eyes into a wonderful and mighty guardian angel, to be venerated, for the time being, beyond words. Truly what a pathos, as well as a rap ture of hopes and anticipations, hovers around those folds of flannel the pity of dav after mass " Humph 1" he muttered to himself, as he canvassed the situation, " the plough man courts my daughter, but without neglecting his work or spending a farth ing : the baker is doing the same thing, loitering about the market-place, and a hrkimolrnano wlirt IrTlnnr how tn 0 et them into such a nice condition. Passing spending his money to win the sales- it ieit the half of those anticipations from words to acts, he would bargain for woman ; the barber overwhelms Berna- should never be fulfilled. And what thn Mitira lot. unneiir Tftrfotlv satisfied dotte with fulsome compliments and moment the minor matters take upon with th nrin. n.l oattv the basket off trifling presents. There is no hurry ; themselves ! What contentions arise re- l 1 i i . 1 Al I 1L nan Va r , Tho Dutch Churches in Now York. . The Christian Intelligeruer, alluding to the approaching centennial of the llo formed Dutch Churoh says : Down to the year 1800, the Dutch language was used in nearly all the Re formed uutcn puipits in oxew lorn. The minutes of our ecclesiastical bodies were in a foreign tongue, and our Con stitution was not printed in English until 1794. With the general, introduc tion of the English tongue, there came progress, enterprise, and improvement. Butgers College at length, in 1825, was placed in a fair working condition. Twenty-five years of educational train ing and aggressive work of many kinds brought the Church down to the year 1850. Then began those elemental throes of conscious power, feeling after de velopment. The development followed on the heels of much friendly agitation, and what has been gained within the last twenty years is an inspiration and encouragement to larger efforts than have hitherto been attempted. Within this latter period, our collegiate and theological institutions have been nobly endowed. Our Church boards, twenty years ago, were but two in number, viz.: the Board of Education, and of Domcstio Missions the Foreign Board being then only a nominal affair. But now the Reformed Church has the complete apparatus for large and effective work, and its several boards find their fiolds and their oppor tunities widening nud increasiug every year. Brazilian Turtles. The size of these creatures may be imagined from the fact that the flippers and feet of one, in crawling over tho sand, leave the tracks of two irregular grooves, three r four feet apart, as though a great wagon with cog wheels had been driven over the ground. It is an easy matter to find a turtle's nest by this track. She comes out of the sea and travels far up on the beach to lay her eggs in the sand, digging a hole a foot and a half or two feet doep for the nest. Professor Hartt, who was in Brazil with Professor Agassiz, says that he Baw a turtle deposit one hundred and forty-three eggs in one of these nest. Tho eggs are ull laid at one sit ting, then covered up cloBely with the sand and left to hatch. The eggs are rather larger than hen's eggs, round and covered with a tough white skin. The Brazilians eat the eggs, and also tho flesh of the turtle. Tho creature is cap tured in a curious way. Two persons go behind it, and taking hold of the shell, turn the animal on its back, in which position it is at the mercy of its captors, as it is impossible for it to turn over on its feet again. The hunters are obligod to creep up behind it cautiously, for as soon as it is alarmed, it thrusts its fore paddles into the sand and throws it behind, so that if the pursuers do not quickly close their eyes they are likely to be blinded. TUB OLD BAIIN. No hay upon tho widespread mows ' No horses In the stalls, - . i ? ' : ;e No broad-horned oxen, sheep or cows , , , . , Within Us time-worn walls. The wind howls through its shattered doors, Nw swinging to and fro ; . t : And o'er its ouce frequented floors No footsteps come and go. '- I - : But once, alas 1 each vacant bay, - , ; i And every space around, . . , Was teeming with sweet-scented hoy, The harvest of tho ground. And well-fed cattle in a row, , , At mangers ranged along, Each lastoned by an oaken bow, - Stood at the staucmous strong. - , But where so long old Dobbin stood, ills master's pride and enrc. And from his hand received his food, All now Is vacant there. Then these broad fields, from hill to plain, Waved in the summer air, . ; With choicest crops of grass or grain, Now lell so bleak and bare. How sweet tho muelc of tho flail, Kcsounding far aud clear, As borne upon the passing gale It reached the distant car. ' ' The blackbird hailed the dewy mom From out his rushy perch ; The sparrow sang upon the thorn, Tho cat-bird on the birch. The robin from tho highest tree Sent forth his whistle clear, ' ' ' Ills soul partaking of the glco That wakes the vernal year. And childhood's merry shout was heard Tho farm-yard choir among, Which, mingling with the note of bird. Enriched the tide of song. The master on his daily round With conscious pride would go, His faithful dog, close by him found, Attending to and fro. Old honest " Trip " long since has gone, Aud moulders 'neaththo wall; No more he takes tho welcome bone, Or hears his master's call Tho kindly master, too, has died, The matron in her grace, And dead, or scattered far and wide, The mmnaut of their race. MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS. Comfort for Travellers. The Boston 2'raiucript says, for the benefit of railroad travellers, that the desideratum so long sought for by in ventors, namely, a practical spark and dust arrester, after repeated experi ments aud failures, has at last been brought to what may be termod perfec tion, by a gentleman of Massachusetts. The invention is simply a curved smoke stack, in nearly the shape of a " horn of plenty," attached as ordinary smoke Btacks are, tho mouth running backward toward the centre of the locomotive. Within, near the enlargement at the upper cur ve, is placed a wire screen at an anglo of about forty-five degrees with the direction of the smoke, and the usual screen is placed over the immedi ate outlet. Just below the first screen a perfor- horizontally A learned writer assorts that, after all, energy quite os often drives off disease as it brings it on. In a libel suit cguinst a newspaper at Little Hock, Ark., for $30,000, the plain tiff obtained $1 in damages. Negotiations are pending betweun Germany and the United States for the mutual recognition of trade inarkB. A Tennessee girl, in ordor to make a sure thing of it, allowed two young raen to take out a license to marry her. She probably kept her matrimonial books on tho double-entry system. It is said that a number of Californ ians, men of lueans and position, as well as many men of other States, will peti tion Congress at its next session to place hfavy restrictions on emigration, so as tj stop the great influx of Chinese, if not to repeal our treaty with that coun try altogether. A snake, said to have been at least five feet long, and as thick as a man's wrist, was killed in the ladies' car of the traiu going from Nashville to Chatta nooga, near that place last week. Tho reptile was discovered crawling along the aisle, and croated a terrible sensa tion before he was despatched. Some twenty months since a guntle man in Lawrence, Kansas, put up a corn-crib on the corner of Rhode Island aud Hancock streets, and filled it with six thouBaud buBhols of corn at an aver age price of fifty-one cents per bushel. A Lawrence firm have recently bought ated steam-pipe is run through tho smoke-stack, connected dence and hope now expressed have any with tho boiler by a valve-pipe under tho entire lot at thirty cents per bushel. iiot!Anait'nn if Tin 11 uf Via that l 4! 11 DTI I .1. nAnt.nl rf Vi ii ii.i ri n a A ri Trill As. I . . . . . . jusuav..., . - " V? , A machine has teen invented by a ciers oi iionaon nave in view soma way, ttie reiuse matter irom tne xurnace passes - h which ia described na the fine spray ejected from the perfor ations, thus deadening the particles and increasing their weight. Striking at the inclined angle named above against the first screen, they are prevented from passing through, and fall to the under curve of the stack, whence, through the natural motion of the engine, they are directed by a tube to beneath the boiler, and thrown upon the track in a moist and consequently harmless condition. which is not clearly understood by oth ers, of keeping their own money at home without producing a panic. N. Y. Keen- tng I out. o his shop, where the fair merchant al ways found some refreshments ana a couple of nice tarts garnished with sweetmeats. Bernadotte, on returning home from market, lightened of her load, passed oe fore the shop of the hairdresser Firmin, a young dandy as frizzled and smoothly shavedjas the little St John in the pro cession of the Fete Diea. M. Firmin had just completed his tour through France, as stated on a handsome sign in big letters, adorned with a pair of things can be cleared up and the charac- garding those chameleon eyes ! what re ters of these gallants tested, to make semblances are discovered to family por- thom solve one of my riaaies. traits, ugly yesterday as unknown snaa When Sunday came liernauotte niaue nws. but glorious to-day as Daoy sances herself look as beautiful as the virgin tors ! by what divine instinct does it queen of a May-day lesttval. biie put har host Scotch muslin cap, calico nfitticoat. red cotton handkerchief and morocco shoes, and awaited the appear- RTion of hr suitors, who, on presenting themselves, the father welcomed in theso terms " You three wish to provido a husband suck its thumb ! and what miracle that it should not happen to be misshapen I To think of the day when it will go alone ; to con lecture the voice in which it shall repeat "The Stag at Eve;" to imagine the hours when it may undergo these same experiences iu its own turn ; to dream concerning the fate before it ; niutm.ii tv. :.t a,-.tir.,,aW in this ever uq- the thing is too intoxicating, not to need In the niidf anv L.;.. wtrV Krv scholar who goes the shading of tho reflection of stiller chaos, smoke, grease, soot, rags, and w I . - . i : A. I ... ..... ,..,. ...l..m . Ii n inntlipr I V l Tl IT onn I tl nn v Iha .in tn scissors and a razor, after the fashion of fQ, mv daughter, and you all cherish the to know that this atom now of a day's tfc uenuuiu Buiau m uuuuid I -a me OulOCt. A custom vviigvm uci w i cAjiuiicm-u nuw - -j device, the selection of one; she . . in. H ,, ... I . . i. i . av. :.. Anni " Heigh I uernaaotte, en 1 1 -1 - l. .. V. .... haM w nil i snuwi ukuwi Jv- sg w vwuuu tuni. - -o - o - .-. M ma fcrwUv r" tn onlWa -naa-Bi five or six year in as- moments, wnen tue iuoiu, ... ... m n i I . . i l. .. i iiernadotte noaaea amrmawveiy. one i certaining whetner ne win wew m Varl hflnn careful to conceal a dozen from I form of soldier, the robes of a lawyer, the wholesale buyer, Casterei, purposely 1 0r that of a doctor. A young girl may be excused if she asks eigui aays tu u- cide what kind of a noose she will put Come back here next pans he can find into use. He sets their sooty bottoms on the clean pino table. He contemplates making tea.. He re flects as to the quantity he used in the mines for a " making." He cannot re collect exactly. lie crams saveral fist fuls into the tea-pot. He will have enough anyway. No one who drinks thereof sloops that night. Nervous. He essays to make biscuit. lie won ders how much saleratui they used in the mines to got a good rise on. He uses enough. He kneads hit dough.and wandering vacantly about the house, leaves traces of flour at every step. It is in the parlor, on the door knobs, on the bannisters. He can cook. He says he can cook better than any woman iu the world if he " was only a-mind to give his mind to it." This conceit is never to be taken out of him. It it peculiar to all old Californians : for he made bread in the mines. It was good bread, too good to kilL They say that two M pard- ners " who " cabined " with him, died of Treed by Bears. Tho Detroit Free Press, of the 4th inst., gives the following account of how the hunter became the hunted : A man named Chas. Tyrell was hunt ing on the St Clair river when two bears appeared. Somewhat excited, ho lev elled his rifle and fired, aud the next moment both the bears were coming down upon him at full speed. The hun ter saw that they meant business, each uttering fierce growls, and he dropped his gun, caught hold of the limb of a small oak tree, and swung his legs up iust in time to save his boots. As he ex- . 11 pectod, one 01 tnem was not ioDg in at tempting to secure a closer acquaint ance. The animal got up about seven feet, and then the limbs refused to let him by. ' He pawed, bit, and growled at a great rate, and, in matting a Dig enon to push away the limbs, fell to the ground. Tyrell commenced shouting, which excited the bears, and one of them was quickly up to the limbs agaiu, when the hunter struck a match and dropped it down on bruin's head, frightening him so that he went down the tree at a heavy bread indigestion. He was given The time is too bright, the success of twenty-four hours to leave that camp. miust oi ail tuu culinary riot, a hava aoma left for M. Firmin. Fru- denoe is the mother of certainty, Mioou tet was undoubtedly very attentive, C as teres very devoted, but M. Firmin was no less agreeable, and nobody knsw and holding that tinv hand w hers, foels that what she has become herself she has made this child ; that where any sin has struck its dark tap-root into her blood, that sin has gone to her child; that wrong wishing, evil imaginings, selfish acts, now all corns back to plague their inventor, and more than that, to around her neck, Sunday, mv friends, in vour best attire I am 1 ; . t., ln -tin intarAftta of my dear Bernadotte, and I have al- plague and clog this precious spirit on smoking lard. It sitzles and sputters all flour, the wife comes home. She opens the hall door, and u oppressed by the cloud of smoke. She knows then that the culinary fit is on her husband. She steps into the kitchen. There he stands, red, heated, flustered, caught in the act, with a big spoon in one hand, a tormen tor in the other, a spot of black on his nose. The frying pan is xuii oi not, A Hairy Family but no Chance for Bur num. The following account of a hairy fami ly appears in the Indian Daily Hem, an East India journal : The hairy family of Mandalay consists of a woman of about forty-five years of age, a man of twenty, and a girl of eleven, with hair over every port of their faces, forehead, nose, and chin, varying in length from throo inches to a foot, and exactly the color and texture of that on a Skye terrier. The hair of their heads, on the contrary, is just the same as on any ordinary Buriuan : they ap pear to be quite as intelligent as the or dinary Burinans. The father of the wo man was the first of the hairy progeny. He married an ordinary Bur man woman and the issue of the union was the pre sent hairy head of the family. She mar ried an ordinary Barman, aud has issue, a son about twenty-three years ot age, follows in the Scientific American : " This invention relates to a machine that, when drawn through a field of standing corn, gathers the ears, drops them into, au elevator, cuts off the knobs, slits the shucks whilo on the ears into traverse ribbons, doing such cutting at the samo time the ears aro being elevated, drops tho ears from the elevator into the shuckor, strips off the husks, throwing them out of the machine, and finally conveys the ears off to one side of the apparatus, where it lets them fall into any receptacle that may be provided." Hydrate of chloral seems to devolop fresh virtues every day. A case of rat tlesnake poison has lately been cured by -it, at Point Pleasant, N. J. A young n-Hii bitten by the rattlesnake, and ex hibiting the usual violent and alarming symptoms, was treated with the hy drate, five doses of twenty grains each -being administered, wheu sleep follow- ed, and the patient awoke after Boveral hours with every symptom of the poi soning gone. At tne same time wo would warn non-profosbional persons against tampering with this powerful agent, the officinal strength of which does not seem to have been agreed upon by the pharmaceutists. Nevada is capable of supplying the world with salt. It. abounds in salt springs, salt marshes, salt mountains, aud great plains where the evaporation lively rate. The hunter had about a A n ... . ii V fia ..ft, V i n anil DvurV t.imA the bears started to climb he would not hairy, and the boy and girl alluded .ege has left deposits of salt almost iivl,ton and let it fall, the trick never to. The Burmese explanation of the ""uiuauie in extern, xur mmuig vui' failing to stop their ascent. After a phenomenon is, to say the least, curious, time both seemed to go away, aud the and might possibly possess a special in- hunter carefully commenced to descend, terest for Mr. Dar win. These hairy peo He was just about to touch the ground pie would be worth a fortune to the en when both the bears came charging at terpriuing Barnum if he could get hold him out of the darkness, and he had to of them, but tho king will not allow go up again, one of his boots being raked I them to go out of his dominions' by claws before he was above the limbs. The eggs wereiooordingly handed to ways felt somewhat superstitious in the its upward fliglt, till she expiates the over him as be stands there with his r v;..T.Tn oho fnnnii thir freshness matter Of tidiness. You muBt not oe xauiw oi years in too iiiureunm. u uu w mo !"! -.v. -,,ih nf her who brought them. Far surprised if you see mo give my daugh- suffering of an hour. I thing for many feet around. There The animals made no further effort to climb the tree, but tore around for a full hour at its base. Tyrell dared not descend for fear that they bad laid a snare for him, and passed the entire night astride of a limb. In the morning he found the bear he had fired at dead at the foot of the tree, but the other had disappeared, and the hunter got safely oil with the Bpoil. The Hon. C. F. Clarkson, of Grundy county, Ohio, says that one of his ten ants was short oi help the other day, when the man's helpmeet oame forward, took a fork, mounted a stack of barley, and pitched the whole stack over to the machine a distance of fifteen feet in forty-seven minutes, the stack yielding 132 bushels of barley. The woman is 48 years of ago. poses the salt of these deposits requires only to be shovelled into sacks and transported to the place of use. For table and dairy purposes it is not quite equal to Eastern salt. It contains a slight per cent, of impurity, which would have to be removed by re-evaporation or some refining process to reu der it marketable for domestio use. This may not be the case with all the depos its of this character within the State, but applies to such ti them as have been ' worked. Within fifty miles-Of rlUno,? ecu and not more than one mile from the railroad, are some of the finest salt springs in the world. One gallon of , water will evaporate three pounds of the best quality of salt