. . . . , „ . . • , - . . . . . . . , .... • . , . . . . • I . , . .. ' ' .-1' •••• .• "'. ..I'. --,‘„,........: • • ~ :. is , 7 . , . . ---'^; -:: 4 4;;='' - • , 4 .., .., A. ,- -% • • . . 41i r .-- •.• •-'- •'' -'4 . . . , . : . .....Ir. f I K ..;;" ..ci . , `0".7,1',.:..' .' 'f .. r.". ::-.:-...". • '' 4 ''''' .. . G . . . i.,,......;:„...„..,..„.......„......,...:. D . 4 . , 7 .11 .• . , „ 1, .111... .„ .. • R w .t .. .L.., ; 0 fI r , • • . , ' AG L.E .... u„f,.....:..i.404.,v....,...._,.. . . , .. .mi., , AL.-:-.-, 5::4 4 1 f; -=.4, -, , : ,..p.±-,-- , -. .'s --. • • . .I. . 1 , ..-:-. / . 4 „,_ .. - , . . . . . , VOL. 11.---NO. 25. TILE Rk:ADING DAILY EAGLE 18 PIIIILISIIRD DAILY BY RITT E R & 0 • AT NO. 542 PENN STREET. ADVERTI4:3fE SON INSERTED AT REA ABLB RATES. Zio3E3 PRINTING. 1 Tho Propr'ii , tora of the ally Bagla awl Weekly Gantt° , ARE PREPARED TO DO ALL KINDS OF JOB WORK PROMPTLY, NEATLY AND AT FAIR PRICES! Having ample facilitiosand good workmen they are mulled to exo eitito every variety of printing do 3ired by 1 , f MERCHANTS, MECHANICS, AND BUSINESS MEN, BUCAI AB !.. Books, Pamphlets, Catalogues, Posters, Handbills, - l Programmes . Oiroulars, Legal Blanks, notes, 3eoelpts, Bill-Heade, Letter-Heads, Bill Cards, Bills of Fero, Wedding Cards, Duslnesi Cards, &0., Wo aro confidont that all work oritrusted to 1.16 will be done Stahl* loterily to tho customer both as to stYlt) and price. ' Ourporsonal and political friondg. aro reminded that Choy can ,mf4o- rially nisi WI ; without any dir ad- vanuic , o ic) thom9elves, by giving • 1 1^ %1161' p . lltrOliflgo 11% this lino. Ordori by express iii 6 1 .1411 will Xddrods U) promptly oxocuttcd. RfTTER & CO. I=l DAILY RAOLS AND GAZETTE OFFICE 542. 6411 Street, Reading, Pa. an() 13. IBM CLOTHES STEP LADDERS, 1 ALL WARRANTED; % AT M°KNIGHT'S HARDWA4 STORE THIRD AND PENN VS. Aug 10 ENGINE BOILER FOR SALE. IMPORTANT TO ' MACHINISTS MANUFACTURERS. Lables, The undersigned offer for Salo, at rea-, sonable rates, ONE OSCILLATING ENTHNE OF FOUR HORSE POWER. ONRIBIGHT-ROBSII TUBULAR UP- Apply at the ADLER Mee, or address RITTER &• CO, 411ADINO.IPA. WRINGERS, AND AND MOUT BOILER. " FOR, THE GOOD THAT LACKS ASSISTANOE : FOR THE WRON e THAT NEEDS RESISTANCE." HEADING, PA, FRIDAY i UERNOON, FEBRUARY 26, 1869. PHILA, AND READING RAILROAD WINTER ARRANGEMENT ag i iiiim OP PASSENGER TRAINS Dxcionnin 11111; I 868: FIVE TRAINS DOWN TO PIIILADEI, PIII 5,', passing Reading, at 7,30, 10.35 and 11.15 A. u., and 4.05 and 0.35 P. M. UP TO POTTSVILLE, at 10.35 A. M., and 5.50 and 6.00 P. M. I TRAINS WEST TO LEBANON & lIABRIB. Western Express &Mil Now-York;all.os A. hi, and 1.60 P. M. and 10.10 P. M, Harrisburg Accommodation Train at 7.16 A. hi, and Matt Trains at 10.45 A. M., and 6.05 P. M. On Sunday, the doWn trains _pass Read. Jug at 9.40 A. M. awl ; 4.25 I'. BL, and up trains 4.1,10 . 60 A. M., nd 5 . 571'. M. The 4.25 I'. M. dow4; and-1.60 A. 61. up Crania. run only between I'hil l adelp la and Rcad- InA. Up trains leave Philadelphia for Reading, . Ilarrisburg and Pottsvillo at 7.30 and 8.15 A. 61.02.30 noon, and 3.30 I' lir, and at 4.45 P. M. for Reading only. The 8.15 A. M. train connects with trains for Tamaqua, Wil liamsport, Elmira, Buffalo, Niagara and Canada. The 8.16 A. M., and 3.30 P. M. up trains from Philadelphia, and 10.35 A. M., and 4.201'. M. down trains, stop only at principal sta tions below Roading. Reading Accommodation Train : Leaves Reading at 7.30 A. M., returning from Phil adelphia at 4.45 P. M. , The Pottstown Aceommodtion train loaves Pottstown at 0.45 A. M. Returning leavea Philad iphia at 4.00 P.'sl. The Wester, j Express trains connect at Harrisburg w th Express_ trains on the Pennsylvania tallroad forlialtimoro,Plits burgh and all points Westand the 10.45 Mail train connects at Harrisburg for Pitts. burgh, Lancaster,Chambersburg, Sunlinry, Scranton, Pittston, W i 11:e8barro, Williams port, Look Haven, Elmira and the Cana das. _ . _ Passenger trains leave Upper I)opot for Ephrata, fiitiz, Columbia and Lanoastor at Lot) A, 1 , 11 and 6.15 P. :Ir. !'tear , - coupon Tickets and td: t ' tc , lnucd rarel, to all the _ • - ot the Nortb,Wt—t and ~)N TICK 'ITS, • t an:.,, tut •?5 Wt cent. Ms . t •t•k-t any poud., desired. MILEAGE TICKETS, - 1 Good for 2000 miles, between all points,' at tt;i2 00—for fatuities and business Arius. SEASON TICKETS, Good for the holder only, for 3,6, 9 and 12 months', between nil points, at reduced Fares. Sohool Season Tickets one-third loss than the above.' 43 - Passengers will take the ExpreS tridne ,IVest at the UPPER DEPOT, and all other ;trains at the LOWER or OLD DEPOT. • 100 pounds Baggage allowed each passen ger. Passengers are requestiid to purchase their tickets before entering the cars as higher fares are charged if paid in the cars. Excursion Tickets, good for ono day, by 1.34) A. 141. Accommodation Train to Phil adelphia, and return, at $2 Qs each. G. A. NICOLLS, May MI Gioneral Superintendent. READING tt COLUMBIA RAILROAD, ktt EU r,f..:ll"liil-LiF;;.„. On and at terThura mit - .0:%•:.. 4 : - day, Nov. lath' AR; , ff3senger 'lran's will run on this road as follows: • Loavo Reading at , - 7.00 A. M. a .• II 6.15 P. M. Arrive at Lancaster at . 9.15 A. M. " " Columbia at r 9.25 A. N . " " Lancaster at 8.25 P. M. " ' " Columbia at - 8.80 P. M. RETURNING : Leave Lancaster .t Columbia at 8.00 A. M " Columbia at " Lanoastor at Arrive at Rending at 10.20 A. 711. " 'at Reading at 5.40 P. Zti. Trains Nos. 2 and 4 make close connec tion at Reading with trains North and South, on the Philadelphia and Readina Railroad, and Weston the Lebanon Valley Road. No. 2 also makes close counceelon with train for New York. Tickets can bo obtained at the offices of the New Jorsoy Contra! IL IL, foot of Lib erty street, Now York, and Phila. &Read ing R. IL, Thirteenth and Callowhill Ms., Pn ilad el ph hi. - Through Tickots to New York and Phil adolphia sold at all the Principal stations and (baggage checked through. Trains are run by Philadelphia and Read ing Railroad time, which is ton mintfics fast e r than Pennsylvania R. R. Time. ; GEORGE F. UAGE, Suporintondent. E. F. KI3I7ICR, Geri. Frt.& Ticket Agent. fob 184 hi KRYDEp, & CO., Manufiteturcr3 of DR. STONER'S ,Oelobrated Toni° Horb Bittern, Importer of WINES AND LIQUORS, Also Solo Agonts fot BAILEY% UtigtvALLrn au Wutsaits. No. 121 N orth Third Street, PHILADELPHIA. For sale at the Eagle Bookstore. BOOTS AND SHOES FOR THE PEOPLE. THE BEST AND CHEAPEST I REINHOLD & WIDENER No. 41 North Sixth Street, READING, PA. THE SUBSCRIBERS RAVE JUST ESTAB -1 lishod a first-class Boot and Shoo-making establisktnent and store at the above stated pl;.,:o, where they are able to it;,eohiniodate customers with the best articles in their line of business, and at lower prices than airily other place in the city. Ihr , following list of p:icesprovoi all weeny Mc , -'• —" bout+, at On , rift upwaftls. .., ..,. roar , Eli (X) • .1 IA ' . 3 f . ; . "reg. grlito - c .:,to: r.•,,,, , ,390 - ‘ - - 'ors, 225 ~.,., ~: ~ ,r;,1,-, 200 . • i .: •,,...i. 1 80 J. , • , ,t'•• 211: 1 ,morals, 1 ("4;1 U O .. i` kit / 'littorals, 1 25 Y otitlis kip . Balmorals, 190 %Women's Listing high Polish, ' 2 75 Women'a Cbogress gaiters, , ' 75 to 250 Women's lasting //Minerals, 1 90 Women's Morocco /lulu/orals, 200 Woulon's Morocco shoos, 1 65 Women'a kid slippers, 55 , Mims' lasting Polish. 1 45 Youths' gaiters from 15 eta. to 75 Youths' and boys' shoea from 317 ets. to 90 Also; a large stook of notions on hand and for sale. , , The ove prices are lower than at any other similar place of business in the city. REPAIRIN . O. Particular attention is rild to all kinds o repairing. REINHOLD SG SOMMER) • NO. 41 NORTH SIXTH 'STREET (AHOY* Tint COURT Rouen ' ) READING, PA. april 11, OH PRINTING —Every desorWtion of Job 17 Printing neat)) , exectiod t "HA OLE ' tiatini Vstabllsbnienf, 632 Penn ;trot. F I AST PENN. A RAILROAD, .MANGEMENP OF PASSENGER TRAINS, Canameneing outlay, Dicember2lat, ItTAL atgli No. 5, Mail Train, leaves Reading 103?, A. Ili, arrives Allentown 12.051 at Now York 3,50, P. M. No. 7 Fast Mail, leaves Reading at 4.20 P. M. arrives at Allentown 5,55 • at New Yotk 10.1%5, P. hi. Nos. 5 and 7, run daily, except Sunday, stopping at all Way Stations between Reading and No v York. EXPR L ESS TRAINS: Leave Reading a, If II IS ' SS IS IS Arrir at Nov York at 14 ' 11 64 61, , II 64 61 u These trains run through from Pitts. burgh to New-York, without change of eara,stopping. only at Lyons, Allentown, Bethlehem, Easton Junction, Clinton, White 110U8(), Somerville, Bound Brook, Plainfield and Elizabeth. The 6.44 A. M. train • runs daily except Sundays and Mondays. The 2.28 P. M. trains run daily except Sundays. • Thu 7.31 A. AL and 1.00 A. M. trains run Weat bound trains, leave Now York, at the foot Of Liberty street, as follow I LOve New York. i Arrive at Raedlng. 12.00 M. Mail No. 6, i J COO P. M. 0.00 A. M. Expreca Train, - 11.50 P. M. 5.10 P. M. Expre3s Train, 10410 P . m; 8.50 P. M. Express Train, 1.00 A. M. Mall Train leaving Allentown at 7.20, A. M., stops at all Way Stations, arriving at Reading ati 9.10, A. M., running daily except Sundayi:. _ The 12 M. Tratt (rein Now' York, stops' at all Stations between New York and Reading, leaving , Allentown at 4.2 1 , P. M:, arriving at !tending at 6,00, I', Af., My uing daily except Sundays. Th 4 8.00 P. M. train from New York, runs Willy stopping at Elizabeth, Plain. field, Sommerville, Junction, Easton, and Evthlohom, arriving at Allentown at 11.45, P. M., passing Lyons at 12.29,A, M., arriv ing at Reading :it 1.00 A. M, Passengers are requested to purchase tickets before entering the oars, 525 eta extra will be oharged and collected on the train from all Who pay the fare- to the Conductor. COMMUTATION TICKETS, good for Twenty-six Trips, at 25 per cent, discount betweenl any }mats desired. 1 51114EAGE'TICK ET BOOKS for 2000 miles, good between all points on this' or the Philadelphia & heading IL IL, or - Pio Reading & 'Columbia K. It., at $52.60 melt for famiiies and firms. •, SEASON TICKETS, good for the holder only, for three, six, Mao and twelve tinontha, at reduced rates. P. M. ERMENTROUT, General Ticket, Agent. an 2,-tfi .-- .......2:2 0N . „ 0 , •%;% . i,,, - N. v - ""i 1 i:v0tary , ` 4 , 4,.:,,, , i'..Y.A..S , LBIIIITIETT'S % ' f' /A.' ` -. • :. Qt-3.` c) Vogretablo tf: ' f) it ' • t t! HAIR RESTORATIVE f • i t ..§ Was decided by the .N. 11. Mate Fair (I anti Is now concodeil bs . tho toddle to bo . . _ lite rely Wet- Preparadon fot lie•toring ‘ I I Way or faded Hair to It, original color', i t itiothls• 11, (true tb, eradicating llu- • ~. .'s more and Dandruff, and for Dressing a... 4 ... 's, ' and Desull4ing the flair. It is trce k.4„,4 t ‘ ; prO3 .4.3. front poisonous drugs, doe , not .. f I. ~,,,, stein the attest &brie, and 44 ,. .. ,) ` 4 . I. • C. 02 leaves the Scalp CIXAN. .A , 1 ger Ills lisle 1:11.11, am" 44 , 1 0 , , f 'C D. ' '' ~, 01.0.951. • ." 0 , 6 : c, p , k isn 4 .§ . '' t • IVA ; * r 0,64 , ..1, , - ff -•. . , ........ `_ ( Ci . ‘. •...:'..'.. .• •• ju et:.b.• J. R. BARRETT & CO., Proprietors, - Ate.tiouEsult, 1. it Ire 3.p P. M. 3.25 P. M. Solo by ell Druggbilm and Dealers In PiltenlModielne9. ri, BIRCH, & 8,R0., D. A. 11. LIGHT, VT. J. THIERWECIITER, inny 51Y fiRrILANS' COURT rALE. - A.., Pursuant to an order of ti u Orphans' court of Dellis county, will be old at pub lic vendue, on Thursday the 11th day of March, A, .I)„ 184)9, on the prunflaes in Itich• mond township, Borks county: I AR that certain Tract or piece of Land situate in Richmond township, !Jerks coun ty, bounded by lands of George Zwoyer, Levi A Hafts and Nicholas litttur,contalh. lug ‘2, - ) hero& and 87 perches, strict 11101tallre, live acres of which is under culture and the balance Woodland, The improvetrienta are a two story FRAME 11011311), with back now In course of erection (the same to be finished.) Late the property, of Jul Zivoyer. deceased. Salo to commence at 1 o'clock In the af ternoon, when duo attendance will bo given and the terms of sale made known by , LEVI ,kt. lIAAS, Adm'or, By Order of the Court, Levi 11, Li Ems, Clerk. Also, at the flame time and place, a lot of boards for fencing rails, GOO pale's,- a lot of hay and straw, and several cords of wood. Conditions mado known on the day of Salo by LEVI A, HAAS, tub '/O-3tw] Administrator, atur 26^ B ANKING HOUSE, • BUSHONG & BRO., BANKERS, _ Deniers in U. S. BONDS & STOCKS, GOLD, SILVER AND COUPONS. ID AVTM, ON NEW YOgli AND PHILADELPHIA. Interest paid on all Deposits. Open al 9 (r. Close al 3 p. m BUSHONU & BROTHER. ree.l-1669 \ VTILLIIE NIOV E.—l AM NOW CLOSING OUT MY ENTIRE STOCK of MILLINERY AND DRY GOODS, In order to re-open an entire new and well selected stock, at NO. 31? PENN BTREETy BETWEEN I THIRD AND FOURTH, where I Will pay particular attention keep all the latest styles of LADIES', MISSES' AND CHILDREN'S KAT dw.z) BONNET FRAMES, and a - complete asßortment of everything pertaining to the Millinery and Trireining line. I I expreas my most hearty thanks for past fjivora, and very respectfully solidi the cOntinuanec of lho same, Satisfaction guaranteed. fob 18-18td MRS. 0. B. KELLER. T HE NATIONAL STOVE, TIN AND HOLLOW-WARE EM PODIUM OF TILE CITY OF READING. D. C. SCHNADER, '414 PENN STREET, Would call the attention of the public to hie larger. stock of Parlor. Offleo and Cooking Stover. Ranee; Tin. Hollowware and House keeping goods of every description. Hoofing and Spout)ng promptly attended to At tho lowest Rico, Give hl a call. te4l?-nsi 5.44 A. Al. 7.51 A. AI. 2:28 A. Al. 1.00 A. Al. 11.00 A.;51. 12.15 A. 111' • 7.00 P. M. 6.15 A. Id. WILLIAM WELLS. Agents, Reading, Pa. WrMon for tho Daily Eagle. N' A I.N 0 • BY 11. Av, Why should we mourn 11,114 grievo hi sad- nose, The lost we may behold no more lone to n realm where jey and gladness Roam hand in 'hand on ev l • en. shore I We:op not for tilos°, tile soon departed, But rather mourn our own dark lot— Loft by the pure and noblo•hcarred, On this chill earth, perchance forgot ! Wobsterivehoso giant strains have _wakened Tho slumbering hosts of freedom's sons: Whose trumpet tones with fear have sha; ken Old despots onlyteir erunibllng thrones— Gone hence, in brighter worlds to wander, rorohanco Is gazing down wari,now, And on our country's fate loth pondor , 1, With sleoploss oyo and placid brow. The gifted one's of earth aro fading Like the brjftlit stars from morning sky ; put khough dark elouils their forms are shading And hide them from our anxious eye— They shine with moro resplendent glory In that far nrclrld beyond our gaze ; ' , Leaving behind their fame and story, The toiling sons of earth to raise, TEE GREAT BELL 01! MUSCOW Close to the tower of Ivan Velihi, (John the Great) and reared on - a mils sivo pedestal ofgranito, stands the mighty boll, most justly named the Monarch, (Czar Kolokot,) forino other in the world may dispute its sovereignty. It'was cast by the command of the Empress Ann, in 1730 y and boars her figure in flowing robes upon its surface beneath which is u deep border of flowers. It is said that the tower in which it originally hung was burnt in 1787, and its fall buried the enormous mass deep in the earth, and broke a huge fragiitent' , from it. There it lay for many years, visited in its subter raneous abode by the enterprising traveller only, and carefully guarded, by a Ituslian sentluol. In the spring of 1837, exactly a century after it fell, the Empe ror Nicholas caused it to be removed, and rightly deeming it to be one of the greatest wonders of this wondrous city, placed it upon its present pedestal, with', the broken fragment beside it. , The fracture took place just above the border ing of flowers that runs round the bell, and this Piece is about six feet high and three feet wide. The height of the whole boll is twenty-one feet three inches, and twenty-two feet five inches in diameter; and it is in no part less than three inches in thickness. Seen from oven a short distarre, surrounded,as it is on nil sides by objects on such an immense scale, with the lofty Ivan yeliki towcri4 immedi• ately behind it, the impression of its meg. nand° is by no means striking ; it is only when the spectator comes near to it, and staOs beside the broken fragment of this paella mountain, or -descends the stairs that lend beneath it and looks up into its capacious cavern, that be becomes sonsi• 1)10 of its enormous bulk. This giant communicator of sound has been -cOns?- crated as a chapel, and!) to entrance to it is by an iron gate, and down a ,fpw stePs that descend into the cavity formed by (119 wall and the excavation under it. Tho "Czar Koldkoris highly venera ted, for the religious feelings of the peo ple wore called into action when. it was cast, and every one who had a fraction of the precious metals threw into the melt ing mass sorhe offering of either silver or gold ; the decorative parts of it are in low relief and badly execute]. It weighs be tween three and four hundred thousand pounds. The value of this mass of metal, from the present price of copper, must be upwards of two millions of dollars.., . Cheap Smoke,liouse. Ie A. farmer in Western New York gives the following as his plan for a good and cheap smoke house: No 'farmer should be without a good 'v smoke-house, and such a one as will be fire-proof and tol erably secure from thieves. Fifty hams can be smoked at one time in a smoke house seven by eight feet square. Mine is six by seven, and is largo enough for most farmers. I first dug all the ground out below where the frost would reach, and filled it up to the surface with small stone. On this I laid my brick floor, in limo mortar. The walls are brick, eight inches thick, and seven feet Idyl,, with a door on one side two feet wide. Tho door should be made of Weed ti O lined with . sheet iron. For the top I pat on joists, two by four, set up edgewise, and eight and a half ? inches from centre to centre, covered with brick, and put on a heavy coat of mortar. I built a small chimney on the top in the centre, arch , mg it over and covering it with with A single roof in the usual way. An arch should be built on the outside, with a small iron door to shut it up; similar . to a Stove door, with a hole from the arch through the wall of the smoke-house, and an iron grate over it. The arch is more convenient and better to put the fire in than to build a fire inside the smoke-house, and the chimney causes a draft through into the smoke-house. Good corhcobs 'or hickory wood are the best materials ,to make a smoke for hams. The cost of such a smoke-house as I described is about $2O. Tile velocipede mania is said to add to the business Of both surgeons and • tailors, - 7= TOE AGM OF OUR EARTH. Among the astounding discoveries of science, is that of tho ithmenso periods that have passed in the gradual forma• lion of the earth. So vast wore the cycles of the time preceding even tho appearance of man on the surface of our globe, that our own period seems as yes t?,4y when compared' with'the epochs tbatJuive gone before 'it. Had we only the evidetico of the deposits; of rooks heaped up on each other in ropier strata by the slow accumulation of 'materials, they alone would convince us of tho long and 'slow maturing of God's works on earth ; but 'when we add to these the * 1 successive lopnlation of whose life the world has loon tho theatre, and whose remains are hidden in the rocks Into which the m d, lor sand, or soil of what ever kind, o which they lived, has hard : cried in the c urso of time—or the onor` ,7 MOIIS Chains of mountains if hoso up. hoaral divided" these periodti of quiet itecumulation by great Iconvoliions—,or i the changes o h different nature in the Configuration of our globe, as the sink ing of lands I eneath tho ocean, or the gradual rising of continents and islands above—or the slow growth of the coral reefs, those) wonderful sea walks, raised by the Mk ocean architects, whose own bodies uruish both the building stones and the °mut that binds them together, and who hero worked so busily during tho long centuries that, there . are ex• tensivo ountries, mountain chains, islands, and long lines of coast, consist- ing solely • tlieir remains—or tho count• less forests h4t liave grown up, flourish• ed and decayed, to Milli° storehouses of coal that tea the fires of the human raoe--if we' consider all theso records of the past, the intellect fails to 'grasp a chronology of which our experienco furnishes no data, and time that lies be. hind us seems as much an oteruity to our 'conception, ns the future that stretches indefinitely before us.--efgassiz. , CHEAP WASII ion Ilutumos.—Tako clean, water-tight cask and put into it half a bushel of lime. Slack it by pour ing water over it boiling hot, and in suf ficient quantity to cover it fivo inches deep-, and stir it briskly till thoroughly slackened. When the limo has been\ slackened, dissolve it in water, and add two pounds of sulphate of zinc and ono of common salt. Theio will cause the wash to harden and prevent its cracking which gives an unseemly appearance to the work. A beautiful cream color may be given to the wash by .adding three pounds of yellow ochre; or a good pearl 9r lead color by the addition of a lump of iron black. For fawn .color add four pounds i umber, one pound of Indian red, and one pound of common lamp black. For steno color add two pounds raw um ber and two pounds lamp black: When, appliqd to the outside of houses and to fences, it is rendered more durable by adding about a pint of sweet'milk to a gallon of wash.—Seientific Anicrican, UNHAPPY MARIIIAGEB.—It is almost in. credible from what a variety of circum• stances marriages may prove unhappy ; but it is found in by far the majority of cases that the husband is sornelinw or other the cause of the evil. Domestic felicity is seldom marred by the %yornan ; it is be empire, and she is no more like ly to destroy it I.ban the bird into pull !ter own nest to pieces. ,She stands by home as n principal, and it is her nature to seek to render it as agreeable as possi lqo to her husband. She has also a more 'intense sense than the man of the decen cies of life—is more Anxious to have all duties properly observed—to have a creditable', appearance before neighbors —in short, as she says, to have everything right. Men, even sensible ell educated men, are often rebels against many - of the ptioprieties, but women ve4;',rarel-Y. A SELL OF BAIL-ROOM LOAFIIIIB.—The Leavenworth Bulletin is responsible 'for the following : "Yesterday evening a wag stepped into a saloon (we don't locate it), and after taking a view at the knot of sit ters gathered around the stoye,,without speaking to any of them, began - to count heads audibly, pointing first to himself and then to each expectant bummer, He counted one, two, three,, four, five, 'Bar tender.' Instantly ten bloodshot oyes gleamed with delight of expectancy'; five necks straightened; five pairs of feet were drawn together for a rise, five mouths were cleared of tobacco ; five coat.sleavcs drawn across five pairs of parched, tobacco-stained lips, Involunta rily smacking with sweeyttiticipations. Six'glasses of lager were ranged in a row on the bar, when _ the joker, without deigning a glance at the thirsty objects of his - enttmenition, proceeded to stow away the six glasses of 'hop water' in short or der, to the ,very evident disgust and dis- appointment of the said 'enumerate' who each heaved 4 sigh of regret and matter ed ruefully, 'sold," Some bongo have recently been diet°, ered at Neufchatel, Switzerland, that be longed to an antediluvian mainifer Professor Putimoyer believes that i formed a mammoth (elephas pritnigeni tus), similar to those whOseremains have' been discovered in Siberia, The &gime' was a contemporary of the men of the worked stone period,. previously to the glacial era, which seetus to have pirt an eit4 to its'exiatenco,' AO CENTS PER WE Stop His litemo.— is not au un• common thing to meet w th horses who will kick while in harness, Such' horses nro dangerous to drivelon. , t4 habit di• tninishes their value 'rely - much, A inb scriber gives the followingsimple method of preventing the practice of this perni• elms trick Take a forked stick, about two feet long, varying a little, according t 6 the size of the horse ; tie the end of the fork firmly to each end of the bridle bit, and the other end of the stick to the lower end of the collar, so as to keep the head up, and this will prevent his kicking. A few days' working in this manner will commonly effect a cure. Morse. aro more apt to kick when turning in plotigh., ing, •r harrowirg, than when doing any , 'other work. —An,. StOck Journak, R,YR ON SANDY German ;lora Telegraph in an article on Rye; !says : Mine of, the cereals can, in fact, be cultivated \ on, a soil which contains eighty-five parts in ono hundred of sand ? except 'rye. But it ,mayi_ be remarked that the richer the land is the more lux. groat will be the .rye,linless, indeed, it e so replete with humus as to induce a plethora, which proves always detrimen tal if not fatal to the grain. All sandy lands, and oven those which nearly ap. proximate in their nature the character of sandy looms, part with their humus much more readily than clayey soils.— This renders them capable of producing good crops 'of r.yo with lour olsoluble humus than would be necessary to cepa cify them for the production of a crop of wheat or corn —Donato M galdo, the Italian, who was convicted Of the murder of John Hy land, in Baxt6r street, Now York, last 4th of July, has been sentenced to the State Prison f 7 the term of his natural life. ,• —Reader, when during the coming' weeks you tread'on a caterpillar, remem• her that you. annihilate tho ancestor of what would be,,, by next October, hia 6,600,000,000 ofikpritig. —The preacher who was hissed Washington theatre, Sunday night, for criticising the President's pardon of Dempsey, hna challenged that individual, but Mr. 1). declined to light. ,r •LA severe shock of an earthquake oo• eurred at Phillipsburg, 3t. Martin's, about noon on the 28th ult., which caused the suspension of business during the entire afternoon, —The State Auditor . of North Carolina has been committed to jail for disobeying an ordor of tho Supreme Court,. relative to the removal of lia,papers froth the clock's °film ,—A flag made entirely of milk grown add manufactured in California la to be (Maud over tho Capitol of that State. —A two-neat velocipede ,baa , been ventedin e at Newark, and a four-wheeled ono at Buffalo. _ —By ehomienl prO'cees, knifo handles and fine-tooth combs arc made from po• tato•pulp• —A citizen of Orange, Vemont, has , ,a gOO5O 60 years old, that has raised 'Vier 850 goalinge, Here is a ohne° for 69ino one's Thanksgiving dinner,. —Shad have already }icon caught in iho Delaware. —Kentaeky hag n hen that has said a three•cornored egg. —Benjamin B. Wiley and daughter, the latter Itt years old , passed through St, Louis .on . Saturday on their way to Memphis, Scotland county, to stand their trial on the charge of murdering an int flint two years of ago, being the fruit of an incestuous intercourse betwien the father and daughter. —With reference to the chill with - no backbone, who is reported to hare re. contly died in Ohio-, the Boston Post says that by his death "the State lost admira ble material fora member of Confess.", —The Cincinnati steamboat inspectors_ have completed the investigation of the'. terrible disaster on tho river by which the steamers United States and America were destroyed, with so many of their passengers, and luive decided that - the pilots of both boats were in the wrong. Tho licenses of the \blunderers are revoked, and,' with this awful punish• mont upon them, closes tho tragedy. -A servant girl, in Cleveland, Ohio, has been rendiout of church by the Cath• olic Bishop of that plac_,e for circulating stories against a Mrs. Dominick Welsh, which resulted in her abandonment by her husband. —A farmer, 'recently plowing near Now Market, East Tennessee - , was greatly as tonished to see his borne: sink into 4' emit) , eighteen feet deep, "skinning off" their harness, and leaving 'the plow be hind. Both the animals were suffocated. - This sudden occurrence was the first in dication that tho earth below was cavern -0118. —A Miss Mary Gilmore renounced Chriptianity and *as received into Juda ism, in ChicagO, last week. —ln Aritona there are !about 85,000 Indians, not one of whom ltas ever yet been instructed in the principles - of 66" Christian religion. —A colony of beavers have settled on tho Appomattox river, Virginia, and are cutting down quantities of shrubbery and young trees. —Maine was visited on Monday night by a mist severe ice storm. The scene the following mining was beyond de scription. Hundreds of trees were corn plete4 ruined, and tho't roads, were al polL itnpamble, El . II