u s . t ( ; -. i f i J BY S. B. EOV. CLEARFIELD, PA., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1858. VOL. 5.-JTO. 9. vav w i t j t uu For tho Raftsman's Journal. 'A THANKSGIVING HYMN FOE 1858. BT LOGAN. "O givs thanks nnto the Lord, for ho is good ; - for hi mercy endureth forever." Pa. 106 : 1. "Vfm thnk thce.O Lord! with the heart and the voice, long as we live we'll giro thanks and rejoice. Thy mercies are groat, and forever endure: As swst is thy word as thy promise is sure. W thnk lho, 0 Lord '. for the gift of thy son ; For thecros he endured; for the crown he hath won; For the work he bath finished our bliss to secure ; For the heaven ho purchased, so holy and pure. And O ! for thy spirit so freely bestowed, We thank thee, we bless thco.our Father and God, 1'by spirit with comfort and light shall iuipurt The image of Christ to the contrite in heart. "rVo tliAi.k thee. O Lord ! for thy faTor and Jove ; And cv'ry good gift that comes down from above ; We thank thee for sunshine, we thank thee fur rain, We th.tnk thee for yellow fields waving with grain. We thank thee forfriends.andwe thank thee for foes; We thank thee for pleasure?; we thank thee for woes; We thank thee for hunger ; wo thank thee for food ; M e thank thee for making all work for our good. We thank thee for raiment, a shelter, and home, And all its dear joys that we never need roam ; And for thy rich grace, all so boundless and free. Thru' which all thy goodness still binds us to thee.; Thou healest the sick, thou dort pardon our sin; Thou keenest us when we go out and come in ; When weary and faint thou art ever our stay ; And the light of thy face drives our darkness away. WHEN GEORGE TIHUD WAS KING. In tho second volume just published of Jti. Massey 's well-planned History of England during the reign of George the Third, there ia a chapter upon English manners in the young days of that king which brings together very cleverly a good many interesting details, and which we must needs rifle of some of its contents. The judicious critic will say that the chapter is not fair, that it tells all the evil ot this portion of our good old times, and omit compensating details. Very true so be it. The authors reply to the judicious critic doubtless would Ik-, that he tells of no exceptional misdeeds or short-comings: lie tells of what our forefathers did as a commu nity. A terriblti pictnre of our own day might 15 drawn front the criminal reports, and if Mr. iiassey's account of the early days of George the Third came from such sources, we certain ly could match it in the year one thousand igl:t hundred and fifty-eight. But the con trast is fairly provoked, and it comes strongly in aid of our old doctrine, that bad as society may be now, it has been worse and is becom ing better : that our duty is not to deplore tho past, but to apply all energy to the securing of a noble future. Great scandal is caused tov-a-days in the church by excess of zeal. But, in the early days of George the Third, scandal arose from rxcess of infidelity. The supple family parson with his bottle and his pack of cards the Rev. Mr. Sampson, w hose acquaintance we are now making in Mr. Thackeray's Virginians be longs to the past of which we speak. Family livings still exist ; bnt they are not given to secure bread to tint family fool, to the disrep utable de nondant of a dissolute patron, to the son of a jobbing attorney in part payment for service dune, or to clients found in the worst company. The greater proportion of the liv iiigwerc, in the time of which we speak, thus tilled. Of the remainder, a large part were in the hands of gentlemen indeed, but of gentle men who frequented fashionable assemblies, naunteri-d at watering-places, or haunted the levees of great men. A clergyman who did not chase the fox, was commonly a hunter for preferment; and, with that view, would accom pany the young heir on the grand tour, nom inally as a preceptor, really as a servile com panion. Or he would write pamphlets and par agraphs for his employer, give his clerical in Huenco in his own parish at elections, even be come the distributor of briles. Such men ob tained stalls, deaneries and bishoprics; and, by their morals, cast discredit on the church. All this lay at the root of that inditlerenco to religion which pervaded 'good" society. Re ligions observances were openly derided, and mo man who dreaded ridicule would venture, an polite company, to show any respect lor nscred things. State patronage was in the king's hands; rid tho royal power even perhaps the Pro testant succession was maintained only by the use or abuse of it. Sir Robert Walpole was'the first uho systematically carried on the Icing's government by means of parliamentary corruption. He troubled hirosell little writes Mr. Massey about any niceties or intricacies of management, but went straight to the point, lie bought the member with a place ; or, if he only wanted a vote, he bought it with money taken from the secret-service fund. The Duke ot Newcastle extended and organised the svetetn so successfully, that by its opera tion alone, in the absence of every other qual ification for power, he became, for somo years, the dictator of the administration. His plan was to buy up the small constituencies. At one time he was said to have farmed, in this manner, one third of tho House of Commons. ' Tho beau of the time of Anne and of the Hanover succession was painted and perfumed like a woman. He took a woman's time over his toilet, wore silks, brocades, lace, embroid ery, and jewels. He seldom stirred abroad on ftw. if!.t for a turn in the Mall ; and, if he Jiad only to cross tho street from bis lodging to a tavern, he was conveyed in a chair- His time, away from home, wsi spent in gallantry and gaming. He read plays, novels, lampoons and tracts in ridiculo of religion, and con demned educated men as prigs ami pedants. 'The men of fashion who were men of wit, however high their ambition, usually looked low for their pleasure. When vindictive ene mies sought for whatever charges could dis credit Sir Robert Walpole, not a voice nrged against the minister the grossncss of his con versation and tho periodical debaucheries ot Houghton, which were to the whole country matters of talk, but not of censure. Tbey be longed to the life of the day. Of three men who were leading ministers during the early part of the reign of George the Third, two, Lord Sandwich and Sir Francis Daabwood the one successively Secretary of State and First Lord of the Admiralty, the ptber Chan cellor of the Exchequer were the most noto riously profligate men of the day. Tbey were the founders of the Franciscan Club, which, in the ruins f Medrnenhani Abbey, scoffed at the sacred things of hearth and altar. In those days ministers of state held daily leTeea, at which bishops and priests, jobbing tnecbers cf parliaaiaat, raayers who had boroughs to sell, agents, pamphleteers, coffee house politicians were accustomed to attend, flocking about the man who possessed power and patronage, deserting him as he lost influ ence, ever in search of notice from the man in whose courts it seemed to them most profi table to be time-servers and sycophants. The mansion of the Duke of .Newcastle in Lincoln's Inn Fields was the most extensive mart of pat ronage ever opened in this country, and it was thronged with clients. When this duke fell, after a dictatorship of fifteen years, tho king himself assymod the keeping of the great source of corruption ; his Majesty's own levees were thrown open, and the saloons of minis ters were througed'nu more. We have referred to tho gaming and we re turn to that. It was the great vice ofEng-, land during a large part of the eighteenth cen tury. Cards, dice, and betting engaged peo ple of all ranks and ages learned or unlearn ed man or woman. . Whist required too much thought, the gambler also could not intoxicate himself with it rapidly enough. Brag, crimp, basset, ombre, hazard, commerce, loo, spadillo could be played quickly without brawns. The ordinary stakes were high. At one of the pro prietary cUlbWhitc's. Brookes's, Boodle's institnteTdlS evade the statue ngaiust gaming-houses, tlje lowest stake was fifty pounds, and it was a common thing for a gentleman to lose or win ten thousand pounds in an evening. Sometimes a :who!e fortune was lost at a sit ting. Every fashionable assembly was a gam ing bouse. Large balls and routs had not yet come into vogue. A ball seldom consisted of more than ten or twelve couples. When a lady received company, card-tables were pro vided for all the guests, and even when there wasdancjng, cards formed the principal part of the entertainment. Ladies often contract ed debts of honor to fine geutlemen larger than they could pay, larger than they could venture toconl'css to a father or a husband. All this tended to evil. Few women were well taught. In town, levity was the fashion. In the days of Queen Anne, the' daughter of a country gentleman was bred as a cook ; and, that she might do her duty as a "hostess, often received lessons from a carving-nmster. If she married in the country, she might get a husband with the graces of a publican who would press friends to drink away their reasons as urgently as she was bound, if possible, to make them cat to absolute repletion. She probably became the mistress of a hall containing no literature be yond a cookery-book, and a filthy book of drinking-songs the Justice of the Fcac a book of sports and a theological tract or two. The country town, if not of the first class, depended for its supply of literature solely on the occasional visits of a hawker or a travel ling agentof some distant house of business. The state bf " the roads during a great part of the year nindo visiting impossible. Agricul ture was still represented by patches of culti vation, seep at intervals between the swamps and wastes yiat formed the pervading charac ter of the "landscape. Neat country villas with trim lawns, and well-kept walks, shrub leries furnished from all regions of earth, and bright conservatories did not then exist; even a common flower garden was not a usual ap pendage to the house of a gentleman qualified to be kin? of the shire. The house, though substantial was rarely clean, and had, under its window not the jessamine and roses, but the stable and the kennel. No wonder that people who had means flocked out of the coun try into London, and, if they did not stay there carried London fashions home. In the early days of George the Third there were still to be found country gentlemen of the old tyfcii but, commonly, the country lady had received some polish iu the metropolis, and took hef daughters for tho like benefit to pend a winter in London or a season at B tli, after theVyame home from the boarding school. jt.ondon liad grown, and roads into it had thriven, so that, about a hundred years ago, a writer had to speak with wonder of the new town lately sprung up from Piccadilly to Ty burn Road now Oxford Street as covering an area larger than the cities of Bristol, Exeter, and York put together. Up to the middle of the last century, gam ing remained the fashionable entertainment; but the bigh play of the clubs then made of it a pursuit too serious for mixed society. Other diversions were invented, and numerous places of amusement opened in London and the suburbs. The fashionable dinner hour was three or four. Tho eveniug began at seven. Tho theatre, a card-drum, a ball and an occa sional masquerade, no longer sufficed for the crowd ot pleasure-seekers that was flocking ev ery year into London. Ranelagh, Vauxhall, Mrs. Cornleys's, and the Fantheon, therefore, became" fashionable places of resort. Ranelagh supplied, nt Chelsea, spacious as-8erubly-iooms with a fine band. The large a rea of the." building was thronged asa pro menade, made sonic what select by" the price' of admission. There were boxes opening to the garden for those who desired more strictly select society. To Rauelagh, visitors repaired to see the world of London, and dignified cler gymen who did not venture into other public assemblies, saw nothing objectionable in its rotunda. Vauxhall, from the time of Queen Anne to an odvauced period of tho reign of George the Third, was a fashionable sink of infamy. The lessee, in seventeen sixty-lour made an attempt to check the wickedness that rnade it scandalous if not unsafe for any decent woman to enter the garden. He closed the schedule walks and lit up the recesses ; but the young gentlemen of fashion, resenting this invasion ot their privileges, tore down the bar riers and put out the new lights. At AI mack's people of quality assembled for high play. , In Soho Square, Mrs. Cornelys kept a house of an exclusive character, but of ques tionable reputation. Masquerades and operas approached through guinea tickets were the ostensible amusements, assignations, the real business of the establishment. Worst of all was an assembly called tho Coterie, a mix ed clubot the most fashionable ladies and gen tlemen ; the ladles balloting for the gentle men, and the gentlemen tor the ladies. Mr. Massey tells us that "unless we are to discredit the concurrent testimony of the pul pit, the press, the stage, the records of courts of Justice, private letters and tradition which has hardly ceased to be recent It is manifest kf , Honravitv of manners in this conntry from the accession of the House of Hanover to the end, at least, of the hrsi ten years j0i George the Third, was not excelled in the de cline of the Roman empire, or in the decay of the old French monarchy." Marriages of convenience were then the rule. Parents concluded them betwoea each other as business contracts, and upon women this practice was most oppressive. The power of a father in the disposal of his daughter was, as a general rule, absolute. Young people sought escape from under this oppression by clandestine matches, and these were multiplied by the uncertain state of the marriage law. We pass over the frightful abuses to which way was made ly a custom that declared ev ery marriage valid that was performed any where between persons of any age and under any circumstances, if it was solemnised by an ordai'ied minister of the Protestant and Ro man church with the consent ot the contract ing parties. This rule begot Fleet-parsons, and gave, it was said, the revenue of a bishop ric to Keith's chapel in May Fair. Three thousand couples were married in one year at that chapel. Its advertisements appeared in the newspaper almost "daily, and, through the year seventeen hundred and fifty, this atroci ous puff was prefixed to them in the Public Advertiser: "We are informed that Mrs. Keith's corpse was removed from her hus band's house in May Fair, the middle of Octo ber last, to an apothecary's in South Audley Street, where she lies in a "room -hung with mourning, and is to continue there until Mr. Keith can attend her funeral." London streets, in the early days of George Third, were infested with bold thieves, who did not scruple to stop carriages after dark in the public thoroughfares. Drunken men were constantly to be met ; no well dressed gentle man could walk without receiving insult and injury ; a walk a mile out of town could not be taken, even in daytime, without some risk of being waylaid. In the streets tho narrow footway, until seventeen hundred and sixty one, seperated from the carriage road only by a line of disconnected stakes and posts, set at wide intervals, was frequently blocked up with chairs, wheelbarrows, or obstructions placed there for the direct purpose of annoyance. Carmen and hackney coachmen considered it good sport to splash clean people from head to foot. If a terrified woman or bewildered stranger slipped into the kennel, there were shouts of triumph and delight. In the road way the confusion was yet greater. There be ing no regulations for traffic, dead locks and stoppages arose." Loud altercations were then swollen by the chorus about carriage of crip ples and beggars, and if there were ladies in a family-coach, some street vocalist was likely to begin a filthy song, of which the refrain would be taken up by numerous bystanders. Mobs were common ; foreigners were habitu ally insulted , sometimes a pickpocket was hauled to the pump; sometimes a man came by, shrieking under the lash at the cart tail. Such is the account given by Mr. Massey on his faith as a historian, of the condition from which we have surely worked some little way upward since the first years of the reign of Georg the Third, and in the lite-time of his immediate predecessors. For evi cry statement in it there is plenty of authori ty. It is not a complete picture of those times, but it is a picture of that part cf them which is now dead, and we have copied it for the pleasurable contemplation of any one who is at all zealous for a revival of old habits. Buckwheat as Food. M. Isidore Pierre has recently been making some investigations on buckwheat, from which he condense the following interesting results: Buckwheat cakes arc equal to pure white bread as regards the phosphates or bone-making ma terial, and nitrogenous principles which they contain, and are superior to bread in fatty mat ters. The general yield of buckwheat when cooked is about three times the weight of the flour used, showing that such flour will retain forty to forty-one per cent of water. Between different batches of ground buckwheat there is a great dissimilarity of composition one batch containing nearly seven times as much n:trogcn,twenty-five times the amount ot phos phates, and a hundred and fifteen times as much fatty matter, as another. The bran is the richest portion ot the buckwheat, but can not be digested by weak stomachs. The finest qualities of buckwheat flour, and the white mill dust especially, are very suitable for chil dren and persons in delicate health, while the coarser varieties require- a stronger stomach and much exercise for their perfect digestion. Large Game in Indiana County, Pa. The Indiana Register, of a recent date, says: On Tuesday last, a bear was tracked in a cornfield at Taylorsvillc, and immediately chase was given, about a dozen men with a number of dogs enjoying the sport. The bear was run about three miles, to near the farm of Samuel Rice, Esq., where he was treed, and after re ceiving five balls, was brought to the ground. He weighed 350 pounds undressed, the skin from the point of his nose to 'he end of the tail, was 7 feet 6 inches, and o feet 6 inches between the front paws when the legs were stretched out. When brought into the vil lage, Bruin was dressed and a part of the car cass roasted, and, of course, finished out by the citizens. The animal's skin was stuffed and exhibited at our County Fair, where it at tracted great attention. On Friday, October 1st, a very large wild cat was killed iu the same vicinity by the same party. No Time for Swappixc. A Hoosier was traveling down the Ohio, in a steamer, with a mare and a two year old colt, when by a sudden careen of the beat, all three were tilted into the river. The Hoosier, as he rose, puffing and blowing above water, caught hold of the tail of the colt, not having a doubt that the natural instinct ot the animal would carry him safe ashore. The old mare took a "bee line" for the shore ; but the freighted colt swam lustly down the current, with his owner still hanging fast., "Let go the colt and hang on to the old mare," shouted some of his friends. "Phree booh !" exclaimed the Hoosier, spout ing the water from his mouth, and 6haking his head like a Newfoundland dog, "its migh ty fine, your telling me to let go the colt ; but to a man that can't swim, this ain't exactly tho time for swapping horses." . A contest is now in progress in Pans which attracts the attention of the whole civilized world. It is nothing more nor less than a game of chess. The contestants are Mr. Paul Morphv. an American youth of twenty-two years, "and Monsieur Harwitz, a Frenchman, who, up, to the advent of Morpby, was repu ted to be the first of living chess-players. The contest is not yet decided. The success ful player Is to win the first seven games. We may remark that Morphy has already met and vanquished the lest chaas-phyers cf A nerica and England. THAT AWFUL UGLY IIOSS : OR SAM VARXET'S VESTl'RE - Sam Varney was a Green Mountain Boy. He had worked as a hired man on different farms, and had laid up some money.'" He bad frequently been employed in bringing loads of produce to the Boston market, and bad made sales quite satisfactory to his employers. On several occasions he had made little specula tions of his own which were quite profitable. On one of his visits to Boston, Sam had fal len in with a sailor, who was a native of the same town where he himself was born, and they had a great deal ot conversation. One -of the interesting facts which Sam learned from his townsman was, that sailors were oc casionally permitted to take out a small ven ture, &s it was called, of their own, a little package of goods, a barrel of mackerel, or something ot that sort, which would not take up much room in the vessel. This they sold ; and brought home the proceeds in the produce of the country they visited. On his return home, Sam meditated pro foundly on this subject; and finally concluded to make a voyage to the West Indies, and take a venture with him. The nexquestioii was what this venture should be. lie had nothing on hand at the time but a small horsey which he had won in a raffle, and, had not yet been able to dispose of. He was not a very beautiful horse. On the contrary, he was generally pronounced by the neighbors "an awful ugly boss." His neck was too short: his head was too long. His body was lean and scraggy. His mane was rough and re fractory, and persisted in standing up too much in spite of trimming ami grooming, and his tail looked like a mop. But Sam had rid den him repeatedly, and found that he was capable of great speed in running. The sailor had told Sam that whole cargoes ot horses were frequently sent from Connect icut to the West Indies, and disposed of at a large profit. So he determined that his horse should be hisyenture. Accordingly he moun ted him, rode down to Boston, put him into a stable and went in search of his sailor friend. He soon found him, and communicated his plan. His acquaintance, Tom Standish by name, was afraid he would, not be able to car ry it out; but promised to lend all the assis tance in his power. He had just shipped in a vessel bound for Jamaica, and more hands were wanted. He introduced him to the cap tain, who made no objection to shipping him as a green hand. W"en the question of the venture came up, there was difficulty. He had no accommodation for a horse on board the brig. Sam offered to put him on deck and take care of him. This would be inconve nient and would interfere with his duty. ' De termined to carry his point, Sam offered to piy freight, cash down, before sailing; and the captain, rather amused at his pertinacity, and curious to see bow the venture would succeed, agreed' ta the proposal- So the horse was shipped, and the vessel sailed. Sam was the butt of the sailors dnring the whole passage out. There was no end to their jeers at tho appearance of the little horse. Their nautical jokes on him were inexhausti ble, and Sam Varney's venture was consider ed the most desperate and ridiculous specula tion that had ever been attempted. But Sam was perfectly imperturbable. He answered all their railleries good-naturedly, and told them "they had better wait and see the upshot. He had never made a bad specu lation yet, and he guessed he knew what he was about. The taoss was not a very handsome boss, but he was a very good one. He guess ed he could asM him." At length the brig arrived at Kingston, Ja maica, and Sam soon had his horse landed and stabled. When he catue to offer him for sale, nobody seemed inclined to buy. The horse was decidedly too ugly for a saddle or gig horse; and the very draymen turned up their noses at him. Presently the races came on, and everybody was hurrying out of town to the raccground. Sam mounted bis horse and rode out with the rest. He looked on with much interest at the first race. He observed that the horses were not remarkable for their speed. There appeared to be no thorough-bred blood-horses aiming them ; and he concluded that the races had been got up by the planters from their love of sport, without having any real race horses on the island. He believed that his little horse could beat them all ; and he de termined at all hazards to give him a trial. So he went to tle managers and offered to en ter him for the next race. Sam's proposition was received with shouts of laughter. It was considered a capital joke. But Sam told them it was no joke, lie was perfectly serious. Ho wanted to run his horse against the whole field, and was ready to bet on him. He was accordingly entered, and instantly heavy odds wero offered against him. Two to one, five to one, and, finally, one plan ter offered twenty to one. On hearing this offer, Sam said he would take it. It was necessary to produce the a mount of his bet. He was in the dress of a common sailor, aud his antagonist said that he was not going to be trifled " with, the stakes must be deposited with managers. How much would he bet 7 "Five hundred dollars," re plied Sam. "Well, down with your dust," said the planter. Whereupon Sam took off a leather belt which he had round bis waist, un der his clothes, and counted out five hundred dollars in doubloons. The planter's check was pronounced satisfactory, and received by the managers. Many other bets were m-.do by different persons, with heavy odds against Sam's horse. . . When Sam rodo up to the starting place there were shouts of laughter at his appuar ance, and the roost unsparing censures of his presumption in entering on the' race. Sam paid no attention to this, but started with the rest ; and it soon became apparent that he was not such a fool as they took him to be. He was among the foremost in two minutes ; and at the end of the race, "that awful ugly hoss" was pronounced clearly and unequivocally the victor. ' . ' Sam coolly received his doubloons back a gain, and put them in his belt, together with the planter's check' for ten thousand dollars, which was afterward duly honored. " , ' " lie offered to bet on another race, but there were no takers. For this, however, he was compensated by the most liberal offers for his horse. . Five hundred "dollars,-, a thousand, fifteen hundred, two thousand," were bid for him. This last figure being the highest, Sam accepted it.'. ' ' ' ''-'"''' ' ' '' ' ' ' ' On hia return to the brigi Sam learned that no one of tho crew but himself had teea at the races. As soon as he came on board the usual bantering began. "Well, Sam," said the cook, "how about that venture V "I guess it will do," replied Sam. "Is that awful ugly horse sold yet ?" said the second mate. "Shouldn't wonder if he was," said Sam. "Yon don't say so. How much did he fetch 1" said the second mate. "Guess," replied Sam. .; "Twenty dollars," More than that. Gueas again." "Fifty." "More than that. Guess again." "A hundred." "A great deal more than that. You don't know much about Varmount bosses. Guess again." ' . ' "Two hundred:" ' : ' ' ' "Oh, it's no use your guessing. That awful ugly hoss brought two thousand dollars, be sides the ten thousand I won on him at the races. So you fellows had better shut up and say no more about Sam Varney'a venture." And they did shut up. S.-un, on the passage home, was treated with marked respect. The worst that was said of him among the sailors, was, "Cute fellow that Sam. His eye teeth is cut." Sam went to sea no more. He bought a farm in the Green Mountain State, married a rosy-cheeked Green Mountain girl, aud had many sons and daughters. Battle with Isdiaxs. Intelligence reached St. Louis a few days since of a desperate bat tl between the U. S. troops and Camanche Indians, near the Wichitta vilhige, in which, on the part of the whites, Lieut. Van Camp and tour men were killed, while there was al so one roan missing and ten wounded, inclu ding a Major Van Horn, severely. The ene my had lorty killed and a considerable num ber wounded. Advices from Fort Kearney to the 2d inst., report that Major Crossnian, Cap taiu Newton, and Lieut. Bryan, of the engi neer corps, and Lieut. Villezpegel, of the 2d Dragoons, had reached that place on the 20th ult. They report the gold excitement as still very high, though the actual results of the op erations were not so cheering as the accounts would seem to warrant. Stop that Bot ! A cigar in his mouth, a swaggar in his walk, impudence in his face, a care for-nothiogness in his manner. Judging from his demeanor he is older than his father, wiser than his teacher, more honored than the Mayor of the town. Stop him ; he is too fast! He don't know his speed; stop him, ere to bacco shatters his nerves, ere whiskey makes a beast of him, ere his pride ruins his charac ter, ere the '-lounger masters the man,", ere good ambition and manly strength give way to low pursuits and brutish aims. Stop all such boys ! They are legion ; the shame of their families, the disgrace of their towns, the sad and solemn reproach of themselves. "Susan stand up and let me see what you have learned. What does c-h-a-i-r spell t" "I don't know, marru." "Why, you ignorant critter ! What do you always sit on ?" "Oh, marm, I don't like to tell." "What on earth is the matter with the gal tell what is it ?" "I don't like to tell it was Bill Crass' knee, but he never kissed me but twice J" "Airthquake and applc-sarse .'" exclaimed the school-mistress, and she fainted. AnMiR.vr.LE Use or a Magxet. A smith, in Brighton, England, while forging a piece of iron, felt something strike his eye, and subse quently feeling great pain,he went to Dr. King in Palace street, who discovered that a piece of iron had emlwdded itself in the ball of the eye. After vainly endeavoring to extract it in the usual way. Dr. Ki ig thought of a pow erful magnet which he had. Hi applied it to the eye, and was rejoiced at finding the piece of iron instantly removed. Orr with his hear! The work of decapi tation has bofcuti at the custom house. Yes terday Mr. W. A. Eagle, inspector, was dis missed. He lived in Delaware county, and voted the regular Lecompton ticket, but he was acquainted with John Hickman.' The sad fact was sufficient to mark him as an object of vengeance. ' "J. B." will not permit his of ficers to even speak to anybody in favor of Le compton. . Alas! for the republic. Philadel phia Dispatch. it "' TnE Ptow. It is not known when or where he who invested the plow was born, when or where he died, or was buried ; yet he has ef fected more for the happiness of the world than the whole race of heroes an4 conquerors who have dr-nched it with tears and manured it with blood, and whose birth, parentage, ed ucation, &c, have been handed down to us with a precision precisely proportiouate to the mischief they have done. The narrisburg Patriot and Union seems to be considerably flurried because Col. Forney walked the streets of Harrisburg in the com pany of certain members of the People's party. The Union is hard to please, yet it cannot be expected that the Col. will shape his course to please his Lecompton opponents,and exchange the countenance of the people for the old sus picions of the Buchanan men. In a school, when the scholars were parsing, the word waif occurred in the sentence. The youngest, who was up, a bright-eyed little fel low puzzled over the word for a few minutes and then, as a bright idea struck him. he burst out with, "I can conjugate it. "Positive waif comparative, waiferj Superlative, sealing wax!" - Gray, of the Cleveland PlairuUnler, one of the decapitated anti- Lecompton postmasters, fell behind his ticket in hia Tecent nice for Congress in Ohio He consoles himself by the reflection that -5t appears to be a prevail ing compUint among democratic candidates for Congress this year." A waggish friend says if your wife is ever lastingly complaining of being sick just let her see you kissiug the hired girl and an in stant cure will be effected. Ht has tried the experiment, and the result was that he has never had to pay a cent for "help" since. - A good action is never throw away, and perhaps that is the reason vre Sod ao few of thera. :-?'.; - - ' s ,z:--z " r. , APOSTROPHE TO WATER. Some time i nee, says the Pittsburgh D' patchj we alluded to the famous apostrophe to water which John B. Gough, the eloqueut lec turer on temperance, has repeated to electri fied thousands in America and England." : Mr. Gough never informed an audience that bo was not the author of that apostroplnj, and for vears has enjoved the undisputed credit of it. We stated that it originated with Paul Den ton, an itinerant of the Methodist chrtrch in Texas, and that it was delivered at a barbacua which Denton had prepared, and to which lw inviied the rangers. It had been years since we'read the incident, and we are dcliglited to find it in an exchange, credited to a Texas pa per. We feel sure our readers will be equally delighted with its perusal. The smoking viands were arranged on tho tables by scores of slaves, and the throng pre pared to commence the sumptuous meal, when a voice pealed from the pulpit, loud as tho blast ot a trumpet in battle, "Slay, gentleneu and ladies, fill the giver of the barbecue asks God's blessing!" Every heart started, every eye was directed to the speaker, and a whisperless silence en sued, for all alike were struck by hia remark able appearance. He was almost a giant in stature, diough scarcely thirty years of age. His hair, dark as the raven's wing, flowed dow n his immense shoulders in masses of nat ural ringlets ; his eyes, black as midnight, beamed like stars over a face pale as Parian marble, calm, passionless, spiritual and wear ing a singnlar, indefinable expression. Th heterogenous crowd, huuters, gamblers and homicides, gazed in mute as'.onishmeat. Th missionary prayed, but it sounded like no oth er prayer ever addressed to the Throne of Grace. It was the cry of a naked soul, and that soul a beggar for the bread and the water of heavenly life. , He ceased, and not till then did I become conscious of weeping. I looked around thro my tears, and saw hundreds of faces wet as with rain. ' .- ; '" "Now, my friends," said the missionary, "partake of God's gift at the table, and thea come and sit down and listne to His gospel." - It would be impossible to describe the sweet tone of kinduess in which these simple word were uttered, that made him on the instant five liundred friends. . One fieart, however, In the assembly, was maddened by the evidence of the-pneaeher's wonderful power. Colonel Watt Forinan exclaimed iu a sneer ing voice : "Mr. Paul Denton, your reverence has lied.: You not only promised-us a good barbacue, but belter liquor. Where is the liquor ?" "There !" answered the missionary in tones of thunder, and pointing his motionless finger at the matchless Double Spring gushing up in two strong columns, with a sound like a about of joyfrom the bosom of the cartb. " "There, lie repeated, with a look terrible as lightning, while his enemy actually trembled at his feet. "There is the liquor which God, the eternal, brews for all his children. Not in the sim mering still, ever smoky fires, choked with, poisonous gasses, and surrounded with the stench of sickening odors and rank corrup tion, doth your father in heaven prepare tho precious essence of life, the pure cold water. But in the green gladea aud grassy dell, whert the red deer wanders, and the child loves to play, there God himself brews it ; and down down in the deep valleys where the fountains murmur and the rills sing ; and high on the tair nlountain tops, where the naked granite glitters like gold in the sun, w here the storm cloud broods aud the thunder tones crash, and away far out on the wide, wide sea, where tho hurricane howls music and the big waves roar the chorus, 'sweeping the march of God,' there he brews it, that beverage of life, health giving water. And everywhere it is a thing of beauty ; gleaming in the dew-drop, singing in the summer rain, shining in the ice-gem, till the trees all seem turned to living jewels spreading a golden veil over the setting sun,' or a white gauze around the mid-night moon ; sporting in tho cataract ; sleeping in the gla cier; dancing in the hail-shower; folding its bright snow-curtains softly about the wintry world ; and weaving the many colored iris, tho zeraph's zone of the sky, wfrose woot is tho sunbeam of heaven, all checkered over with celestial flowers by the mystic hand of refrac tion. Still always it ia beautiful that blessed life-water! No poison bubbles on its brink ; its foam brings not madness and murder; no' blood stains its liquid glass; pale widows and. starving orphans weep not burning tears in its clear depths ; no drunkard's shrieking ghost -from the grave curses it in words of eternal despair! Speak out, my friends, 'would yoa exchange it for the demon's drink alcohol !"! A j-hotit like the roar of a tempest, answer ed "No." - Critics need never tell inb again that back woodsmen are deaf to tho divine voice of elo qnrncc, for I saw at that moment the mission-' ary held the hearts of the multitude, as it were in the hollow of his hand, and tlio popu lar feeling ran in a current "so irresistible that even the duelist. Watt Formah, dared not ven ture another interruption during the meeting.: The camp-meeting continued, and & revival attended it such as never before or since was witnessed in Texas. - The Oldest Postmaster. The Snow Hill, Md., Shield, claims that Mr. Lemuel Showell, Sen., postmaster at St. Martins, in that coun ty, is the oldest postmaster iu tho United States Mr. Showell was appointed to the of fice under the democratic administration of President Jefferson, in IS09, forty eight yeaia ago. He is still hale and hearty. ' An editor up in Minnesota says that he was never happy but once in bis life, and that was on a warm summer's day when he lay in the laps of two blooming Tnaidens,' being fanned by a third, aud kissed by all three. What aa inconsiderate chap he must be. Who ever heard of an editor allowing girls to kiss him?' A countryman, who witnessed a lady lifting up her dress, exclaimed, upon beholding tho numerous tiers of hoops that eucircled ber petticoat in the shape of crinoline. ."Well, may I be danged, if she arn't got ft five-barred gate wiapped round her." . ' ' - A chap out west who bad been afflicted with palpitation of the heart, says that he found in stant relief by the application f another pal pitating heart to the part ffected. " . Gold is universally "worshipped, 'without singlet temple, aad by all classes without ft sin gle hypocrite -1:: - e.-.:-; . :.0