n - mm -4 f3 THE WHOLE ART OP GOVERNMENT CONSISTS IN THE ART OF BEING HONEST.JEFFERSON. STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, JUNE 19, 1851. No,. 39. VOL. 11. II f J Published by ThcodorcSclioch TERMS-Two dollars per annnum lu vc7ufl dollars ami a quarter, Irairycnrly-and if ""'P'U lore the cid ofthe year. Tvvo dollars and a Mf. i no.e who receive their papers by a earner outage dmers employed hythe proprietor, xwll be chargeo cents, per year, extra. ,rrMn,ces arc paid, .No papers ditcontimicd until all arrearages arc P.uu, except at the option of the Editor. ,.nare tx. teen lines will be lnserteu iur- insertion. ID All letters paid. JJOES vkm Havinc a ecneral assortment of large, elegant, plain Slid ornamental Type, wc are prewired to execute ereiy uescripuwi in ranis. Circulirs. Bill Heads, iMotes, uianiv ueceipis, , Justit-.2s, Legal and others B.nks. Phamphlcts, to;.. printed with neatness anu oespaicu, ou iwuiw: terms, - , AT THE OFFICE OF THE Teffersonian Republican. From the New York Tribune. The Kieh Man. BY J. "W. WHITFIELD. The Rich Man thinks his gold his own, And all his gold can bring ; The Rich Man thinks, when thus he thinks, i A very foolish tiling. He'builds a palace, beautiful ; The graceful columns rise, And while he thinks them all his.own, They glad a thousand eyes. He spreads his floral garden round., . The roses bud and bloom; Uat with himself we all enjoy Their beauty and perfume. His noble chargers paw and prance , The Rich Man's heart is proud ; He sees them with one pair of eyes, But thousands have the crowd. Kis parlor walls are loaded down With gems of art to please Himself, lie thinks to please in truth, The poorest man that sees. The stately hall, the cukur'd grove -The park with pebbled way The leaping fount that sweetly sings, For these he has to pay : And pay that other eyes may gaze And bast without a csre ; TJw joy is ours the task his own To please them and prepare. Last' fall we rave an account of a most , . - . t .. t brutal outrage near Wilmington, Uhnton . , ... countv, Ohio, by which a poor man was inur - , . 4, " c. . dercd in the presence of his wife, by some , , i .i persons whose wealth and position made them , 4 i rr., r . presuming and tyrannical. The facts were . . - it . these: A laboring man had a judgment a - ... r . , . , , gainst him for a small amount, which he paid, . . , , , ,Mrn all but the cost, amounting te about i2,50. tl t . . . . On that sum execution was issued, and some t 13 - 1 j landing corn sold, improperly, it was said, to a person by the name of Robison. The debtor gathered and cribbed the corn after it had been solo. Two of the Robinsons, a con- in , 4i stable, and some six or seven other persons went after night to bring away the corn. They were met at the bars by the debtor, and fofbid to enter, telling the Robinsons that the corn was all he had to feed his wife and lit - , , . . tie children, and they should not have it The parly commenced taking down the bars to let in the wagon they had with them,- when the poor man told his little son to go and hr?nr thn v ,vl.ronnn 1,0 cot W ""-"- -.w-r UJ me party, Knocked m tne nead and lcicued to deatliin the presence of his wife and children. Thcone who hit him on the head fled, and has ! not been retaken; the constable has since died j of acrushed spirit; lour of the others were tried ! last week, and found guilty of manslaughter. One of the Robinsons was sentenced to nine! vears ilard labor m the penitentiary, another Robinson to seven years, another of the party j for five years, and a fourth to three years. They were started off the next morning for. the penitentiary and served the afternoon of' the same day in the penitentiary, where it is ! hoped tiicy will remain, without Executive clemcnc', everyday of their sentence. Three others remain to be tried. As the parties are wealthy, wc suppose the widow will recover full damages for the 6 loss she has sustained by the murder of her, husband, at their Jiands. We hope so with all bur hearts. -Cincinnati Enquirer. ' Advice to the Ladies. An exchange paper gives the following advice to the fair sex, which will doubtless be treasured up for future reference : "If ladies would cat meat but once a day, pickles one a week, and sweatmeats but once apar--5fthey woiild take a. cold bath every uight and morning, and would walk fivcanlles e day they would have no need of cosmetics XOitnake them beautiful." man down in Lynn, Mass. it'is said, made so many pair of Bhoe3 in -one day, that it took him two d.ay3 to pojinfci hem4 - He avas asmart Abt&at not egu-aUto ttko mauftn-IleTysHamp'shire, .wjidtDWstf much -stone ifeuce in a- dav. thstt 6KJK'Km all higM nd; part of oest aay to get Home. From Dixon's Life of Penn. Pcim's Conference and Treaty with the Indians. This conference has become one of the most striking scenes in history. Artists have painted, poets have sung, philosphers have applauded it: but it isnevertheless clear that m words and colors it lias been equally and generally misrepresented, because painters, j poets, and historians have chosen to draw on their imaginations for the features of a scene, cvery making line of which they might have J j recovered from authentic sources. 'outlines of nature arc easily obtained. . There I the dense masses of cedar, pine, and ClieSl- I . . . i , ; ', mtnrmr nf tho su.iuuS i- - jaU(j. )ere lhc nofjje river roiimg its waters ! , Ail: , ;- down to the Atlantic ocean 4 I . f t . i , , 1 I..nntn.I..i on f I,r nnnnciln chnrnc tav I ui , -rt r J the fertile and settled country of East New j Jersey. Here stood the gigantic elm which was to become immortal from that day forward and there lay the verdant council chamber formed by nature on the surface of the soil. In the centre stood William Penn; in costume un distinguised from the surrounding group, save by the silken sash. His costume was sim ple, but not pedantic or ungainly. An out- ui tua,, .u - y, w. ; with buttons, a vest or otiier materials, uuc e-1 , . . . ' 1 oaths, no seals, no official mumenes were qually ample; trousers extremely lull, slashed ,-c , , . , H 3 . ' J ., , i used; the treaty was ratified on both sides at the sides, and tied with strings or ribbons; ; . . . . . ' , . , , m . , . with a yea, yea the only one, says Voltaire, a profusion of shirt sleeve and ruffles, with a . . ,,, , . , 1 . . , , , . ' that world has known, never sworn to and cavalier shape (wanting only the featner,) brokeni from beneath the brim of ivhich escaped the . ' , , . , This scene remained to the two races who curls of a new peruke were its chief and not . . .,iL , were witnesses and actors m it, and mheri ungraccful ingredients. At his right hand . . . , ., T tance of ffood will and honorable pride for an was Col. Marram, wlio Had met tne Indians in council more than once on , ., . , spot, and was regarded by them as a firm and t, laiuiiui menu; on ins ieit jrc-u.riun, uiu in- . , , . , I . . . m the woodc, in a shady spot as like as they trepid companion of his voyage; and near his 1fi ,, . . i-i., . 1 , ,. , , , f . jn - I could find to that in which the great Onas person, but a little backward, a band of Ins : , , ,. had conferred with them, when they would most attached adherents. . . . . , , , , , . T .. , . . ., . , , spread out his words or speeches on a blank- V hen the Indians approached m their old ! t . . , , s , ... .et or clean piece of bark, and repeat the forest costume, their bright feathes sparkling ... . , . , . r . ; . , ' , . . . , . . , whole again and again to their great satis- in the sun, and their bodies painted in the . , 1 . , i fitction. most gorgeous manner, the governor received i, T , , , .z , . i In a few years Penn, going beyond the them with the easy dignity of one accustomed I , , . , J J . ' seas .and never returning, became to them a to mix with European courts. As soon as the! - . , , . , , , , , . , , sort of mythical personage; they not only neld reception was over, the sachems retired to a,,. . . , , 1 , . . , . ; his memory in the greatest veneration, but short distance, and after a brief consultation . . . , 4. , , , , c , -4 ... . ,,..! treated the whole body of white men with among themselves, Taminent, the chief sa-, ... - . . . m , . '. ., ,: more kindness for his sake. To be a follower chem or king, a man whose virtues are still , . ... , . . , , . i ot Onas was at all times a passport to their remembered by the sons of the forest, ad-; , , , . i , . ' , , . , ; vanced again a few paces, and put upon his, i , f , , , . , - , 1 : own head a chapiet, into which was twisted , , ,- t1 ,' a small horn ; this chapiet was his symbol of , , - , , T . ' Dower; and m the customs of the Lenni Len-' , , , . r , , . , i ' ape, whenever the chief placed it upon his ' , , , , , brows, the spot become at once scared, and , ; . . . ? the person of every one present inviolable. ' ,. , . ! The venerable Indian king then seated , . , , , himself on the ground, with the older sachems ,. . , , , , , : on his right and left: the middle-aged war- ! riors ranged themselves in the form of a cres- cent, or half moon, round them; and the young-' er men formed a third and outer semi-circle. ,. . , ; All being seated in this picturesque and stnk- , ing order, the old monarch announced to the j governor the natives were prepared to hear and consider his words. Penn then rose to (address them, his counterance beaming with , . ' , , TT b , all the pride of manhood. He was at the . time thirty-eight years old; light and grace- ful in form; 15 the handsomest, best-looking most likely gentleman" she had ever seen, I j 11.. . ..U C ! wluu: a lllUy .wiu war.au uye-wiuie w uus , ceremony. He addressed them in their own j language ; the topics were few and simple ; ! and the beauty of his ideas would compensate with such an audience for the minor errors of diction. The Great Spirit, he said, who ruled in the heaven to which good men go after death, ! who hau made them and him out of nothing, 1 and who knew every secrct thought that was jn the heart of white or red man, knew that i he and his children had a strong desire to! live in peace, to be their friends, to do no' wrono-, but to serve them in every way to the 1 extent of Iheir power. . As the Ureat Spirit was the common Father of all, he wished them to live together not merely as brothers, a the children of a common parent, but as mey were . oineu Willi one nana, one iiuan, one body together; that if ill was done to one all would suffer; if good was done to any, all would gain. He and his children, he went on to say, never used the rifle or trusted to the sword; they met the red men on the broad path of good faith and good will. They in tended to do no harm and they had no fear in their hearts. They believed that their broth- ers of the red race we just and they were prepared to trust m their friendship, he then unfolded the writinc ot the treaty of friendship, and explained its clauses one af . w m ter the other. It recited that from that day the children of Onas and tjie nations of the Lenni Lcnapc should be brothers to each oth er that all paths should be free and open that the doors of the white men. should be o-pen-to redmen, andj.be, doors of the red men should be open to the wliitc men that the children of Oii.as should hot believe any false Lreports of the Lenni Lenape, cor the Lenni Lenape of the children of Onas, but should come and see for themselves as brothers to brothers, and bury such false reports in a bot tomless pit that if the Christians should hear of any thing likely to be of hurt to the Indi ans, or the Indians hear of any thing likely to harm the christians, they should run, like true friends, and let the other know that if any son of Onas were to do any harm to any red skin, or red skin were to do harm to a son of Onas, the sufferer should not offer to right himself, but should complain to the chiefs and to Onas, that justice might be de clared by twenty honest men, and the wrong ! lllirripd ?n n n!t with nn lmftntn tlint tlif T T I '..I ... i-,ennt jenape snouiu assist tne wnite men, and the whUc . . . . .. - . men snould assist tlie L,enni . T Lenape, noninct nil ciifli no wnnM rlistiirli tlinrr, nv Ar ttmm I..... nn.l l.ntli. tlinl lnl. uu Lutjiii iiui i aim litsuvi iiiai uuiu miauiana uim Iliuiuilb SHUU1U IC11 IIIUU UU11- idren of this leauue and chain of friendship. j tiiat it should grow stronger and stronger, and be kept bright and clean, without rust or spot, while the waters ran down the creeks and rivers, and while the sun and moon and stars endured. He then laid the scroll on the ground. What King Taminent replied is not known, except that in substance he was favorable to the view of Penn. The sachems received his proposal with decent gravity, and accepted jt themselveg an(j f()r thejr chidrent No vuiiiu icMiui v. rjum y ear iu vuiir, su vs inu venerable historian of Six Nations, He'ckew- ... . . ',, . .' .... ! elder, the sachems assembled their children proiecuon anu nospiiaiiiy. -T , .. " , , , have his own countrymen been less . . . . , , lf1i ' , , indebted or less grateful to the Great Treaty, m .. , t . . ... , . , . To it, and to the strictness with which its .. . , . , , provisions were maintained by Penn, is owing . .... - , , , , , tnat diking fact recorded by Bancroft that , ., t, . -T . while every other colony in the New World i. Tt i. t t was visited in turn by the horrors of Indian r , r , , , , warfare, no drop of Quaker blood was ever , , . n . . shed by a redman in Pennsylvania, It is humiliating to the pride of the white man think that one of his race should have Deen lne first to break this noble league of Peac!' Forty ars after the famous treaty, and five years after the death of Onas, one ot his unworthy .children murdered the first red man who lost his life in Pennsylvania. The deed was attended with circumstances of un- U3ua atrocity; but it shows in a striking light 8e"litment' that th,c jP dians themselves prayed the murderer's life might be spared. It was spared; but he died in a very short time, and they then said the Great Spirit had avenged their brother. The ;'en.erable elm-tree under which the meeting t0k Pla?e. t0 th SP ntll the storm 0f 1810 threw it to the rOUnd. It measured twenty-four feet in girth, and was lounu then to be two hundred and eip-htv- three years old. A piece of it was sent home to the Penn family, by whom it was mounted on a pedestal with appropriate inscriptions ; and the remainder was manufactured into va ses, workstands, and other relics now held 6acred their possesors. A plain monu " T " , 7 -7 , "ie Sp , ' n" etTnc" Treaty. Pc of irjoxqititues. never knew mosquitoes turned to any p W,U1WUW ! .uu lV " TtSZ ZaZ? - M & . f : Neither threats nor persuasion could in.! Jnn i, m t Mi ti i i mcnt. He was at last sentenced to a him- dred lashes, and then informed that he ' with all this let wars come to an end,- and would be let off with thirty, provided he let 'friendship, charity, love, purity, and kind would tell what he had done with the ness, mark the intercourse between man and gold; but lie refused. The thirty lashes man. We are too selfish, as if the world were inflicted, but he was still stubborn ! was raade for us aone Hmv mucIl happier as a mule. Jle was then stripped naked 1 1 , t , . ,ni A . . m, 7 would we be, were we to labor more earnest and tied to a tree. The musquitoes with , . ' , 4l , , , , flipir lnno. Mile wnf f utm a i V to promote each other's good. God has thvQ . , wag , blood. WrithingandtremblinfromheadiThere is sunshine everywhere in the sky, .n-fnnf TiMfVi u. nnnn thn onrth flprn wnnlil lift in mnst hearts. to foot with exquisite torture, he exclaim-! ed, "Untie me, untie me, and I will tell wnere it is." " fell first," w.as the away and a bright sun shines out. Summer reply, So he told where it might be 1 drops her tintedcurtain upon the earth, which .f , Patty thel,i.with! is very beautiful, even when iiutumn breathes visp3 kept off the still hunsrv inusouitoes. K V . , ; whUe 0ther3 went wliera fhn r.nlnrV. W directed, and recovered the bac of cold. He was then-untied, trashed with cold wa ter, and helped to hi3 cloths, while he mutterd, as if talking, to himself. ?fli couian t Etana tnat anyhow." Three Years in California. Chiton's From the Scientific American To Remove Paint fron Clothes. Many persons by misfortune get pain on their clothes, and from the want of proper knowledge to remove it, their clothes are spoiled for all decent purposes. This is a great loss especially when fine clothes arc spotted or daubed with paint. Many fine and excellent coats have, to our knowledge, been laid aside for common purposes, because of a few spots of paint. Paint can be very easily removed from woollen clothes, although it may be quite hardened. The way to do this is to pour some alcohol on the cloth, satura ting the paint, and after it has remained on it fnr nlinnt ton mlntitoc nnnr rr n 15ttlr mra " r " """ "1UIC and then rub the cloth with the paints spots between, the fingers. This cracks up and breaks the paint from the surface, after which a piece of clean sponge dipped in the alco hol, should be rubbed on the cloth, with the grain. Paint can be taken out of silk in the same way, only it is best to steep the part of the silk with the paint on it, in a cup contain ing the alcohol; and it will not do to rub the silk between the fingers, for fear of breaking and creasing its surface. This is true, as it respects liite string or any hard surfaced silk, but figured soft silk, may be gently rubbed. The way to treat the painted silk, is this; af ter it has been steeped for about 15 minutes, then it should be spread out on a board, and rubbed along the grain with the selvage, by a sponge dipped in the alcohol. This sel dom fails te remove all paint. Some use camphene for removing paint, but alcohol is more cleanly. Black paint on a white sur face, or even on any delicately coloured sur face, always leaves a stain, although the paint, itself, strictlv sneaking ,nav hn rn- moved is much casier to clean a whit J o . surface, than one of alight colour, likeFrench grey, lilac, pink, &c. For cleaning light coloured cloths from paint, use only a clean sponge, or if a sponge is not handy, use a piece of clean white flannel. All the others are very effective, in remov ing pain, also grease spots, but fish oil al always leaves a stain, and is exceedingly dif ficult to remove. There are some who used coloured oils for the hair, these always make a bad stain, especially those of a red colour. The reason of this is that madder is used to colour them, and this is a very permanent dye drug. The best substance for removing paint, grease, &c, from all kinds of clothes, those of the darkest and lightest colours, is that beautiful ether discovered by Prof. Simp son, in Scotland, a few years ago, and by Mr. Guthrie, of America, a few years before, un known to the Doctor, we mean chloroform. It is employed in the same manner as the al cohol, only care must be taken to work it more rapidly, as it is more volatile, and care must also be exercised so as not to inhale it. No one should use it but careful persons of mature years: it is of too high a price to be used in general, and young people, in no case, should be allowed to tamper with it. After what has been said about the remov al of paint and grease, no person need be much frightened at a paint stain on a fine cloth coat, but, at best, let us be candid and say, that upon silk it is not possible to re move the paint and leave the silk as it was before being injured. Prevention, in all ca ses, is better than cure, but misfortunes will take place and seldom come singly, tiiercfore the above will be found useful and of great benefit to many. Thc Charm of L.ifi. There are a thousand things in this world to afflict and sadden but, O ! how many that are beautiful and good ! The world teems with beauty with objects that glad den the eye and warm the heart. Wc might be happy if we would. There are ills we can not escape, the approach of disease and death, of misfortune, the sundering of earthly ties, and the canker-worm of grief, but a vast ma jority of evils which beset us, might be a- a nniircn rf !ntnmnnMnn infnr. woven as it is with all the ligaments of soci- j ety, is one which never strikes but to destroy. There is not one bright page upon the re- cord of its progress-nothing to shield it from t in hrar msf pyppmI nn nf l ip Himnn rnne. It should not exist; it must not. Do away , blessed us with a home which is not all dark. uPon t!ie earth, there would be in most hearts, if we would look around us. Tlie storms die P " . i heaven. Murmur not at a Being so bounti ful, and we "can live hapnier than we dd The well-known plant called arrowroot is tsaid to owe its name to the. belief 'of its beinL' 'an nntidote to the nok-oned arrows ofthe In- i - dians. Capital GEiost Story. That apparitions do not always wander .a- bout without sufficient causc, is proved-by theiycir produced from a snuff mill a barrel of well attested fact which wc give with the endorsement of the Montreal Transcrip.t drudging boxes, covered with a fine bolting" Last Tuesday fortnight, as Mrs. -(a la- cloth,, with which wo sifted it over the sur- dy of literary taste and rather studious habits) faces of any plants attactcd by insects, and sat reading in her drawing room,' . the clock with most signal success. Tlie snuftshould on the mantle piece, struck twelve ; as the ! be applied, if practicable, while the plant is last stroke reverberated through the apart-j. wet with dew, and repeated cvery shower, ments, the door was suddenly flungopen. An If the boxes are properly made, (like a com the act of raising her head to reprove the ' mon flour drudge,) and the snuff is perfectly intrusion (unwrung for) of her servant, her fine and dry, but little time is necessary to eyes rested on the form of her late husband ; go over an acre of plants. Even the rose, bug, she screamed and fell sensless on the carpet, j cabbage louse, thrips. on grape vines, &c, This brought up such members of the family ', all yield to the influence of snuff, and the as had not retired to rest, restoratives cvere ; most delicate plant of the hot-house is not administered, and when Mrs M had ! injured by its application. For field vegeta- regained possession of her suspended facul- bles, caustic lime, made into a fine powder, ties, and being a woman of strong mind and j while dry, and applied before slakingby con highly cultivated intelect, she felt disposed tact with the air, will produce similar results. to consider the whole distress she had under-! gone as the result of certain associations be- tween the melancholy tale she had been pe rusing and her Jate loss, on a partially de ranged nervous system. She however, con sidered it advisable that her maid servant 'should repose in her chamber, least any return , of what she had determined to consider a nervous affection should distress herself and alarm the family. Last Tuesday family. Last Tuesday night,1 feeling stronger and m better spirits than fillP llllfl ll.inn for coron1 innntlie rncf 'Xli-a r . . , , , ornaments, and no studied display. The dif iM disuensed with tlie oresence of her - ..... attendant, retiring alone to her chamber, and , , went to bed a little before ten o'clock. E.v actly as the clock struct twelve she was wa kened and distinctly beheld the apparition she had before seen, advancing from the table (on which stood her night lamp) till it stood opposite to, and drew aside the curtains of her bed. A sense of suffocating oppression deprived her of all power to scream aloud. She describes her very blood retreating with icy dullness to her heart from cvery vein. The countenance' of her beloved in life wore not its benevolent aspect; the eyes, once uuauiuiy wilii iiucuuuu, wuiu iiuvv ii.uu v. nil stern regard on the trcmblinar, half dissolved i v c i .! lioinrr. wlm with thp rnnmrrr. nf iioqnpr.iifnn thus abjured him : " Charles ! dear Charles ! why are vou come anun V " Jessie," slow' and solemnly aspired the shadowy form, waving in its hand a small roll of paper, "Jessie, pay my Newspaper accounts, and let me rest in peace !" Miss Scs'AN Nipper gives a loud certificate in favor of some ofthe popular patent medi - cir.es ofthe da'. She was suffering from' general debility, sick head ache, heart burn, ' indigestion, tapeworms, constipation, rheuma tism in the back, shoulders, and hips, and be sides these she didn't feel well herself more'n tLc card v.ben sajj that thc gros3 re half the time." At length, she says, ;T was ce;pt3 from tiJe tickets already sold here brought very low that my most impudent are a trifle over sixty thousand dollars, friends did not know me, and the regular fa- It is a discouraging fact to us dime-a-day culties did'nt expect mc to live from one end "delvers," that Barnum is salting down to the otiier." ' as net profits by the concern about twen- " About this time a friend recommended, as ' ty thousand per week This we got from the last resort, that I should try a few bottles ".nc who knows." He has constant ap r.i -ir - irk , in 1(! , , plication for his mone-, which he loans of the Pictorial Oxenated Compound baxlaril- . . , , , yA i -n x-tv-iin- tx t,-,, treelr, but securely. He is also flooded la Extract of Wild Cnerry Wine Bitters, sat- Avitll'invitations )v lctter and otherwise, isfaction given or money refunded, to be well tQ dcvote to puWic an(1 priyatc charities, taken before shaken, destroy tlie label as soon .hich he does to an extent the world as as possible, no paxj no cure, beware of coun- yCt knows not of, but will some day, wc tcrfeits none are genuine unless the propri- know. etor is on the wrapper. I took three dozen I have spent most of the morning with bottles of this most truly invaluable medi-' Barnum and his associates, and thiuk I cine, and it gave immediate relief in three never saw so large a business so systemat ntJjs i ieally conducted. He is the reigning m0" ls" , .. m a - a- prince, sits at his table with velvet slip- Personally appeared the said Susan IN ip- r ' . , i u L J aUl.a.v.u y genteel morning gown and blue per, as aforesaid, and swore to the foregoing caj)j a goIdcnwtaasei. receives and said she'd be darned if it was'nt true. message3j messengers, and telegraph des 1 ' ! patches from all parts of the country ; JT5jIJt ! talks, and dictates to clerks the answer- Cream cannot rise through a groat in business, at the same time entertains depth of milk. If milk is therefore de- his friends with much useful information sired to retain its cream for a time, it and the best of jokes. The great secret should be put into a deep, narrow dish ; of 4iis success lies in his perfect knowl- and if it be desired to free it most com- edge of human nature, coupled with great pletely of cream, it should be poured in- to a broad, flat aish, not much exceeding one inch in depth. Ihe evolution ot cream is facilitated by a rise, and retard ed by a depression of temperature. At the usual temperature of the dairy, at 50 deg. of Farenheit, all thc cream, will probably rise in thirty-six hours ; at deg. it will perhaps rise in naiFinai yiiic, and when the milk is kept near the freez- kept near the Ireez- ing point the cream will rise very slowly, because it becomes partially colidilied. In wet and cold weather the milk is less rich, than m dry and warm ; and on this before wc were up., account more cheese is obtained in cold, Barnum paid S75 per day Tor ljer and butter in warm, though not thundery board and findings, while in Louisville, weather. The season ha3 its effect. The last check from Barnum 's cashier The milk in spring is supposed to be best was handed her yesterda-, amounting to for drinking, and hence it would bo best thirteen thousand dollars. Notwithstand suited for calves. In summer it is best ins hqr large donations, she has accurau suited for cheese, and in autumn cows latcd from SQO,000 to 81,O0a.00(L She give richer milk and consequently more is a little inclined t6 bte home sick, and. butter. Thc mornig'a milk is richer than anticipating such an event, left a loop jn the evening's. The last drawn milk of the contract with Barnum, whereby sjhe each milking, at all- time? and seasons, can stop at tlie one hundreth concert jiy is richer than anyt other part ot the paying 860,000. II wa? through fear milk, antl ;much richer than the first of thU forfeiture that Btruum withdre ..drawn, wMchiis the pep-rest; :i ill An Irishman, endeavoring topukouteir gaslight with his fingci'3, cried out (0ch, murder, the divil a wisli's in it.1 Tobacco Dh!. ?As a protection1 against Insects. We last : dry,, but damaged snuff flour, and prepared Prof. Mapcs. j Dress. Eloquence in dress is cheap and ' simple. What it costs a man for tobacco who uses it, is sufficient, if added to the' present cost of hi-clothing, to dress him with ele gance. A few more shillings a yard for cloth, the work of a tasteful tailor, a decent regard j to the prevailing mode, and certain likeness nnil cimnllrMMr Jc nil ' TTlofrnnpo Ja not'OP . . f , t .. c . . T, c c Ail ciia tmj vi AuuijiwAj. xb uitunu ui L. iv,r ' lerence ot a smgie dollar man article or dres3 , may make the whole distinction between el egance and vulgarity. A single tawdy or- namcnt may spoil the effect of the best tail or's workmanship. The slightest eccentrici ty of cut betrays the inborn rowdy. Baiiiiun unci Jenni Eihd. j Their Income axd Expense. The editor of the Cleveland Plaindealer, writ . ing from Cincinnatti, when Jenny Lind , was there, says : A person at a distance of Cleveland, has but little idea df the costliness, mag- x.. .1 .i za r j.k: i Ti luuc itiiu luuuiuceuu in i,ma auuvi. j.ia like was never befGre seen. There are ' fortV attendants now Uudcr pay one of them receives one thousand dollars per niSht5 wo ?e thousand dollars per week; several one nunareu uoiiars per.uay, ana so on, down to ten, five, and two dollars a dav. and all expenses paid. This makes an aggregate of about three thou- ;and dollars per on an average, whether sinsing, travelling, or doing ' nothing, ! Who, besides Barnum, would under- taise sucu a nsK, ana wnat enou mine world besides this, would make it pay X But the wonder as to the expenses i3 nothing whencomparcd to the mysteries nf trio rmornmns income. We sneak bv boldness, energy and tact m adopting means to an end. He never reasons conclusions arc ever present with him. While another is thinking, he is aetincr, and when other showmen are cal- culating the gains, he is counting the dimes. So much for the Hero of this troup. 'ilie Heroine we nave n is as yet quite invisible. not seen Jenny is as yet quite invisible. It was late at midnight when we arrived last night, and this morning she, although a Lutheran, Was off with Bishop 3Purce!l to a mass hia appointments on the IaUe3 The Bum of behavior is, 'retain.' a, man's own dignity, without intruding up on the literaKy of others,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers