A Wealthy Miner. atn .Sau Frftncisco Mail tells this V?3 of "e of e wealthy miners of thnt Bention : Mr. Fair was b.rn in Ireland in lfU-V i? Cftme to tho United States in , ; ""anireil his business edit cation in Chicago, and came to Cali n ma during the gold excitemeut in 1849. ouice that time ha has deroted himself Principally to mining, and from that IZ ? J now enjoying nn income of about $000,000 per month. Mr. Fair resides in Virginia City, and personally l P6?? tenj8 tha work on the Consoh uated Virginia and California mines. His nouse on B street is one of the sights of tne town, boing pure white, and as Prettily ornamented as a tor. In the iront yard there is a bird house elovatod on. a pole, and it is finished in the high est stylo of art. No bird was ever known to enter it. There is very little of the snob about 'HI. fair. It in trim t inf. I,a La. fm,'a U for his family a barouche, drawn bv tnit 1 . . . . ' . . J nurses, witn gold-nobbed harness, but a pair of geldings drag his own buSgy, and there is no gilt upon the straps. Notwithstanding 1n" i m inpnuii iron hi, Mr. Fair is not a happy man. Certain persons scattered through Nevnda are convinced that the bonanza kinc has pronged them in sundry financial opera tions, and would be pleased to blow tho top of his head off. Until withiu eight or nine months Mr. Fair drove a single liorse through the streets of Virginia, nnd. it is said, carried a loaded revolver in his boot. Latterly he has ridden be hind a span, and beside him in the "uggy is a horseman named Mooney, who lias the reputation of being an ex ceedingly Itnrd hitter and a haudy man in a row. Mooney does all the driving lor the Fair family. At the house on B street the greatest precautions are token aga;ust auy attack. A watchman prowls about the yard all night, and another is Btatioujjti in tho hall wiUrn doors. 1110716 opuliir name for Mr. Fair among riuians is "Slippery Jim." He me Virginians is "Slippery Js exceedingly polite to everybody, and " my son " is one of his favorite forms of address. Bores have no terrors for him. To a young nnd disagreeably inquisitive tourist, Mr. Fair is the essence of suavity. Placing his hand upon the shoulder of the Bt;-anger, he will say, with an engag ing smile : " My Bon, would it be too much to ask of you to come around to morrow ? Those mines are any amount C 4 1.1.- i , . . i'i iiuuuiu io me, una Dusniess, you 1 hero are a good mnny stni?s current in Virginia illustrative of Mr. Fair's pe culiar style of doing things. Olio is that nt a tinia who'i a csrbvn cross-cut in tho Consolidated Virgiui'i, showing very rich ore, and it was politic to keep the fact secret, Fair went down the shaft about midnight, and found two minors in tho main drill coolin.r ntr "My son," said Mr. Fair, picking up a piece of rock that had fallen from a car from the cross-cut. and addressing onn of themcn : "rnvsnn. whnt. ln vmi ti.tni, that rock is worth ? " It won't pay for crushing," answered the judicious miner. " What do you think, my son ?" asked Fair, turning to the other. The man, anxious to display his knowledge, blurt ed out : " It's worth two thousand a ton if it's worth a -cent. " "You're a miner," sHid Mr. Fair, ap provingly ; and five minutes later he or dered the foreman to discharge the sec ond speaker, on the ground that " ho knew too much. " Fashion Notes. Tan color is revived. Tight sleeves are dc rigcuer. Buttercups are favorite flowers. Small caps are very fashionable. Small yellow roses are in demand. Putty color is revived for kid gloves. - No birds nre seen on the new bonnets. Madras ginghams are in vogue again. Tho "Imperial" is the leading dol man. Orange and flnme color are fashion able. "No wine," is the rule for the kettle drum. Visits of ceremony should always be short. French and English chips are on the wane. Black aud tilleul is a popular combina tion. The Normandy is tha leading spring-! UUUIIUt. The "Corisande" is a beautiful new overskirt. Square box-toed boots are the most fashionable. Bonnets with pointed crowns are things of the past. The princesse is the favorite dress for little girls. Several kinds of tea are served at a kettledrum, Plush gouze is one of the new bonnet trimmings. For summer wear long white luce mit tens are shown. Tan and brown nre the favorite con binations in the new wraps. Gobi nnd steel are combined in bonnet miu uuiiiuru ornamoiits. All shades of yellow are freely used iu uiiuuiiu (spring uonnets. trruy and tan m pale shades nre the glove colors ot the moment. The hew shades of green are sea foam crysiui, cnscuue nnu uronze. Bushes of lace an I cre,pe lisse used for luce trimmings of bonnets. are A pretty visiting toilet is en regie for jce'.iieurmna or iiincneon parties, Silk Algerine gauzes in Oriental stripes are siiuwu lor evening uresse3. Undressed kid gloves have almost superseded dressed kids for street wear, Among the millinery novelties straw works and straw laces. are Dolmans and scorf mantles are worn, but so are half long French sacks. Bird3 nnd birds' wings have flown away from the spring millinery openings. The new bonnets are small, but are made to look large with the trimmings. w, uiuiies imperative ueuimula vmnii ; ""- " nutra mo oiuceuin wasn- , une 3 ume. nea ho goes to a clerk 'K ""K"". wve wuicu are circular re- ; (Jin tell him I'm not in." the fishes are thoroughly cleaned, and A hint to busy people : When your neighbor is sick, if you would do your . friend kindues3, be helpful to the doe tor and a blessing to society, just stay at home until yon are sent for; keep out of the 6ick room unless the physician asks you to aid him in treating the case. If tins one rule was usually observed, epi demics and contagious diseases would be easily held in abeyance. Messrs. Nichols and Ogle, rival cand:. dates for the mayoralty of Galveston, tossed pennies to determine who should retire from the race, and, the latter has refused a nomination. HOW SARDOES ARE PREPARED. Slenhade'n t'rd In this Country-How tbe Fish la tint Handy for Market-Ureaf la. creiue In llie Trade during the Last Seven Years. The American Sardine Company start ed the business of preparing sardines for sale about seven years ago, at Port Mon mouth, N. J. Some idea of the extent of those works may be gained from the fact that in 1873 the company manufac tured and sold 470,000 cans, a quantity which was nearly equal to the total im portation of foreign sardines in 1870, the year when the company was started. In 1874 the production was equally large, but during the lost two seasons the catch has been small, owing to the scarcity of the fish which the company selected as a substitute for the sardine the menhaden or ocean trout, commonly called the "moss bunker." Its color is silverv. spoiiou wnn uarK Drown. These fl.l. 1 BUOunt " the bays and deep rivers which ! in,1nnt l. XT T l 1 ""-" -iwunswicK, ; Newfoundland and Nova Scotia, and in ; th0 Pvm8 nd fall appear also in great i numbers along the New England coast ! &nl in the Raritan bar. Here during tue season they are oaught by the era- Pu,Tees OI "- sardine oompany, who continuo tha work until Vnroml, fivt wKiii IMJVKtblullB IIUUU& iHttV nrflC Brill The flesh of tho menhaden is sweet and nutritious nml in lv mnn-o- -f,.,...i that of the imported sardine, the only de- feet boing the unusual number of bones These, however, are now removed by a ivSveeptle,nt of the nr? ly gave a frtbune i reporter the following mformation as to the manner of catching the fish and the process of manufacture : Iho menhadon is a timid fish and swims upon the surface. When at early dawn a sohoot is descried by the ripples on the Biuinue, mo smau boats are lowered from the sloops which have been lyinsr off tha KrouU(l since midnight, and a long net I aoont 700 feet in length and descending iwoive or inirteen teet into te water is carried out on both sides until the school is surrounded. The fish are then ladled out by the fishermen with "scoops," placed on board the sloops, and brought to the factory docks at Port Monmouth. In the factory they are first brought to the "scaler," a long shaft with twelve re volving wheels filled with long blunt teeth, which removed the scales. The heads are then cut off. tho entrails ii , r; . the bones removed. They are then put in pielding vats for several hours, until well salted; troin these thev nre trans- i 41. ( 1 1 t . i ferred to the cooking cans, which are , amount of money which the establishment placed in the sti'aming tanks, seven in I was to pour into the hands of every nier number, each capable of holding 1,000 chant and trader in the citv, as events have boxes. From the steaming tanks they ' shown, the first thing which the Citv Kath pass to a long table, and are finally pack- , era did when these works were being erect ed in permanent cans. After oil and ' ed was to tax the bricks and material not Bl"Les lmye een piaceu m the cans, they ' nre 8ealeJ- The time occupied in the I whole process is about three days. : Prior to 1874 the sales were confined i to this country, but during the last two years large quantities have been export- ed to Bussia, Germany, Australia. Entr- land and South America. Last year ap- Plication for arpiicipB in received, but as. owinsto the small vield cva. uui urj. uwini; io me Hill Uil TieiU i mson the PiRtin ,lm.nT ,, i i sumdiod il B,L' i supplied, it was deemed inadvisa- j H o I" UIUnaUV.T: P,.,r, .,, ii. n , " : ' "ci 4 j j! mBU. An ex- gand dollars everv two weeks. These hun tensive catch is expected during the com- dreds of hands pay out that money to the lug season and preparations are making j butcher, the baker, the grocer, the clothier to enlarge the works. i the dry goods merchant, nnd all wl.n 1. A Peculiar General. ! One of the late Gen. Chantrarnier's ! peculiarities was a horror of tobacco. oa n i.. i .i ! lie has been seen at home, where he was otherwise the kindiest of hosts, pursu ing unfortunate smokers even into re mote corners, harassing them, reducing Zr7u V U ' nrer ana , partlv bv serious pvnnftfnl.,,,,, o,,i . .v Di- i n submission, and bringing them up ; I in triumph to the drawing-room. In I uv, iu in ,o jjui Liuumr icupeci ne seems! vi nnve ire.ttea ins guests as a stern but iiiuieny oia colonel might treat a parcel 1 of subalterns. Au odd story is told of j him in the time when he was himself , a subaltern, lie and two comrades had i been dining together; and they had! dined so well that one of the comrades, I overcome with wine and the heat of a j discussion which ensued, lost his head I - , ami struck Changariuer, who turned deadly pule aud felt that he must light Bomuuouy. xsut lie was fur too generous to fight his intoxicated friend. He left the room without saying a word, went into a neighboring eofl'ee-house where the students of the place were wont to assemble, aud administered a couple of cuffs to the first unoifending student he came across, aud, when swords were drawn, followed this outrage up with a severe wound in the shoulder. He then returned to his friend, who had no recol lection of anything that had occurred, and said to him : " What a bore you are ! You've obliged mo to run a poor devil through the shoulder who never did anything to me. It's perfectly ridiculous." And so the two embraced, and no more was said. Giving him a Load. A story is going tho rounds about old Cooke, the actor, whose will is at pres ent tho subject of such exciting and costly litigation in London. The old gentleman went out with a friend to have n day's shooting, and, to add addi tional zest to their sport, it was agreed that Mr. Caoke should carry home all his friend shot, and his friend all that Mr. Cooke mnnngad to kill. As fortune would Jiave it, Mr. Cooke had particu larly bad luck nnd shot nothing, while the other was in excellent form, and slaughtered quite a host of game of all sorts. So tho poor old gentleman, ac cording to the terms of the bot, was com pelled, grievously against his will, to carry all the game on his own shoul ders, and got unmercifully chaffad for his pains by his unsympathizing com panion. The old man bore it all with grim patience, .until going along the road they stumbled upon a huge grant er. In the twinkling of an eye Cooke's gun was at his shoulder, and the pig fell dead, a trophy to his skill. "There now," said the hunter, turninar to his companion, ' take up that and carry it li,,z " .i.;i. j; v . "mi niuuu iiia uuw uisconsoiate friend proceeded to do. Why He Resigned. When asked for the reasons that in. duced him to tender his resignation Senator Cameron, of Pennsylvania, said: "I am seventy-eight years old, and think that I have been in publio life long enough, and that I will never find abet ter time to retire. I am tired of the car and worry of office, of haying to turn away gooo. people wiiora i would be glad to serve if I had the power, and of being annoyed by bad people seeking to make use of me. I am rich, and need not sub jeet myself to all thi trouble, ' ' " CLARK'S "OirSPOOL COTTON How, and Where it is Made The Clark Thread Company Largest Works in the New World Acres of Splendid Build ingsForests of Won derful Machinery. The Process of Manufacture, Down In the Cotton Fields The Employees' Societies The Clark Hose Company A Grand Relief Society Employees' Centen nial Excursion The Renowned Eureka Club and Thistle Band. MANY INTERESTING PARTICULARS. Fr.im tha Essex Count? Prt, Newark, N. J. At the foot of Clark street, in the Eighth ward of the city of Newark, on the banks j ot tn Pnssnic, occupying several acres of j Kraunui "pen wnicn are uuuuings the Hoor- "ii.,-,i nicaDuu-n Itvaur riL'Ill acres. are situated the largest thread works in tlm ?ew WorlJ employing about fifteen hun- dred hnndi and paving out everv two week m 8,xteen to twenty thousand dellain in I wase, to be distributed by the employees i .7"0"B difT"e"t cXa?? nd occupations in ! aeg largest pay roll of any employers in New Jersey, nd contributing SlZ the web fare and prosperity of the city than all its , financial Institutions combined, we hear le j in the newspapers of tiiis world of wealth I makers than of dome second-class moncv j lending shop on Broad street. It would be I useless for anv one to atteumt to tnn tn j their source all the varied industries which have entered into the production of Clark's i. ' opool (Jotton, which is sold by every merchant dealing in dry goods, fancy Roods, hosiery, notions, etc., in the United .States, and contains two hundred yards of thnt indispensable article, strong) smooth and beuutiful. It is made up of NEARLY FORTY-TWO MILLION DOUBLINGS, and yet is so fine as to be liardlv visilih. n few inches from the naked eve.' The im I mense capital invested in TheClark Thread i Company's Works and the vast volume of business, amounting to several millions npr um, extending to everv part of the ted States, is one of the principal sources ewnrK's prosperity. What it is u i,i..: ...i.:..i. o. ... uiCTmus iiii-u uuw iroin it. are , not realized by one in a thousand of' the people who dwell within the sound of their tower l,BU Krtii:tl,t..n.lin i. i . 7el "napeo. into Diiuuings. it was on a I pnr with the intelligence and appreciation : of tne real sources of wealth, ' uaual.'.v exhibited by the average politician. V , uu,e lru" company or curb eton,e ,brokerthat asked exemption.it would p,robab -v have1been gntcd. Some idea ef tlle vnlue of 'he work to the community i ,nay.be had by an illustration of a thing ir i i i ii i " o i whlcU mi?ht reall-v haPPen at any time. rhe Clark T1,read Company employ, as Btatej. obmll fif.pn i,n,i' i ' , ' ! hundred 'peiWiis, pay. ln? out to them sixteen to twenty thou- anything to sell get a part of it in sonie way, either directly or indirectly. From their hands it goes to pay debts, meet ob i: .; ,,,., , , r . i "al;ons aml nu e cnanneis oi trade with i ine circulating medium called monev. and which is to business what blood is to the human system, giving it life, animation and power. Suppose to-night those works were DESTROYED BY FIRE. They are fully insured. The Clark Thread . , .... . . tunipanv receive ineir l from their underwriters themselves: " Business is dull, sales are uncertain, profits are small, the future is i . ' " - -) ... ... . vU . T . A 11C , vast business requires close attention ai d I persistent energy. We will not take this j money and rebuild the works, but adopt I 'he plan pursued by most moneyed men, B Washington, buy government j OOIUls, bring them home, put them in a tin i box Pav no 'axes, and sit down to take our I e!U!e eat d,ink a,'d ue merry, with no thought of care, supported in luxury with out risk by the interest on our bonds, paid by taxation of the producing classes." Can any man calculate the wide spread ruin j which would follew such a calamity and course of action by The Clark Thread Company ? It would be incalculable. All I I those people who earned money to purchase ', what they wanted to buy, would be added I to the list of paupers who to-day clamor for I work or bread. Misery, want, j STARVATION AND CRIME would be the fruit of Biich a coarse. But this is exactly what has been done through out the country, and explains why one in twelve in Newark nre to-day supported by the city. The pruductive capital of the country, which employed our now idle mil lions, lias been put into government bonds, and appalling destitution and want are on every hand, and increasing at a fearful rate. Labor is the source of all wealth and pros perity, and there is no loset equal to that which follows enforced idleness of the pro ducing classes. There is no music so full of joy and peace and good will to men ns the song of labor and the music of machinery. Better far that all other songs be hushed and every note be stilled, rather than those, and to them we now introduce the reader. ON THE DOCK of The Clark Thread Company, which is live hundred feet long, is a mountain of two or three thousand tons of coal, drawn out of boats at the wharf by a donkey engine, and the bales of cotton find their way from the same wharf to the brick house, for the storage of that precious material, one pound of which will make one hundred miles of thread, containing about forty-two million doublings. Xhe mind cannot grasp the numerical fact. But four grades of cotton are ordinarily used in the manufacture of Clark's " O. N. T." Spool Cotton, and known as "Sea Island Cotton." This comes prin cipally from South Carolina and is grown on the small islands along the coast. Con siderable is raised on the peninsulas and around the bays and inlets, but it is not equal to that of the sea islands, whieh is the finest in the world. The first bag of this sea island cotton of the crop of 1876 was purchased by the Clark Thread Com pany at Utty cents per pound. The inland cotton is not used in the manufacture of thread, being too short in the fiber. On these sea islands were the richest planters of the South in THE OLD SLAVE DAYS, many of them having as high as six hun dred slaves, and compared with whom the fendal lords of England were children in luxury, hospitality, and elegance. But to day all is changed. Those vast estates are cut up into' small plantations, many of them owned by the negroes, who now call no man master. They bring in theiwseason's firoduct, sometimes on a mule and again in arge quantities. Brokers on the ground or at the landings, buy and pay the negroes for their cotton, often dividing the money ac. cording to the labor performed in raising the crop. Some lease the lands of the former owners, but the old state of things ! " dun clar' gone." This trade and trafBe, it may be fairly expected, will In a few years large ly increase the wealth and intelligence of the racs in these localities. TUB SEA ISLAND COTTON brings treble the price of inland. An acre will produce in the neighborhood of three hundred and lifty pounds of seed cotton, which when ginned weighs about seventy 6ve pounds, or one to five. The negroes without doubt will evutually grow all the cotton, as not one in five of the Northern men have thus far succeeded in their at tempts. Let the reader remember that we have not looked at a single piece of machin ery yet, and then calculate the number of people and the amount of wealth, these works employ and produce, before we reach the factory. The sail, the mine, commerce and manufactures, all find employment to supply The Clark Thread Company's works, and when they stop the cotton may bloom and fall nnplucked. the col miner may starve on a bed of black diamonds, the sails on the rivers be spread to the breeie no more, and the lathes in a hundred shops be left to rust in silence. The manu facture of Clark's " O. N. T." Spool Cotton embraces the islands of the sea and pene trates the bowels of the earth, utilising the treasures of wealth on every hand, enrich ing and blessing mankind at every step, from the womb of sees to the snindleB of ! Newark We will now examine into the immediate sources of the power which drives the endless machinery of this vast hive of industry, with its sixty miles of belting and about seventy miles of steam pipe for heating purposes. WK ENTER THE ENGINE HOUSE, itself large enough for an ordinary factory. Here, is a mighty production of human brain and brawn. In the presence of this monster, with its majestic tread, one feels his own insignificance and frailtv. This I vast piece of machinery, moving' filentlv, save the sharp click of the improved steain I cut-offs, is equal in power to the combined arau oi six nunareu horses, and is two en gines in one, usually termed a double en gine. The lly-wheel traveling at the rate of forty-eight revolutions per minute and car rying three huge belts on its surface, each two feet wide, is seventy-eight feet in cir cumference, twenty-five feet in diameterand weighs thirty tons or sixty thousand peunds. The shaft is fourteen inches in thickness, the double cylinders are twenty-six inches in uiameier, wu,i condensers, anil a stroke of five feet. They were built by Corliss, in 1874. One of the three belts "on tha fly wheel is one hundred and fifty feet In length. But even this double monster could not run the works. It has a big twin brother, and together they travel every day for ten hors on their endless journey, anl never get tired. Tlicy are wonders of power nnd elegant workmanship, worthy of a vuit from any one who wants to see the BIGGEST PAIR OF TWINS in New Jersey. They are supplied with steam from nine immense tubular boilers and four large upright boilers, Corliss' plan. They consume twenty-five tons of coal per day, which will give some idea of the amount of s!eam necessary to drive the im mense establishment. Besides these there are three ordinary sized engines, made by Watts. Campbell & Co.. of Newark, in dif. ! ferent parts of the workB, making seven fn un, ngrnnu total oi nearly loarteen hundred horse power. The young mountain of coal, whjcji looks enough to last the whole city a year, is rebuilt by two hundred and fifty ton boat loads, at brief intervals. MANCKACTURINO THE THREAD. The cotton is brought in bales to tlir mir. . i . 7 . . '"S rooms, when it is examined and placed in bins, according to the different grades, readv for the .cutrhino m.ni.in.. i,:i open nnd beat the material, cleaning it from the dirt and sand it contains in the bale. After going through the seruching ma chine, it conies out in the shape of a roll, like wall paper, comparatively soft, while and clean. It is, however, really in a very rough state, compared with the fineness nnd perleotion thnt is to be reached. Several of l;lCBe teuiciung macuines are running con- "nunny, anu ineir sounu is like the roar of uyuvMing egress train, as ii whirls past i the platform where you stand. The first I scutcher is fed with the bale cotton from a I hopper which lets it through into knives 1 set in large rollers, which revolve with tre- ' raendous force, and lightning speed, picking j the cotton into small pieces, and passing it ' by suction of nir, on to other rollers, be- i tween which it goes nnd comes out in the sliape ot a web or "lap" in large rolls r .i n . , f ' . "T i .1 U1IUII U machine like the first and run together through the same proce s of picking and beating and cleanino when it comes out again in the same shape as before, rolled to exactly the thickness which it is desired to make the "silver" from which the thread varn is to be spun, What a " silver" is will' be learned further on. The maehine is so delicately set that it regulates the thiokm ss of the web or lau to within half an ounce, in a web of five feet, weighing only twelve to eighteen ounces. After being put through three scutcbi ntt marhinpa in thia wav nml out with eight thicknesses of web or lap similar to that produced by the first pro- cess, it is ready lor the circling machines. This department is filled with Carding Ma- chines, Drawing Frames, Lapnen, and ujiuuuig macuines, a peneci lanyrinth ot belling, pullevs and machinery, the noise of which is like the roar of many waters mingled with tho clatter of a thousand wheels. One of the large rolls of web or lap that cume from the last scutching ma chine is placed on a carding machine which takes and runs it between the teeth of a large and small cylinder for the pur pose of drawing out the entangled fibers and laying them parallel orin the same line of direction und also to remove the small pellicles or motes which may have escaped the nction of the scutching machine. Af ter being treated in this way, a comber or doner takes the web from the small cylin der, which is now a delicate guare ; and it is gathered up and passed through a small hole, say half an inch in sire, after which it is coiled in a revolving can. The whole process is one of wonderful delicacv, the material being so finely worked that breath of air would break it. This card contains ninety thousand square teeth to a foot, or a total of four million one hundred and eighty-six thousand. On the carding machine is a little joker that works like some old man, raising the wire covered flats from the teeth of the carder, which it cleans, and throws off the particles of dirt and eoarse cotton left on them. Six of the tin cans called card slavers, in which the roll is wound are now taken to another machine called a Drawing Framt and run together into one " sliver." These six are so light that when they are passed together through a hole and made one, they fall into another sliver and are then no larger than one of the six from which it was made, although they have not yet been twisted at all. Fourteen of these cans full of slivers are placed at the " Ls ri per "and run between two rollers, making a new web nine inches wide and half an inch thick, which comes out like the origi nal roll from the scutching machine that takes the cotton from the bales, only that now it is soft and delicate as is possible to conceive, weighing only one hundred and forty-five grains to the yard, nine inches wide. It now goes in rolls to a wonderful little machine, a Freneh invention, first in troduced in this country by The Clark Thread Company. It is a refined carding machine, the product of which is as much superior n fineness to the large carders just described as the most elegant silk goods are to, THg CO ABLEST COTTON CLOTH. It U .lled the French combing machins amj . only uwd by (he lst thrond makers, as it is very expensive and while it makes the thread superior in quality, it adds twenty per cent, to the cost of manufacture. Six of the rolls of webbing are now passed together through the combing machine be tween two rollers, and combed by innumer able steel teeth to the fineness of gossamer and the thinness of a spider's' web. It passes on, is gathered into one soft round " sliver " again, goes through rollers once more, when it is coiled Into cans as before, with a loss of twenty per cent, on the ma terial which composed the web when it was put on the French machine. It is a tex ture so fine and soft that one cannot but wonder how it bears its own wight. After the last process, six of the slivers are again put through the drawing frame making one sliver no larger than any of the six from which it is drawn. Then six of these last are put through the same proceess reducing them in size six times, and adding that to the length. This is repeated three times, nd each time they are coiled into cans. The last sliver is the same size and weight as when the process began, although doubled four hundred and thirty-five thousand, four hundred and fifty-six times. The last cans are now taken to THE FIRST SLUnnlNG FRAME. from which cans they are passed through rollers, then twisted to about the size of a lead pencil, nnd wound on bobbins, all by the same machine. From this they go to the second stubbing frame, where one hun dred and two spindles on each machine are winding yarn from two hundred nnd four bobbins, which enme from the first slubber, two threads being wound upon one spool. The next or intermediate slubbing machine winds upon one hundred and seventy-six spools, from three hundred nnd fifty-two bobbins, which came from the second slub ber. The next nnd last is called the roving machine, nnd fills two hundred and forty spools, which came from four hundred nnd eignty ooiimns, irom the intermediate slub bing machine. By this repetition of doub ling ana twisting the yarn is fast becoming 1 Btrong and hard. We now follow the yarn called "roving" to the self-acting "miile,' j which makes eight hundred and forty threads of yarn from sixteen hundred nnd ! eighty bobbins. This wonderful machine, j two of which nre operated by one man, i draws out the yarn and twists i't from six- i teen hundred and eighty spools, when it ! comes away, and on i'.s return winds it on i eight hundred cops (spools) making the j nisi iiumuer oi mreau yarn, we now come 10 THE THREAD MILL, which is a distinct and independent depart ment. The cotten yarn comes here, and ! first goes to the cop winding machines, j where it is run from the cops, through deli- i cate balances, over soft felt ground, upon j bobbins, two threads together upon one. ! From the con winding denartmpnt (ho i bings go to the slinging department, where the two threads that were run together on the spool, in the cop winding department, are twisted or spun in one thread. The thread, as it is unwound, runs through water, and rapidly over glass guides, and the bobbin which receives it revolves five ! thousand times per minute twisting hundreds ! of threads on each machine. ' After biing ! twisted two threads together, making one I hard thread, three of the latter are ngiiin ' run together on a bobbin, the same ns in the first cop winding department. Three of I these nre now twisted together, making six : strans, and THE PROCESS OP TWISTING Til EM is exactly the same as the one lai-t de scribed. It is known ns the finishing twist- ; ing department. When the thread comes from the finishing twisting department, it is inspected with the greatest care, by skillful persons, and put through several "tests be-j fore passing the reeling department, to be'' wound in skeins for the bleach house. The machines in this department nre verv curi- ous, nnd daily turn out vast quantities of thread, which is packed, and given a ! through ticket to the blench and dve houses, j They measure off the thread into' skeins of j an exact length and size, and when thov I have reeled off just the right amount of ; yam, always stop, and unlike some kind of j yarners, they never forget to tell the same story without variations. Again after com- ' ing from the reels, ! THE THREAD IS CAREFULLY INSPECTED, ' the work employing several girls, who take ' all the rough nnd imperfect thread from the ' hanks. After this second inspection, we ! find it next in the Meach house. The bleach and dye houses are ..inong the most inter- : esting departments of this vast establish- i mcnt, although not the most agreeable, j The progress in washing machinery, that is i here exhibited, would make our grand- ! mothers think that the millenium had I come. The baby washer, ns we call it, of ! this concern, is rather a large child, whose ; place and uses will appear later. After the ! thread is sent from the inspection depart- j ment to the bleach nnd dye houses, it is I unpacked, counted nnd put into lnrgetnnks, ' immense loads nt a time, nnd boiled by ; steam 'or several hours, which lakes out the j dirt nnd j CLEANS IT PERFECTLY. j It is then put through washings oft, nnd preparations wonderful and curious. The water.used, we judge, would have increased the flood just about enough to have lifted Noah's ark from the snag on Mount Ararat. S me of the wash tubs are of stone, and nil are on a scale equal in magnitude to nny of Col. Seller's schemes for making millions. The londs of thread nre put in nnd taken out of boilers, rinsers, washers, dryers and half a dozen other procesws by machinery. Then after all this, it goes "right back to those huge steam boilers, nnd the same thing is done over again. The dry room is heated by seven thousand five hundred feet of steam pipe, nnd can be regulated to any desired temperature. After leaving the reeling department, the thread that is to be colored goes to the dye house, and tha; which is to remain white, to the bleach house. In the dye house is the patent dye ing machine, used only to dye black. It does the work far better than by hand and is equal to the labor of more than a dozen men. ALL COLORS OF THREAD are made, nd the quantities of seaps, dve stuffs, and other material of the kind usd, are immense. Eighty thousand gallons of water are consumed daily in the bleach house alone, and one of the Artesian wells of The Clark Thread Company has a capa city of one hundred and fitly thousand gal lons per day. This is a remarkable well, sixteen feet deep and eight feet in diameter, of which Professor Maynard, the New York ehemist, said it produced the purest water he ever saw. It makes a man thirsty to look at it, and is absolutely free from any parti cles of matter, by chemical test. The thread is blued on a big seale, Which gives that handsome tint so greatly admired by the ladies. Then it is committed to the tender mercies of the baby washer, which are cruel, and goes through it ten times. The baby is built like an ordinary washing machine, but ech of the rollers weighs a thousand pounds, and as the thread passes through the water into th washer THEY HOP AND JUMP and pound with antics queer, but it does the business thoroughly. This was formerly doHe by the old fa-hioned pounder and bar rel which our grandmothers used to set us at when we were boys,beforegoing to school in the morning. Then it is drawn through the rinscr," which is a simple and novel ma chine continually supplied with pure Arte sian well water. The thread passes over a roller into the water, eomes up again over another roller, then down into the water, and up and down, and out and in, and out and up over the reels into great boxes on whteU, from which it is put into a large water extractor, a perforated hollow cylin der, revolving several thousand times per minute, and then it is transported to the drying room. In this way five hundred htftdi can U fluted it) four minutes which used to take nn hour and half. After the thread has come out of the drying room, COLORES'Olt TJNCOLOREfl, ' it goes to the wnrerooms, where itiscounted and put in packnges to lie given out prepar atory to being wound upon spools for the market. The thread having reached this stage iff perfection, ban become very valu able and is looked after wilh the greatest care. Tickets direct it to its different de partments nnd denote its size, quality, etc. The inspection and testing of thread is one of the most important .features in it pro duction, nnd it would surprise the lndy who sews day nfter d :y with Clark's " O.'N.T." Spnnl Oitton, to know by what patient snd constant care the perfect smoothness and regularity of the thread was secured. It is now taken to the hank winding department and wound upon large bobbins, wlien it is ready for the last wind upon the spools, from which it in taken by the consumers for its thousand uses of necessity nnd utility, from tying the rag en the boy's whittled and bloody finger, to the delicate embroidery of the wedding garment. THE SPOOLING DEPARTMENT. The spooling room is a busy place, where spools of thread of all sizes and colors by tens of thousands are wound every day, two hundred yards on a spool. The self-acting spooling machine is a. marvelous p'ece of mechanism. The spools are placed in an iron gutter by the operator, when the ma chine picks them up. puts them on a shaft eight at a time, winds the thread nnon them nt the rnte'of three thousand revolutions per ! minute, cuts a little slot in the edee of the I spool, catches the thread in it, nips it off, drops the spools full of thread into boxes ; below, picks up eight more empty spools, i places, winds nnd diops them as before, and never makes a mistake. The machine, which is used in this country only by The Clark Thread Company, was exhibited by them nt the Centennial, and with their magnificent case of goods, was one of the great attractions among the many wonders ! of the exhibition. From the spooling de- ! pari ment, the spooled thread is taken to I THE W'AREROOM, i where the beautiful little label containing i the name, number, etc., of the thread, is put i V... i n'i. . .. ? r... I on giriH, me mncKesi oi tnem win put labels on the ends of nine or ten thou sand in a day, all of which have to be moistened by the tongue, placed on the spool, and then slruek with tiie lmnd to paste it. Some of these girls work about as quick ns lightning. After ticketing, the spools of thread are put into boxes of one dozen each. They are then ready for pack ing. About twenty-five thousand feet of lumber per month is cut nt the mills, in Michigan, to tho various lengths required, and all that is done here is to nut the hnxp together. A private wir runs from the ! works in Newark to the New York office, j and the line is kept busy in sending orders nnd transmitting messages of the company. I In the short time we were there Bevcral i large orders came in from diflerent parts of the country, nnd among them were some 1 from Maine, Texas, California, Wisconsin, I Oregon, etc. The Clark Thread Company j sends out annually vast quantities of show cards, calendars, etc., some of which tire magnificent specimens of the lithographic i and printers' art. i IS THIS IS A FAIR COUNT? The number of feet of draft which one ' pound of cotton undergoes is one trillion, j seven hundred nnd seventy -two billion, j three hundred nnd twenty million, six bun- i died nnd thirty-five thousand, six hundred ! feet, or stated in figures, l.TTS.SO.CI'.o.OOO.'a i distance of 335,477,582 miles. The Col lowing demonstrates the .apparently in- ; credible statement: The web of cotton ' from which this immense length of thread is drawn is forty inches wide. It goes to the carder, where it is drawn tn 4x120, : equal to 4S0 feet. Then the drawing frame ! increases it to 480x0, equal to 2,880; the j lapper 2,SS0x2, equal to 0,480; the comber draws it out to 6,480x20, equal to 168,4S0 ; j then it goes to the firt head drawing frame, where lli8,4S0x0 equal to 1,010,880. THE SECOND DRAWING FRAME multiplies tho last length by six again making 1,010,880x0 equal to 0,005,280, which repeated on the third drawing frame makes a length of C,0i5,2S0x0 equal to 30,- ; 3111,080 feet. Now conies the first slubbing ' frame where 3ti,3'.ll,0M)x5 is equal to 181.-' 958,400; the second slubber 181,908,400x4.1 eqinil to 818,SI2,S0O; the intermediate slubber 181,953,400x0 equal to 4,012,870,- , 800; tin? finishing thread winding machine ' makes the total length of the thread 4,012,- ' 870,80x0 equal to 20,477,200,800. Now it j goes on bobbins to the " mill " where 21),-! 477,200,800x9 gives us 272,004,002,400 feet. ' We then multiply the last number of feel which states the total length of one pound ; of cotton drawn into thread, by the length ; of the original web, which is six nnd a half : feet, and have the total ns stated be'ore ' 272,004,002,400x01 feet making a grand total of 1, 772,320,035,000 feet. The cotton, I when finished ns yarn, has l cn doubled six ; million, nine hundred and eixty-seven thou- i sand, two hundred and ninety-six times i (t),y((,29o), in pas-ung through the diflerent processes. When the yarn is made into six cord finished thread, the above number of doublings have been multiplied bv six, making a total of 41,803,702 doublings. Now divide the total draft, 1,772,327,032, 000, by the total doublings, and if the work is correct, we shall have the total number of feet of yarn in n pound of cotton, which is 254,337 feet. But there has been 20 per cent, loss in the manufacture, which must be added, making n total of 305,254 feet of yarn for a pound of cotton, of 120 hanks of 810 yards each, enough to reach from New York to Trenton, a distance of sixty miles. MACHINE AND CABINET SHOPS, BOX FAC TORY AND PRINTING HOUSE. The Clark Thread Company do all their printing nnd lithographing nt the works here. Four printing presses nre kept run ning nil the tune, aud in the lithograph de- fiartnient one steam press and six or eight land lithograph presses are continually em ployed. In both departments the practice of the "ait preservative" is in the highest style. Orders for the paper box department in llie one item of straw hoard are f iven as high ns eighty to one hundred tons at a time. In the machine shop a large number of men areeniployed in making new machinery and keeping in repair the Vast quantity in use in the various departments of the works. The cabinet factory turns out about two hundred cabinets per day. The bobbins, etc., used in the mill are made here. In fact about nil the Clark Thread Company go outside for is the raw material. They manufacture all they use, except a few of the more intricate or patented machines. THE CLARK HOSE CO"MPANY. One of the best organized and equipped fire companies in the city of Newark is the "Clark Hose Company," organized May 15th, 1809 There are twenty members, employees of the factory, brave, active men, trained by frequent practice to their duty, ar.d proud of their company and outfit. Their equipment is as follows : Two hose carnages with wrenches, bars and axes, carrying seven hundred and fifty feet of hose on reels and two pipes with extra noz zles. They also command nine hundred feet of hose with pipes and nozzles in twenty-one different stations, in and around the factory, one Cameron fire pump, one Worth Ington, one Watts A Campbell, and one Blake pump, one hundred and seventy-eight filled buckets in their proper places throughout the works, sixteen hand pumps, sprinklers in all the rooms of the cotton mill, the packing house, the machine and carpenter shop and the drying rooms. There are also sprinklers in the two top floors of the thread mill and in the warehouse, and there are thirty-five fire plugs or hydrants ou the premises. Kt-gular meetings are held on the second Monday in each month, and practice is bad every two reeks. Examina tion of all the valves, hydrants, pump and other equipments takes place on the first f each month, and a minute fyox of the ex- net condition, position snd effectiveness of the fire service made to The Clark Thread Oompany. ... THJC CLARK THREAD COMPANY REL1FF SOCIETY. . One of the best and most beneficial or ganizations which constitutes pnrt of the system and care of the Clark Thread Com pany for their employees, is the Itelief So ciety. It was orgnnized Jnnunry 22d, 1870, for the purpose of providing a fund for the relief of those who might, by accident or sickness, be incapacitated from sustaining themselves. All the employees of the con -pany must be members of the society, nnd each receives assistance when needed, from the fund according to the amount paid in, which must be at least one cent per week, but no one is permitted to pay in an amount which-would draw, in case of sickness, more thnn half their average weekly wages. Every cent paid in drnws seventy five cents per week. The Clark Thrend Compnny contributes five dollnrs per week to the fund without cessntiori, but nil others cease their contributions when the unex pended bnlanee in the treasury reaches fif. teen hundred dollnrs. When the fund is reduced to seven hundred doljnrs,pnyments Hre renewed. The payments into the treas ury average about nine months in the yesr. We hope that this humane and svstemntie orgnnization may find manv imitators among the manufacturers of Newark nnd throughout the country, wno renu hub arti cle. The company pays interest nt seven per cent, on the money in the treasury, be sides their five dollnrs per week into the fund. Since its orgnnization one thousnnd three hundred nnd ninety-seven members hnve been relieved, nnd twenty-four deaths have occurred in the society. The reason that the receipts for 1874 and 1870 nre less than usunl is because the fund had reached the maximum of $1,500, nnd payments were stopped. The following very interesting table shows the amount received and paid out from 1870 to 1870 inclusive : lVur. 1870 1871 1872 1N73 1874 1875 it me!!!!!! raymtnti. 1.504.58 2,010.2 1.704.18 L742.il 1,5H5.I B 1,024.76 1,751.!4 .$1,742.84 .. 2,247.95 .. 2,114.42 .. 2,381.57 .. 8fG.0 .. 1,611.01 77.04 .. 953.31 Tctal $12,1123.34 $11,930.12 Balance in treasury Jan. 1, 1877, $986.82. now Clark's "o. n. t." spool cotton ORIGINATED. Until within a few years, the great diffi culty to be overcome in the introduction of sewing machines, was the objections made by manufacturers and operators to the then popular threads. These complaints weie so loud and well founded that the sale of sewing machines was greatly impeded on nccountof the impossibility of obtaining n thread adapted to their use. Mr. George A. Clark, appreciating the difficulty, intro duced into the American market the now famous Clark's 'JO. N. T." Spool Cotton, all numbers being six cord, from 8 to 100,wbieh met the demand, did away with nil com plaints, and long since established its repu tation as the best thread in use for sewing machines or hand sewing. To Mr. George A. Clark belongs the credit of being the first to supply those fine qualities of Six Cord Spool Cotton with which his name is associated. The thread is used nnd recom mended by agents of the Singer, Wht elcr & Wilson, Grover & Baker, Domestic. Howe, Florence, Weed, Wilson, Ulces, I'cmingtcm, Secor, Home, Lathrop and other sewing ma chine companies. The superior quality of Clark's " (). N. T." Spool Cotton soon' se cured for it nn immense sale, but with the great popularity of the goods came sIfo counterfeits which made it ncctssary for the manufacturers to adopt a trade iiiaik for their own and the public's- protection, and now upon every genuine spool of their thread is the following : This tradimnrk is familiar to every mer chant in the I'nited States and all who have ever tried the genuine Clark's "O. N. T." Spool Cotton, continue to use it. EMPI.OYEIS AT THE CENTENNIAL. A noticeable feature of The CI -irk Thread Company has always been their thought ful and considerate attention to the welfare and pleasure of their employees. The Cen tennial Exhibition afforded nn opportunity for its practical illustration which should not pass unnoticed in this nrtii le. Desir ing to give nil their operatives nn oppor tunity to witness the great Exhibition at Philadelphia of what the nation had ac complished during the first hundred yenrs of its existence in industry nnd art, the company planned nnd carried to complete success a monster excursion to Phila delphia, which embraced their fifteen hundred employees, with invited guests, members of the press, nnd the mnvor and Common Council of the City of New ark. Some idea of its extent may be gained when it is known thnt forty-five railroad conches were employed for their accommo dation, and the cost for transportation, ad mission, entertainment, etc., exceeded six thousand dollars. But this large sum is small compared with the unalloyed pleasure which was afforded the grand army of industrious people who find employment nt llie Clark Thread Compnny Works' in New ark. The Common Council passed and caused to be beautifully engrossed and pre sented to the Company, a series of resolu tions from which for lack of space w'e. copy only the following extract i Retolved, Tliat we witnessed with great satisltr. lion tbe kiuduesa and allcutiiiu showu by tlie offi ce of this Compai; to thuir tlflef n hillKlreil work ing people and the evident goud feeling that exiaia between them ; rei-ogiming Unit wlieu labor aud capital thna harmonize, prosperity must ensue. Rrmlved, That the location of the Cladk Thkfad CoMi'iNi in our city, w.tb their immense, works, uud their army of operatives, has proved a viift beueflt, and that Newark la aud uliould be, jnutly proud of her inauufacturea on which hfv itrowtli uud prosperity iiiiwl ever depend, aadnial Una municipality should to.ter aud encourage by every proper tneaua their establishment aud success. lt'solutioua of thanks to the Company were alao passed by the employeea, THE EUREKA BOAT fLUB AND THISTLE BAND. The now famous crew, which came eo near winning the prize against the world, at the Centennial International Kegatta last August, is from The Clark Thread Com pany's Works principally. It has a list of ibirty-five active and about forty honorary members. It is the champion crew of the Passaic, and has beaten the celebrated Atlantic crew of New York. They won the first heat on Monday. August 28th, 1876, at Philadelphia, beating the Dublin and Argonauia crews. On the second dav they were beaten by the celebrated Beaver wycks, of Albany, by only six seconds, the Beaverwycks winning the championship of the world on the last day, the Newark it ys of The Clark Thread Companycominld.very close to the championship of the wor i The Thistle Band, one of the best n the State is organized from tbe employees of tbe company and plays for all the many excur sions and festivals of the employees, besides answering outside calls when made. They accompanied the Eurekas to Philadelphia, and also th grand excursion of the em ployees to the Centennial last year, and al ways play at all the regattas in which the Eurekat take part, , THE SEW YORK HOUSE. At No. 400 Broadway, corner of Walle street. New York is the splendid msrb'e building of George A. Clark & Brother, the selling ageuts of The Clsrk Thrend Coin pany. '1 he entire five stories of tuir mag nificent place are tilted up with every facil ity possible for the prompt transaction of thuir immense business. K. T. X- V