Ml J. a qs vS .a ina res vF rot ;8i or- 3J1 It Ir n CT5RKEn, Editor and Proprietor. topP llUTCIliSSOK, Publtihei'. VOLUME 7. -nlRECTORY. V-,n nP post OFFICES liJIS Pott Matter: District.. Carolltown, rh9 Springs Steven L. Evans, Carroll. M. D. Wagner, Chest. A. G. Crooks, Taylor. R. H. Brown, - Waahint'n John Thompson, tbensburg Cresson, Ebessburg. Fallen Timber, C. Jeffries, White. r,armn's MillB, Peter Garman, 8usq'haH. Gallitzin. Washt'n. Johnst'WB. Loretto. Monster. Susq'han. Clearfield. Richland. Washt'n. Croyle. Washt'n. -S'merbill. Gallitria, J. U. Christy, gemlock, Johnstown, Win Tiley, Jr., K. Roberts, M. Adlesberger, A. Durbin, M. J. Piatt, Stan. "Wharton, George Berkey, A. Shoemaker, B. F. Slick, Wo. M'Connell, J. K. Shryock, Loretto, Munster, p'.atteville, S- Angastme, tiln Level. 5onman, iSummerhill, rre,bvtrian-m. T. M. Wiaww, Pastor -neachin every Sabbath morning at 10 J o'clock, and in the evening at 4 o'clock. Sab School at 9 o'clock, A. M. Prayer meet- ns everv Thursday evening at 6 o clock. ifethodistFj -iscopal Church -Bit. A. Bakik, Preacher in charge. Rev. J. Pershing, As 5i$tant. Preaching every alternate babbath morning, at 10J o'clock. Sabbath School at 9 .v'nrk. A. M. Praver meeting every Wednes- IJat evening, at 7 o'clock. 1 Welch Independent Tlzr Ll. R. Powell, ntnr.Preacbintr every Sabbatb morning at 10 o'clock, and in the evening at 6 o clock. Salbath School at i o ciock, r. -u. meeting on the nrst Monaay evening i wiu n;outh; and on every mesaay, iuuiujf wiv. Friday evening, . excepting the first week in tscb month. . , . Calrinintie Methodist Kuv. MORGAS r.I.1.13., Sabbath eveninr at 1 ' - j w JiDi 6 o'clock. Sabbath School at r o clock, A. M. Piayer meeting every fcnday evening, : 1 0 clock. ,,. v.w T.f.nvn.Pa9tor. Preacb- every p&bbam morning sv iu o Particular Baptists Rkt David Evaxs, itftor. Preaching every Sabbath evening at 3 o'clock. Sabbath School at at I o'clock, P. M. Catholic Rev. R. C. Christy, PaBtor. vrvices every Sabbath morning at 10 J o'clock i;l Vespers at 4 o'clock in the evening. KIIETSiilJRG 2f AtLfl. MAILS AHUIVE. J.srtm. tTitottrn. Qaiiy, at 9.35 P. 9.35 P. 0.25 A. Mi M. M. ttstcrn. waV. t intern, through, ' at Eftfttrn. way, " at MAILS CLOSE. 9.25 A. M. 8.00 P. M. 8.00 P. M. Kastern, daily, at Weitern. at t?The raailj from Carrolltown arrive Aviv. SnnHTn Tcinted. The mails from riatten7i'e, Grant, &c, arrive on Mondays, 1 WfJr.fiiArn .nd Fridavs. .Uails for Carrolltown leave daily, Siin- drg excepted. Mails for Platteville, Grant, leave on luesaayn, luursaavs ana oai- Vinvs. KAILROAD SCISKDII.C. CRESSON STATION'. West Bait. Express leaves at 8.25 A: M. Pbila. Express 9.23 A. M. 8.25 9.23 9.52 9.54 7.30 4.15 8.40 2.30 7.16 1.55 1.21 11 i it n 11 ii t ii " New Vork Exp. " Fast Line " I:y Express . " Altoona Accom. Phila. Express " Fast Line M. M. M. M. M. A. M. A.M. P. M. P. M. Pay Exprpss Cincinnati Ex'. AUoona Accora. , , COl'.TTr OFFICERS. Judges of the Court President. Hon. Geo. TyIor, Huntingdon; Associates', George W. Suley, Henry C. Devihe. - rrotkonotary Geo. C. K. Zahm. Register and Recorder James Griffin. Sheriff -James Myers. Pittriet Attorney. John F. Barnes. CkttTry Commissioners John Camptll, Ed- rd Glass, E. R. Dnnnegan. Treasurer -Barnabas M'Dertmt Poor House Direetori-Ucorgt M'Cullougb, Wge Orrii Joseph Dailey. Poor House Treasurer George C. K. Zahm. Avlitors Fran. P. Tierney, Jno. A. Keri- "Xiv. EpanuI Ttra-llier. Ccmicy Surveyor. Henry Scanian. Coroner. William Flattery. Xsntile Appraiser John Cox. " Sjfl 0 Common Schools J. F. Condon. Ebexsrurg RDR. officers. AT LARiSB. fcrjus James A. Moore. -Jutheet of the Peace-Harrison Kinkead, Wnund J. Waters. School n: t t ttt tr.. t a rnA. "&niel J. Davis. David J. Jones. Tilliam M. Ves, R. Jones, jr. I Borough Treasurer Geo. W. Oatman. Cier to Council Saml. Singleton, street Commissioner David Davis. BAST WARD. Town CounfiT A v t t.. - t Lmnel Davis, Charles Owens, R. Jones, jr. -....tulir 1 nomas Todd. 0 Election Wm. D. Davis. Rectors David E. Evans, Danl. J. Davis. Junior Thomas J. Davis. VC IT T viBn rW John Lloyd, Samuel Stiles, Ynr!e -vit wvui. u. iw-viiuibu, urorge J Cowtafcte Barnabas M'Dermit. j "I Election. John D. Thomas. ? Rector.. William H. Sechler, George W. Assessor Joshua D. Tarrish. i-.l;.1'" iSummit Lodge No. 312 A. Y. M. itClS in ATaen.:. TT.1l "w-. u m ii"ouult "an, DenBburg, on trie , "I ""unuui Ij savu uiuuifl, HI a'clock, a - fp ; H?Jf yand Lodee No- 428 1. o. I r- meets in Odd Fpllnrc w-n xv v. lT. T,.-1 . " "on, liueasourK, . eanesaay venine. T.,.,. :",ai6Dianl division No. 84 Sons of 'nfv' ;l XQeta m Temperance Hall, Eb,t , . j' cry oatrqay evening. J ilKRMS OF SUBSCRIPTION TO "THE ALLEGHANIAN $2.W IN ADVANCE. EBENSBTJRG, PA., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1866 Tbe Totcr on Election Day. BY JOHS G. WHITTIBR. The proudest now is bnt my peer, The highest not more high ; To-day, of all the weary year, The king of men dm I. To-day alike are great and small, The nameless and the known ; My palace is tbe people's hall. The ballot-box my throne. Who served to-day upon the list Beside the served shall stand ; Alike the brown and wrinkled fist, The gloved and dainty hand. The rich is level with the poor, The weak is strong to-day ; And sleekest broadcloth counts no more Than homespun frock of gray. To-day let omp aid vain pretence My stubborn right abide ; . I set a plain man's common sense Against tbe pedant's pride. To-day shall simple manhood try The strength of gold and land ; The wide world has not wealth to buy The power in my right hand. While there's grief to seek redress, t)r balance to adjust, Where weighs our living manhood less Than mammon's vilest dus't ! While there's a right to need my vote, A wreng to sweep away, Up ! clouted knee and ragged coat I A man's a man to-day I VA RIFT IN THE CLOUDS." Andrew Lee came home at evening from the shop where he had .worked all day, tired and out of 6pirita j came home to bis wife, who was also tired and oat of ppirits. "A smiling wife and a cheerful home what a paradise it would be!" said Andrew to himself, as he turned his eyes from the clouded face of Mrs. Lee, and sat down with knitted brows and moody as pect Not a word was spoken by either. Mrs. Lee was getting eupper, and she moved about with a weary step. "Come' she said at last, with a eide glance at her husband. There was invitation in the word only, none in the voice of Mrs. Lee. Andrew arose and went to the table. He was tempted to speak an angry word, but controlled himself and kept silent. He could find no fault with the chop, nor the sweet home-made bread, nor the fra grant tea. They would hare cheered his inward man, if there had only been a gleam of sunshine tn the face of his wife. He noticed that ehe did not eat. "Are you not well, Mary V The words were on his lips, but he did not utter them, for the face of his wife looked so repel lant, that he feared an irritating reply. And so in moody silence, the twain sat together until Andrew had finished his supper. As he pushed his chair baok, his wife arose and commenced clearing off the table. , "This is purgatory !" said Lee to him self, as he commenced walking the floor of theit .little breakfast room, with his hands thrust desperately away down into his trowser3 pockets, and his chin almost touching his breast. After removing all the dishes, and tak ing them into the kitchen, Mrs. Lee spread a green cover on the table, and placing a fresh trimmed lamp thereon, went out and shut the door after her, leaving her husband alone with his un pleasant feelings. He took a long, deep breath, as she did so, paused in his walk, stood still for some moments, and then drawing a paper from his pocket, sat down by the table, opened the sheet, and com menced reading. Singularly enough, the words upon which his eye rested were, "Praise your wife." They rather tended to increase the disturbance of mind from which he was suffering. "I should like to find some occasion for praising mine." How quickly his tho'ts expressed that ill-natured sentiment. But his eyes were on the page before -him, and he read on. "Praise your wife, man ; for pity's sake give her a little encouragement. It won't hurt her." Andrew Lee raised his eyes from the paper, and muttered, "Oh, yes j that's all very well. Praise is cheap enough. Sut praise her for what ? For being sullen, and making your home the most disa greeable place in the world ?" His eyes fell again to the paper. "She ha? made your home comfortable, your hearth bright and shining, your food agreeable ; for pity's sake tell her you thank her, if nothing more. She don't expect it ; it will make her eyes open wider than they have for tea years ; but it will do. her good for all that, and you, too." It seemed to Andrew as if this sentence were written just for him, and just for the occasion. It was the complete answer to his question, "Praise her for what ?" and he felt it also as a rebuke. He read no further, for thought came too busy, and in new direction. Memory was convicting him of injustice towards his wife. She had always made his home as I WOULD RATHKR BE RIGHT THAN PRESIDENT. Hihkt Cut. comfortable for him as hands could make it, and had he offered the light return of praise or commendation ? Had he ever told her of the satisfaction he had known, or the comfort experienced ? He was not able to recall the time or occasion. As he thought thus, Mrs. Lee came in from the kitchen, and taking her work-basket from a closet, placed it on the table, and sitting down without speaking, began to sew. Mr. Lee glanced almost stealthily at the work in her hands, and saw that it was the bosom of a shirt, which she was stitch ing neatly. He knew that it was for him that she was at work. "Praise your wife." The words were before the eyes of his mind, and ho could not -look away from them. But he was not reidy for this yet. He still felt moody and unforgiving. The expression of his wife's face he interpreted to mean ill-nature, and with ill-nature he had no patience. His eyes fell upon the news paper that lay spread out before him, and he read the sentence : "A kind, cheerful word, spoken in a gloomy home, is the little rift in a cloud that lets the eunshine through. Lee struggled with himself a while longer. His own ill-nature had to be conquered first ; his moody, accusing spirit had to be subdued. But he was coming right, and at last got right, as to will. Next came the question as to how he hhould begin. He thought of many things to say, jet feared to say them lest his wife should meet his advauces with a cold rebuff. At last, leaning towards her, and taking hold of rile linen bosooi upon which she was at work, he said in a voice carefully modulated with kindness "You are doing that work very beauti fully, Mary." Mrs. Lee made no reply. But her husband did not fail to observe that she lost, almost instantly, that rigid crectness with which she had been sitting, nor that the motion of her needle had ceased. "My shirts are better made, and whiter than those of any other man in the shop," said Lee, encouraged to go on. "Are they?" Mrs. Lee's voice was low, and had in it a slight hiiskiness. She did not turn her face, but her husband saw that she leaned a little toward him. He had broken through the ice of reserve, and all was easy now. His hand was among the clouds, and a few feeble rays were already struggling through the rift it bad made. "Yes, Mary," he answered softly ; "and I've beard it said more than once, what a good wife Andrew Lee must have." Mrs. Lee turned her face towards her husband. There was light in it, and light in her eye. But there was some thing in the expression of her counten ance that a little puzzled him. "Do you think so V she asked quite soberly. "What a question!" ejaculated Andrew Lee, starting up, and going around ; td the side of the table where his wife was sitting. "What a question, Mary !" he repeated, as he stood before her. "Dp you ?" It was all she said. "Yes, darling," was his warmly-spoken answer, and he stooped down and kissed her. "How strange that you should ask me such a question I". "If you would only tell me so now and then, Andrew, it will do me good." And Mrs. Lee arose, and leaning her facje against thejtianly breast of her husband; stood and wept. What a strong light broke in upon the mind of Andrew Lee. He had never given to his wife even the small reward of praise for all the loving interest she had manifested dtily, until doubt of his love had entered her soul, and made the light around her thick darkness. No wonder that her face grew clouded, nor that what he considered moodiness and ill-nature, took possession of her spirit. "You are good and true, Mary, my own dear wife. I am proud of you I love you and my first desire is for your happi ness. O, if I could always see your face in sunshine, my home would be the dear est place on earth." "How precious to me are your words of love and praise, Andrew,'' said Mrs. Lee, smiling up through her tears into his face. "With them in my ears, my heart can never lie in shadow." How easy had been the work for An drew Lee. He had swept his hand across the cloudy horizon of his home, and now the bright sunshine was streaming down and flooding that home with joy and beauty. m ' m m Saving nis Bacon. A good story is told of a Western farmer, a candidate for Congress, whose neighbor was in the habit of stealing his hogs, and was finally caught in the act. Anxious to secure the man's vote and his own pork at the same time, the farmer went to him and said : "Now, I make this proposition if you will " let my hogs alone in the future, I will not only say nothing of the past, but when I kill in the fall, I'll put into your cellar five barrels of as good pork as I make' The fellow hesitated a moment and replied; "Well, 'Squire, that is a fair proposition, anyhow, and seeing as it's you, I'll da it y but I vow I believe I shall lose pork by tbe operation m m tmi ; It is said that Secretary Harlan has accumulated a fortune of $500,000." English Notes on America. . Under the title of "America During and After the War," Mr. Robert Fergu son, author of "Swiss Men and Swiss Mountains," has written a book about his recent travels in the United States. Mr. Ferguson makes fewer blunders than English travelers usually fall into, and is evidently a hearty admirer of some of the public men of this country. He makes fun of certain national peculiarities, which are as sharply criticized by cultivated Americans themselves as by foreigners, but in the main his book is not only pleas- l.ant but accurate. While in Boston, he Netns to, have had . the opportunity of feeing the best literary society, and he gives the following sketches : LONGFELLOW. J found him in hb study, an elegant and cheerful room, in one corner of which a fine orange tree, with its golden fruit, keepsgreen the memory of a departed friend, the late Professor Felton. The table is strewn with books and presenta tion copies, in various languages aye, even in Chinese. But the ways of the Chinese are not as our ways, and this pre sentation copy was in the shape of a fan, on which a poet of the Flowery Land had written a translation of the Psalm of Life; and, if the translation were only as good as the writing, assuredly tbe work was well done. Though the features of the poet have been made familiar to us by many pictures and photographs, yet no one can see him for tho first time without beiug struck with his appearance. His expression of mingled dignity and gentle ness has been fairly presented to us; but the peculiar sweetness of his smile and the touoh of spiritual beauty which often plays upon his features cannot be render ed in a likeness. Before him lies the ever open Dante, his translation of which, a labor of love, bas occupied him for years, now approaches to completion. But Dante has not his Undivided regard, and hardly would the picture of Longfellow in his study be complete without, ever and anon, through one of tho "three doors left unguarded," a little figure stealing gently in, laying an arm around his neck as he bends over his work, and softly whispering some childish secret in his ear. Then, too, his work waa interrupted by visitors of another sort, for among travel ers of all nations the tour, to America would "hardly be considered complete without a visit to Cragie House. And speaking flaently French, German, Ital ian, Spanish and Portugese, and having also a knowledge of Danish and of Dutch, it may well be supposed that there seldom comes a traveler with whom the poet can not, if need be, hold converse in his own tongue. ' - ' - : STORIES ABOUT QUEER VISITORS. And sometimes there come other visit ors, too, self-introduced a class to whom the customs of America show more toler ance than they do with us. I remember, during tbe period of. my stay, a western man, comically quaint and cool, who came with a request to see the pictures at Cragie House. On two successive days he came, and for three or four good hours was Dante thrown aside while, with an amused good humor, the poet answered all his odd questions, and showed him every thing there was to be seen.. Then there came very many others craving assistance in sickness or sorrow, and to these a deaf ear'is never turned. No man's income can be a secret in America ; the-income tax returns are open to public inspection ; aod the newspapers amuse their readers by c'assifled lists of the incomes of prom inent merchants, literary men, politicians and others. Mr. Longfellow is endowed with an income far exceeding that which is generally supposed to fall to the Jot of poets; and as he never refuses to listen to any tale of distress, the number of applicant1?, worthy and unworthy, who find their way to his gate is by no means small. The airs which some of the Amer ican beggars give themselves are very amusing.. I remember the case of a man who came with hi arm in a sling, repre senting himself to have been wounded in the service of his country. Mr Longfel low, having some suspicion, asked to be allowed to look at the wounded arm. "It is not a pleasant sight to show a gentle man," said the man. "Perhaps not, but we are obliged sometimes to look at unpleasant things." "Well, fir," said tho man, drawing himself up, "if that is the ligbt in which you look at the matter, I would rather not be beholden to you for assistance, and so I wish you good morn ing." Then there was another man upon whom, in rosponse to his tale of hunger and distress, there was bestowed a hand some loaf. Now, the least that any Eng lish beggar would have done under the circumstances, would have been to have taken the loaf and converted it into gin. But this would hav6 been beneath the spirit of an American beggar, and so he resented the insult to his dignity by depositing the loaf as he passed out, like an ornament, on tbe top of the gate post. THE WAR. At Cragie House I found the poet's eldest son, "called by men Chirlie," as Mr. Hughes says a fine young fellow not yet of age, recovering from a wound having been shot through the body, from which nothing but youth and a good con stitution could have saved him. Having unlisted in the fir9t instance as a private I in the artillery, he wa?, as soon as found i out, appointed to a Lieutenant' commis-1 sion in a regiment of Massachusetts cav alry. He confirmed the statement which I had heard elsewhere as to the aversion of the Confederate cavalry to a charge of cold steel, their favorite way of fighting being with the pistol a habit, perhaps, acquired before they had any Federal cavalry to cope with. There are few of the distinguished men of the North who have not lost sons or near relatives "fight ing for the Union : the record is given bv Mr. Hughes in the January number of Frazer's Magazine, and a noble roll it is. And we may well believe that these men, thus giving up all they he!d most dear in the cause, should feel bitterly the cruel and unjust taunt put forth in some of the English papers of that time, that they were carrying on a miserable conflict by the aid of hired aliens. How ia any one caso "miserable ?' The term implies either an inadequate cause or an unworthy foe. The Chinese war, with Armstrong guns against bows and arrows, might be called a miserable war perhaps even the war in New Zealand. But a war which, looked at in the lowest point of view, was carried on to preserve the integrity of a great nation, whether we sympathized with its object or not, had no right to be called by such a name. SUMNER. A frequent visitor at Cragie House, when Congress ia not sitting, is Charles Sumner, the scholarly Senator for Massa chusetts, and the representative man of New Englaud politics. And an interest ing sight it was to see these two men, Longfellow and Sumner, so. kindred and yet bo different, sitting together on the eve of the great contest which was to de cide the place of America in the world's history Sumner with the poet's little daughter nestling in his lap, for he is a man to whom all children come calmly discussing some question of European literature. . Mr. Sumner seemed to feel deeply the defection of certain of the old anti-slavery leaders of England from the northern cause in the great crisis of the great struggle, and all the more because New England had always been a link, by this common sympathy, between the old country and tbe new. LOWELL. A frequent guest, too, is J. Russell Lowell, who succeeded to the professorship of the English language and literature in Harvard University, formerly held by Mr. Longfellow. Mr. Lowell, the most remarkable of a remarkable family, tho' best known to the world by his humor, takes a high rank in many departments of literature, and the general complaint among his countrymen is only that he writes too little. He has given a high character to humor, because he has used it for a high purpose, in selectlnglt as tbe weapon to fight the battle of. opinion among his countrymen. When we re member that there are few men who have suffered in their families as Lowell has during the war, his lines "God's price ez high, bat nothin else Then wut He sells wears long." rise into something of solemn pathos. Perhaps to those who saw in the great struggle of the last four years nothing but a subject for highly spiced articles to amuse the English public, this, along with some of Mrs. Howe's stirring lyrics, may seem "profane." To those who, like my self, look upon it as the greatest battle between freedom and slavery that the world has ever seen, the profaneness is on the other side. In conversation brilliant and amusing, Mr. Lowell is one of the persons in whose company ODe can scarcely bo without carrying away something worthy to.be remembered. AGASSIZ. And often, too, comes Agassiz, with his gentle and genial spirit, his childlike de votion to science, aod or he would not be a true sou of the adopted country his eager interests in the politics of the day. We went to hear one of his lectures at the University, not one of what are considered the popular lectures, but one of a special course to a small class. Yet it was deeply interesting, the subject being the shell of the nautilus, and the question whether the nautilus forms of its own habitation, and if so, in what manner. In clear and terse English, though with a slightly foreign accent, he traced the course of Scientific observation up to the present time, indicating the questions which still remained to be solved, and suggesting the points to which the attention of inquirers should now be more especially directed. He wound up with some general remarks, in the course of which he exhorted his hearers to strive to take the same pleasure in the scientific discoveries of others as in their own a noblo aim, yet, ah I how difficult to attain. I believe, however, that if. there are any persons capable of so much single-mindedaes3, Agassiz is one of them. Between the poet and the na turalist there exists a very warm friend ship, and among other poetical tributes, Mr. Longfellow has achieved the feat for so it must seem to us with our rigid English tongues of addressing to his friend in the October number of the At lantic MontiJy, a gay and graceful chanson in his native language. -. And ofUn, too, comes Dana, one of the most charming of talkers, and, more especially with his sea TSRMS,,0 PER AX!SCN. ' IS3.QO IN ADYAXCE. NUMBER 51. stories, enthralling the circle of vounsr and old. Nor should the poet's brother, Mr. Samuel Longfellow, be omitted from the list, a scholar and a critic, who, if he naa been the only one of bi.name, might have been better known as a writer both in prose and verse. TUB OIL BErilON. Mr. Ferguson gives interesting accounts of tho Pennsylvania oil district. Ho eays : "A wonderful place is Pithole, a city eight months old, with ten thousand inhabitants, twelve hotels, a daily naper, a "temple of fashion," billiard rooms innumerable, a theatre and "academy of music," the bills jot which, announcing & musical matinee on 'Saturday afternoon," were stock all about tho town. But the streets are nothing but rivers of mud, across which you may occasionally see an adventurous individual wading in a pair of huge jack boots, but which ordiuary pedestrians can only traverse at certain p'aces, leaping from point to point, as you cross the stepping stones of a brook. Tho city of Pithole owes its existence to a celebrated flowing well, struck in the val ley below, which had been for many months pruuucing ai me rate ot one thousand barrels per day, and the fame of which had naturally attracted crowds of epeculators from all quarters eager to try their luck in the same neighborhood. Making our way among the forest of deriicks-o'u the hill-side, wc came at last to the side of the famous well. We entered an enclosed yard containing a number of gigantic vats, into which tbe precious stream kept constantly flowing night and day, leaving nothing for the workmen to do but to draw it off aod barrel it as fast as they could. With what seemed to me a curioui amount of incaution, considering the ter rible result that would arise from an acci dental spark, they allowed us to walk unguarded through the place, and even to climb up and look into the huge tank into which, with a deep rumbling" noise, the oil was vomited forth from the bowels of the earth in great spasmodic jets. A well like this, which on nn outly of 1,000 or 2,000 must have been returning an income to its fortunate possessor of some thing like 150,000 a year, is one of those great prizes which lend a fascination to tho pursuit of the oil seeker. Its production, however, is thrown into the shade by that of a well lately discovered in Western Virginia, and which, according to the pub lished account, was flowing at the rate of three thousand barrels a day. All around the great United States wellmen were busy boring in every direction, up to tho verge of its territory, ic the eager hope of tapping the reservoir from which its bounteous streams were supplied. But though the general results of the opera tions in the district had been successful, no such second prize had as yet fallen to the lot of any speculator." m m The Broken Atlantic Cable. The London Star teh the following sin gular and most interesting story : Night and day, for a whole year, an electriciau has always been on duty watching tho tiny rays of light through which signals are given, and twice every day the whole length of wire one thousand two hundred and forty miles has been tested for con ductivity and insulation. ' The object of observing the ray of light was, of course, not any expectation of a message, but simply to keep an accurate record ot the condition of tbe wire. Sometimes, indeed, wild incoherent messages from the deep did coni6, but these were merely the results of magnetic storms and earth-cur-rentsj which deflected the galvanometer rapidly, and spelt the most extraordinary words and sometimes even sentences of nonsense, upon the graduated scale before the mirror. Suddenly last Saturday morning, at a quarter m six o'clock, while the light wa3 being watched by Mr. May, he observed a -peculiar indication about it which showed at once to his experienced eyo that a message was at hand. In a few minutes afterwards the unsteady flickering was changed to coherency, if we may use such a term, and at once the cable began to speak, to transmit, .that is, at regular intervals, tbe appointed signals which indicated human purpose and method at the other end, instead of the hurried signs, broken speech, and inarticulate cries of the still illiterate AtWn tic. After the long interval in which it had brought us nothing but the moody and often delirious mutterings of the sea stammering over it alphabet in vain, the words "Canning to Glass" must have seemed like the first ra tional word uttered by a high fever patient when the ravings have ceased and his consciousness returns. Eclipse of the Sun. On Monday, October 8th, there was a partial eclipse of the sun, which, however, could not be seen in this part of the United States, but was visible in New England. It occurred ia tho morning, at the time of the new moon, and will be the last eclipe of tbe sun visible in the United States until August 7th, 1869. mum Paris fashions decree two distinct crinolines ; one, a little, round, insignifi cant hoop, as flexible as a willow, for. short morning skirt? ; the other, a long train crinoline, like a peacock's tail, ex panding out, for evening splendor. I r 1 ii ir