A "WE GO WHERE DEMOCRATIC PRINCIPLES POINT THE WAY ; WHEN THEY CEASE TO LEAD, WE CEASE TO FOLLOW." VOLUME IX. EBENSBIM, THURSDAY, PCEMBER 2, 1852. 6. f " II J I II I II I X II I II I 5 TER3IS. The "MOUXTAIX SEXTJXEL" is publish ed every Thursday morning:, at One Dollar and 'Fifty Cents per annum, if paid in advance or within three months ; after three months Two 'Oollars will be charged. No subscription will be taken for a shorter period than six months ; and no paper will be discontinued until all arrearages are paid. A failure to notify a discontinunnc at the expira tion of the term subscribed for, will be consid ered s a new engagement. grri. ADVERTISEMENTS will be inserted at the following rates: 50 cents per square for the first insertion; 75 cents for two insertions; $1 for three insertions ; and 25 cents per square tor every subsequent insertion. A liberal reduc tion made to those who advertise by the year. All advertisements handed in must have the proper iumber of insertions marked thereon, or thev will be published until forbidden, and sharped in accordance with the above terms. All letters and communications to insure attention must be post paid. A. J. R1IEY A HOME PICTUBE. One autumn night, when tbe wind was high, And tbe rain fell in heavy plashes, A little boy sat by the kitchen fire, A popping corn in the ashes ; And his sister, a curly-haired child of three, Sat looking on just close by his knee. Tbe blast went howling round the house, As if to get in 'twas trying ; It rattled the latch of the outer door, Then seemed it a baby crying ; Sow and then a drop down the chimney came. And spluttered and hissed in the bright red flame. Top, pop and the kernels one by one, Came out of the embers flying ; The boy held a long pine stick in his hand, And kept it busily plying; He stirred the corn and it snapped the more, And faster jumped to the clean-swept floor. A part of the kernels hopped out one way, And a part hopped out the other ; Some fiew plump into the sister's lap, Some under the stool of the brother ; The little girl gathered them into a heap, And called them a flock of milk-white sheep. All at once the boy sat still as a mouse, And into the fire kept gazing ; lie quite forgot he was popping corn, For he looked where the wood was blazing. He looked, and fancied that he could see A house and a barn, a bird and a tree. Still steadily gazed the boy at these, And pussy's grey bnck kept stroking, Till his little sister cried out, "why, Dub, Only see how the corn is smoking !" And sure enough, when the boy looked back, The corn in the ashes was burnt quite black. "Never mind," said he, "we shall have enough, So now, let's sit back and eat it ; 111 carry the stools and you the corn; 'Tis nice nobody can beat it." She took up the corn in bet" pinafore, And they ate it all, nor wished for more. American Usion. A Yankee Enterprise. We learn from the Boston Transcript, that by the schooner Lamartine, which 'cleared at that port on Thursday for Cumana, Venzuela, a par ty of adventurers went out furnished with a compliment of machinery, for the purpose of raising treasure from the wreck of the Spanish J vessel San Pedro, which was lost off Venzncla wore than a century ago. It is supposed the vessel had about 9,000,000 on board, which was sent by the home government to pay o'i" troops in her dominions in the new world. Some two years since, a portion of the present party discovered the wreck, and with the aid of the little apparatus for the purpose, succeeded in raising about $23,000, and cleared th wreck, 60 that they now anticipate operations will be comparatively easy. A steam engine will be carried out, and also a diving machine of inge nious construction, newly invented by Mr. James A. Whipple, together with a sub-marine armor, ?md all other apparatus deemed necessary for the most scientific fathoming of the boundless deep. Should this enterprising company secure the whole of their supposed vastly rich prize, they -will not only suddenly become millionarcs in wealth, but inillionares literally 0f the first water." Tehsimons and Cold Winters. "We have heard of gander and goose-bone signs, bear signs, and Indian signs, of cold winter, but nev er of the Persimmon sign, till we met with the following from the Richmond (Va,) Republican. We pray the editor may be no prophet: A Hard Winter Coming. We were laughed at last winter because we said the uncommonly large crop of persimmons indicated an "uncom monly cold winter. Well, there is a Large crop growing now, and we prognosticate another hard "inter. Remember, this is November 4th, and the weather has been remarkably fine all this Fall. J&SjfA handsome young Yankee pedlar made love to a rich widow in the State of Ohio, but accompanied his declaration with two impedi ments to their union. ''Name them," said the widow. "The want of means to set up a retail store, is the first,' replied the pedlar. They parted and she sent the pedlar a check lor ample means. When they again met, the pedlar had hired and stocked his store, and the fair one desired to know the other impediment ".Well ave another wife," eaid the dealer notions. Woman's Way to Fix a Tale Bearer. From the Annals of Frogtown. "I dunno where I hear'd it, but I know its true, I expected it long ago. I tole Jones it'd come out so." "Why, uncle Josh, you don't pretend to say that Miller's wife has run off with Bob Tape, Yardstick's clerk, do you." "Yes I do, too, haint it been the talk of the neighborhood for a year past, that Miller's wife and that feller Bob Tape were a lettle too thick ?" "Well uncle Josh," says neighbor Brown, "I don't recollect anybody saying anything about it but you, and for my part I don't believe a word of it." "Why, haint Miller's wife gone" says uncle Josh. "I don't know is she" says Brown. "Because she is ; I went over to the store this morning, the first thing, to see if Bob Tape was about he wasn't 4thar they said he'd gone to Boston on business f?r old Yardstick. O, ho ! says I, and then I started off for Heeltap's shop; we allers said how things would turn out. He was out, seein' me go to shop, he came runnin' and says he : 'Uncle Josh, they're gone, sure enough ! I've been over to old Mammy Gabbles, and she sent her Suke over to Miller's on pre tence of borrowin' some lard, but told Suke to look around and see if Miller's wife wur about : by Nebbynezer, Miller's wife wur gone. Mann Gabbles couldn't rest, so she sent back Suke, and told her to ask the children where there Marm was ; Miller hearing Suke, ordered her to scoot, so Suke left without hearin' the facts of the case, as Squire Black says.' But Heel tap swears, and I know Miller's wife and Bob Tape have sloped, as they say in the papers." "Well," says Brown, "I'm sorry if it's true I don't believe a word of it though, and as it's none of my business, I shall have nothing to say about it. Uncle Josh was one of those inordinate pests which almost every village, town and hamlet in the country is more or less accursed with. He was a great tall, bony, sharp-nosed, grinning ge nius, who, being in possession of a large farm, with plenty of boys and girls to work it did not do anything but eat, sleep, and lounge around; a gatherer of scan mag., a news and scandal monger, a great guesser and a strong suspicion er of everybody's motives and intentions, and of course, never imputed a good motive or move ment to anybody. You've seen those wretches, male and female, haven't you, dear reader ? Such people are great nuisances half the discomforts of life are bred by them ; they contaminate and poison the air they breathe with their noisome breath, like the odor of the Upas tree. Uncle Josh had annoyed many he was the dread and disgust of seven-eights of the town he lived in, lie caused more quarrels, smutted more characters, and created more ill-feeling between friends, neighbors and acquaintances than all else be sides in the community of Frogtown. Uncle Josh was voted a great bore by the men, and a sneaking, meddling old granny by the women. So at last the young vromen of the town did a gree that the very next time Uncle Josh carried, concocted, or circulated any slanderous or other wise mischievous stories, that they would duck him in the mill race. Now, Brown- -old Mr. Brown was the very antipode of Uncle Josh ; he was always for ta king matters and things by the smoothest handle. Mr. Brown never told tales, backbited, or slander ed anybody ; everybody had a good word to say about Mr. Brown, and Mr. Brown had a good word to say aboateverybody. The gals thought it prudent to giveold Mister Brown an inkling of their plans in regard to the disposition they intended to make of Uncle Josh ; the old man laughed and told them to go ahead, and to duck old Josh, and perhaps they would reform him. "Now, gals," said old Mr. Brown, "Uncle Josh has just this very day been at his dirty work ; by this time he has spread the news all over the town, that Miller's wife had gone off with Yardstick's clerk. I don't believe a single word of his tale, and if Miller's wife ain't real ly gone off Uncle Josh ought to be soused in the mill race." Next morning Miller's wife came home ; she had been down to a sister a few miles off, to see a sick child ; her husband had been away at tending to a law suit, in a neighboring town ; and so Miller nor his wife knew nothing of the report of her elopement with Bob Tape until their return Miller was in a rage, but could'nt find out the author of the report. Miller's wife was deeply mortified that such a suspicion should arise of her; she had been making Bob Tape some new clothes to go to Boston in, and here was the gist of Bob and Miller's wife's intimacy ! There was a great time about it ; Miller swore like a trooper, and his wife nearly cried her eyes out. A few evenings afterwards, it being clear cold weather in October, Polly Higgins and Sally Smith called to see Miller's wife, and asked her to join them in a little party that some of the neighboring women had got up that evening, for a particular purpose. Miller's wife not having i much to do that evening, her husband said she might go out a spell if she chose, and she went and learned the purport of the call old Uncle Josh was to be ducked in the mill race ! and Mil ler's wife, disguised as the rest, was to do it. When she heard that old Josh had circulated the report of her elopement, Miller's wife did not require much coaxing to join the watering committee. It was so planned that all the women, some ten or twelve in number, were to put on men's clothes and lay in wait for Uncle Josh at his lane gate, about a quarter of a mile from the mill race. Old Josh always hung around the tavern, Heeltap's shoe store, or the grocery, un til 9 P. M., before he started home, and the girls determined to rush out of a small thicket that stood close by Old Josh's lane gate and throwing a large, stout sheet over his head, neck, and heels, hurry him off to the mill race, and duck him well. Mind you, your country gals and women are not paint and powder, corset-laced and fragile creatures, like your deli cate and more ornamented young ladies of the city ; no, no, the gals of Frogtown were real flesh and blood ; Venuses and Dianas of solidity and substance ; and it would have taken several better men than Uncle Josh to have got away from them. It was a cool moonshiny night, but to better favor the women, just as Old Josh got near his gate, a large black cloud obscured the j moon and all was as dark as a stack of black cats in a coal cellar. Miller's wife acted as cap tain ; dressed in Bob Tape's old clothes he had left at her house to be repaired, she gave the word and out they rushed. "Seize him boys !" said she in a very loud whisper. Over went the sheet, down came old Josh Cob. Jin ! Before he could say "lor a massy" he was dragged to the mill race, tied hand and foot, blindfolded, his coat taken off, and he was ca. soused into the cold water. Fury how the old fellow begged for his life. "O, lor a massy don't drown me boys I a I " casouce he went. "Give him another duck,"says one ; and he'd go again. "Now we'll learn you to carry tales," says another. "And tell tales on me and Miller's wife, says Bob Tape casouce he went. "O, lor a mas mas e, do don't drown me, Bob, I'll promise never to do " in they put him again, and the water was cold as ice. "Will you promise never to take or carry a story again ?" . "I d-d do promise, if ye ye ye ye you don't due " and in he went again. "Do you promise to mind your own business, and let others alone, Uncle Josh." "Ye ye yes I d do, I I'll promise any thing b bo boys, only let me go," says Uncle Josh. "Well, boys," says Polly Higgins, a rousing jolly critter she was too ; "I owe Uncle Josh one more dip ; he lied about my gal Polly Higgins, and" "0, ho, Seth Jones, that's you, ain't it ?"well we well, I said nothing about Polly, it was Heeltap said it 'deed it was." Then they let old Josh off, vowing they'd give Heeltap his gruel next night and the moment Josh got clear of his sousers he cut for home. Uncle Josh soon found out that he had been ducked by womCn, and for his own peace he moved to Iowa, and Frogtown has been a happy place ever since. A llrlde's Hevenge. The other day (says the Liverpool Times) as a wedding party was ascending the steps which approach one of our churches, the intended bride, owing to some obstruction, or inadvertant step, missed her footing and fell. The swain, even at that joyful crisis of his existence, una" ble to conceal the vexation at this little contre tempts, exclaimed, pettishly, "Dear me, how very clumsy !" The lady said nothing, but was observed to bite her lip, and a far darker and gloomier look than beseemed the court of Hymen, was seen to gather on her fair brow. She walked deliberately, however, into the church ; the ceremony commenced, and every thing proceeded in orthodox fashion, until the important question was put "Wilt thou have this man ?" &c. Here, instead of whispering blushingly a soft affirmative to the communion cushions, the fair lady drew herseli up, cast a withering glance upon her betrothed, and mut tering the words, "Dear me, how very clumsy!" saild down the aisle, and out of the church, with the port of an offended goddess. We have not heard the sequel. Cuban Movement. The X. Y. Courier and Enquirer learns from an undoubted source that another Cuban expe dition is in a forward state of preparation. The utmost vigilance is required and care taken that the neutrality laws of the United States shall not be violated. All arms and amunition requi red have been procured and are now deposited beyond the bounds of the United States, in a depot known only to a few leading spirits. No arras have been procured in the United States. The men are to leave the country as emigrants, unarmed, and will sail from different ports. It is calculated that suspicion will be excited asto the actual destinat ion. TIfe Cholera in Barbadoes Sad Scenes. . Our Bridgetown correspondent has, from time to time, given us some particulars of the rava gesf the cholera at Barbadoes, but the follow ing accounts from the "Globe" there, of its rav agesj will be perused with Bad interest. The most painful and alarming feature does notVconsist in the numbers, relatively to our popu iition, that have fallen victims to the mala dy, but rather in the indiscriminate manner in which it has attacked its victims sparing the creole and acclimated European no more than the recently arrived in the suddenness of its appearance almost simultaneously in various quarters, rural as well as urban, and the tenaci ty with which, in some instances, it has main tained its hold "upon one or two families and households, among whom it has established it selfto say nothing of the fatality that has fol lowed in its course in most cases. Of these, perhaps, the most melancholy is that of Assis tant Commissary General Neil and his family or rather his entire household. The whole of them were struck down within a very few hours of each other, and everything that the most eminent medical skill could de vise was tried, but without avail, and between the 25th and 27th ult, 2 of Mr. Neil's children, one a girl of lOears, and the other a promis ing little boy of 8, died of the epidemic. On the Bight of the 2Gth Mrs. Neil followed ; the body of this amiable lady had but barely been consigned to the earth, when another victim was proclaimed in the person 'of an only surviving daughter ; she, in a few hours was followed by her father, who was interred alongside the rest i of his beloved domestic circle in the grave yard of St. Paul's Chapel, with all the customary military honors ; ond the body of this excellent man and much respected officer had scarcely been laid in the tomb before public grief was again forced into he same chanel by the an nouncement of the death of the only surviving son ! Nor did the inexorable scourge relax its grasp until the maid servant, the only remaining member of the household, was also numbered with the slain ! 'The case of the Fosters, a respectable fami ly residing in the Black Rock district, yields on ly in painful interest to that mentinned above. Of an entire family of six or seven, only two, we believe, are left, and even the physician who attended on them has fallen. "We have heard of no new cases within the last 3 or 4 days, and we trust that the disease is now on the decline." Cincinnati. The following brief sketch of the early histo ry of Cincinnati, we clip from the Nonpareil "This city is now about sixty-four years old. Some time between October 1787 and January 1788, John Cloves Symmes, of New Jersey, made a contract with the Treasury Board of the United States, on behalf of himself and associ ates, for the lands lying between the two Miami rivers, bounded on the south by the Ohio river, and runninc north so far as to include one mil lion acres. Of this purchase Symmes sold to Matthias Dcnman six hundred and forty acres, lying opposite Licking river, on which Cincinna ti is now principally built, fer forty-nine dol lars. About the tenth of September, 1788, a party met on the site of the city, and made a plat of the incipient town. On the 2Cth of De cember, 1788, the first landing of the immi grants for the settlement was made, and in Jan uary 1789, the streets were surveyed and named in that part of the town lying between Broad way and Western Row. During this year seve ral log houses and one frame house were built, and some of the out lots, all of which were north of Seventh street, "were cleared." The legal title to the grounds on which the town was built being still in Symmes, the patentee, all the deeds for the original in and out lots were made by him. In 1790, the lots on fractional sections number 12 were laid out by the patentee ; and on the 2d of March, 1808, the reservation a round Fort Washington was sold in lots by the surveyor general of the Northwestern territory under the direction of the Secretary of the Trea sury. Between the first and tenth of January, 1780, the name was changed from Losantiville (which it had been at first christened) to Cincin nati. Such is a brief sketch of the early histo ry of the Queen City of the "West. What a con trast she now presents to the straggling log built village of 6ixty years ago ! gf We take the following racy of item from the Local column of the Cleveland Herald: A friend recently returned from the East, says that in the same car with himself, were a newly married couple, who had evidently seen little of the world. They were happy but they coud nt keep it to themselves, and were constantly clasping hands, whispering and 6nugging up to each other like a kitten to a hot brick. They were the "observed of all observers." At length the train went thundering through the long, dark tunnel, and our friend kissed his hand, with a smack which was heard throughout the car. Of course, as the train emerged into the light, all eyes were turned upon the loving couple, who, though innocent of the ki3S, were rosy with the consciousness of being suspected. The thing was more than they could bear, and at the next station they left the train. A Good Joke. The following story of Neil McKinnon, a New York wag, surpasses in impudence anything within our recollection. Read and speak for yourself, gentle reader. When the celebrated "Copenhagen Jackson" was British minister in this country, he resided in New York, and occupied a house in Broadway. Neil, one night at a late hour, in company with a bevy of rough riders, while passing the house, noticed it was brilliantly illuminated, and that several carriages were waiting at the door. "Hallo ?" said our wag, "what's going on at Jackson's!" One of the party remarked that Jackson hada party that evening. "What !" exclaimed Neil, "Jackson have a party and I not invited ? I must see to that." So stepping up to the door he gave a ring which soon brought the servant to the door. "I want to see the British minister," said Neil. "You must call some other time," said the servant, for he is now engaged at a game of whist and must not be disturbed." "Don't talk to me that way," said McKinnon, "but go directly and tell the British minister that I must see him immediately on special busi ness." The servant obeyed, and delivered his mess age in so impressive a style as to bring Mr. Jackson to the door forthwith. "Well," said Mr. Jackson, "what can be your business with me at this time of night, which is so very urgent ?" "Are you Mr. Jackson ?" asked Neil. "Yes sir, I am Mr. Jackson." "The British minister?" "Yes, sir." "You have a party here tonight, I perceive, Mr. Jackson?" "Yes sir, I have a party." 'A large party, I presume ?" "Yes, sir, a large party." "Playing cards, I understand ?" "Yes sir, playing cards." '0, well," said Neil, "as I was passing, I merely called to inquire what's trump ?" A Runaway Match. On Monday morning last, a pair arrived in our city, and might have been seen wending their way to the residence of one of our minis tersone of the pair a verdant looking youth, and the other a lady of whom one could well say, comparing her to the intended groom, what he did not know she could teach him ; for she was old enough. After much trouble, the young man had found the place where to get the "pa pers to marry by," and the twain were soon bound in the "silken cords of matrimony." Soon afterwards they appeared upon the street, when the bride proceeded to fix thegroom's col lar, concluded by giving him a "buss," which highly delighted a number of boys who happen ed to be present. In the afternoon they were promenading Baltimore street, when the young man's father unexpectedly made his appear ance having just arrived i n the cars and col larian his son, told him to leave that "gal," and return home. "You are too late, father," answered the sou, "I am married." "Eh ! what ! married are you; take that," and the youth's cheek received the open hand of his father. The old fellow pulled and tugged, finally succeeded in separating his son from the bride, and the two started down the street. Arriving at a pump, the old gentle man took a drink of water, and again collaring his son, he proceeded on his way, followed by a large crowd of men and boys. Near the public square, he lectured his son upon the sin of run ning off and getting married against his consent, and concluded by slapping his jaws, when a crowd interfered, and separated them. The son started in a full run up the street, when the bride perceiving him olapped her hands with joy, and running to meet him, they clasped bands, and started in a gallop, and the last seen of them, they were going down the Baltimore I pike followed by a crowd of little boys. Cumb. TeUgraph. The Sandwich Islands. A Lima correspondent of the Journal of Com merce says : "I am again becoming alarmed for the fate of the Sandwich Islands. The French question has never been settled, but has remained dormant for two years. They have now a strong squad ron coming out, in which are two CO gun ships, destined, undoubtedly, to act against the Islands which have no protection but such as may be granted by the United States and England. This should be seriously considered by our Gov ernment. Those Islands, in possession of & maritime nation, would give it tha control of California and Oregon, as much, or more, than the possession of Cuba contiols the commerce of the Gulf of Mexico. The Sandwich Islands can furnish more good sailors to man a squadron than can Cuba; besides, it is not so easy to aff ord efficient protection, to Oregon and California as to the States on the Gulf of Mexico. I trust the importance of preventing the Sandwich Is lands from falling into the possession of any Eu ropean power is sufficiently appreciated by our Government." AXuptlal Tragedy-. A' wealthy American merchant of the city of New Orleans had married a Creole lady of for tune, and with the estate and servants there came into his possession n mulatto seamstress and lief daughter, a child of seven years. The gentleman was so much struck with the extra ordinary beauty of the child, which had pur Italian features and complexion, that he resolved to save it from the life of degradation which was before it, and to free it and to educate it. lie sent her to a northern school, where she remain ed until her sixteenth year by all supposed to be a patrician Creole maiden. She herself knew not to the contrary so young was she when she went North. Beloved by her compan ions, the idol of the institute, and caressed by every one, she left for the roof of "her uncle." A young Louisiana gentleman, who had seen her in Philadelphia, and loved her and was beloved by her, sought her hand on her return. The marriage day was fixed, day arrived, when the mother, who had long been sold away into La Fourche Interior, in order that she might never appear as a witness against her child, re-appeared, and in the bridal hall, in the very hour after the ceremony had been performed, claim ed the magnificent and now miserable bride as her own daughter a bond slave by birth, an African by blood ! The scene, as described by one who was present, surpasses the power of a pen to portray. That night, the bridegoom, af ter charging ,the adopted father of his bride with gross deception, fchot him through the bo dy, and disappeared, carrying, no one knew whither, his infamy and bitter sorrows. The next morning the bride was found, a disfigured corpse, in the 6uperb nuptial chamber which had been prepared for her reception. She had taken poison ! Education, a cultivated mind and taste, w hich made her see and understand how great was her degration, now armed her hands with the ready means of death. The unhappy planter recovered from his wound, has removed to the North, where he resides, buried in the deepest seclusion, the residue of his years em bittered by the keenest regret. Anecdotes of Daniel AVebster. The venerable Dr. Nichols, of Kingston, Mass. communicates to the Plymouth Memorial the following incident connected with the accident which befel Mr. Webster in May last : "While I was dressing the wound on his noble forehead, which was much contused and some what lacerated, Mrs. D., the lady of the house entered the door of the chamber, and passed to the other side of the room, with seeming awet as if fearing to approach. Mr. Webster, cas ting his eyes on the woman as she passed, said "Madam, how very diversified is the lot of hu manity in this our world : a certain man pas sing from Jerusalem to Jericho, fell among thieves, and was illy treated. A man passing from Marshfield to Plymouth, fell among a very hospitable set of people and was taken care of.' " Mr. Webster's Personal Appearance, or exte rior was such, his presence so majestic and dignified, that probably no one over looked at him without being (if one may so speak,) im pressed with the grandeur of his aspect so remarkably in union with the gigantic intellect of the man. When he was in England thirteen years since, the people of all classes, as they looked upon his majestic form, seemed to regard him as a man altogether the most God-like, and wonderful, in his mien, they had ever set their eyes upon. "Heavens," exclaimed Sidney Smith "Why, he looks like a small Cathedral." Another Englishmen who Jboked upon the col ossal proportions of Mr. Webster with amaze ment, could compare him with iioth'mg but a Locomotive. "Daniel 'tlster" said he, "i a Steam Engine in breeches." Facta in Physiology- A man is taller in the morning than at night, to the extent of half an inch, owing to the relax ation of the cartilages. The human brain is the twenty-eight of the body, but in the horse but a four-hundredth. Ten days per annum is the average sickness of human life. About the age of SG the lean man generally becomes fatter, and the fat man leaner. Richer enumerates COO distinct species of dis ease in tbe eye. The pulse of children is ICO in a minute ; at puberty it is 80 ; and at CO it is only G . Elephants live for two hundred, three hun dred, and even four hundred years. A healthy full grown elephant consumes thirty pounds of grain per day. The flea, grasshopper and locust jump 200 times their own length, equal to a quarter of a mile for a man. British Gltcnor. Sally-ann Sharp's Curiosities. "Pa, do chimneys make pictures ?" "No child, why do you ask ?" "Why I heard Mr. Lampledon say ours draw well." "Ma, have steamboat boilers wings?" "Oh, don't bother me no." "Why 1 heard a gentleman talking about a boiler Jlue." "Pa, can that gold ring of ma's run?" "No, child, no." "Well I heard a gentleman say that it wag chased." "Ma can steamboat wheels hug ?" "No, child, what put such a thought in your head ?" 'Why I heard a man talking about wheel arms, I did." to be continued as soon as the creek falls.