ADV ERTISINGRATES. 31 1 mo. 3 moe. 6 m9l lyr. 1.&) 1.73 3.60 6.60 12.0 1 3.10 3.50 6.50 9.90 20.01 1.30 5.25 9.130 17.03 23.01 11.60 17.00 25.131 46.93 13.50 22.90 40.00 90.00 20.00 40.133 (10. 00 110.0) 20.00 60.00 110 00 230.00 Ono gins, Two Al Immo Throe Squares Aix tiquaron, . ii Q..rtor Column Cointon . Ole Column Professional Cards Al. 00 per line per year. Administrator's and Auditor's Notices, $.1.00 • City Notices, '2O coots por Rue Int Insertion 16 coats per sue each subsequent insertion. Ten linen agate constitute a square. ROBERT IREDELL, JR., PUBLISHER, I= goal an1:1 Lumber • TILOPRT. R. OTTO. R. Y. OTTO. 0. W. MILIAR iiiiiLBERT, OTTO S• lIIILLER,, MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS IN LU B E \V LLIAMSPORT, PA 71IILI; ON CANAL WEST OF MAYNARD STREET OFFICE AT TILE MILL P CRANE •0v... JAS. M. RITTER, CHAS. W. ABBOTT. OWE:1 nirrEß JORDAN STEAM PLANING MILL SASH, DOOR, AND - BLIND MANUFACTORY, Unison Street, near Jordan Bridge, Allentown, =IE!NEI=I! MANUFACTURERS OF Sash, Doors, OW. Pic Blinds, Inside Blinds, Ifonhf frigv, Brackits Balnetters, Pickets, Stair Rail ings, Window Frames, Door Froutes, , Olaxed Window, Black Walnut to. SCROLL SAWINO TURN'S& PLANT NO, MATCHING, FLOORING and RIPPING, DOSE .4 7' THE SHORTEST NOTICE. ALSO, STAIR BUILDING done laud RAND RAILING Msde to order. Having now had almost three years' possession of the Still, refurnished it almost wholly with new and Improv ed machinery, and having noun hat experienced work men, IVO are prepared to defy competition front at home and abroad, both in price and work m tuship. Do yon contemplate bonding Y Call at our Factory nod satisfy yourself with e. personal examirattion. Drawings for buildings, brackets, patterns 'for orna mental work, scrolls for porches, can ho neon at all times by calling at our Any information to the builder f tarnished cheerfully and freely by calling at the Manu factory., ore Union street, et tbo Jordan Bridge, A lien t rwn, PH.. Or by letter through Gm post °taco. tang 3-Iy] • RITTER, ABBOTT & CO REVIVAL:; Tho nubscribers buying leased the "Old Hope Cool Yard," wouldrespectfully announce to the citizens of Allentowe end the public in general, that they have just got I=l COAL Cons Whig of Stove, Esit, Chestnut and Nut from Ina BUCK BIOUNTAIN MINEti. . , . . . Orden+ loft with A. A. Holler. Steger & Itottonatelo, nt the Eagle Hotel, Hope Ito Mug dlill, or the Yard will he Attended to lu BUSINESS like inannor. Order, for Coal by the car filled at Jib or the lowext price, Always on hand a largo stock of BALED HAY, which will ho sold al lho lowest market prices L. W. KOONS & CO at Um" Old Hope Coal Yard Hamilton Street, corner of Lehigh Valley Railroad A LLENToWN,PA. L. W. Koons oct t A NEW FIRM AND LW UMBER YARD TO BU IDLERS! TREXLML & WEAVER Would hereby announce to the public that they have Wel ripened a new Lumber 1 rod on the evertor, owl con venient grounds no lung ,'erupted luy Ti:Ext,hit Ittir'S en Hamilton circuit, floor Tenth, north node, where they are now prepared with a frill ecurrortntruiti of everything pertaining to the buslitece, c onprlsing In part ELLOW PINE, Wit rrii PINE, SPRUCE and LOCK FLOORING, WHITE PINE IltuA EP S, SCANTLING uuA PLANK of all siren • and troll 1,1111M100('11 • FRAMING TIMBER, Silveri... II EMLOCK JOIST mud SCANTLING of ,4.,dirt. , .1 CEDAR, CVPRESS AND WHITE PINE SHINGLES of extra quality. • HEMLOCK and SPRUCE PLASTERINGansiVIINO. G LIN LATHS , and largo npsortiriont WEATHERBOARDING. also WHITE OAK PL. NE and OMNI IMMO WHITE PINE and SPRUCE PALINOS nod PICKETS, auperlor to anything In the market WHITE PINE and HEMLOCK FENCE RAILS, WHITE 0 . .K and CHESTNUT POSTS, All desktopp or purchasing Lumber to as rood ndvautacts NM In offered nt any other Yard lu Om county, are request ed to call and °amain° our stock before pup chie• whore. Satisfaction Guaranteed in Quality and Price. The Senior member of the firm would hereby ox pre , o. ti la (hunks fur pest Invore Willie a member of the llrem of Trex - ler Brom., hod rexpectrully eallclto a coml.:moo of Ow xame prouttoluig to apply htm hest nulr.n•orx to reuder estlatuctlou to all riotous of oho New yard, IL•spout(ully ED. W. THEMER. augmt 11 Silber llateci Entire sAmuct. K. wayTn, 724 Ci ESTNUT STREET, p a nor 4=130 PRACTICAL MANUFACTURER OP VINE SILVER PLATED WARE, I= Would respectfully announce to big patrons that jig lute A full stock of tho latest styles of DOUBLE AND TREBLE ELECTRO-PLATED WARE ALL OF LUIS OWN PLATING Plated on Nickel and White Sletals, suitable for faintly or city trade. Asthe quality of plating can only be known to the plat er, the relrchaser must rely on the stutunfactomes state ment; there being se much worthless ware in the market, all remesented as treble plate, at prleoe impossible to be tuanu acturud, • All his goods are marked S. K. SMYTH." Cull and examine the goods before purchasing else where. ear - OLD WARE REPLATED. ni.tyls-17 Carlict3 anb Oil Ceti). • RICII AND. ELEGANT CARPE'T'S, OIL CLOTHS, AC., S. C. FOULK. NO. 19 S. SECOND ST., PHILA., I Flt et Carpet Store below Market, East side.) Invites atteution to hie splendid amorlineut of Imported and Muerte.. CARPETS. which will be sold at a very email advance. Coolie warranted as represented so that MI MU buy with confide ace and hailer:whom uov Tblf .ffor tlic jirarmrr For PIRO Water, this colobratud Put entirely tasteless, durable and relia ble; equal to the good old-fashioned wooden Pomp, an tont less than hall mono Easily arrat at (0 be non•fro and In construction that any ono can keep It In repair. THE BEST AND C pANcoAsT R 11111:141, THIRD AND PEAR STREETS, PLAIN AND cAixANizED WROUGHT IRON 'PUBES, Lap-Welded Boiler Tubes, Bran and Iron Vatyrant' Corks: Vlttingm far r; Steam . and Wator; Rough and Fatl.ll.l Brans Work; Bag awl Steam Fittars' 'Faqir, etc. Bath Total and tilnka. Bath Bailors, 6ramelle.l WaAtt Slatah.. air.. Cull• of Total; Sham Nettles and Trot, ' Pipe of all Sizes Bled to Sketch. Socconuufn to DIOBRIS, TASICIiIt St Co., on CONTRACTORS For tbn Heating of littildlogn of nal atone. with Strum hut NVutur, by the wont approyed metbuiln. Estimates F4traished Gratis. VOL. XXV AT ALLENTOWN, On IVEDNI.NDAY, Sept. •?ot!i. 111= Stone Sr., Murray Circus GRAND FREE ATTRACTION Congress or Talented Artists S \TION OF THE PERIOD ANNOUNCEMENT EXTRAORDINARY Unpreced,nte4 Success of the Age Prior to the Circus per formuce. and nboul 1 o'clock P. M., PROF. J. W. HAYDEN, =I Grand Free Balloon Ascension, On the lut wholulng 00. Pavillon All who desire can behold thin !Mott room:aim. gratuitously. No expentio lion boon tiptoed, awl Pr. , ntou has boon made to mod against accidentn. S tx• mow. , ter Mayo been conetrurted. end aro earriod Ith the Stone & Murray Circa., Cr 03 , 1a•c0n,1 ot I. guaranteed do IT, when Ito dating trr,munot~tr lil nrtkr Llr perilena JOURNEY BEYOND THE CLOUDS NEW FACER AND NOVCI, ATTRACTIONS 11.411 RY WELII.I' t'OOKF. Wind Appeararre hi Aln-r:,,) 'hi) Champion Hut xeman of England. JOHN HENRY MOICE, The only tilx-bore,' Rider In the world. LLE ROSINA, • (Fired Appearance in Anwrien JIISS LUC! ELLE ll'A TSON, Premiere Eppetrif unc„lu dezillng Feats or graceful Equithtton. DEN STONE, The well-known world's g,,at.st Jester. R. E•DONAtroitRY —lv TOM BA R (Firat Appearance In America.) == =I MR ..11 , 11N H. MUIVR A Y, And lii Perrorlllllls Trick Ilorr.•+, • ' Frt r ❑IAC fr .. and •" ULM, Ed111.F... I= TILE BEAR AND SENTINEL No 4took n%; alloweJ. Ciapvied Settin (or Ladleg =I ADMISSION, CHILDREN, I=l And which takes pinc.• ilurlnx the toilittiou of the Bal loon, Is tile ur.•at net of the tinil accumplielant l'itrintnn Artiste. THOS. WEAVER 3PLLE JEANNETTE ELLSLER ON A SLENDER WIRE CORD, On leldeli she wells from the ground to the top of the center pole and ratio u. 'riiis fest it lily 1-turtling In its nature. and toruken, the meat exciting feelings to the teliolder. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20th. Also, hi Bethlehem, Tuesdny, September 19th " " Kutztown, Thursday, September 21st .01,6 21w sepll•6td pito POSE D AMENDMENT TO THE CONSTI TUTION OF PENNSYLVANIA. reopaitm an amendment to the Conetitution of Re It Rro,l it! Bir the .9,1111te 111141 110.0 If RePrearll• (titters if IF.. commonwealth of Pennsylronla in Dell• ern/ Assembly toil, That the following amendment of the Constitution or this Cuntimmwealtli lie proposed to the pimple for their niloptho or rrjeetloo, pursuant to the'Provletotei of the tenth orilrle thereof, to-wit Strike out the S xllt Section of the Sixth Article of the Cou.tltudoe. nud iruert to Ilea thereof the following i "A State Treastuer shall be choneu by the qualified electors of the State, at each times and for such term of service as ehall be yreecribedbY • Spoaker of the Boone of Repre.outative.. WILLIAM A. WALLACE, 2ipenkor of thoFepate. Approved tilo Ilftevoth day of June, Arm° Domini on: thousand eight hundred nut seventy-one. JOHN W. GEARY. ' Preraml an' csallied for publication pursuant to the Ten th Article of the Con.iltution. Secretary of the Commonwealth. ()alto Secretary of the Commonwealth, • Ilarrlsburg, July sth, ltil. f fiYlD.3m • EIIAISTRIE 41: ROSS' TJ • • Stock of WHITE 00011 S. LACES AND EMBROIDER• IES aro not excelled by :ley house le tho city, either in completenesr, variety, quality or cheaper,. PIQUES verrcholee. Now stud most desirable FRENCH /111181,INS AND FRENCH NAINSOORS. TARLA TANS, all colons MOSQUITO NET, yard., 2 ands yards wide. VICTORIA LAWNS, a new Invoice. SOFT CAM BRICS, SWISS MULLS, PLAIN, PLAID AND STRIP ED NAINSOOKS, PLAIN AND BIIID•EYE LINEN„, LINEN LAWNS, CAMDRICS, CUSTDALMADE SHIRT FIWNTS. LACES—a moat select stock of all kinds of Lace. A specialty In CURTAIN NETS soul LACE CURTAINS. NEW II AMBUIDI Enalsos & INSERTINOS almost dilly • Von cau always Sod a mood assortment here, and at the lowest rates, at which they can ho sold. All WHITE TRIMMINGS. LINEN sled LACE CoLLARn AND CUFFS. The cheapest EMBROIDERED SETTS Ie tha market. Our price. 212 North Eighth St., Phihula. TII E GREAT a 13=1 rammun 50 Cents 25 Lents ne rnrfunnod =1 =I J'estit6y/vania AMENDMENT JAMES 11. WEBB, F. JORDAN, the Ifebiob rrolOrd. CORN GONG. =I Heap high the farmer's wintry hoard; Heap high the golden corn ; No richer gift has Autumn poured From out her lavish born. Let other lands, exulting, glean The apple from the pine, The orange from Its glossy green, The clubler floin the vine. We better love the hardy gift Our rugged vales bestow, To cheer us when the storm shall drift Our harvest fields with snow. Through vales of grass and flowers Our ploughs their furrows made, While, on the hills, the sun and showers Of c hangefull April played. We dropped the seed o'er hill and plain Beneath the sun of , May, And frightened from our sprouting grain The robber crows away. All through the long bright days of June Its leaves grew green and fair, And waved In hot midsummer noon •Its soft and yellow hair. And now, with Autumn's moonlit eyes, Its harvest time Is conic ; We pluck away Ito frosty leaves, Aril bear Its treasures home.. Then; richer than the fabled gifts Apollo showered of old. Fair hands the broken grains shall sift, And knead its meal of gold. Let vapid idlers 101 l In silk Around the costly board ; dive us the bowl of lump and milk By homespun beauty poured. Then shame on all the proud and vain Whose folly laughs.to scorn The blessings of our hardy grain— Our wealth of golden earn. Let earth withhold her goodly root ; Let mildew blight the rye ; Give to the worm the orchard's fruit, And wheat fields to the fly. But let the good old crop adorn The hills our fathers trod ; Still let us, for Ills golden corn, Send up our thanks to God ! JOAQUIN MILLER Shc Story of the Strange Career of the new California Poet. 111,. rend We nn the Pacific Plains—Extent of his Filarial''n on the Paelfic Eilrope— LOllflitlfpl and limruery of Life it, London Rel !Mom Repnblicaninin mot Character —Testimony of London Celtics. From the Neu, 1 - “rklErf ntng I have letters by me which tell the story of the strange and romantic life of Joaquin Mil ler, the newest of the California poets who have so recently come suddenly to the surface and nt once been ranked with the geniuses of the country, and'which pleasantly sketch his short but remarkable career in Ldndon, and give altogether the most perfect idea of the man that can be got without seeing and study ing him. Of these, the fullest and the best, the most interesting and satisfactory, and the most critical, is by George Francis Armstrong, of Dublin, a man of fine culture, a critic of I ability and reputation, and a contributor to the leading English magazines and literary pa pers. It was written to a friend in answer to inquiries concerning the personal history of Miller, with ii.dfom he became, It seems, quite intima'e during his stay in London. Of his origin, Mr. Arthstrong says ; " When the earliest of the numerous favor able notices of his works appeared in London, he said to me, with an enthusiasM which lie did not care to hide, 'This is worth more to me than gold ; I will send it to my parents' ; and when I asked him where his parents were lie said, 'They have herds of horses and cattle, and dwell on the Willamette, in Oregon. They are dear, pious old people, and have never believed in me, but they will now.' Once he stepped me oppos!U the window of an old printshop in Museum Street, and point `ed out a portrait of Witt, a famous lender of German peasant insurgents in a former centu ry. Ile said this Witt was an ancestor of his on his mother's side. His grandfather on the other side fell In the last war with . Great Bri tain, a private soldier." Concerning his life in the wilds of the West, Mr. Armstrong writes :-- . " has fought on the frontier, and is lame of a left leg and a right arm from bullet wounds. He has told me of his having con ducted a vast party from the South Pacific to the North Pacific mines, and of having found ed a colony in the wilderness, hundreds of miles from any settlements. Here they were attacked be the Indians, against whom he led the fighting-men, and was defeated. Defeated, but not, it appears, disgraced ; for, as soon as the State was formed, he was chosen Judge of the district. This office he held four years, during which time he wrote his earlier poems. Ile tells of planting an orchard, and of turning the attention of the colony to farming and stock raising, after the gold mines were ex- handed." Another friend, and an earlier, writes more in detail of this life, and accordingly adds con siderably to the story. He says : "I first saw Miller in the mountains of Nor thern California, in 1851. He was then a mere boy, and could not have been more than thirteen or fourteen years of age. He was with an old man called " Mountain Joe," who had been one of Fremont's guides, and who treated him as his own boy. He had taught him the use of the pistol, with which he after wards made himself famous in that country. Miller's home was somewhere in what was then Oregon Territory, and it was said he had run away from it. The summer following "Mountain Joe" led a party of miners against the Indians, and in the fight which ensued, Miller was shot in the face with an arrow, ,and nearly lost his life. Not long after, he originated, with "Mountain Joe" and Mc- Dougal, the great gold excitement known es " The Lost Cabin," which many CalifOrnians will remember with regret. This McDougal was a famous character. lie was a brother of Governor McDougal, of California, one of the finest looking men in, the mountains, and known about the country as "Prince George." Whether the " Lost Cabin" was a reality or a myth, and there are many who believe it was not all a myth, the company alwayahad bags of gold dust, although they were_ never seen to be engaged in mining. They rode the finest horses,were armed with the choicest weapons, and wore the most splendid accoutrements ; " Prince George" especially being noted for the magnificence of his dress. Every few months they would 'drop down' to San Fran cisco, put up at the best hotels, and attract the attention of the whole, town by their lavish expenditure of money. Then, as suddenly as they came, they disappeared, and all attempts to follow them, or trace the sources of their wealth, were utterly futile. In time the Lost Cabiners disappeared, and It was said they had joined the filibuster Walker, in Mexico. Mc- Dougal never returned, and it is believed that he is at this moment a chief of the Patagoni ans ; and all trace of 'Mountain Joe' bas been lost." ' " Miller next turned up with the Indians near Mount Shasta, leading them in their fight with varied success. About this time the Pitt River massacre occurred, when the wholevalley was retaken by the Indians, and the settlers either killed or captured. Whether Miller WIP or waTnot engaged in this affair Is not known, or was not at tlui time ; nevertheless, a reward was offered for his body, dead or alive. He was captured one morning with a small Indian camp while sleeping after a bard ride for the settlement, and while the Indians taken with him were shot, he was carried to Shasta City and put into irons to await exe cution; but fortunately, just in the nick of time, another party of Indians broke into his prison and rentted him. ALLENTOWN, PA., WEDNESDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 13, 1871. "Tiring of this border weirfare,Miller, after a while,changed his mode of life. For n time he rode a pony express to and from a gold mining camp in the interior through an Indi an country where' no other man could ,or would go, making friends wherever he went. He wrote quite a number of songs about this, period, for the miners, which, to this day, may be heard In the camps of the Pacific. Re linquishing the 'express business,' Miner mist hoisted his shingle as 'attorney-at-law,' and was elected a judge by the people, which office he hem for some two or three years with an honorable record, both as a judge and as a citizen. It is hardly possible he could have edited a paper, as report has it, for his educa tion had been quite meagre, extending only to a few months' schooling in a log hut. When lie became 'attorney,' lie had literally no book education." Miller went to Europe over a year ago. Ho roamed for some months through various parts of the continent, through England and Scot land. At the commencement of the Franco- Prussian war he was taken prisoner on sus- picion by the French, and kept iu durance about three weeks. His manuscripts and money were taken from him, but subsequently all hie property, with the exception of some fragments of a poem, mislaid by the officials, was returned, and he was liberated. Ile then proceeded by some circuitous route to London. Mr. Armstrong writes of his first meeting with him, one evening in the early part of the present yearjust after the publication of his poems : " I was introduced to Miller for the first time at his own lodgings. Ile was already acquainted with several eminent men and women ; yet he has often told me since that when he came to London first, a few months previously, lie had not in the wile city one stogie friend, and he came without introduc tions, and lie had no literary reputation to stand upon. Ilow in so short a time lie gathered about him so many persons distin- guished in so many professions and pursuits, I knew not. I have never asked him. * " * More have sought him than he has ever sought. Some natural sympathy made him partial to the Rossettis, Swinburnes, and their school ; hut not to that school or to any other had he attached himself." Of his lodgings and manner of living, the following is written : "His lodgings consisted of two small rooms, in a small house on Remmingford Road, Barnsbury —a neighborhood sufficiently dingy, depressing, and unprosperous, away from wealthy and successful men. A wor shipper of rank and respectability once asked him, 'How in the world he was led to live in such a part of London?' and his reply was characteristic in more ways than one : Weil I I said he, it happened this way. I was tiroa of Victoria Street ; they were too still' and stately there ; and I wanted a new place. I wandered out here, and walking up the street one rainy day I saw a sweet-faced little girl at the window. I conic in ; told the old lady I wanted a home ; they let me stay ; and here I've been ever since.' Here he remained pursuing a very plain and simple life, wheli Fame had emptied both her hands upon him, when friends were thronging in to see him, and strangers to court his acquaintance. "Previously to his taking this lodging he had lived in almost all the poorer quarters of London, and in a few months he learned the city more thoroughly than one less curious and less observant of the walks and ways of men would do in so manyyears. I remember once, when we were rambling together through the streets of an old country town; he pointed out a house which lie said was like one which he had occupied nt Mile End. It seemed to me not to have many months more to hang together. And his motive in selecting such Places to dwell in was neither parsimony nor eccentricity. I believe he prefers to live among the poor, whom he considers the real people of the country, threnigh wlp - m it is best to be taught. Like his compatriot, Walt Whitman, he loves the outside of an omnibus, travels third class, and gives the superflux to the poor, lie enjoys a chat with news-boys, shoe-blacks, and such poor toilers for bread: Nor Is he without hopes and plsns of his own for bettering the condition of the poor." Regarding his sentiments and politics, Mr. Armstrong writes:— " He is a sincere and devout republican in passion and politics,and he expresses his remit)• licanhun persistently in the outward symbols of dress and manner. To these symbols he attaches so much significance that the mere thought of being obliged to put, on evening dress has often driven him to refuse invita tions to places where even the attractions of. intellect were not slight. With republican Prance, I know his sympathies were active until the surrender of Paris. Then he could not tollerate the world's loud babble about French valor; condemned the Parisians as cowards, who had shrunk and yielded before half their number, and seemed to lose all Inter est in the nation." And of his region : " Holding great breadth of opinion on pies tions of laith, Miller is one of those wiser men who eledve fast to the loftiest doctrines of Chris Baldly, and would not destroy it. He handed me a letter, one day, from a Pacific member of Congress, informing hint of the death of his only sister. Death," said he, promotion in life. Ido not believe in putting on apparel that makes a display of grief. Therefore I will not go into mourning. If Christ is truth she is happier now, and my grief is only selfish—and Christ is not a mistake.' I have heard him plead earnestly on the side of Christ among those who mocked at his name,and doubted his having existed. •lle would fain hare the dead burned, and the ashes of a family preserved in a single urn. lle urged the advisability of the custom on the grounds of health, economy, good taste.' As he stood with Professor Dote den at the corner of a street in Barnsbury, one day, waiting for an omnibus, he said : ' Look at these vast grave-yards here in London. They keep the people in terror from their mag nitude and desolation, and cast a gloom over w hole districts. Let them be ploughed and planted, and there would be beautiful gelds to look upon.. Besides, they would yield enough bread to feed half the pour of London.' He has desired, In his will, tliat his own body shall be burned." • Ills education, Mr. Armstrong also confes ses, has been exceeding meagre:— " I am bound to say that Miller is-uneduca ted—his book-lore and intellectual training being of the smallest. Ile Is particularly fa miliar with the Bible, and he has no doubt read and absorded Byron, and perhaps one or two other poets. I furnished him with the first copies of ethelley and Carlyle he had ever seen. The English critics (who cannot help finding resemblances in every new poet to some great one living) have detected some thing in common between him and Mr. Brown ing. Genuine poets, in certain good qualities always resemble one another. I know that the-first poem of Browning's Miller ever read , was the Ballad of Nerve Biel, which appeared some months ago in the Cornitlll Magazine. What he has miblished Is written with care t , and displays, on the whole, but little lack of cultivation. But he boasts no education such as schools can give. Ills letters and his con versation exhibit little evidence of any ; and the former; partly owing to the wound in his right arm, are scarcely Intelligible to any one unfamiliar with his peculiar spelling and his doleful callgraphy. But he bas read men and Nature, and his own soul, writhe watchful and remembering eye." His character and nature arc thus delicately sketched:— " lie is a man of strict honor; pasionste with the violence of a warm and sensitive nature ; brave and independent in speaking and act ing : tender to all men ; full of large allowan ces for faults and charitable readings of nit°. lives and def2ds; in many pursuits and likings almost infantile ; in his dealings with a world far-sighted, shrewd as Jacob ; very calm in his general out warfl hearings, the calm huhu!. cd by persistent self restraint; ever busking out with irresistible humor, which in gait and go is unmistakably American, lint looked at nearer is the veritable child of his own rich nature: half dust., half deity;' a man who would subdue his chagrin at defeat with the same doggedness as he would any flame of vanity kindled by success; a man whom none could ever hate, and whom .1t would he hard for most not to love; a remarkable man, whose first words in a crowd are the signal of many eyes to turn Ills way, and many ears to strain towards him with attention." And, adds Mr. Armstrong:— "Maus I think of . this singular history I cannot help feeling that it exhibits something more than a literary success. Here is an American citizen, a patriot in soul and aspi ration, who, with faith in the kinship and in ner unity of two great nations, comes with it gift, which does his own country honor, to a country which honors itself in accepting it with sincere and outspoken praise. Poets, not iioliticians, are the representatives of a nation's heart. Despite the clamor of dishonest dem agogues and crafty place-hunters, whom we shall some day trample into the ground and have done with, there is but one pu`sa of life between England and America. One in blood one in aspiration, one In the love of truth, justice, hunianity, liberty; one in the best In heritances of the past, and best hopes of the future, America has nothing which is not England's, and England nothing which isnot America's. And here is one more golden ring in the chain." Bosco c, July 20, 1971. SLEEP-WALKERS' FREAKS. Nome Curious luostainees bulisin A correspondent of the Columbus, 0., Din. patch, narrates the following curious case of somnambulism : About ten years ago several young men boarded together and kept a bachelors' hall. One of their number was a young artist of ex traordinaryigenius. One day he had on his easel the outlines and first touches of a large picture of a dear friend (dynother, I believe), and occupied his whole time and attention. On returning on the evening of this day spoken of, his thoughts were full of this pain ling, but he soon fell asleep. About midnight his fellow-boarders were disturbed by a noise on his part. The light burning dimly, they observed that he was arising in his sleep, and they cautiously watched his movements. aer ting up,he proceeded immediately to his easel; sat down, mixed the colors, and began to point here his friends got around him and noticed that his eyes were open, though he neither saw them or other objects in the room. But the most remarkable thing was that he paint ed es good or even better then he did when awake. Not one touch was out of place, and the shading and mixing of his paint was un exceptional. Ile finished his picture and re• : tiw-d, and, of course, on his auaking In the morning, he was astounded. In this circum stance, as you will see, neither a part of his hearing or sight was used. Another remarkable incident is as follows Several young men were boarding together, and every other morning it was the duty of one to rise early and prepare breakfast. One of tile party was a notorious sleepwalker, and several mornings arose about three or four o'clock, built the fire, cooked breakfast,- and did several necessary things—and all this time was asleep ! He would then go back to bed again, and would again arise at the proper time to pre pare the break fitst, as lie thought, and lo be. hold, lie would find it alread ycooked and cold. Of course this soon caused a good deal of trou ble, but the only way it was stopped was by one of the others arising about that time every morning, with the help of an alarm clock, and send him back to bed again. Another circumstance that I am acquainted with Is more remarkable and wonderful than the two preceeding : A. farmer had a boy me lds care who was a great night walker, aid performed the most incredible deeds. Near the farmer's house was a large stream, and on this day In question, it had risen to a terrible height, overflowing Its banks and carrying away every bridge or any thing in its grasp. Towards night it began to rain, the wind was high, and altogether the night had a most dreary aspect; but in the eniddle of this dark and stormy night this boy arose—in his sleep —put on his clothes, found his way out of the house, went to the barn, unlitiched the horse, gut on his back, and amid the rain and wind drove down to the stream ; this he forded, and the water reached up to both the horse's and boy's neck. but he did not awake. Arriving on the other side, be pursued his way for a long way ir the woods, turned around, and came back again and crossed the stream, put his horse in the born and went up stairs, and woke up just as he was pulling off his wet and muddy clothes ; and the way it was found out was on account of the dirtiness of the borne, and the tracks discovered, and, of course, as the boy _I I nd been up to those " night walkings" before, ft was finally de cided•it was him. A somnambulist is gener ally a very sensitive person, and one who is particularly nervous. GLEANINGS AND GOSSIP Grapes are so plentifill this year that they arc likely to be within the financial reach of all classes. Ladies at the White Mountains sleep under coverlets of newspapers, as there are not blan kets ensugh to go round. In eighteen years the nine Eastern Shore counties of Maryland have increased only about fifty per cent., from 106,589 to 180,317. A four-handed game was played at Cedar Raids between Mr. Baum and arsenic on one side, and Dr. Smith and a stomach pump on the other. The latter were victorious by a "close squeak." One of the Milwaukee lamplighters is a lit• tle girl ten years old. She makes her rounds in all kinds of weather, and runs up the ladder like a squirrel, while her mother stands below to catch her if she falls. It is stated that a fond papa, by way of comforting his daughter, whose marriage lie opposed, gave her $3OO on leaving her at a watering•place. She sent the money to her lover, who came on immediately and married her. An old gentleman took a huge volume of history of a thousand pages, with maps and illustrations, into a bookstore, a few days ago, and saying lie wished another copy, offered to lend it to them as long as they needed it to print another by. A darkey prisoner in Georgia ingeniously remarked to the jailer, "Oh, look at dat snake dar I"—and ran Ilko the bright-eyed gazelle. Neither shake nor prisoner has been seen since. A Few Words About Cholera With the possible advent among us of that Mal malady, the cholera, a tnief account of its mstore, as showimj its mricin, its means of ransnik.iiiti :tom to emmiry to another, the wculiar conditiuns which are 'favorable to Its levelopmen I, and above all, the simple reme lies that may be applied, at least to check its wogress, if not to cure or eradicate it, will, we hink, be of peculiar interest at Um present ime. A noire intimate knowt dge of its char- acteristies will dispel half its terrors, and thus prove a great safeguard against Its ravages ; for fear and the consequent mental depression have, as Is known, killed more than the disease itself. The East is the habitat of cholera, and lie first appearance in Europe was in the year 1820. As an epidemic it spread with great rapidity and with terrible results, for its symp toms were a novelty at that time to the medl- cal profession, and its treatment but little no derstood. Much doubt then existed in the minds of the leading physicians of the day as to whether the development of this pestilence arose from con tagion, or whether it was an atmospheric, and herelbre an unavoidable scourge. But as sci entifie research has since led to the conviction hat it partakes more of the former character stic, and may thus be considered as a prevent tible disease, it has tended to reassure many and thus to save life. The true sense of the term contagious is "communicable," implying that a person attacked with the cholera may ransinit it under certain conditions to others, and in this way the disease may be carried any distance. But when a distinct neighborhood is infected, experience has shown that the at- mospliere itself becomes tainted nation of this is that the excreta aro chirged with the germs of the disease, which:are easily disseminated if proper sanitary regulations are not adopted to carry off the sources of its dif fusion by proper drainage and ventilation. , or an explanation of thoso conditions which nre favorable to the development 'of au epi• demic, we have only to turn to the little regard paid to .public health iu the towns anl cities of inediteval Europe. Crowded within a nar- row compass, hemmed in by high walls, all sanitary laws neglected in the unsettled and disorganized condition of society then existing, the masses were decimated by constantly re- curring plagues, fevers and famines. Profes sor Parkes says: " Whoever considers care fully the record of the mediteval epidemics, and seeks to interpret them by our present knowledge of the causes of the diseases, will, I believe, become convinced that one great rea son why those epidemic diseases were so fre quent and so fatal was the compression of the population in faulty habitations. 111-contrived and closely packed houses, with narrow streets, Men made winding for the purpose of defence; a very poor supply of water, and therefore a universal uncleanni as ; n want of all appliances for the removal of excreta; ii. population of rude, careless and gross habits, living often on innutritious food, and frequently exposed to famine from their imperfect system of tillage; such were the conditions which almost throughout the whole of Europe enabled dis• eases to attain a range, and to display a viru lence, of which we have now scarcely a con ception. The more these matters are exam teed, the more, I believe, shall we be Comm vineed that we must look, not to grand cosmi cal conditions, not to earthquakes, comets, or mysterious waves of an unseen and poisonous air, net to recondite epidemic constitutions, but to simple, familiar, and household condi tions, to explain the spread and fatality of the mediteval plagues." It is by causes such as these that epidemics are fostered, and, indeed, may have their ori gin. The " black death" has its startling point and permanent habitat in Egypt, where the Arab, his wives, children, servants and domestic animals, exist huddled together in a state which the distinguished observer Clot Aey has described in the words, " Unheard of filth reigns in their infected haunts." Their strength is destroyed by their precarious sup ply of food, which they cook over fires made with dried manure. We now draw these conclusions: First, that the cholera is not atmospheric and there fore unavoidable, but simply a disease com municable either by contact through the me dium of the excreta, or by a special charging of the atmosphere with the miasma arising therefrom. Secondly, that want of personal cleanliness, improper and insufficient food, close and badly ventilated apartments, imper fect drainage and want of a supply of fresh untainted water, Intemperance which enfee bles and deranges the whole system, are what aggravates the disease and lead to the fatal propprtlons It assumes. Thirdly, that with a properobservancc of these sanitary lows which arc today so well understood, by a judicious use of such medicinal remedies ns will check the earliest symptoms of diarrhoea, a careful diet, temperate habits, and an abundant out ward application of cold water, while living in a properly drained neighborhood, the ap proach of this pest may be regarded almost with indifference. Pettenkofer has asserted that the germ is formed by and in the excreta of the patient, and by and in those persons who may not have been actually siezed with the complaint, but have been living within the• sphere of its devastations, wheresoever such excreta are left neglected. This is a strong argument in favor of the strictest quarantine, and of the disinfection of all contagions matter. In n published address In 1849, Mr Kirby, an emi nent English authority on these matters, saps: " If in the dispensations of Providence it be so ruled that my house shall be visited with cholera, I purpose to act upon the conviction of its contagious character. As in typhus the sick rhall be insulated front the rest of the family, due ventilation, cleanliness, and quiet shall be observed, while nothing shall be giv en either in diet or in medicine save as skill directs, and under the administration of prop er nursing attendants." No wiser precautions can be used, and It is undoubtodly the proper course to pursue In acting on the possibility of the disease being communicable or spreading from person to person. The importance of pure water is illustrated by two instances given in the researches of the late Dr. Snow, who originated the idea that cholera was spread by the water used for drinking. The one shows the decrease of cholera following improped water supply; the other Its Increase when the quality of that necessary element is deteriorated. The cases of cholera in Exeter, England, id 1832 exceed ed 1,000. The water was supplied by carriers from the river into which all the sewage flowed. Before the next visitation which devastated the country, the water was taken from a spot two miles above the town, and as a result In 1849 but forty-four cases occurred, and in 1854 hardly one. On the other hand, England, In 1832 was supplied with pure pipe water, but so scantily that the poor had to resort to other means to procure It; 800 of its Inbabliants, mainly the poorest, died of cholera in that year. In 1844 an abundant supply was procured for all classes, but from the river Into which the sewage flowed; and accordingly in 1840 1,834 persons from all ranks fell victims to this ignorance or negli gence of the poisonous effects of contaminated water. "As yet," says the London Lancet, "we have no certain information that the malady has become actively migratory s and that it has extended across the Russian frontier into West and Centeral Europe. But that this danger Is imminent, and has been imminent at any period since the winter of 1869, is cer tain; and it is well that the daily press should have raised the question of the state of our defence against the epidemic. Upon this ques tion we do not propose now to dwell, further than to remark that it is one upon .which no doubt can rest as to tliC duties of the local au thorities who aro responsible for the !Wolin's. tration of the sanitary laws." This statement should Induce the authori ties of every city in the Union to bestir them selves in such n time as this, when we may at any liniment have a pestilence upon us that needs only proper precaution to render it comparatively harmless. Jenkins goes to a Pic-Nie. Maria Ann recently determined to go to a picnic. ' Maria Ann is my wife—unfortunately she had planed to go alone, so far as I was con cerned, on that pie-nic excursion ; but when I heard about it I determined to assist. She pretended to be very glad, but I don't be lieve she was. " It will do you good to get away from your work a day, poor fellow," she said "and wo shall so much enjoy a cool morning ride on the cars and dinner in the woods." On the morning of that memorable day, Marla Ann got up at fivd o'clock. About a minute later she disturbed my slumber, and told me to come to breakfast. I told her I wasn't hungry, but it didn't make a bit of difference, I had to get up. The sun was up; I had no idea the sun began business so early in the morning, but there he was. " Now," said Maria Ann, "we must fly around for the cars start at half past six. Eat all the breakfast you can, for you won't get any more before noon." The expla I could not eat anything a' that time in the morning, and it was Just as well that I could not, for I had all I could do. There was the ice to be pounded to go around the pail of ice cream, and sandwiches to be cut, and I thought I never should get the legs of chickens fixed so that I could get the cover on the big basket. Maria Ann flew around and piled up groceries for me to pack, and gave the directions to the girl about taking care of the house, and was putting on her dress all at once. There is a great deal of energy in that woman—perhaps a trifle too much. At twenty minutes past sit: I stood on the front steps with a basket on one arm and Maria Ann's waterproof on the other, and a pail in each hand, and a bottle of vinegar in my coat skirt pocket. There was a camp chair hung on me somewhere, too, but I forget jest where. "Now," said Marla Ann, we shall not catch the train." "Maria," said I, "tint is not a reasonable idea. How do you suppose I can run with all this freight ?" " You must, you brute. - Yoh always try to teach me. If you'don't want a scene on the street you will start, too." So I ran. I had one comfort at least, Maria Ann fell down and broke her parasol. She called me a brute again because I laughed. Maria drove me all the way to the depot on a brisk trot, and we got on the cars; but neither of us could get a seat, and I could not find a place where I could set the things down, so I stood there and held them. Marla,'l said, In winning accents, 'bow Is this for a cool morning ride ?' Said she, 'you are a brute, Jenkins!' Said I, "my love, you have made that ob servation before." I kept my courage up, yet I knew there would be an hour of wrath when we got home. While we were getting out of the cars the bottle In my pocket got broke, and conse quently I had one boot half full of vinegar all day. That kept me pretty quiet, and Maria Ann ran off with the big whiskered music teacher, and lost her fan, and get her feet wet, and tore her dress, and enjoyed heyself much after the fashion of pic-nic goers. I thought it would never come dinner time, and Maria called me a pig, because I wanted to open our basket before the rest of the baskets were Opened. At last dinner time came—the 'nice dinner in the woods,' you know. Ovtr three thousand little red ants had got into our dinner, and they were worse to pick out than fish-bones. The ice cream had melted, and there was no vinegar for the cold meat except what was In my boot, and of course that was of no imme diate use. The music teacher spilled a cup or hot coffee on Mafia's head, and pulled the frizzles out trying to wipe off the coffee with his hankerchief. Then I sat on a piece amp= berry pie, and spoiled my white pants, and concluded I didn't want anything more, I had to stand up against a tree the rest of the after noon. The day afforded considerable variety, compared to everyday life, but there were so many little drawbacks that I did not enjoy it so much as I might have done. . LATE NEWS ITEMS The 'Mariposa estate is advertised for sale on October 12, by the Trustees, fur thd benefit of c certificate holders The son and daughter of MN. Paul Schisler of lowa township, lowa, were drowned in a pond near their mother's house, on Saturday. Morgan L. Fllkins had a leg broken and was otherwise seriously injured by a fall down a flight of stairs in his residence in Albany, on Tuesday. James McManus, a notorious desperado and burglar, rscaped from the Albany Penitentiary on Tuesday night. This is the first escape that has taken place frbm that prison. George Roberts died in Philadelphia, yester• day, in consequence of being knocked down by George Farnwcll, nt the corner of Front and Spruce streets. The latter wns arrested and the case will be investigated. St. Paul's Methodist Church was dedicated in Providence, yesterday. The Bev. Dr. Tinny of New• Jersey preached the sermon. Five deths from yellow fever have been reported in a Charleston in the last 24 hours. The cool weather is having an unfavorable effect on the sick, but there are hardly any new cases. Some 100 eelegntes, representing the Na Tonal Division of the Sons of Temperance, are holding meetings in Boston, this week, which are largely attended by the temperance brother hood. Among the delegates are the Rev. J. C. Stoughton of Illinois; Judge S. 13. Ransom. New. Jersey; Robert Foust, Pennsylvania; Dr. Hamilton, Nova Scotia; Miss Julia Coleman, Brooklyn, N. Y.; A. H. Benedict; Connecti cut; William Wells Brown, Massachuetts, and other prominent members of the order. A colored organization from Maryland was ad mitted to the convention yesterday. Parties are now engaged in dragging in the Anacostia river, off the Navy Yard at Wash ington, for the recovery, of chains; anchors,. &c., which were deposited for safe keeping in the bed of the rivers in 1814 when the British Invaded the city. A considerable amount of chain and a large anchor have thus far been recovered, which will be renovated at the yard. lion. 11. S. Evans, of West Chester, has obtained a patent for an automatic railroad signal. ROBERT IREDELL, JR. Plain nub Jam Sob Printer, No. 009 HAMILTON STREET, ELEGANTPRINTING • LATEST STYLES Stamped Cheeky!, Card', Circatarn, Paper dead, Book!, Cony tattoo, arid By-Lawa, School Catalogoea, Bill Ifeada Bove'open, Letter eada Bills of Laing, WS/ B i ll,, Tag, and Shipplna Carol., Polders of any Ire, etc., etc., Printed at Short Notleei NO. 36. NARROW-GAUGE RAILROADS The following sensible comments upon this question, from the U. B. Railroad and Mining Register, Is worthy of attention : The extraordinary fervor with which many engineers and projectors of now lines of rail way favor a reduction in the width of the gauge is certainly very remarkable. All' the arguments, mechanical and financial, with which we, with others, have combated the use of tho 6-feet gunge in this country, are now brought In use to show that,the 4 feet inches gauge is wasteful and extravagant, both In construction and operation ; and the new lights in railway engineering are now engaged in showing that the true gauge should be anywhere from two feet to three and one half, feet, and those who favor uniformity of gauge, or a continuation of the present ruling one, of 4 feet 8,3 inches, are looked upon as belonging to the old-fogy or conservative class. Now, under certain conditions, we have no doubt that extremely narrow gauges can be used with profit, as they can be built with less money, and operated with less cost per mile of operation, than the ruling now is; but these narrow-gauge lines must of neces sity be isolated, and having no direct connec tion, for the interchange of traffic, with the general system, they must be operated under great disadvantages. As mere feeders to main lines, bringing sparsely populated sections into connection with the great lines of traffic, they will resemble lines of stages and baggage wagons, more than railway lines; and while their value as feeders must be acknowledged, it must not be - forgotten that they will form no portion of the regular system of the country. Whenever the business and population of time section through which these narrow-gauge lines may run increases to any extent, the line must of necessity be widened and recon structed at an Increased cost. The great argu ment in favor of the narrow-gauge line is the decreased cost of construction, the lighter and cheaper diameter of the rolling-stock, and therefore the cheaper cost of operation. This may apply to certain sections of the country; but men who have been practically engaged In railway operations In the eastern, northern and western sections of the country, well know of the disadvantages of attempting to run with light rolling•stock in the winter months. Every attempt to rust with light locomotives in snow storms proved a failure; and so even light passeng. r trams are now seldom run w ith engines of less than twenty two tons weight, and more often with those weighing twenty•eighttons. Engines weigh ing eight, ten, or twelve tons each, are practi cally useless at certain seasons of the year ; and we take it that no company can afford to keep two sets of equipment, one for the winter and the other fur summer. Practical railway men will understand this matter, even if the nar row-gauge theorists do not. Whet we arc now saying is-a mere word or two of caution; but of the comparative cost of construction, carrying capacity and general efficacy of the of the medium or 4 feet 83 inch gauge, and the extremely narrow-gauge, we intend to consider more of length hereafter. "we limit run or THE CUTTING OF GLASS The glazier's diamond is an angle of a crys tal, the extreme point of which (may lie re garded as a single atom, which, when pressed upon the glass, acts like n wedge, entering be tween two particles of glass, and producing a ,minute fracture. When drawn over the glass it produces an infinite number of minute frac tures, extending sometimes quite through the glass. A sharp point of iron or lead will not cut glass because it is too soft. The extreme point or atom yields When pressed upon the glass, allowing two or more atoms to touch the glass, which act no longer as a wedge, but as a weight, and if sufficient force lie ap plied, a large and irregular fracture will re sult. A. sharp point of hardened steel will cut glass nearly as well as a diamond. Take an old worn nut three-cornered file, grind the end to a three centered point, heat it red hot, and immediately plunge it into a mixture of snow and salt. lietouch it on the stone to re move the scale, and it Is reedy for use. If rightly done it will give very good satisfac tion. In using it bold the file nearly perpen dicular, slightly inclined forward, and with a gentle pressure draw it rapidly over the glass wit limit changing its inclination to the surface. In cutting thick glass it is safer to cut in both sides before attempting to sepa rate the pieces, but thin glass may be cut with the greatest facility. When the point be comes dull from use it will produce only a 'ragged sot ffice—scratch—Mut will not cut. It then needs regrinding. „A single turn of the stone Is sufficient to put it into working order again. Such a glass cuttkr is very serviceable for preparing glass fur various purposes. What our Sermit girls Do The amount of money sent across the water by immigrants to friends left behind, princi pally to pay their passage to Amerlca,ls rather surprising. From the official returns of the Emigration Commissioners of England, it np. pears that in 1870 there was sent from this country to Ireland principally, $3,690,000 in gold, of which $1,663,100 was for prepaid passages. In the twenty-three years froM 1848 to 1870, inclusive, it was upward of 184., - - 670,000 in gold, being an average of about $3,880,047 yearly. But this amount Is prob• ably somewhat below the actual amount sent, as it only includes what has been sent through banks and commercial houses. Of whatever may have been sent through private channels there is no knowledge. And then these suing large as they are, are made up by careful say ings from the wages of servant girls and day laborers. • A Mon congregation was In search of a min ister.. One of the elders came to us for aid in finding the right man for the place. " What sort of a non do you want 4" we asked. " Well," said he, ''our church is.vcry much run down at present ; we have been without pastor for a year or more, and we must have somebody that will make n noise ; the fact is, we must have one who is great or eccentric! Great or eccentric I One or the other is the demand of the hour. Perhaps it was always so ; but it is more so now than ever. But let no minister be discouraged, or provoked by this popular taste. The fearful, earnest man, who does his duty patiently and in the fear of God, wins the esteem of the wise and good, does the work which is given him to . do, and will not fall of his reward. Churches that are built up on the greatness or the eccentricities 'of a particular preacher, are no nurseries for heaven ; they are more apt to be paly•houses for time than training scltools for eternity.— ! Here York Observer. An enormous woman, one Carolina Ileum, is now. on exhibition In London. Her age is said to be twenty-two years, and weight GGO pounds. She measures seven feet around the body, twenty.six inches around the arm, and three feet six Inches across the shoUlders. It is added that, unlike most fat people, this large lacy is able to' sustain great physical exertion, is "handsome and pleasing," and "highly In tellegent," not in the least "drowsy," nor Is her face "fat and greasy." =I =