M5 afr TV-1 - -qj"- M BBBJ VOL III Jt. 9 Hiiijrlr 4 oplca Five Cents SAMSIiCKY, N.'., Tl'KShW. AUGUST V1HG8. WHOLE NO 380 ECLBCTIC MAGAZINE at FOR EI UN LITEM A TURK, Mmm mm Dmm Mourn. Tmtmiutmr Mtwitm. IMturt Hour , Ommmr't wMf, ggT' SaVV ftvrnftl, AwapaWsv Mtvim,- ( ,mtrmirarf Hretrtr, (krittum .Wn-fy,-Alt tke Vf Mouud, I , i I'll I'mrertUf, MaemUUu's JfsswJise, Hrlyracia. W kar also tnBKd to nee are rliolcaelection froa Ik Krtnt. 0re, tad otbar Continental IVrlualcala, mull ted aftnallv for the Ecleotie to add to la variety aad vala of the work . Kach aaabar mbllkikd with oaaor more Kine Hteol InvlMr jrWiU of eminent sasn, or illue IraUv efimporUat klatorieal evaaU. Splendid Premiums for 1868. Re rr ae aakterikfr to tke Rrlectie ISM, payrajr t ta edvaaee. will fatal eltsar or tna rouowiox keaaUhd chremo oU palatial BASKET OF PEACHES, 8iM9 X 11 VIV&ll AND NUT CRACKERS, I Sue 7X8. Tke eke re are cxaet oUa of original oil paiut mgr and are executed by Prang it Co.. in the hierh .t itrle ef Ik art, or, la piece of them ere will eend either of oar fine Steel EnirraviBfe, Washington at Valley KorsS, Betara front Market, Sunday Murn- '"f 'or Two eakaeriaers aad $10.00, we will eend the beautiful Ckroato, Poultry l.ifc Siae 6 1-3 X 8. For Tare aakacrifceri and $16.00, a copy or Webster's National Pictorial Dictionary, aae Vol ma of 1 .040 page, containing: ov.y fiOO pic tor nl illaetratiene, price $,00; or a copy of Kns .Uahenr" Celebrated piece, Shetland Ponies bile RI-liM t-S. Terms of tke Eclectio : Magi ropiea 4fi eta.; on copy, on year, ts.no. t we ropiea year $9,00: lee copiessne year $20.00 Ai4nm W. n. BIDWELL. 6 lieekman St., New York. AunmrV Amen rom TIE OFFNUL HISTOIY Of THE WAu Iff Cm?, CLurarfrr, (oaduf t sad HVmiIK ay no lumiaraa. mrmm A Hook fur aft Sections, ami Hrttes. TSia srreat work present the only com ideieandiuioartlHUnarrsts of the faune of the War yet published, and gives those in terior liirhta aud shadows of the great on- llict only kuowu to thuso big h officer lu watched the Hood-tide of revolution from if fouutain apt i in.'-, aud which were ao aecea aible to Mr. Stephen from hia jKjeitlou M sec. ud officer of the ( oiifederacy. To a public that has been aurfeitd with Al'I'AKENTLY SIMILAR PRODUC TIONS, we iiroiniao ft chaug of fare aifn-e- ftbleand aalutary, audftit intellectual treat of the hisheat order. The Ureat American War haa AT LAST found ft hiatoriau worthy of ita importanoes nd t wrnaae hand it will receive that moderate, candid and im partinl treatment which truth and juatioe o urgeutly dentftnd. The inteust) desire every "where inftnifeat ed to obtain this work, its Official chftrttcter ami ready aale. combined with an increased cummiwion. make it the best subscription book ever published. One Ageut iu Easton, Pa. reports 72 sub scribers in three days. One is Memphis, Teuu. 1UG bubacribera iu five days. Send for Circulars and see our terms, aud a full description of the work, with Press no tices of advance sheets. Ate. Address NATIONAL PUBLISHING CO. 26 South .Seventh St. Philadelphia, Pa Fresh Arrivals at SMITH. FOSTER & CO. 100 piceu Dry Goods Assortaw, 10 Cases Boots A Show, 300 Sacks Bait, 16,000 yds 4 4 SnitafsatiTactaVf price a. 4O.U00 lbs. Rolled. Hammered aad aae u Iron. 5 Hhds MidaastMi We boy Rage aad all kind of Oevntry Pro-1 daw, aad call atiMtioa Jm enkliu Ut law I larreet Htoefc of Woods in this mat a.-i . We are also act-nts for Wheelers, alrllick A Go's. Tnreahers and Cleaners. Call at Sprague's old stand, near the Market Mouse. .-mi ni i-wrui v co- Juno 11,1808. twltn THE OLD NORTH 8TATR ITRI-WKKKLY J Ef-KATBH OK MUrMCaitTtOaV 43 1 Kit HI- tanll IN (ADVtNl k. irt. Weekly. Oas Vsar.... British Periodicalt. Ths London Quarterly Review, (Con ervatire.) Ths Rdinburg Review, (Whijr ) Tks We4tninter Review, (R idioal.) Tk North British Review, (Free Cliareh.) AMD BUcktrooTs Edinburgh Magazine, fary.) SALT! SALT!! 2,000 SACKS genuine Liverpool, 2,000 do. American. Large, full narks in prime order, mo mentarily expected, and lor sale at lowest cur rent prices Orders for lots of 100 Sinks or over, received before dLsuharKe of vessel, will be tilled at ex cnejr l"V Brier?. 0. G. PARSLEY & Co. Wilmington, N. C, Jane 10. tw(57:12l The neiiodlcala are ably lustoined by the con in batioaa f Ike beet writers on Science, Religion and i rj$Watnn. and eland unrivalled in the ri,l at letter. Tbev are inuispenaanie i tne aeholar aad the profeeeional man, and to every rea ding man as, they furnish a better record of the cur rent literature of tke day than can b obtained fro in nn j ether sonrc. TERMS FOR 1868. For any oaefthe Ravtows $4.00 per snnum. For any two ef the Revtews. 7.00 For any three of the Review. ... 10.00 " For all four of tke Reviews a.00 " For Blackwood's Magazine 4.00 For Blaekwood and on Review, 7.00 Fer Blackwood aad any two of the Bevhtwa, ...lO.OO ' For Blaekwood aad three of tke Reviews, ...U.00 For Blackwood sad the four Re- views, W-0 '! i CLUBS. A. discount ef twenty per cent, wilt be allowed to i lake of fbnr or more persons'. Th us. tour copies of Blaekwood, or of on Review, will be sent to one address for f 19.8$. Four copies of the lour Re views sad Blackwood, for $48.00, and so on. POSTAGE. Subscribers should prepay by the quarter, at the office ef delivery. The Postage to any part of the United States is Two CanTS s mnuber. This rate only applies to currentsnbscrlptions. For back num bers the postage la double. Premiums to New Subscribers. a.- .i4Ium in uv two of the above neriod- m for 19S8 will be entitled to receive, gratis, any one of the Kear Ki lews for 18W. New Subscriber to all Ave of the Periodicals for 1868 may receive, gratis, Blackwood or any two of the Foar Reriewa for 1867. .. . . ..w- u iakscribers may oaiain eaoa lumn THK CAROLINA FARMER. BELIEVING that the interests of the Far mers and Planters of this section demand the publication of a periodical to be devoted to the . . i. . , . i . i . jt i : advancement oi Agriculture in me iwo vamn- nas, we have determined to estuiilisn suen a iieriiKlieal under the title of TBE CAROLINA FARMER, aud will Usue tho first number as soon as a Nutiiaient number of subscribers are obtained to pay a reasonable share of tho ex nensc of nublication. The Farme; will lie issued monthly at fci per annum, m advance ; will contain not less tlian thirt j -two largo double-column pages of read ing matter, bound iu hundsomu covers ; aud iu fyjMigraphical execution will not be surpassed by any Agricultural Monthly iu tbe country. Beiuir determined to do whatever energy will accomplish in making the Farmer worthy the support of the Intelligent Planters and Farmers of North Carolina and South Carolina; and de siring to introduce it into every county in those States, we wish to employ active Agents at every Post office, to whom the most liberal in ducements will me onered. Address all communications to WM B. BERNARD, Jo87 wltwtt " Wilmington, N. C. ) o wine rsdaeed rate, vU Tk. k:nrik HritUk froa faanirr ebe. 1867. InelasiM ; Edinhsrfh and th Westmln- r, 18SS, to Decern- .i frm Anrii (Bat. to December. 1MB, Inclusive. and the London Quarterly for tk years 195, 1866 and 1967, atth rate ft .50 a year fpr.esch or sny Review; also. Blackwood for 1866 and 1867, for ft, 6n i year, or tbe two years together for $4.00. tr Neither nrefoiuma to Subscribers, nor discount to Crabs, nr redaced prices for back numbers, eaa ke allowed, unless tk money la remitted direct to ae Publish. ' ike EeonarS Scott Tub. Co., 140 Fulwn, St., NT T. m Te L. 1. Ttr. CO., als publish th 1 FARMERS GUIDE, a Hsvrt Srapaan, ef Edinburgh, and the late J. f. Koarow, of Tal College. vols.,, Royal Detavo, 1600 pages, and numerous Engravings. fries $7 for the two volumes by Mail, poet paid. 800. Jeaft-tf PLAIN TRUTH! m- i - i i 1 HOSE indebted tome are hereby notified to caM and settle by tbe 15tb inst, or their ae rounts will be placed in thebands of Win. H. Baq , t collection,, lam in earnest, JOHN H. ENNISS, ijav 1 1 aiiaai t-T0 ... "T. . - , -----j t: """"" -'-'' ... ' . . . jZ - i . mmmmmmmmm TO THE PEOPLE'S STORE AND SEE I HAVING wst returned from the Northern cities, we offer an ENTIRE NEW STOCK OF G00B3, bought at (he lowest prices for Gash. We offer at WHOLESALE & RETAIL a complete and general stock of Goods, either for .i CASH OR BARTER at such prices as will ensure a sale to any per son visiting this market, consisting of PRY GOODS, ThoaasTltle Feaale Collfg, THOMASVILLE, N. 0. ' Mil: FALL SESSION of this Institution 1 will eoinuieuce 011 Tuesday, the 4th of August, aud contiuue twenty weeks. Board $10 per mouth, and other charg es proportionally low. SIXTY DOLLARS must be prepaid by each young lady ou en tering, and the balance at tbe close of the term. The Faculty is Ml and composed of able aud experienced Teachers. The course is extensive, embracing all the solid and orna mental brauches taught in other Female Colleges. The religious advantages are un surpassed. This College is located between Salisbury and Ureensboro , in one of the most beau tiful and healthy towns on the N. C. Central Railroad, and is in two miles of the cele brated "Helton Chalybeate Springs." And at the additional expeuae of 25 ceuts per day, any of the ''College girls" cau havu the constant use of the water. For Circulars, containing full particulars, address Rkv. 1). R. BURTON, June 27-tw-w-liit. President. iam T waTwHHaW a .......$000 3,ll BTATK On Copy one Year M ' " MX Mouth. I Mi A rroaaX uu the paper Indli atealbe expirallon ol llic - i .i ..ii The trvrynt whteh Ik Ol Nuava Stui." U printed la eutirwly new. No paiaawill be anared to make it a welcome t tailor toerery family . In order to do thtaJBp have engaged theaervloea ol able aad accompliaaTd literarv contributors. Advertising Rates : TUA.VSU'XT KATES For all periods less than on month One Square, first insertion $1.00 Kach aulweiuent Insertion oO Contract rates for period of on to font month. I ao. I two. I $ no. I 4 ao. I 6 ao $M60 1 svl'SBS, S Mit'aSBS, S savins. 4 'nut' A KB, aria. COL. Hi COL. S qraa. col. 0B COU $ 7.60 torn I'iUI 13.00 90.00 36.00 30,00 1 i 'Ml 1600 IH00 I'l no 27.IK) 83l 13,00 $I3ISI 17 00 31.00 33 INI 34 on 33 00 40 011 63.00 $6 00 31 UU am Shisj VMS! 8HINI 46 00 6O0U 430 NI 87.0t 3 40(1 3 700 3 K.VI 44 00 Ml in 70,00 CLEMMONS 8TAGE LINE! ex- Warsaw lo FnyeUrville. Leave Warsaw for Fayettiville daily cept Sunday. Through Tickets from Wil mington to Faye.ttevilie, (i. ThrotifA Tick ..tM from VValtLni via Wargmg. to V yet iw ville, tW. Throogh TnSkets fniin Golds boro'i via Warsaw, to Fayettoville, $6. Cbarlude (o mU l:ro'. Ieave Charlntte, via Mminie, for Wades boro', Tuesday, Thursday and Staturday. Leave Wadesboro' Sunday. Wednesday aud Friday, after the arrival of tho Wilming ton, Charlotte 6c Rutherford Stage. Morrisville (o P.Utbfirft' Leave Morrisville for Pittsboro' Moiidar, Wednesday and rriday, return next days. Clrmaion Accomiuodiilion Line. Between SALEM and HIGH POINT' N. C, fare On Dollar. E. T. CLEMMONS, Contractor. Jnly, 7. 18CS. w-tw-lmj From the Richmond Whig. Crossing the Alps by Steam The Mont Cenis Railroad Peculiari ties of its Construction Tte Route Described I low a Passenger Feels Life on the Alps, dec, dec. tbirc else I know of, the laatt being ranged along tbe tide with a narrow aisle in the oootrr. with tbe entrance at the rear platform. Kach ear is furnished near the frout with a pair of boriaonta) wheels that clasp tbe ecu ire rail, and, of course, with powerful brakes and tbe glass mmt lows of tbe sides are raanis ao that Ussy cannot bo opened, thus compelling the passengers to limit their observations, and preventing brads and anus being thrust out- Froa Franoe to Italy some twenty passengers crossed yesterday, the train beiapj ee as posed oi tutu passenger HldiTfl ""KKig coS, the latter as small as the foi mar. A half-doxcn brakesmen were on board, in addition to the other train hands. Tbe start was made at fifteen minutes pas one, aud in fifty minutes tho train had gone as for as Lanslebourg, at the foot of the mouutain. The railway, the high-road and ft mountain torreut went along side by side up the narrow valley, fntjucntly changing tueir relative posi tions, but still remainiug always in close companionship. At Lanslebourg the en gine replenished its stock of water and fuel, and the difficulties of the ascent com menced. On a level tbe speed was pro bably fifteen miles an hour, but going up hill it was reduced to ten, and sometimes to five miles by the difficulties of the as cent. The railway continued up the nar row valley with its companions, but it was evident that the brisk little engine, that puffed and snorted, aud strained so much, was able to go up the steepest nil that tho wagon road attempted, and as the railway wound about in the crookedest unman n took Ti kix, July 10. ajkind of style, sometimes on the other, tbe ma i . i a a . I - . l lie "tell Hallway over tno .Motii KEKXERSVILLE HIGH SCHOOL, Male and Female, At Kernersville- Forsythe County. N. C. J. F. II KIT MAN, A. M., Priucipal. R. P. KKRNKR, Assistant. Tns Fall Skssion will commence July 29th, and close December 2'2d, 18G8. TUITION. Spelling, Reading and VVritinp, $10 00 Arithmetic, Grammar, Geography, ) qq History and Philosophy, j Higher Mathematics Si Languages, 20 00 Contingent fee, 1 00 Tuition charged from time of entrance to close of session, except in cases of protracted sickness.'" Board can' be had at ftom M to f 10 ser month, exclusive of lights. Our ol.ject will be to make pupils ihsftiigh in what we undertake to teach fheni. For further particulars address the Principal at Kernersville. N. C. . w25;tf ' WILSON SCHOOL, DRESS GOODS, CLOTH 1M- ill is, Ladies' a ad Cenu' f all kinds, Als. some Vashlsaable Bik Bats aud cxsrtsly far as. A large stock of Boots sad Shoes. Hemlock Sole, Calf Skina, awd;tiiiiiiv Bkinsk Atridles-aad Saddles ; s general stock W HARDWARE imW Iron and Steel, Grbeeries, Tanner's and Kero sine Oil. Wooden-Ware, Queens ware, and in fact a r freneral stock f goodar A ww ask is a 1 call at the j MELVILLE, ALA A NCR COUNTY, N C. fllUE next Session commences July 16, and -"continues 20 weksM: kard and Tuition,. . .' $25 00 ach pupil Will furnish 2 sheets, 2 pillow us ses and I DTankeL For ciscukw armyfhePripkl. : $&it1 V ' .. Frineipa Cenia Pass of the Alps is the present won der of Europe, and is certainly a great en gineering triumph. It has been open for passenger traffic since June 15th, and has been worked from that date successfully mid without accident. Ity this line, pas sengers arc taken over the Alps in five hours and a (ttartcr one-halt the time taken by the diligence service aud what is of equal importance, the journey, which costs um-live fin lies lil'J aurn) L diligence, can be made the railway for twenty-five francs (about S7 currency). Vet fully one-half of the people who cross Mont Ccnis are afraid to go on the rail way, as they have a wholesorhe and eer taiuly natural objection to running the risk of their railway train pitching down a precipice, aud making mince meat of all it contains. A natural curiosity took me to the rail way as a means of crossing the Pass. To comprehend tho character of this work, it is necessary to understand the situation of Mont Ceiiis. It is said to be tho lowest of the Aips, and is probably eight thous and feet high. It is comparatively fiat on top, being some six miles broad, and is surroniided by higher Tieaks, many of them covered with snow. On both the French aud Italian sides, mountain tor rents, having their source on Mount Cc nis, run down through deep valleys with precipitous sides, so that the Alpine chain is, as it were, half cut through hy these fissures. An excellent road has been long in existence over the pass, running along the borders of these streams and zig-sag-gitig up the mountain, and Mr. Fell has built bis railway alongside of this road, engine stuck like a leech to the track. The train, though not ninety feet in length, was frequently on three curves at once, aud the cars were ablo to turn at PEOPLE'S STORE, At Sprague-s Old Stand. Main Street. Near the Mdrket House SMITH, FOSTER & Co. VT. A. Smith. ,. Thos. J. Fostib. Jkhu Fo-ter, Jr. 8ahsbury, April 15. 1868. . tw3m. FINLEY HIGH SCHOOL, f?d LD WBLL, COUNTY, K. C, X Jul 27th, 188. For further particulars avoir for a oirculsr. B.W.-BT, Joky 10, 186 i - i- t-. State of North Carolina, , ..... . IJ,H ll.v.l . I ' M. - 1 I. Superior Court of Law, Spring Term, 1868. For tine White vs. K.ving White. -- rrriTioN kor divokck. ' IT appearing fctilpte satisfaction of the Court that .the defenSnt Ewing White, resides be yond the limits of this State : It is ordered that publication jjUPde lor six weeks in the " Watchman It U$Y Nortli Bute, " notifying said defendant to n. and appear at our next Superior Court ol Law, to Jbe held for the county of Davidson, at the Court-House in Ixinton. on tlte first Monday after the, fourth. Monday in September next, then and there to answer or dcanfr to the planum s petition ; oth- from which it rarely parts company, so that the people on the cars and those on the highway for nine-tenths of the dis tance could shake hands with each other if so disposed The mere laying out of the railroad, therefore, was nothing ; but the ''ifliculty which had to be and is surmount ed, was to invent a species of steam rail way that would climb up or go down as steep hills and turn around as sharp cor ners as a horse and wagon, and yet be as completely under control. These things aro successfully accomplished by the use of ajfjoad with three rails, upon which run engine and cars of peculiar construction. The railway is of narrow gauge, not over four feet, and the outside rails upon which rests the weight of the cars are the ordinary T raihviiut oLheavy patteriu-- The centre rail is not used ou level and straight places, but only on curves and declivities. It is shaped something like a j. letter If, and is elevated about ten inches above the other rails, being laid upon heavy wooden string pieces, and braced etrontrl V at the sides. In order .that the trains may go around the sharp carves that are necessary, tire engines and cars are made very short,, none of them over twelve feet long.-. Tho engines have small driving wheels, and car ry their fuel and water over the boilers. Thay are built very heavy, and the pow er is applied not only to the vertical wheels which run on the outside rails, but also two sets of horizontal wheels which can be' pressed upon the sides of the centre rails. The engines indeed seem to be a'l 'Pint Fall Tint In this Institution will begioJarwise, the same will be beard sod granted Witness, H. N. Heitmarr, derk of our said Court at office, the 1st Monday after the fourth 4 Monday ia Mwch.A, &.-lft6fV 2A6LtQJ H. fit UKITIfASY C.S.C TrT- vini: wheels and brakes, and the way they catch hold of and cling to the rails is sur prising. Tbe cars are more like the small, singk-horse passenger ears on some of the American horse railways than any sharp corners as the wagons on the road alongside. Sometimes the railway made a semicircle of uot over fifty feet radius, the firmly fastened central rail keeping the train on tho track. After thus get ting up sxime four thousand feet of the el- nyjlion. the steep side of Alont t iuis was reached, stretching up far above US, the summit bidden in clouds. Starting at a little station with a water-tank and fuel shed, the road twists six times up tbe precipice, each parallel being constructed on a grade of one foot of elevation In from five to ten of length, and the train, every time it turns back and forth, elevates you higher and higher ; yet all the time keeps right over tbe s'atiou, which gets smaller and smaller as you rise thousands of feet above it. The curves necessary for the bends of tho road are one-half tunnelled out of the solid rock, and the other half built out over yawning chasms, clouds al most obscuring tin water-conrses at the bottom. You can throw a stone down the nn hi i. tain side, and it will cross one line of the railway after another, and finally reach tbe ground at the station the train left a half heur before, but which is still under your feet. Snow-capped peaks are all around ; clonds half envelope you ; tbe cars, if they once leave the track, will be dashed to atoms, thousands of feet belo yet sun tne train goes upward and up ward, the little engine holding tightly to the rails and climbing the hill before it that seems to unfold itself interminably This is the most terrific part of the ascent of the I rench side of tne mountain : and it continues until the summit is reached, where, at "Le Grand Croix," the train halts for a moment's rest, and the passen gers, dispirited perhaps by the ""rain" of snow that always pours down So lavishly on the mountain top, begin to wonder whether they will ever get down again. Built in the region of snows and aval&nclies, the railway at the top of the mountain is protected by being occasionally la i in galleries cnt ont of the rock over which tho snow when it falls can pass without hartm ing the roadway; and in places where no galleries can be made an arched roof of corrugated iron, very light and -strong, and supported - on-lieary timber posts, is built over the road, the sides being covered with planks. This is a protection from snow which will probably be effectual,; but it is an interference with the view oat of tbe ear windows of which travellers 'will always V'WlulipTjirn.'Th'lUmWr of the mountain is comparatively flat, always bleak, cold and inhospi table aud at present has on it, form ed by tbe melted snows, a large lake with no "apparent outlet. The railroad in crossing the summit goes up hill and down dale, and twists about, the same as the wagons road does, no embankments or cut tings being necessary. The ascent of hours and a half, the bonr and throe quarters of time remaining be ing occupied in crossing the summit and descending; ou the itallian side. Having got np the hill, tt was now the business of the traia to get down again, and after descending for some distance npon comparatively gentle slopes, tho road eame suddenly npon the edge of a precipice that, to say the least of it, was sensational, ft was at the head of the valley on the Italian side of the mountain, and was not only more abrupt and pcooi piioua, but mnoh despsw than tbe ehasm down which we looked npon the lit tle water station on the French side. Tho country was spread ont before ns like a topographical man. At onr feet, how many thousand feet below I can't protond to fell, began the monntain torrent, led by my raids of little cascades from all the peaks around. A town stood on its banks, snd further on another, which was the famous town of 8nsa, to which we were to get, if possible ; and far beyond stretched tne railway and roads, cultivated fields for miles and" miles, almost to Turin. The valley widened as it leceded from ns, and twisting about on its precipitous sides, could be faintly traced the line of road we were to follow in the de scent. To look down npon Sosa, and think that it was just as easy to roll down the lrll to that ancient Roman town, as to slowly twist dowi the railway, was certainly not" ant. However the hreakamen their places and the descent began. The engine which before did so much climing and pulling, now did quite as good service at holding back. The hill was steep and the road most crooked ; but the brakes clung fast to the wheels and the wheels stuck to the track, and gradually bat some what roughly, especially on tho corves, we slid down. j, Occasionally, when tho sliding went too fast, the engine was revers ed, and at times the ability of tbe train-iianas to stop atafj$jLuteiy on tno ster?pe6t declines, was demonstrated. AH the time we were twisting and sliding down the monntain, various lines of road to be followed when further down could be seen, and the wonder was, how ; were we ever to get them. Also, the town of Snsa, continned-at onr feet, gradually in creasing in size as we approached, and finally we got near enough to detect church steeples, looking like lttle pegs set up among the houses. At half-past six the descent was suc cessfully accomplished, and trundling nto the depot at ousa, the monntain journey came to an end after which, changing to an Italian railway train, wo were in Turin. No one who crosses Mont Oenis, on the Fell railway, can fail to bear testimony to its complete success. It is, however, not a road for people of week nerves to venture npon ; as the feeling when running along tho edge of an almost perpendicular precipice, the bottom of which is almost too far below to be seen, is decidedly mis pleasant. Tbe railway, however, does its work well, and Mr. Fell's little trains can go np and down hill and around sharp corners quite aa well and mnch more rapidly than the ponderous d ill igence. The rail way has been an expensive one to build, and will be a costly one to keep in order, so that unless patrons ized much better than now, it will scarcely pay .expenses. The ingenui ty and daring of its constructors, however, are no greater, although shown on a broader scale, than the skill and perseverance exhibited by the hardy mountaineers, who, bang ing almost by the eyelids, manage to cultivate the sides of sted hills and htthr nooks on the -verges of ch asms, throogh all the wild and ragged and almost sterile region over which tho Fell railway passes. , Poison Oak. Prof. G. Do well, in the Galveston Medisal Journal Jour nal, recommends m cases of poisons ing by Rhus Texicondrou, and other poisonous species of the Rhus, to bathe the parts with a solution of caustic potash, sufficiently strong to rnndnr the skin eoanv. This haa nsr- er failed to cure it immediately, al though be lias used it in hundreds of cases, including nimseii. me pot ash is used in the proportion of ten grains to the ounce of water, bat may be uicioaaed ta strength as needed. A The seventeen year bents in Western Horth Carolina did not live exceeding a month, and disap;eared without leaving sny signs of their brief existence.