T .lA'.i vol wT .TC17i 1 -...ir,..: .J.tiil.M .. caooa lOJJtl nriJ Vj urj JOB I M";iJ 57a .tag?:!: j - U ,11"' ni;on"tl . twined HENRY A. PARS0N8, J.., Edit and Publisher. boUNTf-'Tlftt nEPVEtl'CA ,.1 ... ,', Jt r ,,.:.,7T i ITT- -.iVOL. II. vr,'3.TI7'r YTTTrii 111?" mmrmummxm m ,y v m a. p. u i i I- -i if ti vaeo -POET 11 Ot'R BIRTHDAYS. ... , . A Roanoaa oomo and sensoDg . W mark tholt pastuda ths,-'' Fiiat budf: then lBKfaga, frattoi , And .o tka cvolei round add grew, " Xnd mark thIr turn on u. - f. all the am?i that kave RoWn , 1 Since Adam law the aiffit Hare laid their lmprosa on nr own, And we when babe ore fuller urown Than ho when life acemed done. And bom Into an older world. "T" A philosophic race. i ; Wo have Tlme'l coilcd-np acroll uncurled, Rent Earth ' Kteon rail, with tears tnipeavlod. To scan hor wrinkled face. . i Ve aay thoe wrinkles roprosent ana of airos gone ; And In onr wisdom aalf-content... Ti'oclaiin how strata reft and ront Tf " Are birthdays ! anljied In" etone. f r- . ' n . . . . - . ' And buaied tracliiff back the growth -1 Of this terraqueous sphere . '? E C" ' ' la ltierzctfulneas, or sloth, , , 1 That makes us yearly grow more loth - To count our birthdays here t Ah, no-1 In youth wc sprang to greet Each birthday as it same, Until, maturity complote Ycara seem to rnn with flying feot . i And bear a crosa of flame. We feel tot, while fresh seasons pass, Their footsteps on our brow. Until some clear, unflattering glass Reveals the wrinkle, which, alas i Are furrowed by their plow. And as these furrows indicate, The throes of strife or pain, ' t. Tho heart that was In youth elate ' , In age bends "neath too sad a weight Its birthdays to sustain. - What marvel We pasa mournfully Remembrancers of care, . Epochs of mutability, ' Of passion, strife, or agony, If such our birthdays were ! Mrt. a. L nnaut Bank; in the Qcntleman't Mega tint. HIE STORY-TELLER. THE DEACOX'S COUKTSHIP. The hundsoinest and richest woman in all the countryside was the widow Ad ams. The reigning toast and belle at sixteen, a bride at eighteen, and a widow at twenty, endowed with the largest and best farm in the uuper parish, with out lying pasture and woodlands, and thous ands in bank stock, little wonder that though her crop had not diminished ono iota, and her rosy cheeks and bright eyes were still shrouded in the widow's veil, that manly eyes and manly hearts would not be directed toward her ; less wonder that when a sleighing party from tho " Port " should visit her on a bright moonlight evening that the pret ty widow should look her best and bo toasted as never before over her Thanks giving cake, sweet cider, and choice old Jamaica, or that when the beaux and belles next evening were congregated in tho school-house on the " Green " to practice choir singing, which was just beginning to supercede the old-fashioned " deaconing out," that the handsome widow and her surroundings should be come matter for discussion. .Deacon Cluff at. tho "Pines" had a holy horror of this new style of singing. Though a man only a little past forty, he held in sacred disdain any infringe ment of his sabbatical privileges. It made him a persom of mark to stand in the deacon's seat before the pulpit and read two lines of the psalm for those in the singing gallery to tune into melody. So Iho deacon, that evening, had deter mined to go over to the school-house to stop the disorderly proceedings. Six weeks a widower, I dare not aver how strongly other reasons urged the step. Mrs. Oluff was not forgotten ; on the contrary she' was remembered' every hour in the day. He was lonesome ; his house was at sixes and sevens, his child ren unruly. Then he was conscious of a strange sense of freedom the feminine world was again open to him ; it was pleasant to gaze at the lovely maidens of the so ciety. He was high ia the social scale ; last year overseer of the poor, this year selectman of the town, spoken of as being likely sent to the big and mighty General Court on the following, year. With his standing ia the church, surely he might aspire to the fairest and richest of tho land. A huge lire of green logs was sputter ing and sizzling in the wide stone fire place of tho rude, half-finished temple of learning ; tho tallow candles, stuck into square blocks whittled from a pine stick, cast a weird light over the clumsy dosks and seats, hacked and disfigured by 1heir various occupants, casting ghostly shadows over the time-stained and 8inoko-embrowned walls. . Grouped around the smoking fire, and percted hither and thither upon the benches and desks, were some thirty lads and lasses, singers at the " Green," and a few friends come ta assist in the acquirement of sa cred harmony. . .. . . ' Deaooa Cluff was an artist ; I fear he scarcely understood the full meaning of the term ; still, as he pushed aside the clumsy outer door and stood in the little ' vestibule, the picturesqueneas -of the sceno arrested his steps, and caused him to Btand unobserved in the half open en trance to the. larger entrance. A merry' laugh ran round the group as the deacon paused j a curly-haired, blue-eyed miss, perched upon the front desk, exclaimed s , . , : Elbridge CKfton expects to marry the rich and handsome widow we visited last night'; but the lady is A good, God fearing Federalist, and would not look at such a Tom Paine infidel and Jefl'er sonian Democrat..'. Now John Pike has a chance. Cheer up, John ; if the school marm did give you the mitten, I heard the wido it Adams ask you the price of salt hay." . " 1 .'1 r ' Another uproarous peal was. the re sponse to this sally.. . ., - ... 1 ,. "Who is this widow" Adams?? 'in quired a young man, throwing down the bellows with which he had boon csaxing the fire. , " My cousin, Mrs. Bessie Adams, the fairest and wealthiest dame in the coun ty," replied tbe damsol on the front desk. " Where does she live '( ' ! - " On j. stolendid, farm; in tU upper parish. It's a magnificent place. Don't jrU vish totbo introduced ' Very likely you could cut out Clifton." ' " And what would sitae Mearg do it ho did V queried a distinguished-look ing young man who was leaning against the teacher's desk. r " Marry Deacon Cluff, girls, you've a chance 1 I saw him peeking round the mcting-hduijBSuriflijJ llis" wife is cold in the ground by this time, and he is still young and good-looking; has lots of the ready ; is a big man intends to be bigger ; has only six responsibili ties. Girls, there's a chance ! Hurrah ! I vote for the deacon the boys' may have the widow. Bring on your books, let's proceed to business." ' - ' i Before the preceding hud been half spoken, Deacon Cluff had retreated across the entry. At its close, forgetting his mission, he fairly bolted and ran, never stopping till past the pond and green, when, wiping the perspiration from his brow, he began to gather up his ideas. Yes, the little minx was right he was still young and good looking, rich and a man of note. Who was the widow Adams 'i He must learn ! To bo sure, it was rather quick after his wife's death but then some of those young fellows weuld obtain her, and doubtless sho would prefer an older, more staid man, like himself. He need ed some pigs. Of course, on such a farm there would bo an abundance of pork era ; at least pigs could be an excuse for a call. " He would ride up to the upper parish the next lhursday lecture, and ascertain whero the lady resided, and have a look at her, if nothing more. The Thursday afternoon lecture was a great institution with our forefathers, A half holiday to the schools, it was as regularly attended as the Sabbath ser vices, and those, if health permitted, were seldom omitted. Tho January thaw had come it was poor sleighing ; so, as Deacon Cluff was an expert horseman, he determined to take to the saddle. The widow Adams was an orderly woman sho never infiinged upon cus tom or propriety ; she would certainly have attended tho lecture had not her next-door neiglib&r slipped" on the- wet door-stone and broken her leg; conse quently the handsome widow was assist ing snuffy, clumsy Dr. Rich in his manipulations, instead of being present at the atternoon service. The old, unpainted, square meeting. house, with its rattling windows and heavy doors', basked in the sunshine upon the hill-top. Males and females dismounted from saddle and pillion, at the horse-block, near the principal en trance ; the long row of sheds became filled with sleigh; the square pews, long seats, and wide galleries were thronged. The head chorister pitched his pipe, the tithing man, with his long pole, seated himself among the boys in the gallery; the throe deacons took their place in front ot the pulpit ; the pastor, in his wig, black gown arid white bands, walked majestically up tho center aisle, and slowly ascended the stairs leading to the high rostrum ; the sexton stealthily tiptoed forward and humbly seated him self upon the lowest step. The parson rose, psalm book in hand, the centre door slowly and noiselessly opened, the sexton sprang forward and ushered the- stranger who had entered into one ot the best pews, beside a very quiet, demure-looking young lady. Notwithstanding her somber counte nance and modest demeanor, Tabitha Dole was one f the greatest witches that ever danced to black bambo s nd- die. tihe and Miss Mears had attended Atkinson Academy together and be came choice friends. Tabitha had been visiting at the Green, knew Deacon Cluff by sight, and there learned of his widowed estate. Consequently, when, after service, through which he had been unusually devout, he inquired for the residence of. the Widow Adams, the young spirits at once fathomed his in tentions. Now there was another widow Adams, a woman of sixty, with two unmarried daughters Susan and Hannah resid ing within a stone's throw of the meeting-house ; thither the mischievous girl directed the deacon. But as he stopped to speak to the parson and other digni taries, she ran over to apprise Hannah Adams, whom she found alone, of his coming. Hannah was the fiance of Tab itha's brother, manager of the widow's farm, while Tabitha had promised to wed Edward hite, another young man cm ployed upon the premises. Five minutes sufficed, ,amid giggling and suppressed ejaculations, for Tabitha to unfold a' pl:in, and Hannah to accede -i . i , j, j, i io n, oy wnicn me ueacon was 10 oe vic timized. Tabitha mot her lover a9 she returned up the hill, and informed him of the part he was to play in the drama ; so when the suitor, proud of his horse and horsemanship, pranced up the long lane, everything was in readiness for au ap propriate reception. The worthy man never dreamed of any mistake. A largo, substantial farmhouse,' with ' long barns and an abundance of out-buildings, surrounded by orchards, fields, aad meadows every thing evinced weaitn and care, i Hannah; anawefrod his knock,! " Y the Widow Adams resided here, tihe was absent, but would return by sunset Would not the gentleman walk in and wait, the man would take his horse Pigs, eh yes, there was quite a number he could look at them, ,. So Edward White threw the bridle over his arm and the deacon accompanied him to the sta ble. More and more pleased after a due insnection of the place and nianv in quiries, all of which his companion man aged to answer satisfactorily, the visitor returned to the house, where a mug of nip awaited him, and he was placed in a large arm chair beside -tb.8 Jibb. jn the clean, bright family room. .. ' The Ioks snapped and sparkled in the huge fire-place ; the long dresser, bril liant with pewter aua niany-nuea crock ery, gleamed In ' the fifelic ht ; the tea kettle sang merrily on the long tram mel ; the supper-table, with its spotless cloth and beautifully painted china, was drawn but'. In' the center of. .the neatly sivnded floor; Whfcn Edward White had handed him a nicely-lighted pipe tho visitor folt temarkably comfortable, and as he pulled the curls ot smoke about his :.he?ad; unit watohod" "pretty; buxom Hannah Adams as she bustled about, he tfionghti Jhat'if ,the mttlii was-wj ''good lookyig and; he never doubted her to be the serving-maid what -would bo the mistress r lie scarcely cared ; he lilted the looks yf,f.his .girl, so spry and dalt in nil her Movements 1 ' - ' With half-closed eyes ho gazed, as tho pies nnrt doughnuts were placed on the hearth ib'witrnv; bread; cbeesiS and cake cut, tho toast dipped,, and.- the sausages fried. ' ... .. , , , ... . , Chang, chang, chang, catno the bolls -good, old-faBhioned, rofkAmding bells. A largo, low, comfortable, yellow sleigh, drove to the door.' Two young ladies in nlOnrmng and sablo lurs wore assisted from ' tbe robes of strong, home-spun coverlets; ' the fijot-stove was taken out-, thon Mr. White drove to. ' tho barn, and Deacon Cluff rose to bo introduced. A tall, gaunt, pale,, wrinkled woman, in large, round glassed, silver-mounted spectacles, entered, followed by a black- eyed,, sunuy-iaced younger one. " My mother, the widow Adams, and my sister, Miss Susan Adams," said Han nah, in her most modest and bewitching manner. The deacon certainly experienced a nervous start. For an instant his tongue was paralyzed, his brain whirled, alibis ideas seemed' resolving tb chaos. But he was a man of the world, prided himself on always being equal to any situation. There was a mistake ; this was not the, woman or place he had sought, but. it never should bo nown, bo with his moBt courtly air he gave his name, and he inquired respecting the swine. v " Mrs. Adiuug had not thought of dis posing of any, Ircr hired help ate a great deal of pork during tho summer, but perhaps she could sparo a couple ; her loroman, Mr. .Dole, would be home soon. She must consult him. The gentleman must stop to tea ; alter that there would be plenty of timo for business." The supper was a very sociable one. The deacon learned that David Dole was the prospective Bon-in-law, as well as foreman to Mrs. . Adams ; but he was even more pleased with Miss Susan than he had been with hor younger sis ter. She having been initiated in the roguish plot, played her part to perfec tion, and the mother, though perfectly ignorant of the conspiracy against tho visitor, or ot his mistake, was too shrewd to believe that tho purchase of a couple of pigs was his sole errand. Pleased at the prospect of such a respectable match for hor eldest daughter, she strove to bo as gracious and entertaining as possible. , The widower, surrounded by so much feminine sympathy, became extremely confidential. With tears he dilated on the beauty and virtue of his deceased spouse, gave a detailed account of her illness and ' doath, concluding by a graphio description of his loneliness and domestio troublos. . Words and sighs of consolation were breathed around him, The widow bemoaned her bereavod con dition," but sho was an old woman and had two' such daughters. Her girls, especially tne eldest, nad been sucn a comfort since her husband's death." , The guest, looking unutterablo things at the damsel, " was sure it must bo so," while ehe comfprted the mourner with shy, little glances, and sweetly lisped halt hnishad sentences. Supper over Mr. Dolo arrived with a sled loud of wood, drawn from a distant wood lot. The- bargain for the pigs having ' been satisfactorily concluded, Tabitha Dole came to spenl tho even ing.; : Apples wero brought, nuts were brought, and a bowl ot hot punch mixed, - The tall clock in the corner strikes nine, Tabitha donned cloak and hood, and, escorted by Edward W hite, osten sibly started homeward, but in reality the pair proceeded no further than the long back kitchen, when raking opon the smouldering fire they quietly seated themselves upon the settle in the chim ney corner. , , ' -' Mrs. Adams rolled up her stocking, took the knitting sheath from her side, and placing both on a high mantel, brought the large family Bible aad po litely requested Deacon Cluff' " to sot tho house in order, which, alter a slight show ot modest hesitancy, he proceeded to do in his best style, which really was very good. Prayers over, the widow, complaining of fatigue, but begging the visitor not to hasten his departure, sought her bed room. Tho young ladies and Mr. Dolo became more entertaining. Some cold chicken was brought, and another mug of flip made, as a bonne louche before the guest set out on bis long, cold ride. The merriment increased, till somehow the deacon found himself alone with Miss Suan Adams, who was demurely knit ting in her mother low rocking chair by the small, round light stand. He pushed his seat forward, and strove to take the work from her hand. She ooquettishly resisted. The chair went forward another hitch, something in tended, to be sweet, and .complimentary was -Mttmaierea,- tnen everything swam before his vision, his eyes closed, his head sank on his breast, and the pious, distinguished Deacon Cluff was fust asleep. . - The maiden's needles clicked, the fire snapped and sizzled, the cat purred on tne neartn, the clock tick-tacked, ticx tacked, then rang out eleven: - The dea con never moved. .... ..The door loading from the back kitch en vat cautiously opened and four merry faces peeped in. Miss gugan put up her knitting, and with . a niption, to silence, softly opened the dairy-room , door, and bringing forth' a tall, upright churn, she quietly placed it' between the sleep er s knees, and then noiselessly corerin the fire with anhe aha blew out the. can dle and. joined ihd guy quartette in the next room. ' f-: . - i . .i ' - . A' little suppressed laughter and the young men went to tneir ouamber, while the girls betook themselves to their sleeping apartment, a bedroom ad joining the kitchen. I need not to say that though the bod was sought it was not to sleep. I . . Toward rnornintf Deacon Cluff-aWOke. rubbed his eyeB, and shook his benumb ed limbs. Over went tne cnurn wit", a great bang and rattle on the broad brick hearth. The cat, with a terrible sissirjg,' flow up the chimney ana took retugo pn the jug polo. ' I ',Xti0. ,w?dOW. intra en uignt .mppea hSa4, fcnd- muttered that -ke n'ncar.riy witch Goody Sleeper was at Jier tan trums, riding hither and thither through tho night on her broom stick. What was she up to now f oomo mischief !at tho barn, Bhe warranted ; she must Out some hair from one of the critter's tails and burn it on the morrow. Comforted at the thought of this speoifie against evil, she dosed off again. Meantime the deacon was becoming conscious j of his whereabouts and situation. A good deal ashamed, vastly prvoked, yet ;in spite -of his ire somewliat amused, he si lently groped out his hat and coat from the entry, then as quietly mado his ekit from the front door, which had been considerately left unbarred. Making his way to tho barn, by the light of the moon, he easily procured his horse, tho bridle hunrr upon the stall, but the sad dle was missing. A bareback rido of ten miles was no pleasant prospect, but after searching awhile the deacon con cluded it must be done. Ho was only too glad to have the moon suddenly ob scured that he might escape being recognized by any chance waylarer. Nothing occurred ' to interrupt his lonely ride. Near dawn he arrived at his own door, n wiser if not a sadder man. Some weeks later, upon rising one morning, our hero espied what at first ho took- for a wild animal perched , in a tree opposite his chamber window, but which ' upon examination, he found to bo his missing saddle. All parties kent their own counsel The year waxed and waned. Choir singing was established at the " Green," even a bass viol bad been introduced, much to the horror of the old members, who were scandalized at such Papistical innovations. The young and beautiful Widow Adams had become Mrs. El bridge Clinton, and Hannah Adams and David Dole had been cried three times in the meeting, when the post brought a letter to Deacon ClunY What was his astonishment to find it an invitation to the wedding. Taking heart of grace he determined to go. . On a lovely winter evening he again found himself riding up the long lane. The large house was thronged. The bride and her bride-maid, Tabitha Dole, looked as lovely as ever maidens looked. Miss Susan as mistress ot ceremonies ap- penrpd to grout advantage; both thn bridogroom and the groomsman, Ed ward White, wero especially attentive to the deacon. Mrs. Adams, little wot ting the reason, chided him for not be fore renewing his visit. Miss Adams sweetly hoped - they should see him again, bhe did not hope in vain. Tho orthodox year of mourning hav ing ended, after a little coquettish pru dery the lady consented to fill the va cant place in the deacon's houshold, and before the lapse of another year his family received a mistress and his child ren a mother who verified the Scriptural .description of a perfect woman. " Her children rise np and call hoc blessed, her husband also, and he praiseth her ; her own works praise her in tho gates. ' Iu ' his later years Deacon Cluff was fond ot relating how he found his second wife, not failing to assure his hearers. with a merry twinkle of tho eye, that he had never regretted his visit to the Widow Adams. Western World. Introductions. We can very readily understand why women should be shy of holding con- verso witn men witnout tne ceremony of an introduction, but the stiffness and formality which mark tho meeting of two women, Who do not know each other, is something altogether inexpli cable. Gentlemen speak to each other in tho street or in the cars, when there is occasion, ask necessary questions, crive courteous answers, and think nothing of it. But let a lady want to know the points of the compass, or the locality of a streer, ana sue win puzzie ner naughty head to any conceivable extont rather than approach one of her sister shoppers with a query. Failing finally to work out the problem, she is certain to select a man as tho person to whom to apply. The same shyness of each other marks all tho meetings of women unmtroduced Tho calmness and serenity with which tney ignore eacn ether s existence has something almost sublime about it, and the hauteur with which they receive a volunteered hint of a loose breastpin or a tsuling shawl Irom one of their own sex' contrasts strangely with the gracious smile that greets similar attentions when ottered by gentlemen. Of course thore are exceptions to this rule, but they are only exceptions. Nor do we think tne tact cited the result ot affectation of any kind. On the con trary, most women seem utterly uncon scious of any such peculiarity in them selves or others around them. And yet even highly sensible women do things of the kind every day. ' We once knew two ladies, both of them women of good sense, who sat for weeks at desks not ten feet apart, engaged in the 6ame work, without jonce exchanging a word, while each of . them came to kuow every gen tleman in tne ' onice. ' A formal intro duction came at last and the two women became bosom friends almost immedi ately. During . all the timo each wanted to know the other, each knew who the other was, each was predisposed to like hor neighbor, put the want of the form al introduction was an impassable bar rier which;. Aertner, was sumciently aggressive to overstep.. Two men under similar circumstances would have beea acquainted . within .less than an hour, while a man and woman would have bowed at the first meeting, and' would have known each other on the first day, A tight fit The delirium tremens. 1-ponbljCnnop6f Ceylon." "M r 1 Every object that meets the Lye cn entering the Bay f , dalle 1,' new and strange. . Amongst the Vessels at Anohor lie the dows of -the Arabs, the petamars of Malabar, -tha dhoncrys of Coromandel and tho grotesque sandbbats of the Mal dive and Laocadive Islanders. ' But ' the most remarkable of all are the double canons of the Cingalese, "which , dart with ' surprising Velocity amongst the snipping, managed by half-clad natives, who offer lor sale beautiful but unfa miliar fruits and fishes of extraordinary colors and forms. , . ! . , Theso canoes are . dissimilar in build, some consisting of ,.two trees lashed to gether, but the most common and by for the most graceful are hollowed out of a single stem from eighteen to thirty feet long na about v two feet m apth,! ex clusive of tha wash-board, which adds about a foot to the height. This Is sewed tb the" gunwale by coir yarn, so that no iron or any Other metal enters' into the construction of a canoe. " ' ', ' ' 1 , But their characteristic peculiarity is the balance log, of very buoyant wood, upward of twenty feet in rlength, car ried at tho extremity of two clastic out riggers, eaoh , eighteen feet long. By this arrangement, not only is the boat steadied, but mast,, yard, and sail are bound securely together. -r t 1 1 iho outrigger : must ot necessity , be always kept - to windward,1 and as it would not be possible to remove it from side to sido, the canoo in no constructed as to proceed with cither ond foremost, thus elucidating an observation made by Pliny eighteen hundred years ago, that the ships which pavigated the seas to thwwest of Taprobane had ' prows : at either end, to , avoid ' the necessity i of ihese peculiar cralt venture twenty miles to sea in a strong wind ; they ail upward of ten miles an hour, and noth ing can be more picturesque than tho sight at daybreak of the numerous fleets of fishing-boats, which cruise along tho coast whilst the morning is still misty and cool, and hasten to shore after sun rise with their captures, which consist not only of ordinary nsh, whose scales are flaked with silver or "bedropped witn gold, but include those of the most unusual shapes, displaying the col ors of the rainbow. It is remarkable that thrs form of canoe is found only where the Malays have extended themselves throughout Polynesia and the coral islands of the Pacific j and it seems so peculiar to that race tnat it is to be traced in Madagas car and the Comoros, where a Malayan colony was settled at some remote period of antiquity. The outrigger is unknown amongst tne Arabs, and is little seen on too coast ot India. Instinct of Plants. Not long since, we alluded to the won. derful instinct of animals and insects. Wow tho instinct, or tendencies, of plants come under notice. - The root constitutes the plant's mouth. It terminates in a little sponge. The spenge drinks up the moisture from the surrounding earth. Every boy has seen in the woods the roots of sumo tree, planted by the birds or the winds in the crevices of a rook, wandering down the sides of a boulder in search of nourish ment. In one case, a horse-chestnut tree, growing on a flat stone, sent out its roots thus . to forage for food. They passed seven feet up a contiguous wall, turned at the top, and passing down seven feet upon tho other side, found the needed nourishment there which their own barren home denied them. A yet more singular instance of this search tor food is related. A seed had been dropped by one of nature's husbandmen. a bird, in the decaying trunk of an old tree. it sprouted, put forth roots, branches and a little stem. But its roots in vain sought nourishment ut the breast of its dying foster mother. At length; abandoning all hope of support from her, they pushed out from home to Beek a living.. They dropped to the ground a distance of sixty or seventy feet, and fastening there, succeeded in securing an independent livelihood. As time passed on, the old trunk died, de cayed and disappeared. The new tree remained suspended, as it were, in the mid-air, the roots proceeding downward, and the branches upward, from a point about equal-distant between tho two. Jixrhajiye. Exhibition of Choice Cattle. Probably the largest and finest exhi bition of cattle ever held in the United States will come off at Boston in Sep tember next, under the auspices of the Massachusetts ' Society for Promoting Agriculture, and we believe that the country will be well represented on the occasion by some of the representatives of our finest herds. The amount to be awarded in premiums is over $22,000. Each of tho following breeds Short Horns, Ayrshires, Jerseys, Devous, and Hoisteins will be awarded $2,000, or $10,000 in all for the five breeds; Guernseys and llerefords each fGOo, or, if - enough are shown to justify it, each $2,000. . In addition to these premiums, the awards for dairy produce are very large, and farm animals horses, sheep, swine, and poultry are offered larger premiums than have hitherto been known iu this country, save that not one dollar has been offered for speed. The experiment is to be tried of holding a legitimate agricultural show, unaided by horst-raciug. The only deviation from the strictly utilitarian standard is the "Offer "Of fl.SOO for premiums on sad dle-horses, which will secure an attrac tive exhibition of fine animals, and en courage the production of a niuch-to-be-desired addition to the American stable. Mr. C. 8. Sargeant, of Brook- line, Mass., who ia the executive officer of the organization, will be glad to fur nish full information to all who aro in terested, and he especially requests com munications from breeders as to the num ber of entries they will make. There cannot be a pleasant smile upon the lips of the hopeless. The blow which crushes the life will shatter the smile, t? ? A $40,000 'KuggeUr 0- tt I A New York correspondent of -a Chi cago paper tella a singular i story about a spurious nugget represented to , be ot California gold. The owaer, i whosd ' name is not inontf onedj hd it weighed and assayed .in JNcw XOJr,k city.. ,xho weight was ,2,310.75 otineefl troy, and the assay gave it a yaltie of f -10,000. : A loan of $5,000 or $0,000 waaobtained on it to enable its ownor to ship it to tho rans Exposition, When ft arrived in Paris the owner and his certificate of as say were both missings The nuggot.was then sent to the bank of France, which refused to receive it without knowing its vnlue. ..; vlf "-irr ,.,!f?: i A second assay, was made, much more thoroughly than the first. 1W euttiiir' into" tho body of (the supposed" nugget with a chisel, it was discovered, that un der the, handsome . surface of yellow gold, through which deceptive pieces of white quartz' cropped :oub, was a thin layer of silvor ; under the: silver, one of copper ; and beneath all a base lump of lead.1 The French bankers ' estimated the value of the gold coating at about $4,000. The last assay at the New York oflice shows it to have been but $380, the weight oftef melting having dwin dled to 103 ounoes troy, and the average fineness. ' The sequel to this story is the most curious part of alL It is told by the ed itor of the Stockton Itcpuhlican as fol lows : . ' It may not be out of place to record what we know -of the nugget above alluded to. In tho summer ot lSj-1 and 1S55, late one evening, Isaac Elwell. a clerk in the houso of Adams & Co., in Stockton, came to the Republican office and stated that Mr. Noyes, tho agent, desired to see the writer of this article at the express office; . On our arrival, in company with John Crofton, wo found Noyes, Fred. Cohen, a clerk in the oflice, Henry A. Crabb, and two m":n dressed ' .1: n r dirty blankets. After our entrunce Cohen commenced unrolling, and soon was presented to view a lump of gold that appeared to be eight or nine inches wide, a toot or more long, and four inches in thickness. All were astonished at tho sight, and it was placed on a platform scale that stood in the room, and weighed.- Its weight was l'-izfj pounds. Tho two men stated that in sinking a shaft, a few miles from Murphy s camp, they had found the nugget, at the close of a hard day's work ; and not wishing to create any excitement, they carried it to thoir cabin, rolled it in their blankets, and took the stage as it passed the next morning, without disclosing to those in the neighborhood their good fortuno. The evening we saw the nugget of gold in tho express office, half a dozen of pieces wero cut from it, in various places, with chisol, tho ono presented to Mr. iNoycs weighing more than hve dollars, all the purest quality of gold. In our presence Noyes offered tho men $10,000 for the lump, which they un hesitatingly refused. The next day the miners had a box made, if wo mistake not, by It. S. Ellsworth, in which to take their treasure to the Atlantic States. What beonme of tho wonderful lump of gold after leaving here we know not, but that it was genuine when brought to this city there is no doubt. Sandspouts In Nevada. For several hours yesterday afternoon there were visible from this city, on Twenty-two mile Desert, five or six tall columns of sand, backed up by as many whirlwinds. At sea theso would have been waterspouts, but upon the desert they were only what we might call sand' spouts. The columns appeared t o be ten feet in diameter and one thousand foot in height. Although they waltzed about over the plain tor two or three hours, they never came together nor ever lost their distinct cylindrical form, and when they did go down they went down at once all falling together. These sand spouts are well known to old prospectors, and seem to indicate a change of weath er. Wo have frequently seen in tho Forty mile Desert, east ot the lower sink of the Carson, not less than ten or fifteen of these tall sand columns moving about over tho plains at the same timo. It is seldom that they coino together, but when they do they dart forward like two flashes ot lightning, and an explo sion like a heavy blast ends all, and tho two columns of sand at once fall to the ground. Those who have not been upon our great deserts and have never wit nessed these grand sandspouts or tho wonderful mirages have but little idea of the romantic grandeur of these ap parently uninteresting wastes of sand. 1 iryuuu Aetntla) Antcrprwe. An Extensive Wheat Field. The Stockton (Cal.) Independent of Juno 24th says ; " On tho west sido of the San Joaquin . river in this valley, there is a gram field -which extends for thirty-five miles, and is of an average width of eight miles, thus covering an area of 179,200 acres. Persons who liavo lately travelled through this immense grain field estimate the total average yield at sixteen busneis to the acre, which will give a total yield of 2,807,- 200 bushels, or 60,015 tons. This amount of grain would load 8,001 cars, which, if made up in one train, would reach over oO miles, or from llantas to tbe Oakland wharf. There is, however, a much larger area cultivated in grain on the east side oi tbe ban Joaquin than on the west side. From Lathrop to Meroed, a distanoe of over 50 milos, the railroad runs through an almost unbroken graiu field, extending as far as the eye can see on either side. The product of this whole valley will be much greater than ever before, and the railroad company will find it very difficult to move Uie immense amount to market before the rainy season." A good man, who has seen much of the world, and is tired of it, Bays ; " The grand essentials to happiness are some thing to do, something to love, and some thing to hope for. -Facta tzntJ-Fiffures There "are" 'said -to still biT2,000,000 cannibals in the world. - 'The SUgari-catle trf i iitmisiatm Loir de generated to such an,. extent that the planters have sent an agent to Java and Sumatra to procure.. vigorous cane from tho. East Indies.. , -t, ' A pleasure excursion1 li'Otti Bremen to this country is oUo of tho principal top ics of conversatioTrin Berlin at present. The trip is all arranged, and a number of . prominent Fatlicrlandets, wholhavo never smiled the air pf the salt soa, will daro the deed oi. fi. passage across tho Atlantic to see the land of whose won drous growth anal increasing iniportanco they have heard ahd read so much, rri tm: i...J. -'t..'. if 1.11. - lliaUUULUiUWll, vuiis this: ' '"From our yowig friend, John Wells, who has been on a visit to his re lations in the country, we lonrn that at the residenoe of -Mr.- William Sprigg there is an old. hen that flies up into 11 mulberry treo, picks off the berries, and, having satiated herself, fastens her claws to tho limb and shakes off some for the little duckies that stand underneath with beaks wide open ready to catch the tempting fruit." ' A Lbuisianian litis invented a mclhod of extracting beo. honey from the comb by means of a centrifugal process, which acomplishes its work without ' breaking tho comb further .than uncapping- the cells. The coiuTb is then replaced in sliding compartments fitted to the hive, and the bees at once commence to reull the cells, thus saving the labor of con structing twenty pounds of comb, bee bread and wax, in order to preserve cue pound ot honey. " ... It is now said that tho Colorado des- . ert was once the bed of a sea.' Careful . instrumental observations have lately been made which seem to establish the fact beyond doubt, proving that, either through the gradual -exhaustion of the sources of water supply, or through some more sudden natural convulsion, tho heart of tho continent, once occu pied by a vast expanse of water, has been drained, within a comparatively short space of time, and changed to dry land. The traffic in alligator skin3 is becom ing quite an item in commercial circles. During the past five months a gentleman of Jacksonville, Fla., has shipped to par ties in Boston 1,400 alligator skins. If the traffic in these hides should continue unabated during the next season, it is evident that those who go to Florida for the purpose ot shooting theso interest ing reptiles will be compelled to ponc trate far into the wilds of the State, and the success of the sport will be . some what limited. . A traveller in Florida writes : " This is tho land whero towns consist of one house, whore steamboats make eight miles an hour, whero railroads carry you four miles an hour, (on my honor, they are four hours going sixteen miles from Tocoi to St. Augustino); where the happy maxim rules, ' never do to-day what you can put 'off till to-morrow ;' where the mail comes semi-occasionally;-where the newspaper is almost as rare as a snow storm ; and where telegrams aro unknown." We probably shall not feol any cooler by reflecting that others aro suffering btill more than we irom the fierce rays of the sun, but some churlish persons may find comfort in the thought. For tho benefit of such we note from a Bom bay paper that the thermometer was lately 115 degrees in the shade at Alla habad, and lib degrees at Hyderabad, and that the wells were drying up and men and beasts dying of thirst. It is our opinion that 'Allahabad and Hyder abad havo horrid bad weather at this season. The stock of guano on the islands near Peru is nearly exhausted, and it is estimated that tho supply from these sources will fail within four years. A Peruvian ' journal published . at Lima says, however, that immense guano beds have been discovered on the mainland north of Callao, of a quality superior to that found on the celebrated Chincha Islands. This discovery is tho result of an expedition set on foot by Harry Meigs, the great railroad contractor. Another expedition sent to a placo near Pisco, where it was reported there were large deposits, ascertained that no guano was to be found there. The beds north of Callao, whero it is said that millions upon millions of this valuable fertilizer lio within easy reach, aro the resort of sea lions in immense numbers. At Evansville, Ind., a little child six years ot age, named Harry, the son 01 J. W. Wartman, clerk of tho United States court, was attacked on the street by hogs, and badly, though it is believed not fatally injured. A gentleman named V miaul Brown happened to be near at the time, or the child would have been killed. The hogs next turned upon Mr. Brown, and it was with difficulty that he managed to escape. A gentleman, writing ot the affair, says : "1 he hogs tore all tho child's clothes off, and bit fearfully in many places, chiefly on tho right arm, I suppose there are twenty or thirty wounds from tho elbow to the shoulder, and some of thorn quite deep. lie was also bitten on tho head, breast, back, and one of his legs, though many ot the wounds are mere bruises. An Oregon correspondent says : This is a lovely country, as it lies unrolled before us the green fields and forests glowing, and the wide rivers sparkling under the bright light of a June sun. All of tho Oregonians feel its influence' and all praise the beauty of their laud, which to their minds is without A peer. They are never tired of talking about it, and, when away from it, sigh to return to its shades, and for a view of its land scapes, which are really magnificent, and which possess for them a wondrous charm, found not elsewhere in this broad land. There is a sort of dreamy quiet about it, that seems the perfection of contentment ; and one says to himself, " This is happiness, sure enough. , Let Let the world go on as it may, here I am in this glorious clime, and here I am willing to remain until I am gathered to my fathers."