Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 16, Number 40, Jasper, Dubois County, 13 November 1874 — Page 6

M I S C KLLiVXY. STILL TKXASTKIK ol t on, hw il.nolat- thy llt I a.-, lilV .Iralli alike naTt ' Nor ttiiiil, ii-T miy aonii wilinn, Nor ilatly tlioustil lor ilaily urad. Dw ilrw la niKtitlv on Ihy b-art, 1 rt kotusllilutf wlr to lhr fllPK. An.l aonte lio rulrr think, thry har llv inuriiiurot it-j-iu-Ung wiu.. No "loul t within th chainU-ra there, ot ly thf wall uor ihroiiKh the Kat-, Ini-mint 1 tcnanla come, to whom 1 (if house l uol aouraulate. To thrm the walla ar whit ami warm, 'I lit- chtiiinry lure tlic IhukIiiiik flaiim. Tin bruit ami KrNm take lmly hands, 1 tie tn-w-boru lialw aaiU a name. Who know what far-off Journeyrr At niKiil return w it ti wt insist ucl, 'I o cool ttit-ir ti'tcr In the brook, Or haunt the lneuilow, eli.vi-we't? An lyrttbe morntnir-iiioaere fliel No'looi-erinta Hi to- th y mow, Th- wait r'a clt ar, unwrittfii uk 1 not of tilings that come or go. ' Ti not forsaken rooms alone I nat unsrvn pi-oftf love to tmttl, Nor in the iiioiii.nta only wtn-n 1 he Jay's luiled carts are iifd. To every home, or hltfh or low, ome ummuiOnci K,let repair. Who fiiiiie linst-m to break ami bleM 1 he lre ml ami oil they never share. Hiram Rih, m Sovmiber Atlantic.

THE HIDDEN" TKEASl'KE. IIY S. 5. W. rtEXJAMlX. At a fort In Florida, durin? the Seminole war, a man named Kioh-ird Dlount laj' wounded and dyinjr. A krii ohstTVtr iniht have discerned in thf rm-icintod fwmirvs. well covered by an iroii-irrey, mitrimmed henrd, truces of n-lliu-mcnt almost t tV.Kitl. it is tnif. by the unmistakable mark of a turbulent, and jxThans criminal, enreor. The surgeon in charge ot the stockade sct-mcd a man of warm heart and tender sympathies, whieh had not bren MiuiUtl by familiarity with flittering. He carefully temled "the dyinfr soldier, doiii1 all in his power, by wonU and nctions.to soothe his lat hours. This kindness was not without result. Impressed by attention to whieh he had lonjj Ix-en unaccustomed, liiehard I'llount taciturn and reserved by habit, it not by nature prew more cominuniearive, and, at the last, ma le certain r'el.itiMi- oHuvriiiiiif trHti-Hi'tiong ot which no other living man had any knowltlpe. t)ne af:ernoon, as the sun was oettin? red ai d I road iN a hurninj: haze Is-hiiid the motionless palnu-ttocs, and the mock-idir-tinl was jMiiirinjr forth ids wealth of niuW ty the still bayous where the alligator bak d iinmolesteil. llichurd, who was ficlinjr stronger than usual, after a eriod of silence and mental struck with himself, wild: " 1 im tor. you've rxt-n mighty rood to me. Von are the tir.-t -ron who has FokfH a kind word to me for inanj' years. I'Te led a h:rd life of it. and very likelv lon't ! m rveany better than I've received, yet I e.m't forget that I was once a tetter man and u-ed to kind Mords from those wlio loved me. And now, although 1 am tth oor and loraken. yet N lieve me w hen I say that it Is in my power to make you a- wealthv as vour wildest faneies ionld de-ire. I was Lorn in Knrlaiid ; I have nor a inle relation now living, and to you if ean If of no eonse(Ueiiee what we're the r!teiimtaners ot iny early life. It i- enough to say that I was the yoiinjrcr fon of a 'i! family, and was defined to the ehureli, for whieh I was totally unfitted. I was sent to Oxford, hut an Insatiable thir-t tor adventure eaused me to run away. AfiiT various li.rtunes in many parts o tie- world, in whieh the eards were generally against me, it was at la.-t my Iin-k to tind myslf shipH-d with the cr w t a pirwte sehooiier, and a motley set we re Spaniards, Knjrlidiinen, Frenchmen, Italian, Yanke, (.ireeks men .f all races. Two or three years I sailed in her. tmardinp and burning vessels in the .:i:ii-h main. At length a rumor reai bed the nest of pirate' to which I Ielonsred tli it the Knlish government was atMut to take vigorous measures to cajture our vessel u u I detroy our rendezvous. A we had for a lonsj time been very sui-ci s-ful, without any ferious inoh sfatioti. there was ail the more reason to Ik lieve the report. A council of war was called, in which words ran hi;rh. lint it was decided that, as our ren lezvoiw was well known and would most likelv be attacked tirst and we fhould be unable to defend ourelves fuecesstully against fueh forces as could !esent against us, we oiiyht at onci' to remove our oscK.Kion and onei al tlieni for awhilein some unknown liiiruip-rliee. With us to decide was to act. and without further delay the treasure, which was enormous, N-Inj the accumulated spoil f manv hard lights and scuttled fhipf, wa- sfoweif in the holds of our vessels. (A little water, fureon. If you'll be SO pMHl.) " So Imniens1," continued Richard, after a moment. " whs the ftoek of dollars and douMiHiiis and jewelry that no other h:illa-t was ms-deii for the fchooncrs. When evervthtnjf was tn board we set lire to the cabins on shore, and by the plaie f the tiurniii? houses dropped down the la;: i and made an otlltio;. We headed for the coast ot Florida, and, the moon iH-iii x at the full, shoved i lie schooners into an inlet, wlne whereabouts was known to one o'onr cantains, a native of Florida, born at Key West, son ot a wrecker, I think. It was a very quiet purt of the country, w ithout so many MMpe as there are alwiut it now; an 1 they aren't over thick even eiow. e had sent some men ashore in a boat in the morning to tind the exact en-tram-c. an l alter dai k they lit a tire on the Itcach; so we knew just where to put the fchootiers. At daylight we sailed a lonjf way up the b ijou, winding alout from Ih ihI to N-iid, with fwirps or tal king along tlie shore, and blazing the trees us we went along, until we came to a clearing in the wmms, where the trees fceined to have been felled by a hurricane. If was gloomy and silent enough a solitude which we disturbed jm rliaps for the first time. Here we tnnde the vessi Is fast to the trce. and nil hands went asporc. We made tents f . .-ails, mid in a few hours, to see the -nmkc streaming up among the trees, am m,, the boys cap ring after squirrels and climbing after birds' nests, oi liin r -ticks tit the animators. oil would have thought St was an old settlement.'

After a brief Interval of rest, Kichard went on: "When the provi-ions and everything cle had tK-en taken out ot the schooner wr hove out the ballast (von remeinU r, it was dollar), and carried it Into the middle of the clearing. Each man put his share Into an earthen pot ; his name, w ritten on a bit of parchment, wa.s placed Inside, and hi initials were, scratched on the outside, and it was then sealed up carefully. The pots of gold and silver were then burled In a circle in holes dug tolerably deep In the ground, and every man planted a small tree over his treasure. Our common stin k of treasures we next waled up In a large Jar, and buries! this in the center of the circle and planted a goodsized tiee over this ul.o. "Alter we had secured our valuables, as considerable time had Iktii lost in doing all this, it was decided that the schooner should go ott'on another cxcHtion at once, and they put to sea, leaving a few turn under my charge to look alter the camp and the treasure. Several weeks went by, and no news came from the alsent schooners. Our Mock of provisions began to run low, and it wa.s impossible to get anything In that desolate maze of a morass, overgrown with tangled forest and cut up by muddy stream and bayous, especially u we had planted nothing m the clearing, and had not cleared any more of the land, as wcexm-cted that, of course, the schooners would soon return with a fresh stock. We hail always lecn so lucky that not a soul of us dreamed of any trouble. Anyhow, the schooner never came back, nor did 1 ever afterward get any due to their fate. They were probably captured and burned, or more likely founderetl in a hurricane. " The rainy season was coming on, and before long several of our number had fallen otT with starvation and disease. ly comrade and I talked over the situation, and finally concluded to look out forjiumbcr one, unJ leave the treasure to Luke crfc of Itself. " Well, we had a ship's boat with us, ami one day, after rutting a few mouldy biscuit in our pockets, we took to our lioat and followed the hayou until we came to the sea. Then we skirted the coast until we reached a settlement, and after that separated in different direction, for there wa no tie of friendship to bind us, and we each had a sort of dread that the others might some way In-tray him. For years alter I wandered about the country. sometime on the frontier, until I enlisted in the army, not caring much w hat became of me, but halt hoping that per haps I should In sent to Florida, a turned out

to le the case, to tigltt these Seminoles, and so jx-rliaps catch a chance to look up the treasure we had buriiil in tin forest. 1 never had the ready money, nor, I'm not ashamed to say, the courage to go back alone to that sHit ; but 1 got this shot in the leg. and here I am, and tnu h good that treasure ha done me! l.ut it don't sevm quite the thing, you se, that all that money and treasnre should lie buried thenami Is- of no kind of use to an vhodj', and as you are the tirst and the lat jH tsnn that la-en kind to me tb"se many vears, I'll trust to you to s-e that I have decent burial, and w ill tell you just how to go to litnl the treasure. It's all truth I've U-en telling you, and you needn't be afraid I'm spinning you a lorc.istle yarn, but just do a I direct you to do, and it'll make you the richest man in the count rv, and 1 don't know who deserve it better.'' Kichard Itloiint, utter this, gave the surgeon very minute directions as to how to go in quest of the treasure. n the next day the pirate died. As soon alter this us the surgeon could get leave of ubx-nee, he made arrangements with a friend to go alter the supposed mine of wealth concealed in the forests of Siithern Florida. He could not quite believe the story, but the circumstances under which it had ln-en disclosed and the fact that money had olten N-eii concealed bv the freebooters of the sea. made it sut'lcientlv probable to warrant chartering a small lightdraft schooner, and engaging a crew ot blacks able to work the vessel and willing to dig In the mud niter gold. It was only bv a very close and tedious observation of the eoat that the mouth of the bayou was found. On cut. ring it from the sc:t, the line of trees w hu h had tn-en blazed was also discovered with some d'ulieulty, and traced troin bend to bend in the dusky light of the primeval forest. Oid'h-d by this due, often but faintly distinguishable, the treasure-seeker, afn'r slow ly sailing the devious maze of the silent waters of the wilderness until they almost despaired of reaching tin-end in view, at last burt suddenly iioii a sort of ch aring in the dense mas ot vegetation, overgrow n with trees of younger growth, arising front which n circle of larger tree could he distinctly traced, with a central shall lifting its leathery tuft of foliage far up in tli- blue sky. Tent stake and other relics of extinct life were also visible amid the rank grass which overgrew the soil. Every thing, thus far, had proved exactly as dcscritfd by Kichard 1'lount, and it was n-asonablo to suppose that, as the story had N-cn found to tally In the minutest details with facts, it would continue consistent throughout. It was, therefore, withn-newed zest and with the burning impatience which tortun-s the soul when one is confident of the result and sees the desired object almost within his grasp. that the doctor s-ii a pick, nn I. ordering his mei: to follow suit, broke ground in the last stage of the quest after the treasure which Ins fevered fancy pictured as more and more colossal as the rapturous moment approached when it would U otH-ned to view. Such was his impatience that he was the llrst to make a discovery. The point of the pick, after turning up the soft soil almost noiselessly for some anxious moment, at last struck something hard with a most decided click. The next stroke the sound was reM atcd, ami, at the same time, a bit ot red pottery was thrown up. The doctor, orpiring with exciti uient. Hung a-ide the pick-ax, and. falling on his knees, began to drawout the earth with his hand, w hile every one stopjM'd his work and looked on w itti breathless c(taf ion. It took but a minute to bring to light an earthen jar. but, on trying to raise it, they found it was cricked in several piece, and that the bottom had fallen out. What was more important, the jar was empty Henwas a ilis'ippolntnicnt, to lie sure; but they would not yet give up heart : there Wcie still man v Jar, and erhaps this one was only a "blind." Hut jir titter jar was turned up, and all were' found more or less broken, and not a dollar did one of theni contain. I,a-t of till, the scantier1 cut down the central tree, and unearthed

the jar over w hich It stood. This, also ctow iitng disappointment of all wa in the same condition and contained only earth-worm, llalllcd, but not quite disheartened, the trcjisu re-seekers, as a hist resort, dug several lctt below where the central jar had Inrn. They did Hot tind the treasure they sought, hut they ascertained w here It had gone. They came to water, and thus discovered the solution of the mystcrv, and what had robbed them of the gold. They stood on a mere alluvial crust of oozy soil, under which the water percolated at some depth Ih-Iow. Thf moisture of the earth hud softened thf Jars, and the weight of the treasure had carrh-d away the bottoms and caused It gradually to sink lower and lower, as in a quicksand, until it had dropped Into the water and, of course, out of sight. There was nothing more to te done but to abandon further operations for the time, a such a result had not In-cn foreseen and the mean for raising the money were not at hand. Hut the following year the doctor returned to the bayou with a pumping machine and ample apparatus for his purpose, and after much lalnir was partially rewarded for hi trouble. Doubloon and guinea, vases and casket of precious metals elaborately chased, the handiwork of skilled artisans of various race and age, und gems of price, which had long lain concealed in the slime of the forest, again flashed In the sunbeams. Hut all the lost treasure was not regained ; souie of it eluded the closest scrutiny of avarice or enterprise, and still lies buried forever under the water and the sod 'of Florida. St. Xuholaa far AV reinber. ss - Little Johuuj.'s Compositions. TIIK Kl-lllLKXT. My uncle Ned he says he In-ts I can't write a discIjK-rtioa of the bony tidy travK t, and 1 don't think I cn too, less it's the ephulent, wich 1 never si-en ceptin it was a-travlin with a cirsuc. Then it has a lot of waggins a-follerin, and music a-plane, and my mother she won't let tnego to the sho. hut Hilly went, and the necks day he hurt h'ssef jutnpin' over two chair. The ephulent is the biggest animile but the wale, wich Isn't a animile ut all, but a tish, though my Sundv-soochl book say it's a created beein. The ephah-nt has a trunk like a tale, but thikker. It's in unlike a long nose, but looser and urlier. Once there was a taler wich priekt a ephalent's trunk with his nedle. Then the ephulent went and got it tul of dirty water, and put it in the tuh-r'si wldnow", and Mode it all over the taler, but my uncle Ned says it ain't so. lie says the taler let the sasli down real quick on the cpLalent'strunk, and held it f.i wile he sode up the end, and the cphalent h id to swoller t lie dirty water and was sick aU-d. Wehn my uncle Ned said that, my sister'.' young man, who Is just like one of the tainly, said then the docktor come and felt the "ephalent's pulce, and said it was tifoid f. A r. They Is two kinds of ephalciits; one's feet has fiveto-e, but the other'. fcets has only three tose. The live tose one is the lM-s't, 'cause mop' like men. They all has ears like tulicl-covcrs, but not llggerd. There skins is made too big for 'em. and lias to have tucks In it, and there teeth is call tucks tiM ; one on lnth side of their trunks. Hilly says a man in the cirsuc put his hed iu the ephalent's mouth, wich 1 think was safeenoguh. seein' Its teeth i out-ide. I 1s t iioImmMv hut that man ever see a ephalent's tung. 'o.ves tungs is nice bile.1. There legs is like trees, with bark, tint not like dog's bark, wich isn't real bark, but is call that 'cause when the dog does it he wants you to leave. THE I KU KKT, The cricket don't need so imicIi disI'iperution as the ephulent, 'cause he Is so much littler. He sings on the harth, hut it is more like sques kin', and he can jump wen you cetch h'.m. The tea-kittle ami the cricket sings to gether, and their foke iu st rics is happy, but give me a lid. lie. Their Is a game call d cricket, but it isn't like the real cricket a bit. 'cause it ain't spry, and hurts your legs if you don't tie "cm up like sore lingers. Wen the cricket is a-sittin' still and mindIn' his own bisniss he looks like lie was bulanciii' Jusself between two step-ladders. Crickets is cangaroos in a former staitof existence. TIIK. HKS. Ileus is various. Suite is ycller leg, and some is blew and white, but I'm lor the Columbia crew wen it come to colors. The shankhigh hens Isn't so much sot after as wen they was llrst invented, 'cause wen tlu-y sets they can't git down right on the egs, les the nest is on a wall. Hanteins is good liters, but coach in chiny is liest to tram 'em if it wa a race. My uncle Ned has jut lnokt over my shoulder, and he say that about coachiit chiny is good if that th way to call it, wiclt line sure 1 don't know. He say that all good writers keeps a lawyer to draw up (he pun, but line too little to keep a lawyer, 'cause there ain't enough of me for a if. Chicken is nothing but hens that isn't ri k-, and cocks is brns that cro ; but if I was one I wouldn't get up so crly in the tnornin'just to cro. Me sleep later, and let fokes call me a hen if they like. Hens lay an eg evry day, but on Sundays they don't, but the parson he prccchos. If a ben didn't lay no egs Hilly says she'd jest bust, and if the paron didn't pni ch he'd be sick. Our ole hen she wanted to set, but mother she said no. So father he biled a eg as hot as fire, aid laid it in a nest, and let the ole bird at if. She went and stood straddle of if, ami looked at father like be w as a fool; and then sh, shook herself together and shet her eys, and settled down to her work. I'retty soon she made an awful squcck, and jumpt up and run round ami round like drunk. Then she came back to the nest and stuck out her head at the eg, with her wings dropt and all her let her standin' forward. And then she allied it peck at the eg, and her bil went in it. and it wouldn't come oil, and the hot yellow run all over her hod. and the way she raced altoiit w ith that eg on her bil was Jritct'e to see. After that she was so frade of egs that w hen she tilt she inu-t lay one she run and llew, and some time the eg w a laid in one place, and sometimes It wau"t. Once it wa lain on the roof ot

I tin-cbtin h. and rob-d otf and smaht on a tohni stone close by whan- lather stood talkiu'to ole liafler Peter. Oaftir he 1 lookt up and haked bis led. and walked all loc.i.d the ehur h a -tonkin' up and

shookln' his bed, and then he said he'd been agin that new-fangeld whether-cock from the very llrst. TIIK ki-iikk. This I a Inseck that cctches llies lit a net like a lUh net, hut not iu the water. The net is culled a web, and wen it cctches dust Instead of llies It Is a cobweb. The spider knocs lie is ugly, so he stays a good deal to home, hut ugly w hiiinen goes to church and wakls hi the street more than pretty; but they an both in the fame bisuuis, wich is trappin'. In Calitoruy they has spiders that scorns to spin webs, but goes out and cctches game like other beasts of pray. They are about the size of a girl baby, and a lot pleiier. These is tar untulers. Wen a lnjin has bit hlsself with a taraiituler he tils his skin w itk wisky and steal a blanket to rap hlsself in, and hunts a place w are hi body will Ik most in the way. Then he lies down, and if the pizeii don't work all to once he sings the dcth-song of the brave, and that nocks hint. We was tole this to our house by a traveler wlto said lie guessed he knew a tarnal site about lnjin and tar untulers though h hadn't never In-eii to college. Hut I'ncle Ned he say it i In-st to git a good cddiication first, and then thro' iu lnjin and tar untulers accortin to taste. Spiders isn't socihle Ycptin' among there own set. My sister's young man says that very good men and very big spider is two classes wich has Ix-cn lctt a good ileal together In all ages, and they sometimes git pretty well acquainted, and wastes a lot nf time in such fi ivlousainewsmcntits countin' the bolt beds in there ilores.

Life Iu the Haliamas. Asa class, the negroes, of the Hahamits are far more superstitious than religious. They are great cowards at night, shutting up their cabins tight as a drum to keep out the wandering powers of darkness, and their In-lief in fctichism Is almost incredible. The oU-ah men drive a thriving business, and it is seldom a swinging boat goes to sea without tirst enlisting the valuable aid of the man-witch or warlock. They are said to U lazy, and certainly they seem to take life very easily, lying on the ground sometimes for hours under the full blaze of the noonday sun, chewing the end ol a sugar-cane, or brawling Iu grandiloquent and often ineanir'iiess rodomontade at the stn-et corners. Hut there is little need of exertion when it takes so little to supply their immediate wants. The pastoral of one of the ritualistic priests, giving directions for the ob-s rvanceof Lent, created " inextinguishable laughter" in Nassau last spring, for among other follies he forbade the eating of sugar. As sugar-cane forms the staple article of fosi with the negroes, a strict observance ot his directions would have Int-n followed by lamentable results. Hut I think the charge of laziness unfounded, if one but 'insiders the sev re lalxir the ne-grtM-s often accomplish, as, for example, in the sponge li-herirs, which gives employment to the owners and crew s of rive hundred licensed craft often to twenty-live tons burden, and Is carried on with some rik from the weather, ami much hardship, for the sponges are two or three fathom below the surface, and must ! torn from the rocks w ith hooks attached to long poles. The position of the sponges is ascertained by means of a w ater-glass, which is a simple oblong box a foot square, open at tiie upper end. and containing a paucol glass at tlie other; on holding this perpendicularly over the water one can sec everything through it as clearly as in an aquarium tish, songcs, coral, or shells. The Hahama sponges are chiefly of four sorts, sli-c-wool, w hich is the most valuable, reel, velvet and glove, and although Intel lor to the finest Mediterranean sponges, are very strong, and serviceable for wahing carriage, surgery and the like. The sponge Iniat iisunlly get in on Satunlay, and the sponges are assorted in tin markets, each Im it-load and variety by itself. On Monday tlu-y are disposed of at auction, only uiciidiers of the son,,. guild and those making genuine olh rs Uing in rmittcd to bid, w hUh is done by written tenders. Wrecking Is another branch of business for whiilt the Hahamas have long ln-eit famous, owing to their intricate navigation. At one time this was very lucrative, but it ha. Im-cii falling off of late years. Formerly everything saved front a wn-ck was sold at auction hi Nassau ; now all gmxls not of a H-rishuhle nature, and undamaged, are resliipjM-d to the port of destination. ( 'ollu-ion tn-t ween shiv-mastcrs and thf pilots was also frequent, but incn-a.ssl vigilance on the part of the insurance companies ha interfered with this nefarious huincss, while the numerous lightlioitses recently erected by the Oovt-rn-incnt, with noble wll-sacriiice. have operated hi the same direction. The uncertainties attending money-making in this precarious way have their effect on the character of the jn-ople, as is theca-e w hen the clement of chance enters largely into business; the prizes in the lottery ate lew, but are nu-;iionally so large as to excite undue exn- tations, and thu unlit in: ny for any pursuit more steady but less xciting. Formonthsthey will cmi-e atout, watching and Imping, and barely kept alive on a scant supply of sugar-cane and conch; then they fail iu with a wreck, siid make enough trout it, tn-rhaps, to keep them going another year, it is not it healthy or desirable state, of atliiirs. Ilnrptr fur Suvrmhtr. X Nut for Iaviycrs to Crack. Marriage in the I'nited States is a civil contract, andin Missouri, is to be solemn led by a Justice of the Peace or a licensed or ordained Ministcrof the (iose. If the hart ics to such a contract do not appear is fore the officer recognized by the law, Is tin-re a marriage? Would the hiMrcis of tiarent.s not married by such an otliecr be legitimate, or could they inherit property? If a religious society, recognized by the law, depose front its ministry a jH-rson who, after such expulsion, pe;iorius the ceremony of mai riage, is that marriage lawful? What constitute an ordained minister In the eye ol tne law ? A few days ago 'vrus I. nf kin, of PeaImmIv, Mas.,f-iiUght his foot in the railroad track, and all efforts to releae him were unavailing. He was h Id tat for half an hour, when a train of cars came thundering along. The poor fellow saved hi life by throwing hint-elf on one side, but h'-t his foot, the cars miming over and cutting it off.

In an Open Three miles southwest of New Canton, in this county, can In seen one of the most wonderful sights ever w itnessed. On the land of Shaw ami Kupert, known as tli northwest quarter of section 'SJ, of township ft south, (i west, Is found w hat hits lnt-ii kuown for years as the suit spring. This; spring rises out of a level prairie) ami a lew weeks since the locality gave no indications that you were approaching one of the greatest w onders ol this country. The spot has long lneu the resort of wild game and domestic animals, who came to drink its saline water, which never go dry or freeze, winter or summer. A few weeks ago the proprietors, who had long conceived that there was some undcvcl-on-d secret connected with the spring, sunk an iron pipe some forty feet dow n the moutli ot it, and immediately it In--gait to throw out from the up'n-r edge ol the pin water to the height of twentythree b et. it has remained for a few davs, attracting large nuiidn rs of visitor, who came to see and w onder. Some days utter six more pipes, of the diameter of an inch and a half, were driven Into the spring the longest pipe ulmut fifty-live leet and such a cascade of wa'er was never seen In fore on u level prairie. Some of the pipes have covers perforated w ith small boles, and the jets of water thrown from t hoc form, it the sunshine, Ix-auti-ful rainlnnvs. For ten feet or more in every direction, and littei-n feet high, the white spray rises, glitter and showers around, forming u pod thirty fet iu diameter, clear, limpid and cool. On a clear day the column of water can be seen for miles, and on a cloudy, drizzling day over two miles. I'ittsfieU (III.) old King. Mr. Corcoran, of Washington, has just presented to the Theoloirjeal Seminary of Virginia ;J10,KHI, in bonds and lands, toward its permanent endowment. Not everv one run bo president, but all etut, buy MIA'EU TIITKU shoes for their children. hii.I thereby lessen their shot hills two-thirds. For Sale by all iK-ali-rs. Attk.M) to the first symptom of Consumption, and that disease limy Im checked in its incipiencv. Ce iinni'ili.ilel v Ir. Wishart's Pine Tree Tar Cordial, a safe remedy in all disease of the luns. Fifteen Pounds of Flesh. f oc-rn Cinwick, Me., Jan. IT, 172. It. 11. f TtVFN, Ksij.: pi-ur Sir I liK.t lim! T)vrr!'l In wmt f-rni t tin- l;wt ten i-.n-. ami lm (..Si n liiiiiilri ilii of ilui.rs' Surlli nf iiii ilirliif II hunt eliiHihinit ai.y n In I. Ill Septi'lll lier Ih-I I rnlliln-lii'f-4 Ink Intf tin Viitrny, i m i' Inch I inn' in v In ; I h l.nn.n .-i.lil) niiinn p. I. "Tir fooil illk'i--'-i II, Hint I liuve KKI'i''l fl Tt.-.-n ful il. ef lli -li. I ln-rr iirr ai-rrrnl oOii-m In tlu 'lm:e lakinn lln- toll INK, mi.l ;l Imw oliUlutU ltli I. . our ti n t , I IIOMA F. MOOV.F. Ovcreer of tlicCarJ Kootn, -irumouili lo.'a Miila, SYMITOMS Want of appotltc, rtnlnir of foi aril t tnl rrnin I In' tiiiiiiuli. nf ny i.f I lie stutiiiM'li l,rr(litirn. ilr ui-sp at ji it hiti-ii.-- of Hit- tung'iir in On lo.irn. iisr. i-ri- of ili-ti-!itin tn lite niotnurli mul Ii..,-Im, .MiOM-titni-i, riiiiiMiiiic ati'l mtn ' rimtivfiH -s, H Mi d l orcM-ii'iiitl'v liil-rrnitr ! dlarrlit-i, ; t. Iii-.il Oo-until'. Tin lni-iii)i l i-lrtiiitiiv, or lui a sour or liiitrr la-tr. Oth'-r lri'tiirnt r 111M0111- Mr u utrt lirH-h. pA1 pit ut ion of thr tii-xrt. hriiiV'i'-fi' ;lnl illsiirilrr of I lit- -i n-i-s. it- m ri hg; iluiJili. ftr. '1 1 1 rr Is iri'inTrtl il-l'tlttv. hiii.iiiir, mul !rr-ion to tunt.oii : ,1 Ji'i tinn of tla-njitnts. (I. -turbid .ii-i i Hint Iiihtlul Uriuiiit. ri:i:i Mvsr.i.r a i:av jia. J atics, Mas... Juno 1st, 1ST2. Ma. II. M. Tvr'. I 'i ir sir- I liri.inrh t'i ailvlrp mul i-Brno-l M r-n"l'in i f I.' i . r . s. Ili st. of Oil- pl.u . I linn- Im i ti t iklnil V hi.H IN K f r ! H li, of whli h I Inn' sntti r. .! for M-r-. I li:ii' iis.'i only two li'ittl--, Mtnl ulrraily ti ll In) nt'if a lit-a I mil. liccli'rtfiil.v, 1'K. J. W. tAKTUL A Sourco of Crcat Anxiety. My lUnilitr-r li rornhnl irrnt lirnflt from tlirti ef V t i . It-r ili i llnli,.f ln-ultli - "'iirri' ill cr ut atixlciy to nil of lu r iri.-iiil.. A i liottU-.of On- V I ( fe 1 1 .. K rrctol - il lirr lutaith. mrpriirth Hint iin-tin-. V. II. 1 II I'KN. In- ami ?; I Ffr ATt., 4n Sears' ItuilJuiiJ. llontou. Mux., J unv i, lsi i. What I Know About Vegetine. Sorrn rtoTo. May 9. 101 II. Tt. STS-rrv-: Is-nrsir I ltnv Tnft'1 ron-lilrriCilp r xrrrrtrr alth tru- VK.rriM ror Im-s!h. Oi in rsl lu lilllty mul Imtiiirt- I'IimmI. tin' roti i r l n i r I r to an, tliiim Klilrli I liHr i rr ti-i il. roiiinn in i-il Inking i. ti m hIhhiI On- iimlili). of 1a-t inter. mil aft-r m-mi a fi'w Uittli-n u I'lmri-lv cured no of 0M -ia. ami niv MinmI ni vt'r a. I n mi uimhI cotiiMOnn a at ttn pn-wnt it mi. It 111 nlloril nil- ! usurp to rlvt1 nv fnrtlir-r (mrtlnilarn relntlvp In lis I know stioiit tins itiskI nii'ilii mr. to any iiiiii No 111 fall or aililn u mi) at my ri-slilrlli i', Nh Atln-lia dtri'i-t. i rv ri'!M-( tfuPv, MOM-OK CAl;kl.i' .XI A'lirna ktrwt. vu.rTm: issoin uv am. dkh.i.ints. WISHART'S It ta now f ftMr. run :nrs tlm at'nt1on of ttis puMii- . r.r.1 r;!.-.l l.jr llr. I., y. C. Wi.hart t i thij oii.i rful r. iiii-ili. Bint aril Iik Il pNmnI XI.e U 't "t lone Hint lo .Uv II ii"l only n Cm ,,.iitt.irii. r i.T lli riiiirrroiiiinuiiitv. lint la nmri- fr-umiiiljr it. rit" it ly tiliii-i.in- In tli'ir prarlle thin any oili. r prorrl. tary .r.-iartlon In lli country. Il II tli v tat nrtiiriiil.of I lie Clin 1 . .litaii,.-. Hr a i.ruli.ir f.r.Krln Ok- ilmll I latlmi of thf Tar. t.y ahu ll la hiijltft mt'h.lnnt .roi.-rtlia an- r.'talnril. t"r lli furiiialiiif iimnlaliiia - Inflammation "I O" l.tins-a, t oii-!.. Mir.- Ihronl anl ltr,-f. I -.nine hi O". oiiaiimnli.iti. I.lvi-r fiiinp'aitn. W.-ak Stotimrh. li--;,.- or tli Kt.ln-)a. rrlnaryl ,.tnpM1n'. V.-rn.na l tn.l'v. PjanrimiL ami iliwa'a.-a arlmn Irntti an Inipnri i-onilltion i f the I.I.khI there la tin r.-ntly In Hit 'M Oiat haa l..-. n il -.1 ..iii'.-.s-ln'iv or . an !." an.-li a n'im'-r of inirt.-l.i.isrur.-. I h- Ml.-'ntz HI '"''''"" Oioi-.tiinailiin In li!.-ii Una vrr ;-u rt-im-ay U licUt Vf tlloM) lio lia0 Uacil IK Conanm)tlon for Ten Yfra Curnl. Ia I O t . o i-ti t: fieur Slr-I am rr'-fl " Vmi lii.Mi lli- I ii I "oil sr '""'I' iio-'li" V'V. ill I. nr.- tli. .li-..-.-.-f lh l.iniss. M( all. luia fuel Hie c.iii.ntiiiti' il lor ti'lio-nra. I'ln icImii l .nl tnl.l 10. -llial th.'V r.M.l.l only t.at. h ..'r Hp .-" " 11. -ltiK Sin- ai-i i.tillii.-il In li-r li-il, ami hml I" en f-r aotii.-tliti.-. Ili.'iir.l of votir l-lnn Tr-. 1. onha aii.l.T.ir..rl..t..-lK.tll-. II rll.'w. It.-r -' ;"' M" Imi. now niil-nH h. r fourlti L-.ttl... amt la al. - to l' Oipaork fur hr family, ami iinv ..l twi'l imi nn with your irrpiUiioyt-r) and ture)iu h-- inailcror loii.uit.imou. rfr r n jprcN-,, .Tnrkumi i-nii-r, blit-ilty K.U., Ohio. From St. IhiiiIs, fin WisttAsr. I'iiii. irt "! T-ar Plr-Tiiriiif a visit l I'hllail.-'pKia -unaHtvovMi'- -.. I nl-f.-ritii' rrotn a .--" . olil. I tii'lm-. -.1 to ' 1 " " l,..tt'..of ..tir I'lin It.'. larl onl. l. hull Imi 1 1' . tl- t..f . iiritiu ira III a fi-a 1 . I I'ao "' I "J t.iv I nnllv rvrr .in.-., ami am of th ""H ' 1 11 .-iinl tli. Ilfn of mi v .iiniifhtrr ah., a a. --. in ir m .. vero ami paintnl -.. If I'"- tit.l i.-.t i..tt ol tlu aiil liaof iiy rrn , yon an-nt lilx-H) l n--il. iiiirs i .';H-rt fiiHi JolIN ll(.sf.rT. Pt. Ion.,. Mo. For m v n:i Inia.ta .itnl Stnrlcc:-r. an l at DR. L. Q.C. WISHART'S Office, Na.232 N. Second St., Philadelphia, Pa.

A Naturul Artesian Well Prairie.

PinBTreBTarCoraial