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No. 222 T H E M O V I N G W O U L D . F a c t s a n d E v e n t s . E ^ ° The San Francisco Sanitary F air is to have a cheese which will weigh thirty-live hundred pounds. E^f” The yield of anthracite coal in Penn sylvania this year has been 57,409 tons over the same period of 1868. G3f“ A gay youth at Stafford, Conn., aged seventy-five, recently led to the altar a blush ing maiden of twenty-three. (pgP The oil wells of Pennsylvania have produced 554,000 barrels of petroleum since February, 1S62. £-jT* A report from the Secretary of War states the number of Colonels in command of brigades at 162. A lady recently issued cards for a sup per party, and had “ No butter” printed on them. The Sanitary Commission and its agents cry loudly for potatoes, onions, and pickles, for the soldiers. £5F* The stock o f sugar in the British ware houses has been rapidly increasing for the last three years, and is greater now than it ever was before. E l p The expenses of the late Sanitary Fair in this city amounted to twenty-five per cent, of the gross receipts. So much for a fashiona ble af-fair. Confederate paper, when it passes at all in Texas—and it has long ceased to be current in the Valley of the Rio Granee—goes at three cents per dollar. EW1 The Mobile Register urges the rebel authorities to take measures to hold out in ducements to the colored Union soldiers—fu gitives from slavery—to desert. p ^ ° Idaho, the new Territory, lies between Washington Territory on the north, and Col orado and Utah on the south, and Oregon and Nevada to the west—Dakotah and Nebraska being its eastern boundaries. At Knoxville our Government is now issuing one thousand rations daily to indigent citizens. They are offered free transportation, and are required to leave for the North within fourteen days, or cease to demand rations. p g p Henry Folsom, of St. Louis, has do nated to tbe Mississippi Valley Fair a sword worth 81,500. The Folsom sword is to be got off in the same manner as those of the New York Fair. It is remarked as strange, that, in the summary of the political news regularly given in the Paris M o n iteu r , no mention is made of the presence of Garibaldi in England, nor of the festivities in his honor. C2P In a very short time the old English copper coinage will be declared an illegal tender. This may be useful information for us, as English half-pence have got much mixed up with our American cents. p g r If anybody asks Mr. Lincoln anything about the movements of the army, he replies : “ Ask General Grant.” And if the rejoinder is made. “ Gen. Grant will not tell me,” he says farther : “ Neither will he tell me.” p g r The fashionable thing in England just now is to run over to Denmark or Germany and “ see the war.” The headquarters of both armie3 are crowded with English travel ers, drawn thither merely by curiosity. £§r* Mayor Henry, of Philadelphia, has ordered tne ringing of tbe State-House bell on the occasion of every fire to be discontinued. The firemen are now summoned by telegraph only, and the new method is said‘to answer extremely well. d p An Ohio paper tells of one Captain Stanton Sholes, who had been bald fifty years, but who, at the age of ninety-two, after a se vere headache, had a new crop of hair, of rapid growth, which is now thick, silken, white, and long—30 long that it is combed back from the forehead and tied with a ribbon at the neck. d P Any person may astonish a parlor full of company by brushing his feet briskly along the carpet for a moment, and then applying his finger to a jet of gas. An electric spark is given off, and the gas is instantly lighted by it. If be should touch a heap of powder, it would explode. The Scientific A m e r ica n knows a man who does the principal part of bis advertising by writing bis name and business on the back of bank-bills. Perhaps he is not aware, that, in case those banks whose note8 he thus in dorses were to break, he could be held re sponsible for the face of the note. Courts have so decided in similar cases. d P The loyal women of Boston have held a private meeting, preliminary to the formation of a League to retrench expenditures and to discourage foreign importations. They put into the covenant, however, this little qualifi cation : “ Without renouncing such foreign articles as we deem necessary for health and comfort, yet to give the preference to the pro ducts of our own country.” d T - The stomach of Thomas McEvan, who died suddenly, was examined by a physician, and found to contain alcohol, turpentine, and COpper '.—the lattpr of which was sufficient to cause death. McEvan had been drinking rum and ale in different shops. The verdict of the jury declared that the deceased came to his death “ by drinking poisonous liquors and ale.” E3^ The following was posted in his house, a few days since, by a Poughkeepsie business man: “ H e a d q u a r t e r s , House of “ G e n e r a l O r d e r , No. 1. — J\ u l i a : Until the price falls, no more butter will be used in our family. ' J a m e s . He had hardly reached his counting-house, when a special messenger handed him this : “ J a m e s : Until butter is reinstated, no more tobacco will be used in this house. “ J u l i a , Chief of Staff. It is said that butter won. P e r s o n a l Ite m s . £2T* Dr. Bellows preached in Starr King’s church on Sunday, 1st inst., lor the first time. (pgr* John G. Saxe, the poet, continues seri ously ill at his residence, in Albany. d T ’ Lieut. Burns, who absconded from Louisville with 818,000 Government money, has been arrested at Montreal, C. W. Gen. Grant was born in Clermont county, Ohio, April 2S, 1822, and is, conse quently, 42 years old. The Prince of Wales is to preside at the Royal Literary Fund dinner at St. James’ Hall, this mouth. £3?“ Thomas Motley, father of the historian, and a man greatly respected and beloved, re cently died in Boston, N o tes o f P r o g r e s s . E^f* Amsterdam is to be connected by a canal with the North Sea. Several breweries at Chicago have been closed by tbe United States Assessor. d T ' M. Bardoux, of Poitiers, has invented a method of making paper from wood and other vegetables without the aid of rags. £3F* The young ladies of Do Witt, Clinton county, Iowa, have Resolved , That we will d p Captain Todd, cousin of Mrs. Lincoln,: not countenance or keep company with any and formerly Confederate provost marshal at i young man that drinks beer or ale, or any in- Alexandria, has arrived within the Federal j toxicating drinks, as a beverage, lines with his family, and given himself up. .. .. e . _ ^ | The annual Meeting of the Religious (pgr* King Victor Emanuel, who is a great Society of Progressive Frieuds will be held at friend ofthe chase, has received twenty stags Lougwood, near Iiamorton, Chester County, William S. Thayer, United States Con sul General for Egypt, died at Alexandria on the 10th of April, after a long illness. PSP Rev. Dr. McClintock, who has been pastor of the American Chapel in Puri3 for four years, returned again to this country in the Scotia. £2T* Mr. Richard Westmacott, Royal Acade my, Professor of Sculpture, is engaged upon “ A Iland-Book to the Principal Schools of Sculp ture, Ancient and Modern,” which will be pub lished by the Messrs. Black, of Edinburgh. Casts of the heads of the Indian chiefs in Washington have been made by Mr. Mac- gowan for the American Ethnological Society. On measuring the heads Dr. Macgowan found them to be of greater average size than those of Americans. The first Indian whose cast was taken, showed a bead larger, a whole inch in every direction, than that of Secretary Chase, which is itself of immense size. from Calitornia. They cost, voyage and all, little less than three thousand francs apiece. £2p” “ Lieu.” Maury is getting into bad odor with his quandam scientific brethren. The National Academy of Science has reported against the continued publication of his “ wind current” charts and “ sailing direction,” as his system is faulty and bis philosophy unsound. Among the latest gossip from Paris is the story that one of the arrangements of Lord Clarendon, on the occasion of his late sojourn at the Tuileries, was to prepare the Sense and Nonsense. Pa., on Thursday, June 2, commencing at 10 o’clock. The meeting will probably continue for three days. £3^°The ladies in Indiana are volunteering in large numbers to supply the places of clerks who have volunteered ior one hundred days’ service. They engage to serve for $13 a month, the merchants being required to pay their clerks their salaries during their ab sence, with this deduction. way for an early visit of the Prince of Wales to the Emperor. C3P The palm of patriotism belongs to the family of Wm. Mercer, residing in the vicinity of Bainbridge, Ross County, Ohio, who has eight sons and one grandson in tbe army. Their average weight is 210 pounds, and hight six feet. It is as absurd to live without an aim as to shoot without one. C JP It is easy to look down on others ; to look down on ourselves is the difficulty. E^jpWhy is a widower like a house in di lapidation ? He wantsfto be re-paired. E3f**There is frozen music in many a heart that the beams of encouragement would melt into glorious song. “ Would you like to subscribe for Dickens’ Household Words?” inquired a magazine agent. “ Household Words have played the dickens with me long enough,” was the feeling reply. d p The saying of a White Mountain stage- driver to a New Yorker sitting by him—“ I s’pose if I went to New York I should gawk around just as you folks do here ” bad. Mr. Cisco’s Oath. A LESSON TO O ^ E R S A3 W ELL. EUpHappiness may grow at our fireside, but is not to be picked up in our neighbor’s £3§P' It is said that Dr. Evans, a loyal American, is the dentist of the chief crowned heads of Europe. Napoleon has particularly favored him with his confidence, and Evans t has used his influence against the recognition I garden.* of the Southern Confederacy. f i , e rx i a \ ESIfTunch says that it has been proposed ^ Before his departure from England, I tQ lax stfty8) butJ it was objected 0i; tbe Garibaldi visited E.on College, and his re- i ground that il would diminish consumption, ception by the boys is described as having j b 1 been of a boisterously enthusiastic character. E2§PAs the best tempered sword is the most His carriage, as he 'drove around the quad- j flexible, so the truly generous are the most rangle of the College, was literally beseiged ! pliant and courteous to their inferiors. b y hundreds of the youthful gentry of which I ^ w h do tbe recriminations of married the school is composed. couples resemble the sound of waves on the News comes from Turin that Italy has j shore ■ Because they are murmurs ofthe tied. lost one of her rising statesmen, upon whose , « What cburcb do you attend, Mrs. Parting- future career great hopes were founded. M. ; ton?;} « 0h) any paraciox cburch where the Pasini died almost suddenly two or three g0£pei ;s dispensed with.” days ago. He was a Venetian, a personal | friend of Manin. and the representative of his j EST' A Dutchman’s u^art-rending soliloquy Mr. John W. Hunter, an assistant in the New York Sub-Treasury, wa3 recently arrest ed on the charge of forgery. John J. Cisco, tbe Assistant U. S. Treasurer, testified in the was not j strongest terms possible to the hand-writing j of Mr. Hunter. In his reckless and almost E2T3 A learned and ingenuous foreigner. I ma(^ arahition to screen the office, ho swore he having visited England, and being asked bow ] lcne,v the signature to be that of Mr. Hunter, he liked the Engiish, said: “ They resembie a arid would not believe otherwise though the ?hv a°t theVfrT ! ft!e- frl°* ^rger himself ehould confess the deed tby at the top, dregs at tbe bottom, but the TTnrl Mr Hnntar e • n .. middle part excellent.” j Mr- hunter been friendless, no matter itxss -= ~ a <• how innocent, such testimony—unless, indeed, ^ A very deaf old lady got into a state of its very pertinacity and vehemence bud de- friend, “ and what, then, is it moves you so ?” I. °*>e re3ca®- The po33ible picture of an “Oh, sir,” said the venerable devotee, “it is the Ilnnocenfc victim, his family disgraced by the bobbing of bis blessed wig.” careless oath of one well known in commu- E2T When I am in pecuniary difficulties,” I ®f?alls and .shu0uld bauat Mr Ci8co’s id R npnsiv« h.inWnnt “ m/ e.rH.n I dr®a“ 8 for many a night. Happily a good name and able counsel with the right on their side, prevailed. Mr. Cisco’s testimony was discredited by securing his acknowledgment of a forgery of his own signature! The check signatures of Mr. Hunter, too, enlarged by that blessed child of the sunlight, photography—whose manifold . . — £- ------ works of beauty are gladdening us now at ev- look bj quietly remarking, with a glance at ery step-showed clearly separate strokes of her voluminous crinoline, “ I occupy four!.uQ ,,, , seats, sir.” the Pen, whereby they were cobbled and I patched. So the innocent escaped unharmed. Did he not make several visits after j May Mr. Cisco and all others learn the lesson ^ L f f ea f M a80“ ‘ - 0( da” «er?” ™ H not to be too positive, especially when such question of a lawyer in a cross examination o f! interests are at stake a witness called to prove a doctor’s oill, in | mterest3 are at stake- one of our courts a few days ago. “ No,” r e - ! . plied the witness, “ 1 thought the patient was I The Prohibition, in danger as long as be continued his visits.” Secretary Stanton has withdrawn bis for- d P A reporter of the Poughkeepsie Sani-' mer secretive policy in regard to news from tary Fair says: “ Passing through one of the j the battle-field, which formerly caused such halls a placard caught my eye : ‘ Representa- needless impatience to the loyal North We l„a fl,0“ a' fiJe Historical Event; persons 1 are abie, now. t0 get telegrams iron, the varl- taken in tor ten cents.’ I sallied in. A voun</! i v.- > . lady pulled n bone across a huge piece o l ham ° “ 8 >°calme3 where ° ur arm’e3 ^ stat.oned, , rind, which she was pleased to inform me rep-1 almost as 300n as tae Secretary himself. I resented Bonaparte crossing the Rhine.” - ---------------- I E^” “ And ye have taken the teetotal | Health and Luxury. I pledge, have ye ?” said somebody to an Irish- ! The most luxurious and invigorating Bath j mam “ Indade I have, and am not ashamed j known, either for invalids or thosS in health, in aitkeF-\ ‘' And did not Paul tell Timo- connection with Electricity, is the Oriental thy to take a l.ttle wtne for his stomach’s Vapor Bath-nnder the supervision of Mrs. Giddings for ladies, and Mr. George R. Allen for gentlemen—at No. 364 Sixth Avenue. To the healthy these Baths are a luxury; to the sick they are a source of health. said a pensive bankrupt, “ my garden, my flowers, all fresh and sparkling in the morning, console my heart.” “ Indeed!” said his sympathizing friend, “ I should have thought they would have reminded you of your trouble, for like your bills, they are all over dew.” m *A sensible woman has been found in Chicago in a street car. Handing four fares to the conductor, she answered his puzzled sake?” “ So he did; but my name is not Timothy, and there is nothing the matter with my stomach.” ESP A clergyman, who was consoling a young widow upon the death of her husband, spoke in a very serious tone, remarking that “ He was one of the few. You cannot find his equal, you know.” To which the sobbing fair one replied, with an almost broken heart, “ I don’t know, but I’ll try.” Publishers' Notices. government in Paris. I is described thus : “ She loves Shon Mickle so I petter as I, because he has coople tollars more I “ Oh,” said he, “ excuse me as I has. —The H e r a l d o f P r o g r e s s is worthy a far more extensive circulation. The burden £2? A gallant gentleman of the old school, of increasing our list, if borne by all our read- in one of the Boston city rail cars the other I u . T . day gave his seat up to a lady, who, as is al- J e ’ u Terjf sma*1- Bet us mention one most always the case under like circumstan- ' or two methods : ces, failed to make the proper acknowledg- —Send the names of all persons likely to be ment. Standing awhile after the car had •„ „ i ■ , . moved on, he stooped over as if to listen, and , Permanently interested »n such a journal, that I said to her, “ What did you say, madam ?” we ma7 forward specimen copies. Nothing, sir, was the reply o fthe startled lady. —If possible, subscribe for some one or L i t e r a r y , S c i e n t i f i c , a m i A r t i s t i c . JST ’ Mr. J. P. Bailey, author of that re markable poem, “ Festus,” is preparing a vol ume of minor poems for publication. £ 3 p A bust of Thackeray will, it is said— through the interposition of Mr. Dickens and other literary men—be placed in the “ Poet’s corner” in Westminster Abbey. pgp The Academy of Fine Art3 at Rotter dam will open an exhibition from May 8 to June 5 for all objects of art by Dutch or for eign artists. CStT’ The long-promiseif English edition of the Poem s o f M r . M a c k w o r tli P r a e d , is an nounced for publication by Messrs. Moxon & Co. said, ‘ Thank ’ee.’ ; ElTWoUaire says: “ A physician is an un fortunate gentleman who is every day called upon to perform a miracle—to reconcile health to intemperance.” An Irish guide told Dr. Sam Johnson, who wished for a reason why Echo was al ways of the feminine gender, that “ May be it was because she always had the last word.” E ^ T f some of our conservative men had been present at the creation, they would have said : “ Good God ! what is to become of chaos ?” d P G r ie f knits two hearts in closer bonds than happiness ever can; and common suf ferings are far stronger links than common joys. E ^ \ The library of the Duchess of Berri j ^ A little four-year-old, the other day, has been sold at auction, to pay debts incurred , ^o n l u s e d his mother by making the following by the Duchess while speculating on the Pa- inquiry: Mother,if a man is a mister, ain’t ris stock exchange. The collection included a woman a mystery . thirty-two precious illuminated manuscripts. E ^ ** The authorities at Cambridge have appointed Rev. J. E. B. Mayor to the post of University librarian. Tbe great biographic al knowledge of this gentleman is widely known. Prof. Hofman, of London, has patented a process for making a new coloring matter by means of iodine extracted from sea-weed, and which produces a beautiful violet, blue violet, or red violet. The patented process consists of mixing in certain proportions the substance called rosanline with the iodides of ethyl, G2sF* A Quaker hearing a person tell how much he felt for another who was in distress and needed assistance, dryly asked him, “ Friend, hast thou felt iu thy pocket for him?” J thought you more 0f sucb persons, forwarding pay for six months. A few weeks ago, the workmen em -; —Instruct the newsdealer in your town or ployed upon the Dome ofthe Capitol at Wash- . . , . ington, discovered that a dove was making vicinit7 t0 order one or two copies, pledging her nest in the ample sleeve of the brazen yourself to pay for the copies unsold at the end of three months. —Finally, talk about the paper, write about it, think about it, and decide whether the Pub lishers shall not be aided in their efforts to double the subscription list. p F * A shrewd negro went into a menag- | —We have received a supply of Miss arie, in which was a large baboon in a cage. Sprague’s Poems, which we can furnish in any He approached the cage closely, while the ba- . boon went through several gyrations, such as quantity. nodding and shaking his head, holding out I —Our readers who may wish any work they bis bands to shake. Sc., to the evident delight I sce adyertised can order it of as direct, and of both negro and baboon. Finally the baboon „ , tl . . . ’ ( seemed so intelligent and knowing, the negro j w m case3 1)6 promptly supplied. M here j addressed him some remarks, which the ba- i it is possible, give tbe name of the publisher boon only answered by a nod of the head. At and price of the book. As we purchase at length the negro was still more delighted, and I , , , , „ . . broke forth with the remark: “ You’r© right; ! wholesale, we can make a small margin of don’t open your mouth, kase if you spokes a ! profit, and still furnish the book at the pub- Day after day, week after week, this industrious bird, with the assistance of her mate, was observed to fly back and forth, while gathering the materials necessary for | the purpose. Her home is now established in the sleeve of Liberty, and in due time she will ! send her broodlings forth into the world. G2Flt is said that the rebel guerrillas have killed and carried off more than 50,000 hogs on the Kansas border. A fact which proves conclusively, says an exchange, that the sw o rd is mightier than the pen. A priest said to a peasant whom he thought rude: “ You are better fed than “ Should think I was,” replied the clod-hop- per, “ as I feeds myself and you teaches me.” .ethyl, or amyl. E 3 T The New* National Gallery in London will cost, it is estimated. £150,000. It will “ I can’t imagine why my whiskers consist, if sanctioned as designed, by Parlia- turn gray so much sooner than the hair on my ment, of seven parallel galleries, nine hun- j head,” said an alderman. “ Because you have dred feet in length and forty feet in width, and j worked your jaws so much harder than your the same in hight; while the vista3 will be brains,”, observed a wag. A little scholar when asked to define chaos, answered, that it was “ a great pile of uninterrupted from end to end. The Iron Mountain of Missouri exactly in the geographical center of the United States. It is almost a solid mass of iron ore, rising from a level plain 260 feet. Its base covers 500 acres. The ore contains 67 per cent, of iron, and yields one ton of pig for two tons of ore. It is supposed that the mountain was deposited by chemical action, and that it was raised during the azoic pe riod. £ W Dr. Lardner says : “ It is a startling fact that if the earth were dependent alone upon the sun for heat, it would not get enough to keep in existence animal and vegetable life upon its sur face. It results from the researches of Pouil- let that the stars furnish heat enough in the course ofthe year to melt a crust of ice sev enty-five feet thick—almost as much as is sup plied by the sun. The surprise vanishes when we remember that the whole firmaments is so thickly sown with 8tar3 that in some places thousands are crowded together within a space no greater than that occupied by the full moon. From the first to the sixth magnitude inclu sive, tbe total number of visible stars is 3,128.” nothing, and nowhere to put it.” Another, being asked to define slander, said it was “ when nobody did nothing and somebody went and told on’t.” C5F*During tbe Battle of Shiloh, an officer hurriedly rode up to an aid and inquired for Grant. “ That’s him with the field-glass,” said the aid. Wheeling his horse about, the officer furiously rode up to the General, and touching his cap, thus addressed him : “ Shen- eral, I vants to'make oue report: Schwartz’^ Battery is took.” “ Ha,” said tho General, “ how was that?” “ Veil, you see, Sheneral, de t—d sheshesionist come up in front of us, de t—d sheshesionists flanked us, and de t—d sheshesionists come in de roar of us, and Schwartz’s Battery vas took.” “ Well, sir,” said the General, “ you of course spiked the guns.” “ Vat!” exclaimed the Dutchman in astonishment, “ sclipike dem guns—schpike dem new guns! No, it would schpoil dem !” “ Well,” said the General, sharply, “ what did you do?” “ Do! vy, we took dem- back again!” * word the white man will have a shovel in your hand in less dan a minit .”— M em p h is B u lletin. (iSsF*A selfish man, by tho force of selfish ness, sinks'sooner or later, because it is the law of God which always compels selfishness in the long run to fail. But a man whose motives are beyond himself—by the law of God—lives forever: for, like the mountain stream, his life flows and mixes itself with the mass of human interest beyond; aud thus, the greatness of a motive will come to be de- I termined by its relationship to the universal man, and by its conformity to the sublime wisdom of Providence. £21f*A grand jury in Rebeldora ignored a bill against a negro for stealing chickens, and [ before discharging him from custody, the Judge bade him stand reprimanded, and he concluded thus : “ You may go now, John, but let me warn you never to appear here again.” John, with delight beaming in his eyes, and a broad grin displaying a beautiful row of ivory, replied,“ I wouldn’t bin hero dis time, Judge, only a constable fetch me.” An amusing incident is related of a woman in England whose husband, a very wealthy man, died suddenly without any will. I The widow, desirous of securing the whole I property, concealed her husband’s death, and persuaded a poor shoe-maker to take his place while a will could bo made. Accord ingly, he was closely muffled up in bed as if | very sick, and a lawyer was employed to write the will. The shoe-maker, in a feeble voice, j bequeathed h a lf of all the property to the wid ow. “ What shall be done with the remain der?” asked the lawyer. “ The remainder,” 1 replied he, “ I give and bequeath to the poor little shoe-maker across the street, who has always been a good neighbor and a deserving securing a rich bequest for him self! The widow was thunderstruck with tho man’s audacious cunning, but did not dare to j expose the fraud; and so two rogues shared the estate. lishers’ price. “ W o m a n a n d H e r E r a . ” PROVIDENCE AGENCY. Mrs. J. C. Kenyon has been appointed agent for the sale of Mrs. Farnham’s new work, in Providence, R. I., and sample copies may be seen at S. W . Shaw’s, No. 42 West minster Street; also at No. 47 South Main Street—where subscriptions for the books will be received. Those of our readers in Providence who have not yet procured copies, will bo supplied by leaving their address at either of the above places. S p e a k e r s a s A g e n t s . We frequently receive letters from lecturers in the field, to this effect: “ I f I was author ized, I could procure subscribers to tho H e r a l d o f P r o g r e s s . ” In answer to all such communications, we wish to say to lecturers and the public: that every lecturer, and every man, woman, aud child in the United States, is not only author ized, but specially requested to act as agent, and procure subscribers to the H e r a l d o f P r o g r e s s . It has been our invariable practice to pub lish the appointments of all speakers, when we could learn them, whether specially “ author ized” or not. We submit that no harm can come from lecturers assuming the responsi bility and aiding the cause by reciprocating the favor.