4 , j .1.: v -. ) ' : ? I, :- ;.-.).. 1 M ! Hot, ,1 :.V. . BNET A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. .KLK COUNTYTHE nKVUELICAX TARTY. Two Dollars rj Abkcjl Vol. il RIDGWAY, PA,. THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1872. ,:: NO. 13. H I is J At lVE THY. GOOD-BY. t t i I . t . w. aiimo. u't n :.. . -1 .(liwd-by, proud worM I I'm oln noino ; , Jnott art not my mind, mud I'm not thlnr. I f . nr t)lrou1 nr weary crowd. I ronni i A rfvbr-tttk on the ocenn bi-inr. 'Lonir X vo boon tostl llko the diirun foam ! But now. proud world ! I'm going homo. tf:jUoo4-by to fliilttiry'n fiwrtilwr fnce ; y rajri-indVitr with hi wie frrimaro; t To upstart wealth'! nvi-rted fyp; To npvle office, low uDil Midi ; To Crowded halln, to conrt Mid utreet : " -To frozen heart! a:vl haftlntrfeet ! p 1 To thoe who iro ;;nd thoio who conic 4uod-by, proud world ! I'm icolng home. 1 am going to my ou-n hearth-stone, hoaoincd tu yon green hill alone . A secret nook In a nlea.-ant land. ' Whose frroros tho frolic fairies planned ; ' Whcfo archos irreen. tho livelong day, Ken. the blackbird, roundelay, ' And vulgar feet have never trod - v A ot that Is sacred to thought and God. l)li, when I am safe In my sylvan home, . .1 troad on the pride of Greece and Rome ! "And When I am stretched beneath the pines ' Wh.fe the evening star so holy shines, ' I lautAi at the lore and pride of man. At thetfephlst schools, and the learned clan ; Fur what are they all, in their high conceit. When a man in the bush with God may meet ? THE STORY-TELLER. , v, i. WASHED ASHORE. , " Baysido," as its owner somewhat am bitiously christened the incongruous ag gregation of discomforts and wooden balconies at tho head of the little cove, was one of those numberless salt-water summer refuges with which the shore of Long' Island Sound is studded. It was a quiet sort of place, and the neighborhood wus good ; but the most remarkable feature of Baysido that sum mer was tho presence of Nellio Martin. Of course, there were other girls enough, that came and went ; but the steady possession, week niter week, of even one undeniable beauty, is a windfall for a small watering-place. Old Bowers and his managing wife frankly admitted tj each other that they could have afforded to board Nellie for no'.'iing. " But not her mother," added the good lady; 'J thoso tall, thin people are awful caturs.". ti ! But I r-tther like the old gentleman," responded her spouse. " lie's a good fisherman, and he brings home his fish ; but I don't believe he's rich." " If they ain't pretty well off," said his wife, " they've no business to have spoiled Nellie to that degree." And beyond all doubt, tho willful beauty had been spoiled "to that -dr groo," so that she frankly accepted nU mule attention an J duvotion as no niuiu than 'her due, without the leapt appar ent idow that it could. rightfully demand repayment iu more serious coin than her own smiling approval. To do her justice, however, her fmlt extended to her dealings with even the children; .and she seemed as happy among tho veriest babies that came to Baysido as with the most persistent of her grown-up admirers. Even 'when her palo -faced mother chided Nellio on her behavior, she could obtain no more than a kiss of peace, and, " Nonsense, mamma ; I'm sure it won't hurt either of them." And Mrs. Martin shook he r head lov ingly, and held her peace, for when, among so many young gentlemen as ap peared and disappeared at Baysido, a young j lady like Nellie could say ' eitlicr of them," it was very clear that there were two in particular. Both of them knew very well which two, for Nellie's other worshippers were undecided whether Jack Loutrel or Murray Nesbitt were' most deserving their bitterest resentment. One at least of the more favored or skillful pair was sure to be . in tho way of anybody else who- dreamed of aspiring to a tete-a-tete with Nellie Martin's bine eyes and gold en hair. Fine, presentable fellows ' were they both, ftnd old Mr. Martin knew all about them, and their fathers before them. - "Either would do," ho had said to his wife, more than once. Yes J but husband" " Oh, now, Nellie must choose for her self ; and I ain't at all sure she fancies either of them." No more was Nellie ; but they both amused her in just the way she liked to be amused. Jack and Murray gallantly maintain d an outward semblance of personal good-will to each other, through all the ups and downs of thoir doubtful rivalry ; but who shall blame Jack if he expe rienced a keen sensation of triumph at finding Nellie Martin actually in his boat, one splendid July morning, wheu he felt sure ho was bearing her away fronj'J aiofresponding devices on land'f Alas I for Jack's triumph ! If ho could only have known that the feeling up permost -in the heart of his companion was "one' of merry anticipation of tho disgust of Murray Nesbitt, when he should drive up to Bayside with his new turn-out, and find that sho and Jack had " gone to sea." . . Nevertheless, for she was fond of boat ing, she fully appreciated the skill and vigor-jof Jack's rowing, as the gay little craft ' darted forward over the glassy water. Nellie herself could pull very well, but Jack Loutrel was an athlete of no mean fJrder. " It's a splendid morning for a row," he said ; " but we' muBt not stay out too long. Tho sun will be very hot by-Hiid-by," "Not too long, indeed," said Jack; " but I've a notion there's a storm brew ing." Parhtps there waa; but Jack had made up his mind that some things should be attended to that morning, storm or shine. "There's that desolate-looking little island, at the mouth of the cove," said Nellie. " Did you ever go ashore there '(" " Island '(" replied he. " Yea, desolate enough. " It's dry now, at low water, but tho waves go clean over it when the tide's up. Shall we land, and take pos session, and make believe there's a chance of finding something '(" " I don't care," said Nellio, and in a few minutes more thoy were seated co rily on the low ledge in the centre, and Jack was silent for a little space, as he looked dreamily out to sea, with his great brown eyes. When he turned them again at Nnllio, they had a look in them that almost frightened her, and she could have wish ed herself in the boat again. ." What is the matter, JackW' she ask ed, with an attempt at banter. Are you " " Hush, Nellie ; don't laugh at me just now," interrupted Jack, in a voice that was deep, even for him, but very low and sweet ; " I've something I want to sny to you." And so he had, and he said it nil bJl fore Nellie could muster courago to stop him. It was hardly a fair advantage for Jack to take, away out there on the half-sunken rook, so far from Bay-side, and a good quarter of a mile from either Bhore. Perhaps Nellie herself had some such idea, or it may be she was sturtlod and bewildered. At all events, when her eloquent com panion pleaded for an immediate an swer, she sprang to her feet with a laugh that expressed a world of willful mean ing. " Do you mean to mock me, Nellie Martini' Do you not know can you not feel that I am in earnest V It is a matter of life and death with mo! An swer me ! oh, Nellie !" " Mr. Jack Loutrel. will you have the goodness to -null mo ashore, or shall I take the boat, and go alone :" . "l want to he your oarsman tor life, Nellie, but not just nsw." Nellie was already standinff bv the boat, as it rocked gently at th edge of the little islet. " Shall I wait for vou '(" she said, and there whs half a tremor in her voice. Jack Loutrel could not have snoken at that moment to have saved his life. and ho sunk back upon his seat, from which he had partly risen, but with his back toward the boat. He justly felt that he had said something which was worthy of more serious dealing, coming from a man in earnest. Perhaps if he had snoken. or had turned his great brown eves tinon her for a moment, tho result might havo been different ; but ho sat, without voice or emotion, more like a human barnacle than anything else. A moment more elhe waited. She would have given something for an an swer, for any sign of yielding ; but nono came, and her proud will carried her into the boat, and seated her at the oars. Sho pulled very slowly, and it was itlf a mile to the beach in front of tho ;an: l i Hotel, but a curve in tho land 1. 1 lur.i hid fhe rock from her sight, with- slightest change of posture in the figure sho had left sitting on the ledge. It was a tremendous experience for Nellie, ultogcthtr unlike any sho had ever had before ; and it may have been tho tumult and excitement of her feel ings, even more than carelessness, that led her to accept so eagerly tho offer of a drivo with Murray Nesbitt, which waited for her acceptance as she stepped on shore. Little change was re quired in her simple seaside costume, and in a few minutes sho was whirled away behind the new team. Meanwhile Jack Loutrel had remain ed, in almost sullen fixedness of musing, for a much longer time than thoso who knew him would have dreamed of, for he had ri- ked much on one cast, and he had failed to win. He was not physically uncomfortable, for the fast-rising clonds had now eclipsed the summer sun, and with a gdod provisiou of fishing-tackle, per haps the rock wonld not havo been so bad a place. Not so very bad, with due allowances, for now the sore-hearted watcher was suddenly aroused by tho plash of little waves that were breaking at his very feet, and he felt tho fresh wind of tho sea upon his face. ' " Hullo !" he exclaimed, " tho tido coming in'r' Of course it is ; and what am I to do, now Nellio has carried off the boat ':" Black and heavy the clouds were gathering overhead, and a sort of mist had settled on the water away to wind ward. " Looks like something rough was coming. Drown, sure, if I stay here. This is an awkward piece of business ; but I've swam twice as far as that, and carried my clothes, too. They got wretchedly wet, though. Well.here goes !" Jack Loutrel was a man of action, and his outer clothing was quickly enough rolled in a neat, compact bun dle, and fastened at the back of his neck. Then, as he stood and watched the swift eurrent of tho tide sweeping into the covo, a thought seemed to strike him, and he suddenly snatched off his light chip hat, and sent it spinning out upon the water. " It's one of those varnished things, and I'm sure it'll float. I've got an awful pull to get ashore, and I'll see which'll bo at Bayside first I or my hat." . If ho had any deeper thought, he did not put it in words, but dashed gallantly into tho fast-roughening water. And now the wind was beginning to bo something more than a breeze, and Jack's work was all cut out for him, for he did not care to bo carried too far into tho cove by the tido. Ktill, there was nothing so impossible in the feat, for a man like Jack, but what, in due time, though pale, and dripping, and exhausted, he dragged himself out on dry land. And then he found it no contemptible job to coax himself onco more inside of bis water soaked clothing.. Beyond him, at a little distance, rose the bald, weather-beaten knob that they called " The View," and which formed a stock attraction of the Bayside " drive." The road itself passed near where Jack had landed, and he waited a moment in the bushes at its edge, for his ears had caught the sound of coming wheels, and he hesitated about making an exhibition of himself. It was a rising tide he had breasted, but within his own heart things were at a torribly low ebb. Nearer and faster u.uiiu the rattle of tho whee!s, uui then there swept past him, at their best gait, the new team of Murray Nesbitt, and Nellie Martin her self was sitting beside the handsome driver. She seemed to bo looking up at him, too, with more of earnestness and emotion in her face then Jack Loutrel had ever seen there. True, it was but a glimpse he caught as they flashed past him ; but he cared no longer who might see him in his forlorn predicament, and sprang over into tho rood to make the best of his way to the hotel. That hud been an eventful morning for Nellio Martin. It was a long drive that Murray Nesbitt had planned for her, and that, too, not without a pur pose of his own. Tho swift motion was a good thing for Nellie, and aided amazingly in restoring the tone ot fter somewhat ruffled spirits ; but, for all that, sho was more silent, and in a manner more subdued than Murray had ever known her before. How could lie have given up so good and so ho'l'ul an opportunity 'r At all events, ho did not, and Nellie heard him to tho end in such a half-humble quietude, that Mur ray s heart throbbed quick and last, with a irlow of coming triumph. They were not driving very fast just then, but were coming out upon tho seawurd slope of " Tho lew. Nellie's luce had been half-averted, and there was a dreamy look in her eyes that her companion did not see. hud denly she exclaimed, with a sort of half elect lie start : "Where is ' the rock 'r Why, it is nothing but foam ; and how the wind is blowing. " Oh, that rock," ho snid, coolly. " Why, that's uothing. he water has been over it this half hour." "Home! home! Drive back to the hotel instantly !" gasped Nellie. " Oh ! if anything has happened to him ' I left him on the rock without a boat !" Even Murray's disappointment did not prevent his obeying so serious an injunction, and n they sped, past Jack Lotitrel's ambush, littlo dreaming that he would como striding on behind th:m. It was a short drive, long as it seemed to Nollie's conscience-stricken haste ; and she ran breathlessly from the car riage to tho be;.ch. Careful hands hud hauled the bouts up high and dry, for the waves were chasing one another in a rough and tumble that v. is momentarily becoming more boisterous No one seemed at hand to help, and Nellie's own fair hands were quickly tugging vainly at one of the gayly painted wherries. " Wait a moment, miss !" shouted be hind her the voice of the boat-keeper. " by, ycr into tho water yourself, lou uoilt wntiu i. : ii i, sea t" " Oh ! but we must save him ! I left him on tho rock !" Just then, a long, crested, splashing wave died away from around her feet, and left behind it, on the sand, a round, water-soaked chip hat. Nellie saw it, and covered her face with her hands, for now sho know that Jack Loutrel was not upon the rock. As for Murray Nesbitt, by this time he measurably comprehended tho situa tion, or thought he did, ana insisted on doing his uttermost to get one or more of the boats into the water, having it in mind to row all over the covo in search of any hope of aiding his unfortunate rival ; while poor Nellie, after a few moments, mechanically picked up tho wave-tossed wreck of a hat, and turned back toward the hotel, without vouch safing a word of explanation to tho curious and anxious iuquirors, who were now rapidly hurrying down to the water-side. So general, in fact, was the exodus, that when Nellie entered the veranda, she found it altogether deserted. On she walked, liko one in a dream ; but at the further end, toward the road, a tall form, clad in garment! that clung forlornly close to their woarer, passed stiffly by her, us if it had been one who knew her not. " Oh, Juck !" exclaimed Nellie, and she grasped him hard by the arm us she spoke. " Jack Loutrel, i it you 'i Jack, here's your hat." Jack had turned upon her a pale, re proachful, almost a stormy face ; but Nellie's blue eyes were streaming with tears, and her lips, that had been so willful, were quivering as they nevor had before. " Oh, Jack ! if you had not como ashore, I should havo died !" " Nellie ! Nellie Martin !" " Yes, Jack ; I found it out all at once, when I saw there was nobody on the rock. And, then oh ! whan I thought nothing but your hat Please forgive me, dear Jack." Alas ! for Murray Nesbitt ! The glory of his new team had departed, for Jack Loutrel had got his answer. Old Leather. What becomes of all the old leather 'i We know that the scraps and trimmings that full from tie shoemaker's bench aro collected and sold, and that these finally reach manufacturers of leather board, which, in cheap shoes, is used to give thickness to a solo which has but littlo real leather in it. But what be comes of worn out boots and shoes, and all other articles made of leather which have been cast aside as of no further use ? It was in pursuit of this inquiry that we learned that worn out hose and belting are cut op into soles for boots, and that the "uppers" of boots and shoes whereof the soles have become de moralized, are carefully separated, sub jected to various processes, which make them take on the semblance of newness, and then trimmed round, leaving them sufficiently large to make the " uppers " for smaller feet than they covered be fore. Thousands of such " uppers " are marketed annually, and it is not safe for thoso who buy their boots without regard to the standing of the dealers to assume that their understandings arc new throughout. Princesses n Milliners. Dr. Doran wrote a book on " Mon archs Ketired from Business," but it ban been reserved for tho last French Rev olution to convert princesses into milli ners. Iu tho advertising column of a Loudon journal wo find an advertise ment in the French language, announc ing that the Princess Pierre Bonaparte had opened a millinery establishment, Mayatin de 3lwh, at 17 Bond Street, in that city, and solicits the patronage of tho fair ladies of the English aristoc racy. An editorial notice in the same jour nal refers to the fact, and states the rea son to be tho poverty of the Princess, and the urgent need of her doing some thing to support her children. This lady is the wife of tho Prince Pierto Bonaparte, whose chief notoriety has arisen trom his killing tho Parisian journalist Victor Noir, an incident which probably precipitated tho down fall of the Empire, by exasperating pop ular feeling. He was an officer of th army, but hits been a poor relation f the Emperor for a long time, and dependent on the pension granted him while the latter had control of tho public purse. He is ufllicted not only with this, and the other evil of a very bad temper, but a martyr to the gout also. His marriage with his mistress, the mother of his children, who was a wo man of obsenre position, greatly offend ed his imperial relatives when it took place, shortly after his trial ; and it is more than probable that they give him and his the cold shoulder now. The Empress still keeps up her mimic court ut Chisi'lhurst, but, not despising economies, lias recently advertised her jewels tor sale, and they are now on ex hibition t a London jewelerV. But the poverty of the imperial pair is of taut comparative kind which is very comfortable, for tho diamonds alone are worth several hundred thousand pounds sterling, not to mention " nosi eggs" which have tieen securely put away. We need not condole with tem ; but our admiration and sympathy are due to the brave woman who has the truo pride which prefers independence to de pendence, and who braves scoffs and pre judices in converting her misfsr.tunes, and the historic name she bears, intt a support for herself and her family. Ail Old. Dub h City. - A correspondent of tho TrHriiiit, writing from tho old Dutch city of Am sterdam, says that in tho thirteenth cen tury the city consisted of a number of fishermen's huts clustered together on a salt marsh. After the siege of Antwerp, activo merchants of the sixteenth cen tury, and clever manufacturers, driven by Spanish persecution, sought refuge . ... . . tr,i..,i where they entered into new commer cial pursuits. Amsterdam then de pended principally on its shipping in terests ; and at that period it engrossed tho carrying trade ot the whole world, and reared a race of bold and hardy sea men, ever ready to fight the batties of thoir country or to brave tho tempests of tho deep. Tho ground plan of the city is in tho shape ot a crescent, its walls surrounded by a semi-circular canal, or wido fosso. Within tho city are found other canals, running parallel to the outer one, and called, respectively, thj Priusen, Keigers, Hoeren and Singel Gracht. Each is lined with very hand some houses, and some of the public buildings situated on these broad canals will compare favorably with tho finest in Europe. Two hundred and ninety eight bridges connect tho ninety-five islands upon which Amsterdam is built. The daily cost of keeping in repair and the cleansing of dikes, bridges, etc , is calculated ut two thousand two hun dred dollars. It is said that when Eras mus, in old times, reached Amsterdam, he exclaimed, " These people, like crows, live on the tops of trees." The Dutch East India Company build somo enor mous corn warehouses ; and in 182:2, having stored them with three hundred and fifty tons of corn, tho foundation, being laid on piles, could not bear the prossuro, and corn and buildings disap peared in tho mud beneath. In fact the wholo city is founded on piles, so ithut heavy burdens are always transported along the canals. All Awkward Mistake. A curious story was current in Wre&t End circles some years ago. The Duko of Wellington received a note which he believed emanated from the Bishop of London, requesting permission "to sketch the Waterloo breeches." Tho Duke, though both alarmed and sur prised, immediately ordered the " small clothos" to bo forwarded to St. James square, with the following characteristic epistlo : " F. M. the Duko of Wellington presents his compliments to the Bishop of London, and is not aware that the breeches he wore on tho occasion of tho battle of Waterloo differ materially from many other pairs in his Grace's posses sion, but they are very much at tho Ti T .11. i nisuop s service, aim uo can make any use of them he thinks proper." The Bishop's consternation on receipt of the above, with its accompanying parcel, had the effect of inducing him imme diately to order his carriage and drive to the Prime Minister with this sad proof of the wreck of his Grace's mental powers, whilst tho " Duke," on the other hand, mounted his horse and rode to the residence of tho Lord Chancellor with a similar announcement in respect to tho Bishop, producing the note he had that morning received. On a closer examination it was discovered that the writer was not tho Bishop of London, but " Miss Loudon," daughter of the great landscape gardener, and herself an artist of some celebrity, ask ing his Grace's permission to sketoh not the " Waterloo breeches," but a clump of trees at Btrathfieldsaye, known as the "Waterloo beeches." Tho Duko had mistaken " Loudoa" for " London," the Bishop's usual signature, tho initials be ing, singularly enough, the same in both cases. Miner' Journal, Caiise of Chills nnd Fever. Dr. II. T. Trail nv. in Tl Vhrmnlnnl cat Journal, that intermittent fever is Known to prevail (except in sporadic cases) only in districts where there is a largo amount of vegetable matter in a stnto of decomposition, and this occurs more especially in times of drouth. In dry seasons, rotting wood and vegeta tion, usually innocuous bocausu under water, is cxpoerd to the atmosphere, which it attaints with the emanations of decay. We have no evidence that any amount of decaying vegetable mat ter on a dry soil, though it may be. very unwnoiesome, is especially conducive to me lniermitient torm ot fever. Moist ure is an essential fuotnr in hn raium But all swampy lands are more or less nrmliii,tin V r .1 pvuuvM.u iuo ui lever in ury seasons, and the prevalence of intermit tents in their vicinities always corres ponds with tne quantity ot decaying, or ganic matter. Annthnr slriiirno rf tno rli'aeflur, ,rf ten thought of, and seldom alluded to in medical books, is rotting wood, and other decaying vegetable matter, in the cellars nnd door-yards of houses which are situated in damp phicos. If wood, or any other decaying vegetable matter, and water are allowed to accumulate in the immediate vicinity of houses or stables, tho water will become stagnant, and malarial gases will be generated, causing intermittent fever in tho eccu pants of tho houses, and a more obtcure, though Hiialugous affection in the do mestic animals. Many farmers wonder why the mem bers of their families are sick, and how their domestic animals become diseased, when, if thev would mil. lnV of tl.o .stagnant water, decaying offal, and ac- cumuiatea excrement in the immediate vicinity, they would find the explanation in an ever-present malarial atmos phere. Saving Money. There is, perhaps, no ono iu this world more to be pitied than the poor man the man who has got into the hp.bit of saving until he saves from sheer delight in seeing his wealth increase, and of counting every dollar of expenditure as though its loss was something that could never be repaired. Yet it is the duty of every poor man to save soniothing. The possession of a few dollars often makes all tho difference between happiness and luisiTy, and no man, especially with 11 family dependent on him, can be truly independent unless he has a few dollars reserved for the time of need. While extreme carefulness as to the expendi ture of money will make a rich man poor, a wiso economy will almost as cer tainly make a poor man rich, or at least make him, to a considerable extent, in dependent of tho caprices of employers and of the common vicissitudes of life, mini 'than the "h:abTrorlMii,',slJlnr thing ; but his little hoard will soon be gin to grow at a rato which will sur prise and gratify him. Evory working man ought to havo an account in some savings bank, and should add to it every week during which he has full employ ment, even if the addition is but a dol lar ut a time. If he does this he will soon find the dollars growing into tens, and these tens into hundreds, and in a littlo time will be in possession of a sum which is constantly yielding an addition to his income, which secures him a re serve fund whenever one is needed, and which will enable him to do many things, which, without a littlo money, he would be powerless to do. I'ittntmrijh I'ort. Indian Kelics in Indiana. The New Albany, Ind., Itlger of a recent date contains the following : Mr. Samuel Jones, near New Amster dam, Harrison county, sends ns an ac count of having drained a lake in his place covering over seventy acres, which has probably existed there for hundreds of years. The work was ono of great labor and expense, but restores to use a fine body of land, and Mr. Jones is cer tainly entitled to great credit for the work performed. Ho informs us that after the draining had been coniplcu-d he found that the bed of the lake had at ono time been occupied as an Indian camping ground, probably the site of one of their villages. As evidence of this, ho states that in digging a cellar large quantities of bear and doer bones were thrown up. At other points on tho place, wheu digging holes to set posts, bones of Indians were found. Several Indian graves have been dis covered on tho place, which appear to have been covered with mussel shells, taken from the bed of some of the neigh boring creeks, or the Ohio river. Indian implements of various kind havo also been found on the place, and in the im mediate neighborhood. From tho state ment of Mr. Jones there can be no doubt that tho locality, at ono time, has been the homo of a large tribe of North American Indians, every trace ot which has disappeared except the relics thus accidentally discovered, ibis is an in teresting field for tho investigations of arctiteologists, and may enable them to gather some valuable information in re gard to the aborigines of the country. Not Ix. A pompous, well-dressed Serson entered a bank one day, and ad ressing the teller, who was something ot a wag, inquired, " Is the cashier in i " No. sir." was the renlv. " Well, am dealing iu pens, supply ing the New England banks pretty largely, and I suppose it will be proper tor me to deal with the cashier. " I suppose it will," said the teller. ' Very well ; I will wait." After sitting in a chair, with which the teller politely furnished him, for an hour and a half, the pen-peddler asked. " How soon do you think the cashier will be in r Well, I don't know exactly," said the waggish teller ; " but I expect him in about eight weeks. He has gone to Lake Superior, and told me he thought be should be back in that time. Peddler concluded not to wait, Romantic Marriage. At noon yesterday an event of unusual intorest took placo at the Home for the friendless the marriage ot Judson P. Esmay, a conduetor on the Northwestern Bond, to Martha Arlingdale, one of the pupils in tho Industrial School. As nearly as can be ascertained, the history ot Miss Arlingdale is as follows : Her father was an officer in tho rebel army, and was killed in 1864, and her mother died shortly attorward, at Helena, Ark., leaving the child a helpless orphon. She was brought to Plainfield, 111., by Capt. James Baker, of the Union army, and for six months had a home in his family, when she was sent to the Home for the Friendless in this city. Having been taught to read and to sew, sho was adopted into a family at Clinton, Iowa, but tho death of her benefactor caused her to be returned to tho Home. On her way hither she attracted the atten tion of her future husband, who placed her in tho hands of Mrs. Grant and Miss Bowman, and requested permission to visit her. For two and a half years he iias waw:iied over his iirotcrrt. onlv to ciaim nor yesterday ns his bride. Airs. Esmay is sixteen years of age, jietile in figure, and a brunette with flashing black eyes. She has been fairly :.. " 1 1 . r cumureu, in uiiuauic in Temperament, and was a general favorite with tho lady managers of the Home. Air. Jiismny is twenty-nine years old, bears a high character, nnd has two brothers in this city who aro greatly esteemed. A wedding based upon such Tomontic encumstances necessarily croatod a great sensation. For some time the lady Di rectors of the Home have been prepar ing for the event, and the fair bride was forced to accept an outfit at the hands of those whose hearts sho had Touched. The arrangements for the dress were made by Mrs. Perry H. Smith. Mw. Ed ward Ely, and Mrs. II. M. Buell, and materia' therefor was contributed by several parties. Mrs. William C. Dow decorated the reception-rooms with flower:., and Mrs. Martin Andrews sent the bridal bouquet. The ceremony took place at noon in tho i".ading-room, Elder Boring officiat ing, in the presonco of a large number of ladies. The bridesmaids were eighteen gins irom tho indistnal School. Tho brido wore a drab travelling dress, gloves, and veil, and a white hat trimmed with drab, and relieved by rose-colored rib- nous, in her lett hand was an elegant bouquet. Tho groom was attended bv his two brothers. On the conclusion of the ceremony, Elder Boring presented a Bible, when tho party repaired to the residenco of tho elder brother, and last evening repaired to Oak Park, to spend the honeymoon with a relutive. Chiengo Triiune, May A Tl-i to Florida. visiting Florida. IT is' K m.tL01". visit. Dreamy lagoons, fringed with moss-draped trees, and alligators thrown in, are not to bo found in Jersey. Or rango groves aro not froquent in West chester County. By all means come to Florida, if you have no disease of the lungs or bronchia, and if you are a pru dent and sensible man. If you aro a nervous, fidgety 'Wall Street man, tho lazy, tortoise life here will do you good. A look out upon the cypress swamp wall calm your nervos, if uny thing will. Tho very splash of the terrapin and the hoot ot the owl will lull you. lho bluo heron flaps his big wings as if they were made of lead, and the alligator lies sprawling on the log, as in a paradise of dream. After all, there's tho secret. It's New York that's killing you, ye workers. Your overwrought brains neod a lullaby. You'll find it in Flori da. This is the real Antipodes. Six days will bring you here ; and the scenery and atmosphere are such, on this St. John's, that you can't think of stocks and luuiu.iU.- if you try. This is the land where tow us consist of one house ; where steamboats make eight miles an hour ; where railroads carry you four miles an hour (on my honor, they are four hours going sixteen miles, from Tocoi to St. Augustine) ; where the happy maxim rules, " Never do to-day what you can put off till to-morrow ;" whero the mail comes senu-occasionally ; where the newspaper is almost as rare as a snowstorm ; and where telegrams are unknown. Jhiearil CV(ty. Weights and Ages, Somebody who has been "studying our weights" reports that " upon an avu-rugo, boys at birth weigh a little more, and girls a little less, than six pounds and a half. For the first two years the two sexes continue nearly equal in weight, but beyond that time males acquire a decided preponderance. Thus young men ot twenty average one hundred and torty-three pounds each, while the young womon ot twenty aver age one hundred and twenty pounds. Attn reach their heaviest bulk at about thirty-five, when they average about one hundred and sixty-two pounds ; but women slowly increase in weight until fifty, when their average is one hundred and forty-nine pounds. Taking men and women together, their weight at full growth averages about twenty times as heavy as they were on the first day of their existence. Men range from one hundred and eight to two hundred pounds, women from eighty-eight to two hundred and seven pounds. The actual weight of human nature, taking the average of all ages and conditions nobles, clergy, tinkers, tailors, maidens. boys, girls, and babies, all included, is very nearly ono hundred pounds. These figures are given as avoirdupois weight ; but tho advocates of the superiority of wuiueu luigm wane u nice point oi in troducing tho rule that women be weighed by Troy weight like other jewels ana men avoirdupois. The fig ures will then stand: young men of twenty, one hundred and iorty-threo pounds eacb ; young women of twenty, ono hundred and sixty pounds. A Hun Francisco court has decided that opium eating in not intemperance. Facts and Figures sii . i' ::r The sum of $250,001) was realized last yoar by the sponge gatherers-, on the lower gulf coast of Florida. The hair of a gray-heaaett 61dk patri arch of 88, in Calais, Vt, is tunning black without any patent appliances. Got. Caldwell, of North CMjKha, has just pardoned out of the ppuitentiary a convict who died ahputj fi?xwcfl"i.,ttg9- Itis said that the munbor.,of Ameri can books in tho British-Museum is greater than fn any library iitbei ITni ted States. , . ..; lW )MsiX, Thieves "went through'',, a r .Fort Wayne reporter and came out with' thre? lead pencils, a broken Comb, ftnd a dead head circus ticket; fyr A little girl ; in New Hampshire go two beans up' her nose the pther day, A doctor and a bottle of Other were tteck essary to save hex life. . fcj ,, " Spank this boy and send hha home.'! is tho label which anxious Detroit mothers stick on their bovs when ftheV semi them out to play :, ;! i' ,&i.ut Smart boys in Quincy, ,111.,-.ciifc -.ort' rats' tails, plant them in flower-pots. ' and sell them to unsophisticated fidrMs as a new species of cactus; :1 is ,Wi-. '. The English; papers have cennd-ftol riding the fichborne claimant, and ,ad?, mit that his ease is " rising almost to its former dignity and interest.' fui' MuwU Tho American Medical Association tit' Philadelphia has resolved that its Ipem-. hers should discourage the use of alcouoV as a stimulus in their remedies; ' ' ' A man in Lansing. Mich., hart a crow' that associates with tho hens and erowsr like a healthy rooster. Who has a bet ter right to crow than a'crow!'' r '!- . A female infant was fonrid' toi the porch of a honse in Gnrmantown, P.a.,i and carried to the poor house, where it was registered as " Dolly Varden." ' ' A census has just been taken' of the members of Brigham Young's family..' which returns him G8 children, of whom 40 uro females. His wives number lit. A queer individual at Keokuk. Iowa. called on tho undertaker and got meas ured for his own coffin. Ho said he wanted no measuring tapes about his re-' mains. .;; ' Somebody is responsible for the Ussr-1 tion that Queen Victoria has an America can young lady as waitine-maid. She is a Bostonian nnd a general favorite, n W ill f LU1U. . i An Alabama paper was not issued' iit the regular time, latoly, one of the edi tors being on the jury, and the other ' having been married. . Both expressed , their regrets in tho next issue. Somebody in Wisconsin has discovered that tho northwestern boundary of 'the ommonweaitn resembles ' a profile of : lue luopuciAjv Jt and new it wants to be called the Wash- -- A Kansas crack marksman was lately acquitted on a charge of assault with intent to kill by showing in the back yard that if he had fired at a man in tending to kill him, he would surely ; have done it. The New Albany (Ind.) Ledger says : Fifty newspapers and periodicals are taken by one man at this post-office. Ho is an old farmer, and little known in literary circles, yet ono of tho most in-, telligeut men in the county. The latest fashion at a church wed ding is for a wreath of flowers to be stretched across the aisle, instead ot the customary white ribbon or cord, and when the brido arrives, it is spread on tho ground for her to step over, so that she may literally walk upon roses. A prudent father in Lovoll, Ky.t has found a way of removing objectionablo : members of his family circle, which iu eft'ectivo enough, but not to be encour aged on general principles. He placec a loaded pistol in the hands of bis little son, uged seven years, and told him to shoot his half sister, a poor imbecile. The child did not hit the' right sister, but the family circle was diminished to the sumo extent. Santauta, tho uotable Indian chief. now in tho Penitentiary with Big Tree, -sentenced for life for tho murder of . Texan citizens, has made a proposition to Governor Davis to leave Big Tree as a hostago for his fidelity, and let the Governor send men with him, and he promises to go to all the tribes, return all the captives in their hands without -ransom, and gather in all his wild tribes on any reservation which may be select ed by the Government, and that they shall keep tho peace hereafter. At a teachers' institute in St. Louis county, Missouri, a school-master argued that it was not possible to get along with boys of fifteen and sixteen years of age without flogging them or dis missing them from school. It is to the credit of the institute that none of the other teachers present agreed with him. One was sure that " schools could bo controlled without tho infliction of bodily pain ;" while another member said that " in nine cases out of ten pupils were flogged in the heat of passion." Tho Vicksburg (Miss.) Herald, vouches for this, if true, certainly very romarka ble fact : " In the blooming, beautiful, balmy May of 18U3, one of those dread-. ful battle-stained years never to be for- gotten, General Tiligham fell, shot dead, .' ' at the battle of Champion Hill, gallant ly struggling in defence of his cherished ' principles. His noble life ebbed away on the spot where he fell, and the sad earth drank bis blood with greedy thirstiness. But upon that immediate .. spot grew a peach tree that had raolieil maturity, while its roots steeped theni y selves in the martyr's blood. Singular to relate the loaves and fruit of this treo " aro a blood-red color. The tree Vas i transplanted and is now in the orchard of Dr. J, L. Hebron, of this couuty Tho propagations from the tree are oi' -.' tho same peculiar color. There is some thing very peculiar about this. We have seen the leaves and must confess they do look and even (to us) smell like blood. The toot can be witnessed bv those taking the trouble,1