ItWi IUI . f-4Z vaV ' avi l warn 1 t W I BY S. B."R0"W. VOL. 5.-JT0. 39, CLEARFIELD, PA., WEDNESDAY, MAY 25, 1859. "UEVEE SAY TAIL." Keep pushing 'tis wiser Thun sitting aside. And dreaming and sighing; And waiting tho tide; In life's earnest battlo They only prevail, Who daily march onward And never say fail. With an eye ever open. A tongue that's not dumb, And a heart that will never To sorrow succomb. You'll battle and conquer. Though thousands assail; How strong and how mighty Who never say fail Ahead. then! keep pushing, And elbow your way. Unheeding the envious, All agues that bray; All obstacles vanish. All enemies quail. In the might of their wisdom Who never say fail. In Life's rosy morning. In manhood's fair pride, Let this lo your motto. Your footsteps to guide ; In storm or in sunshine. AVhatevcr assail : We'll onward and conquer, And never say fail ! coprniniiT SEcrRF.n.l CLEARFIELD COT-NT V: . OB, REMINISCENCES OF THE PAST. John Bel!, wc have said, was a bachelor. From his diminutive size, he was familiarly called "little Johnny Bell," and from some lie received the sobriquet of "Demi-John." lie commenced the clearing on the north side of tho River, now owned and occupied by Abra ham Snyder, Esq., near where the State road, afterwards located from Huntingdon and in tersecting the Milesburg & Le Buiufi" road at Fackersville, crossed. When not stimulated by drink, John was one of the mildest and most amiable of men.- Occasional indulgence led him into difficulties, in which were devel oped traits that seemed to transform his char acter. He was 'then irritable, revengeful, pru dence guided not his actions, and he feared no man and no danger. When a party of Indians had crossed the river and encamped near 'Squire McClure's, on their passage from Hun tingdon westward, John, in company with some others in that section, paid them a visit. The Indians were well supplied with liquor, of which they ar.d their visitors partook freely. One of the Indians, a large specimen of hu mauity, being irritated at John, struck him a blow between the cj-es. This incensed John's companions, who caught rtic Indian, and, as a punishment, tied him, intending to leave him in that situation until he was sobered.- A lit tle while after, John was not to be found,, and the Indian was also missing. Fearing- that some harm might have happened to John, his companions mado search, am! found him on the brink of the river, in which there was then a freshet, and to which point "little Johnny" liad succeeded in dragging the bound Indian. When his companions asked him what he was about, he replied that he was "going to roil the enssed red-skin in, to be sure." At their urgent solicitation, he, however, abandoned his design. John, atone time, cut rather a ludicrous figure. Whea at a review at Ben. Jordan's, lie became somewhat obstroperous, because Daniel McCracken, who was a power ful man and the "recognized bu!ly' of the county, met with a first defeat at the hands of Abraham Hess, one of Johnny's friends walked behind him, grasped him by either leg, raised liim in the air, and seating him upon his shoul ders, carried him off the field in triumph, to tho no small amusement of the bystanders and the chagrin, of our hero. On the occasion of the turning of an ark, which in those days could not be done by water power altfhe, he had lain down alongside of a log, and not be ing missed until the next morning, the cold ness of the night had nearly brought to an end his eventful career. Fortunately there was in the neighborhood a man, well fitted for, and an orrament to the profession which he had adopted, who, finding how matters stood, when lie reached the house, prdcred a barrel of warm water to be immediately prepared, into which Johnny was soused. This, with other reme dies, soon restored his almost suspended ani mation. Dr. Samuel Coleman was a man of ability. Though eccentric in his "habits, which, as he was taciturn and indisposed to take any one Into his confidence, wero known to but few, ho had a warm heart. Of his early history, nothing is known. He was supposed to have been the son of an'EnglisIi nobleman, who, for some reason, did not acknowledge his pater nity, but who provided the means to insure him a superior, education and maintenance. Coleman was never known to speak of his birth-place, or bis parentage. He would some times remark, "at the place where I was rais ed, was done," and "the woman who raised rnc, did," so and so. He practiced medicine for some years at Williamsport, where be ac quired considerable reputation. As he was known by some of the early settlers, to whom be had formed an attachment, he would occa sionally, when bis services were needed, come np here from his Lome, to minister to their wants. Not liking the practice of medicine, be removed here, and settled near the resi st....,.., r his friend Joseph Boone, where he cleared out the farm now in possession of ThmH Donehcrty inPenn township. called his farm "Grampian Hills," because of the resemblance which his neighborhood 00 re to those celebrated hills of Scotia; and this has since given riso to the name of one of the most thriving and productive agricultural set tlements in the' county. Here Le labored with his hands, gaining his bread "in tho sweat of his face," and only visiting tho sick-bed when his services were deemed indispensable. In the earlier part'of his career, he was never known to use profane language, and invaria bly reproved the use of it by others. He led a single life, and died at the early age of forty years, on his farm, where it was his re quest to be buried in the middle of a large field, habited iu his best suit of clothes, in cluding hat, boots and spurs, without a stono to mark his resting place, and where the plow might ever after move over his remains. For a few years, tliere were no roads known in the county, the River being tho only source or communication. About the year 1800, an Indian path, leading from Chinchaclamoose to Milesburg was discovered, and this brought the scltleis ic closer connection with a civil ized community, from whom they could get their necessary supplies. Paths served for a few years lor the only means of land transpor tation then known packing on the backs of horses. Travelling along this path, Mrs. Lew is, known by the later settlers as "Granny Lathers," found her way to the bank of the Susquehanna, where she settled at a place af terwards used by A. B. Reed, Esq., for a spring-house, which was destroyed by fire in 1S3G. Granny Lathers was probably the third or fourth settler: Sho is represented as a mild and kind old lady, who hid seen better days, and was respectably connected in Cumberland county, from whence she originally emigra ted. She remained here until about the time of the war, when she went to Bellefonte, there married her third husband, named Stevens, and removed to the Sinnemnhoning, where she died. Mrs. Lewis was the mother of one well known in the annals of crime. Her ton, Da vid Lewis, after committing many de, rcda tions, became the terror of those who traveled on the thoroughfares leading from Eastern to Western Pennsylvania. Clearfield county was not the scene of any of his exploits; but it is said that whilst remaining here, sheltered by the paternal roof, he displayed that disposi tion, which led him on to ruin. 1 1 is mother and a neighbor, Mrs. Collins, had prepared some stores of dried fruit, which were intend ed for winter consumption, and locked them in an old-fashioned sea-chest, which had a double spring-lock, and the key of which was placed in the custody of Mrs. Collins. When the season had arrived, in which it was thought that the use of the fruit would add a zest to the meal, the old chest was unlocked and,'to the utter amazement of the dames, not a ghost of a plum was to be seen. How they had dis appeared, remained a mystery until Mrs. Lew is found, in the pockets of David, a wooden key, which upon trial unlocked the chest. The last exploit of Lewis, on the Seven Mountains, in 1820, in company with Connelly and McQuirc, which led to his capture and death, was that of robbing the wagons of Hammond & Pago, merchants of Bellefonte. Steps were immediately taken to go in pur suit of Lewis and his companious, who were then supposed to be making their way to the domicil of Lewis' mother, on the Sinncmaho. ning. Jamos McGhee, who afterwards settled near Chest creek it) this county, and was the owner of the well known property, "McGhee's Mills," headed a party, which consisted of John Hammotidj Wm. Armor, Paul Lebo, Pe ter Dysell and Joseph Butler, citizens of Belle fonte. They stopped the first night at Kart haus, where they obtained as a guide, "Andy Walker," the great hunter of Bald Eagle. William Hanna joined them at Karthatis, and on starting the next morning, their company was increased to eleven by the accession of John Koons, Samuel Karncll and Peter Bodey. On the 20th July, McGhee's party lost its way, and during the night had to encamp; or, rath er, roost, as they took to the trees. The next morning, striking Trout Run, which empties into Bennet's Branch, they followed it. Walk er and Karnell started ahead of the rest to see if Lewis had made his appearance at his mo ther's, and finding that he had not, they re joined the party,' crossed Driftwood Branch that evening, opposite to Shepherd's, and found upon inquiry that two men, answering the description of Lewis and Connelly, bad breakfasted there. The party, accompanied by Shepherd, proceeded np tho Driftwood Branch about 8 miles, when, not being satis fied that they, were on the right track, the ma jority proposed going further down and ma king" inquiry of any ono whom they might meet. About five miles below, they fell in with a man named Brooks, who was engaged at gigging, snd who informed them that Lewis and another man. had passed that way. They again ascended the Branch, in company with Brooks, nntil they came within hearing of tho robbers, who were then engaged shooting at a mark. Brooks took the party to an eminence, where, unobserved, they had a view of what was going on. ' Finding it nseless to remain secreted, McGhee and his followers approach ed the worthy pair, who, when asked to sur render, replied, "shoot and bo d-d, we will re turn yonr -fire." Lewis was shot twice, bro't to the ground, and then secured. Connelly, trying to cflect an escape, reached the brink of the stream, and, when in the act of plans- ing in, was struck in the abdomen by a ball, said to have' been fired by Dysell, which caus ed his entrails to protrude, aiid resulted in his death on the 2d of August, 1820, just after the party reached the Big Island. Lewis was conveyed to Bellefonte, where, refusing to have his arm amputated, his wound mortified, and he died on the 13th of August, and was buried in the Baptist cemetry at Milesburg. to be CONTINUED.) WOULD YOU HAVE GOOD FRUIT 1 From the eai liest ages there has ever been resting in the heart of mankind a desire for good fruit indeed, the first thing that tempt ed our first Parents was the sight of tho "for bidden" apples which loaded that beautiful tree in the garden of Eden ; and although the results of that false step, on the part of her who seemed so perfect in the eyes of Adam, proved so disastrous, yet wc have no evidence that the apples themselves caused any bad ef fect ; but the curse was rather the "fruit of disobedience." From that time it was de creed that "by the sweat of his brow man should earn his daily bread," anil that if he would enjoy the good things of earth, it must Ik; by an effort and the richer the reward, the greater that effort. If the husbandman wishes a good crop of corn, how well he fits the ground, supplying the lack of such fertilizers as are requisite ; and how diligently he stirs the soil, that no weeds may steal away the strength which the coming crop needs. ..Now, if we would raise a thrifty fruit tree, we must remember that nothing either vegetable or animal over lived without something to lite on. A fruit-tree needs culture very much like a hill of corn. Its energies must be derived from the soil a bout it, and if we would nourish a tree wc must not forget that the tree is to be supplied by the fibrous roots out a little distance from it, and not by direct application of fertilizers to the collar of the tree, or in other words, the trunk where the roots joiu. For if we do this, the tree obtains the strength of the applica tion too fast, which induces a rank growth, rendering the tree more tender than when tho roots supply it model ately as it needs suste nance. It is always better to obtain trees which have been grafted or budded when the seedlings weie only a year old, as the stock and graft being nearly of an age, grow equally last, and consequently make a more durable tree. There is a very common error practiced of putting out - trees too old, as they can not sustaina healthy growth in the nursery alter a certain time. They should always be in a thriving condition when transplanted. Apples are more successful'wheii two to "four years from graft pears and cherries one lo three peaches one, and plums one to two. It is the universal belief -of successful fruit growers at the present day, that trees should be invariably transplanted from a northern to a southern locality ; for being more hardy than native trees, tho .sudden changes of weather affect them less ' unfavorably. Trees may be shipped thousands of miles with perfect safe ty if projerly packed, and it is better by tar to be at the expense of getting choice varie ties and lmrdy thrifty trees, though they cost four times the price of a tree whieh after a few years fails, or produces second-rate fruit. We may wonder whether it will pay to raise fruit ? Certainly it will. A farmer of West ern New York, I understand, obtained last season several hundred barrels of fine Baldwin apples from a small orchard. In April last I saw them selling in Philadelphia at one dollar per peck. There is always a demand for good fruit. Downing states that he knew of a large family of children who were raised chiefly on apple dumplings, and I verily believe that if tliere was as much interest manifested in rais ing good fruit as tliere is in raising children, then those that do grow np would have rud dier cheeks, and nurses would have less to say about "squalling brats." Every farm should have two or three hundred good fruit trees on it, and I never have known an instance where an orchard of well selected fruit, if properly cared for, did not in the course of ten years pay the owner over five hundred per cent, in terest upon tho money invested. Get good trees, good varieties ; set them out well; work the ground with hoed crops for the first five or six years, and you will not fail to have good fruit. E. Clearfield Co., May Ulh, 18-30. WHY DON'T HE DO IT! When the farmer knows that a gate is bet ter, and, as a time and labor-saving fixture, cheaper than a set of bars, and without call ing on a carpenter he can himself make one ; Why don't he do it 1 When he has no other fastenings to hi3 gates and barn doors than a stcno rolled against them, and in a single evening, alter supper, is able to make a better one ; Why don't he do it f Or when he sees the boards dropping from his barns and out-buildings, and like heaps of rubbish lying in piles about his premises, and need only nailing on again; Why don't he do it ? Or if he is afraid of the expense of nails, and is always crying up tho maxim of Dr. Franklin, to "save pence and the pounds will take caro of themselves," and he knows that the same Dr. Franklin also said "niany men are penny wise and pound foolish," and he is not caretnl to think of the precept contained in the latter ; Why don't he do it I If it is a saving of nearly half the manure of a farmer's stock by keeping them shut up in yards, instead of running at large through most of the winter ; Why don't he do it I If he knows that many of his fields would be greatly improved by ditching, and by the removal of large stumps and stones ; JHiy don't he do it And when he knows that his pastures would yield nearly double the feed if the bushes were all cut and subdued ; Why don't he do it ? And if he can add fifty per cent, to the prodnct of his clover fields, and even his pas tures by the use of gypsum; Why don't he d0it? u u lx If a farmer of fifty acres (as he should) have use for a good corn sheller, and one of the manv improved fanning mills, and has not already obtained both ; Why don't he do it T And if it is cheaper, actually cheaper, to burn dry wood than green, and to use a stove instead of an open fire-place ; Wny don't he do itt ; - If a man is happily married, his "rib" is worth all the other bones in his Lody. D0CT02IKGA PIG. Mr. Michael Fagan is a very worthy repre sentative from "Green Eiin," residing in a small dwelling in a small village near Boston. Michael is industrious and strives hard to turn an honest penny to account, whenever, and however, there may be the slightest prospect of profit. Michael has a little patch of ground behind his house, where he supports a few ducks and chickens; and the freshest eggs in the neighborhood can always be found on his premises, for he never allows himself to bo possessed of more than a single dozen at any time before disposing of them. In addition to his stock of jou!try, Michael purchased a young pig, which after four mouths letting and nursing, he prided himself upon exhibit ing to his friends and acquaintances, as one of the "swatcst and kindest cravthurs in the wurld." - But Michael's pig took sick, and from his coughing and sneezing symptoms, it was cer tainly evident that he had contracted a very bad cold. Close by the residence of this honest Hiber nian, there dwells the village physician, a kind hearted mau, and very skillful, whose practice is none of the largest. As he came from his house, a short time since, Michael stood at his gate, ruminating upon the chances in favor ot his favorite porker, and observing the doc tor, he hailed him with: "The top uv the mornin' to ye docthurf" "Ah, Michael, how are you V 'It's very well I am meself docthnr but perhaps ye'll be tellin' a poor man what he'd be aft her, doiu' for his pig; ahone ! ahouc ! he's very sick, docthnr." "Pig," exclaimed the doctor with a smile, "what pig, Michael, and what's the matter with him ?" "Shure he's very bad indade, so he is. A cowld, docthur, shneezin' and barkin the head off him and divil blusht the thing 1 can do wid him." "Well, really, .Michael, I can't say, I'm not a pig doctor!" "Shure it's myself that knows that. But if it was a goston instead uv tho darlin' craythur what would I be afther doing wid him for the cowld ho has V "Well," continued the doctor, considerate ly, "were it a child, Michael, perhaps I should recommend a mustard poultice to his back, and his feet pnt in hot water." "It's meself that's obliged to yo, docthnr, Iks dad I am," responded Mike, as the physi cian passed along, and he entered his house. "Biddy !" he added, addressing his wife, 'we'll cure the pig, so we will." In a short time the porker Was invested in a strong mus tard plaster from his tail to his ears. .Not withstanding his struggles, and his wheezings and torture from the action of the unyielding plaster, a tub of almost boiling water was pre pared, and into it poor piggy was soused a bove his knees. The result may be easily con ceived. .Next morning, bright and early, Michael stood at the gate once more, awaiting the com ing of the doctor, who soon made his appear ance. "Good morning, Mike, how does the pig come on?" , "O, be gorrah, do"-' .ur ! it was mighty oncivil in ye to be tr ling a neighbor in that way, so it was." "Why, what is '"'.ic matter,what has happen ed, Michael ?" "Ilappen'd is i. I put the powltico on the pig, so I did, an' Ve squealed murther, nn' be dad it's no wondt for the wull roll'd oil his back lrom head to Vul." "What!" , 'Didn't I put thU pig's feet in hot wathor as ye tolwd me, an, .', j j ibers the hoofs tumbled off uv him entirely Poor Mike spoke ; ily. Through his ig norance he had blisteiy i olT tho bristles, and with the hot water he sValded H" poor grun ter's feet. He died uniV r this double dose, and though Michael has nyer since asked the doctor upon similar matters,' he still insists that it was "a mane thrick so it was." Moral Suasion on a Ram. When a friend of ours, whom we call Agricola, was a boy, he lived on a farm in Berkshire county, the own er ot which was troubled by his dog Woif. The cur killed his shcep,knowing.pcrhaps,that he was conscientiously opposed to capital punishment, and he could devise no means to prevent it. "I can break him of it," said Asrricola," "if you will give mo leave." "Thon art permitted," said the honest farmer; and we will let Agricola tell the story in his own words. "There was a ram on the farm," said Agricola, "as notorious for butting as Wolf was for sheep stealing and who ? tood in as much need of moral suasion as the dog. I shut Wolf up in the t arn with this old fellow, and the consequence was that the dog never looked a sheep in the face again. The ram broke every bone in his body, literally. Won derfully uplifted was the ram aforesaid, by his exploit ; his insolence became intolerable; he was sure to pitch into whomsoever went nigh him. 'I'll fix him,' said I, and so I did. I rigged an iron crowbar out of a hole in the barn, point foremost, and hung on old hat on the end of it. You can't always tell, when you see a hat, whether there is a head in it or not ; how then should a ram ? Aries made at it full butt, and being a good marksman from long practice, the bar broke in between his horns, and came out nnder his tail. This lit tle admonition effectually cured him of butt- ins Eat rp bt their own Dogs. An old story tells that Action, a famous hunter, kept many hounds, and they ended by eating him np. Actaion is an old name it is Greek, besides. How many Acta;ons do you and I know men ate up by their own dogs. I know men who damage their body by their business, so do you. Many more I know who break down their conscience, their affection, their higher manhood. Mechanics sicken of their craft, painters have the lead colic ; tailors and shoemakers are-pale and dyspeptic looking; printers go off in consumption, whieh they have caught from breathing ink and type-metal. Is that the worst 1 I know men whoso ambition, whose vanity, whose covetousncss, has wronght them worse mischief a consump tion of the mind, a numb palsy of the affec tions, gout in tho conscience, a general dys pepsia of their humanities- Theodore Parker. The population of the United States, it is said, increases one milliou a year, or about two thousand seven bundred and thirty-nine every day. - W0XDEKS 0T THE MISSISSIPPI. The difference of level between high and low water mark at Cairo, is fifty feet ; at New Orleans the difference is but twelve feet. The width and depth ot the river from Cairo and Memphis to New Orleaus is not materially increased, yet immense additions are made to the quantity of water in the channel by large streams from both the eastern and western sides of the Mississippi. The question natu rally arises, What becomes of this vast added volume of water It certainly never reaches New Orleans, and as certainly does no evapo rate ; and of course, it is not confined to the chaunel of the river, for it would rise fara bove the entire region south of us. If a well is sunk anywhere in the Arkansas bottom, water is found as soon as the water level of the Mississippi is reached. When the Mississippi goes down, the water sinks accor dingly in the well. The owner of a saw mill, some twenty miles from the Mississippi, in Arkansas dug a well to supply tho boilers of his'engine, during tho late flood. When the water receded, his well went down till his hose would no longer reach the water, and finally his well was dry. He dug a ditch to an adja cent lake, to let water into his well; the lake was drained and the well was dry again hav ing literally drank ten acres of water in less than a week. The inference is,that the whole Valley of the Mississippi, from its banks to the highlands on either side, rests on a porous substratum, which absorbs the redundant wa ters, and thus prevents that degree of accu mulation which would long since have swept New Orleans into tho Gulf, but for this pro vision of nature, to which alone her safety is attributable. The fact is, if the alluvial lnjttoms of the Mississippi were like tho shores of the Ohio, tho vast plain from Cairo to New Orleans would to-day be part and parcel of the Gulf of Mexico, and this whole valley a fresh water arm of the sea. Were the geological charac ter of the valley different, the construction of levees, confining the water of the Mississippi to its channel, would cause the rise in the river to become so great at tho South that there no sufficient levee could be built. The current would be stronger and the accumula tion of water greater as the levees are exten ded north of us. Such results were reasonably enough anti cipated, but the water instead of brcakinj the levees, permeates the porous soil, and the overflow is really beneath tho surface of the swamps. Such it seems to us, are the nise provisions of natural laws for the safety and ultimate reclamation of tho rich country south of ns. We belicvo that the levee system will be successful, and that the object of its adoption will be attained. The porosity of the materi al used in making them, has caused most if not all of the crevasses. Men may deem it a superhuman task to wall in the Mississippi from Cairo to New Orleans, but our levees are the work of pigmies when contrasted with the dykes of Holland. The flood tide of tho Mississippi is but a ripple on the the surface of a glassy pool, compared with the ocean billows that dash against the artificial shores of Holland. The country to bo reclaimed by our levees all of which will not, for fifty years, cost the people as much as those of the Dutch when originally built would make one-hnn-dred such kingdoms as that over which Bona parte once wielded the sceptre. Memphis .1c alanchc. HUGH MILLEE. In reviewing Hugh Miller's Geologic Sketch Book, just published in England and Scotland, tho London Alhen-tcum s:iys : Even-attentive reader of this volume n ill be struck with the full hearted enjoyment which this gifted wanderer must have felt in tho scenery of his native land. While ordi nary tourists roam there in search only of the grand mountain range, or the dark defile, or the blue and hill embosomed l ike, Hugh Mil ler found equal interest in morasse and bogs, sand-dunes, and igneous rocks. Not a stone Out had its story for him not a stream but to him its earlier history. When wearied with bending down to the earth, he could look up and admire the cloud laden sky, whether the sun broke out with hasty glances, or dar ted flashing across the unlovely moors, or lit np some bosky recess, or revealed more strik-' ingly tho rigidity of some abrupt clitf or iron bound shore. There was no spot which did not furuish something for his fancy, or facts for his note book. Patches of brick clay and boulder clay were searched for minute shells ; moist, oozing masses of black lias shale were lifted up for their accumulated or ganisms; wayfaring men were questioned on anything that might illustrate his scieuce ; lonely bays and shores were trodden joyously in searching for cuttle fish, and these were dissected and described from eye to tail ; the theory of tho ocean's level was discussed ; black, cold marshes were probed for their nu merous hazel nuts, showered down from for gotten Yorests ; in fine those aspects of nature which to common folks most forbidding, to him were suggestive of fruitful fancies, and replete with perpetual instructiou. Such is the latest fruit of Miller's labors of love, lor this 'volume appears appears to be the topmost stone of his literary monument. As such, it is finely chiselled and elaborately ornamental. In closing the book, we cannot avoid a retrospective glance at his glorious career, and at its melancholy termination. How, we say to ourselves, could such a man turn aside into the regions of awful darkness 1 Richly gifted as ho was by natural endow ments; well sustained as ho was by an adequate income (for we nave learnt from one ot bis most intimate friends what that income was), fully supported by a religious faith in things unseen, on which he could soar as' on an eagle's pinion ; blessed with an amiable and accom plished wife, as the preface to the present volume proves; admired exceedingly by his countrymen ; commanding roost attentive au diences, and largely increasing readers how, we say, could such a man wander into the re gions of despair where no light is 1 This is an inscrutable mystery, but it affords a solemn lesson to writers ami readers. Let literary men beware of overtasking their energies, and let readcrs.too often thonghtless and thankless, remember how finely strung,and how perilous ly fragile are those delicate instruments from which is elicited tho sweetest music and ever nnforgotten melodies. " X discovery has been mado by a modem writer, that without a mouth a man coul i neither eat, drink, bin the girls, . ncr cfcew tobacco, . . - ' U5DES EHAIlf-WORK. Overwork of tho brain, against which wo bear so many people cry, and which we hear so many cosy-looking men deplore very com placently in their own persous, is not by a good deal so dangerous as under-work of tho brain, that rare and obscure calamity from which nobody is supposed ever to suffer. Tho Rev. Onesimus Howl drops his chin and ele vates his eyes, upsets his digestion with excess of tea and muffin, and supports, upon tho doughy face ho thus acquires, a reputation for great strain on the brains cansed by tho outponring of a weekly pnddle of words. His lriends labor to prop up his brain with added piles of mutiin. Paler becomes his face and more idiotic his expression, as ha lives from New Year's-day to New Year's-day rattling s bout in his empty head the tew ideas of other men be has connived to borrow, and tranquil ly claims all the sweets of indulgence on ac count of the strain put upon his wits. Dr. Porpice is wheeled about from house to housu in his "brougham," and prescribes his cordials and his mild aperients ; treats by help of w hat knowledge gathered from a past generation may happen to have grown into his habit of practice, all the disease he sees; now and then turns to a book when ho is puzzled, but more commonly dozes after dinner. Yet very glad ly does the doctor hear the talk about im mense strain on his mind, large practice, great responsibility, and the wondering that ono Kor head can carry all he knows. He seldom passes a day without having taken care to con fide to somebody that be is overworked. Once a week, indeed, if his practice bo large, be may be forced into some effort to use his brains ; but that he docs really exercise them once a week, I am not certain. The lawyer elevates his routine into a crush of brain work. The author and tho merchant flatter themselves, or account themselves flattered, by an application to their labors also of the same complimentary condolence. The truth is, that hard work of the brain, taken alone apart from grief and fears, from forced or vol untary stinting of the body's need of food or sleep, and the mind's need of social inter course does infinitely more to prolong lift and strengthen reason in the workers than to cut or fray the thread of cither. Men break down nnder the grind of want, under the strain of a continuous denial to the body of its half- a-dozen hours a day of sleep, its few necessary pounds of wholesome food, and its occasional exercise of tongue and legs. If an author spends his whole life in his study, his mind fails under the pressure of the solitary system. If a great lawyer refuses himself month after month the necessary fourth part of the day for sleep, he wears his brain out, not by reple tion of study, but by privation of something else. Under all ordinary circumstances no man who performs work for which he is com' petent is called upon to deny himself the firsf necessaries of life, except during short periods of encroachment which occur to men in every occupation, and which seldom are of long du ration, and can almost invariably be followed by a period of ease sufficient for recovery. Healthy men, who have bed and board assured them, while they can cat, sleep, stir, and bo merry, will have sound minds, though they work their brains all day, and provide them for the other five or six hours with that light employment which is the chief toil of Dr. Porpice or the Rev. Onesimr.s. A Striking Confirmation of ScRircrnE. One of the most interesting of the monuments of ancient Rome is the triumphal arch erected to commemorate the conquest of Jerusalem by Titus, who, after the destruction el tho temple, made a triumphal march to Rome, bringing with him a long train of captive Jews and the spoils, among which were the sacred vessels of the temple. This procession is represented in the beautiful arch, which thus furnishes an illustration of the Bible no wheru else to be found, these being the only repre sentations that exist of the sacred vessels, tho table of the shew bread, tho golden candle stick with its seven branches, and the silver trumpets used by the priests to proclaim tb year of Jubilee. The Roman Senate and peo ple iittle thought, when erecting this monu ment to a deified emperor, that they wero erecting a monument to the true God in tho verification of prophecy and divine history. Not ine of the Jews of Rome of whom tbero are about six thousand will even to this day pass under the arch of Titus.although it spans ono of the thoroughfares of the city ; tbey shun it as a memorial of a subjugation of their nation, which has never been retrieved, and regard it with aversion. The Ticiso. A name which is in every one's mouth should be correctly pronounced. The letters of the Italian language do not all have the same sounds which they have in English. The pronunciation of this name Is Teechecno. It is a small river, connecting the Lake of Maggiore with the Po, and has its importance from its being the boundary be tween Lombardy and Sardinia ; therefore tho Austrians become invaders the moment they pass to its western banfe. The New York Tribune of Tuesday a-week, says: Mr. Greeley left this city by the Erie Railroad last evening, on his way to the Paci fic States. We shall probably receive from . Kansas the first letters of the scries he pro poses to write during hisjonrticy. After Kan sas he will visit the Pike's Faak country, Utah, Carson Valley, California, and probably Ore gon, returning by way of Arizona and tho Southern Overland Mail route. Ho will be absent about four months. , Dan Kussel, the Union candidate lor Audi tor in M!ssissippi, being called on for a speech, began thus: "Fellow-citizens! -You, have called on me for a few remarks. -I have none to make. 1 have no prepared speech. 'Indeed, lam no speaker. 1 do not desire to. be a "speaker," I only want to be an "auditor." An Irishman, says the PittsbmrK Post, working on the canal, lately walked into the water, and seeing a large., turtle, with head and legs extended, retreated under great ex citement, halloing to Ms companions that bo badscenaboxfullofsnak.es. , There are three dangerous institutions in tb world, viz: kicking colts, pretty calicof and gunpowder, , t . 1 Politeness is' like an air-cushion ttef wsy t nothing iu u;.but ,tt e?:ea ;jonr jgits "frcn. Mli.iiy. . . 1