IP IT. Y U 7! ii ii ii i i i x j! i j a a ak. i k waaaar a v- i . a. s ai wbl w a.az -a,, a m . 3 r t- i w a. -- -w- aaaaaaaaaaaaaasaaaaaaaaaaaaMMMJL--Lll- iii bw ' ',', 'n, mining mm nawaias 1 --C , IWtfWtlHii inlliI'Ml..'.. i -i . . ; . . ..." , . i'-M J-:'--? r -:J5 ,t i j'. -i :, ' I ' ' i in 1 : ' ' ' . i ; i - - - , VOL. 30. Published by Theodore Schoch. TElK-'-1"'0 oH" " JT:rin advance nnd If not niilsrf ircthe enl of the year, two dollars nnd fifty 5M ill be charged. N ):if(r Jiscontinued until all arrearages are pad, xcept a'. Hie nation o( the Editor. C7Alriiscme!tsof one iare of (eight lines) or fti,one or ihr!e meriion $r50. Eacli additionnl jtf'riinii, 30 cents. Longer ones in proportion. " JOB PltlftTlKG, or ALL KINDS, ' tieutd in the highest style of the Art, and onlh most reasonable terms. Valuable Property ; foe sle: The subscribers offer , for sale, their residence in Stroudsburg. The Jt has a front of 145 ft. on Maiu JStreet, with a depth of The buililins 'consist of a convenient dwell ing hoUMe store hou.se, Lara and other out buiUing. . There is an abundance of choice apples, pMr. plums, grapes ail jmall fruit, with excellent water. ' 16, '72.1 A. M. & K. STOKKS, t"aC K i W A X X A HOt'S 12. J OTPOSITE THE HEPOT, Kast Stroudsburg, Ia. B. J. VAN COTT, Proprietor, TIic bat. oor.iaJn the cholot Ltauors ant! tlie Tr.i.n supplied with lh; bt the market iftoT& Vhargv niuderatc. may 3 1872-tf. d rTj. lantz, Surgeon ami Mechanical Deutist, snll h is hi :Tite on Main Street,' in the second f.sry f Dr. S. Walton's brick, buiiding. nearly oppo itf the S;rou.l!iif5 Htnite, and be flatters himself tiut by enhten years constant practice and the inot fnt and r.arrful attention to all matters pertaining ( his profusion, that lie is fully able to M-rfinn all Mraliani in the dental line in llis moyt careful, tatte isl ind skillful inaciier. Jfirciil attentinn given to savins; the Natural Teeth ; s!i. to tha insertion of Artificial Teeth nn Rubber, C iid. Silver or roiitiiuiuus Gums, and perfect fits In ill tas insured. Most persons Know the great fully and danprr of eu tni;inj; their work to the inexprrieiiced. or to those lifin; at a distance. April 13, 1871. ly JU. II. J. I'ATTEKSOIY, OPERATING iND MECIIAMfAL DEMIST, Hiving located in East Stroudiibiirp,' Ta., an nounces that lie is now prepared to insert arti Scial teeth in the uuvt beautiful and life-like insnncr. Also, great attention pircn U filling sad preserving the natural teeth. Teeth ex trsrted wiilunit pain by use of Nitrous Oxide Ga. All other work incident to the profession done in the most skillful and approved style. All work attended to promptly and warranted, 'harden reasonable. Patronage of the public elicited. Office in A. W. Ixder's new building, op fwitt Analomink House, East Stroudnburg, July 11, 1S72 ly. DR. N. Li. PECK, Surgeon Dentist, Announces ihit hsvin? just returned from Dental Colleg-s, he i fully prepared to make sriificial te?tli in the mo-l beautiful and lile Hka manner, and lo fill decayed teeth ac curdinj to the most in proved method. Tre'h exfractfd without pain, when de ;reJ, by tlic use of Nitrous Oxide Uh, which is. entirely harmless. Repairing; of l kimJij neatly done. All work warranted. Charges re'ontble. OfBcr in J. (I. Keller' new Brick build '"f. Mai . S roet, Ntroiidsburjr, Pa. n? til-tf 1) . '. c. iiora'33 1, 5i. u'tM ri'jMf tfully annonneo to the I'm'.'Iic tint Ik 1. i:s reni'ivea ins oiiiee iroin 0;'l!m 1 1 C.tiKi l-u.M.s. MoitnMj County, Pa. Trij'tiiii tint man.v years of consecutive ira'-ri-'e of .Medicine and Surpery will be a fulfii itit gu.iruntco fiir the public confidence. February S70. tf. - J MLS JB. WALTOV, itloriK'j al Ia', OHice in the building formerly occupied .r b M. Bur-on, and opposite the Strouds kurjrBank. .Main street, Stroudburir, 1'a. Jan 13-tf KELLERSVILLE HOTEL. Jlie undersijrned bavin": purchased the !nve well known and opular Hotel 1'roper-f- would resHftfullv ioforni the traveling PWh- that he has refurnished and fitted up ,h llofcl in the best style. A. handsome br. with choice Liquor 'and Sojrars, polite Pendants aud inofh-rate charge.' Oct 10 j?7K tf. I Proprietor. 4 IM OAS V 1 1AAI II OTEL. Thi llU filii Cil.l . 1.,1 If. i .l 1 f rocentlr lafltls fltirl Ksj t h v-. iv rK I v nir.klinii aA '" repaired, will reotHju, for the reception of 'West. o Tuesday, Mav 27th. ir t Ptl,lin Wli! ;,'wa.VK'n,ld t,l5ii ouse de "We i,fJesort Every department will nn?2,.j i tIi lH.-st pr.w.iijl.s r.innner. The fi V ""I'pl'ed with the best the Market I ' tt,,d cuiiniiurea will ahvnvs hnd none ;.u,eH;st wine and liquor at tlie bar. j ' ' "V,I tlllUUklUT Uf MAU'vU "(k1 htiil.Iinsr beh.ninv tn iHp II.u-L will W at all time under the preof careful and ol.li r r.',, iK7-.. a'nti u x y n. p.oem eii. .Sotint Vi'inoii House, 117 and 119 North Second St. A ROVE AnCJI. PH3LADELPKIA. . 172- ly. M y SO JKV. EDWARD A. VILSO.VS(of Wil Pouidi "d AST"MA carefully com- fiOLLINSHEAD'S DRUO STORE. Fresh and Pure. V. HOLLINSIIEAD. mum ' WHITHER? Standing, alonc at the window I gaze on the crowded street, Watch, for a moment, the ocean ? '. - .1 1 i ..; 1 j il f Vhich ebbs, and flow, at my feet : The wonderful ocean of Being, - " r Whose waves, in their restless flow, Seem to dash out & song of defiance, - On the stones of the pavement below. ; ; u --i.i t : . .. ;. .: ., . Anon, and a passionate outcry Of agny hoarse .with despair,' . ? , Seems to rise from the surging billows, And then dies away on the air, , . , , A face is turned upward, a moment,1. ' Deatli"-white with hunger and pain ; '. 'Tis gone swept away and forever ,. Our wonder and pity are Vain : , . Another; another;" another ii i .- t j . A child, with a skelton face ; 1" ; ' p A man whose looks are of Murder ; 11 '" 'l " A lady, in jewels and lace. ' ' "' The billows surge onward, forever, . ; , s In the streets of the city below ; . Kavli forehead impressed with it signet Of heeil lessncsss crime, or of woe. . Standing thus, gating and thinking, ' How strangely unreal it seems I ' ' Like the dim and shadowy visions, The phantoms that come in our dreams. These eager and restless faces, , ; . These forms that go hurrying by ; tion Whence come they J what are they f w ques , And vhitherf Oh, ; whither? we cry. The problem of Being how vainly To solve the enigma we try I We are who shall tell us whence came we ? And are tee .'Tyand whither ? we cry. All things in existence have purpose, ! ' But existence, that only, has none : ' We live, we love and we perish ; For what ? is the question, when done. " e ask the stern Tast for its moral ; Its records we eagerly scan ; . , . . From the clouds of a thousand ages . No answer is given to man. Say, is it Oh can it b, merely To pant neath the burdens of life, To long for the unkown, forever, ' To weary of nfceless strife ? " " ' 1 At last, of the sun, and his shining, : To sicken, and then to grow old, ; To fade, like the leave of the forest, In the autumn, pallid and cold?. To lie down, at last, with hands folded ; , , So grateful the grave-resl to find ; . . ' Bequeathing to others the garment Of labor that we leave behind? , - ' Is it merely to plow' new furrows "r; -,. ... - In the ocean of Time, f-r graves? It i merely to strew it, forever,'' With wrecks, fr the hungry waves? ' li ' . ; ; i . Or, is Being itself a delusion? . - ? Have Matter, Existence a cause? . , , Do we dream that we live, and dream only ? . Bewildered and battled, we pause. - v- i As circles are seen, in the water, '"'''' ' ' To vanwh, when wide they are grown, Ottr questions grow vague, when we struggle To reach, and to grasp the unknown. ; Our life is a strange hidden pathway ; . - 1 ..'Ti" midnight, from birth to the grave, Xo str to illumine the heaven, i . : No gleam of the light which we crave." 1 . f i Like children, afraid of the darkness. In a ftarful, shadowy land, ' , , A realm full of (error, we wander; 'Mid phantom we shuddering stand. . We grope in the blackness; we tremble; r r We stretch out our hands, like the blind ; We feel lor a form alas, only A terrible void do we find ! A cry, full of anguish, we utter, -Of dread, uncontrollable woe; , . We wake, standing still at the window, ; While the crowd hurries onward below. Above the strange murmur now rise ' 'An utterance solemn and clear:- ' "Poor mortal, how weak is thy vision! Blind mortal, how dull is thine ear ! 7 " These voices, that seem so discordant : , i These wailings that trouble thine ear, Are strains of a harmony,- perfect ; .i . How if it thou failest to licar? " Ask not the stern Past for its moral ! ' The page you so eagerly scan, Is but part of a record, eternal One point of an infinite plan. , " Canst thou understand what the angels Desire to fathom in vain? . ' Or grasp that which needcth an endless -Duration, io render it plain ? No longer, then, seek to unravel .,,.- The scheme in eternity laid; , Enorfglv, to believe the Creator , . Will csre ior the world He hath made. . ' "Be patient then, Mortal, be patient ; ' Thy doubts ami thy questionings cease; . Repose from tftf struggles, arid calmly ' ! Await the glad time of release." The voice dies-away into tilence, , . i But the wave, in their ceaseless flow, Still ech-, "Be patient," "Be patient," As they break ou the pavement below. . i , i --M. C. M. Some, idea of the immense exodm of people from the. United States to Europe this reason may be had from the fact the number of cabin passengers who have left this- season for Europe is estimated at op- ward of 50,000,. tie inaj'onfj of wbo were ladies TSTROUDSBURGMbW THE PENNSYLVANIA GERMANS. A lady of Philadelphia, who has spent considerable time lu Irlendly intercourse and association with the German inhabit ants of Lancaster county,; has recently published a scrtoes of essays' on their life ana manners through the house of J1L Ltppmcott & Co. ' While the work is in some respects rather superficial: it is on the wholo a graphic picture of country life in" our German countie's. " The author's experience has mostly been among ' J ;' t: ... wjuBBica iu reiigton wim tiie iien nooites .and Dunkards, " who abound lo Lancaster, Lebanon and 'Dauphin coun ties, and are also lound in considerable numbers in Montgomery and lucks.The pith of the book., is contained, iu the fol lowing sketch, which we copy from a late issue oi tiie.irt6mej k 4rrf Tfiii1 i ;Tbe language spoken by these primi tive Christians, who inhabit the county of Lancaster in Pennsylvania, is a dialect or the uerman, although they srenerallv designate both it and themselves as Dutch. tnr the native German who works with them on the farm they cherish a feeling of contempt. With certain grim recol lections of lunkee tin ' peddlers,, who swarmed over the country some fifty or sixty years ago, the term Yankee is used by them as traditional synonym for cheat. The vocabulary in common use is an odd mixture of the .dialects of South Ger many, brought from the region of the up per Rhine,: including Switzerland, with an infusion of broken English. In their religion, they are a branch of the Men- nonitcs, in plainness .and simplicity of speech and raiment resembling, the So ciety of Friends, although not attaching so much importance to the inner teach ings of the Spirit in the stillness of the soul. Their meeting house is a low brick building, with no . sign of ornament to minister to the "lust of the eye or the pride of life." The men, with broad brimmed hats and Quaker-like garments, sit on benches on " one side of the house, and the women, in prim hats and black sun-bonnets, are ranged on the other. The' services, which are conducted in "Dutch." consist of prayer and exhorta tion, and a kind of rude unmusical chant by the congregation. A pause of about five minutes is allowed for private prayer. The preachers are-not paid, and are chos en by lot from a number of candidates previously " named by the people, both men and women. The ministers are not expected to : take part in ' public affairs, but the least rigid of the members usual ly vote at elections, and are' allowed to hold such offices as school-director 1 and supervisor of roads,-but- not to be mem bers-of; the Legislature. -They cannot bring uit against any one, nor hold judg ment bonds; They do not take? oaths, nor deal in spirituous liquors. If one of the members is disowned by the church, the other members of his own family are not allowed to cat aUtbe same table with him; and his wife withdraws from him. -Theyj;retain the ordinances -of baptism and the Lord's Supper, together with the ancient feet-washing, and the "greeting of one another with a holy kiss.". . ( On Sunday , morning, huge ark-like wagons, ; covered with yellow,, oil-cloth, may be seen moving toward the hoise of the member, whose turu.it is to. entertain the meeting, which seems in some places to be held in private dwellings, instead of a separate meeting house. ; Great, have becu the 'preparations, beforehand won derful the whitewashing, the scrubbing, the polishing of tin and brass to make ready for the occasion. Theyouug moth ers do not stay at ? home, but hriog their babies wiih them. After the services, the congregation remain to dinner. Dean soup was formerly the principal dish, but the well-to-do farmers of the present day are no longer content with so rustic a diet. The greatest festive occasion, or the one which ealls the larges number of T persons to cat and drink together, is the funeral. When a death ocours, the neighbors take possession of? the house,-j relieving the family from all labor and, care. Some of them put the' rooms in orders for the re ception of company, after ' the inevitable neglect in the progress of a fatal disease. Others repair to the kitchen,' and help to bake great store of bread, pies and rusks. Two young men and two young women it upi together. over night to watch in a room adjoining that of the dead. When the funeral takes place ou Sunday, an im mense concourse of people is assembled. There is sometimes as many as three hun dred carriages in attendance. , The ser vices are usually in the German language. An invitation is given to the company to return , to the house and eat after the funeral.' The tables are sometimes set in the barn, or large wapon house, and the guests succeed one another uu til all are done. , The peighbors , wait upou the table. The entertainment generally con sists of cold meat, bread, and butter, ap ple sauce and pickles, pies and rusks', and sometimes stewed chickens,' mashed pota toes, cheese, and coffee invariably.. ; 7 The weddings are of even a still more, primitive character. On one occasiou, the writer of the volume was invited to see the bride leave home. Tho groom arrived at the house about Bix o'clock in the moroiog, having previously break fasted a ud ridden four miles. A? he oo doubt fed and harnessed his own horse, besides dressing for the grand? occasion, he must have taken an early start on the frosfy October morning. The bride wore purple tnoussclioe do laiue and a blue - ' ; ...... . bonnet. The bridegroom was a mechanic The party was composed of four couples who rode to Lancaster in buggies, where two pairs were married by a minister! In the afternoon, the happy mortals went to Philadelphia for a few days',' and on the evening of their return there was a tpletidid 'reception or "home coming." ' The supper consisted of roast turkeysj beef, stewed chickens, cakes, ' pies, 'and coffee of course. ', "Raisin pie", is one of the rare dainties ou such , festive occas sions. , , w. ? , , ! , Another wedding 'took 'place in the meeting house, one bitter Sunday morn ing ; in December. ". The ' party , entered through an adjoining brick dwelling, '.'one room of which served as an anteroom; where4 the sisters ' left their 'bounet.3 and shawls. The--meeting house was crowd4 ed. sOn the left in front was a i plain of muslin caps on the heads of the sisters. Along the other side, the'Lats and over-i coats of the brcthern were placed on shelves and pegs. The building was en tirely uopaioted, with whitewashed walls. A small unpainted desk, before which was a low table, two stoves, and half a dozen hanging tin candlesticks, with the bcuches, constituted the furniture of the apostolic cathedral. After a plain spoken discourse by the preacher, the marriage pair was called upon to come forward. .- Upon this the man and woman- rose from the body of the 'congregation - on either side, and coming out to the middle aisle, stood to gether before the minister. They had both good faces, though they had pas'sed their early youth. The bride wore a mode-colored alpaca and a black aprou, and a plain clear 6tarched cap without frill or border. ' The groom had on a rather conspicuous dark green coat, cut "shade-bellied" after I the manner of the brethren. After putting the usuarques-: tions, and directing them. to join hands, the preacher prououueed them husband and wife. This was followed by a short prayer, when the wedded couple separa ted, each again taking a place among the congregation. The occasion was not with out a certain homely pathos. Ou resum ing his place in the desk, the preacher's eyes were suffused, and ; pocket-handker chiefs were visible on either side, "those of the sisters white, of the brethren col ored silk." The church docs not allow wedding-parties, but' a few friends may gather at the house altar meeting. The farming of the fertile limestone district inhabited by the "Dutch" is en tirely by tillage, and very laborious.' The usual routine'is to' break up the sward every five " years, and plant the ground with corn. The nextyear it is sown with oats, and ' in the mouth of August the stubble - land is manured for , wheat. Wheat and timothy are put. in - with a drill, and in the ensuing Spring clover, is sown upon the same ground.. When the wheat is taken off in July the new grass is growing, and will bo. ready to, mow ia the next fourth Summer. In the fifth year the sod forms arich pasture, and is ready to be broken v. up again' in the Fall for Indian , corn. -Potatoes are seldom planted in large quantities t Ou a farm of forty acres more than twenty will be put with wheat. 'The' average yield of this is twenty bushels, of corn about for ty. W hen wheat and oats are in the barn or stack' enormous' eight-horse thrashers (steam thrashers have lately ' been intro duced) are taken about the neighborhood from farm to farm, and dispatch the whole crop in a few days, completing before the first of October what was once a job foij the Winter. ' ''"' 1 " ' The Pennsylvania "Dutchman'' has no extravagant enthusiasm on the subject of education. lie fears . too much, of it for his sons, as it may lead to laziness,. and laziness with him Js a mortal sin. The book market is not active. During the Winter months the youug men usually go to school, sometimes, with a little, reluc tance, where , they learn .to, read, write, with a touch oi arithmetic and geography. They speak English at Bchool, and the German dialect at home. , The "Dutch" housewife is - considered as more than half the family.; -She milks the tows, raises poultry, takes care of the garden, which she ofteu digs herself, and plants and hoes, with the - help ot her daughters and her "maid," if she has one. She does not iudeed .go in for vegetable raising on a large scale, por has she ex tensive ' beds of strawberries and other small fruits ; nor does she plant a great many peas and 'bean9, which . it is too much trouble to "stick," Uut her gar? den always shows a jolly array of cabbage and "red beets," of onions and early po tatoes, a plenty of cucumbers fpr Winter pickles," and a geucrous store of string beans and tomatoes.'1 A small farm often sells at least two hundred dollars worth of vegetables, which is sufficient to clothe the whole family four or five times over. The daughters are allowed at times' to'go out and -husk, corn. "It was, a pretty sight which I saw one Fall day," says the writer "a father with four sons and daughters' husking in the field.' 'We do it all ourselves,' said he." In tha Winter mornings the wife, per haps, goes out to milk in the stable with a lantern, while her daughters get break fast. Jy eight o'clock the . house i is "swept and garuished,"'and the motherly hands are' ready for several hours' sewing before dinner, - laying by 'huge piles of shirts for the hot. weather. 4 Not ranch work is pat upon the garment's of the family, nor the sewing machine been' in general use until ' recently,' although a a seamstress or tailorcss is sometimes call J: is . ed in.. - At tha Spring cleaniug-the labors- of the women folks areiucrcased by whitewashing , the picket fences Soap making comes iu March, before the care of the garden begins to press. J Here suc cess is so ',. uncertain that it is deemed a matter ' of luck' and 'chance". The soap must . always be stirred in 'one direction, and a sassafras stick 4 is thought T to "pos sess sovereign : virtues for 'the process:-- A smart housekeeper -cao make!a barrel of soap-in the morning and go a visaing in the afternoon. .-V 1 jcij .s During the harvest ';seasoa the house hold labors nro frightful but tho Jbroiling and bakin-g in the hot weather are cheer fully done for the raenfolks, who are swel tering in torrid fields aud stiflling Jbarns; Four. meals are the rulesat this, timend "a piece" 'is sent out, ;as early "a's nine o'clock in 'the morning!' A'"DQfch" g'irj thinks nothing of ' making fifty ."pies in a week, and with a pie' at every meal they are sure to com to a. good market. j - Apple-butter," as a' sauced made of ap ples boiled in cider is called,' has been a great ordinance with the robust Germans, though falling off in late years, on account of the scarcity of fruit.. Two bushels and a half of cut apples are enough for a bar rel of cider. In a few hours the apples will be all in great . copper kettles,, and then you are obliged to stir for dear life, until, on taking out a little on a dish,'you find the cider no longer collcots round the edges, but "all forms a simple mass.- The work is then done;1 and you have 'on-; ly to dip it out into earthen vessels, andj when cold, store it in the garret, with'the hard soap and bags of dried apples and cherries,', perhaps with ..the hams i . and shoulders, that are there wailing Jbr."tba good time coming." The. writer speaks of a specimen of apple butter preserved iu the Lancaster Museum," wjuch dates from the time of, the Revolution, a pro; digy as - wooderful as the blood of St, Januarius, at Naples'. ' ; : " -" ' ; " The whole impression of the book; of which the author's name is not given though it is evidently from the pen of u womau, is that of: a., sequestered -rural landscape, remotely surrouuded with the turmoil and heat of moderu civilization,' but free from all vital contact with its in-j fiuence. The entrance which it opens to the primitive. homes of those simple peo- pie is like leaving the reeking'purlieus of the city for " the rude and wholesome freshecss of the. mountain'" forest.'. ' ; I A Woman in a Turkish Bath.' ; . M. II. D., the sprightly lady correspon-k dent of the Missouri Republican, has been taking a Turkish bath in New. York, aud don't, like jit.- Here's what she. says of it:' We have divested of every stitch of .our clothing. our rings aud. bracelets lock-! ed up, our back hair taken off, pur own 'special possession of seventy-five or a hu'n-i dred hairs rdade into little hirsute pill and impaled with a'hair piu.'Tliat was the only token of civilization "we boasted.; The procession formed. " At tho door we were handed a miuatqre sheet and a lit ' tie bit of sponge wet Jwith cold water. Through a passage to a room,')wheta wej dropped our sheets" and euteied a vapor H1UI. tlUUICU : US'ULLCUllJ. ! II Lil, ,1U l lit steam Iv thought I should suffocate, It poured up, aud." iu and , down, through holes till it was dreadful.' The use of the wet eponge, I imrp ascertained,, was to put on the top of your head tov prevent "coup di efeam,'.' or some such dire com. plaint. ... Ipey. , wouldu t 1st .me out, and the temperaturc:got worse, aud worse, aud ; 1 berrau tor thiok ot my- mother-aud an obituary notice in the t)MWcart,. when we were ' prououueed cooked "enough) and lei out, into 'a' room in '.which' was a anatomy and physiology wero heated to boiling point.- ' This water 'was like ice; It seut the blood rushing.! my hollow head (I'm i convinced ' I-have.'.no brain) and my hcart:came ker.flop up and went kcr-chuocb dowu. - 1 uiadc upuiy miud this was the worst of it, - and tried to be resigned. I had been soaked vand scrub-, bed in the vapor room till'I.was sacrificed I stood por? the brink- and watched iciy companions splashing, through the 'infer nal tank. f One of 'em, to, expedite her own release, caught at my jink le,; away went my soapy, slippery foot . from under me, and in I went for a second time. Iliiw very near an end was the. happy connection between M." 11." Bfaud the St: Louis 'KrpM'ctm. s 'r,.-';-"' ' ''At the next stage ' of this truly awful experience wc received' th'e'l'shower: I had now become couviuced that I never should see home or frieuds again. In a calm despair I walked - nuder a solid cob: umo of water that nearly-broke my back,' and juJt ihere I. got, mad. That fat at tendant hasn't yet recovered sufficiently to make a complaint, and when the thin wonan went before Judge J)owling, that, gciitleuiau said it was ji .conspiracy, that no woman of ray size) unaided could do much damage.1. '-Heboid the woman to go home and say nothing about if. for' she'd' evidently been dreadfully druuk'and un: dertaken to walk through a carpet clean ing machiue. 'And that's the first aud last Russian bath take.' ; " ; . ' .'T .! "4 , 51000 reward is ., offered for Freddie Lcib, carried vff by Italian musicians or gypais from Quiney, IU., June 20th, 18(1, lie is now G years old, stoutly built, dim ples io checks aud ' chiu, dark blue eyes and dark brown hair. mighty tank of cold water, through .which you rau.s't wade t or'swim as you could. - Crcsar'8 ghost ! 'I flew through it. '': My NO. 13. : r. - f IS -Englisn and American Girls. fr The following remarks, by au'English' mah, contrasting the ItiduVtrious habits of Euglish and American 'girls and women; are worthy the" '.attentive consideration of parents" ad daughters. How few Ameri can mothers, cspetlaMy of cities and vil lageseompare favorably with the Wealthy, titled ladies- mentioned i- - -!i "I. can assure you hat; having lived id diflerent,; castles and manor . bouses of Great Dritan, and; being accustomed to the industrious habits of duchesses and pountesses, 1 was utterly astonished at the idleness of Aiue'rican ladies. -,'No English woman of rank, (witK the exception of a few "parveoues'j'from ihe Queen dowtf ward, wpuld 7 remain foVone hoar un employed,' or in V rocking chaif; unless? -seriously ill. They'almost all, with har dly an -exception, copy the business of their husbands, fathers, or brothers ; at tend minutely to the wants of the poor around them, and "then take part in their amusements, and sympathise with their sorrows ; visit aud superintend the schools, work in their owngardens ; see to their household 'concerns j-think about tberr visitors j Hook .-over: the-, weekly account,' not only of domestic expenses, but often? those of the farm and estate; manage penny clubs in tonjunction with the work ing classes, to .-help-, them'; to keep then- 6eives ; and with all these occupations, by early hours,, they keep up their acquain tance with the . literature and politics of the H day, and. cultivate the accomplish ments of music and drawing, and besides often acquire some knowledge of scientific pursuits. ,? . .. "The late Marchioness of Landsowne was so well acquainted with her cottagers in her neignborhood that she used to visit and look'at'ther corpses of the dead, bc' cause she found that her doing so soothed and comforted. 'tho bereaved. Lady Landsowne'a .- only - daughter used one hundred guineas (given her by her father-in-law, Lord Suflolk, to buy a bracelet to build pig styes, with his permission, aC her . husband's : little country residence. .She educates her own children without assistance,. teaching the boys Latin, and the girls all "the usual branches of educa tion. The lateDuchess. of .Bedford, I accidentally discovered when on a visit' to' Woburn, had for thirty years Of her mar ried' lifVriseri af 'si o'clock summer aal winter, lit her own fire, made some tea for the duke and herselfand then, as he wrote.lus own letters of busibess; sbe copied them, and they came' dowri to a large party of - guests at ten o'clock, to dispense breakfast, without sayiag one word, of theirj .matutinal avocations ; so that you might have, been a' visitor in the house without fiuding oufi.that the duke or duchess had transacted' the necessary business" of the day, before, perhaps, you had risen !' .1 rather "mention those that are gone to t'hefr reward than write of women'that are still ' among us ; but you may believeme -when I'say that I ana constantly "among ' those who live such lives of energy .'and usefulness, but they so employ-themselves without ostentation or an idea that they are doiug more thaa ! their simple duty" AWedding; in a Storm. -A recent "Tetter - from Con cord f., states the following ''Yesterday afternoon the most terrific tempest occurred in the city that has been for' known years, last ing three or four hours with but little interruption;. , Itf the 'very hardest p:rt of the tempest, alt five o'clocka wedding was to (jome.uff muSt. Paul's church. Taking advantage' of a slight lull, tho wcddiugparty assembled., in the church. Iu the midst of the ceremony came a vivid flash, accompanied by a' roar of thunder. Some 1 say 2 the church" was struck with lightning, but if so', oVonc' felt the shock, but' a good sized - hole" wot "mid 9' in the roof, directly over the seat of the organist, who, as he playeds the wedding mareh, was visited' by more tnau 'the droppings of the sanctuary. the' rain poured right dowa asT through a taoel on his head. As the ceremony-rooeluded, and the bridal party was leaving thg chancel, there came a, 'lift in the clouds,' the sun for a foment shone out jn . dazzling brilliaucy, and coming, . through the richly stained glass, encircled the head of the bride." f 1 r; Love at First Sight ' 'ftMrs; Fitch; that was, is a daughter of the lord bishop of England, is thirty yeara old,' and is handsome and wealthy. Mrs. Fitch had had threer husbands, and all f them had died.!.! She waa a spiritualist and a medium, and it was revealed to her that if shewould come east from .Cali forniashe would fiud auotber mau. Ou her jourucy she "stopped , at Omaha and was there takeu ill, aud, calling upon Dr. Payne)' she became acquainted with th doctor's a assistant, named M..L. Stautou. Briefly) MrStauton wm that mau. She had no sooner looked upon' him than she knew thaf she -hadmet her destiuy for the fourth time; It was leap year. Sho proposed, after a brief courtship, aud he, ufter thinking the' matter over, accepted he f. There was.a large 'weddiug, and the parties eame.ou to New York. "Wo eommeud 'Mr,' Sta'utoq's 'example to the youu'g ten of Omaha," 'says the Omaha JjVc i Good j but then, Mr, Stanton may live some years, and it is a little rough to expect all the other fellows to remain Hoggle during that period.