:1 BY S. B. ROW. CLEARFIELD, PA, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1860. VOL. 7.JT0. 12. f A MY OLD MOUNTAIH HOME. . Though gently breaks the crested wave Along old ocean's strand, Though stately rivers deep and wide, With gold-dust in their sand ; Though brightly gleams the summer inn On city spire and dome. Yet, lovelier, far. to me, than these, Is my old mount lin home. The sunny south with orange groves, Its sweet perfume exhales ; The verdant plains of the great west O'er-blown by scented gales, .Ad boundless forests, long and wide, Where wild beasts love to roam, Are glorious; but I prize them less Than my old mountain home. These many rough and rugged hills Incessant toil demand ; The scanty harvest which they yield Scarce fills the reaper's baud ; Tet. where my footsteps ever tread, Wherever 1 may roam, My thoughts in love and pride will turn To my old mountain home. THE MYSTERIOUS LODGER. In September, 18-52, I occupied a room in a two story Iramo building on Stockton street, San Francisco, in which were perhaps half a dozen lodgers possibly more. As I seldom visited my room during the day, and invaria bly retired at twelve o'clock, 1 rarely met any of my neighbors or, if I did, it was without my knowing them. With two of my fellow lodgers I became partially acquainted. Ore was a middle-aged man, occupying a room ad joining mine, and divided from it by a thin partition. Against that thin boundary stood our beds the middle-aged gentleman's and mine not to exceed three inches apart. The middle-aged gentleman was wedded to the habit of snoring. And his was a peculiar snore, not a periodical accompanying every fourth or fifth inspiration, but a terrific and uninterrupted combination of snot ts, groans and snufiies, with the addition of teeth grind ing and occasional plunges of the extremities ngainst the creaking foot board. For a week I stood np against the latter. At length. I knockfd at the door. I was desperate, lie ruse, struck a light, and for the first time we met face to face. I had prepared myself to deluge him with sarcasm to abuse him with Billingsgate to sink him with abuse. II is lace whs round and jcvial, and his head so en tirely destitute of hair, that I could not sum mon courage to utter a single harsh word. For a moment we peered into each others faces. Can I do anything for yon ?" I Inquired, Smith, tor that was his name, must have read my thoughts must have known he snor ed must have been aware of the object of my visit for he immediately replied : - " Yes, my friend, join me in a glass of bran dy and water I have a few drops of something genuine. Permit me to insist," he continued, observing my hesitation, "you will sleep all the better for it,5- and he gave a look swelling over with commiseration. 1 meekly followed him to his sideboard, and we pledged each other in a glass of ancient vintage. He then pressed me to smoke a ci gar. I could scarcely do less. Sitting on the hide of the bed, with his rotund visage peer ing through a gauze of smoke, and his fat legs swinging good naturedly, Smith was a picture. Together we would have afforded an amusing sketch for Punch. He talked inces santly, and !efore I lelt him we touched glasses several times, and I resolved that he might snore, night and day, for a year to come, and I would not disturb him. 1 wrung his hand in testacy of friendship, and bade him an affec tionate good night. Smith's brandy was play ing strange tricks with my fancy and 1 felt as though something was whispering, as though to"jiacietn" "Sleep no more i" l iit a can dle, and touud it was two o'clock. Irritated at my wakefulness, I drew my clothes on and was soon in the street. The moon rode high in the heavens, and the night was beautiful as a poet's dream. Strolling around the streets as tar as Clay, I suddenly turned the corner and encountered a crowd of half drunken rowdies standing in front of a house they had either just left or were abont to enter. In the act of retracing my steps, 1 beard some one vxclaim in a boyish tone : "Not to-night, gentleman, sonic o'her time, but not to-night ; please excuse me." The speaker iu passing along the street had been stopped by the rowdies, and invited to drink. Bab !" exclaimed a number of voices "you must come to the scratch either drink or fight." "But, gentlemen, 1 cannot," insisted the stranger, struggling to free himself from the grasp ot bis persecutors. "I can neither drink nor fight to-night ; I am not well." Gammon!" growled the party, attempting to force him into the house. I felt that, as a conservator of the peace and champion of society, it was my duty to inter fere. Smith's brandy told me so, and furnish ed the nerve, in addition, to carry out the res olution. Stalking quietly in upon the crowd, 1 iaid my hand upon the boy's shoulder, and requested him to follow me. lie turned to comply, when "Give him one !" yelled one of the rowdies; and the next moment I received a blow on the back of the neck, and found my self leaning against the side of a house. I was not stunned, but exasperated beyond meas ure. The liquor of my bald headed fellow lodger steeled my nerres to action, and 1 threw myself into a position of defence. .Not doubting my perfect ability to scatter the crowd over an acre of ground, I invited the unequal contest. The appearance of a police man saved the impending slaughter, for the party suddenly left the field. My companion informed the officer of what had occurred, and he started in pursuit of the retiring row dies.enjoining us to fight tho wav to our lodg ings. Taking the arm of the 1 id, we proceed ed towards my room. He was a pale faced, intelligent looking young man of perhaps e gbteen or nineteen years of age, remarka bly well-bred and intelligent. He was dress ed in good taste without affecting any of the airs of matnrer years, and I was quite taken wUh him. He told me at once that his name as Richard Janson j that be was alone in California, but not without means; that he Ji;ed in Stockton street, and visiting a friend inis evening, had been detained to that unusu 'inJ i? r" ln a 'ew raoment we arrived at my joagings, and observing that he evinced little arrl'D.ati0D to Part wlta mt 1 invited hiro to amnr a Prtion f bed lor tbe night. He willingly declined, stating that he was quite Sml .? W? ; D 1 then learned, for the first that he occupied, a room in the same bouse, on the same floor with mvself. Thus I became acqnaintcd with two of rav lodgers Janson and myself olten met alter that, but it was always in the street or on tho stairway He never invited me to his room, or accepted an invitation to mine. He visited me once or twice at my office, and then remained less than five minutes. How be spent his time aid not inquire. lie was a mystery. 1 spoke ot him to bmith cne day. btrange to say that gentleman had never seen him, but from my description of him, ventured the opinion that he was either a gambler or a genteel pick pocket. I was reluctantly forced to the con dition that Smith was right, and after that I treated the young man w ith unusual coldness lie observed tlie change, ana Ii is looks wore a reproach so sorrowful, that 1 half repented having harbored the suspicion of my venerable looking fiiend, who was fearfully averse to all mysteries. Occasion called nc to my room one even ing at an earlier hour than usual. I heard i soft rap at my door, and opening it, found Janson standing in the entry. "Come in, Janson," I exclaimed throwing open the door. "Would you not prefer taking a walk 1" he inquired. "The night is beautiful." "I believe not to night, I replied, "some other time." I was piqued that he should persist in re maining outside the door. "I should be much pleased to have you," he rejoined. I have a few words to say to you in justice to myself, and " 'Enough," I interrupted ; "I will go." felt assured he desired to tell me something of himself, and I was all anxiety to bear it. ft was unpleasant to think him a pickpocket or a sharper, and I hoped he migLt be able to prove to me unit he was neither. W e left the house and proceeded along Stockton street toward Happy Vallev. For ten minutes not a word was spoken. Several times he seemed on the pcint of speaking, but he as olten checked himself. "Unless 1 may call you one, I have not a friend in California," at length he began; placing his hand upon niy shoulder. 1 bowed, but made no replv. "You do not speak," he replied, observing my silence. "I am to understand, I presume that you are not to be made an exception ?" "To be frank with vou, Janson," I replied ''there is a certain mystery about yonr move ments calculated to give rise to suspicions anything but favorable." "Of what nature 1" asked my companion. "That you are a gambler, or uvea worse," I bluntly replied. He smiled as he replied : "Yes, yes, I see ; yet the suspicion wrongs me." "Make it appear so," I answered, "and you shall not want a friend." "Promise me that j'ou will not divulge what I may tell you, or attempt by word or action to thwart me in the accomplishment of a pur pose to which I have pledged my soul," he said, looking me earnestly in the face, "and you shall have the proof you require." "If your purpose is not criminal, I promise; if otherwise, keep your secrets," was my an swer. " 'Tis what you would do, or any other man worth of the name." "Then I promise ; here is my hand." "Listen," he resumed, taking my arm and walking slowly on. "I have a twin sister. e were born in Georgia.and our parents were the possessors of a hundred slaves. and a plan tation large enough to give all employment. When we were fourteen our father died. At the age of sixteen, my sister became a convert during a religious revival, and six months af ter, in the face of the determined opposition of my mother, ran away and mairicd a young preacher, to whose eloquence the revival ow ed its origin. My sister did not love the man. Her feeling for him was a religious enthusi asm a fancy wrought upon her by an unnatu ral infatuation. Learning that they were mar ried, my good mother sent for them,aud they returned to receive her blessing. The plan tation was placed in charge of my sister's hus band, and he relinquished the gospel. He frequently visited New Orleans, and other of the large Southern cities, during the first year of his marriage, but the circumstance excited uo suspicion. To be brief, before two years elapsed, the large estate owned by my father was swept from us, and we were almost bankrupt, lie had induced my mother to mortgage the plan tation, with the view, he said, of purchasing more negroes to work it, but the money was squandered, ond the slaves lie secretly sold, by fives and tens, till less than a dozen re mained. When asked to explain by my moth er, he had no excuse to offer. In the midst of this great grief, another wife of May hew that was the villain's name suddenly made her ap pearance at tho plantation. Learning the res idence of her husband, but not knowing of his second marriage, she had left South Caro lina to meet him. My poor sister was heart broken. Mayhew, to escape prosecution, fed from the Stats. His first wife was sent to the mad house, and in three months my poof old mother was laid in the churchyard. My grief bowed sister but I will not speak of her. Turning the wreck of our property into money, I started in pursuit of the scoundrel who had dealt such a havoc with our peace. Through a dozen States I tracked him, and returned with my mission of vengeance unaccomplished One year ago by accident, I learned he was in California. As soon as I recovered from a se rious illness under which I was laboring, took passage for this State. I arrived six months ago. "He is here, for I have seen him, and he cannot escape roe now ! He is even in this city ; but he little dreams that the pistol is shotted to send him to the great reckoning. I have made few acquaintances here, having no wish to implicate others in a work of blood which must be mine alone. Last night I fol lowed him from tho El Dorado, where he spends most of bis time, to a house on Powell street. He has visited it frequently of late, and to-day I understand that he is paying his addresses to a widow lady residing there. But he will not marry ber, for another week shall not find him alive ! You now know all. Have I one friend in California ?" To see so much spirit, so ninch determina tion, so much manhood exhibited by a beard less boy, surprised me beyond expression. X offered the brave little fellow my hand, and he felt that be was answered. In silence we returned to oar lodgings. Bidding .janson good night, I stepped into Smith's for a mo ment. I found the old fentleuan, somewhat agitated. He had lost a valuable diamond pin, and freely intimated that the "sleek young cuss," as tie denominated Janson bad stolen it. I so strenuously endeavored to dissipate the impression, that I verily believe he felt inclined to transfer the odium of the supposed theft to me. That night Smith snored louder than usual. Three days after, I met Janson in the street, and learned that he had taken rooms on Pow ell street. I did not inquire the reason I thought I knew it. The next day I again met him. His face was unusually pale, yet he said he had not felt better for years." "There is to be a wedding in Powell street to-morrow, at least so Mayhew says, but there will be no bridegroom ! Do you understand " He placed his finger significantly to his lips, and we separated. At eight o'clock the next evening, as Isaac Mayhew was mounting the steps of the house to which Janson had traced him six days be fore, a pistol ball pierced his heart, and he dropped dead upon the pavement. . Some un accountable influence bad drawn me to the neighborhood, and hearing the report of a pistotjJanson's words flashed thro' my mind, and I staited with a dozen others, in the direction of the tragedy. Before I arrived on the spot quite a crowd had collected. The body of Mayhew was lying on the sidewalk, and over it, in speechless agony, stood the widow who was to have been a bride. "Who saw this ?" inquired a policeman. "I heard tho report of a pistol," said one of the crowd, "and a minute after, saw a man enter that house yonder," and he pointed to a small frame building on the opposite side of the street. In an instant, the officer, followed by the excited spectators, started for tho bouse. Springing through the crowd. I reached the side of the policeman, and as be knocked at the door, I was at his elbow. I felt that Jan son was there. The door was quickly opened, and a well dressed lady calmly inquired the object of the visit. "We are looking for a man who a few min utes since committed a murder across the street," said the officer. "And do yon expect to find him in my room, sir f " returned the lady. "No, madam," replied the policeman, rath er politely lor one of his calling; "but I will gianco mrougii your aparinient mereiv as a matter of form, before proceeding to the oth er portions of the house.' The officer entered. I closely followed. While lie was examining the room, I for the first time obtained a fair view of the lady's face. Involuntarily, I threw up my hands in amazement. She detected the movement, and quick as thought, placed her fingei to ber lips. Irr a moment I comprehended all. Richard Janson stood before me. No Rich aid no longer, now that she had slain the des troyer of her peace, but Martha Janson, my former fellow lodger. Heavens what a dis covery ! And for me to have been so con foundedly blind, too but no matter. The policeman searched the house, but did not find the murderer. Tho next day I met Martha on Montgomery street. She smiled and bowed, and I confess I thought her an excedingly pretty woman. A week after she quietly left tlte State for Georgia, where she is now residing. After the sailing ol the steamer, I received a note through the post office from Martha. She ex plained all, and thanking me for the assistance Ihadrendeied her, and the kindness shown to her imaginary twin brother Richard. When I informed Smith, as I did one even ing, that the "sleek young cuss" whom he had viewed with so much suspicion was a woman, he wajted forme to repeat the assertion, and then checked himself in the act of charging rue with falsehood. The news excited Smith, and he went to bed that night and snored as he had never snored before. She who was to have been the third wife of Mayhew still lives in San Francisco. She was married in August last. 1 met ber in the street a few days ago. Haw vividly the sight of her face brought lo mind the incidents I have related ! She will read this little story, perhaps, and learn for the first time, why she did not become tho wife of Mayhew, the biga mist. THE GREAT METROPOLIS. London now covers one hundred and twenty- one square miles, having increased three-fold since the year 1SOO, and bricks and mortar still invade and capture the green fields. The population, according to the leport of the Re gistrar General, augments at the rate of about one thousand per week, halt by birth and half by immigration. Notwithstanding the enor mous wealth of the metropolis, it is recorded in the report of the Registrar General, as a re markable fact, that "one in six of those who leave the world die in one of the public insti tutions a workhouse, hospital, asylum or prison. Nearly one in eleven of the deaths is n the workhouse.-' 1 his shows that poverty follows close at the heels of wealth, and fas tens on the multitude with relentless grasp. Every sixth person dies a pauper or a crimi nal ! Oan this be said of any other city cn the globe? And how great a number there must be who barely manage to escape this fate. The severe competition for subsistence and wealth, which characterizes London life, is a terrible ordeal for any human being to pass through, and thousands fall in the attempt, crushed beneath the golden Juggernaut. It is now notorious, says a London paper, that in the largo establishments where some hundreds of assistants are employed, the great majority of them are broken-down tradesmen, crushed by the competition capital. Even these occu pations are obtained with difficulty, and the less fortunate gradually sink lower and lower in the scale, till they are driven into the pub lic institutions, where they meet an untimely death. The list is further swelled by that nu merous class, who, born in a respectable sphere and well-educated, sink into degrada tion from the sheer love of display and the vanity of living beyond their means. It is on record that out of eight thousand convicts who have past their probation in Pentonville, one thousand fell through this wretched vice, and it is stated that most of the number were "ori ginally respectable in more than an ordinary degree." Jbese statements teach us that the greatness of London has been purchased at a fearful cost in human poverty, misery and crime, the result of its eager pursuit of wealth. He is a brave man who isn't afraid to wear old clothes cctil be is able to pay ior sew ones. EARLY HISTORY OF SAW-MILLS. In early periods, the trunks of trees were spin with wedges into as many and as thin pieces as possitrtfe, audif it was necessary to nave them still thinner, they were hewn on both sides to the proper size. This simple and wasteful manner of making boards has ami oeen continued in Kussia to the present time. Peter the Great tried to put a stop to u loromuing newn boards to be transported on the river Neva. The saw, however, though so convenient and beneficial has not been able to banish entirely the practice" of splittingtim- uer usea in rooting, or in making furniture and utensils : and indeed, it must be allowed that this method is attended w ith peculiar ad vantages, which that of sawing never can pos sess. The wood-splitters perform their work more expeditiously than sawyers, and split timber is much stronger than that which has been sawn ; for the fissure follows the grain of thf fvrkritft an1 I .... : . . i i , . auu icaiw ii. wnuie; wnereas, me saw proceeding in the line chalked out for it, divides the fibers, and by these means lessens iis cohesion and solidity. Split timber, in deed often turns out crooked and warped; but in many purposes to which it is applied, this is not prejudicial, and such faults may be amended. As the fibers, however retain their natural strength and direction, thin boards particulary can be bent much better. This a great advantage in making pipe-staves, or sieve-frames, which require still more ait, in forming various implements of the like kind. Our common saw, which needs only to be guided by the hand of tho workman, "howev er simple it may be, was not known to the-inhabitants of America when they were subdu ed by the Europeans. The saws of the Grecian carpenters had the same form, and were made in the same inge nious manner as ours are at present. This is fully shown by a painting still preserved a mong the antiquities of Herculaneum. Two genii are represented at the end of a bench, which consists of a long table that rests upon two fonr-footed stools. The piece of wood which is to be sawn through is secured by cramps. The saw with which the genii are at work has a perfect resemblance to our frame saw. It consists of a square frame, having in the middle a blade, tho teeth of which stand perpendicular to the frame. The piece of wood which is to be sawn extends beyond the end of the bench, and one of the workman appears standing and the other sitting on tho ground. The arms in wbjch the blade is fast ened, have the same form as that given to them at present. In the bench are seen boles, in which the cramps that bold the timber are stuck. They are shaped like the figure 7, and the ends of them reach below the boards that form the top of it. The French call a cramp of this.kind wn raZer. The most beneficial and ingenious improve ment was, without doubt, the invention of saw-mils, which are driven either by water, wind, or by steam. Mills of the grat kind were erected as early as the fourth century, in Germany, on the small river Roer, or Ruer ; for though Asonius speaks properly of water mills for cutting stone, and not timber, it cannot be doubted that these were invented later than mills for manufacturing boards, or that both kinds were -erected at that time. The art, however of cutting marble with a saw is very old. Pliny conjectures that it was invented in Caria ; at least he knew no building incrusted with marble of greater an tiquity than the palace of King Mausolus, at Halicarnassus. This edifice is celebrated by Vitruvius for the beauty of its marble, and Pliny gives an account of the different kinds of sand used for cutting it ; for it is the sand properly, says he, and not the saw, which pro duces -this effect. The latter presses down the former, and rubs it against the marble, and the coarser the sand is, the longer will be the time required to polish the marble which has been cut by it. Stones of the soap-rock kind, which are indeed softer than marble, and which would require less force than wood, were sawn at that period; but it appears that the far harder glassy kinds of stono were sawn then also, for we are told of the discovery of a building wliidh was encrusted with cut agate, cornelian, lapislazuli, and a metbysts. There is, however, found no ac count in any ot ihe Greek or Roman writers of a mill for sawing wood, and as the writers of modern times speak of saw-mills as new aud uncommon, it would seem that the oldest construction of them has been forgotten, or that some improvement has made them appear entirely new. When the Infant Henry sent settlers to the island of Madeira, which was discovered in 1420, and caused European fruits of every kind to be carried thither, he ordered saw mills to be erected also, for the purpose of sawing into boards, the various species of ex cellent timber with which the island abounded, aud which were afterwards transported to Portugal. About the year 1429 the city of Breslau had a saw-mill, which produced a yearly rent of three marks, and m 1190 the magistrates of Erfurt purchased a forest, in which they caused a saw-mill to be erected, and they rented another mill in the neighbor hood besides. Norway, which is covered with forests, had the first saw-mill about the year 1530. This mode of manufacturing timber was called the new art : and because the ex portation of boards was by these means in creased, that circumstance gave occasion to the deal tythe, introduced by Christian III, in the year 1515. Soon after, the celebrated Henry Ranzau caused the first mill of this kind to be built in Holstein. In 1552 there was a saw-mill at Joachimsthal, which as we are told, belonged to Jacob Gensen, mathema- ! tician. In the year 1555 the Bishop of Ely, ambassador from Queen Mary of England to the court of Rome, having seen a saw-mill in the neighcorhood of Lyons, the writer of bis travels thought it worthy of a particular des cription, ln the sixteenth century, however, there were mills with different saw-blades, by which a plank could be cut into several boards at the same time. Pighins saw one of these, in 1575, on the Danube, near Ratisbun, when he accompanied Charles, prince of Juliers and Cleves on bis travels. It may here be asked whether the Dutch bad such mills first, as is commonly, believed. The first saw-mill was erected ia Holland at Saardam, in the year 1596, and the tnvention of it is ascribed to Cornelius Cornelissen, but he is as little the inventor as the mathematician of Joac himsthal. Perhaps be was the first person who built a saw-mill at that place, which is a village of great trade, and has still a great many saw-mills, though the number of them is becoming daily less, for witbin the I.it thirty years a hundred have been given up. The first mill of this kind in Sweden was erect ed in the year 1653. In England ssw mills had at first the same fate that printing bad in Turkey. When at tempts were made to introduce them, they were violently opposed, because it was appre hended that the sawyers would be deprived by them of their means of getting a subsist ence. .For this reason it was found necessary to abandon a saw-mill erected by a Dutch man near London, in 1663 ; and in the year 1700, when one Houghton laid before the nation the advantage of such a mill, he ex pressed bis apprchensjons that it might excite the rage of the populace. What be dreaded was actually the case in 1767 or I7C8, when an opulent timber merchant, by 4the desire and approbatien of the Society of Arts, caus ed a saw-mill, driven by wind, to be erected at Limehouse, under the direction of James Stansfield. who bad learned in Holland and Norway the art of constructing and manag ing machines of that kind. A mob assembled and pulled the mill to pieces, but the damage was made good by the nation, and some of the rioters were punished. A new mill was afterwards erected, which was suffered to work ; without molestation, aud which gave occasion to the erection of others. It appears, how- ever,that this was not the only mill of the kind then in Great Britain, for one driven also by wind had been built at Leitb, iu Scotland, some years before. The application of the steam engine has in modern times almost entirely displaced the use ot either water or wind as the source of power in.machiuery, in England, as most of the saw mills now in action, especially those on a large scale arc worked by steam. Leckman s History. ERRORS IN DRESS. It need not cost much money to dress well, and on the other hand a person may be expen sively and yet not well dressed. Foreigners say that American ladies spend more for clo thing and ornaments than those of any other nation ; but they do not express the opinion that the ladies of this country are more at tractively arrayed than those of Europe. Some one has made a whimsical calculation after the following manner. "There," says he, "goes a ady with fifty bushels of corn upon her back" her silk dress equaled the market value of the corn ; another had a bale of cotton in her bosom, represented by a diamond pin ; a third carried two tuns of hay upon her head in the shape of a bonnet ; and another was encumber ed with a quarter section of land in the form of a brocade skirt. Yet not one of these per sons was well dressed. The observer looked upon them us he would into the window of dry -goods store, or a jeweler's shop j he saw a splendid display, but it attracted attention from the wearer, fo wh"atshVcimh"Tne' Ob-1 ject to be gained by taste in dress is to adorn, to attract attention fo the wearer, and to high ten the pleasure of looking upon her. Now, ir the bonnet, the shawl, the jewelry, or the dress, is the center point of attraction, they detract from, rather than add to the wearer's charms. A good writer on this subject has said : a lady is well dressed, when you cannot remember a single article of her clothing meaning that no one thing should be so con spicuous as to attract attention, but that all be suited tD tho peculiar bodily habit of the wear er. Now, whatever fashion may dictate, it can not make tfu same style suit a tall and a short person. The present amplitude of crino line gives a rather queenly air to a tall digni fied lady, but upon a short, and especially up on a corpulent person, its effect is ludicrous. When narrow striped stuffs are worn, they make a person appear taller, and a very tall la dy should shun them unless she wishes to bighten her apparent stature ; let her rather a dopt wide stripes or large figures, or patterns which. have a contrary effect. So, too, in the matter of colors. At one time pick is the prevailing style, and it suits a dark complex ion quite well, but it gives a frightful greenish hue to one of very fair or pale cheeks; such should choose green or blue tints if they would appear well in preference to being fast.ionable, while darker colors are safe to nearly all. A gain, good taste is greatly violated by a wrong assortment of colors in diess. Thus a violet bonnet may be entirely spoiled by blue 'flow ers, or ayellow skirt by a pink sash. Green associates well with violet; gold with dark crimson or lilac; pale blue with scarlet; pink with black and white ; gray with scarlet or pink. The most objectionable and perhaps the most common fault to be avoided, is want of harmony in the richness of the several arti cles composing the dress. Thus we often see a costly mantilla thrown over a cheap delaine; a gaudy bonnet accompanied by a cheap shawl ; a splendid parasol shading a 'lady' in calico. Such a contrast reminds one of the school boy who invested his first half dollar in a pair of silk gloves, and was saluted by his comrades with the cry, "patch ou both knees, and gloves on!" The delaine, the calico, the mantilla, the parasol, may all be well enough by them selves, but they do not accord well together; for harmony is the very first essential in cor rect taste. .1m. ,is?riciillurist. Some time ago, the wife of a wealthy farmer in Ohio eloped with a farm laborer. The de serted husband obtained a divorce and plodded orr alone. After a while the sister of the re creant wife, living on an adjoining farm, slow ly drew bis regard and eventually they were married. The other day a knock was beard at the door, and the farmer, opening it, beheld, wan, pale and ragged, h;s truant former wife. Her father had turned his back to her, her par amour bad fallen into drunkenness, aud hope less, homeless, she as a last resort turned to her former happy home. The farmer called bis wife; she would not see ber sister, but a tear glistened in the farmer's eye. He sup plied her present wants, and then built her a cabin on the extreme end of his farm, where by bis bounty she is living out the remnant of ber days in remorse at her crime and folly. Osioss fob Cattle. A writer in the Home stead has great faith in the efficacy of a peck of onions for ridding cows and oxen of lice. He claims to have found them an infallible remedy in bis practice. They also give tone to the stomach, and are especially valuable in hot weather, when. working cattle will lie in the shade at noontime, and refuses to eat. A Breckinridge contempory says that Joe Lane will resign bis Senatorsbip rather than represent a state which has acted so dastardly as Oregon has. We bare no donbt bnt that the Oregonians would admire the old man's rsi$ natian much. THE WARSAW CONFERENCE. The Warsaw conference is among the things of the past. It has been held, and has termi nated. But what was its object 1 The world cannot be persuaded that the Czar, the Kaiser, and the Prince Regent, with their respective ministers, traveled hundreds of miles to mere ly renew interrupted or failing friendships, hunt the wild urus of the Polish forests, and enjoy the delights of convivial intercourse. Something of more importance must have led to this meeting of the three sovereigns of the great northern powers, at so critical a junc ture. It is hardly probable that three such champions of law and order as Alexander, Francis Joseph, and Frederick William that three zuch veteran diplomatists as Gortscba koff", Recbberg, and Schleinitz, came together and separated without having a talk about Eu ropean politics. True, the autocrat of all the Russias assured his Freuch brother, in an au tograph letter, thai the conference had nothing in view adverse to France; but, in certain ca ses, even autocratic assurances are not entitled to implicit credit. Beside, though the Czar could answer for his own views, he could not, when said epistle was written, answer for those of others. Could he say that the Prince Re gent's principal object had nothing in Its na ture hostile to the Emperor Napoleon no re lation to soliciting aid against bis designing neighbor, should he think proper to assail Prussia on the Rhine Could hisCzar&hip af firm that the Kaiser did not mean to impor tune him for succor, should Austria bo attack ed in Venitia by Franco and Sardinia, or should Hungary rise again in rebellion? We may well indeed believe that no attempt was made at Warsaw to form an offensive alli ance against the French emperor; for that should be the best way to raise tho tempest which the potentates in question are so anxious to avert; but that the hope of eliciting a pledge of assistance from Alexander, in the contin gencies supposed, was the chief inducements that led Frederick William and Francis Jo seph to Lecome parties to the conference, is as certain as that they actually brought for ward thereat the proposition indicated. What entertainment was given by bis Russian ma jesty to these Royal and imperial suitors, who thus sought to bind him by a most dangerous pledge, is a secret which only time and events will fully divulge, yet it is not very difficalt to surmise its nature. In despite of bis pacific disposition, and that autograph letter to Napoleon, the czar would scarcely Temain neutral and see Prus sia stripped of her Rhenish provinces. Hence it may be safely assumed that the regent's application bas not been altogether in vain, and that he has received an assurance of aid should France attempt to extend her north eastern frontier to the Rhine. But as compli - ance with the petition ot the kaiser would be, attended with' more hazardous corrseiacnces, and as his defeat on the Mincio or the Danube need not alarm Alexander for the invincibili ty of the Vistula or the Nieman, it is probable that the Uapsburgh has not as much reason to congratulate himself on the result of hia trip to Warsaw as his Prussian rival. Howsoever desirous of recdhci'iition with Austria, the Russian Emperor was far too prtident and sen sible a man to consent to become a partner in the desperate fortunes of Francis Joseph, and ajready we have remarkable, though indirect, evidence of the kaiser's failure. While the tyrant entertained hopes of inveigling the au tocrat in alliance with him, all thoughts of conceding free institutions to his subjects were laid aside, and the empire resounded with ihe clang of preparations for war; but now there sudden'y appears in the li'iener Zei. tung, the official gazette, his long promised manifesto of reform, which -restores indepen dence to the provincial diets; and grants many valuable privileges to the people. This unex pected change of policy on the part of the Uapsburgh proclaims more loudly than could the most explicit admission that the devices of the despot bad f tiled him, and that he has no longer any resource from utter vuin, save in abject submission to the popular will. But the Warsaw conference bas done more than frustrate the expectations of Austria. It has also demonstrated that.bowever well inclin ed the northern powers are to form an alliance a second coalition against liberty they are totally unable to do so. The gentle Alexander is not the man to lead the forlorn hope of absolutism. He called bis brothrr dsepots to gether, indeed, to take measures against rev olution, but becoming dismayed at the start ling prospect before him, he shrunk from car rying out what he had contemplated, and end ed with breaking up the reunion after cbaunt ing a jeremiad over the evil times they have fallen on ! Let the friends and votariea of freedom the world over sing lo triomphe. During the sitting of a Court in Connecti cut, not many years ago, on a very cold eve ning, a crowd of lawyers had collected around the open fire that blazed cheerful on the hearth in the bar-room, when a traveller entered, be numbed with the cold; but no one moved to givehim room to warm bis shins, so he re mained in the back part of the room. Pres ently a smart young limb of the law addressed bim, and the following dialogue ensued . "You look like a traveller ?" "Wall, I suppose I am; I came all the way from Wiscensin !" ' "What a distance to come on one pair of legs !" ejaculated the lawyer. "Wail, I done it anyhow," was the reply. Did you ever pass through h 1, in any of. your travels 7" inquired the lawyer. "i es ; I've been through the outskirts." "I thought likely. Well.jWriaJ.are the man ners and customs there ? borne of as would like to know." "Oh, you'll find them much the same as ia this place the lawyers tit nearest the Jire .'" A person complained to Dr. Franklin of hav ing been insulted by one who caiiea mm a scoundrel. "Ah," replied the doctor, "and what did yon call him I" "Why," said he, "I called him a scoundrel too." "Well," re- .umed Franklin, "I presume yon both spoko ne iruin. Mnch bad feeling prevails between ex-Gor- ernor Wise and Governor Letcher, of Virgin ia, on account of the latter having re-asserted bis devotion to Douglas, and refused to coun tenance extravagant military preparations to belp forward secession. Mr. Harris was never "more s-s-sobcr in the whole course ot his life," bnt when Jones ask ed bim to take a chair, be said be wcru! i ait til! one came rccsl,"