V ''""' 11 1 11 " .fiii.MM.'....K"''nm.i.CTrWI,,W,aWtla,',t.,B On, W 1 t , . r jy.V, ,7.Wrirn'.'...i, .frwiiwun .. Q .a,W. .....i.-.fcin aft-..', 1r- , L -.mu LL,..iu, e , ... . .l.iuj-.l., Slcuotcft fa politics, literature, Agriculture, Science, iWoralitu, auJ encral ittcUtgcucc. VOL 10. STROUDSBURGr. MONROE COUNTY, PA. JUNE 21, i860. NO. 24, Published bv Theodore Schocllt'W0 ''ve UDer an Administration found- doiUreandqu fNVpapere discontinued TERMS. Two dollars per annum in advance Two excent at the option of the Editor, "O Advertisements of one square (ten lines) or Ies., one or three insertions, S 1 00. Each additional inscr ton.5 cents. Longer ones in proportion. iravins a general assortment ofiargc, plain and or Tho Willett'a Point swindle was one of sc7ionofVP0,WC are prcp:,rea lo executecveri'de Kthe means of paying off tho men who fur- senptumo IIRirWffjEftfG3, iniabed money to buy and bribe through ri'anis ircuts urn iicads Notes, niank Receipts, ' tUo election in Pennsylvania; the Fort justices. Legal and other Blanks, Pamphlets. &c, prin "Snelling swindle was auother. Take the aunu oVl"eS case in Indiana. A leading politician there, calling himself an American, had a j q DUCKwouTir. john HAVN c'aim against the Indiaus for $40,000. T CofilltB'V J3ct2ers : In PolkVMimc it had been examined and J.O t-OH 5 ' ' Jsoouted. But he was promised that mon- DUCKWORTH & HAYN, jey in case he would tako care that Indi- wholesale dealers in j ana went against the Republicans. A OrOCCriCSj PrCVisiOHSj ffiiqU0rSj&et'g0otlemBn known as Live-Oak Swift of No 80 Dey street New York. I New-Bed ford furnished a good deal of t... iri"3o L ' ' 'money, and he bad a larse contract eiv- GIVE ME A HOME IN THE COUNTRY. BY THE BARD OF THE EASTOX HALL OF FASHION- Give me a home in the country, Said a maiden young and fair : When Jane is come in her beauty, And on the ttill Summer air Is borne forth the fragrant broathing Of thousauds of lovely flowers, And the warblinga of birds From our natures leafy bowers. Give me a homo in the woodlands, When Sol with his scorching beams Is withering the flowers in their beauty, ' And drying the murmuring streams. Give me a homo vhcrc peace ever Will greet mo when labor is done: And though fortune, in show 'ring her fa vors, Its dear lowly precincts may shun, With companion, neatly robed in tho fabhion, The grace and peculiar etjlc Which characterize the apparel Made up at the great store of Pyle, I'll covet no mora of earth's blessings ; Hut lightsome, and happy and gay, Liko the fiowrj and bright mouth of June, Shall my days pass in sweetness away. (7 The handsomest assortment of Ready Made Clothing and piece goods over seen in Easton is now on exhibition, at Pyle's Great Easton Hall of Fashion, opposite the Easton Bank. SPEECH OF HORACE GESELLY, Before the Young Men's Republican TJn- j ion, at the Stuyvesant Institute, sn.x. Ma. CHAIR3IAX The Past is dead; lei the dead bury it, and let its mourners, if they will, go about the Btrccts; while we devote ourselves to the living Present, with its pressing duties, it vast responsi bilities, and its glorious hopes. Simply calling your attention to the stupendoui developments of official fraud, peculation, and theft recently made before Investi gating Committees at Washington and in tho Federal offices in this city, I ask you to unite with ae in this sentiment : "Resolved, That we recognize not one moriln Vi n f finfi TrrdnrnBQl I. In Clnnfliots- wtibii iuv i--vu m. w... w. . I the first between exjansivc i'ree .Labor lu Ul4""" .n--.w.. on the one hand, and aggressive, all gras-Uould be too foolih for any man to be ping Slavery propagandism on the otber; caught doing. We are going to hate a the second-not lees vital, not less jm "traight forward issue this fall, and while minent between frugal government and j I doubt not the Slavery question will be honest administration on one side, and ! presented, the irrepressible conflict be wholesale executive corruption, legislative twn fraud and honesty in Government bribery, and pcculative jobbery on the I U be still more important than that other; and wo recognize in Honest AbejThis people have been overtaxed and o- Lincoln the r mht man to ead us in both.' TLoud so'.lausel He continued: Mr. Till Chairman and gentlemen. I shall pass very briefly over tbe firet branch of tbis Bubject, because it has been so often and iso thoroughly discussed. I believe that a.Federal Administration that shall be honest and impartial will of itself finish up all the controversy in relation to Sla very. Give us an Administration that sViall hr honest and fair, and I don't be- W Rlnmrc ttill ocnr opt nnnflior ! foot of new territory. If old Zaok Tay Uvlnr and I had hard work to support k;m Ur,A hnon Vrpafont. a hundred years we Bhould not have bad another foot of!tbe money goes into the drawer. ii- ,orr:tnP T the Fprli.nl Gov. 13 anotucr aoQce. i ne postage on a ici- uupuiui .uu, miuuuu 1S.1, 81 to Europes 24 cen'ts, aLnormous bad beaten Fremont 9 000 and the gen they to pass such an infernal bill as tbeyUount to pay. But tbe mail ,s closed ,n eral fe el.ng outside of llo State j.s that A-.A t Jr, m i;nn orot,itm 1 the morning, and the merchant who waits i Douglas had hotter be elected. Mr. U-it-did Ut Winter in WMexico, catching reasVoablo time before the steam-! tenden wrote a letter whioh elected Doug a black man and making a slave of bim , ""in a reao owie e fa myh trnrfnrs and ofFice-holdera Legislature there, and they passed that' bill in order to ingratiate themselves with) I - TIT I" a ;n hoe8 dr tl S L 1. 0 ItJ: Z ier-wboi iou'l waot to crowd Sla.cry opoo tbel oeonlo and tho aueslioo nil I be settled ' J"?."v ThTdiffieuHv i now bat .t. t4V.-i oia M h Kiftorof nn rtnnQ of Frrlnm Thi lifia been the trroot ?ViflnonA nirinsf. wiinh t,ihrrtv has 1 iat to struggle ior jears. ma B5 0I. tBMnt. r ua 17irinfai n mcnt to the cause of honesty and purity.' T il 171 . J I . I cr BUU BUUUS mo lClkUl iu iuo cicouj- ' 1 " " e . atrnifrht acroES to California; now. I be eve that ho will get 5,uuu a-.lus. The cou is iouna m ine nv., . have been called agitator, .ong enough. ,e and 50.000 against any ' the perch in tho scaj the valleys are co d I .mpeach the agitators who forced VfJ thcr man.S Bight there I fool very sure, and tho mountain tops warm; tho nettle (ration, bonest and true, which shall re-1 have a mail agent on the train whose bus Douglae; tbey will give it up 1 know the ? w, mAnS! t,' that. nri tro final rrt nlnnir enKilv. Wo niaubc. I j i i t. ' ... it j. ; i-, ti.Q lottnrs hut I hare lounu iur. Hamlin, our caaaiaatu iui ic .uu umua uio iou - - a j - gard human rights as Something, as we ine.. I is to take ',e""8'fhu 5g a very unassuming, 'humblest house is fitted up with cedar, as what tbey call property, and we shall . lately that it i against he rule for h m , i J ab,o maflnd thfl Ua laDt ig burnod for faoI. have no more SJave ierntory. I propose, to do so. The reason is that tuo rose ( , j Freo- Ubo trees aro without fruit, tho flowers therefore, to call your attention to tbo master wants' to make bis percentage, and a man ot few w? u ond tho birds are witb- otber branch of the' subject-that is the Tor that they must go through the-office.. Soil Dem ocra t 854 vo ng with u y e without scent and the 1 bds are w t ed in fraud. Tbey stole the October e- lection in Pennsylvania, by which they in November. They bought Americans, and run an American , ticket to beat us. The men are now known who bad their $1,000 or 82.000 to do it. "V n t Irn m ItAtn I I. a . AM. I. .... n en uim ior wune-oaK iimocr, unaer sucu mey nave got outsiue oi ine narrows iney utui uuu v ice-i rubiueui. nuou uo mua uio ocai vjcu. owu nus.iu circumt-tanccs as afforded no chance for go onboard and find a box of specie, $5,-1 Mr. Greeley retired from the stand a- possession of the City of Mexico, and tho competition. Those were the meane by , 000 or so, which is tolerably easy to find, mid hearty applause. The Glee Club ' war was virtually ended. Had Mr. Lin wbich Buchanan oame into power. If wo and they come back and report that they 1 then favored the audience with another coin ocoupied the position which Col. can't carry the election without resort to tsuch means, I hope wo shan't win it. Applause If there is to be another four years of suoh corruption, I would j rather it t-hould be Democratic than Re publican. I believe if we run our ticket j honestly, the men who try to get up third ! tickets will be marked and numbered. j I beard a man say that the delegates to ; the National Union or Constitutional Con vention I don't know which laughter owned that their expenses were paid by the Democrats. Tho Demoorats bad to have an outside arrangement to tell the stories which it would injure them to tell ! 6uoh as that about Fremont being a Catholic. We, of course, shall have this machinery of a third party running to take votes from us and give them to our opponents. But I don't believe it will pay expenses. Who will vote the Bell arjd Fkerett ticket here? The man had better vote direct the Democratic ticket. If anybody gets up a Bell and Everett ticket in this State, they won't voto it themselves. Their votes will go plump for the Democratic ticket. In tho inves tigation now going on before the Covode Committee, it appeared that Mr. McCar ty, a largo paper manufacturer, who makes large contracts with the Govern ment paid considerable sums of money to the Democratic party in Pennsylvania. And to keep up the Straight American party in Philadelphia, be paid 810,000. Thry got 500 or 600 votes for it. And tia3e il wou'fc Pay so wel1 as fc.hot-. 1 believe that we have, by our nomination, got rid of the difficulty of giving a port of excuse to Americaus to run a separate ticket. Some of those who have been A lnericans may be going to vote the Dem ocratic ticket; but tho Bell and Everett ticket will be supported by no honest man. It is run as a stool pigeon tioket, aud grown men, with their eyes wide o pen, are not going to vote it. It waj dif ferent in 1856. Then I knew honest, good, faithful men, who really believed that Fillmore was going to get tho vote of tbis State, and they voted honestly for him. But to vote the Bell and Everett , ,1'iUU auu c" that thero must come a reaction. We all know bow generally tbe people resisted tho action of the Legislature last Winter, and wo know now what is going on here. Intelligent men, not few, but ma- nj, have known for months that Isaac V. Fowler was robbing the Government. , I wrote bix weeks aco to a Committee : that he must be htealiug. An enormous , amount of newspapers go paid from our i PoSt-OfficC Post-C them, them, cd for there wi Here I m. 1 . A stamp sbouiu no put on , ias, auu was uou uvmvu, m uu uiiiu j;tcst oominfT and decisive token of death and with hn lamuy removea mere. j.uo but that would have to be account-j he was, is not a common man; tor no ! it(J D tbo body, till the ear has lost ! girl went to school a few miles from home, Instead of that a man stands j common man will answer for mat work; U ueariDg and (be soul's last signal and a hired man was in tbe habit of ear th a stamp and stamps them, and ana at tbe ena oi tuat campaign iur.i-.in- ,.,. - J:,t,,jr-wn 7?, 7)r. Wm. Ne- rvmc her backwara and torwaras in a who run tbe'er, has to pay 4H cents, ldo moneygoes into tbe till, but not into tho account. I am told that there aro twenty men or !M HMA n r A flllfn O f itlO Prtif . duties except to talc SI00 or 8X50 a - ootb ..4 o.rry it away. Aod people aro woDdcring wby tbe Post-Offieo can't support itself It can and would jtb .onnst etnslation auu nure covcrnmcnt. It doesn't, because it is called suDDort the Democratic party l---rr -r JU:l lllill Ull UIUUUU JLk ID i Q n miicf nisA vmtp letter to a Dt ger, and tho Government get nothing.- I don't believe thoro ever was a govern - I ment on oarth a9 corruDt and rotton as this. Twenty millions of Treasury Notes coming due and nothing to pay them with. horty 31ilIions of debt! abundance of defioiency bills, and vou will find a tcr- rible deficiency, not in the bills, when .Laos. " n ma .. i- C QZr T - i- mrtl Vv " abstractions about Slavery blind us to this. I will take up another offioer. There, is a good deal of talk about tho a- mount of money robbed from slavers. Two things have been developed these last years. New-York has become the metropolis of the slave trading. The way as it has been told me, is this: The slave vessel fits out hero and starts out. In the office of the Marshal, the intelligent and honorable Iaaih Rynders, there is a fel- low called 'Dore, Theodore Rynders. The slaver is watched, and when she is ready to sail, Doro and somebody else charter a tug and run after her. When didn't find ber. Laughter. Another box of 820,000 is down below and that is to pay for the cargo. I understand this fact took place A. leading lawyer went up to the Marshall a Offioo and said, "my client has lost $8,000, and your boat took it P There was some swearing and . some blowing, but tho money came back. ! It got so bold and open that there is now. a kjnd of explosion and talk about this, hllf. T Klinnnao f lint: If will Ytn fivfl im anma wav or other. Tbe Government is rotten 1 and corrupt from top to bottom, and tbojbis frame vrbon be comes out 10 tbe people ought to have an honeeter one, 1 morning tbe fair handiwork of faeav and I believe they will. I don't believe and conscious sovereign of all under the great mass of men ever did desire a God- lbcJ look 00 bim mf bls P8 corrupt, swindling Government. I felt l,ion and ml8,rJ visit bim when under the that wo ought to have candidates against depression or gnet, and in the impatience whoso stern integrity nothing could be ,a?d feyeruhneaa of pain; they hear all said, and of whose stern opposition to bl3 rcpimngs, see all his weaknesses and all manner of prodigality, not to Bay tears, and know better than others how corruption, in government thero is uo poor and humble a thing he comes to be doubt. I believe we have got such can-!fore be d,es' Tb fiC.e bim ot,in tbe didates. Show up these corruptions, tabng grace and attitude of the sub whichhavo created astonishment and a- U APJollo but Q tbe recumbent and 1.1 J x f . t IT ' T larm even on tho other side of the water. ! 'Let the neonlfi sob what, sort of men rov- ! .. it -it i l I ern tuom. ana L am sure tuev win aemanu a change, i am snro r.hrir hnvi'nrr hnn. ished some of the - nl.l nrninrlinnR whinl, made us enemies, tbe great mass of those r j . 1 who love honesty and frugality, will come together and say, apart from all abstrac tions and theories, tho first consideration is honest, responsible, frugal Government. I believe that there might be saved mil lions annually. I believe that tho Post Office might be madd to support itself, nearly or quito. at our present rates of postage... In the midbt of tbe cry about the PostTOffice-deficienoy bill, and the need of mone', one of the Postmasters in this State told me that he did not under stand it; he had the money of his own of fice and 15 or 20offices about bim lying on his bands, but the Government did not call for it. There is no responsibility, no accountability, on the part of the subordi nates of this Administration. If they pack delegates well, their accounts are o verlooked, aud they may steal as long as they see fit. That, is why tho Treasury h out at the elbows the utter dishonesty and demoralization of the whole concern. I will say very little of tho men who are now before the people for the highest of fices in their gift. I knew Abraham Lin coln in Congress eleven years ago, when he was one of tho youngest members, yet ooo of tbe most respected. He came from a section where there wero very few Whigs. I never beard any" man impeaoh his integrity, and never until now heard any man doubt his ability. I tell you, tho man who stumps a State with Stephen A. Douglas, and meets him, day after day, bofore the people, bas got to bo no fool. Many a man will make a better first speech than Douglas, but, giving and taking.?backnnd forward, heis very sharp. Now, the man who .went through the! State, speaking against Stephen A.JJoug-l coin came out with 4,000 majority on the lna olinnlil hn nlnntoil nnr) thorn Wflrn SO.- - MA IT-r ' .u. ' r u-i:.- ' have got another man living who would . 1 1 . i.i 1. ij 1 have fought through that campaign 6oef-;fore aDda,th 8d- 'be BOn3 are black, aod .be caglo. are naturedly as bo did Mr. Trambull white; b. moles lay . .. ; would have begun a little njoro ranker, duek, bill, be KJ j ' but ono or tbo otber woold soon bave ttcton tbo doer and squirrel) bas fito been knocked off tbe Platform. Mr. Lin.olaws on bis ore paws tbreo talon, on ; coin wont mrougu uu uvuvuu uu- upon to ture anu entire suavity, anu. ueat owpucu tun. iuuiu a a umu uv,inpuu6w; , aud that A. Douglas, it being the firet time any i has a broom in its mourn insteaa oi a - man on our siae ever carriuu iubl omic j- iuiiuu, u uou, uub-uan Mv.w..K.ut3 i -l rji. - iwt-i-x l ' i -n Hoh nna.hs t rin nnit.nrf m liiu - - htoff'.nn .s rafa. and the other to thotofsqua I Utlliu .uviviu v.w-. .w.-p. ocratio party on all other question.- 1 They could not turn him out of thenar- ty, because he voted with them on all but the Slavery questions, so he was Chair - man of the Committee on Commerce up to toe time they made the Cincinnati Platform and nominated James Bacban- an. Then be came out and said, uYou Till f m rt X w w a n "FA n M M M m V A T Vt t ceased to bo a Democrat; I am going with ho Republicans." He resigned his seat and went to Maine, and was eleoted Gov- crnor by 15,000 majority in a State which went against us the year before Both of these mon have polled tho highest vote ever polled in their two several States, and they will poll a highor vote still next Fall. Loud applause. I have grown : old, and don't believe now that a thing is going to be because I think it ought to be; but I feel very euro, as every man in Chi- cago felt when the nomination was made, that the 4th of March will see Linooln and Hamlin inaugurated as your Prcsi- ' patriotic song, which was enthusiastically cheered. ..- The Physician andthe Pastor, Thero aro two classes of men to whom tbe worJd presents itself in an aspect wbicb is bid from tbe masses of mankind. The Physician and the Pastor look on men from a prospect ground peculiarly their own. They see man not in the raiShfe of bis mind or in" tbe v,'gr of P" Buuermg aopoou ! A.i it. .i e utQera OD lue Buriace ol "J thov nnnpf.rntfi tn frir noro. And it is 'j r ----- DeinS being conversant with different worlds. Without and in the street, all is hilarity j ; r i t i i. ( uuu jvy ui uuuu, uuu tue 5uJf opttii ui life predominates. But it is only the o pening of a door, or the stepping into a cellar, and tho scene is all changed. Man, the goodly child of heaven, tbey fol low bim who was seen in all the alertness of joy and life, made after tbe same pat tern, and breathed into it by the same spirit, is laid out in languisbment and I death, too poor for auzht but pity, his sinking pulse and laboring heart betok ening how little of the little span is left him. To these scenes, both come on the work fae Jq tho morni it wa9 nowhere ! returned, when they acknowledged their of benevolence; but they occupy different tQ fae found Tfae aftornoon hav. i inability to pay, and implored bim not to departments The curer of the body oeoasion to Eako some repairs, a bu-! send them to Jail. The captain compro knows his toils and anxieties. Let him .q hj. room wag removedt and the mised tbe affair by setting them to work first do his work and be gone and how . ... nn . , ft h.A h.DTi the man at sawing wood, and the wo- necessary is it that a physician should be , ac a pnysician snoum ue , a pious man: Bat " not-uit men, to sit down by tho bedside, at tbe moment when the physician shakes his head and retires, and all that is seen and heard betokens that the sick is given over. At that moment of wound up interest to press gently the wasted hand, and if the sick bo a child of God to make the skillful application oflho Gospels comforts to select and present tbe chapters whioh tbe r, . .. . v ... r .it- . . n opint nas. written ior toe aymg, 10 ten of the rod and staff of Jehovah to com fort, and bow precious in His eyes is the death of his taints; or, if be be not a child of God. cautiously to alarm, and gontly to press home the frequent invita- adelphia. Upon being questioned by an tions, the encouraging promiees the rich- j Officer stated that she was homeloes and es of the Father's tender mercies, and tho without friends. She was taken to the impressivo testimonies of the Savior's love 'station house, and subsequently to the with thesa, and with the fearful alterna- central station, whore sho told a sad sto tions, to win, if he can, tho poor soul, ry. It was as follows: She was seven whose night is just at band. What a ! teen years of age, and a native of Salem, ..!,! m,;d m..Dfim An nnrl nniinnn N. J. Two vears aco her fathor pnr- d(j ag hag 0pportunity, till tho la- 6b vms. The Land of Contraries. In Australia the north wind is the hot wind, and the south thb oool; tbo wester ly tho most unhealthy, and the eaFt the mot salubrious; U is summer with tho colonist when it is winter at home, and the barometer is considered to rise be bad weather aud to fall before good; u.a u.u - , lia. t. l. : 1 rl1!. ir, n kin.1 tnn inhnrroi rohinll The Chicogo Press and Tribune thus I disposes of the charge that Mr. Lincoln ' took the Mexioan side through the late war with that country: "Ihe revival of this infamous slander. after its thorough and cooinlcte oxnosures in the canvass of 1858. shows to what des- VlflMflllnn flirt . ... t . . t K I I coin has drivon the Sham Demooraoy. Col. Richardson, howevor, was not very circumspect in his lauguago in starting the falsehood again on its travels. A slight analysis of his statement in conneo- tion with the date of Mr. Lincoln's en- tranoo in CoDgresa is, of itself,, a sufficient refutation of the whole charge. He Bays ' Mr. Lincoln's speeohes 'against his coun- trymon and in favor of Mexico retired him from the political arena, and the ' Whig party refused to roturn him to Congress.' Now, it so happens that Mr. Lincoln was elected to Congress just a- , bout the close of tho Mexican war. i Richardson falsely charges him with hav ing held in relation to the Mixican war, does any man believe than an Illinois constituency especially the district which bad sent the gallant Hardin and his brave regiment to tho scene of conflict would have elected him to CongrossT The fact that he was so elected, together with bis votes and speeches in Congress, proves the whole story to be utterly false; and its continued refutation, after its expo sure, shows tho desperate strait to which the party feels itself driven by the nomi nation of an bonest man and true patriot. It will fail of its purpose, however. The records of Congress aro accessible, and wherever the lie is uttered it will be ex posed. Moreover, when tho facts aro all brought out, the obarge oan be regarded in no other light than as a direct assault upon every man who was identified with tho old Whig party. Mr. Linooln was in full communion and sympathy with ( that party tho friend and associate of j Clay, Webster, Crittenden, Hardin, and all its trusty leaders. He held the Bame opinions in relation to the war which they held, gave the same votes that they gave; and when Col. Richardson seeks to fasten such a charge upon Mr. Lincoln, he, by implication at least, accuses them and the whole rank and file of the Whig party of j tbe same thing." Lost and Found. ly Tray Times tells the following rat Btorv: More than six months ago, Mr. Leon ard Edwards, who lives on Fourth street in that town, lost a valuable gold watch. He placed it upon a stand when be went tn haA at. nirrlif nftnr WinrHntr it UD :; ,n;n u. .a nmnl Whnn floor taken . , . fc lhfl floQr under j, b dat rals. In a Bnng oorDer, be- t tfac A a , Q0,t of yari. fiedjarticleJ SQoh as bits of paper 0ld rags, of' oheeile olotha. . having., and jq thig Mf Edvvarda focnd hig tim ie carofully stowed a- T a'deDt the fa00 j ttndFB0ln0 aisar. ; mcnt 0f the machinery indicated a u u eovore shock. A Painful Case. On Friday morning a young girl was found wandering about the streets of Phil- 'chased a plantation near New Orleans, wason. Jjurtng tuese riues uesuccecueu in winning her affections, and in porsuad ing her to elope with bim. She stole $1 00 belongiug to her father, and tho couple come to this city, where the villain effected her ruin, and after obtaining all ber money and pledging nearly all her clothing he deserted her. Having no means left, tbo poor woman was turned into the streets by tho proprietor of tho house where she bad been staying. Tbe girl refusod to make affidavit against tbo scoundrel who bad betrayed ber. Sho was sent to tho Houo of Refugo until ber family can be communicated with. . I 3 .1 To Preserve the Skins of Animals. A correspondent Bonds tbo following method which he says ho obtained from a foreign journal, and has found reliable: Stretch the skin tightly and smoothly up on a board, hair side down, and tack it by tho edes to its place Scrape away the loose flesh and fat with a blunt knife, aud work in plenty of obalk with plenty of hard rubbing. When the chalk begins to powder and fall-off, remove the skin from tbo board fill it with finely ground alum, wrap it closely together and keep it In a dry place a few days By this means it will be made pliablo. ond will retain tbe hair.- American Agricaiad-turist. buii& Ladies, Read? The following from tho Hartford Daily Conrant, in relation to a fashionable nui sance, which prevails, in that eityr tll apply to all the towns and 'euisatbo U. States: What a number of idle, useless young women they call themselves young la dies parade our streets! "They toil not, neither do they spin, yet Solomon in all bis glory was not arrayed liko one of them." Do they over look forward to thu time when tho roal cares and respon sibilities of life will cluster around theza? Havo tbey made, or are tbey raaking any preparation for the onerous duties which will assuredly fall to thoir lot duties to aocioty, tho world and GodI They lounge or slcop away their time in tho morning. They never take hold of tho drudgery, tho repulsive toil; which each son and daughter of Adam should per form in this world. They have no half its of industry, no taste for the useful, no fkill in any really useful art. Tbey aro in the street., not in the performance of their duty, or for the acquisition of health, but to seo and bo seen They expect thus to pick up a husband who will be as indulgent as their parents have been, and support them in idleness. Thoy who sow wind in this way are euro to reap tho whirlwind. No life can be exempt from, cares. How mistaken an education do these girls receive who are allowed to imagine that lifo is always to be a garden of rosesl Labor is the great law of our being. How worthless will sho provo who is unable to perform it. Domestic education cannot be acquired m the streets. It oannot bo learned a midst tho frivolties of modern society. A good, and worthy, and comfort-bringing husband can rarely be piokod on tho pavement. "Tho nymph who walks the public streets, And sots her cap for all she meets, May catch tbe fool who turns to stare, But men of sens avoid the snare." The highest and best interest of socie- ty in the future, demand a better, a mora useful, a more domcstio training of our j young ladies. High Life below Stairs. A gay couple, representing themselves to bo man and wife, arrived at Carpenter's Hotel, Newark, a few days ago, and book ed themselves as permanent residents. For a few days they lived most luxuriant , lj dictating tho details of their "fodder," iJuu uaviug ii ourveu up iu tutu uu iuvu, but when the time arrived for them to settlo the bill thev manifested a strong disposition to "foot it" during tho land lord s absence, whereupon the bar tender very urgently requested them to remain I under lock and koy until the proprietor man gfc sorQbbing and is determined to keep them at it until tho wholo bill is paid. Gold Ink. Tako some leaf gold and white honey and grind 'them together upon a marble slab until the gold is reduced to an im palpable powder. The paste now form ed is agitated in a largo glass tumbler with soft water, which dissolves tho hon ey while tho gold falls down to tho bot tom. The water is now poured off end tho gold washed until all the honey is re moved, after whioh the gold is dried and then suspended in a mucilage of gam a rabic. It is now used for writing upon paper, and wben it becomes dry it may be burnished and rendered brilliant. Silver ink is prepared in tho same man ner, by substituting silver leaf for tbe gold. Gold is also obtained in powder by dissolving nitrodjdrochlorio acid (ay ua regiaj) which is colled the lerchlorido of gold. When crystallized, this is solu ble in water, alcohol and other, and nay bo used for gold ink by adding a gum mucilage to tho water or alcohol in which it is dissolved. Metallic writing fluids of different colors can be made by mixing bronzo powders in gum mucilage. tS cntijic American. . . i Economy iu Domestic Fires. I bavo, for yoars, materially reduced tho consumption of coals in tho fireplaces in my house by putting fire-clay orcr tho bottom bars. It is introduced in a moist state, and can be carried to any extontin reason which the operator onn desiro, and be molded in any form be may pre fer. I havo it placed in a sloping form, like tho roof of a house, in which t shapo it fills up tho bottom and baok of tho fire, where it oannot be seen wben the coals aro in tho grate. By this contrivanco a very email qunatity of coals is made to produce, apparently a large firo, and tbo mass of day becomes red-hot, and throws a great heat into tho room. Tho-con-sumption of ofels will be found 3to bo much lossenod by this practice, andgtbo olay, when onoo put in, will last for years. Builder. 2Tlt is stated that twenty thouVand Swedes and Norwegians are preparing to embark for the United States, and it is believed that not less than that number will reach tbe United States Jber tho close of tbo pre?ent year.