JCFFERSOYIAN ' -I - THE WHOLE ART OF GOVERNMENT CONSISTS IN THE ART OF BEING HONEST. JEFFERSON. STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1853. V No 15. VOL. 13. Published by Theodore Schoch. TERMS Two dollars per annnum in advance Two dollars and a quarter, half yearljr and if not paid be lore the end of the year. Two dollars and a half. Those whd .receive their papers by a carrier or Mage drivers j employed Dy me proprietor, win dc cnargeu n i- cents, per year, extra. No papers ditconlinued until all arrearages arc paid, cxr.cpt at the option of the JSditor. rO Advertisements not exceeding one square (six teen lines) will be inserted three weeks for one dollar, and twenty-five cents for every subsequent insertion. The Charge for one and three insertions the same A liberal discount inside to yearly advertisers. All letters addressed to the Editor must be post ptid. JOB PBINTIIVG. "Having a general assortment of large, elegant, plain and ornamental Type, we are prepared to execute every dcscnpUonol Cards, Circulars, Bill Heads, Notes, Blank Receipts Justir.es, Legal and other Blanks, Pamphlets, fcc. printed with neatness and despatch, on reasonable terms, AT THE OFFICE OF THE .Tcffcrsouiau Republican. 1-2 , From tlic Saturday Evening Post, Reminiscences of England. English Farm Laborers and tJicir IVascs. -Factory Operatives-How they Live ! Intemperance Src ' " J My plcasantest reminiscences of Eng- land point invariably to the rural districts; vet they are not unmixed with pain. . , , T lt . , Precisely where I saw the greatest evi- J b dence of successful agriculture ; where the land appeared a Paradise of beauty, thcrelheard the most frequent complaints from the laboring classes. I am well a- .. . . . , . , ware that one must take, with some cau- ' tion, the expression of an individual as an indication of the average comfort of his class, or even of the actual condition of his informant. lie may justly query, ,, , . , - , i whether complaints from such quarters may not arise from that disposition in hu- man nature to think the present lot the worst possible. Yet, when I found the . f . i , .), rate of wages to harmonize so well with . , . , , their cry of "hard times I thought that their dissatisfaction had another origin than in a fault-findinir disposition. Let mc mention the rate of wages in Yfar wickshire, the best cultivated country which I visited. Men at work, from 4J . morning till night, said they received lOd orlSd. Women, who worked as long and is possible that the rate of wages, and as hard, according to universal custom, " the greater heaviness of the crops, may t t ip m . t lead to the continuation of old customs, received half price. J.eainters, who rose ., , , , e , rm r ' quite as much a dread of change, lucre with thc Sun in Summer and long before wa3 0RC peculiarity in reference to the him iu Winter, and who never found their harvest field, that was novel and pleasant beds till after sunset, received 10 shillings the gleaning. All that is left behind, per week. Lads of 12 and 14, who should after the binder has done his work, be- , , , , , , . longs to the poor of the parish, and in ev- have been at school, were breaking stones cryVccenflj shocked eld you see for the road, at sixpence a day. At these uomen aud children, scattered here and rates, too, they find their morning, their there, gathering the ungathered stalks, mid-day and their evening meal. In the and preserving them in little bundles for same neighborhood, chatting with the the winter. I was told that not unfre- , . , , T i i quently a fortunate individual succeeded, keeper of a toll-gate and his wife, I bad ? th(J course of thg harves Jn obtainin the curiosity to make some inquiry into heat enough in this way to last through their well-being. They considered them- thc year. The sheaves standing much selves rather a fortunate pair bv their own more thickly over thc fields than you find . lM1 , .. , i them on thc farms near Philadelphia, and their children s exertions, they coula . . , , T , ' ; speak the same language that 1 heard make twelve or thirteen shillings weekly. from tbe workmeil that tbeir cr0pS are They pitied their neighbors, who, with heavier than with us. Forty or fifty larger families, could only make nine shil- bushels of wheat per acre was considered lings per week, and many, they said, had so they said no extraordinary yield ; , . x .L, T . , if my recollection serves me, half of the to be content with seven. 1 am at a loss , . , J , , , ,. r ' -r, latter number would satisfy some Penn- toknow how they succeed in appearing SyiVamans who call themselves good farm so comfortable, on so little money. Their ers upon good farms, cottages are almost uniformly neat, envel-' To pass from the country and the con oped generallyin a profusion of vines and of f,he agricultural popolation, let , , , , , , ,tJl1 us enter the manufacturing towns, and rose bushes, and surrounded by little see if anything of interest can be found patches, of perhaps half an acre, on which there. England is becoming far more a they raise no inconsiderable part of their making than a growing country. It is vegetables. These cottagesrent for 5 her manufactures that make her what pc ATf , she is; it is her manufacturing interest or iJo per annum. Meat must be to most ,,,.. c t t . . , , . - that she is fostering or freeing. In the of them a luxury they do not often taste. great centre of maDUfacturing industry They exercise an economy in clothing, y0u will see the type of life which is that is rarely seen among Americans. England's hope and England's problem. They have little acquaintance with, the The retrospect of visits to these hives, is t x i ii r u- l. j v - j not, altogether, so pleasant as when I re latest Pans fashions : the drab, corduroy ' , , ' . , , , , ., , , ' ' j member the worse paid but better look breeches, and the well worn, well brushed, 5ng peasantry: In Birmingham, Shef- well kept coat, speak in unmistakeable field, Leeds and Manchester, I had the language of "Long, long ago' After best opportunities of inspecting the work all, they perhaps enjoy as good health, P3 fnd ware-houses, and of observing , , , ; the habits and condition of the workmen live as long lives, as tuose who eat roast and workwomen. In Manchester alone, beef and plum pudding every day. My I found an approach to what I hoped to sympathies are less interested for them see. Birmingham was the first of these on account of what they eat, drink and towns that I visited, and going in as I , . i n j did, late in the afternoon, and at a time wear, than because they geem to -be de- . ' v . . , . , . . 3 . ; when an election was being centested, the privedofall supply of intellectual food. worsfc facQ Fag presented to me. The Schools, for the free education of all, ore circumstances under which I entered it, inconceivable to most of them. The nc-' made my mind receptive of the shadow, ccssitv for them mcf. UsJf nnon ' not the sun. I had left Warwick and a-. .u.i- j. . . m, , i vnu aiienuon or every inquirer, xneiaa, landscapes behind, and plunged to whom I have already referred as a suddcnly into the smoke-crowned, dust-stone-breaker, was very ignorant. Sun- filled town. I met the hands just releas dav Schools had eivenhim all the educated from the shops, very many standing tion he had received, and in the branches t-.t .t , t. j,. , . , upon wnicn x carccmsea mm, ne snowea , their v;sits frequenfct Tbo nexfc that they make a very poor substitute for m0rning I visited several large establish the common school. I did not step out mcnts, and found a better appearance of my department to make inquiries into his theological attainments. Mjlnquiries respecting the condition of the agricultural classes vwere not con-j fined to the laborers ; I conversed -with some of the renters, and found similar complaints coming from them. Here, fUov wnre directed against burthen3ome O taxes and removed protection. I found most of them axious for the ministerial candidates in the then pending election. They hoped that soracthiug would be done for their benefit, though few were sanguine enough to expect the re-enactment of corn-laws; indeed few seemed to desire it, but they looked for some inde finable good from a ministerial victory. Those whose expectations took a definite . form, thought that D'lsraeli's indemnity would be a removal of some of the many t taxes that weigh upon the agriculturists, ! from the shoulders of the renter to those of the land owner. I thought it required a large amount of -hope, to suppose that a party, made up largely oflanded aristocra ; cy, would ignore its past practice to this CXm?t' . , , Thet gering f the hay and gram presented some features of novelty to me; some marked contrasts to the methods I had seen employed in my visits to Amer- iban farms. Patent reapers have not yet found their way into those parts in which it was my fortune to spend the harvest; , . . f but as they are not yet very common in Pennsylvania, this did not seem strange to me. It seemed odd, however, to find the sickle still holding its place, in spite of ile cradle .an(1 ,o sec thiFJ or' fortJ hands turned into the corn with no weap- , . . - . -r . , .f . n on but this msigiuucant knife ; to see them trudging home in the evening, with no ponderous cradle on their shoulders hut the scarce noticeable sickle in hand, lJ earlst. "collections of country life, bring the sickle to my mind as a rusty, discJrded instrulnCnt, only brought into use ju souje case 0f special difficulty, when fingered or unfingured scythe was une- qual to the emergency. I was not a little surprised, therefore, when I found it still r . , . , hold its place in a country so much older tban Qurs Thc abseuce of innovation is shown in other agricultural implements, You see wagons that are themselves a load. You see, in the hay field, the hand rake, used as a gleaner, almost invariably: instead of a man, a horse and horse-rake you will see a long row of men and wo men diligently canvassing the field. It Kenilworth Castle, and a succession of at doorf ffn-ops, of which the number is legion. They looked as it worn by those whom I saw at worlc. ! found mucn to interest me in the glass, ; bnttania and papier viacJie manufactory iiere and tbcy mayf0rra the subject of a future letter. At present I have only to do with workmen, not with their work. The wages of those employed, not only in Birmingham, but in the other towns n,amed, are much higher than those re ceived for labor on the farm. An indus trius, skilful man, earn earn in the facto ries which I visited, four, five or even six shillings per day; yet in many cases, I am not sure that I might not say in a major ity, there is much less apparent comfort than on the part of the agricultural labor er. The factory hand is dressed in more modern garments, but they hang loosely, carelessly, and often raggedly on him. He is not so well fed as the peasant, and his dwelling bears no comparison in point of neatness, with tho pretty cottages that dot the smiling country. You must ex cuse the absence of flowers around the houses of the poor in a city ; you may perhaps excuse thepresence of filth, though propriety struggles with charity in the ef fort. How is it, that with so much grea ter means of comfort, in almost every particular, the inhabitant of the city is inferior to the country man ? Why is it that the narrow, close, uncleaned, unsew ered streets swarm with ill-dressed, un shaven, unwashed men, coarse, brutal women, and ragged, squalid children, des titute of learning, wonderfully precocious in wickedness? Tho answer comes up like a chorus, in which the o'ermastering tone is, they are victims not of the facto ry, but of the gin-shop ! It is not low wages, hard work, and long days ; only in pert pent up, unscavengered streets and unventilated houses, that make the misery you see. You may find, with little exertion, in all these towns, quarters where the work people live with a tolerable degree of com fort. You must first become a little ac customed to the dingy appearance of a place, over which hovers at all times a cloud of smoke, descending without prov ocation, and shrouding the city in ever lasting mourning suit. You are soon con vinced that with so gloomy an exterior, there may be joy and gladness within. Those who reside here, have no advan tage over their more miserable fellow-la-borers, save in greater self-control or less temptation. A single incident of a visit to the largest cutlery in Sheffield, proba bly in thc world, contains the pith of tho explanation. I noticed that many of the rooms were almost vacant, long rows of benches without workmen, forges unfired, tools lying idle. On asking my guide for an explanation, he said, "Oh, it is 'blue Monday,' and we don't expect a full com- i . f i n...- i xi pieniem oi nanus. Vjenainiy more man one -third of the places were vacant. He assured me that it was no unusual num ber, and that many were absent till the middle of the weelj, when, having dis posed of all they had earned the week be fore, they were ready to replenish their purses. This is the tax that weighs upon thc nation. It is not sufficient that from the hands of labor must come the shilling or eighteen pence on every pound that support the lords of the land in idleness and extravagance, but they mustpay aself imposed tax of double or triple this a mount, to support the lords of the gin-palace. Ah ! it is a melancholy fact that the drinking population of the United Kingdom, spend annually, for liquor, a sum equal to the whole expenses of the Government interest on the national debt, army, navy, royalty, aristocracy, hierarchy and all. C. G-. Symptoms of 0Id-Ma id ism. When a woman begins drinking her tea without sugar that's a symytom. When a woman begins reading stories in bed that's a symptom. When she sighs on hearing of a wedding that's a symp tom. When she begins to tell how many offers she has refused that's a symptom. When she begins to call men deceitful creatures and says she wouldn't have one When she changes her shoes every time " torn. When she must have a little dog trotting after her, and when she says a servant-girl has no business to have a sweet-heart-that's a symptom. Yhen she begins to rub her fingers o- , . i . .-.i ver cuairs ana taDies to see n tuey are dusty that's a symptom. When she goes to bed with her stockings and flan nel night-cap on that's a symptom. When she put3 her fingers before her mouth when talking lest you might dis cover her false teeth that's a symptom. When she begins to talk about rheumatic i pains in her elbows and knees that's a an unfailing symptom. When she refu ses to tell her age that's a self-evident symptom When she begins to talk about the d f a4- J ilA . unguis ui uuluu icut, uuu niu ueuea- )f excluding the cold air-that's a sity of symptom. In short, when she becomes a lean, crabbed, snappish, ricketty concern, dis playing cheeks pursed up with wrinkles, and a form as spare as a hamper, instead of the rosy plumpness of youth, or the mellow rotundity of matronly expansion she may be set down as a sure speci men of old-maidism. Brooklyn Eagle. Mormon Marriage. The Mormon paper, The Seer, gives the following account of the formalities observed when a Saint espouses supple mentarywives, after he alreado has one of those companions: A. In this Church of Latter Day Saints every man is strictly limited to one wife, unless the Lord, through the President and Prophet of the Church, gives a reve lation permitting him to take more. Without such a revelation it would be sinful, according to the Book of Mermon, which this Church are reqired to obey. Hence the Boob of Mermon is somewhat moro strict than the Bible; for there is nothing in the Bible that limits man kind to one wife, but the Book of Mormon does absolutely forbid a man to have more than one wife, unless God shall commend otherwise. . No man in Utah, who already has a wife, and who may desire to obtain an- other, has any right to make any propo consulted the President over the whole , telh the flowing :-8nl story Church, and through him obtains a reve-1 tbe odo in which Capt. Perry was swin-; lation from God, as to whether it would , Qne of fcbe gip3iegj an oU TOmalj fantastio and tithing gesture, "If 'tis be pleasing in His sight. If he is forbid- ( told him that a treasure of enormous not love I feel, pray what is it?" "Per den by revelation, that the ends the mat-' value was secreted on his farm, but re- ba3 sa-ld tbe youn(r a(iyj "something ter; if, by revelation, the privilege is gran- fused to disclose its location unless he ' ' ,, ted, he still has no right to consult the ' 6? ve her.SOOO This sum was procured, J ' ,. . , , , , , , placed in a trunk, and locked, the key n . - , feelings of the young lady until he has ob- cing given to c'apt perrji In tbre i The entire assets of a recent bankrupt tained the approbation of her parents, ' days, the gipsy returned, and she and ere nine sma11 children! The creditors provided they are living in Utah; if their Perry had an interview alone. The acted magnanimously, and let him keep consent cannot be obtained, this also ends trunk was opened, and the bundle was them. the matter. But if the parents or guar- dians freely give their consent then he may make propositions of marriage to the young lady ; if she refuse these prop ositions, this also ends the matter; but if! ' 7 she accept, a day is generally set apart r ' . . by the parties for the marriage ceremony to be celebrated. It is necessary to state that, before any man takes the least step toward getting another wife, it is his duty to consult the feelings of the wife which " he already has, and obtain her consent, as recorded in the twenty-fourth para- graph of the revelation, published in the v I mat o. of The Seer. When the day set apart for the solemn ization of the marriage ceremony has ar - rived, tho bridegroom and h"i3 wife, and also the bride, together with their rela- tives, and such other guests as may be invited, assembly at the place which they have appointed. The Scribe then pro- ceeds to take the names, ages, native towns - j 0 7 . - i yuu N ao uuxMic tu lutuiui tut ii uiuuu uj i ii-t.i r 11 . r , Counties, States and countries of thc par- whom he was deceived. The house they ( Pubhsh tbe foUowing receipt for chap ties to be married, which he carefully en-' occupy was searched, and, tied up in(Pcd hands: ters on record. The President, who is J hankerchiefs, rags, and in kettles, boxes, j Take three drachms of gum camphor the Prophet, fceer ana iteveiator over tue whole Church throughout the world and who alone holUs tho toys ot authority in this solemn ordinance, (as recorded in the second and fifth paragraphs ot the iteve- jng been in bills of Baltimore' banks." lation on Marrige,) calls upon the bride- 'be Rejmblic says that the victim to groom and his wife, and the bride, to a- to this superstitious folly is a- man of re rise, which they do, fronting the President, gpectable standing, and adds: The wife stands on the left hand of her j ye still further have to regret to say husband, while the bride stands on her that Captain Perry, on Saturday, not left. The President, then, puts the content with the serious lesson he had re question to the wife: "Are you wil- ceived. actually visited a professional for- ling to give this woman to your husband i U !.: !,.(., 1 A AA rr.iPn Cm fJrirt to be his lawful and wedded wife for time wberc it was likely he could find his lost uniting in Paris a man named Jules Le and for all eternity ? If you are, you will money." ' u f tho T.o. manifest it by placing her right hand! within the right hand your husband."; The right hands of the bridegroom and bnd bride, being thus joined, the wife takes her husband by the left arm as if in tho attitude of walking. The Presi- dent then t)roceeds to ask the following 3 question of the man : "Bo you, brother, (calling him by 'name,) take sister (calling 'f brid. H hr Tc) by ? handj to receive ner unio 3'ourseii, io ue your ... . ".I lawlul and wedded wile, and you to be her lawful and wedded husband, for time and for all eternity, with a covenant and ' . . i -ii (promise, on your part, mat you win rui- ! 11 oil l,n Uttto n.l uii uil iuv- in ii', iiiita uuu uiuuiwvj . . . . m.trinion ; the new ana everlasting covenant, doing this !. ., & , ii m tue presence ot liou, angcis, anu inese witnesses, ofyourown free will and choice:' The bridegroom answers, yes. ThoPres - ident then puts the question to the bride : " Do you, sister, (calling Iter by name,) take brother (calling him byname,) by the right hand, and give yourself to him, to be his lawful and wedded wife for time and for all eternity, with a covenant and promise, on your part, that you will fulfill all the laws, rites and ordinauces pertain - ingtothis holy matrimony, in the now and everlasting covenant, doing this m tne presence of God, angels and these wit- ' nnfonn y sTtT11 IVkA TTl11 H n fl fll Olf? A ' . uuooca. ui yum win The bride answers, yes. The President then savs. "In the name of the Lord Je sus Christ, and by tbe authority of the Holy Priesthood, I pronounce you legal ly and lawfully husband and wife for time and for all eternity ; and seal upon you the blessings of the holy resurection, with power to come forth in the morning of the first resurrection, clothed with glory, im mortality and eternallives; and I seal up- on you the blessings of thrones, and do- j The following was picked up in tho minions, and principalities, and powers, ' street a few days since, accompanying alit and exaltations, together with the bles-1 bunch of gr;zziy.brown hair, which sings of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, and t , , , f :tY, say unto you be fruitful, and multiply, 1 looked as lf lfc bad bccn Pullcd 0Ut Wlth a mm renlenish fli onrfh fl.if. t-nn mnw.nne loom corao: you may have joy and rejoicing in your posterity i in the day of the Lord Jesus. All these blessings, together with all other blessings pertaining to the new and everlasting cov enant, I seal upon 3'our heads, through your faithfulness unto the end,, by the authority of the Holy Priesthood, in tho name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost, Amen." The Scribe then enters on the general record the date and place of the mairiage, together withbut -f dot can take it to tbe divil the names of two or three witnesses who j . , J . , ' i, A . . T I n-iH V An A I'm nnf of nil Trr hlf K I ar. were nresent. Gipsy Delusions. .V ,1 gang ot cipsies recently visiteu iounu exactly as it nau Deen pracea. no was then required to go upon his knees, in order that her incantations performed ji . i j 1 1 i over tue trurnc ana money misut have f!io!r full nffpnf:. Whiln sn nncr.icrPfl lior . cloak fel1 vPon the tvunk but she quickly i .1 :i. i i i,i w. p . . V , . ' -n mysterious proceedings being over, Per - ry was called to examinc the trunk, and found it all right; he relocked, and pock- keted the l;ey. He was now told that the coultStur n datnd fthmonc Pa s.c , rei.Ur' an Hn?l . xc, in the trunk were all right, she ; woujd be afc liberty to point out to him the exact locality of the treasure on his farm- Ihe ninth day came, but the gip- !sy did not appear, and after waitmsr a day or two longer thc trunk was opened, but the bundle iu which the $1,000 was 1 T,iaccfi. -was found to contain onlv some . tw0 hundred coppers and a few leaves of j tobacco. The ninsv had substituted this The gipsy had substituted this bundle for the one containing his money, , Capt. Perry followed the gipsies to Wash-1 .intrton. and had several of them arrested, I but was unable to identify the woman by i &cj the officers found large quantities ot gold and silver coin, amounting to S20, - , q00. Capt. Perry could identify none of m0ney the greater portion of it hav- tunc-tellcr in Washington, to be informed i . vi..i 1.. ..1J C .1 u: Chemical anlysis has demonstrated, in N. York, that much of the 11 fine vinegar" whioh is sold to and used by families in that city, abounds with poison. The examination was induced by a pre- vlnns nrm in London, made bv a coinmis- ' sion of eminent chemists and doctors,who ' report that out of twentyreight samples purchased at the houses of-various re- tauers, in amereni parts ui tu uuv the productions ot almost every maker, only four were free from sulphuric acid 0r oil of vitriol. Twenty-four were adul- . ,1 HnHMntv - . , terateu witn maL powenui ami wimuanu ;nnK..l nM Tn Pliilnflfilnhin. -ilso.this iiiiutiui vu. - 1- , , ' nnJcnnmw liouid is made, and sold in large quantities, and doubless in all other ...b n ' cities. i ( 'A Fraudulext Health Insurance Association. It seems that for two years past, an institution called the C,U. S. Mutual Health Assoiation ofN. Y.," ' claiming to have been incorporated with ; a cash and guaranteed capital of $20,- 000, for insuring tho health of members ! against loss by sickness or accident,those 'paying 82 per annum to have S2 per j week in case of sickness and more in proportion to the amount tncy pa. Complaints were made under oath that if Ttf 1 C ft , - - - public, and four of the Company have fictitious concern to deiraud the Anne Arundel County, Maryland, andjbrated sculptor of the Emperor Charles while in the vicinity of Bristol Post-Of- Y' was a Sreat coxcomb- S0t pUn' . fice, Capt. Robert Perry, a gentleman of islied one da? h a f Bolof a to i m li j i J whom he took into his head to make love considerable means, was swindled by one of them out of 81,000. The gipsies then ! in a foDPlsh manncr' Se was "! , ft .1 v.1. t j i i i ner at a ball, in the midst of which he left the neighborhood, and removed to ' , , . , . ' heavy work, than flour bread. For per- If you wish to collect together all the sons who use but little exercise also, rye pretty girls in town, advertise a "Locture aud Indian is still more salutary, if pos to Young Men." " sible in its effects. j If it should happen to get hard and Blessed is tho woman who30 husband crumbly before consumed he thinks hU has a wooden le, as she. will have but animals will readily help him to use up one stocking to knit. 6 Och, Biddy my darlint, Here's a lock of my hair, An' if there's a snarl in it, Devil a bit do I care, Ony howl I'm goin' off, Biddy, To work on the track; Ye can take it and kape it Until I get back. It ye like: ' uc r A Bite. Alfonso Lombardi, a cele- ' The worthiest people are most injured bv slanders: as we usually find it to be j 1 J thc best fruit which thc birds have been . PeciinS at- i Girdled Trees. A correspondent of ' e . the Genesee Farmer says that girdled trees may be preserved by thc following: "Take out a block of wood extending abVC and belW tllC girdle' tak from the body or limb of another tree a .... ' Wock corresponding in size and shape, with the bark on, and adjust it in the plaCe, and bind it there, on the principle of engrafting." This plan, it is said, ha3 proved successful. Cure for CnAPrED Hands. Most of 1 our juveniles during the winter season, are troubled with chapped hands. For the benefit of the mothers, who are oblig ed to listen to their endless complaints, three do, white beeswax, three do, sper ' . Qunces maceti and two ounces olive oil put ( j tnem togethc r in a cup upon the stove, where they will melt slowly and form a white ointment in a few minutes. If the hands be affected anoint them on going to bed, and put on a pair of gloves. A day or two will suffice to heal them. A Han of no Weight. Europeans state that there is now cx- " . . l baire has, by some scientific process, the secret of which is not disclosed succeeded jn depriving his body of its tendency to Uat fining the power of recalling f ' m c " at will. He is, consequently, cnanica j to perform the most marvelous feats. T-Jo walks, or rather glides, with naked feetj aong the edge of a gigantic razor ' IT 1 L Li U Li U CICl 1UU1U" 1111 IUIUi . , f 4l, elrin I -I a can balance himself on his head on the point of the sharpest sword, and will stand on -i i i 3 ;x j a aencate neeaie, piacea pomi. upwaras, .i r j: tt: c i. wiinoub even uuiiuiiiir it, xiis iut ioii w" . . , s JumPmS P .Tnomnhe. and remainiusr susDendcd m , Triomphe, and remainiug suspended in the air for half an hour. All the scien tific men in Paris are in a state of the highest excitement, and it is said that immense sums havo been offered to him to disclose his secret. This is certainly wonderful if true. r-y-- j Rye and Indian McaL A correspondent of the Germantown reCommends. Rve and Indian o r bread in preference to wheat flour, and savs: " It is very nutritious and will - . . , . i sustain a laboring man longer and in 1 11 J UUU UUtlbl 11UU11.U U1IU O w U h itiu u J K the refuse of his loaves.