U V 1 lj? gp BY S. B. ROW. CLEARFIELD, PA., "WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1859. VOL. 0.JTO. L DEEDS OF KINDNESS. Suppose the little cowslip should bang its golden cup. And say, '-I'm such a tiny flower, , Il better not grow up." How many a weary traveler Would miss its fragrant smell : How many a little child would grieve To lose it from the dell. i? oppo?e the glistening dew drop Upon the grass should say. "What can a little dew drop do? I"d better roll away ;' The blade on which it rested. Before the day was done, Without a drop to moisten it, Would wither in the sun. Suppose the little breezes, Upon a summer's day, Should think themselves too small to cool The traveler on his way ; Who would not miss the fin all est And softest ones that blow, And think they make a great mistake Jf they were talking so. How many deeds of kindness A little child may do, Although it has so little strength, And little wisdom too ; It wants a loving spirit .Much more than strength to prove How many things a child may do For others by his love. JrfipvuiGHT SEcrnrn. CLEAUHELD COUNTY: OB, REMINISCENCES OF THE PAST. From the commencement of m anufactnring sawed lumber nntil within a very recent date, the business steadily increased, and we have now about four hundred saw-mills in the coun ty, the annua! product of which has been es timated at 100,000,000 ftet, valued at market t a million of dollars. This of course dues not represent the full capacity of the mills. Many of the mills are owned by farmers who only devote such time as they can spare from the labors of the farm to running their mills. Anew system of lumbering, which within a Jew years lias threatened to carry the sawing of the logs to other localities, has rendered tho business more precarious and proven a drawback on home manufactures. The most of the mills are' driver by water power a few are steam mills. With hes'e and there an ex ception, our mills are erected having in view the manufacture of boards, plank, scantling and such like lumber. Very ft-w of them are saitvil for sawing lumber for large building's or structures, and bills arc 'rarely sought or sawed. The lumber scarcely ever exceeds 10 foct in length. When exported, it is general ly rafted first in platforms formed by making the alternate layers cross each other. Ten or more platforms are then united to form a raft. An ordinary raft contains from i0 to GO M of boards. Five hands are sufficient to run such a raft over what is considered the dangerous part of the streamy and two lrom there to mar ket. The cost of running such a raft to mar ket averages about $100. For the ?ale of their sawed lumber, our raftsmen geueraliy resort to Middletown or Columbia, but many sales are made at other points on the river. Some of the choicest lumber is sent to market in atks built lor the purpose.y These contain a Lout the same number of feet as an ordinary board raft. Frequently light timber rafts are loaded with boards, and the lumber thus ex ported. The greatest part of the lumber saw ed in this county is white pine. Hemlock comes next in amount, and the trade in that kind of Inniber seems to be on the increase as the demand becomes greater. Cherry, poplar, ash and oak are not exported as much as for merly. Two streams penetrating our county, cause a small part of the lumber to descend to wards the Mississippi, but the bulk goes east ward. Since the construction cf the Central Railroad, another channel has been opened to some sections of the county, and a brisk trade sprung up with Tyrone and some other places on the road. In 1805, David Litz inaugurated a system of lumbering which has grown to great magii titde and vastly benefitted our county. The first timber rait which descended our stream was ran by him from the Clearfield creek, and was composed of small house logs. The tim ber business has been the business of Clear Held county. It is true that it is attended with hardships, exposure, and often ended in disappointments and loss. It is certain that but comparatively few engaged in it have suc ceeded in amassing large sums of money. But it was the business which has so much advanced the prosperity of the county. With out it our section might have remained almost uninhabited. It enabled men to clear land and at the same time provide the means for purchasing the soil upon which they were ex pending the toil of their hands and the sweat of their brows.V'It provided remunerating la bor for them and their cattle during that sea Ron in which they would otherwise have been compelled to be idle for lack of work upon their farms. And this, in connection with the branch of lumbering already spoken of, has caused our citizens to leave home more or less frequently, to mingle with people of other sections, and thereby gain new ideas and de velop their intellectual powers. Lumbering has made us a reading and thinking communi ty, and diffused more general intelligence a mong our people than is generally met with in rural populations. The manufacture of square timber commences after fall seeding. Trees are selected to suit the kind of raft intended to be made. These are felled, and whilst one set of hands are engaged in juggling and sco ring In, another set hews the timber. It is hewn as near square as can be. Whilst thus engaged, many woodsmen live in cabins, where they do their own cooking and such work as is necessary to their comfort. Of course, when houses are convenient and boarding can be ob tained, it is done. Some serious and fatal ac cidents have occurred from the falling of trees, but the greatest number of accidents have re sulted from the glancing of tho axe whilst chopping timber of which the sap was hard frozen...The -requisite number of sticks ob tained and made, advantage is taken of the snow to haul the lumber to a stream. Two horses or oxen are generally attached to a stick containing oO to 100 cubic feet. It of-, ten requires a much greater force, owingjio. the contents of the stick and the character .of the road the latter having the greatest iriflu-: ence. At first only the timber handy to a stream was valued, now it is hauled many miles. Oftimes in hauling spars, cn span of horses are found insuflicient. Many such sticks are cut and run, which are from 80 to 90 feet in length and from CO to 40 inches in diameter. When the timber sticks or spars are hauled to the river they are laid side by side and secured by lash poles so as to form a raft about 22 feet wide and 200 feet or up wards in length. A timber raft averages a bout 5000 cubic feet, and a spar raft contains about twenty sticks. These rafts, like board rafts and arks, arc managed by oars hung fore and aft. The downward current of the stream is the propelling power. The oars are only used to guide the rafts. The crookedness of the stream, the swiftness of the water in some places, and the rocks which are in or near the channel, require that the rafts should bo in charge of experienced and skillful pilots. On our streams the pilots command the forward oar, instead of, as in other places, taking po sition on the hindmost part of the craft. In some places the navigation is very dangerous, a stroke with the oar at a wrong time or place sometimes running the raft on a rock, cr high and dry on shore. Such a mishap frequently causes other rafts to stave at the same place, and sometimes a number of rafts are piled one on another before the descending crafts can be informed of the "mishap, and saved by be ing secured to shorc' Occasionally an acci dent to one raft prevents the passjge of others for days and a flood-is lost. When staved in some localities a raft is scarcely worth looking after. Occasionally the raft must be taken off of the rocks stick by stick and re-rafted. A bout the same force is necessary to run a tim ber or spar raft as a raft of boards, and the expense is about the same. To run the lum ber, advantage is taken of the periodical floods caused by the melting of the snow or the rains which fall in this section. Lumber cannot be run but at the time of a flood, and it has happened that a year has elapsed with out a 'running' lreshet occurring. Should the flood be very high it renders the navigation so dangerous that the rafts await the falling of the water. The stage of the water has much influence upon the distance the craft will de scend and tho length of time to be employed in ruuning, as it is not every place alotig the river where a landing can be effected or a safe harbor obtained. Each raft is provided with a rope about lj inches through and some 50 or CO feet in length. One end of this is secure ly attached to the raft, and when it is desired to land, the other end is thrown on shore, and a hand gets on shore to "snub," that is, pass the rope around a tree and gradually check the progress of the raft. Too sudden a check would break the rope. To assist in landing, long sticks, called "grousers," are sometimes passed through openings in the raft. These rubbing along the bed of the river retard the passage of the raft. To land requires quick ness and sonio skill. Occasionally, particu larly when the water is high and wild, land ings are missed and the raltsmen spend a night upon the water, surrounded by perils. Should the hand on shore unluckily be caught in a coil of tho rope, a leg may be severed from the body by a clean cut. Casualties on the river are of rare occurrence, considering the number engaged and the liability to accidents. (TO BE COXTIXI ED.) Next Field for Agitation. Neosho, or the Indian Territory, as has before been occa sionally hinted, is likely to be tho next rally ing point of the South, for the organization of a new Slave State. Kansas has been thorough ly tried, and is at length to be abandoned. A Kansas Pro-Slavery correspondent of the Charleston Mercury siguiflcantly writes : "We have about 2,700 Southern men in Kansas, and they intend emigrating South as soon as Kan sas is admitted info the Union. Wo are con nected with a Southern organization, and,. in cluding all, we have about 17,000 men. The next theatre for ac'llon will be the Indian Ter ritory south of Kansas, including Cherokee, Creek aud Choctaw nations. The South should prepare for this in time, and stand by her ter ritorial rights." A fat House Contract. The Leavenworth correspondent of the New York Timess ays : "The last subject of discussion here is a con tract given to a Virginian named Gilespie for 400 cavalry horses, at $175 apiece. The lucky recipient of the job sold out to a St. Louis d?aler at a profit of $14,000 that is the actual horse dealer filled the contract at $140 a horse. Hut this was not the whole loss to the govern ment ; the horses were not wanted certainly at this season. Two hundred and five of the animals, however, were sent to Fort Smith, and the balance (195) to this port, and an ofli cer was sent on to inspect and receive them, and turn them over to the Quarter-master." THE LAST BULLET. An Incident of Commodore Stewart's Algerine Experience. The United States ship-of-war Constellation was anchored in the harbor of Algiers, whith er she had proceeded under command of Com modore Preble, having on board, among other officers, Charles Stewart, then an Acting Lieu tenant. It was the watch of yonng Stewart, and he was parading to and fro on the deck, about half an hour after sunset, when ho saw a small boat, containing a single person, coming off from the Old Port, as the western part of the town is so called, and heading directly for the ship. This person was rowing with all his might, and Stewart 'was not long in discovering the -caused - Close behind the single boatman ivas-seen a large rover filled with men, whose presence was announced by a continued firing at him of whom they weTe in such determin ed pursuit, holding on their way until they were nnder the very guns of the ship. - "Now, by my soul I" cried Stewart, "may I be shot if I don't teach those fellows a les son. : Stand by, Mr. Rogers," ho added, ad dressing a favorite gunner, "to throw a little' grape into. that fellow." ' ' Just aft ct'i a wreath of smoke curled up from .the side of' the ship, and as the report went booming over-the water the iron messenger sped on its way, crashing into the pursuing boat, severely wounding two or three of her crew. She instantly turned to put back, at the same time that the fugitive reached his destination, and came up the side into the presence of tho ofliccr of the deck. He was an elderly man, with a stout frame and brow nish features; but it required but a single glance from the lieutenant to see that he was English or American. When he was sufficient ly recovered from his over exertion to breathe he went on to tell his story, to which Stewart listened with much excitement. The new comer was an American citizen, named James Collins, a native of New York, who, with his wife and daughter, had been ta ken from an American vessel at the same time as its commander and crew, two years before, by an Algerine pirate. His wife had since died, and he and his daughter had been en during since his capture all the horrors of a hopeless and aggravated captivity ; but the worst part of the poor man's story, and that which moved Lieutenant Stewart the most, was the announcement that his daughter, a gentle and beautiful girl, was on the eve of being forced into a detestable union with the very wretch who had bought her and her father as slaves. "My agony at these. circumstances culmina ted not two hours ago," finished the father, "when I struck the persecutor insensible to my feet and fled. By dint of exertion I man aged to reach the watet side, and embarked before the pursuers could prevent it. But, though I have succeeded in reaching this place of safety, my poor Alice is still in the power of her tormentor, exposed to his ven geance : and lam almost crazy at thinking that she may even now be subjected to a fate worse than death. If I could only guide a boat's crew, under your order" "One moment," interrupted Stewart. "Staj where you are until I have seen Commodore Preble." One moment the yonng lieutenant was en gaged with his commander in the C'ibin, and then he came forth with a stern smile of sat isfaction on his features. Ten minutes more had not passed before a cutter with twelve chosen men pushed off in the darkness, with the lieutenant and the stranger in the stern, and rapidly struck out for tho shore. "Our owner," said Mr. Collins, "resides in the western part of the city. There is a coast guard established, but 1 do not apprehend that we shall have any especial trouble from that source. I think we can land below, go up the street to the house, and carry oil my child, and all without losing a man." Tho boat landed, after twenty minutes of rapid progress, at a small wharf near the Ge leta, in the western part of the town. The ar rival was certainly observed, but not a great deal of attention was bestowed upon it by the stupid Algerines. Leaving part of his men in the cutter, with orders for them to lie down under the wharf, Lieut. Stewart and the re mainder of his force' followed the footsteps of Mr. Collini-,-rwiio-1edithe way rapidly up the intervening streets. On arriving at his late prison, an old, dingy looking structure, extremely spacious, having all the looseness of the Moorish style, the par ty discovered that silence and darkness were the principal features of the scene. Not a sound was heard nor a word nttered. The whole building seemed deserted. The agony of the father was extreme. "Oi my child-! my child!" he cried, no longer abl3".to control the .-terrible emotions which hacHwen -surging through his soul du ring tho last hour, "shall I never see thee more ?" A Moorish slave came around frcm the rear of the building, and assuied his fellow captive that the girl had been carried off by the mas ter, and that no one was at home save himself. But even as the lying rascal uttered the con cluding words, a wild shriek was heard in the chamber, and the next moment a young and beautiful girl of seventeen summers appeared at one of the front windows, looking like a spectre in her garments of spotless white. "My child, my Alice !" exclaimed Mr Col lins. "Save me, father !" was the response, and while shouts and groans were heard proceed ing lrom the interior of the building, the maiden threw herself from the low window, falling into the very arms of her father and Lieutenant Stewart. The very moment of this reunion was des tined to be that in which a company of Alge rine troops came round the nearest corner, marching up tho street in the direction of Lieut. Stewart and his men. It was also at the same moment that the old Moor, who had so long considered himself the proprietor of Mr. Collins and his daughter, came to the window and set up a startling yejl. "This way !" cried Mr. Collins,and he dash ed open the front door of the building, and conducted the entire party within. "Look to your weapons, and take the rascals off their pins the instant they halt," said Stewart. A sharp and determined struggle soon com menced, in the course of which half tho Moor ish soldiers were killed, and the remainder finally gave way. But the rescuers had ex pended all their ammunitioned only a single bullet was remaining ; that was in a large horse-pistol in the possession of Lieut. Stew art. lie was Just wondering what he should do with it when the oldMoor came down stairs with a huge sibre in his grasp, an"d made a furious dash at Mr. Collins and daughter, with mur der written on his features and flashing from his eyes. This sudden arrival decided the destination of the last bullet. "Take it, yon black devil !" cried Stewart, just as the blow was descending, and he fired iiis weapou, the ball passing through the mis creant's head, and bringing him dead to the floor. "Now, boys," said Lieut. S., we are going to finish with a hand-to-hand fight. The pow der and ball are out; we must trust to the sword." j. Closely followed by his men as well as by Mr. Collins and Alice, the Lieutenant led the way towards the boat. It seemed as if Al giers had turned out to witness the triumphal retreat, the streets being filled with thousands of men and women collected together by the brief contest at the Moors's house, but not an attempt was made to intercept the progress of the party,the Algerines contenting themselves with scowls and denunciations. Ten minutes later the rescuers were at the cutter, twenty minutes more and the entire party were safely back to tho Constellation, not having lost a man. The young lieutenant received the hearty thanks of his superior, to say nothing of thegratitudc of Mr- Collins and his daugh ter, whose family proved to be of consequence in New York ; and we are assured that Char ley Stewart was never happier in his life than when Miss Alice was united to one of his "chums," a noble-hearted lieutenant, now a commodore, who fell in love with the rescued maiden on the Constellation's homeward passage. ANECDOTE 03? CASSIUS 11. CLAY. Notwithstanding the stroDg enmities which the slavery question ever engenders in the South, C. M. Clay's social qualities have made him ahvaj-s a favorite with the magnanimous portion of the slaveholders. On the Kentuc ky river, at the base of one of those immense ledges of perpendicular limestone, which give that stream the most sublime and picturesque scenery, where Fayette county joins Madison, (Mr. Clay's native co.,) flows one of the cold est and purest streams of water in all the land. Here for many years parties of gentlemen from both counties have been in the habit of meeting in the most 'social and unreserved manner, and feasting upon what is called a "hnrgout" a sort of camp soup made of fish, turnips, red pepper, &c. as much relished m the West as chowder in New England with interludes of cigars, old Bourbon and nnec dotcs. On such occasions all come uninvi ted, high and low, rich and poor, and a gen eral jollification ensues. A few years since, on one of the occasions, the Vice President (John 0. Breckenridge,) the Dudleys, Bruces, Hunters and other good fellows being present, it was proposed to go in bathing, and for many hundred yards the river was splashiug with good and bad swimmers, playing on each other all sorts of tricks. In the midst of all the fun came the terrible cry "a man is drowning!" This was Mr. Willis, of Madison county, whose family had been the most bitter enemies of C. M. Claj-. The four or five men who were nearest him fled to the shore in great terror, and immediately from a score or more persons rose the cry, "Clay Clay Clay !" Mr. Clay was about fifty or sixty jards above, but immediately swam down the swift stream to where Willis had sunk never to rise again of his own effort and seiz ing him by the hair at arm's length, swam to wards the shore, kenping the lace of the near, ly insensible man under water. He was called to on all sides to raise Willis' head above water; but knowing that the life of both depended upon keeping the drowning man from seizing hold of the swimmer, he pro ceeded calmly without answering till he plac ed his charge safely on land ; then turning to his officious advisers who had fled from the danger which they left to others, he said "next time, if you want his head raised above water, raise it yourself!" The universal call for Clay in this imergency, showed the great and unquestioned confidence which all who know him place in his quiet courage, and mag nanimity of soul; and the end proved that it was not misplaced. Willis and his family be came thenceforth his life iriends. Witchcraft In the course of the century during which the persecution against so-called witchcraft was at its height in Germany from 1580 to 1G80 it is calculated that more than 100,000 individuals,nine-tenths of whom were woman, were its victims. To the honor of hu manity be it said, some voices were raised ngainst this blood-thirsty practice ; but they were drowned In the general clamor. In every part of Germany, Protestant, or Catholic, the same atrocities were committed. At length, in the year 1631, the noble-hearted Count Frederic Stein, himself a member of the or der of Jesuits, an order which had been a mong the most violent denouncers of sorcery, ventured to step boldly forward and declare, that among the many whom he had conducted to the scafRld, there was not one whom he could confidently declare guilty. "Treat me so,"he added,"treatin this manner the judges, or the heads of the church, subject us to the same tortures, and see if you will not discov er sorcery in us all." Despite this burst of generous indignation, it was not nntil 1694 that this incomprehensible insanity began to abate. The last so-called witch burnt in the German Empire was a poor nun, aged 70, in the j'ear 1749, at Berg. But at Glarus, in German Switzerland, an execution of a simi lar nature took place as late as 1794. This time the victim was a servant girl, accused of having practiced diabolical arts, to lame the child of her employers. Germany, indeed, seemed to live in an atmosphere of sorcery. The ground which faith had lost, superstition made her own. Poets and Poetry of Germany. A Louisiana Paper, in recording the death by lightning of "two likely negro men," says : 'The electrid fluid of the clouds seems to be no respector of persons. It would as soon kill a negro worth fifteen hundred or two thou sand dollars as a poor white man not worth the powder and lead to blow his brains out." The odorous matter of flowers is inflamma ble, and arises from an essential oil. When growing in the dark their odor is diminished, but restored in the light, and it is strongest in sunny climates. The plant known as the frax. mclla takes fire in hot evenings by bringing a flame near its roots. FUNERAL OF A SIBERIAN CHIEF. At a late meeting of the London Royal His torical Society, Mr. Atkinson, whose interest, ing travels among the Kirgiz, and other no mades of Siberia, have recently been publish ed, delivered to the meeting "A narrative of some of his adventures among those rarely visited tribes," giving a graphic picture of their habits and manners. The following is an account of the funeral of a chief named Darnia Syrym, who died near Norzaisan, when Mr. Atkinson was on a visit to tho tribe : "So soon as the chief w.'s dead, messengers were sent off to invite the head men residing within a hundred miles, who all immediately repaired to the place. The body of the chief was laid oat in his best attire, his chair of state was placed at his head, his saddle, his arms and clothing were hung around, and silk curtains were suspended from the roof of his yourt. Ilis wives and daughlers, with the fe males of the tribe, knelt around, chanting the funeral dirge, in which the voices of men oc casionally joined. While this was going on the funeral feast was preparing. Ten horses and a hundred sheep were slaughtered and the flesh was thrown into numerous caldrons, boil ing over fires built in th! ground, which were constantly kept stirred by men stripped to the waist. When a sufficient quantity of food was dressed, the feast began. The guests sat in a circle round the meat, the chiefs nearest the centre ; those of next degree next them; and the women outside. "The feast lasted seven days, during which 2,000 persons partook heartily in the consump tion of mutton and horse-flesh. On the eighth day the body was conveyed to the tomb on a camel; the camel also carried the chair of state. The two favorite horses of the chief followed ; after which went the whole tribe, singing the funeral hymn. On reaching the place of burial, the body was deposited in the grave, and the horses were forthwith slain and placed beside the body of their master. When the grave was filled up, all returned to the en campment to continue the funeral feast, which comprised one hundred horses and one thous and sheep, slaughtered for the occasion. The festival continued for several days after the burial, the chief and thefamil' of the deceas ed chanting his praises every day, until all the guests had gradually departed for their homes. The feast was kept up by the tribe for a con siderable time afterwards; and the chanting was repeated every day, at sunrise and sunset, for a whole year. Mr. Atkinson dwelt on the very impressive nature of the ceremony the wailing music of the funeral chants the sor row, apparent at least, exhibited by an im mense concourse of mourners mingled with the almost savage accompaniment of the feast ; all this, in the midst of a desert which seemed to be of unlimited extent, produced an effect which an Englishman finds it difficult to picture tjo himself." Remedy for Insect Bites. When a raus quito. flea, gnat, or other noxious insect prtne tures the human skin, it deposits or injects an atom of an acidulous fluid of a poisonous na ture. The results are irritation, a sensation of tickling, itching, or of pain. The tickling of flies we are comparatively indifferent about; but the itch produced by a flea, or gnat, or other noisome insect, disturbs our serenity, and, like the pain of a wasp or a bee sting, cr cites us to a remedy. The best remedies for the sting of insects are those which will in stantly neutralize this acidulous poison depos ited in the skin. These are either ammonia or borax. The alkaline re-action of borax is scarcely jet sufficiently appreciated. How ever, a time will come when its good qualities will be known, and more universallj- valued than ammonia, or, as it is commonly termed, "hartshorn ;" it is moreover a snlt of that in nocent nature that it may be kept in every household. The solution of borax for insect bites is made thus: Dissolve one ounce of borax in one pint of water that has been boiled and allowed to cool. Instead of plain water, distilled rose water, elder, or orange flower water is more pleasant. The bites are to be dabbed with the solution so long as there is any iiritation. For bees' or wasps' stings, the borax solution may be made of twice the a bove strength. In every farmhouse this solu tion should be kept as a household remedy. Carstang vs. Shaw. The case of EflieC. Carstang against Henry Shaw, of St. Louis for breach of promise, will be remembered as one of the most remarkable of its kind ever occurring in this country. On its trial a ver dict was rendered by a St. Louis jury lor the sum of one hundred thousand dollars againsi the defendant. This, however, was set aside on account of some informalities, and anew trial ordered for the coming fall. The plain tiff and her family formerly lived in the city of Brooklyn, and, to ascertain, and, if possi ble, impeach the character of the plaintiff, a commission was issued by the courts of Mis souri appointing John G. Eager and Edward II. Collins, Esqs, of New York, to take tes timony thereon. The testimony, which is very voluminous, is just closed. Many of tha first and oldest citizens have been examined. It is said the only important witness against her has been impeached. Nearly four weeks have been spent in daily examinations of wit nesses on both sides. The testimony will be transmitted to St. Louis, and the final trial had in November in that city. Important Question Settled. We have always been interested in the number of chil dren which John Rogers, of precious memory, had at the time he was burnt. That picture in the old primer is before us now, when his wife and "vine small children, with one at the breast," were seen in the distance. 'Chancel lor Walwoith, tit Norwich, settled the matter by exhuming from some old history a letter or address from John to the government, in which was a passage to this effect : "I would that my worthy wife might come to see me ; she has with her ten children, which are hers and mine, and I would comfort her somewhat." Parson Brownlow. This eccentric gentle man recentlv passed through Staunton, on his way to the Virginia Springs. He has almost entirely lost his voice, but he says he intends to raise it against Locofocoisra as long as he can, and when he can no longer speak he in tends to make mouths at the rascally concern ! It ought always to be steadily inculcated, that virtue is the highest proof of understand ing, and the only solid basis of greatness; that vice is the consequence of narrow thoughts, and that it begins in mistake and ends in ignominy. OLD VIRGINIA. An Illinois Sucker took a great dislike to a foolish young Virginian who was a fellow-passenger with him on one of the Mississippi steamboats. Tho Virginian was continually combing his hair, brushing his clothes, or dus ting his boots to all which movements tiro Sucker tock exceptions, as being what ho termed "a leetle too darned nice, by half." He finally drew up his chair beside the Vir ginian and began "Whar might you be from, stranger ?" "I am from Virginia, sir," politely answer ed the gent. "From old Virginny, I s'p3se ?" says tha Sucker. "Yes, sir, old Virginia," was the reply. "You are pooty high up in the pictures thar, I suppose ?" "I don't know what you mean by that re mark, sir." "Oh, nnthin'," says the Sucker, "but that you are desp'rate rich, and have been brought up right nice." "It the information will gratify you, in any way," says the gent patronizingly, smoothing" down his hair, "I belong to one of the first families." "Oh, in course," answered the Snckcr. "Wrell stranger, bein' as you belong to the furst, I'll just give you two of the fattest shoats in all Illinois ef you'll only find me a teller that belongs to one of the second Virginny families." "You want to quarrel with me, sir," says the Virginian. "No, stranger, not an atom," answered the Sucker, "bnt I never seed one of the second family, and I'd gin suthin to git a sight at ono of 'em. I know you are one of the furst, 'cause you look just like John Randolph." ''This mollified the Virginian the hint of a resemblance to the statesman was flattering to his feeliegs, and he accordingly acknowledg ed relationship with the orator. "He, you know, descended from tho Ingln gal, Pocahontas." "You are right, sir," answered the other. "Well stranger," said the Sucker, -"do yon know thar is anuthcr queer thing allys puzzles me, and it's this I never seed aVirginyin that didn't claim to be either descended from an lngin, John Randolph, or a nigger." We need not add that the Sucker rolled off his chair suddenly ! They were seperated until the Sucker got off at a landing near his' home. As he stepped ashore, he caught sight of the Virginian on the upper deck, and bail ed him at once with "I say, old Virginny. remember two fat shoats for the furst feller you find belonging to the'second Virginny family !" SOCIAL LIFE ON THE FRONTIERS. W"e copy the following from one of Mr. Gree ley's letters, dated Big Sandy, Oregon, July 6. In speaking of the inhabitants on Black's Fork, he says : "J. R.who has been here some twen ty odd years began with little or nothing, and has quietly accumulated some fifty horses, three or four hundred head of neat cattle, three squaws, and any number of half-breed chil dren. He is said to be worth seventy-five thou sand dollars, though he has not even a garden, has probably not tasted an apple or peach these ten 3-ears, and lives in a tent, which would bo dear at fifty dollars. I instance this gentle man's life, not by any means to commend it, but to illustrate the habits of a class. Whito men with two or three squaws each, are quite common throughout, this region, and young and really comely Indian girls, are bought from their fathers, by white men, as regularly and openly as Circassians at Constantinople. The usual range of prices is from $40 to $80, about that of Indian horses. I hear it stated that, though all other trades may be dull, that in young squaws is always brisk on Green River and the North Platte. That women so purchased should be discard ed or traded off", as satiety or avarice may suggest, and they should desert or deceivo their purchasers, on the slightest temptation, can surprise no one. I met an Irishman on Big Sandy, whoso squaw had recentiy gone off with an Indian admirer, leaving him two clever, bright, half breed children of seven and five years. I trust that plank in the Republican Nation- " al i'latlorm,wlucn aturms tne right ana duty or Congressional Prohibition, not only of Slavery in i lie territories, uui ui i oo gamy aiso, is destined to be speedily embodied in a law. Mtsteriocs Affair at Harrisburg. Wo learn from the Harrisburg Telegraph of the 10th, that a tragedy, involved in considerable mystery, is now the prevailing sensation in that place. It appears that a short time since, a colored woman was imprisoned in Carlisle. While in jail she disclosed the fact that about eighteen months since, while the was employ ed as servant in the house of Mrs. Black, of Harrisburg, two gamblers, one of them named Knox, came to the house, accompanied by a stranger, for the purpose of gambling for money. During the evening a quarrel aroso between them. The stranger- drew a knife, and Knox a pistol. Knox fired and shot tho stranger through the head, killing him in stantly. The colored girl says 'she has been prevented from telling the story heretofore by bribes and threats. The girl Mas brought from Carlisle to Harrisburg where she repea ted the story. Knox being .in Philadelphia, a dispatch was sent to the Mayor to have him arrested, which was promptly done.. Search, was made for the body of the murdered man in the place where the girl said it had Wen buried, but no trace of it could be found. Knox was brought before Jndgc PearsCn on a writ of habeas corpus, on Saturday afternoon, where he entered bail in three securities to the amount of $15,000, to appear at Court and answer the charge of murder. The other day a lady fell off the Brooklyn boat into the East river; a poor Irishman sprang over and rescued her. When she was on deck again, her husband, who had been a calm spectator of the accident, handed tht brave fellow a shilling. Upon sotne or the. bystanders expressing indignation, Pat, said, as he pocketed the coin, "Arrah, don't blarao the jintleman he knows best ; mayhap if I hadn't saved her, he'd have given mo a dollar! The boys in Western New York are so fast to make Blondins of themselves,' that the doc tors have full lists c,f fractured limbs and bro ken heads to attend to." - - . . We heard of a dogVho was to erious that be hadn't the least bit of vag about bis taiLf