'WU GO WHLItL DEMOCRATIC PRINCIPLES POINT THE WAY : WHEN THEY nvCT- - LEAD, WE CaJASK TO FOLLOW." jf III! I MY: KEKUICii8S I8L1S 8-B1II3 8. TERMS.' 1 r ..ZOUXTAfX SHMIM:" is publish- j U ever-' evcr.- Thursday morning, at Jici- Zo:f;i irs per ',i ,ulseri;tion wnl bo take en for a shorter ,-J than six months : and no paper will be 'r.-t:..-,. 1 l '",7 all arrearages tire vail. A -- . ;lt'' a. u;s?or.tiiniunci? at the cxpira- . . ei:Vvri-.Cr ft T. Will 1. 0 C( liSld- tcad tt ivru. .. , ! """" "1 nrn-frjrs will be ii.3crtc.t-. tbIV.vIug rates: 50 cents per s-vu.U"f i tiefirit insertion; 75 cents for two insertion?: il fur three insc-rLn-as; ana o cents persqmue r.-ev-rv subsequent insertion. A liberal redue- j ft. niaJc t those v.!v advertise by tne voir. . All advert. s.-ments iiamica in musi nu .m m-ii-.eit mermen tr tv V.::l 1;0 puui.a'j.'.l uhUht.d until forbuluen, ar.-.i ,-u . -(ti.1 ' .-Kvurdancc with th. above terms. t ti-Ul letU-rs and communications to insare i fcAii.tuni jn rry ;;t:on must l.ct"'' A.J.UU1.1. A large number of the Djmocrats t-f tVimbri t Cuaty, a39uib!e-I at tie Tichr.: Hvtel ia the Borough of Ebeaslure-, on t-iur-.iy OTeinn. I'jveaibsr 22J, for the purpos of c-j!ebrat;r.g t tl viet'jrv achieve 1 on tue iiinoi ucmuei ::isr. mr the combine i fcrcc-3 of V.'higs, itives nr.d Atolitiouiats. Tb cvmriny tt uo;tii to & most excellent nr ly the -r .(.rittor f tl ExcLno, and to a;c'a ftwp'e justice w3 ior.e. .Mur thec'jth ht lUen ro:r.oJ. the meeting orjm'ta on mwCioii cr ria. ). ;iiim.i t y U e:o'.iituit of h tAliVilat cioers : PaeaspiiST Ho:;. PHILIP :.'00N V;ci r3iDSTi Hon. Hrr:ju Kinkeul, Cit. Jat..- Mvirrsy, Dr. Wiu. A. Smith, James Hjm, CLrl L'uilrgr, and Rwca J. Lloyd. Se:tar:e JoLn C. O'Neill, Ksq., 9 mue! C. Wir.i.irJ. Ei , 0ecrj3 C K. Zatm, aa.i John 1 El.'.r. T following tjs.stu Wire tken rad, and itLi, uiiiirt th cheers of tW company, anl in ttt c:;rs of the evctii& aJdrr1 wei ue Utii V,y d. 0. Wia:krJ. Jt.tp, A. J. Khey, Cbar'. 1). Murray, mai Jaaic-9 P. iJ.irr, liu., wlJcb were highly oppl iu Jed. XSGULAU TOASTS. rCont'.t.uu,iicf the h'nitejSt.4tfa Formed jlr;t, ;f cimproaiite by .r Fathers, nod cjr which hT nuV.ii 1 our present st.ite t prosperity. Its g.h.iuitds-i mus: be strictly aitaincJ by every St.ite of the r.nfed;r.icy, tJ 0'ir Uclwa will tau be ptre.u.tl. reuuvivtii'i Th Keystone of the Feden! Ar;h, not t-i he moved from hr position by ail tbe tJorts of abo'.itba aitutor, or fanaticul f-ni3ls. The result cf the recent election Us aiia trovsa her patriotism, ami dettrmi ft'.:,a to eui:.-ua ' the ri-hts f the States ai.d the Uuiua of the States." Gillian lliier, Governor elect of Pennsyl- V.e hail his election as a triumph of uth an 1 principle over error and demagono m, &a 1 in whose hands the interests of the Democrat;: party, as well as its "compromistj" .U be upheld, and sustained. Ge. Seth Clover Our next Canal Coinm's- ,;5aer, a self-made man, and unwavering demo- wt. His election evinces the estimation in "bich ho is held by the "hard fisted democracy" Lis native State. The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania Distin guished throughout our Union for its learning -l ability. Its high character will be fully nstained by the elevation to its bench of Black, leis, Lowrie and Gibson. Ihn. James Buchanan The favorite son of Penasylvanie, and our choice for the next Pris- i lJency. Ilia abilities as a statesman are known j the world, and have been endorsed by the The Union, the Constitution, and the Compro-nnse-Tkcy are as essential to our political Prosperity, perpetuity, and independence, as Water' c&rlu. and air to our physical being. Tne Keystone and the Bisrler Raft The nn as soon fnll from the top as the other go to tb bottom. Th next Congress Overwhelmingly demo- rX may its deliberations be conducted in a P'Ht cf union, harmony and fraternity. JH Memory of Francis It. Shunk Respected i treVCrcJ wuile living: his patriotism and Ion? t0 intcrcsts of his native State will ? remembered by Pennsylvanians. of CtJ"utry The asylum of the oppressed e 'd "' JnS' Frm the Atlantic t0 tLe 1acific bi-rae J0Wn tr(K,,len' anJ offer t,iem a r.l H t!l mill'"s vIj0 ,cnJy 5ts rights, ' ' Jtrtjcs, bc evtr rcajv tQ suta;n them. b,manGc"rs last test Slft t0 inan- Man's t"t ndfirst and last. j VOLuTTTEER TOASTS. Itct il;p Noon William Bigler, Governor to th' Cmuic",1c1 by his honesty and capacity bls e;rec'UKa of Pennsylvania. Judging from Pfet conduct in official stations every thin" t s a unht aQj brilliunt future for the raftg the Susquehanna. . Tiiou ,e' C' K' Zahm 1Ion- Jnme3 Campbell aemie 'ilIiCed and ucfe:ited, the victory of his The 1S tL 6ll0rt"Uvea victory of an hour. c"rses of his foca like young chickens will By John C. O'Neill Buchanan. H;..r ti... i - aonai on;prom!be, and Constitution, will al- Way 3 tui iHt.L to sustain theia. Cambria" ready uud wiliin By C. Litzlnger The Democratic Party of Penneylvaaia With Clover in the field, they have shown tht they understand how to raise a Sood croc. By Dan'I C. "ul.ru Benjamin FranVirrt-lTb Printer 's a ffcn,,v Adam iu America. Joan W. Forney, i'.'.'ieendunt ; Lis services will not to uuaT arduJ. jv jUUiCS Myers The Youm Democracy cf ' Ebeasl .nJ Cumbria toL By S. C. Vi'iiiirurii lion- PLiiiu Xnnn T , . con - iatunte him upon hi selection to the 4iL - imcjrrliy will give iiiu prvmulriice uid hlh respect-biiity iii iLit bwJy, ui dJ i,t,U.r to the mny fuithl'ai 21keliargi-e oi'iiut, for wLl.k j 15y James McGiuley The coinii.ee of the Bal timore Convention :i leS2, be Le whom Le mmy, ; Euehanan the firi d only choice of Pecnyl 1 Villi before nouiiiMiticn. i fiy J me Murray Cowman and Sansom , The Editors of the Dea.ocrai.lc orr-i cf Udford , and i'jltot. Loi-ic mmj tLejr 'tt ii. u.ir lito- rial chairs to taniiui DoMOi-VMtic 4oc(riu, miA j ieatuic? lite uiti rei-egnJcs who de- fintei th? Hon. JnOic Cinupbel!. . I By Chkil. D. Vlurratj Hu. Jumes EuVhur.cn liii Kret ohiiltira mud rrTk'H ia tt.it-u.Mi have eleid hiu. iu the adiulrtiiu of all Lowest . and liorimiu:.!: u.cl. of bviL partita, Mid his i him and JrTotti adLTtuce lo lire priieipiea cf the L'eaiocriic prty fsd Liui in the 1 hertb of the Aw-rica Dmocrcy, ud tiiie i.u Lo iio 4ouht X.mt a politicul triumph would he the reuit of Lis uoitliiitkn for tie x'rtsidiu . cy in 1P51.'. By (Jer-e W. Tod J The Editor of the- Moun- ! taiu Sentinel An Auirew Jckoti republican, J j a wonting tui, a 71.1 a gutlna. Al- ! I le heay Is.irrt are jrowing fcr Lita iu fielia of j . cieuiucratic aearia. By V illim Kuaaell Elgler and Buchanan ( The elt-ctin of the former iiwwrea tke afety of : i the Ur.icii, and the election of the latter will be a sure jru-iraiitee taat the govertmett will be ! aJminifctered acccraing to the principles cf Jef- ' fer(.u, Mai; son, Jcaaoa, and I'vlk- 1 By J. P. Del; Col. John W. Forney His scr- ; vices in the late campaign are not unappreciated. ' It' the wlehes of tlie Democracy cf Cambria are ' carried out he will bs in part rewarded in the ' , next s'-ssion cf Congress. j 1 By M. M. O'.Seili Wia. S. Campbell An honest man, and on of Cambria's favorites. ! By John O wens The Democratic Partv Ever true to the Constitution. Ia the hour of dark ness and trial it clings to it with more than : filial aC'tction. j By Henry Tickerhoof Hen. James Buchanan ' A fn m !,D'1 unwavering Democrat and a true patriot. As tuxh he ehouid be mn-ortedby . every man who has the interest cf his country ; 1 and party at heart. j By D. P. Murray William Bigler The suc cessful pilot of the raft " fcusuuehanna." May he be as successful in piloting the ship of State I to her mooring. ; By Joshua- D. Parrish May the Democracy of Ptnusylvania ever have a Bigler to triumph ovcr v,'Lic'SclT- By C. V. . Catron The Pennsylvanian Con- ducted by J. . Forney, it could not be other- By A. J. Bhey The Democratic Party " Its policy is alike liberal, just, narrowed down to , no sectional interests, bound to no personal ob : jects, held to no locality, but broad, and gen j ous, as expansive as the air which is watted by j the w inds of heaven from one part of our coun try to another." By Robert Litzinger The Union The Com promise, or any thing to preserve it entire. By John C. Murray Buchanan, Bigler, and Clover Favorites of Cambria. . They will al ways find her iu the front ranks in the hour of danger. By John A. Blair The radical Democracy of Cambria county Willing to forgive and forget, and always for the ticket, , By Wm. A. Smith The Kidnapping Act of 1817 The repeal of all its obnoxious and uncon constitutioual sections is demanded by the peo ple of Pennsylvania. Let the next Legislature do its duty, and a patriotic Governor will carry out the wishes of the Democracy. By Edward Riley The two Biglers One a Governor near the Atlantic the other a Gover nor near the Pacific. The waves of the two oceans waft the news of the triumph of the De mocracy to an admiring world, and proclaim the stability of the Democratic party. ; By Wm. J. Willinms Andrew J. Ilbcy Tin course he has pursued since he took charge of the Mountaia Sentinel pirovcs that he can and will edit a paper that ran be considered as the erjan of the Dtworrapy f Cambria. By John Lloyd The Young Democracy of lilensburg always right. By ?. C. fciiHrd John C. O'Xeill The Democratic Hercules of Cambria. True to his friends, gtutrous to his foes, and firm in the confidence of the party. May Lis value be properly appreciated by those ha has tso largely assisted by political powtr. By M. M. O'Neill The Prefddencr The uom'rce of the Democratic Jationil Convention. By George Hartcame Our Guests May they find th.ir highest enjoyment on their visit to EbcEabui-fT this eveiiii.'. By John M. Burke Audrew Jackson P.hey i!ay Le be 43 successful in Ucfeattl .Simon Cameron atJ tLe .Mid.Uctowu Bank as Andrew Jackson was in defeating Nick Diddle pud the United States Bank. By j-ics P. Parr Hen. Linn Boyd of Ken tucky ILe author of the Texas Annexation Bill, ai- J the ougiator of the Compromise. An honest, uuhiachinif and coi.aiutit .Nathiim! Beiuoci'bt. As the Pathtr of the House of itri.riuauvc-a," Le should be elected its Speaker, bd witii Liui as the candidate of the i Bemociatic party in lho2 for the Tice Presiden cy, tier would L "no such word as fail." By A. J. Khey S-mu! C. Wingard, Ea-p An aacelitt lawj.-r, a cou.yiaiai:t gi.nt!cJia atd aoUl.d DtrUtOCrat. Hib l'ruirliwc iii Cumbria Las made Lim LcsU W fiiu-d. axd adu-ireifi. Hla tright talents will Svou pkee Lira ia a posi tion in wLicL Le can do signal service to thc Dclaotritic palty. vi:isxiiii. BY ANN C. LYKCH. The authoress of the following poem, which (s-ya the' 7A.n Jsri,i,) we find in the Itrt'Ui yHtr, write aft a man waves a flag from the buttieuieuta of a caatle it ia not what you see that luakra it fiiia, Ltt whtt it awaken and ugg. sta. W kuow bo i.ie wh id s so much i as Mii. I.yiith, wiiiiout giving in to th detail ana nn4an wluch the age exetb. Htr thoughts. fcienderlas they are drea.jd.all bav the reliah ! of having kept great eoiupa&r. The subject of this poeiu is but the half of one of Webster's sentences in Li speech iu the Senate in July, 15j: "WLeu I and all those who hear me ahall have gone to our last Lome, and vheu the mould anall have gathered on our memories, as it will on our tombs" The mould upon thy memory ! 2o rsot wli.n one note is rung Of those divine, immortal s-.ngs Mi. ton and Shukespt-are jung; Not till the night 1" years enshrouds The Anglo-Saxon tongue. N! let the flood of Time roil oa, And men and empires die; Genius, enthroned on lofty heights, Can its dread course defy, Anl here, on earth, can claim the gift Of immortality: Can save from that Lthcim tido That sweeps so dark along, A people's name; a people's fame To future time prolong, As Troy still lives, ami only lives, In Homer's deathless song. What though to buried Nineveh The traveller may come, And roll away the stone that hides That long-forgotten tomb; He question its mute past in va;n, Its oracles are dumb. What though he stand where Balbcc stood Gigantic in its pride; Iso voice c jiii3 o'er that silent waste, Lon, desolate, and wide; They had no bard, no orator, No etateemnn. and they died. They lived their little span of life; They lived and died in vain ; They sank ingloriously beneath Oblivion's silent reigu, As sank beneath the Dead Soa wave The Cities of the Plain. But for those famed, immortal lands, Greece and imperial Rome, Where genius left its shining mark, And found its chosen homo, . . All eloquent with miad they speak, Wood, wave, and crumbling dome. The honeyed words of Tlato still Float on the echoing air, The thunders of Demosthenes Bgcan waters bear, And the pilgrim to the Forum hears The voice of Tuily there. And thus thy memory shall live, And thus thy fame resound, While far-oli future ages roll Their solemn cycle round, And make this wide, this fair New World An ancient classic ground. Then with our Country's glorious name Thine own shall be entwined; , Within the Senate's pillared hall Thine image shall be shrined; And on the nation's Law shall gleam Light from thy giant mind. Our proudest monuments no more May rise to meet the sky, The stately Capitol o'erthrown, Low iu the dust may lie; But mind, sublime above the wreck, Immortal cannot die. jSy Paxton, the designer of . the Crystal Palace, is to receive, in addition to his knight hood, the sum of 5,000. Other amounts are to be given to other persons engaged in getting up the Great Exhibition. Frym an article in the N.Y. Literary World revising De Haas' History of Western Virginia we cut the following interesting accounts of Gen. Braddock, and some instances connected with his death: ' The great defeat of Bra block in tnis tattle as u 'rcil kown, was bib n?gleot cf the uual In-d-afl methods of warfare. Reappears to have teen a daring, undoubtedly a cc-ur igeous officer of the old "blood and thmrie school; but his sacrifice of the lives of his men and officers, was teanui. Dr. De Haas maintains, as an unques tionable point of history, that he fell by a shot from one cf his own men. His memoranda s of the event are striking; In tho ranks of Braddock vrere two brothers. 'Joseph and Thomaj Fausett, cr Faiccett: the rlrt a tcmmis.r.ioced, r.nd the other a non com- miss Hon r-ed officer. Oaq of them(Tom Faussett) laorc-w Stuart, of Unicntown, says he tnew very weu, am oiten conversed witn him n ----- ! ",)out trly times. -He did not hesitate to own 111 ltiC ireseaee 01 ms menus that nesaot Brad- dock' The circumstances were briefly these: 1 -Ilcg.rdless of Gen. Braddock'd positive and j foolish orders, that the troops should cot pro- j tect themselves behind trees, Joseph Jb ausctt a good time of it until about two o'clock ia the 'had ao puctil, which Bra 1 lock discovering, ; moraing. Many distinguished whigs were pres ; rode up aL,d struck Liiu down with his sword. ; ent, and flt perfectly at home. The Governor f TiJ1 fdut-tt, who saw the whole tnuiimctioii, . TlsUeJ Pvobinsoa's theatre cn Saturday night, I Uil uauifiiaieiy draw up hi a riile md ahot Lim ; where he was received with three times three ; through the tody. This, as he afterwards .aid by the whole audience. The returns show that j was partly oiit of revenge for Gen. B.'u assault upon Lie brother, and partly to get the general oat of tie way and HaTe the remnant of the armv' 'In adJition to the above, we may give the statement of a correspondent of the National ! CSO!a(lon. i - j Intelligencer, who seem to have been familiar j An immigrant just arrived across the plains, ' with the facts: j gives the following description cf the memorable "When my father was removing with his fa- "jama Jo del muerto," on which d many thou mily to the Weet, one of the Fausetta kept a ; sands of animals and bo many perccs of lat 1 Public bouse to the eastward, from, and near where L'niontown now stands. At this man's j house we lodged about the 10th of October, '81, ' lwtutJ-9ix 'r anJ few months after Brad- : dk 8 ua iuen WM na5 auythicg but a secrtt, that one of the family dealt the ' death blow of the British General. 13 years '. afurwurds i met Tom Fausett, then, as he told . I me, in his 7ou. year. To him I put the plain j : quvfetton, ina ivcuvt-u me piam repuy, --j. ma ; tn 'H fieri ! 1 no. r aeari tne tact doubted cr , perty, v;x: wagons, carnages eel btigcie, ueaa blamed, th..i .-it killed Braddock. J horses, mules and cattle, whose crca;ses lie "Mr. Vakon (Annals of the Olden Time vol. 1 thick all over the ground, in a state of preser I., pp. HI 2) says, mat in 1833, he met Wm. vation, the skins and a good deal of the flesh butitr, a private iu tne Pennsylvania Greens at j being dried to the bones, the water, mar;hes the defeat of Brad lock. I asked him a jjurticu- J and air being so strongly imp regnated with al- larly, mho killed Braddock? aud he answered j p-romptly one Iuett, brother of one whom j Braddock had killed in a passion.' "In lb20, Butler saw Fausett near Carlisle, where he Lad rone on a visit to his daughter. mother, brother or sister has been buried, but The Millerstown (Perry Co., Pa.) Gazette of ' ere the train is out of sight, the corpse is disin 11 JO, speaks of Butler being there, and in com- ; terred by the prowling wolf or the savage In paay wkh an aged soldier in that town, who dian :the bones to bleach upon the great Ameri hud been iu Braddock's defeat, and both coa- 1 can Desert. Although I am rather a hardened curved in saying that Braddock had been shot ' sinner, yet when I saw the scene as just de by Fausett." i scribed, I could not refrain from shedding tears, "A Minister of the M. E. Church, writing to j aU(1 feeiing niyself more submissive to that the Christian Advocate says:. 'The old man j mighty and powerful God who rules the uni died at the age of 111 years, in 1821, who vcrse." killed Braddock.' j "The Newburyport Herald, of 1842, declares IIOAV Canada Obtained It Same its acquaintance with Daniel Adams, an old ! jne origin of the word Canr-.da is curious soldier of that place, aged 82, who confirmed J cnough. The S paniards visited the country the shooting of Braddock by one of his own J previous to the French, and.mado particular men. "Braddock wore a coat ef mail in front, which turned Dans in ironi; out u U3 ... back, and the ball was found stopped in front by the coat oL mail." The venerable William Barby, of Washington city, has recently stated . . . 1 . 1 L 1 .1.1 C V. to the author, that during his early uays, ue never heard it doubted that Fausett had killed Braddock. It seems a generally conceded fact, j aud most of the settlers were disposed to ap plaud the act." Tlic Siaiils3 Character. A correspondent of tho Boston Transcript, writing from Madrid, says : " I have heard the Spanish character summed up as indolent, haughty, unsocial and revenge ful. My own experience upon tho sjibject is too limited to permit me to substantial 0 -prrefute any one's opiuiou or dogma. N'eTcrttrelees, in my journey from Alicante to this capital, I ob served in passing through the Northern part of the province of Murcia, entire hills of consider- able elevation, aud natural prccipitousness, lcvclled off into terraces, irrigated cud cultivated to the very Eummit. Surely, thought I, this cannot be the height of indolence, for the most industrious "cf aatiocs, even England, ia some respects, might consider her ways and grow wiser. Haughty and unsocial the Spaniards certainly are, to all whose manners display a contempt for them or their institutions ; but re move the sneer frcm your countenance, pay a passing respect to their customs, do what com mon civility requires, and you will find that in true courtesy no one can surpass tnera. xo use their own phrase, their houses are literally "at your service." Verily, prejudice and ignorance have not been idle in forming the popular sen timent regarding the Pf anish nafion.' Vol. Jubn K!2eTs Arrival at Saa Francisco. Tha following letter from the Pittsburg Post gives an interesting account of the reception of Colonel John Bigler at San Francisco, after his election as Governor of the Golden State of the Pacific: ""Th G.rernor elect, Co!onl T;igier. f.rrifrrr here on Friday night last, from Sacramento. lie came down on the steamer Confidence. The C., on coming up the harbor, fired a salute. The democracy were ca the wharf ready to re ceive the Governor. When he landed he wss placed in a barouche drawn by four white hor ses. The procession then moved through the principal streets by torchlight, headed by three bands of music. Anion? those in the barouche j I recognized Mayer Ilarder.burg, of Sacramento I citr, and Ex-M.TVOr Gearv. of S.n Pranr.isrrt. j After reaching the Oriental hotel, which was j beautifully illuminated, the Governor was wel- ; corned in a beautifnl soeech. delivered bv fl : Geary, to which he replied in a manner that ; astonlshei ail who heard him : (most folks tho't ! the Governor cov.ldn't make a SDeech.1) When the speaking was over, the folding doors of the i large saloon were thrown open, and here we had , wherever Bigler has canvassed the State he has . carried all before him. If he had had a little : more time he would have swept the State from j 1 one end to the other. I - , , r . years emigration perithed: "If there is a aec- tion of country in God's wide-extended creaticn that can surpass that large scope of country ly- ing between Salt Lake Valley and Carson River for sterility ol ioU, scarcity cfllmlir, and every thing that has a tendency to cheer up the spirits of the wearied traveller, I am aure that I don't j care to see it. From the sink of Humboldt River across the desert to Carstn River, my heart was sicaenea Bi seeing iu great uinrucuun 01 pro- kali that it has a tendency to keep off the de- vouring insects and birds cf prey. But the j worst is not half told yet ; to see every two or three hundred yards a grave, where a father, I searches for cold and saver, and a name none. I they said among themselves, "Acanada," (there- ; s nothing thcre.) The Indians, who watched ; clogclyt lcurneJ th;3 scntcnce and its meaning, After thfi departuro of tll0 Spaniards, the , arr;TeJ: an.i the Indians, who wanted none of their company, and supposi?d they were also Spaniards come on the same errand, were anxious to inform them that their errand was fruitless, and incessantly repeated to them the Spanish sentence, "Acanada." The French, who knew as little of the Spanish as the Indi ans, supposed this incessantly recurring sound was the name of the country, and gave it the name Canada, which it has borne ever since. 3Tciv Kind or Skating At a large beer drinking house in Beilin, Prussia, the customers are waited upon by fe male skaters. The instant a customer takes his ecat, one of the damsels darts from the end of the room, skims ovcr the floor describing gracc- ful curves, and in a moment is at his side, and . rcqucgt3 to know uis wisaCs. One of these fe- male waiters will collect a number of orders in her round, or carry her beer vessels to her cus tomers without ruffling their snowy froth. The motions performed rescinblo Bkating, and stran gers are likely to be deceived, but the act is per- f forae(j uy employing small iron reliers let into the soles of strong but neatly fitting boots. This is all tho mystery. It takes time and practice to execute the movements well, and the work is Bomewhat fatiguing. The floors over which they j gUJo arQ aaJe of 8niooth uarJ wooJ fcogrJs , ic3T The theatres and other p laces of amuse ment arc open in "San Francisco, on ' Sunday evenings, as we sec by tho advertisements in tho newspapers of that city. An JLlxlcrifci! e Ilauclie. The San Froucisco Times and Transcript states that Senor racheco, of Santa Cruz coun ty, is the owner cf three eleven league grants cf land, or about 200,000 teres.' This is' three times the quantity allowed to try cue man, Ly the Spanish or Mexican law j to aToid thishrgil provision,- th grants, were -originally gvrefcjtt three different periods,' and it is said a different name was ued each time. At the j resent time, there are 20,000 head of cattle on lhi? 3 leagues ranche, and tho whole property is assessed at $1,000,000 ; the taxes this year will tmount to $30,000, requiring the e!e of about SUOO heal of cattle to raise the money. Some idea cf the value of land in that part of California may ta formed by' the assessment of the grants afore specified. Suppose the cattle are reckoned at $10 a head, which is probably a moderate esti mate, their total value wculd be $300,000, lea ving $7t-U,C0l as the value cf the land, or tb&ut three dollars and a half per acre. Ice CnliiiaUon. A gontlcraan of Boston has adopted a sy-fcm cf ice eulter-, f jr the purpoEe of preserving that cooling substance early, or when the seascn is too mild to freeie ovcr the deep wr.t?r cf the Fresh Ponds. Ilia plan is to make an artitcial pond, cf an equal depth, and let the water intj it as fast as it freezes. Workmen are cow en gaged ia large numbers on the Fresh Poai Mea dows, in preparing such a pond. It will cover abcut twenty-five acres of land, with a clay bot tom, and so much lower than Fresh Pea J, that the water of the pond may be let into it ia any quantity desirable. As this p-end will te very shallow, it will freezs over readily, and it wculd seem iaa?t seenre a crcp of ice ia the mildest cf Boston winters. Of course it may be cropped as often r.s it can be frczen of sufficient thickness. The making cf the pond, it is calculated. 1 cost about tweniy-five thousand dollars, or ere thousand dollars per acre, and ths iie:esary buildings for storing the ice about as much icra. Rtnl and Ideal. Oo, jr., in cae of" his discourses, in wiich he describes the contrsat between eemblewre aid reality, hits o2 a ball scene: "A woni-n," siys he, "msy cot be ea arjcl, though she glides throcgh the mazes of The dance, like a spirit clothed with a rainbow and etadlcd with etsrs. The young man may be fccld his admired object cn the mcnow in the true light of reality, emptying a wash-tub in the gutter, with frock pinaed up behin j, hr cheeks pn'.e fcr the want of paint, her hair massed and mcs;y,- except what lies ia the bureau, aad her whole contour wearing the appearance of an an gel jan'.d throi'gh a brush fcace into the world of wretchedness and wo'." SaT A boy ca board one of the Gulf of Mexi co steamers got up quite a panic among the pas sengers recently-. He bolted suddenly into the cabin one morning, before the passengers had fairly rubbed their eyes open, exclaiming " We are loff.'" "Lost."' exclaimed another. " Zen .'" screamed out the whole crowd. " Yes, lort ."' taid the lad astonished at the alarm he had created, "I know w 3 ar lest, because tie captin's ca tcp o' the house and another man upon tho ma:t, a leckin to t,e xchar ti e ar ."' 445" M. Thevelin, a Frenchman, in perform ing a balloon ascension at Brussels, Belgium, in crossing the city, got foul of the statue of St. Michael, placed oa the .spire of the City Hall of Bruts?ls, and in order to save himself, clung ts the statue immediately, w hile his paratus was carried oil by the baliocn ; he then proceeded, as his only means of salvation, to descend to the ground, the spire being COO feet in height, and by dint of extraordinary presence of mind and bodily activity, he got down in safety. JPcy Ray after ray of hope penetrates the gloomy horrors which overspread the Emerald Isle. Tho cultivation of the sugar beet seem?, thus far, to be successful, and five hundred asres have been allotted to further ixrerlrsenta next seasoa. . 52 Miss Lind, at Pittsburg, the other d?r, received a pair of splendid diamond bracelets, aa a present from some one of her ardent admirers there, which she returned with information that she ncvar received presents frcm gentle men. A writer more thaa two thous md "years ag mentions the fact that hca's eggs which aie nearly round invariably produce female chickens and those which are long or pointed, produce males. jeT "Will you clasp my cloak, sir!" asked a young lady of the gentleman who was to ac company her home from a party. Yes, and its contents," replied he, putting his arm around her waist. 3- The number of common schools in Penn sylvania has increased from 7C2 to 0,200 and the tcacners.Irom b0 to 11, COO. ' a r5T It is lumered that Gen. Foote - wiM re sign the Gubernatorial chair, and continue ia hi seat in the U. S. Senate. ii 1 i t it if i K IV ir
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers