'I BcoobA to politics, fucranire, 3Vgviatliuw, Sricnrc, JHoraMa, anb' cncral fntclltQcnte, STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA. OCTOBER 20, 1859. ATA ,10 Vol is. Published by Theodore Schoch . tfERMS.Two dollars per annum in advance Two dollars ami 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 aie paid, fe'xcepl at the option of the Editor. IO Advertisements of one square (ten line) or less, brie or ihree insertions. $1 00. Each additional inser lion, 23 cents. Longer ones in proportion. TAR PRf ItfTEMG. having a general assortment of large, plain' and or- Omental Type, wc are prepared to execute every de JfAWBS" SPMBSTTOSSTS. Cards Circulars, Hill Heads, Notes. Blank Receipts, ' Justices, Legal and other nianks, Pamphlets. &p... pun ted with neatness and despatch, on raasonable terms at this office. J. C DUCKWORTH. JOHN HA.YN. To Country ca!crs. DUCKWORTH & HAYN, WHOLUSALE DEALERS IN Groceries, Provisions, Liquors, &c. No. 80 Dev street, New York. June 1G, 1859. iy- From Once a Week. A SEAPORT DITTY. 41 ITark, cay maiden, and I'll tell you, By the power of my art, All the things that e'er befell you, And the ecoret of your heart. 'IIow that you lore some one dou't you! j Lovo him better than you say ; Won't you hoar, ray maiden, won'l you ! What's to be your wedding-day !" ""Ah, you cheat, with words of houey, You tell stories that you know ! Where's the husband, for my money That I gave you long ago ! "Neither silver, gold nor copper. Shall you get this time from me; Where's the hu-band, tall and proper, That you told me I should see !" "Coming still, my maiden, coming, With two eyes as black as sloes, Marching soldierly, and humming Gallaut love-sougs as he goes." "Get along you stupid gipsy ! I won't have your barack-bcau, Strutting up to me half tipsy, Saucy with his chin up so V 'Come, I'll tell youtho first letter Of your handsome sailor's 'name." 4I know every one that's better ; Thank you, gipsy, all the same.' 4,Ha, my maidco, ruus your text so I Now I sec the die is cast, Aud the day h Monday next." 'No, Gipsy-, it was Monday last !" The New Aerial Ship. Lowe's aerial ship, City of New-York, rivals the Great Eastern in magnitude With it be confidently expects to make the trip froai New York to Europe in forty- t'igbt hours, it la ncany ovo times iar cer than tue largest Daiioon ever oeiorc built, its dimensions being as ionows: greatest diameter, one huudred and thirty feet; transverse diameter, one hundred aud four feet; height, from valve to boat, three huudred aud fifty feet; weight, with outGt, three and a, ball tour:; lifting pow r (aggregatc) twenty-two and a half tons; capacity of gas-eu'.elope, seven huu dred and twenty-five thousand cubic feet. Six thousand yards of twilled cloth bave linen ued in the construction of the en- velope. jieunccu 10 .:, ibu aua. measurement of this material is fifty-four t.hnn4nd feet, or nearly eleven miles. V M PUPT1 IllllPtJ. IVUW'V 1 f Six of Wheeler and Wilson's sewing-machines were employed twelve days to con nect the pieces. The upper cxtremety of the envelope intended to receive tne gas valie, of triple thicknets, btrcngtbeued with heavy brown linen, and tewed in triple soama. The pressure being great est at this point, extraordinary power of resibtance requiite. It is asserted that one hundred women, sewing conatsntly for two years, could not have accomplish ed this work, which measures by miles. The material is fctout, and the stitching' stouter. The San Juan Affair. The English journals generally compli ment the American Pres- on the tone of forbearance and moderation with which it Um disflUKsed the San Juan differences ivn nr rnnsins would Draisc us less and imitate us more. When they talk about Gen. Harney's movement as "one of those aots of piracy" by wbicb tne wimout uruer, hhuuuiuuim. u. United States are in tbe habit of settling its object or destination. Eutenng Utah ditputcs with weaker neighbors, aud urge ' thus as no Army, but as a number of the neccishity of at once chastising "the seperate, straggling detachments, neither licenced ruffians of tbe Federal army," of which was ordered to protect the up tker do not in the leat facilitate tbe pa-; ply Trains which followed one or two mar cific adjustment of the dispute. We have ebes behind them, they had the mortiG aot the slightest apprehension that any cation to learn, about the 1st of October, war will grow out of tbe controversy. If that those Supply Trains, without evjen Mr Buchanan bad intended at any time an armed corporal's guard in their vicm to insist upon our extreme rights in that ity, bad been surprised and burnt by a quarter, be would not have sent Gen. Mormon band, who thus in effect made Seott to reap tbe honors of so doing. war on the United States. Indignantly We regard the fact that be was ordered but still without a loader and without thither as at least presumptive evidence defiuite orders, tbe Army struggled on to that the British elaim will be conceeded. Bridger, 113 miles from Salt Lake, which But it U scarcely worth while for tbe tho ormous abandoned" on its approach. English journals to presume upon Ibis Bridger is many, thousand feet above the fact so much in advance. Wc tbould be level of the sea and the grouud was here sorry to havo our fcatisfaction at the pre- so buried in snow that its gaunt animals servation of peace marred by any reco'l- died by, hundreds, and the residue were lectfon of needles insult from the other unable to drag the baggage over the riv gje J 4cra and steep mountains which still Bcpa- AN OVERLAND JOURNEY. XXIV The Army inJtah. Camp Floyd, Utah, July 21, 1659. Camp Floyd, 40 miles South of Salt Lake City, is located on the west side of Liaue Uty, is locatea on tue west i 10 o. a dry vally perhaps ton miles wide by thirty miles loog, separated by high -j gQme Qftecn tj hills twenty 1 es distant on tno oonn-easw. xm, Valley Would be fertile Were it not doomed j0 sterilit v by drought. A small, stream . J . J . 0 . . . takes its n?c m copious springs at the foot of the western hills just north 01 the camp, but it is coon oranK up on toe uiirs jty plain. Water in this stream, and wood I (low cedar) on the adjacent hills, proba jbly dictated the selection of this site for la camp, though I believe a desire if not . a secrect compact to locate the troops as far as possible from the Mormon settle ments had an influenco in the preniics. No Moraons live in this valley or within 'sight of it; though all the roads leadiug I from Salt Lake City, as well as from i Provo, and the other settlements around iLuke Utah, are within a days march and iiu a j be said to be commanded by the learn p. The toil is easily pulverized jwhen dry, aud keeps the entire area en iveloDed in a cloud of dust during the Summer, visible for miles in every direc 1 . tion. 1 saw it wnen eigut miles away as 1 camo day. down from Salt Lake City yester- The catr.p is formed of low and nont a- ! dobe houses, generally small. I presume 1 there are three or four hundred of them enough, at all events, to make three or ' four Kansas cities. "Frogtown" is a sa !. 1 1 v .i 1 .i icunc, or suuuru, wuuucu fcrug auu uiuui luxuries (including execrable whisky, at about S10 rer gallon) aud dispensed to thirsty soldiers who have not already drank rip more than their pay amouuts to. The Yalley is covered with Sagebush and Greasewood, as u-ual; but the camp has been freed from these, aud is mainly as level as a house noor. 1 be adobes werp made on the pot by Mexicans, the boards for roofs, finishing off, &c, hupplied by Briiihaea Youn" aud his sou-in-law, from the only cauou opening into Salt Lake Valley which abounds m timber (lellow Pine, I believe) fit for sawing. The Ter ritorial Legislature which is another name for "the Church'") granted this canon to Brigham, who runs three saw mill's therein at a clear profit of a S100 or so per day. His profit on the lumber supplied to the Camp was probably over Qfin lltm Tlio r.rifo icrta .?7() nor flinim. .iYlrtf' Pr0;.un. Vnn n,. ! with evident self-complacency, that he did not Deed and would not accept a dol lor of salary from "the Church" he con sidered himtelf able to make all the mon ey he needed by business, a he had made the250,000worthof property he already possesses. With a legislature ever ready to grant him such perquisites as this lum- iw,? nnn,,rl T iif.lii.uo t!,r r,nf Wnnrl . : i5 .. i i t 1. -trn :. 11.1 t. 1.:... ...,,t, .:.:!.. r. IJtMU Ul UI1U UUUCI U DIUII1U1 IIUC III illlU I should think be might. The total cost of this post lo the Government was about $200,000. The army in Utah has numbered 3, 500 men 1 believe its prencnt strength is iUni M 000. fr Jj mniTilo nnnnnTif r;i. ted in this camp. thou2h some small de- tachments are engaged in surveying or opening roads, guarding herds, &c., in different parts of the Territory. I be lieve this is still the largest regular force ever concentrated upon the soil of our country in time of peace. It consists of 1 ihe 5t 7fch and 10th iajentf, of InfM. , L,f9,jnn nr T.;hf rHirv nnrl I J ' . -r- two or three companies of Dragoous. I met between Bridger and Ham's Fork, a considerable force of Dragoons going cow 11. Let us briefly consider the history and position of this little Army. In tbe former half of 1857, it was con centrated in Kansas; lute in that year,the several regiments composing it were put in march toward the Bocky Mountains. The Mormons full soon learned that it was to be launched against them, and at once prepared to give it a warm reccp- uon; mo ,xrmy uuu uuiuioru.auuuuu.ue a l i r : . i. l in Kansas to give effect to Gov. Walker's electioneering quackeries, it was at length sent on its way at a season too late to al low it to reach Salt Lake before Winter. No commander was sent with it; General Harney was announced as its chief but , has not even yet joined it. It wad thus ! dispatched on a long and difficult expedi tion, in detachments, without a chief, rated it from Salt Lake. So the regi ments halted, built huts to shelter them selves from the Winter's inclcuiency,.and lived through the snowy season as they might on a half allowance of their lean gristly animals, without salt. Snrino- at lenoth came: the day long j tiflntl waited for, when V m ar;ive(1. tbey had been f o . ' nrnmirtfid ft warm reoeDtion in the narrow defiles of Ech Canon by Lieut. General Wells and his Mormon host, and tbey eagerly courted that reception. If ben. Wells were able, as he boasted, to send them to the right about, they would have nothing to do but to go. They bad grown Tii.fr frnm innnfinn. and stood ready to 1 i:l-j u .,K nn itnnln. ment as Gen. Wells. But news came Territory. Why, then keep them here 7 that the whole affair had been somehow , Brigham young will oontract, and mako arranged that Col. Kane, Brigham money by contracting, to put down all re Young, and Gov. Cumming had fixed mat- ; sistanoe to this policy at one-tenth the ters so that there would be no fighting cost of keeping the Army here : why, r.f f.irtknr f rnin.hnmi na. Yet the then, not withdraw it! Mormons Bed from Salt Lake City in an ticipation of their entering it; tbey were required by the civil power to enoamp as far as nossiblo from the Mormon Bettle- mcntf; and they have ever since been treated by the Federal Executive a3 though tbey had come there on their own motion, in defiance of rather than in 0 bedience to that Executive's own orders. Whether truly or falsely, this Army, probably without an individual exception, uudoubtingly believes the Mormon as a body to be traitors to the Union and its Government, inflexibly intent on estab lishing here a power which shall be at first independent of and ultimately domi nant over that of the United States. They believe that the ostentatious, defiant refu sal of Brigham Young, in 1857, to sur render the Territorial Governorship, and bis declaration that he would hold that 'post until God Almighty should tell him to give it up, were but the natural devel opment of a polity which looks to the sub jugation of all earthly kingdoms, states, empires, sovcrignties, to a rule nominally theoratic, but practically autocratic, with Brigham Young or his designated succes or as despot. They bold that the instinct of self-preservatipn, the spirit of that re quirement of the Federal Constitution which enjoins that each State shall be guarantied a republican form of Govern ment, cry out against such a despotism, and demand its overthrow. The Army undoubtingly and univer sally believes that Mormouism is, at least, on the part of the master spirits of "the Church," an organized, secret, trcasona- ble conspiracy to extend the power, m- I crease vue weuuu, au grainy iuu mcuruua ! appetitites of those leaders who are using the terms of religion to mask and fchicld systematic adultery, perjury, counterfeit ing, robbery, treason, and even murder. It points to the wholesale massacre at Mountain Meadows the murder of the IJ"s, and a hundred more such, as iDstances of Mormon assassination for the cood of the (Jhurcb. the chaftisement 01 its enemies or tbo accrandizement or its , . leadini members to the impossibility of briniiingthepcrpetralorsof these crimes to jus-tice, to the Territorial laws of Utah i which empower Mormon functionaries to select the Grand and Petit Jurorors even , for the United States Court, and impose j qualifications which in effect secure the exclusion of all but Mormons from the Jurv-box. and to the uniform refusal of those jurors to indict or convict those who have committed crimes in tbe interest of Mormonism, as proof positivo that all attempts to punish the Mormon criminals by Mormon jurors and officers must ever prove abortive, and demands of tho Fed cral Government that it shall devise end put in execution some remedy for this unbearable impunity to crime. It is uni formly believed in camp that not less than seventy five distinct instances of murder j by Mormons because of apostaoy, or some j other form of bo-tility to "the Church" i or mainly for the sake of plunder, are j known to tho authorities here, and that 1 there is no shadow of hopo that one of ' tbe perpetrators will ever be brought to justice under tho sway of Mormon "Pop jular Sovereignty" as now established in this Territory. The Army, therefore turn8 aQ anxiou tQ Washington, and strains its ear to hear what remedy is to be applied. Manifestly, the recent response from that quarter are not calculated to allay this anxiety. The official rebuke recent ly given to tho Federal Judges here, for employing detatchmcnts of troops to ar rest and bold securely Mormons accused of capital crime, elicits low mutterings of dissatisfaction from some, with a grave silence on the part of many whom disci pline restrains from speaking. As tho recent orders from Washington are under stood here, no employment of Federal troops to arest or secure persons charged with or even convicted of crime is allow-! ed, except where tho civil power (intense- i Iy Mormon) shall have ocrtificd that tbe execution of process is resisted by a force i which it cannot overcome by means of a ' civil jmsse. How opposite this is tbe or ders given and obeyed in the Fugitive Slave cases at Boston, need hardly bo indicated. Very general, then, is tbe inquiry in tbo Army. Why were we sent here? and why arewo kept here T What good can Judge Cradlebaugh asserts that on the list of jurors recently imposed nn him for the investigation at Provo of the Parish and oth er murders, he knew there were not less lhap nine leading participants in, those murders. our remaining do T What mischief can it prevent I A fettered, suspected watch ed, distrusted Army an Army which must do nothing must not even be ask ed to doanytbing in any probable con tingency what purpose docs it observe beyond enriching contractors and the Mormon magnates at its own cost that of the Federal Treasury! Every Mormon magnates at its own cost and ar- tide eoten.drank, worn, or in any manner bought by the soldiers, cost three to ten times its value m tno states; pan 01 ims extra cost falls on thes-Treasury, the real due on the troops individally. Their po sition here is an irksome one; their com forts few; home, family, friends are far awav. If the Doliov now nursued is to nrevail. thev cannot bo needed in this j r j I havo not to Mormons as that bad an opinion of the entertained by the Ar- my while" I consider the Mormon jeli- gion, so called, a delusion and a blight, I believe many of its devoted adherents, including most of those I have met, to be pure-minded, well-meaning people; I do not believe that Mormons generally do light in plunder or murder, though tho testimony in the Mountain Meadows, Parrish, and one or two other cases, is certainly staggering. But I concur en- tiroly in tbe conviction of tbe Army that tho to. is no use in its retention here under existing ordors and circumstances, and that three or four companies of uragroons would answer every purpose of this large and costly concentration of troops. Ihe Army would cost less almost anywhere else, and could not anywhere be loss use ful. A suspicion that it is kept here to an swer private pecuniary ends is widely entertained here. It is known that vast sums have been made out of its transpor tation by favored contractors. Take a single instance already quite notorious: Twenty-two cent per pound is paid for the transportation of all provisions, mu nitions, &c., from Leavenworth to this point. The great contractors were al lowed this for transporting tbis year's supply of Flour. By a little dexterous management at Washington, they were next allowed to furnish the Flour here, being paid their twenty-two cents per pound for transportation, in addition to the primo cost on the Missouri. As Utah has a b&ter soil for growing Wheat than almost anything else, they had no diffi culty in sub-letting this contract at seven cents per pound net,making a clear pront of S170.000 on the contract, without risk- ing a dollar or lifting a finger. Ofcourse, thoni- selves, not for the Liovernment; but some- body is well paid for taking care of tho public's interost in such matters: Has he done his duty? Acain: Pursuant to a recent order t .U A:.ffA nr.. i t' ii- u auction some Two Ihousaud Mules a bout two-thirds of ajl the Government owns in this Territory. These mules cost S175 each, and are worth to-day S125 to S150. I attended the sale for an hour or so this forenoon; the range of prices was from S60 to Si IS; the average of the 700 already to!d about $75. Had these mules been taken to California and there properly advertised and sold, they would have brought nearly cost; evon at Leavenworth they must bave sold for at least $100,000 more than hero, where there is practically no demand and no competition for such an immense herd; and, after every Mormon who can raiwe a hundred dollars or ovr shall have sup plied himself with a span of mules for half their valuo, ono or two speculators will make as much as they pleaso, while the dead loss to the People will be at least $200,000. Nobody here has re commended the sale of theso mules; they were being herded, under tbe oaro of de tachments of tbe Army, at no cost but for herdsmen, aud they could bave been kept through next Winter in secluded mountain valleys at a cost of about 810 per head; whereas, the Army can never move without purchasing an equal num ber; and they can neither bo bought here nor brought here for S200.0U0 more than these animals are now fetch ing. Somebody's interest is subserved by this sale, but it is certainly not that of the Armv nor of the People. Tho or- der is to sell seven hundred wagons as ll .1 l.J t t.Snn C!ll ,m nli - rf , wen, out tuuau wuuiu Uuw u..uB w while they cost at least 81au, ana could not bo renlaoed when wanted even for . . that, while the Army cannot move with out them, and keeping them costs abso lutely nothing. Who issues such orders i as this, and for whose benefit! Look at another featuro ot this trans action: There is at this moment a largo amount duo to officers and soldiers of of S40 to of this Armv as pay, in sums RSOl) nunh. Manv of those to whom this U 1 a il IV HQ UVi IU OU-"1' v' v-v rri. Ann vn.l,1 vArv much like to money UI J UU lJ l l w ,,n.. .w.j talro mules in nart oavment. either to use while here, to sell again, or to boar them ond their baggage o California, or back to the Miusouri on the approaohing expi s ration of their terms of enlistment. In i many instances, two soldiers would doubt ! less club to buy a mule on which to pack their blankets, &o,, whenever their time is out. Hundreds of mules would thus havo been bought, and. the proceed of the sale considerably augmented, if tho Government, by its functionaries, had consented to receive its own hon'st debts in payment. But no I on some rediculous pretense of ill-blood between the Pay and the Subsistcuco bureaux of the War De partment, this is refused it would he too much trouble to take certificates ot gciiunmu uuiu uuvf...j .... uuu soldiers' pay actually due in payment for aand ho-es. ,nstCB(1 of parting offsome these mules: so the officers and soldiers t0 gladden their homes, certainly, but too must purchase of speculators at double price or go without, and the mules be sold for far less than they would have brought if those who must have them had been enabled to bid directly for them. Two or three speculators reap a harvest here at the sore cost of the soldiers aud the Treasury. Rnf w k t,o Anv(anu mat anu ice oiuer pretty or ciever j-ruk m Kill wu oaiu mat .'Utarc m uvi in Utah. It would suffice to answer that idlo mules obtain, save in Winter, only,3 growing on the Public Lands, which may as well bo eaten in part by Government mules as all by those of the Mormon squatters. But let us see how it co.-a so much, liere has recently been received here thirty thousand bushels of corn froUlisea. ,r in.tb,e cemetery at home. tr, StnfPQ nr n not. rn,f .r.M.ulim, trnrm. portation, of 8310,000 or over SI 1 per ! idens ancient times, somebody was bushel. No requisition was ever uiade:alwaJ8 founLd. to g out afa,nat 1,l5D. ad for this Corn, which could have been ! conquer htm at ast. Wo must not bdF 1 1 1 1 c- Hess watchful and devoted than our fore- el, or $60,000 in all. w.-, r. j lie ucau l j . the Treasury on this Com is 8280,000, even supposing that the service required it at all. Somebody makes a good thing la . s-i f . t ! ot wagoning tbis oorn irom tne Missouri per Who believes that said somebody has not mnuentiai 1 and thrifty connections inside of the War j uepariinenu I will not pursue this exposition: Con- gress may. Let me now give a sample of Re trenchment in the public service in this quarter: The mail from Missouri to Salt Lake has hitherto been carried weekly in good six-mule wagons; tho contract time being twenty-two days. The importance ot irequent ana regular communication with head quarters, at leant so long as a'atood out opon tho platforra, and amid large Army is retained hero at a heavy the profound attention of his audience, extra cost, and because of some presum-1 commence(i ; ed public necessity, is evident. Yet tbej i?eliow citixens Five and forty years new Postmaster-General has cut down : 0 thig Drdgef buijt by your enterprise, tbe Mail Service on this important central j wa3 parfc and parcej of the bowiing route from weekly to semi-monthly. But j derneg9 p jje paused a moment, "Yes, the contractors, who are obliged to runlfellow cit;zcnSj 0Q)y gve and fortJ yeartt their stages weekly because of their pas-j ag0, this bridge, where we now stand, was senger business, and because they have j part and parcei 0f the howling wilder to keep their stock and pay their men neaai" Again be paused. Cries of "good, whether they work or play, find that they g0 0Q n Here as the Jah t f(Jol cannot carry the Mail every other week j hardly necessary to repeat, tnat tbis so cheaply as they can every week. For , brid fellow cjtjzens, orjjy gve and for. Z L A : l i '.-i : instance: i. man irum iuu oiatcs uuw u cuu"Bl3 U1 "B,,C tu fl,tlMU UCU,J' sbcks mosi 01 mem nneu who iraneu documents), weighing as many hundred pounds. Double this, and no six mule team would draw it at tbe requisite pace, and no baggage wagon stand tbe jerks and jolts of an unmade road. So they say, "Please let us carry the Mail week ly, though you only pay us for carrying it semi-montbly." But no! this is strict- 11 MJUI1-UIOUW ly forbiddenl The Postmaster at Salt, uaau uao CApim "innu vit.wo iu iw.uu it, and of course he at St. Joseph also. And thus all this central region, embra- . t . f . Jt.l!i cing at least a aozen inporiant military posts and countless Iudian Agencies, is! reduced to semi-montbly mail service,' though tho contractor would gladly make it weekly at the same pricel Horace Greeley. Harriet Martineanon Female Education. It will be an immense advantage when the day comes for boys and g,rls . earnlDg auu piujiup 8VIU"' ' 7 ' several foreign countries do. Climbing trees is admirable exercise for everybody; j and so is cricket, and trap-ball, aud ball play of all kinds; and racing and jump inp. Instead of this, we see not a few scboo s where the girls, after sitting and standing all day are taken out for a tunll- in tho tailiuht to save lirfhtin? can- V. mi u e i u tbo reader seateu tnereon, enioy- dles. Thoy seldom feel tho sum; theyl. .. .. . j j- . DO,u"UJ ' J bia exening cigar and a distant have chilblains and other ailments from , J Qr bad circulation; and m such schools near-, of ,over3 .tf a boat thfl ly every girl has more or less distortion jgUmmcr water3 0f 60me rural Co.no, of tho spine when she has been there oq the and . Qn) at he more man two years, xu iu ,us ui.- ry people knew no better. Little girb were put upon uara uencues vmuum backs, and so high that tho feet hung in the air; and so perched, they were re- ah i m ii Tf hit. iinir linr mi , iiiiu dcii ivi ..v- ,r."o bours together. the hump back, the wearv achinir spine which many thou Eanda 0f English women have carried to ' . l 'P .n.n id nn innrn rn.aunn fnr lQC gravi;. iUu.u women hiin?? crooKcu tnan any oiuer creature born with a proper backbone; and tbis is better understood than it used to bo. Wc see that tho seats in schools aro oftcner accommodated to the bigth f ho oliildrnn: arid if leaninc back is cot countenanced, there is more frequent ohange of porturo aud of occupation. nalisthenic exercises, and even the tn- ! clined plane fer tho relief of tho backs of I . fast crowing girls, are common sigbts in our day. Tho improvement is marked; I m . . 1 k.,f ikn nnnditioa ot sciiooi-cins neeus - ... . i ' . i UUU K"" - . more consideration than bas,yet been giv en to it. Their avcrago of health is far that of hovs: moro of them will lan- ni,h in invalidhn; fewer will havo gen- tbo deformed shoulder, the humpback,'. r uine robust health; moro, m particular, ing m Hayli lor -ilwr barrel. Ihia will die of consumption within ten years, eeems like a high pric?but tho money Tho main cause of this is tho unequal was nay t'ten currency, much depreciated, development of the faculties. There is j like our old Continental nxoney: About too much intellectual acquisition, though twenty dollars of it aro equal to'oue fil oot too much mental exerciso, if it wcrol.vcr dollar. . made more general; and there is an al-mo-t total absence of physical ddacatioir. If the muscles were called upon as stren uously a.s the memory to how what tbey could do, tho long train of echool-girla who institute the romance of the coming . U1..1 :i:.ii.t many to the languid lot of jnvalidism, or lu luo bibiw-iuuui, wuuo u iuici- niiuable procession 01 tnem 19 tor ever on its way to tho cemetery the foremost dropping into the grave while tbo num ber is kept up from behind. Many a survivor will be still wondering, with I grandchildren round tbe fire, that this t u i t 'whoofellow nbould havo died so early? at, lue Bamc papa at imriy, win remark on the number of tho fellows who left tho school with him who have had to go to Madeira. Some have rallied; but for most it was merely the choice of a' ;:ravo under the myrtle there, or in the " ucu a uragOU ucvuuicu youiUS j 1 1 1 and fnt. Wo must rescue our youths aud maidens from an early doom. An Or atori n a tight Corner. I remember once, when I was a young man living up in New-Hampshire, tbey dedicated a new bridge, and invited a i young lawyer to deliver an oration. The lawyer had never yet, after a fortnights practice, had tbe honor of being retained, and the opportunity of establishing a rep utation was admirable. The day came, and with it came tbe multitude and the orator. He had made no written prepa ration, that being, he had been told, un-lawyer-liko a lawyer being supposed to' bo capable of speaking without note or;' notice any number of hours, on any sub iect, in a style of thrilling eloquence. So , nr nPnfnr ttA tn M,n nnno.inn TT ' tv vears aio. was nart and narcel of the .howling wildernes;.; and 1 will conclude by saying that I wish it teas part and pcirccl of it now" . A word with the Aeronauts. There is one great featuro of baloon sailing which threatens to assume a very unpleasaut practical importance, if tho art is to pass into the category of ordina ry human occupations. We mean the system of lightening balloons by 4,beav- iuji over ballast in a promiscuous man- ner upon tne earth below, oo iar as wo know, no accident has ever -et resulted from this practice,- but it is impossible for any merely walking sublunary mortal, who does not disdain his mother earth, to read without a certain discomposure Mr. Lamountain's exciting account of the means he adopted for relieving his ship when sho bad lost her buoyancy in the storm. The Atlantic took up seven bun- jdrcd pounds of ballast, and a miscellane ip et.bags, and other lu ous supply of iron fans, posts, bars, car- more or less weiiihtv. She came down minus her en- tiro cargo. It happened that in this case the good vessel was unloaded chiefly into a lake, though Mr. Lamountain docs ad mit that he once beard his sand-bass bouge houg(j & , h0u3C 0Ql sbore of the 8o biriliU wiiu u iuuu upuu iuu iuui ui a eaa- A n 7 . . .... ' . nd tbc flame suddcnly sriIuted by . bencdiction of lhrcc carpct.ba,,s and a twenty-pound crow-bar falling from tho skies, as fails a star 1 The fate of iEsby lus was romantic certainly, but rather per- icmntcrrv: and tuougn it would be moro , i i . Iirtnnrn h i Imnnrii hl tn ho killnri Viv a s.tnil.tmfr in - 1 , , a .i r f ' , th nctMresult to i . ' .... ! tho earth-creepin" man would be virtual- , Af . , m, ly the same in both cases. Death from a Fly Bite. A letter from Gasscl In the Journal do Frankfort, mentions tbe sudden death of Mr. Habicht. a protestaut Minister of that town, from the puncture of a fly. Tho ! wound was inflicted near tho corner of his. eve. A tumor formed, which was followed by crysipelhs, and speedily oaus- " " ed dcath. It is presumed that tho fly bad been feeding on some dead carcass " in a sjatc of decomposition, and had im bibed a poi-onus virus, which bad enter ed the wound. (KrA't the last accounts flour was scll-