JDcuotci to Jpclitics, literature, Agriculture, 0ricncc, illorcilitn, emit cncral jJxitciixgcitce. VOL is. STROUDSBUKG, MONROE COUNTY, PA. JULY 1,1858. NO. 28. Published by -Theodore Schoch. TERMS. T o dollars per annum in ndvancc Two dollars and a quarter, half yearly and if not paid be fore the end of the year, Two dollars and a half. No papers discontinued until all arrearages ate paid, except at the option of the Editor. IE7 Advertisements of one square (ten lines) or less, one or three insertions, $ I 00. Each additional inser tion, 25 cents. Longer ones in proportion. JOB PRINTING. Having a general assortment of large, plain and or- namentanype, we arc prepared to execute every dc- I acription of j Cards, Circulars, Hill Heads, Notes, Blank Receipts, I Justices, Legal and other ltl.inks, I'-.uuphlets. &c. prin- led with neatntiss and despatch, on reasonable teims t this t.ffice. I THE THIRD CHOICER. A FRENCH WILL STORY. 'Is she dead, then!' 'Yes, madam,' replied a little gentle man in brown coat and short breeches. And her will!' 'Is going to be opened here immediate ly by her solicitor.' 'Shall we inherit anything?' 'It must be supposed so; we havo o cliim.' 'Who is that miserably drcs.ed person ace who intrudes herself here!' i'Oh, she," said the little man, sneering- ly, he wont have much iu the will; she is si.-ter to the deceased.' What, that Annie, who wedded in 13- 42 a man of nothing an officer!' 'Precisely .ao.' She must havo no small amount of im pudence to present herself hT0 before a respectable family.' 'The more so, as sUtcr Egerie, of noble birth, had never given her that Mcsalli liancc.'' Anne moved this time acros the room in which the family of tho dc- j ceased were nsciubleu. fche was pale, her fine black eyes were filled with pre cocious wriukles. What do you come here for?' said, with great haughtiness, Madame dc Villeboys, the lady who, a moment before, had been interrogating the little man who inherited with her. Madam,' tho poor lady replied with humility, I did not come here to claim a part of what does not belong to mo; I come solely to sec M Duboi, my poor sisters solicitor, to inquire if she spoke of me in her last hours.' What! do you thiuk people busy them selves sbout vou! arrogantly observed Madamo de Villeboys 'the disgrace of a , great house you wedded a niau of noth- j mi?, a SOldier OI UOnspane S. Madame, my husband, although a child of the people, was a brave soldier, and what is better, au honest man,' obser ycd Anne. At this moment a venerable personage, the notary Dubois, made his appearance. 'Cease, he said, 'to reproach Anne with a union which her sister has long forgiv en ber. Anne loved a brave, generous, nnd good man, who had no other orituc to reproach himself with thau his poverty and tho obscurity of his name, neverthc- 1c?f, had he lived, if his family had known hira as I knew him I, his old friend Anne would bo at this time happy and respected.' 'But why is this woman herel' Because it is her place to be here,' said thc notary gravely; 'I myself requested her to attend here.' M. Dubois then proceeded to open the will. I, being sound in mind and heart, E- yjerie de Damening, retired as a boarder in the convent of the Sacred Heart of Je- sup, distate the following wishes as the cxprcssiou of my formal dexire and prin cipal elau-e of my testament. 'After my decease theere will be found two hundred thousand francs in money ct my notary's, besides jewelry, clothes and furniture; also a chateau worth two hundred thousand francs. 'In the convent where I have been re siding, there will only be found my book, 'Heurcs de Vierge,' holy volume, which remains as it was when I took it with me at the time of emigration. I desire that there objects bc divided into three lots. 'The first lot, the two hundred thous and francs in money. 'The second lot, the chateau, furniture, and jewels. 'The third lot, my book, Hcures de la Vierge. I have pardoned sister Anna, the grief which she has caused to us, and I would have comforted ber in her sorrows if I had known sooner of her return to France. I compromise ber in my will. 'Madame de Villeboys, my much be loved cousin, shall have the first choice. M. Vatry, my brother-in-law, shall have the second choice. Anne will take the remaining lot.' 'Ah! ah!' said Vatry, 'Sister Egerie was a good one; that is rather clever on her part!' fAnne will only have the prayer book.5 exclaimed Madame de Villeboys, laugh ing aloud. The notary interrupted her jocularly. 'Madame,' he said, which lot do you choose.' .rfThe two hundred thousand francs in Money.' ' 'Have yon quite made ap your mind?' 'Perfectly so.' The man of law, addressing himself then to the good feelings of the lady said, 'Madame, you aro rich, and Anne has nothing. Could you not leave her this lotj and tako tho book of prayers, which the eccentricity of the deceased has plac ed on a par with the other lots!' j 'You must be joking, M. Dubois!' ex- claimed Madame do Villeboys, 'you must really be very dull not to see the inten- lions of sister Egerie in all this. Our honored cousin foresaw full well that her book of prayers would fail to the lot of AnnA nrKrk flin Inof Vi nlna ' 'And what do you conclude from that?' inquired the notary. 'I conclude that she means to Intimate to her sister that repentance and prayer were the only help she had to expect in this world.' As she finished these words Madame the ready money for her share. Mons. Vatry, as may be easily imagined, select ed the chateau, furniture and jewels as his lot. 'Monsieur Vatry,' said M. Dubois to that gentleman, 'even suppose it had been the intention of the deceased to pun ish her sister, it would be a noble act on your part, millionaireasyou are, to give up at least a portion of your share to Anne, who wants it so much.' Thank", for vour kind advice, dear sir,' replied Vatry. The mansion is sit ; , ' ,, J r c i uatcj on the very confines of my woods, , , , , ,, ., ' ! nnii sin ; mo nri nup.nh v ?i tho mnvfi so and suits me admirably, all the more so, ' that it U ready furnished. As to the jewels ! of nster Egerie. they are reminiscences j which one ought never to part with.' 'Since it is so,' said the notary, 'my poor : Madame Anne, here is the prayer book , that remains to you.' i Anne, attended by her son, a handsome ! boy, witli blue eyes, took her sister's old , prayer book, and making her son kiss it i after her, she said: j 'Hector, kiss tbis book which belonged I to vour poor aunt, who is dead, but would have loved jou well had she known you. When you have learned to read, you will pray to Heaven to make you wise and good as your father was, and happier than your unfortunate mother.' The eyes of those who were present wero filled with tears, notwithstanding their their efforts so preserve an appear aucc of indifference. The child embraced the old prayer book with boyish fervor, and opening it exclaimed: 'Oh! mamma, .what pretty pictures!' 'Indeed,' said the mother, happy in the gladness of her boy. 'Yes. The good Virgin, in a red dress, holding the infant in her arms. But why, mamma, had silk paper been put upon the picture?' ou iluh mtj ujiuu uui uc- mjuicu, iuj dear. "But. mamma, why nre there ten silk papers to each engraviugl' The mother looked, and uttering a sud den shriek, she fell into the arms of M. Dubois, the notary, who, addressing those peut, said: 'eave her alone, it won't be much; people don't die of these shocks. As for j you, little one,' addressing Hector, 'give ; me that prayer book, you will tear the engravings.' ' The inheritors withdrew, making vari- j ous conjectures as to tho cause of Anne's J sudden illness, and the interest which the notary took in her. A month afterward i they met Anne and her son exceedingly ( well, but not extravagantly dressed, tak- .ing au airing in a two horse chariot. This led them to make inquiries, and they learned that Madame Anne had recently j purchased a hotel for one hundred and j eighty thousand francs, and was giving a j fir?t rate education to her Bon. Tho news came like a thunder-bolt upon them. i Madame de Villeboys and M. Vatry has- tened to call upon tbe notary forexplana tions. The good Dubois was working at his desk. 'Perhaps we are disturbing you! said the arrogant lady. No matter. I was in the act of set tling a purchase in the state funds for Madame Anne.' What!' exclaimed Vatry, after having purchased house and equipage, she has still money to inveit?' 'Undoubtedly so!' 'But where did the money come from!' 'What! did you uot see!' 'When!' 'When she shrieked upon seeing what j tue prayer ooou contained wuicn sne in herited.' 'We observed nothing.' Oh! I thought you saw it,' said the sarcastic notary. 'That prayer book con tained sixty engravings, and each engra ving tvas covered by ten notes of a thou sand francs each.' ! exclaimed Vatry, j 'Good Heavens!' thunderstruck. If J had only known it! shouted Mad ame de Villeboys. 'You had your choice,' added the nota ry, 'and I myself urged you to take tho prayer book, but you refused.' 'But who could have expected to find a fortune in a breviary! The two baffled egotists withdrew, their Qr brers by tbc side of a log. ;fc jg of sim. hearts swollen with pasf-ionate envy. pie struoture, being composed of a few Madame Anne is ftill in Pans. If dried leaves ln this receptacle, tho eggs you pass by the Rue Lafitte on a tine are deposited, sometimes to the number summer evening, you will see a charming of twentyf but more usually from nine to picture on the first floor, illuminated by gfteen; tfcoy are whitish, spotted with red the pale reflection of wax lights. j igQ Drownf like those of the domestic tur- A lady who has joined the two hands jjej The female always approaches her of her son, a fair child of six years of age nest with great caution, varying her course in prayer before an old book of 'Heures so ag rarely to reach it twice by the same dc la Vierge,' and fogwhich a case of r0ute; and on leaving her charge, she is gold has been made. 'Pray for me, child,' said tho mother. ' leaves, with which she conceals it so care 'And for who else!' inquired tbe child, j fully, as to make it extremely difficult, e- 'For your father, your dear lather, who perished without knowing you, without being able to love you.' j 'Must I pray to the saints, my patron?' ' 'Yes, my little friend; but do not forget a saint who watched us from Heaven, and who smiles upon us from above the nlnnflu " 'What is the name of that saint, mam ma?' The mother, then watering the fair child's head with tears, answered: j Her name is Sister Egerie. Wild Turkeys their History and Habits. noe and to the order maleagris gallopavo, ' and is found only in America. Its orig inal range extended from the Northwest j ern part of the United- States to the Isth mus of Panama. It is now mostly eon fined to the unsettled or thinly inhabited portions of Arkansas, Louisiana, Tonnes see, Alabama, Ohio, Kentucky, Illinois, ; and the vast territory lying west and j south-west of these States, though found ; in small numbers in Georgia, Florida,the - - -j Carolines, Virginia and Pennsylvania. Turkeys of a mongrel variety, produced . J . e . s ... ,f ' r , , by a crossing of the wild and tame breeds, Jo are found in the mountainous parts of Sussex County, N. J., and in Western , elected Just,co ot tb? i c6- owJohn New York; and are commonly called wild , dld nofc Profe8S to. skilled in all the turkeys. J mysteries and intricacies of the law, nci- Some of the peculiar habits of this bird ' ther did he tbiulf U necessary that he are thus described in tho "Transactions should bc- for' os he understood it his du nftli Amf.r;,.an Tnstimtfl" for 1852 . ty as squire was simply to preservo the The wild turkeys do not confine them- selves to any particular food; they eat Iu- tenaea to ao ai au nazarus, wnciuer uu diaucorn, all kinds of berries, fruits, did it legally or not. He had books con grains, and grasses; and even tadpoles, taming the laws of the State of Vermont, grasshoppers, young frogs, and lizards, also several decisions, forms of deeds, arc constantly found in their crops; but mortgages, warrants, etc., which were of where the pecan nut is plenty, they pre- much service t0 h5m in tQo discharge of fer that food to any other. Their more his official dul5es- 0ne daJ his neighbor general predilection is, however, for tho A- camc t0 bim 10 8reat haste. Sajing he acorn, or mast, chestnut, etc-, on which had hissed a handsaw, which had proba they readily fatten. About the begiuniug blJ been stolen and suspected B. to be of October, while the mast or shock, still fiuilty of the . theft, as he was the only remains on toe trees, tucy assemme in flocks, and direct their oourse to the rich bottom lands. At this season they are observed in great numbers in the valleys of the Ohio and Mississippi. The time of this irruption is knowu to the Indians by the name of turkey month. The males usually termed gobblers, associate in par ties numbering from ton to a hundred, and seek their food apart from the fe male.; while the latter cither move about singly with their young, then nearly two thirds grown, or, in company with other females and their families, form troops, snmntimfis consisting of seventv or eihf,v individuals, all of whom are intent on a- c ' o j voiding the old males, who, whenever an opportunity offers, attack and destroy the young by repeated blows on the head. AH parties, however, travel in the same direction, anu on loot, uniess tney are compelled to seek their individual safety, by flying from the hunter s dog, or their march is impeded by natural obstructions. When the turkeys have surmounted all difficulties, and arrived at their land of abundance, they disperse in small flocks, composed of individuals of all sexes and .. -llll 11 . i nrroK inrprminrrifiii. wnn n ft vour an tho iges mast as they advance; this occurs about the middle of November. It has been observed that, after these long journeys, tbe turkeys become so familiar near the farm houses and plantations as to enter the stables and corn-cribs in search of food; in this way they pass the Autumn, and part of the Winter. Early in March they begin to pair; and for a short time previous the females sep arate from and shun their mates, though tbe latter pertinaciously follow them, ut tering their gobbling notes. When ma ted for the season, one or more females, thus associated, follow their favorite and roost in the immediate neighborhood, if not on the same tree, until they begin to lay, when they ohange their mode of life, in order to save their eggs, which the male uniformly breaks, if in his power, that the female may not be withdrawn from his company and attention. At this time, the females shun the males during the greater part of the day; tho males be comes clumsy and careloss, meet each oth er peacefully, and cease to gobble. The sexes then separate: the males retiro and conceal themselves in secluded parts of tbe forest, or in the almost impenetrable recesses of a canebrake. About the mid dle of April, when the weather was dry, tbe female selects a propper place in which j to deposit her eggs, secured from the en croachment of water, and as far as possi- blc, concealed from tbe watchful eyo of tne crow. ch-js crafty bird espies the hen I going to her nest, and having discovered the precious deposit, he waits lor tho ab sence of the parent and then removes ev ery one of the eggs from the spot, that he may devour them at his leisure. The nest is placed on the ground, cith er on a dry ridge in the fallen top of a . lonfu troo nrwlnr tlnnlror. nf Rnmnnli 9f A very careful to cover tbe whole with dry - m m m m . ven forono wno nas waicuca ner move- ments, to indicate tho exact spot. When laying or sitting, the turkey ben is not easily driven from her post, by the ap proach of apparent danger; but if an ene my appears, she crouches as low as pos sible, and suffers it to pass. They seldom abandon their nests on account of being discovered by man, but should a snake, or any other wild animal, suck one of her eggs, the parent leaves them altogether. If the eggs be removed, she again seeks the male, and recommences laying, though otherwise she lays but one nest of eggs du ring the season. Several turkey hens associate, perhaps for mutual safety, and deposit their eggs in the same nest, and rear their broods together. Mr. Audu bon onoe found three females sitting on forty-two eggs. In suoh cases the nest is constantly guarded by one of the parties, so that no crow, raven or polecat, dare approach it. The mother will not for sake her eggs, when near hatching, while life remains; she will suffer an cnolosure to be made around and imprison her, rather than abandon her charge. : The Way He Got over It. Among the first settlers of Kentucky , was one oan wno was atierwarua X.I. X . I- - I - f 1- ' Peace and dspcnse justice, which he in-j . ijii j-iiii j i. i i. . " "v .6w. " .. ly to do such a thinjr, consequently he wanted a search-warrant to search the premises of the said B., whereupon the squire turned to his books for a form of a search-warrant for a handsaw ! He was quite sure he must have one some where, but a'ter looking for an hour, without finding anything about a hand saw, be concluded it must have been mis laid. However, he found something rel ative to stolen turkeys, which would an swer cveiy purposo, so ho issued a search warrant for turkeys, instructing A at the same time, if he found the saw while , i p .i . i i i. i : loOKing xor ine lurxteys, iu iuhe uuu u would be all right. Gin. A citizen of Jersey City, says the Courier, had occasion to purchase a small quantity of gin the other day up- on recipe of bis physician. It appearing "ugntnmg" iikc to nis tasie no uccuuea to use it, and passed the bottle overdo his wife for cleaning purposes. Being troubled with bed-bugs, she applied it to tbe bedstead with the idea that they would at least scamper off at the smell, when relink in a K n natnni jli mnnf fr, aan flii In. nuau 3 uo uaiuuiauuiuu " sects drop dead upon the first apalication of the liquid. Let human gin drinkers therefore beware. Delicate Eating. The "Digger In dians," of California, catch cart-loads of grasshoppers by driving them into a pit dug for the purpose, after which they are baked by fire encircling the pit, and then pulverized into flour, from which various delicate viands are prepared for the Indi an palate. A man named William Simcock, of Washington county, Pa., recently lost his wife in tbe morning married his second wife before night, and followed the re mains of his first wife, in company with the second, to the grave the day after. A "boss" doctor in Olean, made a bet of twenty dollars that he could remove from any horse anything nature had not placed upon the beast meaning ring bone, spavin, &c. A wag took the bet, showed him a mortgage for one hundred and fifty dollars on a favorite horse, and pocketed the twenty dollars. Prentice of tho Louisville Journal, ob jects to the five minutes rule in tho New York prayer meetings. He says, "im agine for instance, Old Bennett, of the Ilerald, confessing his sins in the ridicu lous space of five minutes !" Danger From noors. Tho Peoria Transcript, says that, in the recent torna do in Illinois, "two ladies were blown a way, and have not since been heard of. They probably woro hoops.'' Alter asking your name in tne state or . Arkansas, tho natives are in the habit of; saying in a confidential tone: "Well, now,;oot 0f tne unwise legislation of Congress, what wer yer name alore yer moved to theso parts !" It is stated that there are at least two thousand people, of both sexes, from oth er States, sojourning in Indiana and Illi nois, for the express purpose of getting rid of their wives and husbands. .nl . i . -r, r . m nomuj .. . vjv., which chews tobacco with a relish, and not only acorns wasting the juice by filthy expecioraiion, pm swanows jum buu an. Senator Cameron's Speech. The following brief preface to a mo tion in the Senate, two or three days since, is one of the most remarkable and forcible we have ever seen in the procee dings of that body. It is, in a few words, a most admirably condensed and sen tentious embodiment of the flood of thoughts which tho great question it re fers to presses upon us now. It is a speech which tens of thousands can and will read, and the eminent speaker well said, at its close, that he was speaking to the petitioners and their associates, and speaking for them in so doing. This pithy and conclusive enforcement of the duty of tho unfortunate workers in coal and iron to consider the question of po litical direction at the polls and not in vain petitions, will have more weight with those to whom it is especially addressed than any former argument emanating from the House or Senate. Philcul. North American. Mr. Cameron said : I am requested to preseut a petition, signed by a large number of laboring men engaged iu the manufacture of iron, in 1 ennsylvania. I receive a great many letters, dailv. from nersons of this class. and I will say here, what will savo me the hrrmliln of mrJtin.T n rrrnnt. mnnv 1ottorvi They thiuk the Congress of the United States can relieve them from all their trou bles. There never has been a time ia the history of the iron business of Pennsyl vania, when there was so much real dis- he ! tress among the laborinrr men of my State the men who do the work, the men who go to the torge colore uayiigtit, and re main there long after the moon has risen than there is at present. It is not a complaiut now on the part of the capital- ist. Men of capital, men of fortune, can ways take care of itself; labor, poverty, indigence and want, always need sympa thy and protection. These persons reside in the town of Norristowu, on the Schuylkill river some twenty miles above Philadelphia. The river Schuylkill is traversed on both sides, by railroad, one extending some twenty or thirty miles, auother one hun dred miles. On the one side of the river is a canal. All these works have been made for tho purpose of conveying coal and iron to tho place of manufacture and sale. The county of Schuylkill, the great coal denosit of Pennsylvania, has a non- ulation of some 80,000 or 90,000 people, which has grown up within the last twen ty-fivc years. At this time the whole laboring popu lation engaged in the iron and coal busi ness of the whole country extending from Philadelphia to the mountains of Schuyl kill county, are idle; boats are tied up; locomotives are, in a great measure, stan ding still, and laborers arc running about hunting employment and hunting food. These are the persons who complain; they think that Congress can relieve them. I have told them, and I have written to them, that they have the power in their own hands. Tho laboring men of this oountry are powerful for good always. They do con trol when they think propper, and I think the time is coming when they will control tbe politics of this country. I tell them that before they oan get common protec ting they must change the majority in tlie Senate they must change the majority qf the otfier House of Congress; and, above all tltey must clvange the occupant of the White House, who is the dispenser of this power which controls the legislation of tho coun- -T- i n .1 t try. in place or gentlemen wno sneer when we talk about protection they must send men here who know something of tho wants, something of tho interests, something of tho usefulness of the labor ing man. Hitherto, they have not acted as if they cared for their own interests. While they talked about a tariff which would guard their labor from competition with the pau per labor of Europe, they would goto the elections under some ward leader and vote for men to represent them, here and elsewhere, who cared only for party drill, and who had no interest above party suc This system they must change, iAmc, he shall bc committed to tho jail of cess. they hope for success. I think the laboring men of Pcnusylvauia, at least, aro now beginning to put their bboulders to the wheel, and I believe they will make such a noise in next October as will alarm the gentlemen all oyer the country who laugh at them. The canals, railroads, and mining op erations of this region of country, have cost moro than a hundred millions of dol lars; the furnaces aud other works con nected with tuo manutacture ot iron, au enormous puni. i no people interesieu hi , f i i . . i ' tlm iron and coal oal husinss, directly or m- directly, along the valley of the Schuyl-i kill amount to more than three hundred . . t i tuou5aud souls. Since ldoo, tbere lias, ijeen a blight unon the business, growing whicn bas really pro.ectou tuo . " 'fret your ears cropped they are entirely England. Russia and Sweeden, and thuao" J vv J taken the labor and the bread from our own workmen. Tbis iron interest of Pennsylvania, in which these men aro employed, commen ced, in 1820, with a production of only 20.000 tons. In 1855. when it was up I to its greatest extent, tho production wus :i i: nrc nf ni fr metal. Whnn this i mi? a Tiirr motnl Whrn rhJ : u,,,,uu. ..::,A,B. . .i - I pig metal is woruu ,ulu w,c .auu. in which iron is to bo consumed, it a - j of.ru mnnv mi inns ot do Wars, uuu.u The annual produce of coal in Schuylkill county alone, in 1855, amounted in val ue to some S20,0U0.000. When it ia known that it requires two tons of coal to make a ton of iron, you can imagine the number of persons who rely for their daily bread on the production of iron and coal. Iron, in its native mountains, is worth but 51) cents a ton; when it is work ed into pig metal it ranges in price from $20 to 530, and sometimes to $40 a ton; and when worked into various uses it fre quently amounts to hundreds of dollan ton. I have said that these people have tho power in their own hands. I am speak ing to them now, and I wish them to ex ercise the power they have. I can not help them, much as I desire to do so, nor can any of their friends here; but when they go to work as men determined to succeed should do, I havo no doubt they will get protection. The people in tbis valley and on the slope of the Schuylkill mountains have votes enough to change and control the politics of the Union; for as Pennsylvania goes, so goes the Union in all great elections; and their votes can at all times decide the politics of Penn sylvania. Let them exercise the poicer j elyt and they will no longer bc without plenty of work and good prices. I move mittco on Finance. The New Game Law. In the Jeffersonian of the 10th of Juno we published the new Game Law passed at the late session of the Legislature, but (owing to material errors in the paper from which wo copied it, its force and opera tion aro considerably impaired. Wo ' c x. i .. t law as it was passed, and approved by the Governor: An Act for the better preservation of Gams and Insectivorous Birds, fyc. Section 1. Be it enacted, fyc, That from and after the passage of this act, it shall not be lawful for any person within this commonwealth to shoot, kill, or in a ny way entrap or destroy, any blue bird, swallow, martin or auy other insectivor ous bird, at any season of the year, under the penalty of two dollars. Section 2. That from and after the passage of this act, no person shall shoot, kill or otherwise destroy, any pheasant between tbe first day of January and tho first day of September, or any woodcock, between the first day of January and the fourth day of July, or any partridge or rabbit between the first day of January and the first day of October, in the pres ent year, and in each and overy year thereafter under the penalty of five dol lars for each and every offence. Section 3. That no person shall buy or cause to be bought, or carry out of this State, for the purposo of supplying any private or or public house, or market, a uy pheasant, partridge, woodcock oc rab bit, unless the same shall have been shot or taken in the proper season, as provi ded for in this act under a penalty of fivo dollars for each and every offence. Section 4. I hat no person shall at any time wilfully destroy tbe eggs or nests of any birds mentioned in the different sec tions of this act, within this common wealth, under a penalty of two dollars for each and every offence. Section 5. That the possession of any . Y.I 4 j person in tuis commonwealth, ot any ot the game and birds mentioned in tbe dif ferent sections of this act, shot, killed, or otherwise destroyed out of season as afore said, shall be ;w;?w jacia evidence to convict under tbis act. Section 6. That any person offending against any of the provisions of this act,and being thereof convicted before any alder man or justice of tho peace aforesaid, or by the oath or affirmation of one or moro witnesses, shall for every such offenco, forfeit the fine or fines attached to tho same, one half for the use of the county in which tbe complaint is made, and tho other half to the iuformer; and if tho of fender shall refuse to pay the said forfcit- the proper county, for every such offence, for the ipace of two days, without bail or mainprise; Provided, hmccver, That such conviction be made within sixty days af ter committing the offence. Section 7. That any act or acts con flicting with this act, be and tbe same aro hereby repealed. Approved April 21st, 1857. Locusts. The seventeen year locusts, as Doctor Smith of Maryland, predicted t i . 1 nave maae tueir appearaueu iu cuuuuuaa multitudes in the neighborhood ot V loks- burg, Miss. Except for tbc incessant jroning they keep up, they aro said not . to be troublesome. "Paddy," says a joker, "why don't you i too long for a man!' "And yours," replied Pat,"ought to bo lengthened they are too short for an ass. "Does your razor take hold well!" ask ed an agonizing Bufferer of the' tonso'rial OOCratOT. i.y was the consoling reply, lit ---. - . v t takes bold first rate, tut it don t lrt go wonu