. T V" - L- IJ' :'5iL . ill ' IT r -r; r f AA ; : vy iA A - , t&ze - 1 ; 'lJi - .. '- . ; . t v ---4 ,; k i . . . . , , L J '' V. i ' 'I. v . . , -. . ; . ' '4 HE' ME WS''. fiUiJLIbilED LVE3Y TUESDAY. 114 ll i & V:'k Yf,R'd'YEl R V f. '! Editors and Proprietors. FAYETTEVltLE, K. C. : One year, ' -Six months. $3 00 2 00 DA gulf 3 f'f gflwrlfaiBg. Qne gjtipjc,.tl inch or less r;5t insertifm,$ 1 00r ; ,? tai-li ruh.ic-quent insertion .4.-.. ' CO' 7"rr mo yc"t'r, one s-para i 'i'or x 'jutii:-;, ' 15 00 0OO 6 00 I r- r liaartM1 Column, o squares, 3 month?, PS . , . ' H :"f 11 ' It 5 . .ft 4 40 CO . 75 40 75 100 125 .75 125 150 200' 9 12 1 Tor Half .LcViKin, 10 Kquares 3 44, -r 0 . . 9 12 .5, Tot One Cilaua, 20 squares, 3 monthp, 4 . It i: Fir:u the f-'i'lf-utific American. j .r - - : -.-.! ' , TuS"s. Editors: I have read w th Dleas- valuable . k I , w M f V - . . . . q - - - j - - - y ariKi!,' from "1). C' . (David Christy, Esq., . X piip)o.3a.) An authority, too, upon thq fi.ihjL-l he treat?, and those analogues to it, ar (rood any in the United States. I JJiiov "th.ut his- observations, especially iri jbhe Mouthfrii Ai!eghai)iis, have bepn prac t!c;if i'.id thoronijh. ; The phenoinnou ex hibiti'i! -A OirH'tcm, Oa., I have vyitnessed -'t Uivi.ory'Xut Gap, on the Taad. frora Aslicj-iila'to Hi,:thci!brdton, and jit other .j:o:ii1fe- hi She mountains' of Western Nbrth Otroilna. One of tc most singular arid vm'U: wli'ects of fo and air currcl.is as.ex- , liibif'fd ytarly on -Try on Mountain' iri Polk ;o!uny, near the upper waters of tife Saluda JMvpb."' 'Thiert! 'frost is ncverj knowi and the pi".c' crop never fails. " In my itivestia-tio:'.:-ii;i AVer-tern North Carolina I found Minillr rtfoimtuin sides in otjier ' fcouhtiesj V.wi;erh for'insfance, th.e leaves are untouch d hi frost fyr many days later injthe year than fthose:ajjoming. t - Waterspouts I have frequently j heard of and' !;.il tine j!rash-rc - of being itijj a small ,011?; I On !he 'French .Broad , River above Ttin? lricei, ot one by which a boulder con- t;iini V i'vnm iliF i Mild iii ii.i finr xttHq pnrrlaii ILIlOb 1UU7 UUUil' VT (jl vUl I ft 1 1 - h .. ' 'yarJl down into the. bed of the river.; The ;tincl of f ho spout was about . thirty feet 'widel' If "occurred many years iiaso. and II - . " ... j W. y:r., f the oid settlers told rre itj was ac .iiiied by vjrroat wind and noise. In li;iVoorj county mere was a singular spilt in tl'iti top of a mountain, said topave oc curred 'about the same time. I vpited the Tracil'oi cine. on an old road leading from tiiii iVarm Siirmcrs to Tennessee. . Just wlir-ire the 'snout crossed, the roadlhad been treatl'd with polc3 on the cordujroy plan In their iMa-ce was an immense ditch, while , so:nff of the poles were to bo, found in. trees far ItjiowJ One of the neighbors describ- ii'sir said, '-tlie spring branch was- as big as JJroad River. 1 learned 'also ithat they werJ fre(trieut there, and the roaiil, though bot and sliorteit'to Tennessee, had to . be -I'a'ndoned lor that reason. The forma lion of-the fjari above Was- similar to that tltheribed iby "D. C." at Clayton and on the north-east side (in Tcnnessee,j the State line, apparently straight on "the map, runs with the Unaka Ridge, hence is zigzag) was n fa ni noted for its peaches ar)d "grapes. I tr "id, both myself when none were to be hadlauvvvherc else for' sixty miles around. I shall not occupy your valuable ispace with any theories a to the frost-line lor fosfand air hirront?. The latter has been well and . uo 'jloiibt will be fully treated Jy 'D. C." "'iindil ! know morn ably than I sliould: but lliele are peculiai itics of formation and lo cation in the mountains ot Western North Carolina, .which especially fit th.em for the t-ul urc o' the grape. I know Jy observa tion, and it has been demonstrated by oth ers fin' practical experience.- One of these pecjiliarities is in many, pointsj a total ab pcnr o of frost, or, as some terni it, the ex istiiiee of a line of altitude above which froit-has never been known. The seeming mystery is , pi a inly solved in tile action of fogjand air currents similar to hat so well des'tribed ;:s existing at CIayto:n. Ga. .'In omipointl think vD. C." is incorrect:, the icrtn js noi uaii, out iiakij trom tne aDsence of jfuv tree-crowth. The Indians viewed iherc bal'd peak?? with a religious reverence. . h)iu:j vfpiniuiz 13 hiiiib tuuy iiiiiu an ui jgiu in lire,, and as the practice of. turning the , wopul is yearly, becommar Jess common, t!;cy ;'arc decreasing. Another theory is ijljat they are caused by the S fierce, cold vids which svvee the elevated' and expos ed points!.! Still, I have seen points equally high in t!e immcUia tc neighborhood cov- cnil with trees. . Some' of the Indians call thrfm "Devirstracks.,l,. , "J'he W.irm Springs region U one of, pe , cticiar interest to' scientific men.'" The wa? teifof the 'Springs has a temperature of. 104 . d'eg. Fahrenheit, contains sulpliuf, carbonic uua iia, uuu. ,uces 01 some otner minerals. Tlipy arc. located near the junction of "tlie . nmestonei anu metamorphic, slates, . As a v.. mineral region the .'country- Has never been woll explored ;lead, silver, ahuVoppcr are pldntv. iron of the bestJ flualitv'abiiridant: J J .. a 1 ' - . M r -a largQ mass of corundum opens a few miles irqm uiq tfpryigs, iiatl lavas jsnovvn a san T)lfi nf pinrjirtrir whinh wns snid to h.ivo : bepn obtained from , a creeks about, fifteen mU'dsi froni fhn Snrinws.'l ' Thrt: Kcerierv is Wildly grand ctid beautiful, aiid were the river, bat 'navigable its fame would be world wide.; i. A. railroad trom Greenville,' S. C, via.Asheville, N; C, to some point on the East 'TenD; and Ta. Road, has for , years been chartered; also an extension of the Western N. iC. It. R. to a similar point! One. wiir be bpU; surveys have been made and some griding done. - The Springs are located on thb French Broad Riveri twenty four.miles frbm Greenville, Tenn., on the East Tenn. an d Virginia R. R. - j. t 1 ; ; 'HE. Colton. ' IJrooklyn, L. I.; Dec. 27, 1866. : - v ; ' From th Eichmond "Whig : ' THE DIGNITY OF LABOR. The London Times alludes to" the general rise bff prices as one of the characteristics of the ;presecit generation, and adds "that nothing haB fisen in value so much as man. It jdtclares that at thisepoch there are no glutted labpf 'markets and "overstocked professions. There is a dearth of appli caats for admission to the old liberal pro-feaions- indeed in all inferior . callings do?vn to that of domestic service. . This result is j attributed to . an extraordinary multiplication of demand,! and an equally remarkable modification of social opinions. ...w;.u.k,gipUjfo. - xiiu nine was wnp.n here were only three reconid lihpml prdfessjons. ! We micrht now redkon thirtv. an what is of still more impbrtanoe, any 6n$ :6f these is thouirht iusfc- n Hh! ' that is fust as becoming to a frentlftmnn as r$7 !otne Novv-a-days young gentle men ;gd into counting houses as readily as .jujf, uum u. lino me uruarus, and are 4.1. ... 1. i. it !.' uiugut uoii cne worse ot. There is an mmeuse held of employment, arid' no. pre-! udices'to interfere with anvbodvs choice. The i necessary consequence is that all old ea L! infra RnfFer n Uttlti n!1 m-X. ( nj. fm ..vv.U, UUVl '.VUISC JllUOb- lit wnicn ttiere was least natural attraction." : Such1 are lithe results of the multinlica- tion of-industries and i- ' j v-- v m 1IIV4UW1 till deyelopment The world over, there is a demancf for intelligent labor, and when it juipivyjuisvii lo most advantage and without -incurring. social) ostracism in the physical callings, .as distinguished from those purely: mental, we must expect these laucr-ip do 1 Situnneu. it is gratifying to witness the triumph of educated labor over hoary prejudices, and to see that intellect and t energy untrammelled by social re straints, are 'allowed free scope and 'a field ior selection, limited only; by the almost mnumerapief present avocations ot life. It is to education, to science, that we are in debted for those almost countless inven tions that have made labor both easy and pivubauiu Luat iiiive maue macninery sup ply the place of human muscle, and have i .f. . L it- ! ... 1 1? . -i ' mi id iiiuiii vu wuptrrv is anu airecc it. i ne reproductive power thus created is wonder ful to; contemplate. Machinery makes macmnery, and the more there is created, anp the greater its capacity, the more extended-will ;!be the sphere for human labor. th greater the demand for it, the richer us rewards,: a aa tue more respectablo and inHuential it becomes. -' ! Physical science is making the world, as itjwere, a new- one and is breaking down class distinctions and social prejudices, and elevating; man. above mere callings "and professions! The time is at hand when man makes the occupation honorable, and not the occupation, the man. . .. t :-Tu it:. .. j 1 . , , au khi gutnu marcn 01 improvement, we the lSouth are larrieraVds' Eninvinirr until recently opulence that left us scarcely "'fr''a ; lv wish, wiui ievv large cities, devoted tol agriculture, the "bulk of our male population landed proprietors,, the n j-h mm HAin'ntnnxi A w i t . ........ .. A 'iifn, uijs ai cs unu luuurt'rs we were 'nob tltrown into competition with other people, arid were; vqitbaut those incentives to com mercial and mechanical riursuits that others had. JWe; lived generously, . comfortably, inaqieniiy. j laoor was not a necessity, smce we had slaves to do that labor for iis In choosing occupations for our young nien.wo coofined ourselves to the learned pfof essionsj occasionally embracing com- merce never tne mecuanicat pursuits un less compelled to it bylpovertv, or in those instances, id which mechanics brought-up their sons In their own business. It is use less. to deny that class distinctions and so- cial prejudices txisted.'; They arc not yet eitirpatd.j . Poor as our people are, there 1 . . . ! ...... . I 1 " T T 1.1 nf - . ' are many wno would, ratner sutler than see teir sons engage in trades." It is only by. hard labor in agriculture,' commerce, man ufactures j anid tho mechanic arts, that we can ever recover our lost wealth and influ ence, and; restore the South to its former mgn estate. . mere is not on earth a State in : whichi well-directed 5Iabor can accom plish greater results than in 'Virginia nor where; the physical sciences and" the me-, chaftic arts could have a finer field. We have-as rich lands as there are on the globe, add mines,! minerals and water-nower vast arid inexhaustible. We cannot look to pro- iessionai men to maKetnose resources avail able. ! Wje must . have educated labor and muscle fori that purpose; and all that h aye sb'ns should" teach, or j cause them to. be taughtr the physical sciences, and encourage them to engage in some one or another pf Jhe industrial pursuits.1 instad of in law and physic. - 1 Productive industry; is "what is wanted; If it is respectable in England it shpuTd be respectable in. Virginia. Con tempt for work and those who have to en gage in it, i si "despicable enough in those who"are rich Vut it . becomes absurd' and criminal when displayed by those who are ss aepenaent upou u as ourselves, and wno must be bfeggars without it. - . t f -! ;:' ': ? , r t : - - - i . i--- J r It - . - ; ----- - ...-4 . -w- i -- - COIJPLICT EI A STATS PHIS0II. i The'Louisville Courier gives the follow ing particulars of the insurrection at the Jefferson ville (Indiana) Penitentiary, briefly reported by telegraph: V ' '. ' !l' "A' desperate convict by! the name of George Henderson, who had been senten ced to four year's , imprisonment for grand larceny in the Southern Indiana! Penitenti ary, an old offender,' and the leader oi ah outbreak at the Joiliet Illiuois Penitenti ary, in which he acknowledged having kill ed the warden several years since, was re garded with suspicion by the officers of the prison as being in league with some ef the f rifthe prisoners for the purpose of in cuing them to mutiny. Iu the afternoon while the convicts were at work in fh wheel shops, where Henderson also u?- avvonieu, ne was detected by jlr. Sae, tSYir,d in charge of that department,in putting un . unusual keen edge upon his knife at the grindstone the convicts using these knives about their persons for noth ing else but to eat with, ordered him to give up. the knife a-d go on" with his work; whereupon he jumped upon Mr. Sage, making an attack with his knife, and would have succeeded in killing the officer but for the timely arrival of Mr. .Baugh, the guard under the wheel shops, who threw ofl the prisoner, at the same time' firing four ineffectual shots at him. the nrisoner escaping the shots by taking refuge behind a pile of waon wheels, but returtunirfipht by throwing heavy bars of iron at the of- ncers. Air. uaugn, tiudmg the pistol shoot ing of no effect, made an attack tvifh n wheelspoke, and with one.5 effectual blow succeeded r m telling . the convict to the tlOOr. During the -seen A th mmrrlc mnva promptly at their separate posts, exnectinn- at any moment an outbreak, which, through the vigilance of those efficient men, was Kept under entire subjection. Henderson, who was still resisting the officers, was fina,1y;;taIien 1 to: the whipping-post, arid abou t to have 'the; cat-o-nine-tails applied; when he was discovered to swoon. ; IL? was placed in his cell, suspected to be un der the influence of tobacco, which narcot ic had been successfully applied on previ ous occasions by this prisoner in swallow ing large quantities , of the .juice about the time a whipping was to come oft. Iri'an hour and a half, upon a visit to his cell, he was found a corpse. A nost mortem M-ami. nation was made by Dr.. McAride, of this city. The blow from which he is supposed tn tihxrn tcA wna naA a uuiiU . of the head,: producing a fracture of the skull bone. An inquest was held upon the body, and a verdict rendered of "justifiable homicide." THE ANIMALS OF BRAZIL. -vs-wu V U3 ItJUlLiLC:!! till 1 IIH. IMII. V 1 I I The second lecture by Professor Louis Agassiz, under the auspices of the 'Mer cantile Library Association of Brooklyn was delivered last Tuesday evening in tin Academy of Music of that citv; The sub ject was "The Animals of Brazil," on which . jr .j i' . i ' . -' ; -i ' ; - ne Qiscoursea ior neariy two nours in i vervv interesting and : instructive manner He remarked that in submitting a sketch of the animal world of South America he did not propose to enumerate the various kinds of animals which inhabited that portion of the continent. This would be only a tedi ous nomenclature. 1 He ' desired simply to present a. picture of tho , part which the animal tliere take , in the animal kingdom at present and in ; past times. There were only, four plans according to which the whole animal kingdom had been construct ed. The question was, what is the nature of the connection of animals constructed on one of these plans with those on another plan? Whether they; were linked together by a common descent or "whether their connection was a natural one; i Animals must be studiedl; anatomically as - regards their structure,: historically 'to know how they had grown up, and' whence they came bv their eeoirraphical distribution. These evidences went to Drove tha t one order of animals had not grown out' of another by a species. of deyelopment, but that each, as is found by fossil remains, was always the same- the fish to-day resembling those which existed in the formation of the pri mary strata of the earth. ' There were four plans on which all animals were builtthe radiates! molluskg, articulates and verte brates.; Explaining the points of difference and resempianco m ine construction oi va rious animals belonging, to : each of these orders, he proceeded to mention some ot the animals of Brazil. In our rivers here, for instance; the North river, were sturgeon, perch, pickerel, white fish, and in the lower part a, few; herrings, and" in some, of the tributaries, - trout., r .There" were pone of these in :the rivers of. Brazil. . Instead, of trout, they, had a fish resembling it some what, but with, a totally different organiza tion about the back bone, especially about the neck; arid the organ of hearing was different. So with ail theother represen tatives of thesef: "Among reptiles the same marked difference was observable. . There were lizards, salamanders, turtles, terrapins and harmless snakes. In Brazil there were no salamanders, a large number of lizards arid turtles, and snakes, ten, fifteen-and eighteen feetrrr in length andabdrit' the thickness of a thigh. .They had also a kind of fresh water turtle as large as the ordi nary green turtle. There . were vast num bp.ra of "riarrbta in v Brazil. Terv few deer. arid those very small; tapirs, wild boars and i am as," which have a famt 'rPmM.; some of the Northern animals. . In examin ing the structure 'of these, the naturalist could discover, so much beauty of form and wisdom.in the adaptation of parts that it was natural to believe they were, made by an intelligent cause by Him? who made man in the image of Himself, in or der that He might inquire into and under stand the -wonders of the material world: Trom the New York World, Jan. 17. THE STATE 0E ETJEOPE. . . The two 'great nucstions which nW n'fc present" engagincr the attention of tho Eu ropean statesmen are slowlv hut --sfMflilv approaching their final solution. In Tur- Key, tne resistance of the Christian popu lation totlie brutish desnotism nFth Turks has; since the beginning of the NevV :Year, largely crainexi in dimeusion and strength. It- is. no .longer Crete" alone which' is in arms. The smaller islands in the redlfpr- ranean have, followed the example set by v.vii iuici oisver, anu unueo 10 cnase the Turks " from the seav, Thd nrovince nf Thessaly, which borders 'upon Greece, is i , . 1U insurrection, and lurmshes a convenient , rendezvous for the great uuijiber of Greek youth who can no longer res rain their warlike patriotism. In Gree. the people, with an astonishing unanimity, are Dnnging an irresistible pressure to bear upon me urovernment m behalt of an open suilpdrt of their kindred and co-relimonists in flic Turkish provinces.' The schemes of ine Servians m JNort hern Turkey, who are tlie most warlike of all the CI arid "who constitute the bulk of the nonuln- tib n in the Provinces ofs.Servia. . Crnatin Bosnia, Herzegovina and Montenegro, are sou more ominous than'-th mntTomunf r - 1 ww IA V I V1J1 VtiV J I than the Cretan insurrection has done dur inr the past emht months. Russia is nuiet- ly ub firmly maturing her policy for the and France irresolutely confine themselves I to a declaration that they will not inter-! -uppiuauuiiig crisis, .wnue rn 21 and 1 T 1 . terp as long as Russia remains neutral. ' a European Conference, whicfi is now much talked of, has no more chance of success than.thc. late London Conference fnr fhp settlement, of the Schleswicr-Holstein diffi culty. According to present appearances. ine establishment ot one or two Christian empires upon tho ruins of the Mohamme dan power in Euronean Turkev is an ppnt - HJ n?1 7ar remote. 4. r- i - . t- .,.' - In Rome the people are ouietlv awaitinsr the call of the "committee of action." That this call will ere long be issued, andtthat it will be complied with bv nearlv the whole population of the Papal dominions,! j.nn 1. . 1..Ui.. fPI..' T1-' I ment, in the meanwhile, by new acts of in- tolerance acainst tho foreign Protestant res idents, and by its obstinate refusal to man ifest a conciliatory spirit toward the 'tjrov- . A. X - i !.1 l ! 11 . i - advances made by the latter, seem to be I eiuuiLwu. J.UWYV nocwicnstanama: au me anxious to destroy the last remainder of syfn- ...l. tu.i. 1.. .n ...;.t pathy that may yet be felt with it as a temporal power. f f ; ; v Germany is preparing for the meeting of the first North German i Parliament. We hare as yet no official account of the pro ceedings of the Plenipotentiaries assembled in Berlin. What has become known of the Prussian draft of a new German Constitu tion meets witli considerable, opposition but at the same time the conviction prevails generally that more or less unpopular pro visions .will hardly weaken Uhe impulse which the meeting of a Parliament elected by-universal suffrage ; will give to the'nat idqar unity movement. The idea of., a South Geniiaii Confederation has been al together abanuoned, and with Baden and Bavaria fooking avowedly toward a confed erative reunion with Prussia, Wurtemburg alone cannot stay out. ! i ' 5 . ; rl -The embarrassments of the Austrian Gov ernment are- jn nowise lessened. The Hun garian Diet; lias, by an almost unanimous voce, auopieu a qeciarauon against tno new military law cf, Austria, and the breach between Hungary and Austria is, therefore, a's-wide as-evcr. The new Rcichsfcih. which the Government has oidered to bo elected and to be jconyoked within a "few weeks, Will only tend to make the conflict more apparent, for the r differences between the several nationalities ; are still greater '.than those between, the Government of Austria and thej Magyars. Though trouble may riot be so imminent as in Turkey and,Rome, it is fully as sure to come at the proper time. " "' -; 1 : ! . ;'"-; - r " , ' France has sent out the last vessel of the squad ron that is to bring back . the expedi tionary, force from Mexico. It appears to b4 certain "that the Government will so far yield to , the popular: dissatisfaction with the new plan for reorganizing the army as WinCroduceimportant modifications. 'There is & strong current of pripu lar opiuion; that the" mili ta ry . f o r ce o f Fra n ce can no t b e made sufficiently powerful for 'azirressionr; C, f j .The. Fenian movement in Ireland "'is. for the present entirely suppressed; -The "re form agitation : in EngIand; on the other hand, is gaining strength, though it appears doubtful.whether it will soon lead to any practical result; 1 ; - - i v ; . i "' - - . Our interesting cotempoTary,t the I JJmtown Ini: Slinger, mentions1 the : interesting f fact that it has received, for publication an article from "A subscriber of tMrty-yeara standing," aiid that npoii reference to its books, it finds that his subscription acconnth.iqhrvm ci n- I ing'Tfor thirty -fiye years, atleasti . J r u t. i i tile Greeks in the South, -and the impend ing outbreak in Bosnia may, therefore, give uiu iui, 4w a iuw wutitvs. iiiuruirniin p I From the Kingstree Star 'of tlia StK : j' TETIRTBLE CATASTHOPHE, 1 We arecalled upon to record one of the most horrifying and melancholy accidents which has .ever, occuired within the limits of this State. M Though an accident wluch no caution or, foresight could avoid, , it will send , a .thrill of horror throughout the .whole - country.: On the evening o( the -7th instant between the hours of S and 9 P. M.J the occupant of the gail heard, very suddenly, a rumbling noise m the upper stories of the jail, as if the iron were being shaken, and immediately followed by the cry of fire. He rushed from his room, to ascertain whether tho jail was On fire Or not. arid aftiT wnlkintr mtin the jail he observed a little smoke issuing from "lie ui ine wioaows on the third floor. Hi next object wa3 to 'open the prison door and extinguish it. , but remembering that Mr. Barineau, who was the jailor, and who .was living several hundred yards from the jail, had the keys in" his possession, he (the occupant of the jail) immediately de spatched a messenger for him. Mr. Bari neau, accompanied by the sheriff, was soon at the jail. In the mean time, however, numbers of persons had collected." .The fire, apparency.! at this time had riot "made as rapid progress as was shown in a few min utes, although a dense smoke was issuing from every window. " The sheriff, with the assistance of nearly all the citizens in the village and the gar rison at this place, immediately took the most active measures to "save, .if possible, the unfortunate inmates:;. The door on the basement was opened, but the' dense and suffocating smoke prevented any one from rescuing those who occupied the third sto ry. As a last resort, strenuous etTorta then made, with the assistance of Jadders, to remove the grating from one of the win dows, which proved ineffectual.- t ; - , ' At this time the cries and screams of iht suffering inmates were heart-rending. The jaii was iu names, ano twenty-two Human h.iitrrn .TIL 1L 1" X a 1 .. ? beinS3 were being burnt to death: 'without any P08?iblo relief. Human agency, could D S ever7 effort was made to rescue tneni w,1cb could be suggested, but to no PurPos The devotiring flames Buuu uuiisumeu mem, and in the charred ruins is only; to be seen the ghastly specta Icle of bones'. " Horrible as the accident msv be, and as much to be regretted, a", conso- aiion I01IOW8 ot having done our. duty to the best ofpur abilities, and that accident is confined to no place or order of circum stances. ' ' -r---'f,-f From the Scientific Ameriaia. - ' r , TEA CULTU2E HI THE SOUTH. "Messrs. Editors: An artir.In m mnr I riS3Ue of December 22dr induces .me to se!T you 7- penence, etc., in the -tea culture. During the vvar I was living in Fayetteville N. CI and-there tried the tea plant with success The general "soil wi iiiau ecciiuu is eanuy, with an unaerstra- lam moJe or Ies deeP of cy. The seeds r ,7 w, Duc 8Prted welj, 1 and in March. ISfi?. T ha J nvor hnnAwaA - v ' m - aivjaiivji fine plants, averaeinx eiaht inchesin heinht. At that time my fence was destroved hv j the accidents of war. and I naid hur lifti! attention to the plants until June, when . ' I -v.w . i iound many still Uourishing. Dr.;Saml. J. Hinsdale, of that place, transplanted them to bis gardens .He has now many f ii .. ... .j give more full information of j his own ex perience. I know the seed were distributed oy nim, and that.dozens ot persons planted them. with success., i - - f J- " t (li TV .Q,-r.;fV r Ml rt .. .1 wamij, iicui vjiceiiviue, o. u., spent uch time 'and 'money experimenting with m the tea plant, but I'donot think the soil t,. UA I -.fxti' - At' a v - c "iu w-uuui vviiii sio gooa as mat iurther south', and east. He," however, said i that good tea could be produced there at a comparatively small price.' There is no doubt that thu3 growing the nlants is the only way it can be hadpure. ; 7 ; On the eastern shores of North Carol :;; ''tlfV. 1 Carolina! grows wild a name" no doubt derived from the-Yeopim Iridians to which " botanv has' iriveri thn uauiu jlivjl, jutoKiam ii, is very similar to the Matte (Ilex Far"aajai?is)o South :'A merica. It is crudely cured arid Jused "as a tea by the poorer classes and boatmen. Its chemical properties are similar to black tea, .. . T. f... .I... Ti -Li ' ;- . while its medicinal arc superior. As a se dative in fevers," it has no equal. In excess, it acts on the liver and also produces vomit ing. -The leaf is or the same size and shape as Chinese tea, and .from appearance no one can tell any difference in the two plants at eight ,or ten'.rnchcs high. " When full grown and large I think the yopon has a slightly thicker leaf; but of this I am not a fair judge,' as I have ; seen yopbn shrubs fifteen feet high, while I fiavc never seen a Chinese- tea plant more. than' two 'feet in bight.; I have no doubt but with equal nrA iVrTti"r!.Avrvfi-.',i.r,i.rf:i. 1 j .ui t,uo t iiu out uuuixtvuu VuruilUii WUIIIU make a tea as good as et er came from China, while, too, I have no doubt mnch bt the "pine barrens" of eastern 4orth Carolina mishtbe made to vield an immense nmfifc. cultivated in tea plants.'4 Thousand of acres r u 1 j e l' l ii . . t. trees, can be bought at from $1 toS3 per acre. : Brooklyn, L. I. - f ' , IL E. C. uuo anu large snruus oi the tea 'tree, and i '"""l-u lu j'.viura oauu oi -masKers. has prepared tea therefrom. The soil' oft -ter drinking five glassesof absinthe in afc that section is well adapted to the growth j cae on theBoulevards, he betook himself ri of the plant, and land c an be bought there I t0 lnc I'ont des Arts, ; which he scaled to very .cheap. I "presume Dr.? Hiiisdala'could Perm l,is last pirouette, h i..n jrirpmnrft full infrirmntinrt nf.li nn.n' . 1 ! ..ill ' ' ' ...:"'-'-- ':. ... ua Butu lauu, jroai wmcu, .1110 .turpentine necessity" is once was, to our commercial" has been worked, can be bought for2j or. I public.; The river can never again, wheth- " 50, cents? an acre, . while . much .equally fit j cr it continues navigable or not, csunie';,' for corn.1 etc... with turpentine and t?mhr!thf imnortance it n! hithprfn nKvrrT in - Frcn the VAX Hull Rf. i smcirs or a huhah iiorcTis. .The Paris papers cl " - :- . f lUtf one who was for. some rears uotoriousJaa particular section of Parisian society; v It break of day following the Iastopc?ra ball masque a strange looking figure waVsecn1 to lean for a moment or two over the part-1 pet of the Pont des Arts and then fo iumpf mtothe river. Vfahprnvin i the incident, after long searching brought' " the body to the surface of the water. .. En veloped na it was. from head to foot in a, long hairy covering it seemprl f firef Air-if 1 to be an ape, but was soon recognized as d uuman oemg. Attempts were made to re-' store animation, but in vain. In one of the : pocketsbf the unknown the following letter was found, which 'bcl'pcd'to 'clear up the, mystery: " 7 It is useless to attemnf in infl(r mV " I am the descendant of a noble family, -whom my fullies have dishonored. All my patrimony is dissipated, and I prefer suicide to misery. - to those who affirm that it is necessary to be bravo to kill oneself, I re ply that absintho mves conraorp. t nm drunk; it is thus that I ought to die. ; I nave been surnamed "Caoutchouc;" let" mo be buried under this name. , Mnv mi-death serve as an example to youth.-CAOuxcuouc. , V.AOCTCUOCC, says the Pans papers, wars the old Count Chicard of modern public " balls. Ilia reputation extended from the Chateau Rouge to Mabille," and. from the casino to the opera. There was always a -crowd to see him dance and it was certain-'' !y an extraordinary performance. In! ap pearance he was far from prepossessing; he had a coarse, brutal-looking face, pulled and pimpled by debauchery; his dull, lustre- less eyes had an odious leer, and his swol len, rickety figure also told the tale of ex- cesses. But dull nd listless as be seemed i in thc intervals of the dance, the music no ; sooner struck up than a sort of fury seemed ' X . - I , , T-T- ... . . ...... iu seizs mm. lie writhed, and. bounded; like a madman, in a quadrille his .steps were so many convulsions; , none of tho , clowns of the "Cirque" could dislocate their; limbs after the fashion .of -Caoutchouc in the figure of 'cavallier sieul." .Ho had a -method of shortening himself, of flatten in tr' hhrself, of balancing himself on his hips, of1 bounding about a la Quassmodo, which thrilled the wild Bohemians among whom ' he danced with enthusiasm and envy. Tho cancan is prohibited by the austere morality " of the Empire, but Chicard managed to in-'; troduce snatches of it in defiance of the pch lice. Altogether this old "builbonold,,atL least, in looks, with his bald head and pirn-: pled face, his frenzied contortions, his faor- I rid drunken leer and lewd gestures was one of the saddest and most- disgusting-4 spectacles that Paris had to offer. ' ; This year Caoutchouc was at the head-cf " the orgies of the masked balls of the opera, where he excelled himself, so his admirers said, in the wild cccciitricities of the. quad-" rille. ' On Saturday, the 22df disguised c an qurang-outang, he exhibited belore ; tlio; r crowds in tho theatre of the Rue Lbpelle- -i tier the marvellous elasticity of his bodr. He leaped on the shoulders of his compau- ions, springing from one to the other with " all the ease and more than the mischievous ncss of a Brazilian ape." At 5 o'clock in the morning he was dead. ' On leaving the opera Caoutchouci:dc DRYHI3 UP OF THE HIS5IS3IPPI. Old steamboat men declare, that tti kicMrtW"5 f it. . x ' . . O .; j w ine pat lour.or uvc seasons point to the permanent 'drying up, of..,' the ; Mississippi Ri ver, reducing it from a stream, navigable. , , for the largest boats the whole 6ca5ou;to one of uncertain, navigation, like the Mis-- souri, passable at certain seasons; and the v rest Of the year shrunk to a mere' creek, winding along among sand bars and shoals Thcre is certainly some change taking place 1 in our climate that is affectin? orir l-ikpi and ; rivers. They are greatly di ffercnt in men iiauua iu wiiai, iiiey vv ere uigiivy year ago. - The average of water, i3 gradual" decreasing. v. .Our 'June, rise,' once a3;cer v-. tain as the coming of the month, has to h tally ceased. . The heaviest rains, I which " once would have swelled the river several fl feet, now do not seem to affect - it iri the ' least. 4 !' 7 " ." '" ' :': . ; ' ,;' " 4 " - - "? plain this.' One is, that the climate 13 un-1, dergoing some change, which seems plausi- bler as those who have studied the. mete orology of our State are convinced that - this change is taking pl.-ice. f Another the- 'j bry is that ;the cultivation of-' the country,' " ' destructionof the forests," arid other phy-Y'". sical - causes have tended to decrease t " rainiaii, and retard .the tlowing ot the extra . moisture into the streanWy ' Z " Whatever "mav be the cause, the "cfTpcf: "1 certamlv pxisfs. and the. samr thinT . hn . been on all the Western rivers, which are - a gradually shrinking up. In our case, how- ever, the evil is less to be feared; because nnr rni!rn?id RVStem i3 nprirlw r'proUmxr? Vs that t w . . . . v I . w w . 1 V.1WIW&'LVJ. . ft .X ' . . . St. Paul Pioneer. . ix ; ; .... " 1119 111 v 1 11 riP'i . 11 U!ir 1 " 1 1