-r .ri it!-. ijf.; ( i - ' BY S. B. ROW; CLEARFIELD, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 26,185(1. VOL 2. If 0.' 33. .v.:-.- ' .'"LIGHTS , ' V .The following exquisite poem, by "William. Pitt Pammer, was - some years ago pronounced, by one of tho most eminent European critics to be the fi nest production) of the same length, in our lan guage : : "' ; - ; Prom the quickened womb of tho primal gloomy , The sun rolled black and bare, !,,",,. Till I wove him a Test for his Ethiop breast ' ,i Of the thread of my golden hair; - -' 1 And. when the broad tent of the firmament ' Arose in its airy spars, e . . ' ".-i i ' I penciled the hue of its matchless blue,; ..- And spangled it round with eUrs, -., . . - . , . I painted the flowers of the Eden bowers, And their leaves of living green ; And mine were the dyes in the sinless eyes : - Of Eden's virgin queen ; - " And when the fiend's art on her trustful heart, - Bad fastened its mortal spell, .' ; In the silvery sphere of the first-born tear. To the trembling earth. I fell. TThori the waves that burst o'er tho world accursed, Their werk of wrath had sped, And tho Ark's lone few, the tried and true, ' . Came forth among the dead ; i - With tho wond'rons gleams of my bridal beams, - I bade their terrors cease, As I wrote on the roll of the storm's dark scroll, God's covenant of peaee." Like a pall at rest on a senseless breast, Night's funeral shadow slept; -Where shepherd swains on the Bethlehem plain3 . Their lonely vigils kept : When I flashed on their sight the heralds bright 'Of Heaven's redeeming plan, As they chanted the morn of a Savior born : Joy. joy to the outcast man. Equal favor I show to the lofty and low, On the just and unjust I descend ; E'en the blind, whose vain spheres roll in dark- - ' ; ness and tears. ; See my smile, the blest smile of a friend ; Jiay, thetlower of the wast by my love is embraced, - As the rose in the garden of Kings; At the chrysalis bier of the worm I appear, And, lo, the gay butterfly wings. The desolate Morn, like a mourner forlorn, Conceals all the pride of her charms, Till I bid the bright hours chase Night from her flowers, And lead the young Day to her arms ; And when the gay rover seeks Eve for his lover, ' And sinks to her balmy repose, I wrap the soft rest by the xophyr fanned west, In curtains of amber and rose. From my sentinel steep, by the night-brooded deep, I gaze with unslumbering eye, When the cynosure star of the mariner .. Is blotted from out the sky ; And guided by me through the merciless sea, ' Though sped by the hurricane's wings.f His coropasiloss. dark, lone,' weltering bark To the haven-home safely he brings. I waken the flower in their dew-spangled bowers, The birds in their chambers of green. And mountains and plain grow with beauty again, As they bask in their matinal sheen. 0, if such the glad worth of my presence to earth, Though fitful and fleeting the while. What glories must rest on the home of the blest, i Ever bright tith the Deity's smile " Prom the Indiana (Pa.) Register. LEWIS, THE II OB BE It. -- ' A EEMHUSCENCE. Lewis wag the master-spirit of a gang of highway men, who lived fey robbing travellers and committing depredations upon residents, chiefly between Chambersburgh and Bedford,' where they harbored in the forests'of the moun tains. They were a terror to the community, and western merchauts who travelled on horse back generally armed themselves when going to the east, so as to bo prepared to repel an at tack, and for greater security sometimes went in companies. It was understood, or at least believed, that some of Lewis' baud were sta tioned in Pittsburgh, where, by mixing in gen teol society, and being unsuspected, they would inform themselves of the time when merchants of that city and from parts farther west inten ded making their semi-annual trips to Phila delphia, and would then find means to convey tbe, intelligence to their accomplices along the road. . ; . : - Lewis was a young man of handsome appear anco and agreeable address, and it was said he supported his mother and sisters upon the fruits of his unlawful pursuit. Ilis more immediate associates were Conner and Connelly, who, at the time of which we are speaking, kept among tho gorges of Sideling Hill, where, at a dis tance of several miles, from the public road, they had erected a shanty, which was well sup plied with provisions and other comforts,whith cr Lewis, after remaining about Bedford and Bloody Hun as long as he could do so without exciting suspicion, or until he had received letters' which he expected, would resort and remain for days and weeks, concerting mea sures for robbing some unsuspecting traveller or for obtaining booty in some other way. ' , -Persons who have travelled the turnpike be tween McConnelsburgh aud tho Crossings of the Juniata will remember Reamer's tavern on the eastern slope of the mountain andNycuni's .on the western, tho intervening distance being about eight miles, which formerly presented little else to the eye than scrub-oak thickets, Interspersed with rocks and fallen timber, with here and there a slight opening, through which the cattle feeding during thesunmier had trod den paths which served the hunter as a guide and passage when following the game along the mountain range in winter. It was, indeed, a gloomy road, with Dothing to break the mo notony, save, perhaps, occasionally the cawing of a. crow as Bhe hovered overhead, or the sud den bound of a deer aroused from his lair by the .noise of approaching footsteps and the lonely traveller,- as he wended his way slowly up the steep ascent, now urging his jaded steed to greater effort, and now relieving it by leap lag from the saddle and walking by its side, would long to gain the summit, where he might proceed more speedily and with mere comfort to Wmwlf and his animal.. ; On ascending the mountain from tho. west, one sees now on the south side of the turnpike a patch of cultivated ground, embracing sev eral acres, which has. been cleared for a num ber of years, but was a dense forest at the time 1 6 which our story has reference.. It was here, immediately opposite the' cleared field, that Lewis performed ; one of his most '. daring ex ploits, and, which led to his arrest and subse quently cost him his life. ' ' - It appeared from what transpired afterwards, that Lewis had received intelligence from some of his gang, of an individual carrying a large sum of money going eastward on horseback, and that Lewis and two of his associates were on the look-out fcr him, ready to make an at tempt at securing the rich prize whenever it should come within reach. From some caftse or other, however,' that individual's departure was delayed ; but about the time designated by Lewis' spy, a Mr. McClelland, a merchant in Pittsburg, started for Philadelphia to purchase goods," travelling on horseback and having in his saddlebags some two thousand dollars in silver. lie had got to Nycum's on Saturday evening, where he remained until Sunday mor ning, and then early prosecuted his journey thinking to breakfast at Reamer's. As he was walking his horso up the mountain and wheu he had proceeded several miles, he espied, some distance ahead, a man, who wore a sloch ed hat and an ill-fitting, somewhat tattered coat, walking rather awkwardly, his body in clined forward, now shooting diagonally across tbe road, and then, taking up and balancing himself, moving on again .in a straight line.- As McClelland Beared him, the man onco or twice looked around, exhibiting a pair of black ened eyes, as if he had been recently engaged in a fight; and McClelland inferred from his whole conduct and appearance that he had been in company drinking and got himself handsomely pummeled, without having been sobered by the operation. As they approach ed the summit, McClelland gained upon the fellow, until at the point which we have been endeavoring to describe be was about passing him ; but at that moment, and beforo be sus pected any danger, he found himself dragged lrom his horse, tho drunken man, as he had ta ken hwa to be, having sprang upon him at a single bound, while in the same instant a man with a cocked pistol jumped up from cither side of the' road, the ono seizing the horse's bridle and the other coming to tho assistance of their leader, who was no other than Lewis himself and who had assumed this disguise to prevent suspicion. The two men who had been lying in wait were Conner and Connelly and there can bo no doubt but some one of the gang had seen McClelland the day or evening before, and that they bad prepared themselves during the night to attack him in tho morning, Ilad he tarried at Xycum's until later in the day and perchance got some company,he would most likely have been permitted to pass unmo lested, and the counterfeit drunkard, who, with painted eyes and tattered garments, had . been seen staggering along the road would scarcely have been thought of again. The spot was well chosen by the robbers for the accomplishment of their purpose. On tho north side of tho road, for a distance of at least a quarter of a mile, tho woods were more open here than at any other point on the mountain ; and whilst McClelland was hurried off by two of the mcnamong the thickets his horse was gailopee at full speed through the open space, so as to be out of sight, should any person chance to come along the road. " Having com manded M'Clelland to observe silence If he did not wish to have his brains blown out, they led him onward for several miles, tho other man with the horse bringing up the rearnntil they reached the robber's hut, which had been constructed of light " logs and covered with bark, where they halted and forthwith entered upon an examination of their booty. After ascertaining the amount, Lewis turned to Mc Clelland and smilingly said bovas 1 'not the bird they bad been watching for, nevertheless these were pretty rich pickings" and be and his associates were amply compensated there by for their trouble "; Conner and Connelly then proposed they should put McClelland to death alleging as a reason that if he were set at liberty he would inform on them and might cause their arrest ; against which Lewis stoutly protested and at the same time handed to Mc Clelland bis watch and ten dollars, saying that would carry him back to his family and friends. " This done preparations were. made by the robbers to start with the money . taken from McClelland to some placo where they would deposit it for greater security, and ho was told that if he offered to move from the spot before, their rsturn, his life should pay tho forfeit of his temerity That they intended to return has always been doubted, and it has been judg eit, andwith very good reason, that their ob ject was to induce him to remain there during part of the day, whereby they would have gain ed ample time to get out of barm's way before he could give the alarm and start anybody in pursuit. In order to make dure work, howev er, they produced a pint flask filled with whis key and ordered him to drink freely, thinking no doubt that by so doing be, a man , unaccus tomed to Btrong drink, would soon .fall asleep and might not awake for many hoursv McClel land thought the liquor contained somo deadly Pi?on &d ihc robbers were taking this meth od to get rid oi him ; and knowg; be wa ia their power and that if his death had been re solved on all his pleading for life would be un availing, he concluded to die with as little pain as possible, and therefore, to their great surr prise, drank the entire contents of the flask. Fortunately, however, the liquor was trot poi soned; but the robbers thinking their prison er had taken enough to answer all their pur poses, now left, after ordering him to lie down in a Corner of the cabin: , ' ' - . . M'Clelland was now alone. The incidents of the morning clustered around his mind, and his distress was indescribable. "Within the spa ce of a few hours all his earthly hopes had been blasted. Jle was not only beggared, but in all likehood doomed to die, perhaps in a few moments, away from his friends and kindred, where his body might become food for vultures and wild beasts and bis requiem should ba the winds as they passed howling over his blecching bones I ; He pictured to himself the distress of his family consequent upon his sud den and mysterious disappearance, and their fruitless conjectures in regard to his fate, and then ran with his mind's eye over the pages of their future history, lamenting their desolate and forlorn condition is they should bo drift ing without an earthly protecter on life's wide gJeean, tossed by the waves and exposed to the tempest: " But he felt admonished to dismiss these reflections and turn unto others. : Every moment he expected to feel a deadly stupor coming over him, and ever and anon he cast his eyes" upon surrounding objects to assure himself that all was not a dream and that he was still in possession of his reason; Such was the intensity of his feelings that it coun teracted the effects of the spirits which he had swallowed, and impelled by that love of life which clings unto man to his last moments,' he ventured to ascend to the roof of the shanty and then cast inquiring looks far into the for est, anxious to ascertain whether the robbers had actually taken their departure or whether they were still loitering about, awaiting his death. In a slight opening in the woods at the distance of half a mile he at length espied them, pressing on with all possible speed, ani in a moment his resolution was taken to at-' tempt his escape. Mounting his horso he en-; tt-ivu a ravmu near uy, wmcu ne juagea muse lead him in the direction of Reamer's and then urging the animal forward as fast as the nature of the country permitted, he kept in the ra vine, leaping over rocks and fallen trees, and in an incredibly short time reached the point he was aiming for, where he gave the alarm and urged immediate pursuit. "V7e may here remark that among those back woods men who employ most of their time in hunting and fishing, Sunday is not generally reverenced as' it should be, and it will there fore cause no surprise to learn that when M' Clelland arrived at the tavern just m&ntioncd he found there some half a dozen or more of rugged mountaineers, who had called in for their "bitters" preparatory to starting into the woods iii quest of game. No sooner were they made acquainted with the robbery that had been committed than they volunteered to go in search of the robbers, and in a few mo ments bad all things in readiness and set out; resolved to do their best. ' . - The banters had a general knowledge of the topography of the mountains, directed their steps toward a point some distance beyond that designated by M'Clelland as the one where he had last seen the robbers; having reached which, they divided into two parties and moved some distance apart, and in this order had not .proceeded very far, when they espied the objects of their search, by -whom they were seen likewise at the same instant. The robbers tried to escape by running but before they could get beyond the reach of the hunters rifles Lewis was wounded by a ball,' and ono' of tho others killed, whilst the third escaped unharmed. Lewis was ' secured and carried to Bedford jail, there to await his trial, but afterwards made his escape and was pur sued, and 'whilst rowing himself across the West-branch of the Susquehanna in a canoe, was shot dead by one of his pursuers. . . " .While ia prison, Lewi3 stated that ho had concealed a large sum of money under a rock -Mhe specie in a vessel and the bauk bills in a bottle near a small stream on the west of the Allegheny mountain ; and after bis death dili gent search was made for. the treasure, by dif ferent persons and at different places but it is not known that it has ever been found, and the probability is that it had been removed by some of Lewis associates. ' : '" Had Lewis' mind been directed into the right channel and subjected to a proper .course of training, he- might have lived an honor to him self and his family and been useful in his day and generation ; but having a penchant for the romantic and lawless, where be could indulge his passions without restraint, he became a lienatcd from society, an outcast and a by word, and in' his, death wo have but another proof of tho truthfulness of the proverb that "tho way of the transgressor is bard." . -;- Asf orriciAi.; return of the' Spanish debt has just been published in Madrid.' Tfcejjjtala-' mount of indebtedness is 13,350,406,110 reals. Among the items is one of "inscriptions in favor of the United States, 12,000,000 reals." Society without children would be like the earth' without flowers, the sky without stars, tne neaven wwow Mgf. , n:. TIIE LIFE OF A SHOWMAN, 7 From the N.-Y. Sunday Leader, March, 16. P. T. Barnum, whoa few months ago was reputed to be worth, half a million of dollars, now comes before the Supreme Court, brought there by some of bis creditors, to , explain all about ... his property. He . btatcs that he now lives in lfiris city, that tho Museum, once his, and all its curiosities, have been sold for $2i, 000 j that he paid 12,000 for it fourteen years ago, and that now bo has not the least interest in it. He says that last June be 3ras worth $300,000. His property ho valued at $800,000, and he owed $300,000. About this period the Jeromes came along and wished him to en dorse their notes for $ 100,000. Barnum' did it, and repeated his endorsement on similar paper, as he supposed, to take up the former. . - Finally he ascertained that he had endorsed to tho amount of $161,000, and so . far as ho knows, there - may be a million of dollars of this paper out," as he often signed in blank for tho Jeromes to put in what amount they chose. Still Barnum don't consider that be has failed, as'ho says bis ' refusal to pay these "clock debts" of the Jerome's don't exactly consti tute a failure. . Ha' alleges that the holders of these obligations of his were the very persons who. induced him to become responsible for the Jeromes. . ; ' The splendid, paintings at Barnum's house at Iranistan, he 6ays he- sold for $2,000, tho' they co-it him $10,000. His present assets are Crystal Palace stock, which is not worth half as much as the skin of the. celebrated woolly horse once in his possession. . - Now, whoever has read Barnnm's biography written by himself, will consider it vsry strange that he did' not follow his own advice. Who that knows Barnum could believe that he would endorse the notes of a clock company to the extent of nearly every dollar he was worth in the world, according to his own esti mate of tho value of his property in June last. Ho says he owned property which he valued at $800,000, and it was mortgaged for about $300,000, which left him about $500,000. At this very time he endorsed notes for near half a million of dollars, without even carefully scrutinizing the responsibility of those whose paper he put bis nama to. He even mort gaged his property to raise $80,000 for the Je romes in December last. There may be a woolly horse in all this reputed failure of Bar num after all. The Jeromes did not get this $80,000. Barnum says he raised it in bonds on several States, counties and towns, but a friend of his just at this time had looked into tho affairs of the Jeromes, and told Barnum that they were bankrupt, and he was ruined. Barnum then sold these bonds, at a loss of $30,000, and took the money, he says, to pay his own debts. ' " There cannot be much sympathy for Bar num. Whoever has read his biography, from his own pen, must be satisfied that his moral principles were never strongly developed. His book, which he managed to sell in various countries of the globe, has disgraced the A- merican name. It is nothing but a history of the art of getting money under false preten ces ; and tho author, in a moral point of view, is no better than thousands who have suffered the penalties of the laws for such practices. The world is always better off withont such ge niuses as Barnum. No one pretends that he ever possessed talent in any honorable and dig nified employment, lie is a mere cunning showman, who would seize upon other men's ideas and apply them to the art of money ma king without proper remuneration even in a business point of view, j "Show me how you live, and where you live, and whero you get your means to live?" This was ene of the questions put to Barnum during his examination ; and he replied to it by say ing that he lived in this city, in Eighth street, and kept boarders, and bad no other means of support,' except some meat given to him by his son-in-law, in Connecticut, and some vege tables which grew on his farm last year. He said be Bad a gold watch and a bi east pin, worth some four or five hundred dollars, which be would produce, if required to do so. ne also casually remarked that he had twosuits of clothes and about twenty-five dollars in money. A Max of Bosks. Hero; is a curious fact for you. ' The flesh of a living man once grew into bone. It seems hard to believe, but I suppose it was so ; for in the musenm at Dub lin, Ireland, there is, or was, the skeleton of one Clavk, a native of the city of Cork, whom they call the Ossified Man, one of the greatest curiosities of nature. ' It is the carcass of "a man entirely ossified in his lifetime, living in that condition for several years. Those who knew him befoie this surprising alteration, af firm that he had been a man of great strength and agility ! lie felt the first symptoms of this surprising change some time' after a debauch ; by slow degrees, every part grew into a bony substance, except his skin, eyes and intestines; his joints settled in such a manner that no lig ament bad its proper operation ; be could not lie "down or rise up without assistance. -He had at last no bend in his body, yet when he was placed upright, like a. statue of stone, he could stand, but could not move iuthe least. His teeth were joined, and formed into one en tire bone $ therefore a hole was broken through them to convey liquid substance for his nour ishment. -The. toogu lost its use, and bis 6ight left him, some time before he tfxjiirtd- Closixo; Scesb or x LizaisLxrvur.. The Legislature of Nebraska Territory adjourned on tho- 25th, Fubruary, after repealing a law giving women tho right to vote, which they had passed the day beforo. - A letter from O maha City gives the following account pi their adjournment,: , , . , i . . "One member called for music, another for 'drinks all round j some shouted ego it boots,' go it,',such is death,'. 'let me go to tho (Gov ernor, and tell him he must not fool with us any longer ;' I move a committee be appoint ed to inquire after the dignity of the House ;' 'I move the gentleman from Otoe bo declared a brick ;' 'Mr. Speaker, will a game of poker bo in order ?' 'I move we tako a recess for fif teen minutes to drink I move the medical members be requested to take the pains (panes) from tho windows, and extract the Tooth of Time,' &c. " One member set .the clock going at railroad speed to bring tho hour of adjourn ment around. Members wcro.mixed up with outsiders inside the bar, some talking, some smoking, some walking, somo perched, on the tops of the desks and chairs, and everybody enjoying himself about as nature dictated. The'House had more the appearance of a pub lic bar room than a hall of legislation. -Members were called on for speeches. About midnight the Council sent in word they were ready to adjourn. .Resolutions com mending the clerks and officers of tho Uoase, down to fireman, wcro passed ;. but not a word was passed for the Speaker, whom a few mem bers took occasion to abuse in bitter and un becoming language. In tho midst of .confu sion, worse confounded, the. House adjourned. Wnt Satd. Tho Indian in bis native con dition, is no fool, as the following anecdote re lated by a Washington correspondent of the Baltimoro "Republican" attests : ' ' We met 'Col. Stambourg to-day 'in the ro tunda of the Capitol, aud while we were look ing at the carved representations over the door-ways of the rotunda, the veteran Indian agent told us that in 1830, with a delegation of tho Menominee Indians, he visited the Cap itol, and explained the nature and design of the stone groups in the rotunda, when the chief, "Grizzly Bear," turned to the eastern doorway, over which there is a representation of tho landing of the Pilgrims, and said, "there, Ingen give white man corn ;" and to tho north representing Pcnn's treaty, "there Ingen give um land ;""and to tbe West, where Pocahontas is seen saving tbe life of Captain Smith, "there Ingen save cm life" and, last ly, to the south, where the hardy pioneer, Dan iel Boone, is seen plunging his knife Into the breast of one red man, while his toot is placed on the dead body of another, '-and there, white man kill Ingen." ACokspiract Agaixst Me. Buchanan. A Washington correspondent of the New York Courier says; "It is understood that Gener al Pierce and Judge Douglas, or their mana ging friends, willopposo the nomination of Mr.. Euchanan, on the ground that he is not unmis takeably committed to the repeal of tho Mis souri Compromise, and that under the circum stances bis election would be a popularrebuke to them. This circumstance w ill diminish the chances of his nomination, and it is believed here, among the politicians of the classes I have named, that these two prominent aspi rants will combine .upon a Southern candi date, if neither of them shall be able to secure the nomination. In that event, the question w ill be found . reduced to a choice between Hunter and Rusk. Mr. Wise is a capital, al most irresistable stumper, and were tho strug gle confined to Virginia, would distance all competition. But bo cannot stump for the Presidency, and I predict that bis energy will be found no match for the luck of Mr.Hunter." SoMETnixo of a. Family. A correspondent of the Urbana Citizen writes from Bourbon county, Ky., about a family as follows : "The' old gentleman is a native of Maryland, and J? now in his 70th year; was brought to the State ofKy., when quite young, and has . raised his family in tho above county, consisting of six sons and three daughters." He then proceeded to describe tho family all of whom are six feet in height, the tallest being six feet 11 1 inches, and the lowest (a daughter), six feet 2 inches the aggregate height of tho whole of them, eleven in num ber, being .seventy feet. The father weighs 200 pounds, the mother 255, and the children from 150 to 296 pounds. Their aggregate weight is 2500 pounds. The writer adds :. . ; "The family are all living except the young est daughter, are all wealthy, and of the first families of Kentucky, I must add, that aere ral of the grand-children are over six and a half feet, and still growing.". . , A Sleighisg Partt. -Washington's birth day 22d February was celebrated by the in habitants of Madison'and Clinton counties, Connecticut, by the getting up of an old-fashioned sleighing party. Three hundred and fifty-three sleighs were ia the procession, con taining fiftoen hundred-passengers. -Trades and professions of different kind were repre sented, and flags were displayed at different points along the route. , Preceeding the. pro cession was a full-rigged steamer in. complete working order, blowing off steam as she went along. At sundown, a National salute of 13 guns announced the close of the festivities.. . HOW MINERAL COAL WAS MADE. Geology has proved that at one period thereT existed an enormously abundant land vegeta-r-tion, ihe'ritins or rubbish, of which, carried In to seas, and there sunk to tha bottom, and af terwards covered ocrr by eandand mud-beds, became the substance we recognize as coal. It may naturally excite surprise that the vege table remains should have so completely chang ed their apparent character, and become black. But this can -bo explained by chemistry; and part of the marvel becomes clear to the sim plest understanding, when we recall tho fami liar fact, that damp hay, thrown dost-ly into heap, gives out beat, and -becomes of a dark: color. When a vegetable mass is- excluded from the air, and- subjected fo great pressure' a bituminous fermentat ion is prodnced,and the result is the mineral coal, which is of various characters, according as the'aiass has been ori-a ginally Intermingled with saud, clay, and oth er earthy impurities. On account of the change effected by niineralization,.lt is difficult to de: tect in coal the traces of a vegetable' struc ture ; but these can be made clear in all except tho highly bituminous coking coal, by Cutting or polishiug it dow n into thin transparent sli ces, when, the microscope shows the fibre and cells very plainly. From distinct, isolated specimens, found in the sand stones amidst tho coal beds, we discover the plants of this eral They are almost all of simple, cellular struc ture, and such as exist with us in small forms, (horse tails, club mosses, and Jerns,) bat ad vanced to an enormous magnitude. Tho spe cies are long since extinct. ' .The vegetation is such as grows in clusters of tropical islands,' but it must have been the result of a high tem perature obtained otherwise than '.that "of tha tropical regions now is, for the coal strata are found in the temperate, and; even 'the polar regions. The conclusion, therefore, to which most geologists have arrived, is, that the earth originally an" incandescent,' or' highly heated" mass, gradually cooled down until Jo the car boniferous period it fostered a growth of ter restrial Vegetation all over its surface, to which the existing jungles of the tropics are mero barrenness in comparison.' Tbe high and'eni form temperature, combined" with a greater, proportion of carbonic acid gasa In the manu facture, could not only sustain a gigantic and prolific vegetation, but would also creat6 dtrsa vapor?, showers and ralas ; tiej cga:r. gi gantic rivers, piorHcr.l iuunditicn?, end del tas. Thus a'.l the conditions for oster.sire de posits cf wood ia estuaries, would arise frcsa this high temperature; and every circumstance connected with the coal measures points to such conditions.' ;' ' ' - - Potatoes Brrr Es vs. Seto Ejrrs. John Brown, of Long Island communicates the fol lowing to the Granito Farmer. , - .' . . "Several years ago I made some experi ments to satisfy myself concerning the dispu ted point as to which Is the best portion of a potato to plant in order to obtain the largest and best yield. The exact, result;, has been lost, and as I have often since heard and read assertions directly contrary to the conclusion which I then deduced, I resolved to repeat the experiments. Last spring I planted four rows of equal length, tide by sida, with two varieties of potatoes. . In one . row I planted, none, but the seed ends, so called, including about one-third of the potatoes, and in the next row I plauted the butt end of. the same potatoes. I had one row of seed ends and cae row of butt ends fa variety called' Peach. Blows. The yield of these four rows was as follows: Pint eyes, butt ends, 217 pounds; seed ends, 179 pounds ; Peach .blows, butt ends, 229 pounds; seed ends, 170 pounda.-r The potatoes raised from the butt ends were much larger than those from the seed ends, and appeared to be from a week to ten' day earlier.; This result corresponds with that' of my former experiment. , nad the whole field been planted with butt ends the yield would have been more than 500. bnshels to the 'acre. I also planted two rows next to tho above, la one of which I put only large, potatoes, bjf. a tuber in each bill, cut length-wise so as to divide tho eyes equally, and in. the other row I dropped only small potatoes, one in each hill. From the former. 1 dug 18i pounds, and front the bitter 131 pounds. , I should add' that the average yield of the field was about 180 pounds to tbe row; and that large.(not the very lar- gest) potatoes were used for seed cut length wise with a half fa tnrber in each hill." A Sailor'' was called upon the stand as a witness.- ' - --" 7V 'i -; "TTell, sir,' said the lawyer," "do yon- kno?r the plaintiff" and defendant t" ' 1-. - "I don't knoi tte drift ' of them words, answered the sailor. . I : - : - - x . ! -. "What; not know the meaniag of plaintiff and defendant V continued the lawyei'i a pret ty fellow you are to come here a witness; Can yon tell me where on board the ship it waa that this man struck the other one V "Abaft the bianicle," aaid the sailor.. J i 't - "Abaft the binnicle ? what do you mean by that V asked the lawyer. " ' ' ' ' -" '"A pretty fellow you," responded the sailor," "to come here as lawyer, and don't know what: abaft the binnacle means." r - -'' - -'" ' A wag says he knows only one thing better, than love, and that ia to be thrown into a pond of mush and milk, with, tbe privilege of estfee your way. ashore- ,s t -, .