f rwTim imirt t-r - i i i i p- i i. -- ... .. ,1,.,.. , - '. ' '" ' ' ' " ' -r"" 1 , . ... 'i ' " " " ' " 1 ' Mi " . n, -. . ... . n ,my i I- BY S. B. ROW. CLEARFIELD, PA., "WEDNESDAY, 3IAY 10, 1860 VOL. 6 T0. 38. 3 4 JUDGE KINDLY. ' Judge kindly ! Oh, you cannot tell How oft the troubled heart May seek to hide its grief in smiles, And act a careless part ; Iiow oft beneath the ringing laugh, A moan is smothered there ; And in some hasty, thoughtless word, Is breathe! an earnest prayer ! And oh ! perhaps when heaviest The heart by sorrow pressed, The words and actions often are Most carelessly expressed. Then kindly judge ; it is no proof Because the words are light, That nobler thoughts are buried, or The heart's no longer right. SPEECH WITHOUT WOEDS, OR CIECCMVENTISG A BURGLAR. I'll tell yon a story," said tho mistress of a tillage school in England, to one of her small scholars, " of how I once saved ruy lile entire ly through having learned the deaf and dumb alphabet. Thero were two little boys who us ed tw como and stay with Uncle Frank and me when we were married, and they could neither bear nor speak. They could only talk with their fingers so only ever so much quicker. They were quick and clever; could read and write, and do many other- things which most boys would make a very bad hand at. They could play at draughts and backgammon, at chess and fox and geese as well as any boys. They could almost see w hat we said, though they could not hear, with such quick, eager eyes did they watch every movement of our lips. We soyn, however, got to talk as easily with our fingers us our tongues ; when the lads were not with us Uncle Frank and I used to converse ja that manner, when alone, for practice. " It happened on one occasion that he had to go up to London on important business ; he was to have gone by an afternoon train, but fcomelh'mg delayed him, so that he was not able to leave before the night express. I was not in . very good health, and retired to my led-room about two hours before his departure. He promised, however, to come and wish me good-bye before he started, which would bo between twelve and one o'clock in tho morn ing. The matter which called him away was connected with the bank here, which had just burnt down ; and my husband, it seems, though I did not know it at the time so great a secret had he endeavored to keep it had many thousands of pounds belonging to the concern in his temporary possession, locked up in an iron safe in our led-room, where the plate was kept, lie was a bank manager., and responsible for the whole of it. It was1 winter time, and there was a fire in the room, so bright and com fortable that I was in. no hurry to leave it and get into bed, but sat np, looking at the fiery coals, and thinking about all sorts of things of tho long journey your Uncle Frank had to take that night, and of how dreary the days would seem until he returned, and in particu lar of how lonely I should feel in that great room, all by myself, when he should be away ; for I was a great coward. It was a little alter eleven o'clock when I got into bed, bat I did not seem inclined to sleep then. I knew Uncle Frank would be coming to wish me good-bye presently, and besides, there seemed to be all sorts of noises about the room, which my fool ish ear always used to hear whenever I was alone at night-time. 'If a littlo soot fell down the chimney, it was, I thought, a great black crow at least, which would soon bo flying about the room, and setting on my pillow ; and if the wind blew at the casement, I thought it was some thing trying to get in at the window, although it was two stories high. You may imagine, then, my horror when I heard a sneezo within a quarter of an inch of me, just behind the head-board of the bed, and between that and the wall, where there was a considerable space. I had, as usual, taken the precaution, before I put tho candle out, of looking everywhere in the room where it was quite impossible any person could be hid ; but in the littlo alcove Into which the bod had been pushed, I had never thought of looking, although that was a capital hiding place for anybody, ever since I had slept in that room ; in short, I had been like the ostrich ol which we read, who puts his head in the sand, and then imagines himself in perfect security. I had piqued myself upon precautionary measures, that after all, might just as well have been omitted. The only thing, as I believe, which saved my reason from departing altogether, when I first heard that terrible sound, was that my mind clung to the hope that it might be, after all, only the sneeze of a cat. Fifty cats together could not have made half such a disturbance, it is true ; for it was the sneeze of a man who sneezes in spite of himself, and almost shook the house, but the idea sustained me over the shock. The next instant the wretch had sneezed again, and pushing aside the bed, which rolled on castors, was standing beside my bed looking at me. If he had given only one sneeze, he might, perhaps, have believed me, as I lay quite still, breathing quite regularly as I could, and pretending to be asleep ; but he reasoned very justly, that, unless I was deaf or dead, I must have been awakened by the sound. " You're awake marm," said he in a grulT voice, and it's no use shamming ! If you don't want a tap with this life preserver, just look alive." I opened my eyes exceedingly wide at this, and beheld a man with crape over his face, Manding by the bed ; he held a sort of club with two knobs upon it in hi3 right hand, and with his left pointed to the iron safe. " Is the money there 7" said he. " The plate is," said I in a trembling voice. " 1 raJ take it, sir; I am sure'you are very wel come;" for he might have had everything of value out of the house with all my heart, so long as he left me my life. " The money the gold the notes, are they there 7" cried ho again, in a trembling sort oi whisper. " It's all there," I replied, although I knew nothing about it; all except fifteen and six pence in my purse on the dressing table yon der. There's a silver mustard pot besides in the pantry ; and a couple of candlesticks in the study, only they are plated, for I would not deceive you, sir, upon any account." You had better not," observed the burglar grimly, or it will be the worse for yoa." lie produced a key like that my husband used, and approached the iron safe, but as he did so, his K1 tarcauBht a footstep upon the staircase. Who's that?" cried he. "My husband, sir!" 1 returned, but pray j don t hurt him, pray." j " Is he not gone to town, then 7" cried the ruiuan with an oath of disappointment. " lie is going at twelve o'clock," replied I ue is, inaeea. " If you tell him," said the burtrlar hoarselv " if you breathe but one word of my presence here, it will be the death doom of you both." He had slipped into the alcove, and drawn back the bed to its place in an instant. My husband enierea immediately afterwards and even while ne was in the room, I heard the awful threat repeated once again through the thick curtain behind me : " If you do but whisper it, woman I will kill you where you lie. Will you swear not to ten mm r" " I will," said I solemnly, " I promise not to open my lips about the matter." Your Uncle Frank leaned over the pillow to Kiss me ana observed how terrified I looked " You have been frighteningfyourself about robbers again, I suppose, you sillv child." "Not I, Frank,," returned I, as cheerfully as l couia ; " i nave only a little headache but I said with my fingers so that he could plainly read in the fire-light "For God's sake, hush ; there is a man behind the bed head." Your Undo Frank was as bold as a lion, and naa nerves like iron, although he was tender hearted and kind. He only answered, " Where is your sal volatile, dearest 7" and went to the mantle piece to get it. I thought he could not have understood me, ho spoke with such cool ness and unconcern, until I saw his fingers re ply as he took the bottle, " All right : don't be afraid." And then 1 was not afraid, Dick, or at least, not so much ; for I knew that I should not bo left one instant in that room alone ;' and I felt that my Frank was a match for any two men in such a cause. Only he had no weapon. " lie nas a utile me preserver," (pistol; said l, witn my ringers. Your fire is getting rather low, Georgey," observed he, as he took up the poker. (Ah, he had a weapon then!) I must leave you a good blaze to comfort you before I go." lie poked the fire and left the poker in, but without ever taking his eye off me and the bed-head. " I will just ring the bell, and see wnetner l nomas has cot tho Dortmanteau ready." " Mary," continued he to the maid that answered the bell, " send Thomas up, Then, when she had gone upon that errand : By Jove f I never gave him that key ; where is it, ueorgey i l have not a minute to lose ; if it is in your dressing case with the rest there I shall bo an age in looking for it Might 1 ask you to get out of bed an instant and show me which it is 7" lie said with his fingers, " Jump !" and I jumped, you may be sure, Dickey, quickly enough, and was inside the dressing-room, and with the door locked, in hall a second. . 'Come in, Thomas," said your nncle ; "come in ;" for Thomas was modestly, hesitating at the chamber door; there's some blackguard got Into the house and behind my bed there ; if he makes the least resistance, I'll kill him with this hot poker." At these words tho bed was pushed slowly outward, and the burglar, without his crape mask, and with a face as pale as ashes, emerged from his biding place. Your Uncle Frank knew him at once, as having been a bank mes senger, who had been turned out of bis situa tion since the fire, upon suspicion of dishon esty. " O, sir, have pity upon me," cried he ; " I am an unlucky dog. If it had not been for a sueeze, I should have had ten thousand pounds in my pocket by this time." " O, you came after that, did you 7" said my husband, coolly. " Well, please togiveupthat life-preserver which you have in your pocket before we have any more conversation." " And did your lady tell you that, too 7" cried the villain, in accents of astonishment, as he delivered up the weapon to the man servant ; " and yet I stood by her yonder, and never heard her utter a syllable." " I never spoke one word," cried I, through the dressing-room-key-hole, for I did not wish the man to think that I had broken my oath ; nor, to say the truth, was I anxious to make a deadly enemy of him, in case he should be ever at large again. " Then it's a judgment cn me," exclaimed the miserable wretch, " and it's no good for me to fight against it." " It's not the least good," replied your uncle Frankjdeeisively, "and we willgotothe police ofiico at once." So off the burglar went in their custody leaving poor Aunt Georgy safe and sound af ter all. And now, don't you think there may be some uso in learning everything, even so small a thing as a deaf and dumb alpliabet, Dickey 7 " Sometimes," replied the small boy, cauti ously, not wishing to commit himself to the general question. " It actually saved my life, yon see," con tinued the old lady ; and I didn't break my promise, etf her; did I, Dickey 7 I said I wouldn't speak a word, and I didn't; for what I did was what I call speech without words." What the Lecompton Bill Cost. The tes timony before the Covode Committee at Wash ington shows that it cost the government near ly a million to pass the Lecomption bill. Dur ing the examination of Wendell, checks to the amount of $023,000 were produced by him and left with the Committee. Most of thnm arn dated during the contest on the Lecompton bill. They are payable to no particular indivi dual. Curious combinations of letters are in serted at the usual place lor the name of the payee. Mr. Wendell refused to give any ex planations of these mysterious marks. Some of the checks are payable to Senators, others to members of the House of Representatives. Whether these payments were made to secure the passage of the Lecompton bill, or for other corrupt purposes, Wendell refuses to disclose ; but the other testimony brought out by the Committee leaves but little doubt that this im mense sum was used by Wendell, under the direction of the Administration in buying the passage of the most odious law ever enacted in this country. That's the way the money goes. Wendell never had that much money of his own, and does not pretend that it was his own. His very refusal to testify what it was used for shows that it was not used for any honest purpose. The absurdity of regarding Heenan and Sayers as representatives either oi England or America, or of " Anglo-Saxon " valor, pluck and endurance, or other phrases of the muscu lar vernacular, is apparent from the fact tbt the champions are both of Irish parentage, and that it is understood that their parents lived within 00 miles of each other in Ireland. - HOW B AENEY GOT HIS WIFE. - ' ' ' BT 8AM SLICK. ESO. - "Well, there lived an old woman some years ago at Musquish Creek, in South Carolina, niai, uau a large rortin and an only darter. She -nrna n n J. . m i n. "M "uuer, a miser,ana a aunuer. She was very good and very cross, as many riteous pious people are, and had a loose tongue and a tight purse of her own. All the men that JOOKea at her darter sho thought had an eye iv money, ana she warn't lar out of the way nother, for it seems as if beauty and money was too much to go together in a general'way. Rich gals and handsome gals are seldom good ior. noinin- else hut their cash or their looks. i ears and peaches are not often found on the same tree, I tell you. ; She lived all alone tho most, with nobody but her darter and her in the house, and some old nigger slaves in a hut near at hand; acd she seed no company she could help. The only place they went in a general way, was meetin : and Jerushe never missed that, for it Mas the only chance she had Doraeumes to get out alone. lsarney O'Balentine had a most bcantiful anu aiways went mere, too, to sing a- long wun me gals ; ana Jiarney heann' of the fortin of Miss Elles made up to her as fierce as possible, and sang so sweet, and talked so sweet, and kissed so sweet, that he soon stood number one with the heiress. But he didn't often get a chance to walk home with her, and wnen ne aid, she darsen t let him come in for tear of the old woman. But Barney warn't to Da put oft that way long. When a gal's in one pasture ana a lover in another, its a high ience that they can't get over, that's a fact. "Tell you what," saysBarney, "set up alone in me keepin' room, Jerusha, dear, arter old mother has gone to bed, put out the light, and I'll slide down on the rope from the tran door on the roof. Tell her you are exercised in your mind, and want to meditate alone, as tne wordsyou heard to day reached your heart. Jerusha was frightened to death a'most : but what won't a woman do, when a lover is in the way bo that very night she told the old woman she was exercised in her mind, and would rastle with the spirit. "lo, aear," says the motr.er, "ana you won't think of the vanities of dress and idle company no more. You see how I have given them all up since. I have made a profession, and never so much as talk of 'em now, or even minis oi 'em." "Strange, 'Square, ain't it 7 But it is much easier to cheat ourselves, than to cheat the devil. The old hag was too stinjrv to bnv a are, but persuaded herself it was "being too good to wear it." "Well, the house was a flat roofed house, an had a trap door in the ceilin. over the keepin' ..room, and there was a crane on the roof, with a rope to pull things up, to spread out uti ttsyr there. ;'. - . As soot . as the lights were all out, and Bar ney thought the old woman was asleep, he crawls on the house, opens the trap-door, and lets himself down by the rope, and he and Je rusha sat down on the hearth in the chimney corner, courtin' ;" or, as they called it in ihem diggin's, snnjjin ashes. When daylight began to show, he went up the rope hand over hand, hauled it up after him, closed the trap-door, and made himself scarce. Well, all this went on as slick as could be for awhile, but the old woman saw that her darter looked pa' , after a while,as though she didn't get sleep enough, and there was nogettin' her up in the mornin'. She got oneasy after a while, and would some times get up in the night, and call her darter, and make her go off to bed, and once or twice come mighty near catchin' of 'em. So what does Barney do, but takes two nig gers with him, when he went after that, and leaves them on the roof, and fastens a large basket to tho rope, and tells them if they feel the rope pull, they must hoist away for dear life, but not to speak a word for the world. Well, one night the old lady came to the door, as usual, and sais : "Jerusha, what on airth ails you, to sit up all night, in that way 7 Do come to bed, that's a dear." "Presently, marm," sais she. "I'm wrestling with the evil, one, I'll come presently." Dear, dear' sais she, "you have rastled long enough with him to have throwed him by this time. If you can't throw him now, give it up, or he may throw you." "Presently, marm," sais her darter. "It's always the same tune," sais her mother, goin' off grumblin' "it's al ways presentlv what has got into the gal to act so 7 Oh, dear ! what a pertracted time she has on it. She has been sorely exercised, poor girl.-' As soon as she had gone, Barney larfed so that he had to put his arm around her to study him on the bench, in a way that didn't look unlike rompin' and when he went to whisper, ho larfed so he did nothin' but touch her cheek with his lips, in a way that looked plagnily like kissin,' and felt like it too, and she pulled to get away, and they had a most regular rastle as they sat on the bench, and down went both on 'em on the floor with an awful smash, and in bounced the old woman. Which is uppermost, sais she. "Have you throwed Satan or has Satan throwed you 7" I have throwed him," sais-her darter, "and I hope I have broke his neck, he acted so." 'Come to bed then, damn, sais she, and say a prayer afterward, and " jist then the old woman was seized round the waist, hoisted through the roof.and from thence to the crane, where the basket stopped and the first thing she knowed she was away up ever so far in the air swingin' in a large basket, and no soul near her. "Barney and his niggers cnt sticks in double quick time, crept into the bushes, and went all round the road, just as day was breakm . The old woman was singin' out for dear life, kicking and squealin,' and cryin' and prayin', all in one, properly lnghtcned. Down runs Barney, hard as he could slip, lookin' as inno cent as if he'd never heard nothin' of it, and pretendin' to be horrid frightened ; offers his and gets blessed till he was tired of it. "Oh!" says the old woman, "Mr. O'Balentine, the moment Jerusha, throwed the evil one, the house shook like an earthquake, and as I en tered the room he grabbed me. Oh f I shall j never forget bis fiery eyelids, and the horrid smell of brimstone he had." says Barney. "I couldn't see in the dark," says she, "but his claws were orful sharp, oh ! how they dug into my ribs. It enemost took the flesh ofT here 1 Lord have mercy on us ! I hope he's in the Red Sea now." "Tell you what it is, Aunty," says Barney, "that's an awful story ; keep it secret for your life folks might say the house is barnted that you were possessed, and that Jerusha was in league with the evil one. Don't so much as nsp a syllable to a living sinner breathen; keep the secret, and I will help you." The hint took ; the old woman had no wish to do Durnt or drowned for a witch, and the moment a feller has a woman's secret, he Is that woman's master. He was invited there, ue siayea there, married there, but the old woman never knew who the evil one was, and always thought to her dying day it was old Scratch himself. After her death they didn't Keep it secret any longer, and many a good laugh has there been at the story of Barney u iiaientine ana the Devil. A CANN0H BALL Ut HIS HAT. An anonymous writer, supposed to be the Rev. Henry Ward Beecher, after describing how, when a boy, he stole a common cannon ball from the Navy Yard at Charlestowu, Mass achusetts, and with much trepidation and more headache carried it away in that univer sal pocket of youth, his hat, winds up with the iouowing reflections which, though philosop hically trite, are conveyed with much force and freshness. When I reached home I had nothing to do with my shot. I did not dare to show it in the house, nor tell where I got it, and after solitary reflection, I gave it away on the same day to a prize fighter. But, after all, that six pounder rolled a good deal of sense into my skull. I think it was the last thing I ever stole (except a little matter of neart now and then.) and it gave me a notion of the folly of coveting more than you can en joy, which has made my whole life happier. It was rather a severe mode of catchising, but ethics rubbed m with a six pound shot are bet ter than none at all. But I see men doing the same things going into underground and dirty vaults ; and gath ering up wealth, which will, when got, roll round their heads like a ball, and not be a whit solter because it is gold instead of iron, though there is not a man In V all street who will be lieve that. I have seen a man put himself to every hu miliation to win a proud woman who was born above him, and when he got her, walked all the rest of his life with a cannon ball in his hat. I have seen young men enrich themselves by pleasure in the same wise, way, sparing no pains, scrupling at no sacrifice of principle for the sake, at last, of carrying a burden that no man can bear. All the world are busy in striving for things that give little pleasure and. much care ;and I am accustomed in my walks among men, no ticing their walks and their folly, to think, there is a man stealing a cannon ball ; or there is a man with a ball on bis head know it by the way he walks. The money which a clerk purloins for his pocket at last gets into his bis hat like a cannon ball. Pride.bad temper, selfishness, and evil pasaions will roll a man as if he bad a ball on his head ! And ten thous and men in New York will die this year, and as each one falls his hat will come off, and out. will roll an iron ball, which for years he has worn out his strength in carrying. A remarkable fact has been developed by the publication of Lord Brougham s Mathemat ical and Physical Tracts. One of the papers, on the subject of light and colors, was pub lished in the Philosophical Transactions for 179G. The copy sent to the Royal Society -contained remarks on the effect of exposing a plate of ivory stained with nitrate of silver to the rays of the spectrum, and also on the result of submitting the plate to the rays pass ing through a small aperture into a dark room. These suggestions were considered by Sir. C. Blagden to relate more to art than to pure science, and were accordingly omitted from the published copy. Had they appeared, it is morally certain that they would have led to the immediate discovery of photograpy fifty years earlier than its actual introduction. In spite of its abstruse nature, a new edition of the volume was required in a week. - A Personal Matter. Mr. Lovejoy dined at Gov. Seward's recently .with Gov.McRea,of Mississippi, and other fire-eaters, who were sociable enough. Before leaving the table, the host enquired why the Southerners had sat so still while Loveioy was pitching into slavery and them, but kicked up a dnst when he took a religious view- of the question 7 "Why," said Gov. McRae, "we were dumb with astonishment when our institutions were attacked, and didn't recover until Loveioy, changed his topic." No, no !" exclaim ed Lovejoy, "you sat still enough until I be gan to talk about the devil, and then you con sidered it a personal question !" Tho reply raised a general laugh. Indeed, although the newspaper accounts are alarming, our Con gressmen have not reached Concord pitch. Northern Democrats must feel highly com plimented by the remarks of Mr. Burrows, of Arkansas, in the Charleston Convention. "He considered them worse than the Black Repub licans! He did not care whether the Black Republicans whipped them, or they whipped the Black Republicans. Of tho two, he con sidered the Black Republicans as the most open and manly foes of the South." Is this tho guerdon earned, after years of devotion to Slavery on the part of Northen Democrats 7 Trapping must be a very profitable business in Kansas. If such luck as the following is common out there, we should think the gold mines would soon lose their attractions. The Leavenworth Dispatch says : Two young men from Michigan recently went out on a trapping expedition to the Big Blue, taking with them a lot of "animal traps," (a kind of spring gnn arrangement.) 'They returned to this city yesterday with $30,000 worth of furs, the re sult of a two mouths' trapping tour. It is one great mistake in female education to keep a young lady's time and attention de voted to only the fashionable literature oi the day. If you would qualify her for conversa tion, you must give her something to talc a- bout, give her education with the actual world and its transpiring events. Urge her to read newspapers and become familiar with the present character and improvement of our race. How to Cleah Chimneys. An Irishman out west, has invented a patent for cleaning chim neys which knocks all other patents far "into the shade." ' He takes a goose and ties its legs and lets it down the chimney. The fluttering of the bird of coarse completely cleans the soot out of the chimney. So much for inven tive genius. THE ADULTERATING BUSINESS. Much has been said and written lately rela tive to the adulterating of liquors, and the tricks resorted to by wholesale dealers to make fortunes in a short space of time by poisoning the people. Bnt adulteration, it appears, does not extend alone to what we drink, Even the ordinary articles which come to our tables are adulterated, and probably to a greater extent tnan our drinks, ibis may sound strange but people generally know it to be a fact that not only the milk (and water) is adulterated but almost every article which comes from the groceries, in which it is possible to drive the nefarious business. On this subject a cotem porary says, " there are probably few persons ignorant of the fact that articles of food are morcor less adulterated ; a less number, per haps, are informed of the extent of these adulterations, and their baneful effects upon health and life. Most European Nations have been compelled to take strong measures against these infamous corruptions, which are in the highest degree an injustice and hard ship upon the poor. In this country these evil practices are not less perniciously pursued Bread is mixed with plaster of paris, alum, and sulphate of copper; coffee with chicory, roast ed wheat, beans, and mangel wurzel ; vinegar with sulphuric acid ; sugar w:th sand, ec Wine, which is absolutely necessary ior the poor when recovering from sickness, is fear fully debased. Frequently, when recommend ed as a wholesome stimulant and astringent, it has produced griping, acidity, irritation and pain. A late investigation in England de monstrates that a large proportion of domestic and imported butter is composed of tallow, flour and beef suet. The latter article is lm ported in large quantities for this express pur pose. It is believed that eggs and meat are the only kinds of provisions which are sold in an unadulterated state. The latter is not above saspicion. It is alleged that salted beef and pork are not "corned" until the flesh becomes fetid, -and only a petty fraction of the great quantities of city milk, so essen tial to the healthy nourishment of children, is retailed in its pure condition. Abuses like these demand immediate attention. The weekly mortality of young children in our large cities is a fearful experience, and so long as even medicines prescribed by the physician aro adulterated all sanitary regulations are mockeries. Science alone can alleviate such evils. There are in our country hundreds of educated men, good analytical chemists, without employment. No inspector sbould be appointed who is not adequate to his posi tion, and a skillful and frequent analysis of suspected provisions, with punishment for adulteration, is the only sure remedy. Such officers are shortly to be appointed in England by a late parliamentary enactment. . These are authorized to enter, at will, any establish ment, and experiment upon samples of food it is a known lact that in this country are large manufactories engaged in open adultera tion, scattering broadcast deleterious and poi sonous compounds, with death and misery Of what avail are temperance reformers in al cholic purities, when the ordinary comforts of the table are equally degrading. The matter calls for redress, and at every pause in reme dial legislation the spoilers are at work. Ruin ed constitutions and debilitated systems are the sure effects of foul adulterations. A Good One. Pat was helping Mr. Blank to get a safe in his office one day, and not be ing acquainted with the article, enquired what it was for 7 "To prevent papers and other articles which are placed in it from being burnt in case of fire," said Mr. B. "An' sure will nothing ivir burn that is put in that thing 7" "No." . Well, thin, yer honor, ye'd better be after getting into that same when ye die !" Mr. Blank "wilted." The Japanese have discovered that a few seconds previous to an earthquake, the magnet temporarily loses its power, and have ingeni ously constructed a light frame supporting a horse-shoe magnet, beneath which is a cup bell metal. To the armature is attached a weight; so that upon the magnet becoming paralyzed, the weight drops, and striking the enp, gives the alarm. Every one in the house then seeks the open air for safety. - The Japanese thonght that the ladies whom they saw at the Sandwish Islands wearing crin oline actually filled the immense skirts. One of the men, who happened to touch a dress in passing, was much surprised to find it ca ving in, and burst out into roars of laughter at his astonishing discovery. -' His ideas of the bodily portions of the fair one suddenly col lapsed. The Pope, according to a letter dated Zu- rich,April 6, published in the Journal of Cora- merce,is going to leave the city of Rome and to put up his residence in the city of Ancona. His object in changing his residence is to get rid at last of the French garrison of the city of Rome, by taking away the only pretext of protecting the Head of the Catholic Church. A gentleman boarding at a hotel in Boston, wishing to display his Latin at the breakfast table, and needing the milk, said to his oppo site neighbor," Will you pass the lactael&uidl" "Haven't any of that," was the reply ; "but here's the stump -tail perhaps that will do as well." This milky joke produced a roar of laughter. - In the Registry of Deeds at Cambridge, Massachusetts, is recorded a deed,dated 1784, which gives the following bounds : Then southerly on Wm. Smith to a pine in the swamp marked W, then southerly on said Wm. Smith to stump and stones where Daniel Harrington licked William Smith." " What a fine head of hair your boy has," said an admiring friend. " les," said the fond father, " he's a chip of the old block, ain't you sonny 7" I guess so daddy, 'cause the teacher said yesterday, I was a young blockhead." It is one of the Waltham statistics which is worth remembering, that " a single pound ot steel, costing but fifty cents, is manufactured into one hundred thousand screws, which are worth eleven hundred dollars." Franklin, on hearing the remark that what was lost on earth went to the moon, observed that there must be a deal of good advice accumulated there. NEGRO INFATUATION. A deplorable instance of the mental dark ness and obliquity of the African race has just been brought to light. An ebony chattel call ing himself William Bracker a name which probably belongs to his master most ungrate fully tired of working for such hog and hom iny as is freely accorded to chattels in the pa triarchal State of South Carolina resolved to commit a grand larceny of his own body and bone, hide, features and wool as villainous chattels have been known to do ere now and, to this end, stowed himself away on board tho steamship S. R. Spaulding, of and from Bos ton, whence she was about to return richly freighted with New-England Delegates to the late Democratic National Convention ! Wo h3d already beard of jumping " out of tho frying-pan into the fire," and all manner of kindred fatuities ; but to attempt to escape from slavery by biding in a vessel whereof Benjamin Uallctt and Caleb Cnshing had vir tual command, goes ahead of any absurdity within our knowledge. Of course, this fuga cious mass of constitutional property was seiz ed as soon as ho was driven from his hiding place by hunger; the vessel's course altered, a southward-steering vessel thereby intercept ed, the negro put aboard of her, and returned to Baltimore, whence be will be promptly for warded, at a liberal cost to Uncle Sam, to his master in Charleston. IT that negro should ever again be caught aboard of a vessel char tered by a regiment of Democratic office-holders and office-seekers, in tho hope of thus es caping slavery, he will deserve for his stupid ity a far severer flogging than his master has now in store for him. Iscexiocs Use op a Dog's Tail. A sergeant with about twenty-five soldiers had been sent out some miles from Fort Defiance, New Mexico, to guard some stock which were sent to grare, when they found that the party was surrounded by about four hundred hostile Navajo Indians. The brave and skillful sergeant took position on an eminence, and by a volley from the long-shooting rifles of his party at first drove off the savages, who, how ever, soon rallied, and prepared to storm the small Earty on all sides. The sergeant, in taxing his rain for an expedient bj which to convey intelli gence of the desperate peril in which his party was placed, took a dog. which had accompanied the party, fastened to his collar a note written with a pencil, informing the commander at the fort of his situation, took a tin cup in which he put some pebbles, which were confined with a piece of cloth over the top, fastened with a string to the dog's tail and started the dog loose, knowing that he would in his affright run to the fort. He dash ed with his greatest epeed to Fort Defiance ; the note was discovered and read ; straightway a par ty was sent to the rescue, and arrived just in time to save the lives of the whole party. Contf.st between Blacksmiths. The develop ment of muscle leads not always tc the prize-ring. In Troy, N. Y., the other day, John Mckinnev and Patrick Kennedy, blacksmiths both, had an extra ordinary trial of skill. The former challenged the latter to compete with him in making horse shoes for the championship. The challenge was accepted and the working time fixed at ten hours, each man, with his 41helper," went at the metal. Their shops were surrounded through theday with an interested throng, and ropes were stretched a bout the forges to give sufficient space. At the expiration cf the ten hours Kennedy had made 240 shoes, and McKinney 210. Near the close of the contest, the "helper" of the latter fainted from fa tigue. It is not probable that an equal feat has ever been accomplished before. Docs IN jArAS. The streets of Yeddo are in fested with not the wretched, mangy curs of Con stantinople or the pariahs of India, but sleek, well- fed, audacious animals, who own no masters, but who seem to thrive on the community, and bid it defi ancc. They trot proudly about, with ears and tail erect, and are most formidable to meet in a by-lane. These animals are held in as high ven eration as they were informer times in .Egypt; and it is a capital crime to put one to death. There are even guardians appointed for their pro tection, and hospitals to which they are carried in case of illness. Certainly a Ions experience has taught them to profit in the immunity from perse cution which they enjoy. A Frenchman at Dexter. Maine, undertook a few days since, upon a wager of $10, to saw six cords ot wooa, two euts. between sunrise and sunset, lie accomplished four cords and seven feet at 6 p. m., and then eave ut the job. The Frenchman was rried down to Dexter for the purpose bv a hotel keeper, who wagered S40 on his head. The wooi was packed very close to make the feat as hard as possible. Beside having a man constantly sharp ening them, the betting landlord furnished a round oi porK with which to lubricate the saws. They are in a ludicrous hobble in Trov. N. Y. That city is full of cents, coppers and nickels ; they are increasing so rapidly that the people are growing superstitious, thinking that they either multiply themselves or that they attract other cents thitber. They bid fair to become the exclu sive currency of the city : already ladies who buv for cash are forced to take with them a boy and a basket to carry the circulating medium. One of the papers calls for a public meetins on the sub ject, and for a concert of action. The best fencer in Paris is a beautiful vonns la dy of Tolish origin. M ile. Linowska. At a soiree at the bouse of an aristocratic widow in the Fau bourg St. II on ore, who it appears is fond of fen cing, and has an apartment in her house devoted to that sort of exercise, the evening closed with a grand assault-at-arms. Dressed iu the handsome costume of her country, M'lle Linowska held her sword with so much grace and precision, that no gentleman present was able to compete with her. Mr. Eea.x, editerial proprietor of the Messenger at Fremont, Ohio, is a model of incorruptibility. In 1858 he was a clerk in the House under Mr. Al- en, and he testified before the Covode Committee that he received $5,000 from Mr. 'Wendell just be fore the passage of the English bill. He further testifies that he tried to influence no votes with it. but simply put the money in his pocket, and de clares that it did not even influence bis own opin ion ! That man knew Dean, but Wendell didn't. A shocking calamity occurred near Camden, in the State of South Carolina, on the 5th inst. A party of boys and girls on a pio-nic were drowned in a mill-pond, the boat on which they were sink ing in the middle of the pond. Nineteen bodies had been recovered, and it is thought ten more, making twenty-nine in allr perished. A sensible writer advises those who would en joy good eating to keep good-natured ; for, says he, ' an angry man can't tell whether he is eating boiled cabbage or stewed umbrella." A gentleman, bragging of having killed a pan that had a tail three feet long, Brown observed that the animal died seasonably, as the tail was long enough not to be continued. A dying West India planter, groaning to his favorite servant, sighed out, "Ah, Sambo, I am going on a long, long journey." " Nev er mind, massa," said the negro, consolingly "it am all de way down hill." . (