; ' : " ' ' -: : - ii r I 1 11 ......... . - in .. , i i ii .. i i Imp ,mmm .n - i in - " ' . I .a 1 ' ' BY S.B. ROW. .CLEARFIELD, PA, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25, 1860. YOL. 6.HTO. 35. IF WE KNEW. BY Rl'TH BENTON. If we knew the cares and crosses Crowding round our neighbor's way, If we knew the little losses. Sorely grievous, day by day ; "Would we then so often chide him For his lack of thrift and gain Leaving on his heart a shadow, Leaving on our lives a stain i If we knew the clouds above us, Held by gentle blessings there, Would we turn away all trembling, In our blind and weak despair ? Would w shrink from little shadows, Lying on the dewy grass. Whilst 'tis only birds of Eden, Just in mercy flying past ? If we knew the silent story, Quivering thro' the heart of pain, Would our womanhood dare doom them Back to haunts of guilt again ? Life has many a tangled crossing ; Joy bath many a break of woe ; And the cheeks, tear washed, are whitest; This the blessed angels know. , Let ns reach in our bosoms " For the key to other lives, And with love towards erring nature, Cherish good that still survives; So that when our disrobed spirits Soar to realms of light again, "We may say, dear Father, judge U3 As we judged our fellow-men. HOW KISS PHIPPS BECAME ZftBS. PHILLIPS. A LEAP-TEAR 8TOB.Y. Authors and artists have imposed some most ridiculously untruthful types of charac ter upon us. For example, what is the con ventional notion of the old maid 1 Thanks to those unchivalrous caricaturists, the phrase suggests a picture of a lady with a figuie like a ramrod, and a laco like a winter apple a crab-opple reserving her small remnant of sour milk ot human kindness for her cat; as afraid of the men as Horace's Chloe ; and feasting like a ghoul upon the mangled repu tations ol her youthful sisters. Well, now, my reader, look around your circle of acquaintances, and tell me honestly how many of such veslals you can find. I never met witb one, and with your permission, will introduce you to a little body who is the very opposite of that abominable portrait roy friend, Miss Rhoda Phipps. As plump as a partridge, as blithe as a ma vis, bright-eyed as a robin such is Miss Fhlpps, as, on the last night of 185 she sits in her doll's house of a cottage, in Pogis Par va, with her elder sister, Harriet, e(2rtaining a tiny party of village friends. The topic of conversation is a Mr. Phillips, a shy autumnal bachelor, who has recently ta ken up his residence in Pogis. So very, shy is be,that he has had his pew in church screen ed, not only in front, but also at the sides, with lofty curtains, above, which when he stands, up, the top ot his head can just be seen by his fellow-worshippers, and behind which, at the close of the service, he remains perdu until the church is empty, having taken care to be the first to enter it. All the week long, he never stirs from his own premises, which he would seem to have selected for the snke of a brick-wall and a high hollyhedge, which shut them in on all sides. The rector is the only person who has visited him, and he reports that Mr. Phillips is an in telligent and well-in-formed, but most ridicu lously nervous man, with a perfect horror of woman-kind. His servants, to whom he rare ly speaks, can give no lurther gratification to their village gossips curiosity aboi.t him, but that fce spends the day in reading in his study, or moping in bis garden ; and that they often overhear him walking up and down his bed room at night, talking to himself. Here is a mine of mystery for speculation 1 Our ladies, fur the most part, are very unchar itable in their conjectures. The rector's wife believes him to be a concealed atheist. Why cannot he show his face at chnrch, she asks, like a decent Christian 1 Mrs. Squills, the surgeon's spouse, suggests that night-walking and talking point to remorse for some great crime perhaps a murder. Swindling finds more favor in the eyes of Mrs. Brown, the re tired tradesman's wife. She would like to know whether Phillips is his name, and how he got bis money. '-Perhaps he's a coiner," whispers, in an awe-struck voice, her daugh ter Belinda, a grestjeader of romances. Miss Harriet P&ipps, who is suspected of having had a love-aflair long ago, is the only one who is not censorious; she hints that blighted affections may have caused his mel ancholy. But this compassionate hypothesis, in common witb all its unkind predecessors, Aunt Rhoda scornfully scouts. In her opin ion, the man is merely an absurd hypochon driac old bachelor, who has grown half silly through living by himself, and having no one else to care for; and, as usual, sharp sighted littlo Aunt Rhoda, is right. She declares, moreover,that she will rout him out,and make him take a wife, and do some good ifi the vil lage, instead of haunting his house like a sel fish old ghost. 'Why not ask him yourself, Aunt Rhoda V says Miss Brown. "Next year is leap year, I yon know.'' "Well," laughs Aunt Rhoda, "if I can't manage it any other way, I will." "Ob, Rhoda !" exclaims shocked sister Har riet. Thus they sit chatting nntil the bellfs burst out with tlreir joy-peal at the birth of the new year, when with many expressions of surprise t the quickness with which the time has flown, they give each other the customary greeting ol the aour ; and when the visitors clog and cloak, and scatter to their homes, tho rector's wile tossing her head contemptuously when sbe meets the Methodists coming out of their "watch night" service in their little meeting house, in manifestation of scorn. I cannot sympathize with Mrs. Rector, there seeming to me to be a deal of solemn poetry in that rite. The few minutes before midnight, pass ed kneeling and in silence, whilst the clock ticks audibly in the hushed chapel, as if it were the heart of the dying year fast hastening to its final throb, struck me, when once I wit nessed the service, as being about the most thrilling time I overspent. Leap-year is not three days old, when in company with Mrs. Squills, Aunt Rhoda pre sents herself at the gate of Holly Lodge, and requests to be ushered into the presence of its owner. In vain does wondering John, the janitor, inform her that "Master don't see no oody.miss." He mm see her, as she has come on business. But when they are seated in the drawing-room, comes a request for the ladies to send their raestage, as Mr. Phillips is too unwell to leave the library. "Very well, then we'll go to him, John," says the undaunted little woman ; and go she does, dragging her companion with her. Mr. Phillips, a tall, pale-faced man, with witching lips and quivering fingers, starts from his chair at the apparition. Since they have bear ded him in hisMen caught him sitting on his form, perhaps, would bo a more appropriate figure he tries hard to bo polite, kicks over the coal-scuttle in a nervous attempt to hand them seats, and stammers out a welcome, to which, however, his startled eyes give a decided contradiction. He looks a little relieved when be finds that the intruders have come for no more formida ble purposes than to solicit a subscription to their Coal and Blanket Fund, and permits them to put down his name for a munificent sum, evidently hoping to bribe them into a speedy departure ; but still Aunt Rhoda stays, rattling on about the weather, and the neighborhood, and general news, until hisjook of pain chan ges into a look of puzzle, and eventually into one of semi-pleasure. It is a novel and not altogether disagreeable sensation to have the stagnant waters ot bis existence stirred. Women he finds,like other reputed monsters, are not quite so terrible when closely scanued ; lie can talk, after a bit, without stuttering and hlushing, and when his visitors leave, escorts them not only to the hall door, but also to the garden gate. . Other local charities afford pretexts for oth er calls. Ruthlessly does little Rhoda bleed his purse, affirming that she ought to extract heavy fees for the good she has done him. And, indeed, he is marvelously improved. Ho no longer denies himself to the village la dies, all ot whom Rhoda introduces to him in turn. He ventures outside his gate on the week days; he joins the Book Club, and at tends its meetings at first, indeed, with tho scared look of a snared thing,but he gets used in time to hearing his own voice in company, and proves a valuable acquisition to tho so ciety, not only by bis suggestions as to the selection of their literature, but also from tho interesting nature of bis conversation. His front curtain at church is now undrawn, and rumor says, that he looks a good deal more at Aunt Rhoda than at the rector. Belinda Brown, who is rather an old young lady, adds that it is really immodest for Miss Rhoda Phipps she doesn't "aunt" her now to call so often at his house ; but sho supposes that her age protects her. At this spite and tattle, Aunt Rhoda only laughs. In all honesty of purpose, she simp ly tried to win a fresh patron for her poor clients, and to convert a sullen recluse into an agreeable neighbor. She has succeeded, so let rumor and Belinda Brown say what they Tleas3. It must be owned, however, that sho takes a great interest in her protege, and cham pions him on all occasions against Harriet, who,nowthat her love theory has proved false, and he lives like a commonplace gentleman instead of a romantic hermit, is rather apt with a most mild malignity, however to de preciate him. New Year's Eve has come again ; and a little after eleven the sisters aro sitting this time without company in their littlo parlor, when they hear a knock at tho front door. Rhoda, much astonished, runs to open it, and is still more surprised when Mr. Phillips en ters. He has bad a sad relapse his mauvaise honte has come back as bad as ever. He can hardly be persuaded to be seated ; he fidgets with his hat ; he looks askance at Miss Harriet, as if annoyed by her presence, but turns pale with fear when by chance she rises, if about to leave tho room ; he hems and haws; he begins sentences, and never ends them. "Deeply grateful to Miss Rhoda" "object for existence" "not let the year close," aro the only intelligible portions and these but partially intelligible of his frag mentary utterances. Miss Rhoda soon understands him,however, and cheerily exclaims ; "1 know what you mean, Mr. Phillips ; but you'll never say it, if I don't help you, for we can't send Harriet up into the bedroom this cold night ; and if I wait till the clock strikes, I shall lose my chance of helping you. You want me to marry you, don't you 7 There, Harriet! I said this time twelve months ago that I'd ask him. and see I have !" Neither Harriet, snugly housed in, nor'we who visit at her happy, hospitable home have had any reason to regret that Miss Rboda Phipps became, a month afterwards, Mrs Hen ry Phillips. Fond of Physic. No one objects to a man dosing himself in any way he pleases,provided that lie does not commit actual suicide. With some men, the taking of medicino seems a form of monomania. Bishop Berkley drank a butt of tar-water ; and a person named Samuel Jessop, who died at the age of sixty-five, in ion , naa suca an inordinate craving lor pnys ic, that in twenty-one years he took no less than two hundred and twenty-six thousand nine hundred and thirty-four pills, besides forty thousand bottles of mixture; and in the year 1814, when his appetite increased, his consumption of pills was fifty-one thousand five hundred and ninety ? Dp. David Hartley, not content with Joanna Stephen's specific, bad during his life eaten two hundred pounds weight of soap as a medicine. k "Love Rcles the Court." A Jury in Tex as lately acquitted a man on the charge of horse stealing, although the crime was clearly proven against him, simply because lie stole the horso to elope with his sweet-heart, who was present in court during the trial, and waiting to marry him if acquitted. The jurors had probably all been in love themselves, at one period or another of their lives, and there was not, perhaps, one of them but what would have done the same thing, in their younger days, If they couldn't Lave got their .wives without. Three hunters from Kansas, lately returned from a month's bunt on the Arkansas river, bringing with them the skins of three hundred and seven wolves. Another party of twelve, in two month's time, secured over two thous and skins. The skins are worth one dollar apieco. Some of the Catholics of Cincinnati are at variance with the archbishop, I hey bad made arrangements to celebrate St. Patrick's Day by a ball. The Archbishop forbade the ball, as being a violation of the rules of Lent, but it was given, nevertheless, and was largely attended. REMINISCENCES OF THE N. Y.HEEALD. We find in the Herald, published at Grand .traverse, Michigan, the following remimscen ces of early times in New York. They are by tne editor, Morgan Bates, Esq., are of his own knowledge and of course interesting; now Bennett Started the New York IIerald. As James Gordon Bennett is the confidential counsellor and adviser of the Pre sident of the United States, and his is the ac credited organ of the Administration in the city of New York, it may not be uninteresting to our readers to know how and under what circumstances a paper was started which has attained so great notoriety and wields such powerful influence over a certain class of the whole community. We are cognizant of some facts connected with its early history, which came under our immediate observation at the time, and which are probably known only to Horace Greeley, Gordon Bennett, and ourselves. We violate no confidence in placing them on record as matter of history, and as tending to illustrate the fact that that which is conceived in sin and brought forth in iniquity will grow and flourish only in a congenial atmosphere of pollution and infamy. In 1834, just after Horace Greeley & Co. had started the New Yorker, in the old yellow two story building which then stood on tbS south west corner of Nassau and Liberty streets, there stalked in the office one day a lank, hard-visaged, squint-eyed, villainous-looking man, who appeared as if ho bad just escaped from or was about to be sent to the peniten tiary, and introduced himself to Mr. Greeley as James Gordon Bennett, late editor of a Philadelphia paper (the Pennsylvanian, we think, though we may be mistaken in the name.) He stated that he had called to hold a consultation with Mr. Greeley relative to the expediency of starting a cheap daily in New York. As Mr. Greeley was busily engaged at the time, Mr. Bennett did not fully unfold his plans, but promised to call again. The next day he spread out his programme. The main feature of which was a paper de voted to scandal in "high life," but to be con ducted with such consummate ability and tact that it would "take" with all classes. He said he had one thousand dollars to invest in the enterprise, but as that sum was not suffi cient to insure success he wished a partner who could furnish a like amount, and asked Mr. Greeley to join him. Greeley listened pa tiently to all his plans, and then, in his blunt, off band way, told him that such a paper might pay if a man could be found to conduct it who combined the requisite talent and meanness and flatly refused to have anything to do with it. And this is the reason why Bennett has hated Greeley ever since. At this time there was a printer in Ann street named Anderson, who was a general jobber and newspaper printer, but who did not publish on his own account. Bennett procur ed an introduction to him, and by lair pro mises and false pretences induced him to en ter into the scheme and the New York Her ald was ushered into being. Anderson soon found that Bennett had de ceived bim with regard to funds not one pen ny of the thousand dollars ever having been paid over and that he would have to bear the whole pecuniary burden until the paper should work its way up to a self-sustaining point, lie expended a large sum of money to keep it alive, until, just as it began to bo remunera tive, the great fire of 1834 occurred in Ann street, which made such terrible havoc among the printers, and Anderson lost presses, type, and cveryth;njr, with little or no insurance His friends, who had faith in the ultimate suc cess of the Herald, aided him to procure a po wer press and other materials; but Bennett, meantime, made clandestine arrangements with another printer, and the Herald appeared the next morning with James Gordon Ben nett as editor and proprietor. He refused to recognize Anderson at all, or to pay him a penny for his interest in the paper, or lor the large sums which he had advanced to sustain it. Anderson took the matter so deeply to heart that.be died in a short time, and there it ended. About this time Ellen Jewett, a beautiful and celebrated courtesan, was murdered at the house of Rosina Townsend, in Thomas street, by a young man named Robinson, who was a clerk for Joseph Iloxie, and through whose in fluence be was acquitted. The murder was a devil-send for Bennett (he never had a God send.) He procured, or pretended he had, a list of the names of all tnose who lodged at Mrs. Townsend's house that night, some seven ty men, most of whom were married, and occu pied high positions in society and threatened to expose them in the columns of his paper. This ruse brought to his coffers an untold amount of black-mail; and before the affair was ended he had made money enough to buy a printing office and set up business on bis own account. It is not our purposo to follow him any fur ther in bis course of infamy, our object being only to show how the New York Herald was started. Pec&niarly he has met with unbound ed success the success of infamy and crime. But he has not reached his present position without stripes. We havo had the pleasure of seeing him twice cowhided on the public street, kicked down three flights of stairs by his journeymen printers, and cuffed and spit upon by the late Thomas Ilamblin ull of which be submitted to with the abject humi lity of a coward. Such is a faint outline of James Gordon Ben nett, the editor of the New York Herald, and bosom friend of the President of the United States. ' The Pope of Rome is now in his sixty-eighth year, and even should ho be obliged to flee from the Eternal City, he will have quite e nough to maintain himself comfortably for the remainder of his life. It appears that "Peter Pence" contributions have already amounted to about one hundred and sixty thousand dol lars, of. which sum Ireland has contributed eighty thousand dollars, as much as all the other countries of Europe put together. Be sides this, it is currently reported that the Pope has no less than twelve million dollars, the pious offerings of good catholics, packed away in boxes at the Vatican ; so that, in case he should consider another hegira necessary the money for his traveling expenses is abun dantly provided. Cold prayers are as, arrows without heads, as swords without edges, as birds without wings ; they pierce not, they cut not, they fly not up to heaven. Cold prayers always freeze before they reach ueaven. THE JAPANESE. The Japanese war-steamer Kandinmurrah arrived recently at San Francisco, as the avant courrier of the Powhatan and the Ambassadors of J apan, with their suite of seventy attendants, on their way to Washington City. Recent publications, among which are the works of Dr. Wood, ol the Navy, and letters from our Ambassador and the missionaries in Japan, have given us the opportunity of know ing something of this very interesting people. A new work has just been issued, written by Mr. Oliphant, private secretary to Lord Elgin, the English Ambassador to China and Japan, which adds materially to our previous know ledge. The Japanese are obviously of the general Mongol type, but they have marked peculiari ties. They are by far the most interesting and agreeable of the races living beyond India. Their most marked characteristic is a gen eral gayety and insouciance. They are every where lively, lovers of pleasure, ever ready lor a joke or laugh. In the midst of Lord Elgin's conventions in making his treaty, the high Commissioners were constantly on the alert for fun, considering gravity by no means essential to diplomacy. The impression in this respect 6eeius to have been the same in all the persons who have visited them. But this love of amusement does not imply neglect of business. The whole empire is in good order. The cultivation of the fields and gardens is fine; grounds are well and pleasantly laid out; the whole population is industrious; their manufactures are actively prosecuted. Indeed, they seem wiser in this respect than we are. We mean that they appear to combine better than the grave Anglo-Saxon tho ideas of business and amusement. There is very considerable sense of beauty in the Japanse. They are very cleanly. They bathe frequently. Their houses are the very home of neatness. They wear only sandals of cloth in their houses; the floors are covered with matting, the walls are hung with the nicest paper, the woods used are soft and often like satin, the whole giving an impression of refreshment, coolness and neatness. In this, as in, many other respects; they greatly differ from the Chinese. There is much politeness in these heathen. Their crowds are not dangerous, or, beyond a strong curiosity, disagreeable. The spies con duct themselves courteously. They treat each other like gentlemen. Their ingenuity and quickness are marvellous. They learn every thing directly. They eat the food of Euro peans and Americans, never seen before, at once. They can go through a dinner party passably, after once seeing it. They joined in drinking of healths and shouting hip, hip, hurra, with the English instantly, though they had never heard of it before. Tbey made exact copies of American and European furniture they have none in the toy-shops in which they live-and furnished Lord Elgin's house comfortably at once. The Japanese remind us of the Persians and the French. They are deceitful in certain ways, but there is much honesty in their dealing. The Government is all-pervading and manages many things admirably. Their reli gion seems to have but little hold upon them. It reminds usof the Greek faith, rather a slight objective form of religion, not penetiating much to the deeper elements of humanity they havo indeed, speaking loosely and generally, something rather Greek about them. The young women aro much prettier than the Chinese, or the South Sea Islanders, or East Indians. The married women blacken their teeth and pluck out their eye-brows. Adultery is punishable with death. But a vast system of licentiousness is arranged and licensed by the Government. This is one of the dark features of Japan. The trade of this large empire is eagerly an ticipated by the Californians, and the prospect in their future, when the Pacific Railroad shall be finished, and Japan open to us the gates of Asia, is certainly bright. Meanwhile the re ception of the embassy will be an interesting episode. We hope it will be done handsomely, especially as we are tho first nation thus honored. Joe Smith. Mormonism has again shown itself in Illinois, and under widely different auspices from the modern Mahomedanism of Utah. Young Joe Smith claims to be the true leader, as a matter of inheritance, we suppose, of the Mormon Church, and at Amboy he was installed into office by a conference though no account is given as to the source from which the delegates derived their installing power. His title is "President Prophet," and a church is organized under him, that is declared to be entirely independent of the organization of which Brigham Young has so long been pro phet, priest, and king, binith opposes poly gamy and the other vices of the infamous dis ciples at Utah ; and declares that he will only teach the two doctrines of religion and moral ity. He also inculcates patriotic duties and obedience to the laws of the land, speaks kindly of the Anti-Mormons, and says that he holds no feelings of enmity towards any man living. It is hoped that his teachings will not be without influence, even in far-off Utah, where reformation is much needed. The Interior of China. The voyage of the Earl of Elgin, two years since, up the great Yang-tse-kiang, of China, the particu lars of which are only now first made known to the world through the publication of the narrative of the mission, has furnished some interesting facts relative to the interior of this empiie. . The ruin which the rebels have caused can hardly be believed populous cit ies have been destroyed, and the country ev erywhere laid waste. Chirkiang, Which once had a population of 500,000, did not contain 500 souls. The great city ot Ching-kiang-foo, which had been taken by the rebels, was in a most deplorable state. "A single dilapi dated street, composed only of a few meat shops, was all that remained of this thriving and populous city ; the remainder of the area, comprised within walls six miles in cir cumference, contained ' nothing but , ruins, weeds and kitchen gardens." At Woo-chang, a city, of 400,000 inhabitants,the party landed. They found its walls thrown down,large tracts were covered with the ruins ot houses des troyed by the rebels, and so solitary were por tions of the ruined city,that in its very centre the officers scared up two brace of pheasants. It was remarked by Dionyslus, the sophist, in counselling moderation in pleasure, that "honey should be eaten from the tip of the jfiDger.", ART AND LIQUOR IX EUROPE. The following letter from Theodore Parker, da ted at Rome, in February last, and addressed to a iriena, will repay the reader tor its perusal : "It is curious to Btudy the institutions of Rome, and see how man decays here with such a Govern ment. Tho people of the Roman States about tnroe and a quarter millions have one of the fi nest climates and countries in the world, free what they make of it. They have about 25 or 30 miles of railroad one track to Frascati, another to Civita v eccbia though other lines are laid out The commerce is inconsiderable : manufactures al most nothing. All the spinning and weaving in Rome is done by hand ; so is all the sawing. Ag riculture returns to the rudest form. In all the fertile campagna about Rome they get but one crop of grain from the land in three years; the rest of the time it lies fallow. The favorite work of agriculture once was to produce the vine, the olive, the fig, nuts, and various grains. Now the farmer seeks chiefly the spontaneous product of the soil grass and on that he pastures his oxen, sheep, and swine. The labored products of the farm are on the decline. Rome exports about one million pounds of wool a year. I think it is her chief export, and may be worth two or three mil lion dollars. In the city the chief industry, after supplying the daily wants of the back and belly, is devoted to the fine arts. I find that last year Rome sold old pictures to the amount of 816.000, and new ones to $134,000 say 150,000 for pic tures. 5he sold S2.000 worth of old sculpture, and $2:J0,000 worth of new. Then she exports cameos, mosaics, jewels, church ornaments, tc, to about $500,000 a year. Perhaps we might say her in dustry in the fine arts brought her in $1,000,000 in 1859. But the sale of these things is quite preca rious, and depends on the number of strangers here. It is a hard time the poor artists have this year when there are bo few foreigners in town. It is curious to seo the contrasts of uiccness and rude ness in tho same street. In a studio men make statues of most exquisite irraco and beauty the triumph of mind over matter ; in a 6hop next door others make the strong boxes to hold those statues ; they put a log of wood on two clumsy horses, one man gets on top, another underneath, and with a miserable old saw they cut the log into planks to make the box. (We don t make many statues in lioston, but a top sawyer is not known .) Ahc el egant arts aro held in high esteem, while the use ful sink into neglect. It is curious to see how long it takes mankind to respect tho industry which feeds and clothes, houses and comforts, the human race. The work of ruling, of fighting, of "wiving the eoul" by some sort of hocus pocus this is thought decent and respectable; but farm work, wood work, shop work, that is mean and debasing I Such is the notion that prevails in the classic wri ters of Greece and Rome, and with the "gentle men" and "ladies" of New England to-day I mean with the ornamental males and females. Slavery is only supported by the profound con tempt for productive industry which marks the South ; and it has its support at the North chiefly in the same contempt. Miss Diddle-de-diddle is aescended Irom a blacksmith at lieverly or Alar blebead ; he was grandfather to this foolish thing; she is ashamed of her origin, and never sees an anvil without a blush of mortified vanity. Now, if 1 had a son. I should rather he would be a great engineer, a great mason, carpenter, or railroad builder, than a great painter, sculptor or fiddler; and certainly I should rather my son were an or dinary third-rate tailor, shoemaker, or brazier, than an ordinary third-rate sculptor, to spoil mar ble and waste the time of men he strove to make statues of. How much better to be a common house painter than a stupid dauber of canvass. In America I mean in the free States the mass of the people, in their collective action, work right in respect to this, though uncounted individuals make the greatest mistakes; but here it is the community as a whole that falls into the error. Alas for them! the miserable rags which are the clothing of the people, and the wretched food they cat, are consequences of the fatal blunder, and the haggard, meluncholy faces of the common people, ill housed, ill clad, ill fed, are the protest of na ture against the worship of beauty and the scorn of use. Think of a city exporting one million dol lars' worth of trinkets, while she has not a saw mill nor a power loom. We manage this matter better in New England. There were seven paper mills in Massachusetts, a foundry at Saugus, and saw-mills more than I can recollect before a pic ture had ever been painted in all New England, or a statue made. Jonathan had many a useful notion before he made him a fiddle. In Europe you see many things which seem strange to an American. Take the use of wine. If I am right, the Europeans consume about 6,500, 000.000 gallons of wine. In France, leaving out of account the pasture land which is not farmed and the forests, of the actual arable land, one third is devoted to the grape. Yet there are immense districts where no wine can be raised at all. I see it stated that the government returns make it ap pear that the people of France drink 850.000,000 gallons of wine, and the calculation is that the a niount is not much less, than 1,000,000,000 ! Yet I don't believe, in the year 1859, there was so much drunkenness among the thirty-nine million peo ple of France as among the three million Yankees of New England ! I have been four months at Home. J here are wine shops everywhere. Iam out-doors from three to six hours a day. and I have not yet seen a man drunk ; now and then one is merry, never intoxicated. The Romans, Italians, French, tc., are quite temperate ; they drink their weak wine with water, and when the take liquors, it is only a little glassful at a time, (which does not contain a spoonful.) I don't believe there is a bar in all Italy where men step up and drink rum and water, gin and water, fcc. Excessive drinking is not to the taste of the people. In the north of Europe, and even in Switzerland, it is not so. The English, without help from the Irish and Scotch, drink about 600 or 700.000,000 gallons of ' beer every year, not to speak of the wine, spirits, Ac., they take to wash it down withal. There is drunkenness. So you find it in Scandinavia, in Holland, and North Germany. How do you think the Americans will settle the drink question ? Certainly not by taking merely to water, tea, cof fee, 4c. We shall have more beer, perhaps, re turn to the making of cider, and certainly plant vines where they will grow. Drunkenness is such a monstrous and ghastly evil, I would do almost anything to get rid of it. But I sometimes think we have taken the wrong track. I am glad to see the License law introduced to the New York Legis lature, and think it will do more good than our New England scheme of prohibition by force. Just now, the two prominent nations of Europe are doing a great work introducing a liberal scheme of commercial intercourse." Really, Napo leon the Little, as we used contemptuously to call him, seems to be the most statesmanlike head in Europe, and is far wiser than the other Napoleon, who broke wickedly with the ideas of the ago, and so properly set down on the little rock at the end of the world, to point the moral of history and adorn its tale. I dislike much that Napoleon has done, but must confess an honest admiration for his efforts to liberate Italy, and to advance the in dustrial interests of France. After all, it is prob ably true that his nation deserves no better rule than he gives it, and is not capable of more liber al institutions. Those Celtic people have got e-1 quality ; the old aristocratic regime is perished ut terly; all depends on universal suffrage; liberty is something they care little about. A strange people are the French, with so much military cour age and no civil courage at all. I don't see how they could live nnder a republican government one like ours, I am sure, would be impossible. If yon would succeed in life, attend well to your own business and let that of others alone. An exchange ays lead is an animal production, because it is found in "pigs." THE GREATEST DUEL 01T RECORD. An old Mississippian furnishes the following to the WoodvilJe (Miss.) Republican : The famous duel in which .forty or moro gentlemen were engaged, in 1828, is still re membered in Natchez. Col. Jim Bowie, the famous fighter and inventor of the knife, which bears bis name, used to spend a great deal of his time in Natchez. He was challenged by a gentleman of Alexandria, La., whose friends to the number of twenty or more, accompanied him to Natchez to see fair play, knowing Bowie was a desperate man, and had his own friends about bim. All parties went upon tha field. The combatants tooK their places in tha centre, separated from their friends in the rear, or enough not to endanger them with their balls. Behold tho battle array thus: Twenty armed Louisianians fifty yards behind their champion and his seconds and surgeon, and opposite them, as far behind Bowie and his seconds and surgeon, twenty armed Mlssissippians. Behold tbe heights of Natchez thronged with spectators, and a steamer in the river rounded too, its decks black with passengers, watching with a deep interest the scene. The plan of fight was to exchange shots twice with pistols, and to closo with knives, Bowie being armed with his own terrible weapon. At the first fire both parties escaped. At the second the Louisianian was too quick and took advantage of Bowie, who waited the word. At this Bowie's second cried "foul play!" and shot tho Lousianian dead. The second of the latter instantly kill ed the slayer of his principal. Bowie drove bis knife into his man. The surgeons crossed blades, while, with loud cries, came on the two parties ol friends, the light of battle in their eyes. In a moment the whole number were engaged in a fearless conflict. Dirks, pistols and knives wcro used with fatal effect, until one party drove tho other from the field. 1 do not know how many were killed and wounded in all, but it was a dreadful slaugh ter. Bowie fought like a' lion, but fell covered with wounds. For months he lin gered at the Mansion House before he fully recovered. The Morocco War Ejtded. Peace Las been concluded between Spain and Morocco, on terms decidedly advantageous to the first named power. She gets not only 20,000,000 piastres to pay the . expenses of tho war, but she gets commercial advantages, gets the rght to have a Minister at Fez and to send Spanish, missionaries there, and she gets an impor tant cession of African territory. On this strip of land, bordering on the sea, doubtless Spain intends to plant a colony, which shall be to her what Algeria is to France. The two European Christian nations, working side by side on African soil, may accomplish great ends, and immensely promofe the wort of civilizing Africa and developing its wealth. Our chief mfcfgiving arises from" the fact that nearly all past Spanish efforts at colonization and eonnnest. hownvp nrnmisfnir at flrsf ham terminated disastrously. Cuba and Porto Ri co are itie oniy important possessions neid now bv Snain- which fnrmprlv IipM nnrlw nil tha American continent and islands. . Even these two islands Would be far more prosperous un der almost any other flag than the Spanish. Whether Snain will snocfiprr anv hptrpr m hf attemps to colonize Africa,remains to be seen. Avtv.k "Mntn" llinpivrca A ill..l. n residing at Perrvnnnlis Vawittt C. HiiicH,.mri'l...i an "eloapment" which recently occurred there : -T.u luajiiiicui un lucsuaj jigui a young ir Ilixenbaugh And Miss Hasher Eloped From Per ryopolis Took passage on the Cars for Pittsburgh" for tho Purpose of Getting married this privilege uciug iijcctuu vy mcir panems on me account ol their ages; on his accompanying her home the dot was marie, thnv vcpnt infn hor It ritUpiVl.ur. and they thought that he was still setting talking iu ucr us usual, ou -eii morning louna mem uota TnilTlff ttnil hnrl t.rtj-.lr nitoe... n Ka f 2m suit of moar happiness And Joy go with them." Not oct op Raxge. Old Governor Stuyve?ant.- some years after the British took possession of New" iom, appeared uciore tne liritish liovernor (Uar taret.) with a complaint that he was annoved bv men and boys bathing in front of his houae in a nude state. Governor Cartaret assured him that it should be stopped, but happening to recollect, said : "Why, Governor, your house is at some dis tance from the river, and how can it incommode the ladies of your family?1' "Yy, you ice," said old Peter, shaking his cane, "mine gals have got a pig spy-glass !'' A popular preacher tells a good story as a hit at those kind of christians who are too indolent to pursue the duties required of them by their faith. He says that one pious gentleman composed a very fervent prayer to the Almighty, wrote it out legi bly, affixed the manuscript to the bod post, then. on cold nights, he merely pointed to the "docu ment," and said "Oh. Lord ! those are my senti ments!" blew out the light, and1 nestled among the blankets. One of tho neatest replies we ever heard in a le- fflfllatilTA knilir AW n 1 r- n.n VMa I nl.l . .1 by Mr. Tilson, of Rockland, Maine. A member had replied to something Mr. Tilson had said, and, pausing a moment, he inquired if he saw the line of argument. "Mr. Speaker," said he, "in answer to the gentleman, I would say, I hear the humming of the wheel, but cannot see any thread." Afflictive Dispf.nsatios. Within the past six months, sixteen children hare died within a mile of Shingle's Church, in North Coventry township, Chester county all of putrid sore throat. In that short space of time three families have lost all their children, namely John Stacer's, Rudolph Reifsnyder's and Owen Posey's. Lewis Spies has buried four children, but has two left. A terrible encounter took place, a coucle weeks ago, in Powell county, Kentucky, between a man named Hall and his sons, and one named Bowler and five cf his sons Old Hall was mortally woun ded and one of his sons killed and another severely Etabbed. Old Bowler was also badly wounded. At the Orphan Asylum in Lexington, Ky., tho children recently ate by mistake some arsenic pre pared for the destruction of rats. Twenty-one of the victims of this mistake were seriously poison ed, but by great care were saved from death. The subiect of a re-union of the Methodist Epis copal Church. North and South, is being extensive ly discussed in various papersof the Church. The present year is the centennary anniversary of Methodism in the United States. The forests in Natchitoches parish,' in the State of Louisiana, are literally strewn with the carcas ses of cows, sheep, hogs, 4c., which have died from famine during the winter. Emnggins hae electrified humanity by the dis covery that much of the ricKness in JNew Orleans is occasioned by bad health.