wmmfa W'MTIk Wtsssk p 53cuoicii to fOolitirs, literature, 2Vgriculturc, Science, iltoralitn, emir cncral Intelligence. VOL 18. STROUDSBURG-j MONBOE COUNTY, PA. SEPTEMBER 1, 1850. NO. 35. 1iihi:i!iri hv Ttl4orf- SrliOCh. itibl.slicd ay iivoaoie acnocn. TKRMS.-Two dollars per nnnum in advance-i wo dollars and :t quarter, half vcarly ami if not. p: fnrr hr nnil nf ilm vnar. Two dollars ami a half. ami u noi. paiu ue No papers discontinued until all arrearages aie paid, except at the option of the Editor. IE? Advertisements of one square (len lines) or less, one or three insertions. $1 00. Eacli additional inser tion. '25 cents. Longer ones in proportion. .TOS5 PRIKTiSG. iencr.il assortment of large, plain and or J. Q. DUCKWORTH. To GU2&2av JOHN nAYN J&calcrs. DUCKWORTH & HAYN, WHOLUSAIjE DKAM:RS I.N' Z-n. ' rUUlJMeiiutiSiuus,!,. No. SO Dey street, Now York. June 1G. 1859. ly. AN OVERLAND JOURNEY. XV. WESTERN" CHARACTERS. Denver, June 21, 1S59. T know it is not quite correct to speak of i this region as 'Western.'seeing that it is in fact the center of North America and very; close to its backbone. Still, as the terms 'Ea-tcrn' and Western1 are conventional and relative Castiue beinj- "Western" to b BluenoHO and Carson Yalley "Eastern" , Having a j namentnl Type, wc are prepared to execute every etc including some scores of WOU10U and Chll- times quite misceiiancousi.) , muiuu uuu Bcripiion of Idren, who generally stop here, as all of mc as inconvenient for a quiet guest with J5&-&l& & ?&LUL$1 A 'V-WJ BJ-a !t,Jem sbou(-. for jfe Q the Mountains is only a leg and a half, hence in poor con- ?fi&S yot horribly rough. Public religious dilioo for dodging bullets. So I lofc ted with neutacss and despatch, on roiisojublo terms regular mail and other civili- "How do you lire in Denver I 1 in- lib ltlt? 1. 1 .rr. - - r to a Californian I take the responsibih- from them by that river, and, winding enii,raljonf abandoning all but what they ity of grouping certain characters J have its northward course of forty or Gfty miles ' coujj carry away. jfc s sad that lots noted on the Plains and in or about tbo over the Plains, with its sources barely au( cab;DS together sold for $25 so long Mountains as "Western," begging that, touching the Mountains, is a capricious j as tburc wereQpUrobasers; but, these soon most respectable region which lies eant stream, running quite smartly when we I fajngi tbey werc cft behind like camp of tbo Buffalo range also that portion came here, but whose broad aud thirsty greH tho mornine and have since been which lies west of the Colorado to cs- cuse the liberty. The first circumstance that strikes a stranger traversius this wild country is the vagrant instincts aud balits of tbe , by the melting of the snows on the bifrh preat majority of its denizen perhaps mountains, runs nearly full-banked, I should say, of tbo American people j through the constant succession of hot generally, os exhibited hero. Among 'suns and dry winds begins to tell upon it, any ten who you successively meet, there j while Clear Creek, (properly Ya.quer'u vsiU be natives of Ntw-En'land, New- Fork) which issues directly from the York, Pennsylvania, Yirgiuia or Georgia,; Ohio or Indiana, Kentucky or Missouri! France, Germany, and perhaps ireianu. But worse than thi.-: you cannot euter a circle of a dozeu persons of whom at least : three will not have spent some years in California, two or three have made claims and built cabins in Kansas or Ncbra?ka. nnd at least one snent a year or so in Texas. Boston, New-York, Philadelphia j " r v New-Orleans, St. Louis, Cincinnati, have all contributed their quota toward peopl ing tbc new Gold Region. The next man you meet driving an ox team, and white as a miller with iutit, an ex hanker or doctor, a brokt-n merchant or manufac turer from the old States, who hasscraped together the candle ends charitably or contemptuously allowed bim by his cred itors on scttlciaent, and ri-ked them on a last desperate cast of the dice by corning hither. Ex-editors, ex-printers, cx-clcrks, ex-steamboat men, arc. here in abound aucc all on the keen hunt for the gold which only a few will secure. Oue of the Ftations at which we slept on our way up the rough tent with a cheering hope (nince blsstcd) of a log bcusc in the near future was keDt bv an ex-lawvcr of Cin- - i . Omnibus drivers Irom Broadway repeat- ndlr handled the ribbons; ex Border Ru-; fiaus from civilized Kansas sorae of them of unblcs-ed memory were en-; countered cn our way, at intervals none too long. All these tended with voter-; j.?n;n man Tnr!nna nf all orndfls ' au I'luuuium ..w., iu-.-w v. b from tbc tamest to the wilde-t, Half- Breeds, I'reuch trappers and voyugcur (who have generally two or lureu tuuiau wives apiece) and au occasional uigger, ' comrjose a medlcv such as hardly anoth-j other region can parallel. Honolulu, or home other of the South Sea Inlands could , cinnati aud his wife, an ex-sctresa tromjte, and roughly hewed on mc two per our New-York Bowery she being cook pcndicular idts, and chinked with billets probably match it most nearly. ,iug a prefiguring a window, the edihee is The old Mountaineers form a caste by complete. Of coure, many have no earth (homed vc, and they prize the distinction, on their covering of shooks, and so are li Some of them are Frenchmen, or Frauoo-! able to gentle inuudation in the rainy sea Americans, who have been trapping or son; but, though wehavc had thunder and trading in and arouud these mountains lightning almost daily, with a brisk gale for a nuarter of a century, have wives and children here, and here expect to live J &nd dlC. DOmO OI UlttU uaie wuiuuiayui; uuniiumu, Univ.!; cuuu j ted Droncrtv and cash to the value of ses, through whose sides and roofs you) $200,000, which omouut will not eas-ily may see the stars as you lie awake nights, bo reduced, as they are frugal in every- aie decidedly tbe cooIt and airer. There thing, (liquor sometimes excepted), spend is a new hotel nearly finished in Auraria, but a pittance on the clothing of their which has a seoond story floor; beside families, trust little, keep small stocks of thi, mine eyes have never yet been b leas goods, and sell at large profits. Others ed with the sight of any floor whatever in came years ago from the States, some of cither Denver or Auraria. The last time them on account each of a "difficultj" , I slept or ate with a floor under me (our wherein they severally killed or savagely ' wagon-box and Mother Earth excepted) maimed their respective antagonists un- was at Junction City, nearly four weeks der circumstances on which tho law refu-; ago. The "Denver House,'' which is the sesto look leniently; whence their pilgrim- Astor Hou-c of tbe Gold Region, has walls ae to and prolonged sojourn hero, des- of logs, a floor of eortb, with windows and pfte enticing placards offering S500 or roof of rather flimsy cotton sheeting, perhaps SI ,000 for their eafc return to while every guest ia allowed as good a bed tbe places that knew them ouce, but shall as bis blankets will make. The charges know them no more. This class is not are no higher than at the Astor and oth rjumerous. but is more influential than it er first-class hotels, exeeptfor liquor 25 ebould be in civing tone to tbe society of cents a drink for whisky, colored and which its members form a Dart, rrone t J.n -I r-wilrlnrf cniirnil !n to in nor 111. II 11. 'I'll ..I I 11 II 1 U. . " country where tbe regular administration of justice is yet a matter of prophecy, it seoms difficult to overrule or disregard. I apprehend that there have been, during my two weeks sojourn, more brwls,more figbts, more pistol shots with criminal in- ways armed, bristling at a word, ready region. I had the honor to be shaved not purcbase-a heart unspotted, and v.r with the rifle, revolver or bowie-knife, there by a nephew (so he assured me) of i tue without a stain-whioli is all that they five law and set fashions which in a Murot, Bonaparte's King of Naples the j descended to me from my parents. tent, in this log city of 150 dwelling,not . j r luuanilCU, HOr Olie-iuiiu in iu ui, iuu m any community of no greater numbers on earth. This will be changed in titne I trust within a year, for the empty houses arc steadily Guding tenants from the two streams of cmhration rolling in daily up tho Pintle, n well as down Cherrv Creek, tin-: influences, are being established;, there is a gleam of hope that the Arapa-h'cc:- who have made the last two or three nights indescribably hidcousby their infernal war-whoops, songs and dances, j will at last clear out on the foray against thr. TTtns thev have so lou? threatened, - ranntn -e I UIuJlUi3UlIJH laiUUIT l"- w drunkenness and justifying expectations ! of comparative paace. So let too close up my jottings from this point which circumstances beyond my control nave rendered too voluminous with a rough ambrotype of LIFE IN DEXVER. The rival cities of Denver and Aura- ria front on each other from either bank of Cherry Creek, just before it is lost in the South Platte. The Platte has its sources in the South Park of the Rocky Mountains, a hnndrcd miles S. W. of this point, but Cherry Creek is beaded off bands bn-c since tlranK n an up at mis ( point, leaving the loc foot-bridges which connect the two cities as useless as an ice- house in Novouiber. The Platte, aided Mountains ju?t above its cro-sing on the way to the Gregory Diggings, is nearly at its highest, and will so remain till the in ner mountains are mainly denuded of their snowy mantles. But, within a few days, a foot-bridge has been completed over the Platte, virtually abolishing the ferrv and, savinp; considerable time and money to gold-seekers and travellers, while another over Clear Creek precludes not onlv delay but danger several wag ons having boen wrecked and two or three men all but drowned in attempt? to ford its rapid, rocky current. Thus the ways of the adventurer grow daily smoother, nnd they who visit this region ten years j a man about tbc city 5eEtcrjaJ witu hence will regard as idle tales the stones : LuttQC(! to se)iar)d I am credibly as- ' of privation,impedinjentand"huir breadth !gured hat tbere wU1 be GrceQ pC8S ncxt 'scapes" which are told, or might be, by month actually Peasl-provided it should the gold peckers of 1 6o9. ra5n soaj;nfTjy meantime whereof a hazy Of these rival cities, Aurnna is by )owering ajfy wouu .seem jut now to af far the more venerable-some of its struc- f(ml .Qine bope (p g Tbe hope ba3 tures being, I think, fully a year old. if van;s.be-) But I already sadly behind not more. Denver, on the other hand, , rnfirir ni,i to travel as?ain mu&t c&n boal of no antiquity beyond Seplem- I er or October last. In the architecture of the two cities there is, notwithstanding, a striking similarity cottonwood logs, cut from the adjacent bottom of the Plat oi spnt v,ouoiiw0ou ou lue.uiiei uuu mud id on the outer side, forming the walls , of nearly or quite every edihee which a- ! dorus either city. Across the ocDter of the interior, from shorter wall to wall,' stretches a sturdy ridge pole, u-ually in a state of nature, from which "shooks'' or , f t I. ' split saplings of cotton wood, their spl-fc tiues uuu, mvuuu gcuuy iu iuu i.iio cipc ui iuhi siui vu mto v..v- , more finished structures) a coating of i earth U laid, and, with a chimney of mud ( daubed sticks in one corner, u door near- ! ly opposite, and a hole beside it represent- 'in most instances, they have had no rain worth naming snob here for weeks and nicunamea to sun tue taste oi customers, VlPin rMI,lnr rtn hrnimhmit this : honor aud the shavo together costing but a paltry dollar. Still, a few days of such luxury surfeited mo, mainly because the drinking room was also occupied by scv- ernl blacklegs as a gambling bsll, and their incessant clamor of Who'll go me XX! Tbo ace of hearts is the winning oar(I Whoevcr turn3 tbo ace of hearts , .,,, nersisted in at ' v- - - , , r all hours up to midnight, beoamc at length a nuisance, from which I craved dehver- anco at any price. Then the visitors of that drinking and gambling room had a careless way, when drunk, ot firing revoi- vers, sometimes at each other, at other quired of a New-York friend some weeks domiciled here, in whose company l vis ited the Mines. ''0, I've jumped a cab in," wus his cool, matter-of-course reply. Asjumpioea cabin was rather beyoud J t ' ; i r..t 1 my experience, jl inquireu luruici, uu learned that, Gnding a cabin desortcd-and ....flthnf. suited him. he had auietlv .x,w-M.w 7 entered and spread his blankets, eating at borne or abroad as opportunity might ' suggest. I found, on further inquiry that at least one-third of the inhabitants in Denver and Auraria were desolate when wc came here, (they have been gradually j filling up since); some of the owners hav- j ing gone into the Mountains, digging or , ! prospecting, and taKen tneir uniteu sup- . Qf nou!fcU t -i oti,fir(. bold goods along with them: discouraged by tbo poor . .l0W of mimmg six wecka ago, when even tbe nearcr mountains were still covered wJtb SUQW an(i jCCt rusbed pell-mell down tho iiatte with wild reflux of tho Spring t tb(J service 0f au COmers. j So, in company with a journalizing friend ; I, too, have "jumped a cabin," and have kept to it quite closely, under a doctors care, for the last ten days. It is about ten feet square and eight feet high, rath er too well chinked for Summer, consid ering that it lacks a window, but must be a capital house for this country in Win ter. I board with the nearest neighbor, and it is not my landlady's fault that the edible resources of Denver are decidedly limited. But even these are improving: To the Bread, Bacon and Beans, which ! formed the staple of every meal a short time ago, thero have been several recent additions : Milk, which was last week twenty five cents per quart, is now down to ten, and I hear a rumor that eggs, off- i ing to a recent increase in the number of j hens within five hundred miles from four j or five to twelve or fifteen, are about to I fall from a dollar a dozen to fifty cents. : On every side, I note signs of Progress ! Tmnrovemeut Manifest Destinv there turn back QQ tbis prom;sc 0f luxuries, ' and taKc tue roaa to jjaramtc io-uay, ui at furthest to-morrow. Horace Greeley. Things Wo Have Seen. We have seen the most worthless and , f , . t fnsbionable y , , . uilo.d vounrr men turn tipplers and die druukards. . . . j D We have seen men who have boasted of their wealth, who were not able to pay ( their tailor. j V(J ave seen men wuo ouyu mauu much noise about their bravery and dar- We have seen men who have made 0SJ,0t an, D t ' We have seen the same run away from a goose. Wc hare seen men run in debt with- Qut probabiHtJ of being able to make J S payment We have neen men urging nnnlhnr to become a candidate for some office- and, Wji have seen tbo same fellow vote a gaiust him at tho election. , Wc have seen parents urge their in- He'en a lovely young girl mar ry a rich old bachelor merely for wealth; and We have seen the same girl die bro ken hearted within a year. 'We have seen talented young men marry bashy, brainless girls and, . We have seen them even aiter drag- ging out a wretched, miserable-life. Losing a Day. "I say Pete, in gwino round de world, trabblers tell ui dey lose one whole day.'' "Dat am nuffin, Sam, when you can make cm up again.'' "How you gwine to make cm up agin tell me dot!" 'Why, turn round and go, back agin, nigger, J5SFA Greek maiden being asked what fortune she would bring her husband, re- ulicd "I will brine: bim what gold can- . -o VOOixt West, the law gives damapes for apparent breach of promise. J ho bachelors, however, obviate the difficulty by having their cards labelled, "(joocl for this call only:' Three Thousand Miles of Eiver Naviga tion. A steamboat has recently returned to St. Louh, from a trip up the Missouri BJvcr to Fort Benton, a distance of three thousand miles from its mouth, and only seventy miles from tho sources of tbo Columbia River. It is, therefore, evident that a steamboat may go from Pittsburgh to Fort Benton, and were the navigation of tho Ohio and Missouri Rivers inproved, as it readily might be, travel and trans- . portation might be carried on throughout this extensive route during the greater j part of the year. Facta like these, show ; in a strong light the wretched policy which our General Government pursues in refusing to encburago works of internal improvement. There is an abundanooof of unemployed labor in the country which would rejoice to find employment in Quch works, and the expenditure would in a ' few years be returned a hundred fold in tho increased value of the land in our great western territories. The wealth which would be produced by the settle ment and exploration of that vast region, between tho Mississippi and the Pacific, i3. incalculable; and yet all of its immense resources lie dormant, while thoe who administer the Government amuse them selves with schemes for the purchase of Cuba and the absorption of Mexico. Were the industrial capital of the coun try protected from the European drain, which so injuriously affects all American interests, and keeps enterprising men in a continual fever of anxiety, improve ment'', which would so largely increase tbo value of property, would be gradually undertaken by private individuals or cor porations formed for tbo purpose. The labor, tbe skill and energy aro here in abundance, and all that is wanting is the pecuniary means and that confidence which regularity in the operations of busi ness always creates, to enable our people to accomplish enterprises of a far grander and more important character than any which have yet been undertaken. But at the present time men live in continual dread of those panics and revulsions which results from our slavish depen dence upon Europe for all the pecuniary capital with which business is carried on iu this country. If the tariff of 1842 had not been disturbed, tbe gold from Cali fornia would have remained in the coun try, instead of being sent to Europe to pay for useless manufactures, and many branches of industry would have been so much improved that other nations would be tributary to us, instead of drawing our money from us. We should have the best currency in the world, and enough of it for all the business wants of the com munity. That tbe unexplored portions of our Western Territories contain un told mineral wealth, no one can doubt; and that the land in many of them is rich, in an agricultural point ot view, in equally evident. To subdue, to devel ope, to cultivate, and to make available the resources of this vast regiou, would be a work of which tbo mightiest nations might bo proud; and the largo scope for the exhibition of the genius aud enter prise of the American people, which such a work would afford, and the improve ment in the condition of the people,-Consequent upon the large demand which would be made for labor of every kind, would do more to exalt tho Americrn people amongst tbe nations of the Earth than any work which has yet been under taken. When we consider what our country has already accomplished while struggling with so many difficulties, wo can well imagine what she would do if those obstructions were removed, and tho industry of the people encouraged. The country "traversed in this steam boat expedition of three thousand miles, is almo?t an uubroken wilderness. At the present tiino it is almost valueless; yet all the materials of wealth are there, invitiug iudustry to come and take them. Myriads of unemployed or poorly paid mechanics, operatives and laborers, pine in our Eastern States for lack of the means to open those mines of wealth in this distant region, which would so abun dantly reward their industry. Our coun try is like a huge machine which stands still for want of an engineer to set it iu motion, aud manage its operations. A vast part of the people live in indigence whilo wealth is buried all around them. We need not look to tho far West to see the results of the wretched policy which paralyzes tho arm. of industry, and de prives tbe useful man of a proper reward for his labor. Hero in Pennsylvania, we hove in abundanco tbe rich treasures of tho earth sleeping in our hills and for ests, while industry goes without reward. There is abundanco everywhere, but for want of motion in the industrial machine tho people suffer in tho midst of plen ty. The cost of tho construction of a rail road to California would have been re paid in tbo value of property twenty times over in a few years. The bonds of union would have been strengthened, and the nations of Europo would have been compelled to pay ua tributo for their in tercourse with the Paoifio. Tho funds for tho construction of such a work as well as for the improvement of tho navi gation of the great rivers of the West, could have been raised by increased duties on foreign manufacture?, which would have been a benefit instead of a burthen to tho country? Nay,the mere adoption of specif ic duties in the place of the fraud-inviting ndvalorevi system which pow prevails, would afford an increase of revenue suffi cient in ten years to complete a Pacific llailroad and make vigatiou of the Missouri to Fort Benton. Wisdom in tbe management of oar publie affairs is ail that is wanting to make our country the greatest and most powerful of nations, and to increase the prosperity, happiness and independence of tbe people in an incalculable extent. Daily Kcics. i m mm " ' Something to Impart and Something to Learn. It is related of a reverend clergyman who lived in Vermont soruo forty years ago, that he was on such friendly and in timate teres with his parishonrs that ho would sometimes indulge in freedoms not altogether in character with the grav ity of deportment so essential to tho maintenance of clerical dignity aud res pect. On one occasion, previous to com mencing religious worship, he called the attention of hi3 hearers to a subject which weighed heavily on his mind. "I have," said he, "something to im part aud something to learn. There is oue thing which T know that you do not know; there is one thing which you know that I do not know; and there is one thing which neither of m knows. First, as I was coming over the hedge I tore my breeches this I know, but you did not know. Second, whether you will give me cloth enough to make a new pair this jou know, but I do not know; and third, what will tho tailor charge to make them. This latter is what neither of us knows." A Fast Girl. -Mary Butler, a servant girl was arres ted at the Five Points, N. Y., for stealing a quantity of clothing from her mi-tress, Mrs. Clarinda B. Hazeltine, who was boarding at Orange, on the IGtb ult. The girl first got partly drunk, and then breaking open her mistress's trunk, put on a S40 silk dress, S50 shawl, S20 hat and other apparel to match, making about S150 worth of goods and jewelry, and went to New York. She had disposed of the whole stock for $5. The servant was sent to jail, and the man who bought the goods was held on a charge of receiving stolen goods. ,b. A Fast Boy. The Worcester (Mass.) Spy relates tbe criminal adventures of a boy twelve years of age, whose precocious rogueries and cunning escapes would form an interest ing chapter in the Old Bailey Chronicle of the Police Gazette. This young rogue, Isaac B. Pateh by name, commenced his career in Worcester by stealing from his uncle, Mr. S. F. Towne, S250, with which he went to Boston. There he fell into the hands of a police officer, and was sent homo in charge of the conductor. He e luded the vigilance of his guardian, bow-( ever, and left the train at Groton junc-i tiou. After various hair-breadth esoapes: and wiley stratagems, he stole a horse, I wagon and harness belonging to Elijah' Gro.s, of Athburnham, and made hi way to Bellows Falls. Here he was overtaken by the owner of the team, and taken back j to Fitchburg, where he was committed for trial at the next Criminal Court for Worcester county. Queer 3atrimonial Freak. A letter from a citizen of Livingston county, Kentuckey, to the Danville Tri bune, relates the following bit of family history in that neighborhood: "A widow lady took an orphan to raise, quite small, and when arrived at the age of eighteen, tlin morrinfl lilm elm MlPn hpillT in llOT fiftieth year. They lived together many years, as happy as any couple. Teu' years ago they took an orphau girl to, raise. This fall tbe old lady died, being ninety-six years of age, and in seven weeks after, the old man married the . .- ... i girl they had raised, he being sixcy-eigut years old, and the girl eighteen." A Living Head on a Dead Body. Mr. Archibald Campbell, a respectable farmer in the township of Camden East, while enj-aged in finishing a new dwell on his premises, tho scaffold gave way, aud he was precipitated bead foremost to the ground, and dislocated hU neck; but very fortunately and mysteriously it did not kill bim. When his head was brought to its proper position, the verte bras of tbe neck returned to their place with a dull but distinct snap. The whole body is paralyzed and dead from tho neck downward. He is not capable of moving a muscle or exporienciug tbc slijhtelt pain. Fortunately the nerves supplying the muscles used in respiration were not paralvzed, and he can breathe and live; had the injury of tho spinal cord been a little higher, he would have died immediately. Tho sense of siht, hearing, smelling, &c, are normal, and intellect is unimpaired. When lafet heard from however, there were some indications of a return of sen sation and the power of motion, and it is ju possiblo that Mr. Campbell may par tially Tcoowr.Newburgk (C. W.) In dex, f&Don't expect to bo called a good fellow a moment longer than you consent to do precisely what other -people wish you to. do. -13cgger3 always find one kind of provision plenty tho cold shoulder. Inclined to be Quarrelsome. There was once a little, dim-built fel low, rich as a Jew, and independent as old Scratch, riding along a highway in the Stale of Georgia, when be overtook a man driving a drove of hogs by tho help of a big, raw-boned six-feet two specimeu of humanity. Stopping the last named individual, be accosted him: 'I fay, are,tbee your hogs V No,' sir; I'm to work by the month.'r 'What pay might you be getting, friend 7" "Ten dollars a month and whiskey thrown in," was the reply. "Wdl, look here; I'm a weak, little in offonsivc man, and people are apt to im pose upo.n me, d'ye see. Now, I'll give you twenty-five dollars a month to ridoa long mith me and protect me," said Mr, Gardner. "But," he added, as a thought struck bim, "how might jou be on a fight !" 'Never been licked in my life," rejoin ed the six-foot. "Just the man I want. LVt a bargain!''' queried Gardner. Six footer ruminated. "Twenty-five dollars double wages nothing to do but to ride around and smash a fellows mug occasionall when he's sassy." Six footer accepted. They rodo along, till, just at night,they reached a village inn. Dismountingat the door, they went in. Gardner imme diately singled out the biggest roan in tbe room and picked a fuss with bim. After considerable promiscuous jawing, Gardner turned to his fighting friend aDd intimated that the licking of that man had become a sad necessity. Six-footer peeled, went in, and came out first best. The next night, at another hotel, tho same scene was re-enacted Gardner 'getting into a row with the biggest man iu tho place, and six-footer doing the ! fighting. At last on the third day, they came to a ferry kept by a huge, double-fisted man, who had never been licked in his life. Whilst crossing the river, Gardner, as u sual began to find fault and blow. Tho ferryman naturally got mad, throw things around, and told bim his opinion of their kind. Gardner then turned to his friend, and gently broke the intelligence to him that he was sorry, but that it was abso lutely necessary to thrash that ferryman. Six footer nc-dded his head, but said nothing. It was plainly to be seen that he did not relish the job, by the way he shrugged his shoulders, but there was no help for it. So when they reached the shore, both stripped, and at it they went. Up and down the bank, over the sand, in to the water they fought, scratched, goug ed, bit, and rolled, till, at the end of aD hour, tbe ferryman gave in. Six footer was triumphant, but it bad been tough work. Going up to his employer, ho scratched his head for a moment and then broke forth : "Look here, Mr. Gardner, yoar salary sets mighty well, but I'm of the o- pinion that you are inclined to -be quarrelsome. Here I've only been with you three dajs, and I've licked the three biggest men in the country I I think this firm had better dissolve, for yon see, Mr. Gardner, I'm afraid you're inclined to be quarrelsome, aud 1 reckon I'll draw." . A Fine Thought. A French wri'er has said that 'to dream gloriously, jou mu-t act gloriously while you are awake; and to bring angels down to converse with you in your sleep, you must labor in the cause of virtue during the day. US'J. B." tells a good 'un. While riditiir in ono of the Philadelphia cars, recently, he asked an elderly uncle if ha had seen any of .the newly medicated pa per. Tho reply wa in the ofiirmtive. Jusfthen an elderly Quaker lady, sitting opposite, addressing the elderly gentle raau, said, "Friend, what newspaper did thee speak oil" Here was a poser; but instantly recovering his equanimity, after a few a-hem's and a-ha's. be replied, ''A now paper, started in opposition to tho New York Herald!" The old lady then subsided, apparently satisfied with the explanation. About this time there was a general explosion. gSrMr. Marsh, an able chemist, found that iron long under water when reduced to powder, invariably becomes red hot, and ignites anything it touches. A gen eral knowledge of this is important, as it account for many spontaneous fires. A pieco of rusty old iron, brought into con tact with a cotton balo in a warehouse or on shipboard, may occasional uchrloss of life and property. . ' i - . . . '.jfp jlf you tovo others, they wilMovo you. If you Speak kindly to them, they will speak kindly, to you. Love i rapid with love, and hatred with batredTsWould you hear a sweet and pleasing echo, speak sweetly and pleasantly yourself. Some of tho savage tribes wear b'clh on their noses. Wc have sometimes5 at crowded soirees, had belles on onr toes and didu'tlikc the fashion. JJrKnowledgo is prond that h has learned so much; wisdom is. humble thst he has learned no moro. j - j fSJf-Marriago U a feist where thcgrace is sometimes belter than dinner.