t '-? 1 - ... 11 . Zm-. . . 'r. .." ' ",V?r7n. frT ." ..i.-i , , i hi m mm iwi iii ii i ii i i ii i nan mi ii i imunnm miiiiniiiiMWil iJLj , , ,i,IMITirrTTTm--rTi-rr-rr -" . nrrf"- i n- i - - - , . -. .... . ti fiinn ininii n " ir'"T Scuotcb to politics, Citcvatuvc, svicultttvc, Science, iiioaditn, an cncral 3iitclligcnrc. TROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA. FEBRUARY H, 1858. NO. 8 VOL Is. S Published by Theodore Schoch. TB'tMs T.v lollars per nireim in advance Two HoHir.snutn qu irler. half yearly and il not paid before the en I of the ycar.Two dollars anil a hall. No Miprs hrvuimipdmitilallarrearagesarep.ud exe.cnt at the oiM.m of the Editor. liac will be insprle.Mhrer urelis lor one lollar, and charge, for one and three insertion? the same. A lib er tf discount tn'i lc to vc.irlv aUeilicrs. IC7 Allletiers iddiesscd to the Etlitoi r.uslbc post paid. J O K E Ei ! 5 T J KG. Having.i!;cnrralasortinciitoflarge.rlcpant,pl.un andontanionlal Tvpp.wpareprcparcd tocxerititccvcrydcMMii't.orof SF&ISTSS' SPSllL'SMSK'C!-, CardCir.ut.Hinireads.Notes.HlanuKcceip Justie-cs, Le? l and other ni'.nks. Pamphlet. &c printed a,th neatness and despatch, on reason- bie terms, AT THE OFFICE OF THE 3 KFlFE25i&OK A7i. Paper 02:tSEger, MOUSE AND SlCrS Shop in Aurachcr's building, on Eliz- abcth street, btroudsiiurg, l a., wncre may be had at all times Sash. Poors, Oiiads & Shiiers, which will be soid at the lowest rates Calt a 1. r nd examine before purchasing elsewhere TRIAL LIST for Feb. Term, 1S58. Executors of Joseph Keller, deceased vs. Mclchior Coserd. Executor of James Clever, deceased vs. James X. Durling, Alexander Horn by, Mathias Brackley and Win. S. White. Fred., rick Cramer, vs. Sarah Kiplc, Executor of George Kiplc, deceased. John J. Griffiu vs. George Phillips. Ephraim Chri.-traan vs. Samuel J. Ber- gcr. Jese K. Weiss vs. Moses u. oyse. William Ruff vs. Sydenham V <on. William S. Vvintenute vs. the School Directors of Stroud township. Daniel Bailey vs. Samuel S. Keller. Adam Bojcr vs. Jnoes M. Porter na John W. Sayrc, partners under the firm of Porter fc Sayre. A Dismal Plight. A Good Story. Sir John Mandeville, an old British navigator, gives some astonishing reports of adventures in the Arctic seas 5ucb, for oxample, as the following : We were separated by a storm in the latitude of 'seventy-throe, ins-omuch thai only the ship which I vras in. with a Dutch and' French ve-fel, cot afe into a oretk of Nova Zembla. We landed in ord.er tr refit our vesels, and store our.-elve- with provision. The crew of each vessel wade themselves a cbin of turf and wood at some distance from each other, to fence themselves aaint the inrdemencies of the weather, which was severe beyond imag ination. We soon ob-erved that, in talk ing to one another, we lo-t several of our words, and could not hear one another at above two yards distauce, and that too when we sat very near thc fire. After much perplexity, I found that our words froze in the air before they could reach the ears of the person to whom they were spoken. I v:as t-oon confirmed in tlii conjecture, when, upon the increase of the cold, the whole company grew dustib, or rather deaf; for every man was sensi ble, as we afterwards found that he spoke as well as ever, but the sound- no sooner took air than they were condensed and lost It was now a miserable spectacle to see us nodding and irapiug at one an other, every man talking, and no man beard. One might ob-erve a seaman that could hail a ship at a league's dis tance, beckoning with his baud, straiuing his lungs, and teaiing his throat; but all in vain : Nor voice, nor words ensued. We continued here three weeks in this ( j:i i;..i.f At r,n r, turn nf j 1 - . v v t Wind the air about us began to thaw. Our ; ,- - t i fiii.i -t, cabin was immediately filled with a dry 1 ...hint; T -fWicr fm.nA ' to be the cracl above our with a gentle hissing the letter 4s" that occurs so frequently in 1 ! t. i 1 p. 1 .1. i.-L.Ar ..t.:! "t - .uow.uit uj u.j , for those, being of a soft and tent c sub- , p stance, immediately liquified m the warm - , '. ,1 J 1 viod that blew ac.oss our cabin. Thee that molted sooner or later, as they were more or less coorcaled: so that we now ;Un ronronats that broke ; ' . , ? c.,., ,t,..t ...i,.,,, vt1(, Vll. heads and verv often mixed ; icelings in my ico, lor ue laugneu 1- . uiaas, anu ery ouiu ujiiu r , smirned vnn as she would :i von- , Which 1 imputed tO J lot ninil- ronrile- v l!..-.l sl.. tnnh hnnh tUn heard everything that had been spoken interrupted him. "Do you remember thc during the whole three weeks, that we time when I went to you, five years ago, bad been silent, if I may use thcexpres- aud offered you what now would be your eioo. It was now very early in the mor-, highest bliss to own? Do you remember ning aud yet to my surprise, I heard how you laughed my words to scorn, and somebody say "Sir John, it is midnight scoffed at me as a silly boy, who had mis and time for tk? ship's crew to go to bed." taken himself and you? Ay, 1 was a boy This I knew to.be the pilotV, aud, upon re- in years, llelleu lleade; but a man's un collecting myself, I concluded that he had demanding, a man's experience, a man's spoken those words to me sonic days be- pas.-iouate strength of purpose, had made fore, though I could not hear them until me old before my time, and I loved you the present thaw. My reader will easily with as perfect a love as ever grew up m imagine how the whole crew was amazed a human heart I was proud; and your to hear every mau talking, and see no indifference, your gay, heartless, cutting an opening his mouth. In the midst of indifference galled me, and made disop tbis great surprise wc were all in, wo pointment doubly bitter. I said then, as heard a volley of oaths and curses, last- I left you with that dead hope making ing for 0 long while, and uttered in a vc- ' discord in my breast, that some day your ry hoarse voice, which I kuew belonged heart should bleed us mine did then; that to the boatswain, who was a very choler- some day I would mock your auguish ic fellow, and had taken this opportunity contempt as humiliating as that you heap of cursing aud swearing at me when he cd ou mc. Has not my hour of triumph thought. I could not hear him; for I had come? nave I not won you carefully, several times given him the strappado on proudly, as best became b luy ' that account, as I did not fail to repent ject I wa striving for? And did L not Z. c 1 1 ,.i:u.,;nc n-lmn T limw iust now. when , my blood tingled ,ot him bn shinboard. ; LOVE AND REVENGE. Oh, bow I hated him how I hated Richard Hiclv kneeling by my Side, ., . t rf r mn,.l-;n , tvinrntili li.rk. With tint sort ot niOCkmg tliumpll JlgiJC- nj,1(T up ,;.. deep eyes, and his proud, thin hps, halt parted, as it in expectation til at I would say something that ho might wish to cheek. And whqjsvould not have bated him as I did? Let idc tell you how it was. I had loved him more than a year- J0VC(J !,,, hcavctl only knows how pas- . J .. ,, ,1,, sionatcly. isot more blindly or entirely docs the silk worm weave itself with it own shroud, tllHU I wrapped myself up jn his pleasure, his admiration, llh love, . trilst;n,.lT tlirn. the fearless ea- ' glo to it- mountaiu eyrie, than I, fooli.-h 1 J w w v v - - j,- j - and confiding, turned to thcbiijht, beau tiful castles of hope which I had built on the rotton foundation of his faith. And ! yet (I never thought of it till that day; i and oh, with what a huniiliatinj-; weight I . , , . l 1 1 A the Knowledge came to me.; tie nau uuv ror cious UUU. JJUt L IiclM UKJL U1UiV LianLti cinn m r.i-ie could be not-red forth and ;.ion as t.i.ie could i,e poured 101 t i . . lu or asKei me lor 111 v iov nuvui --n" 1 - , ., ., .11 11 e 1 tit,m run nrnnni tn near me: t answer-. ann;i iun "" ji it opeulv save by tender glances and cd yoa as any other giddy, inconsiderate 8loo upon tne mresuo u. 1 j 1 nl.ii.i Lorn rlnnn- hut ITnvnn knows "W hat, all cmi.tv, all nark!1 I heard , prestiuree 01 ine nauu, aiiu uioat iuous.uiu " - 1 1 i 1 . .r.,n, rt firi. l,r ii i - i 1 T nio'nt nn linnii no eoMteinnt no cxul- huu pay, and then ho turned to go, owe : deheste attentions which arc most pre- 1 meant no uartn, no to.uuiipi, , j - .. . , 1 t- (i;A., v ,o. wl 51 nrh e. a tne Duller 01 my wuiio r umn to llic jealous eyes ann ears 01 auec-I " -...v.. . ' . , , t t . ,,,.,1 ,! ,J . . J. .... 1.. n ..iv nftraeleii his no tee. for he stooped and urine wc no return, jl tun not uvu nn- . v .. t ',' T vi . .. 1 , agine that his apparent devotion could be ' nd kept it rankling in you memory till, ! that you? -I did. not ancr, bu wrongly understood; and sol blindfold- it has grown strong enough to cru.h byjdrewthe window curtain c.osoly about ed mUlf.ond, bewildered, content, hap-; its rebounding, a heart that would have my face. -Don t be tnfiing, he.a.dim py, rushed forward to despair. t, lat drop of blood to serve you. patiently, 4I havo someth-ng hat I wish That afternoon wc had been sit ing in L-vc jouT-jw-so well that I could 1 to -something that I M,ut tell you. the garden, talking to each other, aswc ' strike J0U dead here at my feet, and tram-! And he came along, and drew an ottoman had "many times before, of our pa-t lives. ' pie on youi lifeless body in very loathing to my iuq. The dreamy music which the wind made of the mean soul it contained! so wellj Jhat he should have mistaken me for a- it stirred the trees above and the that if your faUe heart lay bare before j another person, even in the dark, seemed (mt,xtt Bivell nf parlv flowers with rae, I could snap the chords apart with 'strauge to me then, although I sec now which the spring air was loaded, seemed iuot the cut-A ard influence needed to soft- bruce and the sweet mother who had U1IUVW UU iiiw -wv- u.v..v. closed her eves in their eternal j-lccp ere the rss had twice srown green over her hubandt coffin; of his desolate, friendless, struggling boyhood, showing w.c, one by hu-bandt coffin; of his desolate, friendless, one the wearry steps he bad climed; tell- cu our hearts, and draw them mo.-t nearly be beside you to show you how tit you are "r u eeiuuu a tuougn 1 couiu Miner- . into ..ytupathy; and when iohisqaiet, man- for Heaven; to console you by recalling ny torture rather than make myself known j ly wey he told ine the story of his life of the tragnanimious aims that have inpir- to him, lest he should triumph over me a- i (,.. fi'w tel.n died before his rcmeru- ed your" life, and to revive you at the last :'n i "y "ore womanly and less defi- '. ing me so gratefully how my hands had ani a gratified listener, said my toruten--own roCf in the steep way; and at the tor, diily. olo-e, saying with such a serene smile: "I have nothing more to say," I rc Hfltu, I would suffer my life over a- plied, "save that I pray I may never look u'ain a thousand times, rather than give upon your face .train, unless the sight of Wlr thi dv:" a heart was filled to o- e hooou.es s torment, and then 1 will verfiowing. I too, was an orph'in, and knew better than any one, I thought, how cruelly and grudgingly the world had - - - j 1 j hiid its bsnds upon bun, as he toiled on ward in its service. How glad I was that 1 had always been kiud to hioi, that I had kept my heart free, unsullied and womsniy, as the crowing gift of his suc cess aud joy. I wept, moved deeply by his eloquence and leaning towards httu, with a quick, ittmetuous movement, drew his hea-l for- ward with my hands, and pres-ing my ' ty; o I waited for him to speak. L, it a lips to his white forehead, kissed him ny wonder I hated him? not luhtly aud coquvti-hly but rover- ! "Helen," he .-aid, aud the cutting sharp eutly and tc-rfylly. For a moment he nc-a was all gone from his voice, "will bowed bin bed, and I could not ee his you marry me?" faec; but when he looked up his express- ! The quotioo did not starile me half as ;n Kfn1.1 the ehanr.e h:id been sn ' much as it would have done an hour be- tuddeu. j fore; it was like him itrau,:u, abrupt "Do you know." said he, slowly, drop- J contradictory. 1 spraug up and spurned pin his eves before my look of wonder- 1 him with my foot. ing inquiry, "that I think the woman who ! "Po uot tempt me further, Richard he-tows the tokeus of her love tin-ought, ' Vinely, or even you, evil as you arc, may lowers herself beneath the re-peet of him j "brink from the demou I shall harden in who becomes their recipient." to. I am uot ashamed to own that I I am bure L -hould not have understood have loved you, for over the blackne.-s him, but for the meaning sarcastic smile , nd corruption of your true character, with which he spoke. I saw then, in a you have worn skillfully the disguise ot moment, his whole power over me; I saw a pure, upright manliness, aud through he had led uie ou cautiou-ly, artfully, . that only have I known you Go away through love to pity, and through pity to ' ow and boast of your prowess I am humiliation; I saw that for an ignoble ! willing. Spread it far and wide, that triumph over my woman's pride he had : sacrificed his 1 truth and would sacrifice my heart: I saw mm degraded from an j ""J ' . . , honest, oving, coble heart, into a fiend, ! m and for my lile I coula not have answered , lIT.ill.n Pondn r-rtu rnnrl nof InnV Kf n Utu,r sr, seomfnl in vour at.- i uw.t r : -- . ger, thiuking to deceive me. lou love b itt. .w v nlii,.,r,. ,P me, aud I know it. 1 ou would have wa- 1 1 1 ..1., I. Ln r fir ded with naked feet through heap-of fire now. You would wait till I have done," he contiuued, when I would have beneath -the; pressure ,pf ypor, arm, half inreeo 10 usieu. " i "J " hv half confident, and felt the warmth of your clinging lip-t upon my brow, that nnvor liofnr. li!il vou been so completely, so unreservedly, mine? Ilelcu, Helen! ; iors that had been crowded with couspa atn I not gloriously avenged now, that Ijny all the afternoon: I sang, jested, ani can toss batk your heart as lightly as I played, scarcely knowing and little caring have won it, and know all the whilo that what I did, yet dimly conscious that, once vou love me, in .-pile of yourself and your the tail figure of Richard Vinely came m "uji"hty pride?" 'to tne r00lQj linereJ a moment as if 'Ilichard Vinely," 1 began, as lie ccaseu. speaking; but the torrent of fierce words that leaped up hotly for utterance choked in? mr lirt humeri as though bli-tered by tl.o n.,..l. nf lh.m. ami I was forced to stop and t-teady my wild rage before Ij were extinguished, and laint with the could proceed. misery I had kept in check so lonsr, I was At leaiiiith, in a hoarse, angry whis- bitting on a broad, low window-seat at one per I said? j end of the desolated parlors, leaning out "Ycsl I remember the time of which; to feel the cool, frc.sh, nijht wind, as it you pponk; although, but for vour deli-' to-sed the long, unbound hair, from my cate rewinding, I tnight never have called fevered cheeks. Everything seemed to it to my mind again. I was a youn.:, me like a contused dream, and when the thoughtless, ignonmt girl: I did not uu-!door at tht at the further extremity of derstand you, or the nature of thp feel- ji C - - "O I . . 1 11 .' e eri bed the sligtit ot a necuiess gin, as little pity as I would threads of flax! so well, that when vou die I hope T may moment by whimpering in your ear of the - r honorable victory you have achieved over a defenceless, weak hearted womanl" I paused, out ot breath with pas-ion. "Go on please go on. Anger 1m- proves the Style ot your ocauty, and 1 rik wealth, life, ay, everything, for the sake of passing once more before your eyes." He caught one of my hands that was iyioz idly in my lap, and when 1 would hava snatched it from hirn, he closed his fitijors about it like a vice. The look of bitternc-s softened away from his fea tures, and one of almo-t tender expecta tion took its place. I saw in thu change only a new revelation of hypocrisy, cun ning and tar-eein treacherous maligni- Helen ilea tie proud, imperial, naughty . ueieu neaue uas oeeu uuuiuieu ny your scorn. i f - t f c. . i,fOP. nu. jjuc sa not tu.it sne wept oeiorc you, , , , ..w,!,.,! say 1 ot that -b. clui. to you, or pleaded, lore you despised and flung it to the t as the only shame of her life; say ! th,t. she defied, insulted, cursed you to 1 1 your face, and called a I the ane s of J . ,1 1 t , ' darkness to licr aid, so that she may hate and she live; say- "Stop! in Heaven's name, stop!" he ex claimed, interrupting me; and I knew by the whiteness of his face, and the blank, horrified look of entreaty which he gave me, that my vehemence frightened him. I was glad (hat it was so, and swept past him with a low, derisiye laugh. "Wait, and hear mo one moment, Hel en!" he cried, springing forward to de tain me. I t T tlinn in r !ir MM ( 1 I HI V. ror lattiteil. ss rentier women miiht have But I shook off his touch as it had nearly overwhelmed mc. been a serpent's, and walked proudly up He turned his bead quickly, and ex ilic narden nuth. 1 can but wonder now 'claimed, in a voice scarcely above a whid at the mighty effort with which I crushed Ver- "Hark, Amyl Am I dreammg--back my true feeling into subjection, r 1 lluar hr cilU mc?" till my heart was numb with the great I put my hands out to him, as I had agony it would not let find a voice. I done before that day, and drawing his tried to think of everything save the in- head forward with the same quick, impet ward Ore that was consuming me; tried uous movement, let my lips cling once to think of the rose bushes whose green more to his white forehead. Just then branches, thick with buds, brushed my the moon came over the tops of the garments as I went steadily past thein; trees, aud abroad beam of light dropped tried to think of the lilacs that reached in at the window like a torch of silver. out their heavy clusters to me like so ma- He caught me by the shoulders and turn ny purple hands; aGd all the while I felt ed mc about till I faced the light, and I that sharp anguish gnawing into my soul, saw a rapid, intense happiness break over I did not go to my, room, fprr I thought his features as he murmured huskily, that its qiiiet solitude would, kill mc. t "Helen!" -v?-.- - was too miscrablo too weep, or pray, or think. I uceicd excitement, activity, a- rnusement. So I went into the Urge par- waicmug me, anu uitu 01?...... i no not remember now T.ai ucnioou and evening wore away. But I know the irreat. uoisv, brilliiint roomn were silent I .1 last: the gue.-t had departed, the liht the apartment w3 openeu t-ouiy, l ion r . , L......A hh a inui L'fnnn intn t in rAM . - 1 H(J 5 Amy." he called, in a low voice, how easily in his great agitation it could be. But I was glad to escape detection, ' ant mood. Besides I thought I should t I 1 t I'll like to hear bun speak once more, kindly .and without irony, as he had been wont to speak before that terrible hour whn j he almost s.ote me mad. with his eruel j words; So I schooled uiyself for the ic- j ception I was abor.t to practice, and told-' hsiu in a whi-per, that I was ready to hear , him. j "0, 1 am wretched, Amy, so utterly wretched!" he commenced. I Fierce n- was the exultation with which 1 I heard this confes.-ion, there was some thing so touching, and withal so earnest, that for a moment I pitied more than de spised hitn. Since he suffered I thought I had a right to pantinlly forgive him the terrible wrong he had done mc. : "Li-ten," he continued, seeinir I did "ot :peak; "let me tell you wlrtt an idol, what a wretch I hive been. You known Amy, " I imaniucd his voice quivered a little "what my feelings have been to wards Helen lleade; to you, and to you only have I confided the love which has been my in-piration for hx long years. You know, too, that a lonur time ago, when she was very young and I was fool ish, I offered myself to her and was re jected. Since then she ha- learned to look upon me in a different liyht; need I say what happiness it has yiven ine to known it? lo day, Amy, when 1 knew that, a !ingle word of mine would have o peucd the iuennost door of her proud heart to tne and made her mine forever, some evil demon put it in my heart to try her even as had been tried. I taunted her with the very love I craved so madly, and told her I had sought it but for re venge. Fnol that I was so to tempt a wo- ; man's pride! Fool to thin U I could put her from me with affected contempt, ani gather her all the more closely to my bos- . 0111; to imagine I miht rdioek. startle, ter rify her, and then soften her back' into forgiveness, by the same tenderness I hail , outraged! Oh. the real indignation with i which she corned me and tlung my in- i suits back into my teeth! I qu ailed be- J fore her, atoniahed, ashamed, ha filed; trembled at the -torm I had invoked. , With a rash hand I dared di-turb the j sweot chanci of her maidenly love, and it turned into a river of gall, whose bitter ness shall henceforth be over all my life. feel that no explanation, no apology, no plea for forgivcnesst can be powerful enough to counteract the great, unuttera blo baited with which I have in-pired her. Pity me dear Amy, pity me! A mad, unmanly freak hascoatme the hap piness of a lifetime" He paused, and I could hear hisproud form shaking with strong, passionate sobs of grief. It was well that hfi was thus agitated or the loud beating of my heart would have betrayed me. "Ilichard!" I whispered softly through my blinding tears, after I had time to control the rapturous feeling that ban i 1 t 1 "Do not repute me again. Kiuhnrd?" How Eurnirg Fluids nre Made. I cried, putting both my arms round a- Not many years ago the only fluids bout hi neck, and dropping mj baj.py, omjiiovea in our country for household tearful face, upou his shoulder ''it would lig t were animal oil.-, ol tniiu-d by prri killiml" lo f adveti'tifc on the storm- Sa uiih "Rcj u'se you, IL!en?', Tt was ail he monstets of the dorp. At prc-ent whale said, but a whole heart full of gratitude oil- are in comparatively limited use for penitence, hope and temleruess was in the illumination, and are becon-ing more lim. words, and I was content. M. Y. itei every year. Sperm oil has no supe- i rior aaiohg ali the burning fluids, hut it ilia-' I'CCoiiie so dear that cheaper substi Making Sread by Hacliinery. j totes have bet n sought and obtained. It is somewhat remarkable that up to Thc ,,'-t foxnmon of these is a compound" A. ... , . .of nlehohol atiil turi er-tir-e, comn only the present time, when utmost every want , ... . 7; .,i:,.t, J known by thc nam oi hunum jlnia.vikwlx of civilized mar. U supplied by machine- jH very cheap and d -anly, pes. ssing none ry, thc manufacture of bread the first of that gretisy proj ert which belongs to of all necessaries, the "sUfif of life" oil-. 'J his fluid was first brought into should be almost universally carried on l'."c .P1" $ J,e" V(1 in as r.i4e a manner an by "the ancients. P''O w obraincd for it by Isaiah It in tru that the primary process of eon-: JeUIIi,l,'.of L'W Y!C;7' It" "DJ verting the grain into fiWr may be said P;c, of,,f1c V! oi h'P rectified al to have arrived at perfection, but. bejond "hoi and one ot camphene. and is capa thia the .ranufHoture, as generally prac- bIe of ,n comuion "P w !t tiecd, differs little from what it waiu the n0t vohuh, ho huru,:, fluid could bo days of 31o.es. The subject has. howev- morc strahle. Lrom its veiy nature, er, within the l.vt few year-, attracted owcver. it nin.t be used uith great care, 1 e .- because it is so liable to evaporate auu much titention from scietitihc and nrie- , , . "" - v 1 .1 .1 . 1 l'' become cxtdoivc by uiixinj; with tne at- nious men, both in thn country and Eu- . 1 T. ., ,a . - ... , . : ntop!ere. IJornbic accidents, causinir rope, and it now seems tti:t tnis most im- . , . . , ' j portent of all the usczui arts is to lo no Ionirer behind those which miuisterto our other wants. A mechaniele bakery has jut com menced operation in Philadelphia, thc o-ven- and machinery of which are the in vetuion of A. Bcruan, of New York city, which is enpable, when worked up to it- fullo-t capacity, of converting into bread , f the enormous quality of 1.000 barn flour daily, e-t.mated -uinei-m to supply 1 the entire population ot the Q-iuker City. tinctl at a jou. temperature from rich can By the immense avin- of labor, fuel and w COB,f ar(j nQW lhU cij ajUOst exclu space the bre:d can be applied from the ,vcy Omr.owd for lubrication in Great c-tahli-hmcnt to the con-uu.cr, at a eot u,jt.,it tt(:fe n js extensively used both greatly below tint chared by the bakers, faJ. jbr;c,.aon &n,i iHUII1iaation among and even cheaper than it can be made by . 0jr peop0 yat bojtf oi- rjcu c0-l from families, put cha-iug their fio-tr at retail. , w ,iich ojj can be obtalncd cxj.t jn A brief description of this immen-e eon-; pennsvivriia. Ohio and Kentucky, af cern will, doubtless, Lc intere.-tiig to he forijj, ;ourcc3 Gf ?pply or thousand? majority of our reader-, thou.-h it would , J0ars come TJji oj Qver in a require engravings to give anything like, very cru ?e .utc? jSiC;i,(abie Qf being gen an adequate idea of it. . ! er-.lly cn.ployed for buriiiZ on its firsf Thc building is four stories high, to filiation; but bv the u-e of snlpbaritr the uppen.io.-t of which the flour is con-; ac;.i a(i K,cl,ro.t;te of notash. several reyed in the barrels by .1 hoisting appa-, wa.i,i,lsrs a!l,i i.,aiiou-. it is purified ratu-, and alter being turned out ot the as to afford a mo.-t briili.nt liht in an barrels, is sifted by suitable machinery, j arsraIlt burner. Coal oils are very peca and afterwards conveyed into a lar.- hop-t jiar A vcry cjRar olj r:; t0je over jn per belongintr to the kneading machine, , small qQlj;,t;0S at a comparative low which is on thc floor below. This " ;. i,rilt d,.m,g distillation; then, as the tem chino is composed of a hormontnl eylin- pCrilture rai-d, a rater quantity der. in which rotates a bar for stirrin, the . voIt.s ovor tnt t jH -. ami viscid. floer water and ferment together, a sc ap.-r , ajj tjCJSe 0;j8 aro jj AQ ,Q Dccome red in for preventing the adhesion of the dough t,0,or ly ,.Xfl0fUrt. to tbc air anj tbey to the cylinder and a "Hopper," which cuts h(jV,, au 0iyt..i4U 0(ior. into ami opens the douji, takes up several ; Ucettfied turpentine, under the name hundred pounds of it at a time, and ; Qf r:,. pber.e, which is tery cheap, has throws it about in a mo-t remarkable ' been tried' for illumination, ami judgment manner, -0111-what iiiit:it i n r ou a large j j,a.su,j againt it. It require-, like coal scale the operation of kneading by ham ' oil, an argan J burner, aud even with the cau-in' much ir to enter into it and be . greatest care it is iiablu tasmoke aud fill retained within it, di-lributed in 6".all j Tip the me hes of the laiupwiek with resi c Uules, and h, a king the bread very light, ( uou, mattfr. llo.-in oil, although very with a fM.all quantity of yea-t. From cheap, labors under thc ame disadvan this machine the dotii-h is conveyed to ta;e. the hopper or a lo-if-m kintr machine, the i lt a remarkable fart that, while all principal poition of which i- on the -ee-jtj,e auiujal oil- m;y be burnt iu coin'.ron ond floor. This machine cuts or :t.o lids lamp-, very few ol the veg. ttble oils can the dotijjb into loavt.s, anl regi-t rs the he o used. Th? great detect of mo.-t iiuml er n.ade. The mow ids or cutter of 1 v-ethie oils tor burniu - tlnir gu ra the 1 St mentioned machine are varia 'e .y nature, which c;.u-- them to clog up to enable the loaves to be varied in sue ' ti,e U10-h, s o: the wick, and -ive out only exactly in proportion to the mark-1 price1., ,juU redish and Mj.oky liht. The tntf of flour. The loaves, alter being formed, vegetable oil- capable of burning in lamps are carried oh" by an etid!e- apron to a :ire lh,e from the olive and the feed of convenient point, to l.; tiken by attend-1 tj,t. irai-a rttjws, (t ape st i d ) Thi- oil ant- and placed on brick bottomed car-, ;s eapab'e 0f rivalling -perm for giving a on whi'h they are pa-std into the ov. ns b,il!,at.t light. Patent- have beeu taken and baked. '1 he ov ns, of which there, out for purity ing linseed, cotton seed, and aro two. aie upright, and occupy compar- j 5nfiow. r seed oils, to adapt them lor ar atively little horizontal area. They are tif-eial light, hut hitherto none of them independent of each other, and each cooi-jn tVe COll7e into general u-c; the procc.-s plete in it-elf, containing a -ystem of up-1 pr-ued to ptiri'y them have either been rilit endless chains, which are con-taut-' inefficient or too expen-ive. ly in motion, to convey the bread from j Neither the olive nor the rape are cul o'ne door of the oven ou the second floor tivttfd for oil in bur country; yet the for of the build i tit:, where the bread is iniro- ,m,r mav an should he, for its beautiful duccd, down to a door on the lust noor, 0lf ; our Southern States, and the lat wherc it is discharged when sufficiently ter for the same olject iu all our States, baked; ihe time occupied in its descent u lVmce and Germany rape .-eed is ex bcinj j't sufiieient for the baking pro-1 tensively and profitably cultivated. The cess, which is made continuous for any!0ji cxi-ts ready formed in thc seed and is length of time, by the introduction of extracted by pressure, like other oihob-n--w supplies as fast as the di-charges tajIUJ from seed-. Thc sied i first take place, the oven being thus kept con-!rou,ul to inr.il, then heated to 200 dc stantly filled with the bnad at proves- JrePSj placed in bags, and -ubmr'ttl'H to' sive stages of the baking process. Whi c Terj atJVerc pressure. As the oil comes thc baking bread is pss.-itu' down the 0- frou, tju. p. j, co,jtaif.s 0inc i,.Ucilage, veil on one side, the cars which hv.e 1 eeni Illu.t be removed to fit it for burn- e:ptied on the first floor and introduced j,, 1' lx i js accompli.-hed by. stirring a at another door on the saaso floor, areJi,oUt two per ceut. 0f vitriol among it, passing up through thc oven on the op- .shjug with water in vats, and after-po-ite side to a door on the second floor, W!ir( jitt rin it. The sulphuric acid u where they are di-chsrged, fo be re h ad-' ,.jtt,s nj, tuc n,uciafeC of the oil, and ed and introduced at tho fir.-.t named r;,jis down as a heavy precipitate; the oil door again. There are four doors in all, floats on thc top ot tlic water after stand two on tho Gr.-t, and two on the second jni, a fe,v days, and is then drawn off by floor. The endless chains of thc o- a fphon or tap. This oil, which can be vens are made with rails, on which tho employed in common lamps, illumines the cars run in and out. The doox-s ore o- lighthouses on thc French coast, which pencd one at a time, at proper intervals, arc saifl to be tho bcrt lighted in the for the admission and exit of thc cars. WOrld. It is, at least, an oil to which di which are drawn into and expelled from roct attention in order to induce some of the oven, and moved from the uiieharg-iour ,.e0plo to introduce a useful mauufac- 1112 to the receiving uoor.s ouisiuu vu u - veil all by machinery; and fhe only man-1 ... . .. i , ., . . 1 ual labor in thc whole establishment rs that of loadintr and unloading tho car The oven is built entirely ot brick, anu tho cars on which the bread is baked aro with the exception of light iron frames, made entirely of brick. Of tho advan- ta'e of brick ovens it is needless to speak- The ovens arc heated by fires which are tended in-the basement of the, building. ScicrUific "Americans -; -; .. . - . 1 . . . from thc explo-icn of lamps since itcame . . i into use; hence a pater substance is desi rable. From some kinds of bituminuos coal a subpirituou?i oil is now manufactured, which U fast eoin; into popular favor, ouini to the improvements which have recently een u.ade in the mean of pu- rifyincr, and in the lanps designed for . burniit it. It is tut a few years tunce it f ..... . . f;:i0oror4li that f,;i could be dis ture.- oncmutc jimciwan. Loui.3 Napoleon is about- stopping, du-" -ii: i.' 1 : 4-.:. i cuing .in rranoc, ey uiiugmg lorjusiice thc seconds aud surviving princ'ipaljin a recent affair of honor, which terminated fatally, aud had for a caue the .simple. fact that a gentleman wore in his button hole a tlawor. given hitn by a hdywbiclv -bad bounw-ntesrntcd to her eanlyeinl tb evenin hyri.ral. - -. 3191 C S
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