J BY S. B. ROW. CLEARFIELD, PA, "WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1857. VOL. L-HO. 9. "Sms JiLNG" ON TIIE STREET. The following lines, very appropriate just now, r from the Sew York Evening Post. . Rmhing 'round the corners, Chasing every friend, Plunging into banks Nothing there to lend Piteously begging Of every man yon meet; Bless me ! this is pleasant, '"thinning" on the street Merchants very short, Kunning neck and neckt Want to keep a' going, 1 Praying for a check ; Jalblcri in stocks. Blue as bine can be, Evidently wishing They new -fancy free. All our splendid railroads Got such dreadful knocks, Twenty thousand Balls Couldn't miss their stocks ; Many of the Bears, In the trouble sharing, . Xow begin to feol Thoyve been over-Bearing. lticky speculators Tumbling with the shock, Never mind stopping More than any clock ; Still they give big dinners. F'coke ard drink and sup, Going all the better i'or a windiag-np. Banking institutions. Companies of "trust," With other people's money, Go off oc a. "bust;" Houses of long standing Crumbling in a night With so many "smashes," Xo wonder money's tight. Gentlemen of Sloans Having lots to spend Save a little sympathy, ' Nothing have to lend ; Gentlemen in want Willing to pay double Find they can borrow Nothing now but trouble. Half our mon of business Wanting an extension. While nearly all the others Contemplate suspension ; Many of them, though. Don't appear to drend it ; - Brry cent they owe is so much to thoir credit. Brokers are all brenktng, Credit all is cracked, Women all expanding As the banks contract. Panic still increasing M'hcre will the trouble end. While a!! hands want to borrow, And nobody oan lend ? Banning 'round the corners. Trying every source ; Asking at the banks Nothing there, of course ; ileney getting tighter, Misery complete Blexs me ! this is pleasant, "Shinning" on the street. A MOTHER'S LOVE. CHAPTER I. THE PRISONER. Descending down seven stone steps, crown ed with an iron door, tho heavy footsteps of two men, with a clank of iron chain between them, were beard. Daylight shed its last swet beam on that iron door, and ten long years roust pass ere it could bestow another on one of those who walked there then. But not tho sunlight parting sadly with him at that door for it grew faint to death then nor the cold cheer of wiudowless granite, the dull light of tho lantern, nor the savage face, (more sav age in that light) of his conductor, sent any thrill to the young felon's heart, or touched it with one new emotion. Anger was in his scornful face, wrath in his proud heart, wrath in his gestures and on his blasphemous tongue. Growl, young tiger ! We'll give you a nest of granite, and a steel collar and a bed, where your tongue may tire before it gets an answer I A gnash of his teeth was the young man's on ly an?ver to the mocking of bis grim guardian. "He be cub snarl and gibber ! I owe you a little, top o'the law's account; and now ye'er here, see if I don't quit tho score !" and the brutal keeper gave the irons a wrench on the wrist of bis prisoner, that made him gnash Lis teeth for pain. Clank, clank, tramp, tramp, along a narrow, dark passage, flanked uto cither hand by narrow cells with grated o peoings into the dismal hall, the two proceed ed. Dimly the haggard faces of old criminals showed through the gratings, some with eager looks, half-hopeful, till the clank of irons told ttem that the unwontod light came to lead a nother victim into, not out of that foul place ; and some, with unquenched hate still glaring iu their eyes. Long, shrivelled arms thrust out through the bars, now writhed with scornful, hateful gestures; now stretched supplicantly to the passers, and a low chuckle of delight out of tfie dark that showed no form or feature, came from ono cell, as the clank of chains went by a flendisj triumph" from the ''Murderer's Grave" s. cell devoted to the last hours of i'be cos4ned-for there a lost wretch greet ed thus each neww as he passed. At the end of this bjack passage huge door, whose great bolt, sunk n tFlgl beds on 'thVfour sides thst bounded it, glided back, and let them pass ; and here, as the gate fell to with a sullen clang, the keeper paused. Looking Into a ceU on the right, to which a current ol air, fresh and- pure, and a little li.hi. came from a deep windo high np out pi reach, the jailor shook bj head, muttering to himself, "No, no, that.' too extravagant s a tnnnMt ha shall KO farther." A f.w ata more brought them fo a djungeflq, no kind beam had ever found its way , and no sweet breath conld come a low, cold, daaip cell,' with grated opening, twiee as deep as it was broad, where food could only be taken piecemeal through the bars, the very turnkey set not his foot there in bis rounds. The cell had long been vacant, and would have remained so now, but for the spite of the official mon arch of this cheerless realm ; for but a little resistance to the chain that was being fastened on his bands, the prisoner gained that dark ruler's displeasure,wbich was vented by thrust ing him into this den of night. Mockingly the turnkey thrust the young man in, and before loosing his chains from the prisoner's limbs, lie raised the lantern to his face, with a black grin, as if it were a joy to gloat over a fellow being's misery. But he saw something there in the calmness of stern and horrible purpose that made his own dark features ghastly. A rattle of the chain as it fell from lis hands told of his ter ror another, as it arose with the two arms Of the desperate youth, and fell with a crash upon the coward's shoulder, told what cause he had to fear ! The blow fell not on his brain, only because he shrank from it; and before the shackled prisoner could lift his irons for another, the wretch was past his reach ; the door was thrown between them, and the courageous officer of the State fired a pistol shot at random through the grating, and fled, careless of what might have been the result, and determined to tame by starvation the spirit he provoked by brutal ity, t . The shot had no effect but to fill with stifling sulphur the narrow cell, and to wting an oath with a cry of regret that his body had not been in its path, from the frantic prisoner. He sunk where he stood, for in the darkness nothing was discernible; and clenching his fetters with his hands, he cursed aloud, and howled till his voice grew weak ; then he drop ped his head upon bis knees and muttered to himself. One near him could have beard such words as these : "Ten years ! O, God ! Ten years of darkness, and stone and iron 1 Ten years here I Forgery ! The curse of the with ered and heart-scalded light on the wretch who first invented traffic ! and doubly Lot on him who made words stand for things, and an ink-blot a horrible significance! Forgery! they lie ! 1 only wrote the name of my em ployer, as I had done an hundred time before; and only that I wrote it on my own account, and not his. I must take this .'" His chains rattled with his anger. "It is much," be con tinued, that I should counterfeit a petty scrawl, a thing of their invention who use it ; but the lying wretches whose whole life is a counterfeit of honor and truth, and God 's hand writing, law fit tool for such sanctioned has no terrors for them ! To counterfeit a smile and the warm pressure of friendship, when the whole heart is black and icy cold, is ths daily lie of cursed society, and neither God's law nor man's revenge has any retribution. Bonds of dues owed from man to man arc sacred, and surrounded with terrors ; but tho hypocrite's prayer and the sycophant's smile, and all the forms and scemings which are bouds on human hearts, may pass current as the winds, and none may say them nay." Ah, wretched youth, hush ! Those stones there in the black night may have ears, and thou hast mingled witli thy evil words enough of truth, bitter and bitterly said for wrath's sake, to have doomed thee at once to a darker fate than thine, though thou hadst been white from all olTence, and only inspired by honest good-will and integrity. Well," said the forlorn youth, "let the ac cursed world triumph ! I did forge a name ; but the base fawning of humanity the craven bow of servility to law or custom I will not forge or pass. Nay, curse on the law and the law's minions I can bear ! Curse the day that laughs over me it cannot come here to laugh! Curse man and beast, and the free air, and all that would mock me, but for my dungeon for tress cannot! Curse the friend who mined me, the grave fools who would have saved me, the beggary that made me seek wealth, and the fortune that, cursed me with its poison influ ence ! Nay, curse all that is myself and all that know me the father who begat me, and the moth" A hot hand, smiting on his very brain and heart, struck dumb the wretch before his lips could fashion the horrible imprecation. A dew-drop, sweated from his cold cell, struck on his check with a rebuke that it should be dry at the memory of his mother, and a pale blue light, a dim phosphorescence from the damp filth of his unused cell, flutter ed before him, as if to hint to the guilty youth how closely he treads upon the brink of hell. Who, in whatever place he may be, dares to curse bis mother. The youth fell mute on his dungeon floor, and a tender voice the fare well voice of his mother seemed to sound in his ears as it had sounded when he left their poor home for the great city : "And now Wil lie, my boy, shun wicked company ; and if evil suggestions come, remember your poor old mother. God bless you, Willie ! Good bye." lie saw her lift her spectacles to wipe off a tear from her old eyes' as she turned back to her wheel, while he, full of young hope and promise, went forth into the world to seek his fortune. chajtkr JhXu search. a woman, leaning on. a staff and covered with . ard cloak-an old, gray.witbered woman I -old in years and very old in heart-rapped at the keeper's door, in the Walnut Street Pris on, in the "City of Brotherly Love." A gruff voice bade her in, but the old palsied, hand only knocked again when it strove to lift the latch. "Why can't you come in, and not stand there fumbling and numbling f " At last the latch rose, and the poor woman, not unused to snch rudo greeting, came for ward. The jailor, half abashed, muttered some thing about "Didn't know 'twas a woman men bother me too much company" offer ing at once a wound and an apology in his mo rose way. "Don't mind me, sir," said the poor woman, "I'm a poor old creature that has looked in a'most all the dark places that man has made for his brother, sir a looking for my poor boy; God bless him! Can you tell me, for the love of God and pity of a poor creature like me, if my boy is in this prison V "Is the old woman a fool or mad," mutter ed the man of office. Kicking a chair towards the woman as he spoke, he growled, from habit rather than a will to growl "There's boys enough here ; how should I know." 'To be sure, dear me, you could'nt know my poor Willie, and it's likely he's changed. But, conld you tell me If there's a lad here named William Byron or rather, he was a lad ten years ago, when he left nie, and since I hear, he lias changed his name, poor boy, as he did his nature." The prison-keeper run bis eye over a list of commitments, till he heard the last words of the bewildered woman. "Why, bless me, did you come here to both er me T If you don't know where your boy is who appears to be an 'old boy' how should I know f" The weak and wasted old woman dropped into a chair from exhaustion and misery, and, with a look of sincere deprecation, which nei ther her faultering nor his rudeness demanded, she said, "I beg your pardon, sir : God knows 1 would never have come but for the love of my poor boy." "But what do you know about him V asked the jailor, in a subdued tone. "Ten years ago, sir, he was as good a lad as ever need look at the only help of his old mother, for I was old then, sir ; and it is mis ery, m or o than years, that makes me so much older now. If there was any fault, sir, it was that he felt too sharply the bite of poverty yand the scorn which it will sometimes meet, un justly ; and I fear that was his hurt." "And he's in prison, eh ?" "Yes, sir, to the shame of my old grey hairs ; but I'll tell you what I know, though it breaks my heart. Ten years ago I sent him to the city to try his luck in business; and who he served I can't tell, for he never wrote the name to mc, nor the busircss ; tho dear child was waiting to surprise me. "But at last I heard no more from him, and thought he must have died. Searching all the papers I could find, I tried to get a word of him, though it were a bad word. I sold the dear boy's clothes, and advertised him, only I saved the littlo 'slip' he had when he was a ba by. I couldn't bear to part with all, and that was full of dear memories." And for a moment the grief that made her garrulous, melted to tears, and made her dumb. The jailor was silent, and looked sour,which was a sign that he was touched. His hard and flinty heart was softened at the recital of a tale of sorrow from a mother's lips, who had suffered many severe trials while in search of a long lost son. She continued: "For all the little I could do, I could get no trace of him, till somebody once sent me a paper with a passage marked in the dying speech of a murderer, who was hanged in New Orleans. . I have it yet. O, dear ! its all the trace I have of him, my poor, dear Willie !" She drew from her pocket a little bit of lea ther, loldod and tear-stained, and opening it, a fragment of a newspaper was shown pasted on the inside. "Here, sir, I have carried it long, and the tears I shed have dimmed it some, and my eyes, too." From the dying speech of the murdcrer,the jailor spelled out starameringly these words : "And if my dying words can never reach him, let them warn the last of my young com panions in crime, before it is too late the bright Will Byron have reached the last step; Ac has reached only the felon's dun geon. When he shall again see the light, I shall have been ten years' in " The rest was obliterated. "Ah !" groaned the poor unfortunate, heart stricken mother, "that was my poor boy my poor Willie and eight of these ten terrible years have I spent in seeking from prison to prison for him. Now, tell me, for the love of God, if he is here !" "I guess not, inarm ; I don't see his name in the file." He mumbled over to him self a list of names, John Jones, June 7tb, five years for barn burning ; James Smith, alias Simpson, July 1st, two years for house-breaking," and on through the year all the commitments of the eight years from the dat.e of his present speaking. No Willie Byron there, though the mother listened with so much anxiety and desire to catch his name in that dark list, as once she would to bavo heard his fame. . Bending forward to take every muttered tone in her ears, the absence of the one she sought fell on her heart like a want. She begged the keeper to let her go through the prison "It may be he has changed his namo, and will know the voice of his poor old mother." The man could not refuse, rough-hearted as he was, and soon bis lantern was lighted, and, taking a huge bunch of keys from an iron safe, proceeded to lead the way. The aged mother noticed her companion no longer; her old eyes glistened, be r step was not now so faltering, as she followed on with hope in her heart, though often so sorely dis appointed. "O, Willie !" she cried, as she entered a mong the cells, "will you hear the voice of your poor mother, and speak to me, if you are here V So from cell to cell she went, uttering with tremendous voice, "Willie Byron ! are you here ? You needn't shame to be known. The world may say what it will, but your mother loves you still." Old men wept to hear her; the icy fountain of their tears burst, and found vent through the head pumps, as the sailor says. Young men hid their heads to think of their own mothers, forsaken and left to shame and sorrow. But no answer came to give her heart its long and sole desire. Through all the passes of the prison she went, all that the light of day could visit ; and now the iron door of the great dungeon lets them in. She shuddered as the clanging door fell back, to think it possible to find her dar ling there. The lantern was raised to the grates, as each prisoner was called forward to receive the scrutiny of those tear-wet eyes. "O Willie, Willie Byron, are you here ? my dear boy, are you here in this dark place 1 If you hear me, Willie, it's your poor old mother that speaks, and you'll answer mc for the mem ory of the time when yoa were a little child. O, Willie Byron, are you here 1 Speak for the love of your old mother, who loves you, whatsoever you have done ; let me see you once more ! O God, let me see him once be fore I dio !" " She turned from disappointment after disap pointment, her wrinkled face to heaven, and supplicated God to help her. The hard, rough keeper, stood fixed with wonder, and a touch of the human seemed to vibrate in his bosom, for be stood sullenly still and scowled, without fixing his eyes anywhere, or moving them sure mark that such a na ture has been humanly stirred. He suffered the lantern to be taken from his hand by the poor mother, whose strange words thrilled the darkest lairs of crime, and started tears where they would never flow but in the dark. Not a doomed felon in that blackest cave of penalty that mocked ber, and, alas ! not one that an swercdtocr darling's name. Another blank in the long annals of her aw ful search ; and the poor mother, struck by another blow, went farther into the open air, to wander whither f CHAPTER III. TUE LOST FOCXD. Down seven stone steps, topped by that iron door which more than eight years ago received a form it had not let pass out, two persons trod ; the one a kind, good hearted man, who had superseded the cruel keeper of former times in his office ; the other, an aged woman lean ing on his arm. "The man you seek, perhaps, is this way," said the attentive guide. "God bless you, sir. I shall be happy if it proves so, for I came to this very door near seven years ago, and the man who could not done less to a robber, wouldn't let me in here, and many and many a mile have I walked, by the help of kind chairity, only to come back to this place again, and now I am just ready to die if my hope fails here." The prisoners attracted by tho light, came forward to their windows, and even among the deepest sunk in crime, there shone some hu man meaning in the glances they bestowed upon their keeper, for he had sought by kind ness to undo tho wrongs which hate and the world's scorn with their own dark passions had done to them. "Far ahead is a prisoner. I could wish, if you will find your son, it were he. When I came here, there was in the foulest dungeon of the prison, a hard, sour man, bitterly taunt ing every one to whom he was allowed to speak. The former keeper had abused him beyond the measure of his common abuse, andfa prond spirit that would not break, only turned from vain revenge to sullen bate. I went into his cell to take his chains off, which bad been left on him without warrant, and though I spoke with kindness, he trusted me not, but struck me with the manacles from which I had freed him, a very cruel blow. I told him I should not use my privilege to whip and chain bim for it, as the law allowed, and for all private wrongs he had my forgiveness. lie was silent and savage, and for all my notice, remained so for days. At last I wrung a reply from him. I asked him to be a man, for he was yet to go among men. - "A butt tor their vile mirth," . he answered bitterly. The ice was broken, and I continued : "But conquer your stained name, and win a good one by a strict Tfe, which can be yours thro' a trust in God." "In whose just providence," ho said, "huge crime walks unrebuked, while little sins are avenged sevenfold." "I appealed to every memory, hope, or as piration that I believed yet lurked or ever liv ed in his bosom. They only awoke new to kens of despair, and utter hardness, but at last a thought came to me, and I said, 'Young friend, God keep me and you, as I pity you ; but I shudder to think your fate is not the worst your act may have produced. It may be you have a mother, whose trembling frame hangs over the grave, heavy with agony for a loved son in prison and in shame.' " " "God reward you tuat you said it, whoever he was," said the poor mother, who, beguiled by her interest in the prisoner, had been led into a vacant cell to hear the story, uncon scious of the pause, though eager to test ber last hope. The jailor continued : "The poor youth lift ed his pale hands, and smote .bis breast, ex claiming : 'O, forbear, forbear my mother, O, my mother!' and I turned from the sight of his tears to hide my own. That day he con sented to let me move him into anothers cell, where a little sunlight, a little fresh air, and the waving of green grass about the dungeon window, might le some solace to imprison ment. Since then he has been a growing and generous spirit. Contrite and humble, yet not meanly crouching. Ceasing to accuse man kind or himself bitterly, he waits in patience for the time of his release, no never told his name. It is not for you to ask. But a few steps now," be said, for they bad resumed their walk, "will bring you to his cell." The great door yielded, as its fourfold, triple bolts fell back. A little stream of light ponred across their path from a cell within. The great door clos ed again with a jar, the cell was opened, and the dimmed eyes of the grief-bowed .and age bent woman, fell upon a pale, sad-faced young man of about thirty, who lifted his eyes with a faint smile as the keeper of the prison en tered, but turned with an instant's glance of inquiring wonder on the changed form before him. It was but for an instant. The mother spoke : "Willie, my boy, is it you T" "My mother!" The jailor retreated, leavfng mother and son locked in each other's arms. Ask not of mc how passed the next hour in that lone cell.how memory flooded all tho past with tears, bow the long heaviness of eight distressful years of pilgrimage rolled in a moment from that mo ther's heart, and left no thought there of the erring, and the lost, but only one deep glow ing, overwhelming sense of gratitude and joy in the penitent found, the darling of that poor old heart so long wearied, now so blest ! That hour passed, and left no cloud between them ; and short as it was, it sufficed the jail or to do some business in, for when be came back he brought the Governor in person to the cell, with a full pardon iu his hand, if he should find the prisoner worthy; and before an other half hour Willie Byron and his happy mother were on their way home again, where the kind charities of the good had given her the means to retreat, and see her son a pros perous farmer in the neighborhood, before she closed her satisfied eyes in death. A Sea Devil. A sea devil was caught on the coast of England recently, which, says the Greenock Advertiser, is anything but cap tivating. It is flat ; four feet eight inches in length ; two feet six inches in breadth ; its mouthy in which there is a single row of can dated sharp teeth, measures 12 inches hori zontal, and, when its jaws are fully opened, it measures betwixt the lower and upper 16 inches; on its belly, near the lower part of the head, are two hands, having five fingers on each distinctly exhibited, and webbed. It has also two anterior fins, and two lateral bags cf great capacity, with ono of a triangu lar form on the belly. It weighs about eighty pounds. It is altogether a formidable and strange looking fish, and the name by which it is known is not inappropriate. K7"SheriffSrnith, of Peoria county, Illinois, started on Saturday night, with five prisoners for Alton, and when two miles above Be-ds-town, Archie McDonald, a Scotchman by birth and a noted burglar, and one Houston, managed while in bed, about 10 o'clock in the night, to sever the chain which united them, and they both sprang overboard while the officer started to get them a drink of water. It was general ly supposed they were drowned. KFThe State laws require the New Orleans banks to keep an amount of specie on band e qual to one-third of their liabilities. The pen alty for falling below this is $100 on each di rector, for every day that the bank is "out of line" a pretty effectual bar to expansion. "Earthquakes axd Gold. Gold countries seem to be asfull of earthquakes as of precious metals. New mines have been discovered in California, and another earthquake hasvisited that country. IIoset Bees. A practised aparian recom mends that bees should be covered np in the winter, giving a small vent for the air. They live on one-third less food by so doing. The MAsrrACTCRX or Molasses from Scoab. Cask. The Cincinnati Gazette baa a commu nication from a Warren county agriculturist who gives some straightforward practicable) ideas upon the culture of sugar cane and the manufacture of syrup. lie says s v "On our farm In Warren county we planted an acre of sugar cane the last week in May. It grew finely tall and plump. We 1st tbo stalks become ripe, seeds well matured and brown ripe, for the better matured and ripen ed stalks all the better even a frost or two thrown in will make the juice the sweeter and more of it. We then cut them ; cnt the tops and stripped the blades off we then ground them in a common cider mill, placing the grinding apparatus as near together as possi ble. Running through a couple of times, took out all the juice a full pint to the stalk on an average. We then strained the juice cleverly, placed it in kettles, and commenced the boiling operation. We put into each thirty gallons, on beginning to boil, a table spoonful of officinal lime water, (lime and wa ter mixed will do) adding the same occasion ally, and skimming off the green scum when ever it arose. About four tablespoonfuls of lime water to the thirty gallons is sufficient, though it is better too much than not enough. Going on in this way for eight or ten hoars, we bad pure, beautiful and finely tasted mo lasses. It is no more difficult to make syrup from the sugar cane than to make it from th maple tree the one being just as simple as the other. Two or three strainings, proper attention to skimming, well boiling, the prop er addition of lime water to neutralize tba acid, and we have just as good molasses, bet tcr than what we now pay one dollar a gallon for." m. w Two gentlemen residing in Wabash county, Illinois, write to the Chicago Press, Oct. 2d, that they are making a barrel of superior Sor ghum molasses daily, and shall continue to do so until cold weather. They also say that the fodder saved will pay the expense of raising the cane. They have twenty acres of the cane, and the yield will be about one Lnndred gallons to the acre, of syrup superior to Lou isiana. . Tue British; East Isoia Compart Accor ding to recent and authentic documents, this company now rules, directly or indirectly, an empire of 500,000 square miles, with a popu lation of more than 160,000,000. The nominal money capital of the company is set down at $80,000,000,and its anual revenues are estima ted at $ 135,000,000. The salaries of the prin cipal officers are: Governor General, $125, 000 perquisites, $200,000 ; Members of Govt ernor's Council, $48,000; Bishops, $12,000 1 $15,000 ; Law Judge, (30 in number,) $15,000 . Collectors and Magistrates, (45 in number,) from S 6,000 to $IG,000. In striking contrast with these graet salaries is the pay of the native soldiers, being eleven cents per day. . The standing military force of this powerful company is about three hundred thousand men, European and natives the former the flower of the British army. The department of the topographical engineers is remarkable for ita skill and efficiency, and has done much for the material development of the country. Railroads completed and in construction, now tpan the whole extent of the empire, from Car natic to tho Himalayas, opening a brilliant prospect for the agriculturist at no distant future. There are also in operation at tho present time more than four thousand miles of the magnetic telegraph, with which con nection will soon be made along the sontheru coast of Arabia, and through Egypt, subraar-i ining the Red Sea, with the Mediterranean lines, thus communicating directly with tho wholo of the western world. 'There is special interest attached to this company, at this mo ment, growing out of the terrible re be Hi 03 now fearfully progressing in India, for upon tho company devolves the momentous duty of stopping the progress ol the insurrection, and the heavy responsiblity of its consequences. 7 Close Gcessixo. Some time ago, the edi tors of the Mobile Tribune offered a handsome silver service, worth $300, to the person who could make the bet guess as to the amount of the cotton crop of 1856-7. W. B. Hamil ton, of Mobile, estimated 2,939,537 bales. The total crop is 2,939,515 bales; the estimate being only 22 bales above the actual receipts. The Capitol at Wasuiscto.v is to be a mag nificent structure when completed. The old buildings cost $3,000,000, and it is estimated that fhe extension will cost 7,000,000 more. $1,500,000 is to be expended on the new dome. It will be a work of great architectural beauty. Patent Office. The newly appointed Ex aminers are reported being very liberal In their views towards inventors, and will giro them the benefit of .y doubts that may arise in the examination of their cases. This will be good news for inventors. Coal Mixes. A large party of men bav commenced to work theSan Diego coal mines. It is thought that in a short time these mines will yield a better quality of anthracite coa" than is now sent to California from Pennsyl vania and New York. ' What is stronger in death than In life f An old yoilow-kgged ben. If you don't beliavo it, try to dissect one after roasting. - 3 a .1 r : i