SJcuoteir ta politics, Citeratnre, 2lgriatltnre, Stitntt, iiluraliii), tmfr nieml Intelligence. VOL. 23. STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA. JULY 7, 1864; NO. 20 Published by Theodore Schoch. TERMS Two dollars a year in advance and if not paid boftire the end of the ye;u, two dollars and twen ty fire cts. will be charged. . No p iper discontinued until all arrearages are paid. siccpiac ine option ui mu cuuor A Shade Worse than the Blue laws. From a Bridgeport, Connecticut, paper we learn that a Mr. Jcssup SJierwood, of Fair field, in that State, brought a suit against From Frank Leslies' Illustrated Newspaper, dor. The Museum is so favorably known BARNTJM AND HIS MTJSETH& throughout Europe that do foreigner of As a successful caterer for public respectability, coming to this Country, amusement and instruction Mr. P. T klls to v,slt lS- Indeed thls was fche 0Q- , icrAivcrtisctnents of one square of (ten lines) or his wife, fa second wife to P'et nossession of , Baruuni undnnhtailltr sfnnrls wiMinnf. a r.,lJ Place ot amusement attended by the i1 personal property, The lady, who in- val in the world. Having lost a fortune rl J Wales and suite while in the heritcda ferm worth 86,000 and personal J Pacing too much confidence in his fel -! fUuflted States and thoPnnce had thogood . . JOB PRIffTIilG, property of the value of $3,000, and is sixty men, ho has overcome all obstacles Jt -of age, was married to the plaintiff! -d;i- dp etr 0-30 'hrnrmo'Ttraoraar; Sxecntcd in U.e inghest Myle of the Art.and on.the some few years since. He was a widower, I ' Ln,;VL, curiosity in the establishment. Mr. Bar- muni 1 HaLaiiii tint nnns. . 1 uiuui ulliul.uiuu iiji 11 in 111 uni: uiii. . " , . WlTIl rwn nnmnmnH Ho nirhtrsre Knpnm mrr ' 1 i . . A Sit or Romance. with two unmarried daughters. Becoming . lag drawn the most immonv miilrihiidM num has recently taken his two sons-in- bankrupt he wanted tofinirer his wife's cash : 1 of nnf.rnnq thnm during fiin tmnhrl taw luto the museum to assist him in the . a . I - A woman mssml tlirnmrj, tliis r.ifv on and as she Droved obstinate he sued. A . vears. The cnnsrrmmi . hn is nrnhn.i details ot its management, but tins arange- Wednesday last en route to New York, who, Connecticut judge gave an order that the ! bly worth two Millions of Dollars. But menfc jlthS ifc relieves him from some during the last three years, has passed defendant be imprisoned, unless before a day ' g?d fortune docs not spoil a man Hke! car.es, by no means induces him to relin i "u J . t. -1. .1 -11 -Barnum, on the contrary, his indomitable' quwh any portion of his personal atten- w iniiiorwt a j-i 1... ...a. 1 x' . 1 1 1 uiuii tu u u.Tiiii-T.i. 1 1 in oiiiiiuiv utiLiiiLU nance is seen in the Museum every day, surrounded by his other curiosities, (ma 1 personalty nant- and cliirinn; the absence of tho nnrnt? nartmcnt of a iail. while the husband and his o i j j - wii.n, uv iu wuiiuu ui 1110 v lai iuis 'ii-it , , y one dav the children were all massscred hv daucrhtcrs occunied her house. It is a slip-bt and constnntlv fo nrnnunn tho (rrontwt' anc as ne declares he is nowhere so hap- ome of the chivalry. The wife immediately rcfief to this disgraceful statement to say ' possible amount of valuable and startling! P7- as,whcn innthe. museum, catering for assumed male attire, enlisted in the same that the Supreme Court, has reversed the . novelties lor the smallest possible price otj " - - .iuo, ..cu uu aamission. lieuce, at a daily expense oti ,, " Mi" e; i.njMj jji' ness." oij. uuuuiou uuumsj iijuiu rum, uunuus and instructive amusementand "wonders" A Great Cheese Kegion. ! may be enjoyed and seen in his Museum tearlv part of the war,' she, with her husband evidences of her personal estate ; and from ".T "uu BU,lY1LJr ? IU" Pace wi . .1 1 -li -1- . u oQi c at 1 iopo -i .u Wltl1 nis great success aud he declares fcd two or three children, were residing in the 23d day of November, 1863, until with- , thafc hh 0,gef ide and fco &t n Border State, where scccss;onism was ram- 'in a short lime, she lay in the criminal de- ten(j personally to the business of his Mu- company with her husband, and fought side by side with him in nearly all the battles participated in by the Army of the Cumber land. A few months since her husband re ceived a fatal bullet while fighting by her side, and the wife, too, was subsequently wounded and taken to the hospital, where her hex was discovered. Those who conversed with her say that proceedings, and the wife is at liberty At a recent convention held at Rome, , for twenty-five cents than can perhaps be Oneida count', N. Y., representatives were j found in any part of the world for ten present from sixty-four cheese factories, ! timcs tllat sum- - volume of the most which employed 33,070 cows. The largest ! comprehensive interest aud entertainment 1 J 43 ! tmirlif hn lillnrl nrith i ivini'n lief nf oil fhn . I . . rT- 0 Tl .ua.iw U lillU !!llll tl UlUIVi 1ICU JL till tllU ot these factories is that of Xenny & r raver, 0 1. j , , , , , , I novelties in art and nature with which Cortland county, which has 1,000 cows, and al. i i : : her manners fully confirm her story. She Hie New Woodstock, which has 1.200. There aa .i j ias acquired many of Uie disgusting habits ,vere nine nriVilte dairies renresentod. which nnnnZ hJh l,OI;cnl,Mc T?mm fl, t I ' , vl V UVtll 11 V UI IOllWI JL" 4 V UI bllU have together 416 cows. The system of ( day that he first took possession of the A manufacturing cheese on a combined plan, , merican Museum in 1841 he has never and on a large scale, is one of recent origin, i faiIed nor faltered in his purposes of sat and this list shows that it has absorbed the ! kfying an insatiate and incessant public nurse ior an tnat is novel, oeautuui, gro tesque, exceptional or monstrous. Scarce Idaho Territof. shows that the temDerature is warmer in Idaho' is the youngest territory. Three the same latitude as you go westward. " years ago it was inhabated only by Indi- Certain it is that the climate of the north ans and wild beasts. It now numbers a Cfti Idaho is quite as mild as that of ma white population of about 40,000, and, ny of the northern and western states; from present indication's, will, in another and in some of the valleys west of thtf year, contain a population of 150,000. mountaius cattle run at large all winter, It is by far tho largest and the moat at- find are always in excellent condition for tractive of our western territories. It slaughtering. was organized last March, from portions The" Overland Mail Company have es of Washington, Dakotoh add Nebraska, tablished a daily line of coached ffom.: and is bounded on the north by British Salt Lake City to the territory. America, south by Colorado, Nevada and 1 The Jesuits established a number of. Utah, east by Dakotah and Nebraska, and missions in the northwestern portion of west by Utah, Oregon and Washington, the Territory about twenty or twcnty-five: It contains an area of 328,323 square years ago. Their object was to' civilizo: miles, being more than six times the size and christianize the Indian tribes, and.in of the State of New York. Its name, some iustances they accomplished much.' "Idaho' is an Indian word, signifying good In some of the valleys the Indians' "the Gem of the Mountains." j cultivated the soil to a considerable ex- There are two sections at present pop-r'tent, and in one or two places they have ulated,-remote from each other and isola-i towns built of good substantial" houses.- ted, separated by the Rocky Mountain The highest civilization seems to havo: range, and'inhabited by persons from dif- been attained by the Flatheads. ferent sections. The western settlements ! In the South-western corner of the were peopled by gold-seekers from Cali- Territory, at Soda-Spring on Bear River,; fornia, Oregon and the British Posses- there is a settlement of Mormons, called sions the northeastern settlements are Morrisites, who reject the tloctrine and filled up from Colorado, and the States practice of polygamy, and institute many bordering on the Mississippi river. The reforms in the practice of the Mormons.' present indications are that the territory They were driven from Utah as heretics of the sterner sex during her campaigning, fuch'nthc usi of tobacco, profanity, &c. But her patriotism is undoubted, and she has suffered a great deal in the Union cause, for all of which she is entitled to the empathy and gratitude of freedom-loving people. She is very bitter in her denuncia tions of the rebels, as she has cood rcafons 10 be. Providence Press. -4p Union Soldiers Poisoned in Virginia by a Hebel Woman. Private S. N. Ellsworth of Company K-Ist New Jersey Volunteers, furnishes the follow ing item to a newspaper correspondent with the Army ofGcn. Meade, in Virginia. The charge of poisoning our men has before been made against women in the Rebel States, This case is substantiated by the essential particulars of names, date and place: On Thursday, the 2oth May at a farm house near the Pamunkey River, in Virginia, seven soldiers, belonging to the 1st New'Jcr sey Volunteers, partook of some hot mince pic offered them by an old woman, who pre tended to be very friendly. She professed to be a pious woman, a member of the Protest ant Episcopal Church. Shortly after eating the pie; the men were seized with the symp toms usually attendant upon poisioning by arsenic. The stomach-pump was applied by Dr. Mott of the 1st New Jersey Volunteers jind I5r. Hendricks of the 2d New Jersey Volunteers. The contents of the stomscbs were analyzed, and in all of them arsenic was found. The men had been overdosed. None are dead, but all are disabled for duty up to the" present time. S. N. Ellsworth "0 Co. Iv, 1st New Jerse' Volunteers, was one of the poisoned men. dairv interest: of that region. an experiment that he has tried or an en Blockade Runners Captured. j ternrise in which he has enuraed, but has The United States supply steamer, j becu a complete and signal triumph. Ilis Xewbcru, arrived at New York, on L'ri- j first endeavors though conducted with a day, direct from the North Atlautic j wise restraint of caution, were successes Blockading squadron, having on board that laid the foundation of a hand- 3 prisoners trout the blockade-runners some fortune, but the adventures in which Thistle, Gcorgiauna McCall, and Siren, he has launched with an apparent utter recently captured. Ou the i)th lust., the disregard of ordinary busiuess chances Newborn ran ashore the blockade-runner i have been those from which he has rcal- 1'eveusey, nine miles north of Beaufort, j ized the most stupendous results in raon- 01 . il-.. :.i 1 1 1 i 1 t.- if t one was jaueu wuaanus, mau, uuuuu, aim ey auu reuuwn. xt is oue 01 iur. xar- shoes, ou Confederate accouut. Her en- num's idiosyncracies not to be satisfied giues aud boilers were blown completely with offering the public what would be out of her a few moments after she struck. ' merely sufficient to content and attract She was a fine iron side-wheel steamer of them, lie must needs forestall and, as it 543 tuns register, and new, this being were, overwhelm their craving for the her second trip. The vessel and cargo novel and marvelous by giving them a were valued at 31,000,000. ! great deal more than their wildest expec- The British steamer Donegal arrived : tations could suggest, lie is not satisfied at Philadelphia, a few days ago, a prize ' to introduce one dwarf, however remark- to the United States Steamer Metaeouiet. able, to them at a time; it must be a She was captured June 6, off Florida, whole family or group of manikins. One and had on board 40,000 pounds of guu- ' giant, who alone would be sufficient to powder, and other munitions of war, a- gather an unceasing throng of admirers, mounting to about 1,000 tous. j is not enough for him ; he must have four Ihc Navy Department has received in- of them as he did the other day whose teiligence of the capture of the British : combined altitude was in the neighbor steamer Siren off Beaufort, N. C, with a hood of thirty-three feet. When he or- cargo of liquors, hoop-iron, paper cases, ganized a grand Aquarial exposition, (and kegs, &c, by the Uuited States steamer by the way, the Aquaria are about the Keystone State, Commander Pierce Cros- most delightful, and at the same time in- by. The prize is an iron screw steamer, structive things to be seeu at the Muse schooner rigged, and S7 tuns burden. , um,) he is not satisfied with collecting rare and beautiful fish easily obtained near Singular Presentiment of Death. I home J b?fc hc musfc S to lhre ,tr0Pic1s nd procure me gorgeous angci usn, anu men to the east of Labrador to catch a genuine How to Dispose of Dead Animals. On almost every farm, oue or more larire animal a horse, a cow. or a hnl- ' lock dies in the course of a year; and 1 so$u De divided, making two or more though they profess to believe in Joe" every farm loses pigs, calves or sheep in j rge, prosperous, and wealthy States ( Smith: Christian Advocate. r the same period. The disposition of the ; rivalling California in wealth and popula-1 $ s carcase is frequently a source of perplex- J on which will soon ask admission into 1 Immigration. ity to the tarmer. If a large stream is j nin;n 1C. Iacc tne area and resour- Thc stream 0f immigation continues to convenient, they are frequently thrown -j ces of the Territory would seem to war-,flow t0 our sll0reS; from all partg of Eu into it, to oflend the sense of sight and . nt the erection ot five or six States from f rope especirillv from Ireland, in a great' smell, as well as pollute the waters. Oc- f the territory at present embraced within j ly agmented volume. Indeed, the capa casionally, the defunct animal is buried; , its limits. 1 city of the vessels employed in the pas- but most frequently it is dragged to the i . V estern Idaho, or that .portion border- j scger-carrying trade appears, for the nearest woods, where it rots, impregnates j ng on ashington and Oregon, was first; prcsent, to be its only limit. The Cork the atmosphere with offensive smells and j settled by gold-hunters from thc Cariboo j RCp0rter 0f the 13th ult. states' there" furnishes a rich feast to the crows and Mines of British Columbia, who discov-were ti,cn in that city over2,000 persons buzzards. This is all wrong, aud in these ' crcd rich placers in Eastern Oregon aud ! Gntereci to sa:f :n tiie Tnnian j;nP nf' days of high prices, the manurial valve f ashington, and, penetrating eastward, j steamers ; and that, before one of theni of a dead horse or cow is too great to jus-1 ouud precious metal along the Clear-' be sent there will be a vasfc increaSQ tily sucn waste a worn nut aste. Many farmers will sell 1 water Salmon, Boise and Snake rivers, ky other entries in Liverpool and Q horse to the tanner boy for ' A rush of emigrants from California, Or- town and by the receipt of advi ueens- advices of half a dollar, while the actual worth of I egon and Washington soon followed. i fares paid in America. Hundreds of pe'r the carcase, for manure, is ten times that ! juany, of course, returned disappointed ;;sons wj10 cannot be accommodated, apply amount. Every particle of it hair, hide, i bufc lfc 1S estimated that not less than;for passage in each steamer departing-" hoofs, bones, flesh will assist in adding ' twenty-five thousand still remain. Some' wb;ie those who are fortunate enough "to to the value of crops. The easiest and most profitable method of disposing of a carcase is, to cover it thickly with fresh soil, with which a por tion of quicklime has been mixed. After thorough decomposition has'taken place, the whole mass .should be made into aj moderate placers were found in various j iavc thcir Daines booked, refuse to sell localities ; but by far the richest was in a sink or basin near Florence, where a few men realized immense fortuues in a short time from surface mines. Lewistowu, the present capital of Ida ho, is located in the junction of Snake their places for double the regular fare. The accommodations in sailing vessels are likewise wholly inadequate to meet the demand. , , The number of immigrants landed at this port between the 1st. of January last' i n Xj d i I j compost, with iresli soil, alter which it is . ailu v,ieaaier rivers. c is aiso uie Jar-janj tbe lst of May, inclusive, is 68,078 ready for application to the soil. It is ! gest town in the territory, though it will, 0f wbom 4183 were from Ireland, 15, stated by Dr. Wilson "that every pound j probably not long remaiu so- With the j 343 from Germany, 8,114 from England, of animal flesh will impregnate ten j exception .of two portages, the "Dallas" hsG from Scotland, 214 from WalesV pounds of vegetable mould; or, taking , and thc "Cascades," there is a continuous and 1 933 from a otber countries : bein iiuu ui nuviiTiiLiuii iruui tiiu uioum 01 me our soils as they usually occur, one pound of flesh, fish, blood, wood. horn. Columbia to Lewistown. &c.f can fertilize three hundred pounds i Scotch name on the Boise river, is a of common loom." These are shrinking town ot considerable size, in which a and wcl "authenticated facts, and they ap- weekly newspaper is published. Oro Fi- peal with powerful force to the farmer, po anu jiiiK uty are also important towns w in hithertn hns norniittfri this vii iwi ft in tlllS section .. j fertilizing material to go to waste. Mrs. Soberer, wife of our townsman, Christiau Scherer, died last Thursday af ter a short illness. Some years ago Mrs. Scherer dreamed that she should die in ten years and with cholera. As time passed she carried thc memory of this singular dream with her, and as her fath er had a similar warning which was vcri tied, she had faith in its consuuiation. Week before last she told her husband that the lime was approaching, and she desired him to go with her to the Ceme tery to select a lot. He evaded thc mat- A McClellan Veteran. A fi.-w days .iuce a noisy copperhead was proclaiming thc popularity of Gen. McClel lan, in the cars between Philadelphia and New York. Discovering a solJier in the car, he approached him and inquired who he went for for next President. The soldi'er replied, "George B. McClellan." The cop perhead made loud proclamation of thc fact ter for a time, hoping to divert her mind lo thc passengers The veteran soon be-from the melancholy subject, but she ... ... . f ...1,1 t r.. i.i i.. !... came a copperhead Hon. Mated at his sua- ' "S" ".1 iuay my y- , g ig tQ de fc itse(. this .esent gu pointed to go, but were prevented, audi rni., r c 1. .,.ifi-i,w. , , 1 t ti 1 . on Saturday aq;ain sometlnnrr interfered. u t t i two wounds on his arm, received at the bat- ; , j -? - o 1 0 ! . 1 enormous ; but Mr. Ba , . ,. . A . On luesday Mrs. Scherer was taken sick , , ' ..n.. I c of Gettvsbunr. At this interestmir lunc- .j .,..:. 1 , , . , and hc unquestionably . . 1 auu uu iuuisuay cue uuuuituu. iiccvnv lure a military detective entered the car ' 0(jic 'fhnes. and confronted the McClellan soldier. Af- j e ..... 1 1 ..1 1 ter a little conversation ne iei, out toon re- Ll Cillc;nnatif last Wednesday, one of turned with two soldiers. The wounded Arnr.,M'c'f., , :f 1 - - j warrior of Gett3'sburg was unharmoniously arrested and handcuffed. It turned out that ou parole was met and recognized by one of the members of the One Hundred aud he was an escaped prisoner from Fort Dela- j Seventy-first Ohio Beg. in front of the ware, and belonged to the Ninth Georgia I Deuuisou House, who halted the rebel regiment He bad got off in the stolen ! with an oath, and said : " You took my Clothe., of a Union soldier. Of course his ! Sun .m mc at Cjntluana, and abused . . , , , P ! mc; it is now my turn, and then knock new friends loved him all he better for this, C(J fcm down Jd kf dm q1o th(J but they didn t like to manitcst it under the Circumstances. Trenton Gazette. ter and walked ou. Four lines more beautiful than these, : says the Buffalo Express, are rarely writ ten. The figure which it involves is ex quisite , A solemn murmer in the soul Tells of the world to be, As travellers hear the billows roll " ' Before they reach the sea. Four lines more truthful than these ! fians are still at larrcV are rarely written: A solemn murmur in your" ear. " iVhen you retire to bed. Tells you that swilling lager, beer; Mr. C. W. Zeigler, one of Commission ers of Schuylkill county, while on his way home, about 11 o'clock on Thursday evening of last week, was attacked by two ruffians, who, after stripping a cap over his head and gagging him, robbed him of his "money, and then tied him to a fence, where Mr. Ziegler was obliged to remain until 4 o'clock in the morning, before he could free himself. - Thc ruf- Is dreadful for the head. Epitaph on aTailop Here lies below a? tailor dead, - His name was Edward Prim, s 4 An Irishman going to market saw a far mer with an owl. 'Say, Mister ; what will jyfi take for yer big eyed turkey?" 'Tis an owl," replied, the astonished farmer. "Divil abit do I care whether it is ould or young.'1 ' A busybody labors without thanks, talks without credit, lives without tears, dies with- He cabbig'd buckram, silk and thread out pity save that some say, "It is a pity 'Till Satan cabbag'dhim. he died 110 sooner." whale, spending more money in such ad venturous projects than one would think could ever come back to him. The an gel fish may sicken it is replaced with something still more strange ; the whale may die aud he immediately goes to work to obtain another Even at this present time he has but just completed an immense glass reservoir to be supplied (through pipes laid under the streets, at an expense of three thousand dollars) ; with salt water from the bay, in which a gigantic whale, which he is daily expec- ting to arrive here from the Northern m- The cost of such an undertaking is Jar num says it pays, questionably ought to know. i t i. !.. ....: simple eiiuuiuiuuuu ui lhu jusaui uun osities with which the Museum is cram med, and, in, which changes are going on from day to day almost from hour to hour would occupy too much ' space. They compromise such an iufinitc variety and appeal to such eudless phases of pop ular fancy as to defy any attempt at de tailed description But there is oue de partment of the Museum deserving and requiring particular mention1 atfd unboun ded eulogy. This is the system cf Dra matic Entertainments offered every after uoon aud evening in the Lecture lloorc. The management of this department in volves the production ot a constant suc cession of new and cncctiVc plays, men Close of the Philadelphia Fair. The creat Central Sanitary Fair at Philadelphia closed on -Tuesday with ap propriate ceremonies, including a proces sion of the Executive Committee, music, &c., a prayer by Bishop Potter, and ad dresses by Messrs. John Welsh, Michcn er, &c. A variety of resolutions thank ing the ladies aud gentlemen through whose patriotic efforts the fair has been rendered a great success were passed. The following are the votes for the com petitors for the articles to be presented : Tiik Union Vase. Union League, 4,003; Lincoln4, 859; Welsh, 161; E. G. Jame, 4,939; Farragut, 58; Simpson, 54; Wood, 30; Potter, II; Herfry, 54; Han cock, 33; Meade, 3G; Grant, 15; McClel lan, 1G; Sherman, G; Stuart, 34; Curtin, 115; Chase, 10; Stanton, 9; Bright, 37; Du Pont, 4; Union Ilefreshmerit Saloon, 4; H. W. Bellows, 77. Total, 10,455. The Camp Chest. Birney, 308; Gib bous, 2S; McClellan, 10; Meade, 103; Grant,- IG; Hancock, 9; scattering, 10. Total, 385. Horse Equipments. Hancock-, 116; Meade, 76; Grant, 7; Butler, 5; Birney, 3; McClellan, 3; scattering, 2. Total, 212. Vote on Swoiid. Meade, 3,442; Hancock, 1,506; McClellan, 297; Graut, 177"; scattering, 119. Total, 5,541. Leghorn Bonnet. Mrs. Gen. Burn- sido, 296: Mrs. Gen. Meade, 28G; Mrs Gen.' Graut, 121; Mrs. Gen. McClellan, 96; scattering, 107. Total, 908. The Fireman's Horn was won by thc Goodwill Engine, there being 12,732 votes recorded iu its favor. The pro ceeds of ths Fair are expected to fully ! reach 31,000,000. At thc close of the (Fair a meetimr of citizens was convened The settlements in Northeastern Idaho are at this time attracting most attention. In the spring of 1S62, enticed by the re ports of rich placcra on Salmon river, an immense emigration started to that coun try from the western States and Territo ries. Disappointed iu their expectations many of them returned; others concluded an increase of 18.396 over the corresnon- Bannock ajding period of last year. The like ratio of increase during the. remainder of 1864 will give a total immigration at this port, of 214,876 souls, which is an increase of 58,032 over 13S,570. A marked superiority in intelligence and thrift is manifest in the immigration' of this year, which compromises an extra ordinary proportion of mechanics and skilled agriculturists, as well as of cotton' and woolen spinners, destined to the Eas tern States, of coal and iron miners, wh'6' for the most part have gone to Pennsyl vania, and of copper and lead miners to cross the mountains and prospect the whosc destination was the Lake Superior country about the head waters of tlic : region- Mr. Casserly, the exn6rienced: Mississippi. T hey found more or less of General Agent iu charge of the Emigrant the precious metal as they proceeded, un-j Landing Depot iu this city, estimates the til finally their expectations were realized average amount of coin in the possession, in finding rich places on Grasshopper ; 0f eac:h immigrant landed since the 1st of Creek one of the tributaries of thc Jef-j January last at S0. Assuming that the ferson fork of the Missouri lliver about1 total immigration to our shores for thc three hundred miles south of Fort Ben-'yCar 1SG4 will reach 236,000 souls, tiie ton. A town was io-cated there, fallod-! tnnnpv thus brought into the nountrv; nis- Baunoekr City named altera prominent tribe of Indians inhabiting that region. The tide of emigration set thithcrward,and Bannock soon numbered its population by thousands. Soon after auother dis covery was made on' Stinking Water Creek another tributary of the Jackson Fork about seventy miles uortheast oft eordiuj to thc above -estimate, will amount to the sum of 18,880,000. elo-jforH Tribune. . Killed by a Eit of Rage. A woman living at Windsor, England named Scanwell, recently died through: She was iu thc act of pouring T5:innrflv- whiidi nrnved tn he the richest i Passion placer ever discovered iu thc Territory, out some tea, when one or her children; if not in America. Another town, called four Jears sVlcil s0Ve ,c6Jc"e: vtrm'nin PJhir wn hnilfc i.n wl"nl, ,,mr I 'c oor. Scanwell. immediately flew in- The Value of a Kiss. It has been decided in one of the western torious original -pieces, written; expressly mi PAniIft:fM&flYWed earnostlv thank for the establishment, and of the very pickj in(r all wllo had in any way contributed of such dramas, comedies and" farces, as. tothe 1?air hy giftSj iouns 0f ar tides for have already made their mark on the cxhibitioQ, and their personal services, j'jugti&u ui ujuiiuiiu ouift.,. fLxir ui iuB a1j ajSQ to Mayor ilenry and the Police are Drougni out in spmuuiu aiu mm fine scenery and handsome appointment', and are performed by a complete and talr euted company of actors. It is moreover Mr. Barnum's special care to see to it that courts, that a kiss is a valid consideration in whatever is played no words or situn- jn a caSo quoted, an old bachelor offered a tion that could offeud the taste of the most vminrT ia(v a nonv for a kiss. The offer was' renned and lastidious snouid appear, in accepte(j ana tiie ji8S givcn, but the bachc too many f our theatres the ear and-eye lor refu6i t0 ive tne ponyt a Euit was cn are apt to be shocked by allusions and ac- . . v ... ,iA -.Ao,i ti,t ili.. p. U : u-nnt. teredm the cowhand the.jury d6cided41iat LiUliD UilUl U1U JJAU1ULIU UilU 1UJJ1 ujjoi , 11 uuu positively iudeccnt. This never occurs at the Museum. The thousands of ladies, children find frrntlflmp.n who thrOUQ! this popular establishment from the basement ory was the real sire of thc Democratic day in the party, Wllo was its uam: uy, n-waa the pbny or its value should be given the girl. An exchange' asks, "If Old Hick- to the sixth storv. nver'v week year, are thomselves a study and a won- damned by James Buchanan-. contains about five thousand inhabitants the most successful milling, community on the continent. to a great passion, threw an infant which she had in her arms on the floor, rushed" at the child who had" Spilled the coffee, fvimrlit liim' hT the firm fiiiil flnnVr Tiim The surface mines of Idaho arc aston-. such violenfeo- ttat he nearfffa!oi auiug nu. x uioiHiuKiat cate,i hJs arin cxxxxVr ,t to bleed. When has probably been assisted by powerful a a(3 rcm0nStratcd 'with her, she stamp-1 glaciers, crushing the rocky strata, and erf her foot, and began to rave in a very separating thc gold on a larger scale than a vq1c(J Suddenly she gave a loud in lower latitudes. . , . scream, aud fell on thc ground, and almost' In some instances nuggets weighing instantly cxvred. three or four pounds have been found, and as much as a hundred dollars have - "n " 1 T t. rT-fr'irJ"' been taken from a single pan of dirt- onf c n F- er, But few lodges of quartz veins lKlveaS,0n0 yet been fom.d, and these am not much !,u,.e,11e.ral Canada, in plaOe of Joshua' worked. It is generally supposed that K- Giddings, deceased. all the country east of the ll'cclry Moun'-j : tains washed by the Yellow Stone and its- j-A sour fellow-'says that he always tributaries is auriferous, and that thou- j looks under the marriage head for the-" sand of rich placers will be discovered to 'news of tho wcalc. - t overawe or subdue thc savages. j l)B, There arc several-powerful and savage cu .t tribes of Indians inhabiting that region, ' country dentist advcrtisGs hafc among whom are the Bannocks, thc "ho sPare? P t0 render his opera Snakes, or Shoshoners, the.Nez Pcrceir, . tl0ns saUsftfotory. thc Flatheads and . Clack feet. They are j - all unfriendly to' the whites, and particu- Love and a good dinner aro-said larly hostile to such as they imagine to to be -the only two -things which' chan'go'' be in quest of gold'. Hu'udrods of gold- a- juau's character. hunters have perished at their hands, and . yvuu uuw.ii, is uusa.u iui ounm FtwM - ss-v, ,7;... M&JiLu i i. i I.' prospecu tnac couiuiy. '. ,, , . r , , , t . mrr ' na rlio nmn oniil tv lion in hirl ha' . , ouis presoutcu to mm ac one tunc. t. "VCG Oi laumue, iu uiuy uu jmuuw - . -r -. de that short seasons and intense cold would prevent .settlement or even continued ! if-Real A!PItat5. The bestfcapitaV success in jnining but all experience to begin life ou is a capital wife.-