u u t -. n BY S. B. ROW. YOL. 6.-T0. 12. CLEARFIELD, PA., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1859. it- ! :-. --v.-.. 4 m 1 1 C03IE IN AND SHUT THE DOOR. 0 ! do not stand go long outside, Why need jou be so shy ? The people's eys are open. John, As they are passing by ! You cacnot tell what they may think, They're sail strange things before, And if you wish to talk awhile, Come in and shut the door ! Kay, do not saT '-No, thank you, Jane," With such a bashful smile ; You said when ladies whispered "No," They meant "Yes," all the while ! My father, too. will welcome you ; I told you that before ; It doesn't look well standing here Come in anJ shut the door! You said I did not answer you To what was said last night; 1 heard the question in tha dark Thought ou it in the light; And now my lips shall ntter what My heart has said before. Yes. dearest, I but stay awhile Come in and shut the door ! COPYRIGHT SECURED. J CLEARFIELD COUNTY: OR, REMINISCENCES OF THE PAST. Wh?n Judge Woodward's terra expired, it became necessary to appoint a President Judge to serve until under the amended Constitution an election could take plaee. The honor was conferred ly Governor Johnston on James T. Hale of Centre county. Judge Hale presided at several courts and produced a very favora ble impression. Time would have soon worn off that which alone has been alleged against Iiixn being too much of the advocate. Mr. Hale was well known in our community. For many years he had attended our courts regu larly, and assisted at tha trial of important causes. He is in the prime of life, of fine ap pearance, polished manners, superior attain ments, and well versed in the knowledge of law. He has been an industrious lawyer, and at the bar ranks high. His personal character adds force to nis words, which, when address ing a jury or the court, are earnest. lie is a pleasant speaker seldom indulges in oratori cal display, but in chaste and plain language delivers himself of lucid and strong arguments. A mannerism in speaking attracts the auditor from the subject to the man, and mars some what tha effect on those not directlj- interested in his discourse. Mr. Hale has lent a helping hand to the temperance reform, in which, as wll as other benevolent enterprizes, he has been warmly enlisted. As a politician, he was connected with the old Whig party, and since its dissolution he has remained arrayed against the Democratic party. At the election of he was elected a member of Congress in a district where the party to which he is at tached had been for years in the minority. In the fall of 1801, Robert G. White was e lected as successor to Judgo Hale. He presi ded at but one court, and then a change in the district made Hon. John C. Knox the Presi dent Judge. Again the district was remodel ed, ai.d Hon. James Burnside was elected in 1S33. Tl;e melancholy accident which re moved Mr. Burnside having occurred during the publication of these sketches, and a lengthy notice then having been published, is sufficient reason for saying no more here. The vacancy occasioned by the death of Judge Burnside was fiiled by the appointment of Hon. James" Gamble of Jersey Shore. Mr. Gamble had represented this county in the Legislature when we were connected with Lycoming coun ty in a Representative district. lie is an a miallo and worthy genth-man, possessed of talents, of high order. Personally popular, Jvdge Gamble, thiough th; suffrages of his neighbors, has been elected to Congress and called upon to fill other positions. Having served here but one term as President Judge, we cam ot speak of his merits. His successor is Samuel Linn of Bellefonte, a son of Rev. James Linn, who for more than fifty years has ofliciated as pastor of a Presbyterian church in Centre county, and who in an early day oc casionally ministered to the spiritual wauts of our citizens. Sun tie I Linn from his admission to practice until recently was another of the Bellefonte Lawyers who was regular in his attendance at our court. The principal part of his time has been devoted to his profession. Few men of his age hive acquired and merited so great a tame for legal erudition as he. In our good old Commonwealth, he has few peers and his superiors arc rare. His practice has been large, and extended over several counties. In ihe examination of witnesses he shows con siderable tact his cross examinations being olten searching and severe. When assisting in a cause you might suppose from his dreamy iook that he was half asleep and uninterested, but when a question is asked or testimony of fered which is not geriuaine to the case and affects his client, quick as the flash he rises to his feet and interposes his objections. Then, should the occasion demand it, you hear from his lips a clear, concise, and logical argument, shoeing a master intellect, legal acumen, and deep reading. When before the J:ry, be is listened to with marked attention. His speeches are episodes which fill p the routine of the week. Something good is al koked for. If there is any fun in the ce he is mre to bring it out, and that in the drollest manner when you least expect it. Mr. Linn is a close reasoner, sometimes splits hairs. 1 - appears best in those matters where author iti Bfeia contradictory or nearly balanced ; thtn he throws himself into the argument, and roY.i gan of heavy metal. He is honora ble as well as able. lie has his peculiarities, and has rendered his name familiar to the le gal profession by writing a peculiar book pe culiar from the fact that, whilst others of its genus have began at the mouth and traced back to the fountain head, he wrote in the nat ural order, commencing where the principle first sprung from among the leaves and garbi age of the reports, and traced it through its meanderings. We said wrote perhaps we are wrong in using that word, for the work contains nothing of his but the preface ; yet it shows careful, laborious and long continued application on a subject which could only be interesting to one determined to master Penn sylvania jurisprudence. Linn's Analytical Di gest has less to interest the general reader than a dictionary, but to the practicing law yer it is as valuable and indispensable, as the book named is to the student. Mr. Linn is a bout adopting new and untried duties. We are aware that his legal training and his prac tice enable him to be" a correct Judge. We are certain he will be an impartial one, and the people of this district will not complain if in f uture time it can be said of him as of an emiuent justice "He held his judgment in perfect abeyance until he heard all that could be said pro and con, and then formed his o pinion with inflexible drmness. No man fear ed responsibility less than he, in what he thought right none could bo more impertur bable, impenetrable, silent, patient and ab stracted until it was his cue to speak ; it was impossible to foretell what his opinion would be, but when he charged a Jury, none could be more explicit and authoritative." We must yet mention another of that galaxy which, for years, by their brilliancy added an interest to our judicial proceedings. Andrew G. Curtin is a native of Centre county. His practice here as assistant counsel was large. Altho' amply qualified to conduct any cause, he succeeded best in those which from their nature enlisted the sympathies of the jury in behalf of his client. He possesses all the ele ments of an orator. A large frame, finely de veloped figure, a noble and expressive counte nance, natural and easy gesticulation, and a voice, falling like music on the car, modula ted by his will. He has a fine flow of lan guage ; he at times indulges in biting sarcasm, and his speeches abound with the choicest rhetorical figures and the most highly wrought imagery. Irresistably he carries you away. You weep with him, smile with him, and laugh heartily at his droll word-pictures, yet when he takes his seat it is impossible to recall what he has said. His speeches are like dreams of which only a delightful impression remains. Andy, as he is familiarly called, is a noble specimen of the country gentleman. His man ners are easy and agreeable. He is kind, warm hearted and affable. In society he is the life of the company ; his conversation is attrac tive, slibwing extensive reading, and an inti mate knowledge of men and natuie, and he leads his wit sparkles ; his tepartees are bril liant, and despite yourself you love the man. He has been an active politician, and being in a district in which bis party is in the minori ty has been named for office but never elect ed." He served as Secretary of the Common wealth during Governor Pollock's administra tion. Our Bar at present is composed of young men, who are not without name for ability and research and are gaining for themselves repu tations. As with a Curtin the scene generally closes, we will so close our glance at the Court and Bar, and when the present members, who now unaided conduct their business, have tar ried at Jericho until their beards have grown, others may perhaps sketch them. (TO BE C0XTIXCEIJ.) t , m m w Nebraska Politics. Mr. Purple, formerly conductor on the Western Railroad, and a member ol the first Legislature of Nebraska, thus tells his experience in Western politics. He says : "Secretary T. B. Cumming said to me one morning, 'Purple, we want a member from Burt county.' So I harnessed up and took nine fellows with me from Iowa, and we started for the woods ; and when we thought we had got far enough for Burt county, we un packed our ballot box and held an election, (in Washington county,) canvassed the vote, and it was astonishing to observe how great was tho unanimity at the first election ever held in Burt county. Purple had every vote. So Purple-was declared duly elected." Dr.Livingstonc, the celebrated African trav eller, who is at present exploring the river Zambezi, reports the valley of the Shire as a bounding with wild elephants, having magni ficent and most valuable tusks. In one herd he saw over five hundred of the giant game grazing on the plain. The Shire is a good navigable river lor over one hundred miles from its confluence. The mountains of Me rembela stand 4.000 feet over the plain, pos sessed of a fine climate and profuse vegetation lemon trees, oranges, and pine-apples grow ing wild in the woods, promising to be had in abundance and cheap lrotn tho natives, who cultivate largely the upper third of the valley. The existence of an organized band of rob ir oitpnsive in numbers, and carrying on concerted operations over a wide region of country, bordering on tne soumwesieru snore of Lake Erie, is certain beyond a doubt. The frequent and heavy depredations committed between Buffalo and Cleveland have caused the police of both cities to suspect that such is the case,and that their rendezvous is some where near Erie, in this State. A mass of the best cannel-ooal of the size of a whale, it is said, contains moro oil than there is In that fish. MESMERISM AND MATKIMONY. OR, SCIENCE VERSUS WIDOW. Martin Speed was a bachelor. He had backed and filled, and hesitated and doubted about entering en the "blissful estate" of matiimony, until the fire of youthful passion was all spent, and matrimony had become a problem to him as dry and as formal as one in old Walsh's arithmetic; to be ciphered out for an answer as much as that proposition a bout carrying the fox, goose, and bag of corn across the creek, that everybody "problemly" remembers. Being a phrenologist, he left the province of hearts altogether, and went to ex amining heads to ascertain by craniological developments a woman's fitness tor the posi tion of a wife to Martin Speed, Esq., as letters came addressed to him at the Speedwell post, office. The town of Speedwell was named for an ancestor of his, and boasted -of several thousand inhabitants; and as it was a factory place, it had a goodly, share of good-looking marriageablegirls. f ' ' ".-." Martin studied Combe and Spurzheim, and Gall, and grew bitter a a disappointment sav him enter his forty-first year a bachelor. Ho looked back on the past,Nind saw the chances he had neglected, and "the;. haprjinees;oj those who had started with him,"and were how port" lypeople; the heads and fronts of families j and the delicate damsels" he had slighted, re-, spected mothers in Israel, and exemplary and amiable wives. lie sought every opportunity ol examining the heads of such as would sub mit themselves to his hand with a hope of catching the bachelor; for they knew his weakness, and he was well-to-do, and an eligi ble match. But in vain he looked lor perfec tion. The bumps would not be arranged as he wished them. If he took a liking to a pretty face, phrenology impertinently gave it the lie straight, and he at once avoided it. It was at this juncture that a biological lec turer a grave protessor in that science came to Speedwell and gave a series ot exhibitions. These Martin attended and biology at once be came an "intensity" with him a "new emo tion." He attended all the exhibitions; saw men personate roosters and crow ; hens and scratch ; shiver with cold or burn with heat, at the will of the operator; saw a miser en deavor to clutch an eagle held out to him while under the influence of the wonderful spell, and the tongue of a woman stilled who for twenty years had been the pest of Speed well by her loquacity. This put the mind of Martin on a new track. He sold all his phrenological works snd devo ted himself to the study of the wonderful science through which such marvels were per formed. The professor was such a fine teach er, and Martin placed himself under his tui tion. He succeeded admirably. In a short time he surpassed his instructor.and had more than his power in influencing the susceptible among his weak brethren and sisters. He formed a resolution to himself that through this means he could gain a wife. Could he find one that bis sciencejcould control one that at a glance he could transfix, like the man who was stopped by a mesmerizer half way down, as he was falling from the roof of a house he would marry her ; for the reason, dear reader, that Martin had not married, was, that he had heard of wi'ves wearing the au- thontj "over their lords, and he was a timid man. In this new science he saw security ,and sedulously sought for one of tho right de scription. At every party where he was in vited, at every sewing circle, at every knot of fictory girls in which he mingled in the evenings. ho tried his art, but without success. At'ast, wnen on the point of despairii.g, ac cident gave what he had failed to obtain by earnest seeking. A widow dangerous to a bachelor's pe ice, as edged tools are to the careless bands of the unexperienced came to the village on a visit. The weeds had not been removed that marked her bereavement, and the merest touch of melancholy rested on her brow ; but her eye was laughing, and a sweet curl strayed awa' and lajslikc a chisl ed eddy upon the marble of her cheek. She had a jewel on her hand, and the black dress she won? was cut judiciously the milliner that cut it had been a widow herself, and knew how to manage such matters showing a beau tiful white shoulder, and revealing a bust of rare loveliness. Martin met the widow at the residence of a friend and liked her. ne had never seen so prepossessig a woman ho thought. But she had buiied one husband, and that was rather a drawback. One visit led to another the liking still increasing, until he broached the subject of his biology, with a wish fervently' that this might be the woman he sought. She was fully acquainted with it, and in answer to his question if she was susceptible to its in fluence, she replied that she did not know, but was willing to have the fact tested. Wh it a position for Martin ! Seated by her side on a sofa, with her hand laid in bis, her rich dark eyes resting upon his'with a look equal to that which the widow Wadman ' poured into the eyes of the unsuspecting Toby in the stillness of a summer evening ! But science held him secure, and his nerves were as calm as the sum mer day of that evening. By-and-by the beautiful lids drooped, the head bent gently forward, and tho widow, with a swe-t smile upon her lips, lay lasl asleep. Martin could have shouted "Eureka," in his delight at the discovery. Now his pulse quickened, and he stooped to kiss the lips that lay unresisting before him ; but he didn't. By the exercise of his power he awakened her, and she was so much surprised at being caught napping, and blushed at the strangenesss of it ; and blushed more when Martin told her how he had been tempted, and how gloriously he had resisted; and laughed a little when she slapped his cheek with her fingers as he took pay from the wid ow's lips for his self-denial, and went home half crazy with his new-fouud treasure, more like a boy of nineteen than a matured gentle man of forty. Every night found him a visitor at the wid ow's and every night the success of the sci ence was proved, until by a mere look or wave of the hand the beautiful widow became a subject to bis will, and he became at the same time a subject to hers. She was a splendid creature, too ! Yon would not find in a long journey a fairer or more intelligentfor more virtuous. The question might be asked, which was the most pleasant subjugation, his or hers. But he thought only of his own, not deeming that he was in a spell more pow erful,tbat was irrevocably binding him. , What could an old bachelor know of such a thing ? This state of things grew to a crisis at last, and Martin formally proposed to the widow that the two sbonld be made one by the trans mutation Of the church. To this she assented ; and it was announced soon after, to the aston ishment of all, that Martin Speed had married the widow Goode. The punster of the village made a notable pun about Good Speed, at which the people laughed very much ; and the editor of one of the papers, who was a very funny man, put it in print. It happened, fchortly after tho marriage, that they had a famous party, and somejof the guests bantered Martin about his marriage, upon which he told them how it came about. They were a little incredulous, and he volun teered to give them some specimens of his remarkable power over his wife. She was in the next room attending to some female friends when he called hei to him. She came obedi ently, and he aslfed her to sit down, which she did. He took her hand and looked into hei eyes, to put her to sleep. Her eyes were wide open and a lurking spirit of mischief looked out of them broadly into his. He waved his hands before them, but they remain ed persistently open. He bent the force of his will to their subjugation,but it was no use. - ' "Mr. Speed," said she, laughing, "1 don't believe the magnetism of the husband is equal to that ot a lover ; or, perhaps science and mat rimony are at war." She said this in a manner to awaken a strong suspicion in his mind that she had humbugged him, and had never been put to sleep at all. His friends as friends will when they fancy a poor fellow has got into a hobble laughed at him and told the story all around the village. For months he was an object of sport to every body. People would make passes over each other as he passed, and women would shut their eyes and look knowing. But, whether his power had gone or not, hers remained ; and he cared not a fig for their laughing, for he was happy in the beautiful spell of affection which she threw over him, that bound him as a chain of flowers. The attempt to close her eyes was never repeated, for he was too glad to see them open to wish to lose sight of them. Life with Speed sped well, and Martin became a father in time. He never regretted the ex pedient he adopted to get his wife, though he never could make out exactly whether she had humbugged him or not. IRON AND ITS USEFUL APPLICATIONS. The United States has iron in unlimited a bundance ; and iron is, of all metals, the most important. Better be without our gold mines than our iron mines ; in lact, we ma' almost estimate a nation's might by the quantity of iron it consumes. It enters into the composi tion of almost everything, and without it noth ing substantial can be effected. The farmer's plowshare, the woodman's axe, the instruments of agriculttiie,. the wheels of carriages, the shoes of horses, the multiform machinery of manufactures, and the tools of every trade to say nothing of the railroad and the steam-engine all these powerful auxiliaries of man are chiefly composed of iron. We have not an article of utility in tho household which is uot dependent in a great measure upon this metal. While iron is the source of our pros perity in peace, it forms also the very nerves and sinews of our strength in war; the cannon-balls, the sabre and the bayonet those terrible instruments of destruction are all composed of this same metal. Upon the sea it is equally omnipresent ; there, in the shape of a steamship, it forms the vessel of war, the most formidable agent that has been yet em ployed by man. Thus, no subject can abound in deeper interest to all nations than that of iron ; and the greater the facility with which any land can produce and employ it, the more does she possess within herself the true ele ments of wealth. No nation, however, should be content with the mere knTTwledge that na ture has enriched its territory with the 'ele ments from which this metal can be produced. Her people must also be instructed in the most economical methods by which the buried trea sure may be drawn from the bowels cf the earth and transformed into articles subservient to the us(j of man. All nations, accordingly, which have made any considerable advance in civilization, have devoted a large amount of time to the study of the art ot making and working iron. This most valuable metal is so abundant in the earth, and is produced so cheaply, that to compete in the production, not only the ore but tho lime and fuel for working it must be had ; and as these are re quired in so large a quantity, the three must be found in close proximity. Each tun of ore" requires one tun of coal and one-third of a tun of lime. In many portions of the western States iron is fonnd m horizontal beds with similar beds ol" coal and lime, all cropping out in the ravines which have been cut by the ac tion of the water through the strata, so that all three are quarried by drifting in horizontally from the ravine. Along the shores of Lake Erie, and in many portions of New England, furnaces are employed in smelting bog iron ore. It has long been known that this kind of ore increases in quantity, or grows. Af ter all the ore was once removed from a bog, in a few years it would be found to be filled with a fresh supply. It has been ascertained that this iron is brought into the bog dissolved iu water; and in some cases it is simply deposi ted , while in others it forms the coating or shields of microscopic animals. Though the little beings are so small as to be individually invisible to the naked eye, they exist in such innumerable multitudes that great furnaces are employed for years in melting down their shields into cast-iron. Investor of Perpetual Motion Dead. Jas. G. Hendrickson died at his residence, at Black's Mills, New Jersey, on Saturday last, in the 69th year of his age. The last 40 years of his life he has engaged in the pursuit of the perpetual motion, and he succeeded in con structing a machine, very simple in its ar arrangement, which appears to realize the idea. It has been exhibited in various parts of the country, and in several of the large ci. ties, and so far has defied the closest scrutiny to detect in it the imposture. Of late years his attention has been absorbed in the one idea of his life, to the neglect of the ordinary mode of acquiring a livelihood, and he eked out a scanty support by the proceeds of the exhibi tion of his machine. "Mr. Jones, have you got a mntch ?" "Yes, sir, a match for the old boy ; there she is mi ing up dough." Jones pointed to his wife, and then slid from the front door. The last we saw of him he was. "kitingr" down the road, hotly pursued by a red-beaded lady with a cistern pole at a threatening angle. An Exchange says a friend of his "died without the aid of pbysicl&n." Singular ! THE BATH OF BLOOD. About the year 1610, Elizabeth Bathora, sis ter to the King of Poland, and the wife of a rich and powerful Hungarian magnate, was the principal actor in the most singular and horri ble tragedy mentioned in history. She occu pied the Castle of Csejta, in Transylvania. Like most ladies of that period, she was sur rounded by a troop of young girls, generally the daughters of poor, but noble parents, who lived in honorable servitude ; in return for which their education was cared for and their dowry secured. Elizabeth was of a severe and cruel disposition and her hand-maidens led no joyous life. Slight faults are said to have been punished in the most cruel and merciless tortures. ' One day, as the lady of Csejta was admiring at the mirror those charms which that faithful monitor told her were last waning, she gave way to her ungovernablo temper, excited per haps, by the mirror's unwelcome hint, and struck her unoffending maid with such force in the face as to draw blood. As she washed from her hands the stain, she fancied the part which the blood bad touched whiter, softer, and as it were she believed she had found the elixer r.la, the lount of never-fading youth and beauty. Remorseless by nature, and now urg ed on by irrepressible vanity, the thought no sooner flashed across her brain than her reso lution was taken ; the life of her luckless hand maiden was not to be compared w ith the pre cious boon her death promised to secure. E lizabeth, however, was wary as well as cruel. At the foot of the rock on which Csejta stood was a small cottage, inhabited by two old wo men, and between the cellar of this cottage and the castle was a subterranean passage known only to one or two persons, and never used but in time of danger. With the aid of these old crones and her steward, Elizabeth led the poor girl through the secret passage to the cottage, and alter murdering her, bathed in her blood. Not satisfied with her first essay, at different intervals, by the aid of these ac complices and the secret passage, no less than three hundred maideus were sacrificed on the altar ot vanity and superstition. Several years had been occupied in this piti less slaughter, and no suspicion was excited, though the greatest amazement pervaded the country at the disappearance of so many per sons. At last however, Elizabeth called into play against her two passions even stron ger than vanity and cunning love and re venge became interested in the discovery of the mystery. Among the victims of Csejta was a beautiful virgin, who was beloved by and betrothed to a young man of the neighborhood. In despair at the loss of his mistress, he fol lowed her traces with such perseverencc, that, in spite ot the hitherto successful caution ol the murderess, he penetrated the bloody se crets of the castle, and burning tor revenge, he flew to Presburg, boldly accused Elizabeth Ba thora of murder, before the palatine In open court, and demanded judgment against her. So grave an accusation brought against a pur son of such high rank, demanded the most se rious attention, and the palatine undertook to investigate the affair in person. Proceeding immediately to Csejta, before the murderess or her accomplices had an' idea of the accusa tion, he discovered the still warm body of a young girl whom they had been destroying as the palatine approached, and had not time to dispose of it before he apprehended them. The rank of Elizabeth mitigated her punish ment to imprisonment lor life, but her assis tants were burned at the stake. Legal documents still exist to attest the truth of this circumstance. Paget a distin guished traveller, who visited Csejta about twenty years ago, says : "With this tale fresh in mind, we ascended the long hill, gained the castle, and wandered over its deserted ruins. The shades of eveding were just spreading o ver the valley, the bare, gray walls stood up against the sk-, the solemn stillness of eve ning reigned over the scene; and as two ra vens, which had made their nests on the cas tle's highest tower, came toward it. winging their heavy flight, and wheeling once around, each cawing a coarse welcome to the other, alighted on their favorite turret, I could have fancied them the two old crones, condemned to haunt the scene of their former crimes, while the infernal mistress was cursed by some more wretched doom." Some of the Indians on Lake Superior have formed a temperance society. The occasion of this was as follows: A large number of them had collected a considerable amount of money in small sums, which they intrusted to the keeping of a chief in whom they had im plicit confidence. This dignitary was not in fallible, and one day went on a spree and spent it all. The red men held an indigna tion meeting over it, and, after a most empha tic series of grunts; formed a self-protective association, based on fundamental principles that is to say, the first Indian who got drunk was to be tied to a stemp and whipped with twentv-five lashes. Jcst So. "Gov. Willard's connection with Brown's Lieutenant is a misfortune which we are not disposed to aggravate by censuring him for acting in accordance with natural feeling. But suppose, instead of being brother-in-law of a Democratic Governor, Cook had been a brother-in-law of Gov. Morgan or Gov. Chase 1 Suppose they had gone down to Harper's Fer ry to labor for his acquittal? What a howl would have been raised by the Locofoco pa pers ! How zealously would they have harped upon the fact as evidence of 'compli city with the insurrection.' As it is, they will be silent as the grave for 'circumstances alter cases.'" Tho Agricultural Bureau of the United States Patent Office have received intelligence ot the shipment from Havre, France, of a large swarm of Lombardy bees. These bees will be sent upon their arrival here direct to the Agricultural Bureau. They are of a lar ger size than the ordinary bee, and having a larger bill are "'e to suck flowers inaccessi. ble to the A"ericau Dee The product of an old hivo of these is sometimes 150 lbs of hon ey in one season. : These bees will not bo dis turbed until 1861. A New Ticket A wag suggests that, (in consideration of his valuable services to the party,) "Major General Brown" be put on the ticket for the Vice Presidency, with 'old Buck' in 1860. The General is-a courageous fellow, but we can't think be has distinguished himself sufficiently t' the ranks to merit so sadden an elevation. However, that is a matter ior Lo cos to settle. '"Sack. & Bro-n,,--ilreedTrelL EXPLAINING THINGS. Nothing can be fully explained. In every department of knowledge, if we go a few steps from that which is visible upon the surface, we come to absolute mystery which no man can explain. Ask the most learned surgeon to explain the motion of the hand. He tells j ou the little hand is at one end of a bona which has a joint at the other end ; that a band of flesh, which he calls a muscle, i attached at one end to this bone and at the other end to another bone beyond the joint, in such a way that, when the muscle contracts, the bono moves upon the joint and carries the hand a long. A nerve leads fiom the brain to the muscle and carries the influence by which tho will acts upon the muscle. If you ask the eurgeon how the brain acts upon the nerve,and the nerve upon the muscle, he cau tell j-pu no more than the smallest child or the most ig norant savage can- What the nervous iflu ence is whether it is a fluid or a vibration, or whether it is something diiTerent from either of these is known to God, but it is not known by any of the childien of men. We see a pebble fall to the ground, and wo are told that it is drawn by the attraction ot gravitation; but what the attraction ol gravi tation is how it reaches np from the earth and takes hold of every atom of the pebblo and pulls it down Is to us an un fathomed mystery. There must be some material con nection between the stone and the earth. This was so plain to Sir Isaac Newton that he re garded the person who denied it a incapable of comprehending the proposition. But if wa pass our hand between the stone and the earth we cannot feel any suVstance, we cannot see anj' with our eyes, and yet we know that i hero is some matter interposed, between the two bodies which draws them together with tre mendous power. We know some of the pro perties of gravitation ; we know that it diaws all ponderous bodies together with a force proportioned to the quantity of matter which they contain, and in inverse proportion to the square of distance between them. But what its essence is, and how it takes hold of mat ter, no human being has ever learned. Oxygen is more ready to enter into chemi cal combination with zinc than it is with cop per, but why this is so not all the chemists in the world can tell. Vast iudeed is the amount of knowledge in regard to chemical affinity ; what substances exhibit its power with the greatest energy, how to manifest itself in thousands ot curious and complicated and wonderful operations, all in accordance with fixed and infallible laws, have been learned by patient and laborious study of many among the greatest intellects of our race ; but what the essence ot chemical affinity is, or how it takes bold of the atoms whicii it moves, ha uever been ascertained. If we attempt to understand thoroughly any fact whatever which comes under our observa tion, we shall find thai a few steps will- bring us to the dark gulf of profound and iiniathom ed mystery. Carlisle says : "Sooty Manches ter, it too is spanned by the skyey firmament, and there is Life in it, and Death it it ; and it is every whit as unimaginable, as inconceiva- ble, as the oldest Salem or prophetic city !." Ait about a Pair of Garters. Tho De troit, Michigan, Free Pres, of a recent date, tells the following story : A blooming young damseljWho called herself Rosa Johnsn,mado complaint agai:ist another equally attractive maiden named Martha Jane O'Brien, before Justice Pnrdy, charging her with having sto len an elegant, costly, and altogether invalua ble pair of garters, unlawfully appropriating the same to her own comfort and delectation, much to the detriment of the peace of mind of the said Rosa. It appeared from the state ment of the pretty and much aggrieved Rosa, whose blue eyes suffused in tears as she told her grievance, that those articles of feminino wear had been the joy of her heart. A sea-, faring lover of hers had brought them all tho way from Buenos Ayres, where the Spanish ladies indulge in little extravagancesthat way, and they w ere very unique for such a country as this, where a lover never would think of presenting, as a token of esteem, a dozen of garters, as they do down there. They were figured with elaborate devices, and inscribed with a pretty motto in Spanish, which she said he told her meant all about love and kisses, and such like ; and had a Cupid on one end who embraced a heart on the other when the article was clasped. She missed them on Sunday morning, and kicked up such a row about it that there wa3 no peace in the family until all the girls it was some sort of a femi nine manufacturing institution agreed to a search. When it came Martha Jane's turn, however, she demurred on the ground of ex, treme delicacy, whereupon they all set upon her and threw her down, and then made a for cible inspection, which revealed the stolen property in all its pristine and unblemished beauty. Rosa said she would have rather lost her best silk dress, and demanded that sum mary justice should be done. Martha Jano plead the great temptation and the instinctive weakness of her sex. for the little vanities or the world, and maintained that she only wan ted to borrow them for the occasion ah of which so overruled the majesty ot th law that she got off with only a lathe: ly ad monition to a better conduct in future. Somo thought it was no great sin atter all. the offence was so peculiar and the sinner so pretty. About the most remarkable piece of brutal ity we have ever, heard of was perpetrated on Thursday evening, Sd instant, in Cincinnati. Some persons unknown caught a little daugh ter of Mr. Charles Relth, only tveo years old, stripped and covered her from head to foot with tar, and let her find home in that condi tion. The father had offered a reward ol $50 for the villains. Mr. Israel Woodbury, aged 100 years, died recently in Salem, N. II. He was at the bat t e of Bunker Hill, and was for three Tears in the hands of the British as a prisoner. Two years ago, one hundred of his descendants sa luted him at bis home. . - ,rat,fuhpldiDR ioT'ih in rTf oi women, conclude, thus, "Oh, my hearers, depend up! on it, nothing beats a good wife.' I W your pardon," replied one of his female audf tors, "a drunken husband does." . L..9hi ! the reat country for raising raw silk. N o less than 1.000,000 of pounds were exported last year. All classes in Pekin wear xt lor common clothing. - -. Fancy may "bolt. bran, ind think it flotr. m I, 5. - - V i! I) ' fv V - . u : 1 1 -.:" IP Hi - - ? -Pi A -St I - Ail i . r.. ; jV-"" K sr . . . - v T r