- BY S. B. ROW. CLEARFIELD, PA., WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1860. YOL. 6.-JT0. 24. TSEY TELL ME THAT I'M ALWAYS GAY. They tell me that I'm always gay, That iny heart is ever light. That Bought of sorrow clouds my way, Or dims life's roses bright. Eut O, they do not read aright. The lore of my soul profound. Whose buried griefs, obscured from sight, Not even the plummet can sound. The thoughts which sadly crowd my brain, Jfo human mind can know ; This heart shall never more complain, Though crushed to earth by woe ! "Within the smiles of life I'll bask, , A slave to joy and mirth, Till death shall cast aside the mask I wore while on the earth. THE PRINCE'S LOOK. CONTINUED. X HUNTING PIECE. Th farther he found himself among the mountains, the more composed his mind be came. He thought of his old tutor, Maritius, and sometimes, too, of his beantiful compani on. He took out the glove, and examined it carefully. From the glove his thoughts turn ed to the bcautitul arm, hand and finger ; from the arm, he thought of the fair shoulder, and then of the fine symmetry of her whole lovely person, and the proud majesty of her inno cence. He had nothing now to do but indulge bis fancies, for the country was without varie ty. He was following a road, on either side ol which rose mountains and tr?es. Suddenly he heard a shot, aud a ball whizzed by him. The colonel stood still. "Halloa !" he cried. A fox dashed across the road, and soon a huntsman appeared in pursuit. "Badly aimed, friend," cried the colonel, "yon had nearly Lit me instead of the fox." The stranger turned towards Lini. "How f" he cried, "is it possible 1" Ho slowly ap proached, took oil' his hat, saying, with much respect, "I do not mistake You are the B.iron von Leinau ?" "And you I recollect you vre have met somewhere O, yes ! in London. You are Count Streitenberg !" said the colonel- "Ah, comrade !" exclaimed the count, embracing the baron with great cordiality. Now came question upon question, joy upon Joy. Come with me," said tho count : "not far from hence is a sportsman's breakfast, cojd meat and a glass of vine. We will share it." ' They went. The breakfast was waiting un der an old oak, and a youth was standing by. The count bade the young man go home with the dogs, and order dinner at the hour, lor the chase was ended for the day, and the stranger was to be his guest. When the youth had de parted, the count again fell on the baron's neck. "Baron," he cried, "I cannot express my delight. Ah ! If you only knew how many thousand times I have wanted you here, and how much I value you. Where are you go ing 1 What have you to do J Are you mar ried ? Have you a family ?" The baron, forgetting tho unpaid debt, and enlivened partly by the cordiality of the count, and partly by the good wine, returned the em braces of bis friend. The count was highly delighted. "There is a wonderful sympathy between ws, baron," said he; "I loved you from the first moment of our acquaintance in London, and when 3-ou gave me tho bank-note, and delivered me from the perplexing embar rassment in which the severity of my uncle had thrown me really, baron, no man had ev tt before such an impression made upon him. I Lave no friend. I have never found one un til now. I pray you, be my friend." The baron embraced the count in silence. "Ah, baron, I am unhappy, very unhappy," continued the count, looking sadly at Leinau, very unhappy. It is doubtful whether you " "Whether what ?'' interrupted Leinau with warmth, while the thought of the unpaid bank note flashed across his mind. "Unhappy T well! unhappy? I am unhappy also. We shall suit each other so much the better. I will not forsake you. We shall share money and estate, if need be. No, it is not in vain that I have a hundred times sworn to myself that such a noble countenance could not de ceive me. Count, we are friends forever. We ae brothers, brothers formed for one an other by Heaven. So be it !" "So be it baron," said the count, again embracing him ; "I have found at last tho man I have sought so long." "And our treaty is in all due form and or der, consummated," cried the colonel, filling both glasses with the remains of the flask. "I belong to you forever, My blood for you !' The count, seized with the like enthusiasm, exclaimed, "You are my friend ; never cease to be my friend. Yon are my brother. I, too, could die for you. Now I am unhappy no longer." "I will put a marble monument," continued the count, as they both rose, "under this oak. If you are faithless to me, I will summon you to this oak and this monument." "How?" said the baron; "I thought you were unhappy because yon had no property, and now you are going to erect marble pil lars." The count laughed and said, "O my dear baron, my misfortune is not poverty. Is it then a misfortune to be without money ?" "You are right," replied Leinau, "it was a mistake of mine. I trust that you and I would not be unhappy even it we were beggars ?" So the conversation went on. Arm in arm they sauntered through the forest, and when they came out into the open country, there 6tood before them, on a hill, which ascended from a lovely valle3r, several miles long and wide, a noble chateau. The colonel was rela ting to tho count his adventures, travels, and campaigns in Russia and Poland, and how he had Ipst at last every thing, and he hardly no ticed the beauty of the garden through which they were going. But when they emerged from the shrubbery, and a large, elegant man sion stood before them, with ample courts, wauunu iountains and statues, the baron looked around him with astonishment. "To whom does this castle belong ?'.' lie asked. "o my uncle," replied the count; "but I occupy it. You see now there is room e nough for yoa." The baron grew more and more serious as they approached the edifice, and the ducal coat of arms appeared over the portal. Two servants came out, with an air of great respect, took charge of the count's hunting piece, and ' the baron's also. "Is dinner ready 1" asked the count. - "If your grace pleases." The colonel looked first at tho count, and . then at the building. "What is the fellow ying V asked he., pointing to the servant as the latter retired4 Why j asked tho cQunt ' i ... " 8amniered the baron, "it sound- T.!l Klrf' "Sha,: 1 teU yn now at ,at "bo ' interrupted the count ; "yon would cot pbrmit m to do it in London." "Certain- ly. It is quite time," replied the baron. "My name is Louis.' "Well, but what else?' "How! you are not afraid" said the count, taking the baron's hand. "I am the Crown Prince." The colonel drew back, and would have rais ed his hand to his hat, but the prince exclaim ed, "How ! shall I lead you back to the oak, Leinan, where you swore to be my brother V "The true foundation of friendship is want ing, equality," answered the baron. "In the eye of the world, dear Leinau," replied the prince, "it is wanting, but not between our selves. Before tho world you will give me my title, but when we are alone together, I am your brother, and you will call me Louis.". EXPLANATIONS. In the company of the prince, the colonel forgot the pastor, Mauritius, whom he had set out to seek only from-a weariness of his mon otonous life. The two friends were right in believing that they were made for each other. Both loved, hated, honoured, or despised the same things,although,ottentimes,from very dif ferent reasons. The prince,aIthough no braver than the baron, was more enthusiastic. He possessed very lively sensibilities, while the colonel was more precise, more quiet, or, at least, more master of himself. His influence went to moderate the feelings of the prince, or to raise them when they sunk. It was exert ed to keep the good sense of the other clear and paramount. Each considered the other as having bound him Ly the greatest obligations. From this time their studies and pursuits were alike. The baron consented to remain a guest at the residence of the prince, and the latter lived in a very delightful way. Kept at a dis tance, almost hated by the reigning duke, his life, hitherto, had been that of a prisoner or exile. The people generally loved the crown prince, the more on account of this dislike, but none ventured to express their affection o penly. They knew that the duke was still in his best years, and that it would be some lime before they could honor the prince as the rising sun. Soon after his arrival at Fricdland such was the name of the prince's residence the baron had a manifest proof of the severity of the old duke towards his nephew. The prince was desirous of making his friend a present of money, when he ascertain ed that t!v baron, once accustomed to live in opulence, had lost nearly the whole ot his propetfy. In tendering him this gift, he en- titl.d it the interest of that sum which he had received from the baron in London. "What if I did return that sum," he added, "to your steward, as soon as I got home, yet I must pay the interest of it all my life long. The duke left me without help, enjoining it upon me in the strictest manner neither to contract any debts, nor to break my incognito. And then he suddenly recalled me and I knew not what would have been the consequences had I hes itated to obey him." Upon further explana tion, tho prince wa3 astonished to learn that the baron knew nothing of the payment of the debt. The receipt of the post-office, through which the money was transmitted, was produ ced by the prince. A letter was instantly des patched to Leinau's steward, and the honest old man replied, that he had never received the money. The princeordeied an examina tion of the post-olBce, and the receipt of the. money at that place was amply proved ; but a letter of the duke's came to light, directing that all the letters of the prince, during tho first year after his return, should be forwarded to the capital. Thus the riddle was solved. But the trouble taken in getting at the solu tion, had disagreeable consequences. It bro't the baron under the notice of the old duke, who probably suspected him to be disaffected, and that, on this account, he was residing with the prince. The prince was commanded to banish Leinau from his estate. Nothing re mained but silent obedience, unless the two friends were willing to exasperate the duke. The colonel returned to his humble dwel ling, and here received weekly visits from his princely friend, or, when a visit was not practicable, there came letters ; or they met half-way between their respective residences. CHANGES. One stormy winter's morning, when the snow was deep, and it was yet dark, and the colonel was still in bed, a loud noise was heard at the door of his little mansion. Some one knock ed. The door was opened, and steps were heard. The baron imagined that the prince had come, whom he had not seen now for some days, on account of the bad weather. After a while the old steward entered the room, and approached the bed, with a candle and a huge letter. "Who has come so early ?' asked the baron. "One of the duke's cou riers, from the palace, with this letter," an swered lhe steward. The baron grew alarmed. - His grace, the duke, whose's prince's look the baron had not lorgotten, could certainly send nothing good. "Probably,' thought he, "a gracious command to show the prince the door when he comes to visit my little study again." But the address of the letter ran thus: "To the President of our Prjyy council, the noble Baron of Leinau." "What !" cried the colonel, springing from the bed, "I, the President of the Privy-council! Are the people crazy, or do they want to make mo so ?" lie tore open the letter, and read his nomi nation to the highest honor in the state,vritten in all due form, to which was added the gra cious command to conje to the palace immedi ately. The paper was signed Louis; and by way of postcript, were written in the prince's own hand the lollowing words: "The first act of my reign, dear Baron, is to call you to me. Come without delay." It seemed to the baron as if he had fallen from the clouds. "Is the duke dead V he inquired of the steward. Tho old man could give no satisfaction. He was sent to inquire of the courier, and the answer was, that the duke had died of apoplexy. The steward trembled in every limb, for ap oplexy was a thing he did not at all like. He hastened to the baron, and said : "His grace the duko is dead." But the word apoplexy did not pass his lips. "Whaf ! how ?" exclaimed the baton. "His grace was ever sudden in his move ments." "But how was it ? Was it sickness,or some accident ?" "His majesty, it appears, has been pleased accidentally to to die." "Bravo!" cried the colonel, and drew on his traveling clothes, and hastened to the palace in the steward's carriage. TO EE COSTIXVED. Gen. Cass has given to the board of Educa tion of Detroit, a lot of land rained at $15, 000, for a Union Schoolbouse. A GROUP 0? PRINTERS. GREELEY", DOW, JR.. K EXP ALL, OF THE PICAYUNE, AC Mr. Swain, editor of the Albany Statesman recounts the subjoined reminiscences : There are but few. of our readers who have not read with delight the Patent Sermons, by Dow, Jr., which originally appeared in the Xew York Sunday Mercury. His death has lately been announced, as occurring at San Francisco, California, from drunkenness and want. The first accounts prove, however, to have exaggerated his failing. By the follow ing extract of a late letter in the A'ew York Times, over the signature of "Glauccs" (Dr. F. Tathull, last year member of Assembly from Kings,) dated from San Francisco, it appears that he was only subject to an occasional de bauch, and that he was not always intoxicated, "By your last advices you were informed of the miserable death o.f 'Dow, jr.,' who died of a drunken debauch on the 4th of December. He was as quiet, inofiensive and modest a man here as when he was preaching his 'Patent Ser mons' in New York; but about once in six mouths ho would have a big spree. He died almost unattended, in a wretched room, but not poor. He worked at the case, and con tributed Heekly,when sober, to the Golden Era, a sermon. If you have seen his sermons late ly, you may have thought them but repetitions of his earlier productions. But this was not so. He let his reputation suffer this suspicion by permitting his publishers, when he was out of sorts, to reprint from the volnmescollected lrom the Mercury, without any intimation that the new dram came from an old bottle. Shab bily as he had treated himself, and dirty as I found him when lying in his plain red wood coffin, in front of the stable that is used for a dead house, you would have recognized the features as the same once so familiar in Nassau street. He has buried in Lone Mountain Cem etery, the brief funeral procession being made up almost entirely of members of the Press." The real name of Dow, jr., was "Eldiklge Gerry Paige. He came to New York, from New England and sought employment as a journeyman printer. Twenty-three years ago we ' stuck tpyc" in the same alley, in the printing office ot the New Yorker, edited and published by Horace Greely. Geo. Wilkins Kendall, (the projector of the New t Orleans Picayune,) Morgan Bates, (we think since a partner of Geo. Dawson in the publication of the Detroit Advertiser,') O. A. Bowe, (who was a fellow apprentice with Greely, and afterwards published a paper at Little Falls,) stood at the case in the same office. Bowo, Batos and Paige are now dead. Kendall is still living but has abandoned the chair editorial for sheep raising on the plains of Texas. He left the Yorker Office to commence the Picayune, hav ing acquired the capital for that enterprise, in a way that would hardly be-considered ortho dox in a moial community. Before leaving New York, Kendall had "tramped" the South as a jonr printer traveled for information, as he said, through every principal village and city in the Southern States, sometimes on steamboats, sometimes in stage coaches, (there was but one railroad in tho South then from Charleston to Augusta,) and not unfrequently on foot, with his baggage on his back, pendant in a handkerchief, from his walking stick. Sometimes he was "flush" and well dressed sometimes "strapped" and seedy but always witty, genial and gentle'manly. In his ven tures, he had frequently been boon companion with many of the most eminent men of the country. The Astor House then was but just opened and extensively visited by Southerners. It was a lashion with Kendall to patronize that estab lishment, after working hours. Strolling over there one evening, after having '-washed up," he was agreeably surprised to meet several gentleman whom he. had known as merchants, and lawyers and doctors, at Natchez, Missis sippi. After juleps round, and a sherry cob bler apiece, some one proposed to "close the night" with a little game of poker. Kendall had but about five dollars in his watch fob, (there was no watch there) but he assented, among the rest, to the proposition. Excusing himself for a moment, he made a rush down Ann Street to the Office, where he hoped to find some of his fellow-printers with money to lend. Bates, as foreman of the office, had been detained making up the forms. He had eight dollars and "we" (we were helping Bates) had two hundred and seven cents. Kendall took the dollars (leaving us the cents) and thus made a purse of fifteen dollars. With this fund he sat down to play. The play went on till daylight. At seven o'clock Kendall came into the office, paid up the 10 he had borrow ed, told Greely he would give up his situation and asked all hands to partake of a "pious gorge" that afternoon. All the hands were but too happy to do that same, and still more happy when their fellow craftsman announced that he was tho fortunate possessor of about $700, won at the "little game of poker" afore said, and that with the $700 he proposed "to start a paper in New Orleans." In due time the Picayune appeared was a success win ning reputation lor Kendall as a polished wri ter and a brilliant wit, and what was better, giving him a princely income. He has had many a hair breadth escape since that: was among the Sante Fe prisoners, and given up as dead, but alterwards released; he went through the Mexican war; has passed years in foreign travel, until, satiated with enjoyment, and ti red of the excitement of city life, he retired to Texas, and is now master of thousands of acres of land, and reckons more than a hun dred thousand sheep, cattle and mules as his individual property. in time, Paige also left the New Yorker of fice, and in company with two others, com menced the publication of the Sunday Mercury, a paper about tho size of the Albany Times. The arrangement was that tho partners (they were all printers) shouid set the type. Paige was not to perform any editorial duties,(which his partners were expected to perform,) and there was no thought that he was capable of writing. His transfer was the work of chance. The Sunday Atlas was at that timeas it always since has been the rival of the Mercury, -the latter being the younger of the two. Shortly after the Mercury appeared, the proprietors of the Atlas enlarged their journal, procuring new type and a beautiful vignette head, rep resenting Atlas upholding the World. Of course the Mercury must follow suit abandon its plain apparel, and have an embellished heading. A consultation as to what that head ing should be was held between the two edi tors, but neither could make any satisfactory suggestion. Finally Paige was invited to co-operate The want being stated, Paige at once suggest ed a vignette representing the god Mercury - flying over the World and Atlas, with this line ioramotto: "lie sees the top of Atlas as he flies." Tlyj hit was palpable the suirsestion adopted. The partners got another hint that their asso ciate might have in him the stuff of which a good editor is made. A little talk Paige shy ana doubtful, the partners insisting and confi dent and Paige was induced to trv his hand In the next number of the Mercury appeared me urst oi the "JPatent Sermons, by Dew, jr." These were continued weekly, and gave the paper such an impetus that the exchequer of the Mercury grew plethoric, tho partners aban doned type-setting, and attended only to the business and editorial departments. Paige was sought out became very popular was dined, liquored, feted. From an industrious, sober, hard-working printer, he became a man about town, a favorite of the fast men, and in time so dissipated that he became useless to the paper, and was bought out by his partners. He wasted all his money in idleness and drink ing, and finally went to California. TEA-DRINKING IN RUSSIA. A correspondent of the Boston Transcript gives an interesting account of tea-drinking in Russia. He savs : The visiter in St. Petersburg will notice among the pictorial embellishments of the shop fronts, which are 30 singular in their ap pearance, a great many signs whereupon are represented tho Russian Samoyar, or tea nrn, and a set of cups and saucers or glasses. These signify that tho establishment is a tea house, a place largely patronized by the Russians of all classes. The tea of which they are so found is brought overland from China ; thus preserving, as they claim, the peculiarly delicate flavor, which a sea voyage is sure to destroy. It is very dear; the finer kinds costing from five to fifteen dol lar3 a pound. As a general rule, the black teas are preferred, although a delicate green is in high favor with many, at sixteen silver rubles,or about twelve dollars a pound. There is a yellow tea ot about the same price, which has a frightful effect upon one's nerves green tea is a sedative compared with it. The bev erage, black, green or yellow, is drunk with sugar, but without cream, a slice of lemon be ing substituted, and the tea sipped by spoon fuls. You may find all grades of tea-houses in the .Russian cities, even to those in which the poorest classes gather after their day's work is done, to refresh their wearied frames with the gentle stimulant. If you enter one of the better class, you find a large room, or series of rooms, with little tables, and, invariably, a picture of the Virgin and Child, or a saint, covered with a plate of gold, or silver gilt, so as to leave only the face, hands and feet visi ble. Then you taue your seat at one of the windows that look upon the Streets, and order your "chi." The waiter brings a portion of tea in a small tea-pot, a plentiful supply of hot water in another vessel, glasses instead of cups,some slices of lemon and lumps of sugar, and then a plate of rolls of paper and tobacco for cigarettes. The Russians drink their tea very weak, and the tea-pot is replenished with hot water by a native, until a person accustomed to what is called tea in England or America, begins to nnd the flavor of the lemon preponderate in his glaae. Indeed, the drinking of strong tea, at fifteen dollars a pound is rather an ex pensive luxury. But the higher grades are usually reserved for higher occasions. The kinds in general use among the wealthy citi zens of St. Petersburg are thoso averaging about four roubles or three dollars a pound ; in the tea-houses a still lower quality is used. THE SCHOOLMASTER'S IN THAT BED. A correspondent of the New York Weekly gives the following as one of the manj' inci dents that befel a "boarding round schoolmas ter:" I had been teaching in Mason county, in the Sucker State, and this particular term was "boarding round." One evening after school, one of my little scholars stepped up to me and said : "Mr. Jones, father said you would come home with me." "Very well," I replied, and forthwith set out for my patron's house, wnich was distant some two miles. Now, be it known, James M'Harry for such was his name had two daughters, tho pride and envy of the whole commuuity. I had heard so much about them that I was naturally anxious to see them. It seemed, however, that I was to be disappoint ed. AVhen, we arrived, I learned the "gals" had gone to a party on the other side cf tho creek; so I went to bed, cursing the luck which deprived mo of seeing them that night. The night had far advanced, when I heard one of the girls come home, and passing into the adjoining room, was warming before some coals which were alive on the hearth. It seems that the old lady and gentleman slept in the same room, but I was not aware of it until then. Having warmed herself, she turn ed to leave the room, when the old man spoke : "Girls," said he, "tUe schoolmaster's in your bed." "Very well," said Sarah, and passing thro' the room I slept in, went up stairs. About an hour elapsed, when I heard Judy, the other one, come. She stood at the door a long time, talking with her "feller," then entered softly. Disrobing her feet, she entered the' room where I lay, carefully undressed herself, and coming to the side of tho bed, prepared to get in. ' Now it happened that I lay in the middle, and turning back the clothes, she gave me a shake, and said, in a suppressed whisper: "Lay over, Sarah !" I rolled over, and whipped tho corner of the pillow into rcy mouth to keep from laughing. In she bounced, but the bed would creak. The old man heard it, and cried out: "Judy !" "Sir !" was responded in a faint tone from the bed beside me. "The schoolmaster is in that bed !' With one loud yell, and "oh, heavens!" she. landed on tho floor, and fled with the rapidity of a deer up stairs. She never heard the last of it, I can tell you ; but probably she "learn ed something" about "stayin out late spark in' ;" and trying to slip in unbeknown to the old folks. . - . Samuel Woodman, near Dayton, Ohio, died of hydrophobia, recently. He was bitten by a dog last September. : The month of December, 1859, is regarded as one of the coldest Decembers on record. . LETTER FROM MISSOURI. Correspondence of the "Raftsman's Journal." Cheam Ridge, January 23tu, 1800. S. B. Row, Esq; Dear Sir: As 1 promised that alter I got out and had time to look around a little, I would let you hear from me, I take this occasion to drop you a few Jincs. We left Pittsburg in a steamboat, bound for Cin cinnati, there took another boat for St. Louis, there took steam packet for Hannibal, and at that place took the Hannibal & St. Joseph Railroad to Chillicothe, which i3 within1 five miles of where I live. The water being very low, it took us fifteen days to make the trip, which is a much longer time than it would take if the water were in good order. The fare for one passenger to Chillicothe, Living ston county, Missouri, from Clearfield, is, $ 2,50 to Tyrone, $3,9-3 to Pittsburgh, $12 to St. Louis, $3 to Hannibal, 5,20 to Chillicothe total $2G,G5. On tho-cars it will cost more 2,50 to Tyrone, $3,95 to Pittsburgh, $19,50 to St. Louis, and to Chillicothe $8,40, making $34,35 and on the boat your boarding is in cluded in the price mentioned ; while on tho cars j'ou have to pay for your meals. I have traveled both ways, and much prefer the steamboat, particularly when a person has a family along with him. . We live five miles from the city of Chilli cothe, and within hearing of the iron horse. Wo have a good market for all that wc can raise, and prices are rather on the advance. The prices cf dry goods in a general way are" near about the same as they are in Clearfield. Pork, 4 to 4 for good corn-fed that which was killed in tho woods, fattened on the mast, is softer meat and sells foi about 3 ets. ; good beef 3 to 4 cts. ; wheat from 70 to DO cts. per bushel; corn 30 to 35 cts.; oats 40 to 50 cts. My impression is that raising stock is the ni cest and the best paying business in this part of the country, as feed is plenty and the win ter short, and hogs aud cattle are always in de mand, and can be sold for csh at any time. We have a better breed of cattle here than you have in Clearfield. A good milch cow is worth about $23,00. Butter sells from 15 to 25 cents per lb. the year round, and some of the citi zens tell me that fresh butter is sometimes as high as 40 cts. The reason is, they generally let the calves run with the cows, and the cous arc not milked. To give you an idea ol what kind of calves they raise here, I will give you the dimensions of one among some that I purchased. When the boys brought it home, I took my tape line and measured it. 1 roni tip to tip ho measured 10 feet and round his body G feet 4 inches. This is a spring calf. Rents in this part of the country are double as mucu as they are in Clearheld. ooa is worth $2,50 to $3,00 per cord for good hickory in town. Taxes are lower, and all the school tax there is to pay is when a school house is to be built. 1 he schools are kept up by donation of land, every sixteenth section of the land being given for school purposes, and all the expense the citizens incur is to keep up the school houses. The weather is much milder here than it 13 with you. I see in tho Journal, (which is a welcome weekly visitor, keeping us posted in all the news of the day,) that you have had snow and fine sleighing, whilst the weather was very pleasant here. When the winter set in, it was very rough for two or three davs, and it was over. We had several little squalls of snow that-lasted a few days and then dis appeared. Comparing the winter, so far as it is past, i ith what we used to have in Clear field, and it is no winter at a1!. For some time past it has been warm enough to do without hre in the house, lo look at the burning prairie, it does not seem like winter ; and to see the cattle outdoors pickf ng about makes it appear like the spring of the year. Now would" bo a good time for persons to buy land in this part of the country. Ihero are a great many wanting to go to Pike's Peak and to California, who would sell low. Some fine farms, well improved, can be bought at $20 to $25 per acre. Prairie land can be bought for ten to fifteen dollars per acre, in good locations. If you or any of the Clearfield folks should coins out this way, I would be glad to seo them. I hopa they will not pass by without giving me a call. By inquiring of Josian W . Baud in Chillicothe, you can learn where I live. I will give all the information I can t)f the country. It is a pity to see so much good land here and no person to woik it, whilst there are so many in Clearfield working among the roots and stumps for so small a re ward. I wish there was a colony of them here. My familj is all in good health, and have had no sickness since wo came to Missouri. For my own part, I have had better health since i came to tins Mate than i had for ten years past. I have not been sick one day since we came here, cor have. I taken on dose of medicine of any kind, and whilst I was in Clearfield I had to take medicine almost as regular as the day came. I have gained fifteen pounds in weight since I left Clearfield. Hoping to hear from you weekly through the Journal, I remain 3-ours truly, Lewis R. Carter. My post office address is, Chillicothe, Liv- ingstoc county, Missouri. The Ladies op New York have organized a "hearthstone club" for discussing domestic matters and bringing about necessary reforms in housekeeping. They meet once a month, and at the last meeting, among other impor tant subjects, a discussion on dolls took place. One thought a rag-baby as good as a doll ; and another, that as the doll was the child's idea of the human, it should be beautiful so as not to vitiate the child's taste ; while the Presi dent suggested that it should be aitistic iu form, and denounced the shapeless monstrosi ties found in the market. After these impor tant declarations of opinion, the ladies ad journed. As advocates of the rights of our own sex, we insist that they devote some at tention to masculine as well as feminine toys, and at the next meeting we hope to hear w hat they have got to say on hobby-horses, tin whistles and pop-guns. rr"Affnsiira nrfi alinnt h!nr fnkon In TCaw - 0 . . . Jersey for diminishing the evils of intemper ance. -Will they be pint, quart, or gallon measures? -We recommend dry measures. . : Measures are being passed in the Legisla ture of Minnesota in order that steps may be taken to remove the Winnebago Indians from their present location. The whites want their land. ; ' I A Fat Office. From statistics published, 'it i inferred that the income of the SheriS of New York is at least $60,000 year! HIGH LIFE IN WASHINGTON CITY. The following bits of gossip, which a cor respondent furnishes an exchange, will givo the reader an insight into the way some things are done in tho Federal capital : Dinner parties are now tho order of the day, and will be given in rapid succession by thoso officials who have "a local habitation and" a cook, until the matin-chimes ot lent warn th faitliful to confine themselves to a moigre diet. Generally speaking, these ceremonious repasts are like the Democratic, speeches, in which certain phrases are repeated by each orator ; for the table ornaments, the edibles and the at tendant waiters,. are invariably supplied at a French restaurant. A stranger, who has como here properly recommended, dines ono day with a foreign minister the next with a south ern Senator the third with a northern Repre sentative, and the fourth with a metropolitan resident. The dining rooms are of different sizes, and furnished in'didVreut stj'les; differ ent gentlemen and ladies occupy tho position of host and hostess, and very likely there aro dillereut circles of guests; but the same ser vants are in attendance, the same epergnes and table furniture are seen at each house, and there is a stereotype bill of fare. The lood wouid have made either Careme, Vatch, or Soycr, go mad, had it been attribu ted to their cuisine. A half chilled vegetable soup ; salmon brought in tin eans from New Brunswick; and a half dozen courses, rejoic ing in Apican names, bul very questionable in appearance, and so flavored as to defy de tection. A pastry cook's dessert follows, with a few bon-bons that are greedily pocketed; and pr beverages there are badly-ieed cham pagne, a manufactured Bordeaux, and execra ble Brown Sherry. Everything Is dull, prosy, stupid, and indigestible. How different was it in the olden time-. Then, a gentleman who came here as a mem ber ol Congress, or of the Cabinet, would bring his servants and his silver.while Madame would come provided with table linen, pickles, and preserves. The magnates of the land would bo seen early in tho morning at market, and at their tables they would have the good cheer always to be found there. The ducks, oysters and fish from the Potomac and Chesapeako Bay, with the fine beef and mutton from tho valley of Virginia, aud a homo-cured ham, were so prepared as to make banquets uu equalkd at the TYci's Freres in its palmiest days. And as for the wines, the simple an nouncement that the madeiras and clarets came from Charleston, the sherries from Phil adelphia, and the champagnes from New York, was a guarantee of their goodness. The best repasts given here now mirabilt dictu are served up near the "witching hour o' night" by those spoilsmen, the subjects of King Faro. Well supplied tables, choice wine?, and agreeable companj, lure many a pigeon to bo plucked, and well plucked at that. When the 34th Congress was organized, after tho protracted contest for the Speakership, tho proprietor of a noted gambling-heuse held or ders for the pay of seven members during that entire session. It is whispered that some of tho members of the present House have been equally unfortunate, and their creditor is ot course anxious for "organization," as by tho present rule each Representative will have a good sum at once subject to his oider. The all-engrossing topic of drawing-room gossip, however, is the appearance of tho daughter of the Austrian consul at New York, at Mrs. Gwin's paaty, a feiv days since, with out hoops ! This introduction of. a new-fashion, or rather the discarding of an old one, is discussed with great earnestness, and the houso is "divided." Stout dames look with horror at the fashion plates of scanty skirts, and those of more slender proportions exult over the discomfiture of their rivals. Facts about Milk. Cream cannot riso through a great depth of milk. If, therefore, milk is desired to retain its cream for a time, it should be put into a deep narrow dish ; and if it be desired to free it most completely of cream, it should be poured into a broad flat dish, not much exceeding one inch in depth.. The evolution of cream is faciliated by a risa and retarded by a depression of temperature. At the usual temperature of the dury forty degrees of Fahrenheit all the cream will pro bably rise in thirtj'-six hours; but at seventy degrees it will perhaps rise in half that time ; and when the milk is kept near the freezing point, the cream will rise very slowly, becaust) it becomes solidified. In wet and cold weath er the milk is less rich than in dry and warm, and on this account more cheese is obtained in cold than in warm, though not in thundery weather. The season has its' effects. . Th milk in spring is supposed to bo-tliq best for drinking, hence it would be the best for calves; in summer it is best suited for cheese, and in autumn the butter keeping is better than that in summer the cows less frequently milked, give richer milk and consequently more but ter. The morning's milk is richer than tho evening's. The last drawn milk of each milk ing, at all times and seasons, is richer than the first drawn, which is the poorest.. The X. E. Farmer truly says that the fat tening of turkevs and other poultry in dark cellars, (or in close confinement in any way, we would add) is cruelty. It is cruelty, wo say, to the consumers, as well as to the birds ; because one of the, ordinarily, most healthful kinds of flesh, is thus made unwholesome. The Farmer prescribes variety of grain foods, and boiled potatoes and Indian meal; and then, perfect freecdom to ramble, which, when so fed, the animals will not over-use. They will then fatten rapidly enough, and preservo a healthful state and fine appearance. A young lady in Texas, was bitten by a snake several weeks ago. Since then she has very enrious fits, and while in this condition she went twenty-eight days without tasting ioou. one is aiso partly parauzeu. A doctor's wife attempted to move him by her tears. "Ah 1" said he, "tears are useless I have analysed them. They contain a littla phosphate of lime, .some chlorate of sodium, and water." rYn man ttinfr rtiif? th TlL'ptj far Cnrt aiit Brown. th h'jidpr of thft Hampr's Ferrv raid. ----- J I F was proven to be a Democrat, before the in- ?ii a ii . . i r i vestigating commiuce at tvasuiDgion, sever al days since. Rnm is like death it levels all distinctions. An alderman, with a "brick In his hat," would jastas soon fraternize with a chimney sweep as with a foreign eavoy,. . . r