American Volunteer, FU KVBIIY THURSDAY MORNING r .VTTON te K ENNKBY (CB-Sorin JIAIIHET SQUARE, Ta-n Dinars nor vear If paid strictly H l .Ttrn Dollarsand Fifty rent* If pair! Innths: after which Three Dollars . 'fiiosa farms will ho rltridly ad ,c*fv Instance. , No subscription diS inntH arrearages are paid, unless at j rt ifPs(«foiinl (ffarDa. claim " . AND ;; ESTA TE' A G ENG YI jl. B. BUTLER, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Rtnryuf InhoflTs Building, No.3South !irect, Carlisle, Cumberland county Bounties, Back Pay. &c., promptly ons by mall, will receive Immediate ralientlon given to the .selling or rent h) lowii or country. In all lot iry, please enclose postage stamp. to—tr . )H. GRAHAM, Jit., torney at law, [).H bOTim HANO.VER ST., CARLISLE.'I>A. Adjoining Judge Graham’s. IblU-tf lELTZIIOOVKU, :OliNB Y~A T-LAW, CAKLISLE. Pa. on Snath Hanover Street, opposite goods tUore. fCH & PARKER, kttorskyhat law. • lidn Street, lu Marion Hall, Oar- SHEARER. Attorney and ■iKLi.ou at Law, has removed his unoccupied room in the orner of the Court House. IN BUY, Attdunky at Law <lc. Peiiiin. Oilluo same us tlmtol d volunteer.” /HUE S. SEAKIOHT, Den mm the Sal/i mitre Cnlleyc of Dental lint the residence of tils mother sireef, three doors below Bedford a, ' , iita ano vSaps HARR I V A L pT AT.Ii THE A NIP STYLES SAND CAPS. ior tms .lust opened at A T o. 15 North a few doors North of the Carlisle one of the largest and best Slocks ‘AP3 over offered In Carlisle, .v-imeroof all styles and qualities, iltirent colors, and every descrip ts now made. /I mid Old Fashioned Brush, con iluml made to order, all wamint ifueMon. \ full assoUment of S. BOY’S, AND. CHILDREN’S, HATS. Jed to my Stock, notions of diflor sbliny of , d) GENTLEMEN’S STOCKINGS , Su-tpoUTrra, 4 Gloves, ilx, - Thread, Scwlhq Silk, Umhrc Uas t & EOARS AND TOBACCO . LWAYB ON HAND. I, ftinl examlno my stock as I feel using all, besides saving you mo- JOHN A. KKhLftCi; Affent, No. 16 North Hanover Street, CAPS I INT A NICE HAT OR CAP ? Don’t Pail to Call on G.CALLIO, WES 7 MAIN STREET, win the finest assortment of S AND CA P S i.'aiiMe. Ho takes groat pleas liis old friends, and customers, !s,to his splendid stock Just re nv York and Philadelphia, con »f lino ’» CABSIMERE HATS. less variety of Hats and Caps of | all of which he will seU ul the F-’. Also, ids own manufacture fnhand.and fUPACTUKED TO ORDER, it arrangement for coloring Hats oiilen Goods. Overcoats. &c., at K* (as ho colors every week) and lomihle terras. Also, a fine lot oi 00 AND CIGARS He desires to oftll thoattentlon I NT II Y F UKS ■ • i the highest cash prices for he l.at the'above number, his »ld comment of giving entire sa ,is- 0 anti jotjons. btONhXjKB, n»h Hanover Street , iRLIBLE, PA. ■a >o patronage extended! them }j usual lame $ STYLES of AND SHOES % FOR MISSUS 1 1 W AND ROYS’, . YOUTHS’ AND’CITILDS’, jftled'Jor comfort and beauty AND VALISSES, DUBOVS’ HATS, hie sold at small profits, Oall It 'i full equivalents for your A. HARRIS, Mono. or of the city of Hams ‘-•iiKeii a United States lONBER, Hand county, and would take r uV 1 . V* s bis friends that ho Is o VLEtJ, upon tlio moat Rea- 3s oxperienco ns an JS himself upon giving en £j I' mi pnrUes wiio may engage fig i,/ 11 y b>nn B will bo made us S 111 orders Juft at llio |j k Mn house, I or at tho 3 E K ’ B OFF [CE, dtcaded to: or address, t| F. A. HARRIS, Carlisle, Pa. N Jiil'E IVO SALE SABLE s OVEIi AND BEDFOUF'ST., iR OF BENTZ HOUHK RLIRLE,, PA. ■l> the suable with now Carrl jo'l'urcd to furnlsn llrst-olass Jimblo rules, Panics taken o April 25,1807— 3y • . • ,t 11;1 Vi t 4 AI; .1. 4 1 • 4 • „ L IL ie 4.2 C . • k E • •••, • •• • 1 2 . A , . • , „ • • ,• • , •4., 4 *P:. • 111 1 e"•• • , , • BY BRATTON & KENNEDY. Bcv (Boons, GOODS! NEW GOODS!! AT THE CHEAP DM GOODS STORE, D, A. SAWYER, Opposite (he Marl-et ilousc, Hns just opened a largo and well selected stock FALL AND WINTER D R Y GOOD S embracing every variety of design and fabric. Black Silks, Colored Wilks, Hllk Poplins. French Poplins, Empress and .Mixed Poplins, Wool ■Helges, Wool imps, Veloms, Victoria Plaids Stuart and Kob Itoy Plaids, Colored Poplins A?! piteous. A superb!) brnnd of black Alnaccas Siicl mYboT.mrkel. U,, “' e ’ aml pnco e *°“ ,s DOMESTIC GOODS, MUSLINS, 8, 10. 12U. 15. . cai*jues. k, io, izli. GINGHAMS, x'A',, 1-1. lu TICKINGS, 12*05. 18. 43. DELAINES, 15, i«, 20. FLANNELS, FLANNELS, All the best makes at the lowest prices. BLANKET DEPARTMENT, Afresh stock of White-and Colored in from the nulls, v er y cheap, ■ CLOAKING CI'OTHS, Velveteens. Water Proof, 81.00 ami upwards. SHAWLS, SHAWLS, Brochp Shawls. Thibet Shawls Striped Shawls, and Blanket shawls. Prices-away down. NOTIONS IN ALL VARIETIES, Hreakiast Shawls, Ladles’ and Childrens’ Merino' Vuhts, Men’s Mejlno Shirts, Wove -Yarns, Zeph ors, Hosiery, Luces, Embroideries, Gloves. Jou vins Kid Gloves. • FURS! FURS I FURS I Fresh stock lu from- the manufacturers. Jess than city, prices, ’ A lull lino of Men’s and Boys’ cassiraers.—• butts niiulo to order at lowed prices. We wh h everybody to call and examine our cheap stock and getsomoof the bargains, as you can save 2c percent. ’ * M. 70. D, A. SAWYER. QREAT COMMOTION IN l \ DfiY GOODS. On account, of tlie reduction In Oold, tlie Dry Goods Merchants who understand their business and the cerium signs of the times, have reduced inepnceoi their goods correspondingly. Thesab sen hers have Just received from the cities a large and full assortment of all kinds of FOREIGN & STAPLE GOODS, which they will sell lower than they have done since 1851,. SILKS, •Wool De Lalnog, Alpacas, Poplins, Serges, Bom bnzlnes, Tmmso Cloth, Grenadines. flannels op all kinds; Plain and Fancy, Linen Table Diapers. Cotton do.. Chucks, Tickings, Ginghams, Counterpanes EMBROIDERIES, a full lino: White Goods iti great variety, HOSIERY, gloves, trimmings and a full stock DOMESTIC GOODS, Calicoes, Muslins, by the piece or yard; Grain bags. CLOTHS, CASSIMERS, &c„ CARPETS, OIL CLOTHS, Druggets, Wlnddw Shades. Matting' JVULINERY GOODS of nil kinds,' Including and Childrens UhiN and Sundowns, and the best assortment and host quality of fine Ribbons In the county.— Ktd Gloves, (best make,) Jewelry, Fancy Goods and Notions in great variety. This . MAMMOTH StOCK OF GOODS tne largest In this section of country, is offered a. prices that defy competition, and all we ask isu fair examination by g mil judges of goods to satisfy the public that this Is the place to buy and save money. 4 LADIES’ UNDER WEAR, A Mii'r> assortment oi Ladles’ Under Clothing very handsomely stitched and trimmed ot reasonable prices. WOOL taken in exchange for goods. BENTZ & CO. At the old Dry Goods stand established Feb ruary Ist, lul March SO—7o J’OW PRICES! LOW PRICESM The exceedingly low prices of goods at the cheap Dry Goods siove. opposite Thudlum’a Hole!, are attracting the serious attention of buyers. All kinds of SUMMER GOODS. are so low. that persons In need of them have on ly to see to i p treclnte them. Having Just re turned from i.a* East with a fine assortment of goods looking to -ho Fall trade, lie is prepured-to sell them at the smallest possible prollts. Spe cial bargains in CLOTHS AND UASSIMERES. All kinds of COTTON AND LINEN GOODS constantly on Band. PRINTS In great variety of styles.' The best stock of S H A W.L S In town, HOSIERY, WHITE GOODS, GLOVES, &e. NOTIO JSH3 of every description. CARPET CHAIN of all shades at the lowest figures. The most careful attention paid to all orders, hy mail or otherwise. Call, see and ho convinced at No. DO North Hanover street, opposite Thudlura’s Ho tel, Carlisle. Pa. D. H. LACHEY. Aug. 4,1670—1 y PATENT LANTERN GO’Y., Office, 40 Barclay St., N. Y. (Up Stairs.) Offer to tho public a .Lantern combining safe ly and economy wlip elegance and usefulness.— It cannot explode; It gives a good light, and consumes le-iH oil than any oilier; It iH-not.dls turbed by iho highest Wind, and II A glass Is broken it is easily replaced by means of the scro«"; Tooy i ro universally liked where they huvo been tried. Bop. 22, 70—lira WANTED— Agents, ($2O per day) lo sell tho celebrated IIUME SHUTTLE HEWING MACHINE, llasiho uader-/ff<!d makes the "lock Htitch" (alike on both sides.) and 1 Hjully Ucenkra. Tho hesi am! cheapest family Sewing Machine In the market. Address, JOHNSON, CLAuIC it CO., Huston, Mass., Pittsburg, Pa,, Chicago, 11).. or St. Louis, Mo. Hep. 22.70-.hii y t A Al/\ JjE FROM 60 ( la I d)i.v -oniethiiiK urgently, needed by ©very bo'>> . lull and examine, or sum plea *ent (pott age paid) for DC els that rolatl easily foy-giu, It, h. W«i.c«tt, Ist Chatham Sq., N, Y, Oct. (I,7o— i\v §.wtol. CIIII.DIIOOID. 31Y GEO. I>. PUKNTICE, , ’Tla, sad. but sweet, to listen To the soft wind’s gentle swell, 6 And think wo hear the music . Our childhood loved so well; To gaze out on the eve, And the boundless Helds of air, Ami feel again our boyhood’s wish. To roam like angels there. , There aro many dreams ol gladness That cling around the past, And from the tomb of icellug Uld thoughts come thronging fast. The forms wo loved so dearly, In the happy days now gone, The beautiful and lovely, So fair to look upon. Those brluhtftud gentle maidens, Who seemed so formed for bliss. Too glormus and too heavenly Korsuch a world as this! Whose dark soft eyes seem’d swimming In a sin of liquid light. .ia_a wiiosoi.^i, u ‘'f<7old wore streaming O’er blows so sunny brlglil. Like the brightest buds of summer They have fallen from the stem; Yet, oil I It Is n lovely dream, To fade from earth like them. And yet the thought Is saddening. To muse on such as they, And feel (hat all the beautiful Are passing swift away I That the fair ones whom wo love Grow to each loving breast, ‘ Like tondrlln of the clinging vino, And perish whore they rest.. Ul.toUajuMttsi, ROMANCE IN A RAILWAY. BY JUSTIN M’CARTHY Two young barristers, traveling from London to Liverpool, took Mieir seats one evening In a first-class carriage of the five o’clock express at tlie Euatnn Square sta tion-natation known, I venture to think, to ever> American who has over Invaded the old country. There were only two other Feats occupied in the compartment entered hy the two young men. Two hulles-rat least a lady and her. maid— were the other occupants. The. Indy was youmrnnd pale and pretty; the maid was a Ireab,blooming.round eyed north coun try girl—the moment she spoke a word her aecentraade it plain to one of the two advocates, himself from the lakeland of Northern England, that the girl came from dear old Cumberland Two «»entle- men, one apparently lb© young lady's father, amended her to the carriage do*»r, and waited at the door until the train an- They both, especially ally moved oil tile one who seemed to exercise parental authority over the young lady, kept in cessantly pasting expectant, eager, sus picious eyes about the platform,as If they looked for or dreaded the arrival of some body. These little facts the two harris ters, accustomed to notesmoll things and construct them into evidence, observed almost unconsciously, and by the sheer force of habit. The older man, whom hoth the youths learned in law assumed to he the father of the dep'ining young lady, at last nod : ded signilioantly to the other, and said, in a low tone, *lt is all right, Cunning ham. He Is not here.. Thank Heaven!’ ‘He can’t come now,’ said the other. 'lt would hot have much muttered even if he did,’ (lie elder observed. 'He should not have exchanged a word wilh'her — not one word: But I’m glad to escape scenes and tears and confusion for all that ’ The lady in the carriage had heard nothing of tills. She sat at the farther side of-lter compartment. Doubtless what was said would never have been spoken were site nearenmigh to hear ! t. One of our lawyer friends, however, did hear it —ln fact lie could not help himself; he had no choice but to hear. .The elder of the two speakers had ta ken a fun-well of the girl when he put her into the carriage—that is, lie kissed her very coldly, and said good bye, and added a few whispered won Is which seem ed to be something in the -nalu.re of a caution or a mena.ee. Now, as (he train moved oil, lie only, nodded a farewell. He hud a formally handsome face, regu lar, cold, and harsh, with thin lips and very white teeth. The train th *n went on, and it room whirled -through the pleasant suburbs of that side of, London, and away into the open country, . The young lad} seemed very melan choly and absorbed. Site replied grace fully to a tew civilities and attentions offered by the two barristers' but was evidently nor. mud) inclined to any man ner of conversation. She exchanged a few words every nowand then wlrli her maid, but for the. most part she remained silent. •If was growing to be lute, in autumn, and dual; anon began to com© on. The evening was soft and beautifulthe face of the country looked lender and'poetic, .with all its autumnal charms and irielun cboly grace aroUnd it- v Our Iwo friends talked together on many subjects, at first in a low tone, then ns-the young lady appeared to he asleep, or wholly absorbed in herown thoughts, they begun to speak a little more freely and loudly.* Something or other, perhaps (he grav. poetic sadness of the evening, set them talking of the old world gliosis —the dear, delightful, torturing, hair lifting, blood-chilling sneclres who used to haunt our childhood. Thev actually began telling each otherghosf stories, and did not observe (lie shuddering terror of the Cumberland lass, who could hardly gitstillin her seat, so great was herinter eat. excitement, and superstitious dread. •I don’t know,’ said one df the two young men, Lewis Rnssmore bv name, ‘why railways should he supposed to h<we necessarily banished ghosts. I can quite imagine a ghost making Ids appearance in this very train, for instance.’ ‘Can you?’ replied Fred Rargent, *T confess I can’t;-but I think-you North men near the Hoottl&U border, have more imagination than wo prosaic cockneys.’ At the same time he happened tog’anco at the young ludv in the corner, and her pale, sad face seemed ghost-like enough In the gray evening light. Fred Burgent thought for a moment of the legend of the company who setone evening telling ghost stories, until at lust the turn came to a pale young lady, who hud been silent all the time, and who now, whet/ invited to contribute her share to the entertain ment, said, In a low, toneless voice, *1 have no ghost story to tell, hut I am a ghost myself I* and an vanished. ‘Yes,’ pursued Lewis Rnssmore, ‘I '’an easily imagine it; and I think it could he done with rattier fine effect. Look here, Ruruent, take a note of this idea, and make something of it for one of the mag azines. Two people are traveling alone in a railway—the express—and have just passed one of the oily stopping places. Heboid, us the train Is rushing at full speed across the open country, fitly miles an hour, and the evening is growing dark* like this, thev suddenly perceive that one ni the seats has uu occupant, whose presence was not observed be fore ’ ‘God’s sake! don’t go on in that way/ broke in the. Cumberland girl, unable, to contain herself any longer. ‘Don’t ye go on so, gentlemen; It’s enough to raise a ghost right i’ the midst of uh all!’ The* young men laughed at Aral, but the superstitious /ear of the poor girl was ho obviously genuine and profound, that Roamnore discontinued bin goblin inven tion, and they’ reassured her, and talked for a lew moment* of something elwo. Then tho train slopped lor tlve minutes at the ono puly station where it was to make any halt during the long journey. CARLISLE,. PA., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1870. No one got out of the compartment hi which our friends wore, and no one got Into it; and when the train had fairly moved off,mid our two fylends felt pecure against further disturbance, they settled themselves for sleep. • The young lady appeared to he already asleep. Both young met)'slept. Hdddeniy a lend shriek caused both to start up and ruh their eyes. It was the Cumberland girl who had 'given the alarm. ‘lt’s a uhnst! it's'a ghost!’ shecrled. 'That’s what comes of your deviltry and your talk—you’ve brought a ghostamong us!’ ■ * The evening had sunk into almost com plete darkness; the one lump, the highest luxury, in tho way of illumination, to which even first class passengers in an English express are treated, was burning very dimly; put It needed little light to see that there was a fifth figure in the carriage—the figure of a man. There he was assuredly; a tall, slender man, stoop ing, because of the lowne.-s of the ro f, and apparently about to take the seat, which was vacant, opposite to that on which the young lady was seated She had started nt) with.,a half-scream oil nearing ner servauPsalurm; oiuUiePack of the mysterious intruder was turned to her, and she, perhaps, saw nothing sur prising in his presence. * . . Both the young lawyers, however, saw something very surprising in it. An Eng lish railway train cannot, possibly ho en tered by any one alter it has moved from the station. Nor has it any outer plat form or other means of communication, bv which passengers cun go from one carrifge into another. The carnages open at, tho sides, and each first-class coach !«• a room closed up and complete in U-telf. Nobody had entered this, compartment when it stopp< d at the station ; imho *y could haveentered it since then; yet here was a fifth occupant where only four were present before. ‘Hallo! who are you ?’exclaimed Sar gent,' • ’ i ‘How did you get in—where the devil did you come from?’ fiercely demanded Rossmore. ‘lt’s a ghost!’sobbed the Cumberland girl, faithful to her original hypothesis. . ‘Don’t he alarmed, gentlemen.’ the in truder very calmly observed. ‘You have not a ghost among you; although ff I had remained under cover a little longer, ,|t is quite possible you might have had a ghost In Hie carriage before the end of the journey.’ But the sound of his voice created a new agitation. Tim young, lady sprung from, her seat and oiled nut. ’Oh, Har old 1 my dear Harold !’ and threw her self upon hi« neck, arm qobhe'd and laugh ed and sobbed., again, and committed other such extravagances, to which the intruder lent himself with great appa rent cordiality, giving back- embrace for embrace, and with compour d Interest. . •The Cumberland girl said, ‘God be guide to us—lt’s Master Harold himself!’ The two barristers resumed their seats and looked on much amazed, but with tliSit ‘outward calmness which distin guishes your true Briton under almost all conceivable, circumstances.. The in truder, whoever he mlghtbe, was clearly neither ghost nor robber. ■‘Oh,’ Harold!’ exclaimed the young lady ; ‘ how did yon come here? Where did'you get in ; and what have you come for?’ •Come for? ’Why, to flea you love, of course. They thought they were quite safe, I believe, when they were a little mistaken. We’ll surprise them a little more yet, Alice.' ‘But how did you come here, FTarold !’ •‘Do satisfy our curiosity, air,* Sargent Interposed. *Il is really quite legitimate on our part, seeing that-your.sudden ap pearance looks very much like a fraud upon the railway company, of whlcn. for aught you know, my friend and I may he leading'directors—and then you are positively accused of being a ghost..' Tho young man laughed. ‘Gentle man,’ in* said, ‘You shall have a full ex*.- planation,. I have been for years engag ed,to this young lady. Lately her moth er who was a widow, thought tit to mar ry «ga ! n, and her new husband, this young ludv’s step-fa'her—rydu saw him at the station to day detests me, has poisoned his wife’s mind against lias persuaded her to refuse her consent to our marriage, of which she quite ap proved two years ago—perhaps beceuse we were then too 'young to marry. lam going-/to the West Indies, and may be absent Heaven knows 1 ow • long-r-and they had set their hearts upon prevent ing me from seeing Alice before I go. — Now T had, very naturally, set my heart, on seeing her; and yet I didn't care to ask her to do anything direetly’iu op position to her mothers commands,’ .‘Quito right, air,’ said Rosamore, with a look of infinite solemnity. 'Very commendable indeed,’ added Sargent, paternally. ‘So,’'Hamid continued, *1 found that she was being sent back to the country to-day, in ofder to get her qnlckly out of my way—and my course was clear.’ ‘Don’t see it yet,’ murmured Sargent. ‘Don’t you ace it? I came to Easton Station, took a ticket &> Liverpool—so you perceive there is no question of fraud, on th° company—used audacious efforts in the way of bribery, and thus induced the guard, first .to allow me to hide under the seat, and next to manage, ■so that the young Judy, whoso phono graph I showed 'him, should be conduct ed into this particular carriage. Gentle men, this was done, and, In short, bore I am.’ ' ‘Lucky that you were Hot smothered/ said Sargent, ‘Or shot as a robber, on emerging from your hiding-nlace,’ said Rossmore. ‘Dear Harold, ir'w you must have Suf fered/ Alice whispered. He pressed her, blind tenderly. ‘Why did you not come out before?’ she asked. Harold smiled, ‘Blame these gentle men for thaC’ he said ‘They will not be offended iff say that I thought them just a Utile de imp ; and I fancied, from something they said, they were about to get out attheslation we have just passed, ami so I waited. But when I found they were coming the whole way, Tsaw Rwas, unless waiting any longer, and I Cfcrae out, and nearly frightened poor P<dly .there’ (the servant) ‘out of her senses.’ ‘Very sorry we should .have been in your way sir,’ said Sargent. ‘But it may interest you to know that I am ®»e very profoundest sleeper who ever traveled in a train, and that I feel terribly sleepy al ready.’ ‘And I said Kossmore can hardly keep my eyes open.’ Bo the discreet barristers at once-turn*--' ed round In their scats, coiled themselves up. and closed their eyes, and were ap parently burled In slumber deep enough for the Etnperer Barbarossa or the Sleep ing Beauty in her immortal wood. Then Harold sat beside Alice, and took her hand in tils; and the servant. Polly, seemed to follow the exatnpleof her legal travelling companions, and sink into steep. So Alice and Harold talked and talked, and were happy. About to part, apparently for years, yet they were happy, in the present.' Surely that is one of the most excellent and exquisite properties ot love—exquisite in its delight and in its puin —that it never looks beyond the’ present hour, but finds happiness now in a momentary meeting, though Che agony of a long parting threatens near at hand —agony now in a momentary purling, although the hope of a speedy re-union may smile and offer consolation. * These two then were happy for the hour. But after all, the whole journey from London to Liverpool by express is only some live hours affair , and two hours had been wasted before our adven turous lovt-r emerged from his conceal* ment. Bo the prospect of Liverpool and separation began to look vety threaten ing and imminent; and Harold, dread ing and detesting the thought of such a palling, began to urge a wild proposal. Why should they not escape at Liver pool take the first train in the morning— only a very few Uouw to wait—and go en i toHco'land and he married there? Then t lot thefamlly do its worst; and Harold ’■ would not go to the VVe-«t Indies, but ) would push a career at home. - Or, even I If they hail’to go, he would at least leave, ’ behind him a wedded wife, whom no ill conditioned step-father could take from . him. *Bo my wife—come and be ’my 1 wife—that first; that of all hazards!* Wo rung the refrain of the papaiona’e out pouring which for nearly an hour Har old kept whispering into Alice’s ear. • The-girl had spirit enough, and was not unwilling to yield. Indeed, there were fevfr risks lif* could offer which she was not ready to encounter rather than to go hack to the dreary nnrlodimis home life, with Harold far away. Now she was being sent, as she perfectly well knew,' to the custody of an uncle and aunt in Liverpool, in order that she might be kept out of the way until Har old should have left London and gone out to the West Indies, where ho hopp’d, to make a fortune. •But, Harold, dear,' thegirl whispered, •the thing is impossible. My uncle will he at the station waiting for me with the •carrhge. Do you think he would be likely n.‘ .fall h/tp our nln-u-* 1 ’ , • f No, Alice; i nave thought of that.— If you have courage—ami I know, you have—and are very quick, we can escape and defy him. Now listen, and don’t be afraid Just before we get to Liver pool the train enters a tunnel, and inside the month of the tunnel we stop for a minute—a hare moment—to make sure thn,t all fa clear. I will have the door open, and I will take you In, my arms and get out; it will be perfectly easy and safe; and Polly shall follow without one instant of delay. Then we hold our breaths, and stain! in the darkness close up to the tunnel wall for only a moment, until the train rushes hj’; and then we get quietly out, lake to the mad, get u carriage at the nearest inn, and drive to any station on the line whdro we can wait f..r the Scottish mail. Your unde will only suppose that you have put off’ coming for a day ; he will grumble and wait for,you to-morrow without doing or even suspecting any thing, and then if will be too late.’ ! ‘lf we are killed— 1 ‘Dearest, do you think I would expose J you to any danger?’ '* ‘.No, Harold, If. was not that, I was only going to say that If we are killed—X mean If wo are kll.ed—we shall be killed to* aether!’ Harold embraced hie Intrepid and des- perate fia»ece\ ami the (dun whs resolved on. A few whispered words convoyed the whole to stout hearted Polly, who hud a romantic heart, and would have gone with these lovers any where-*-leap ed wlth-them out of an express train fly ing at lull speed rather than desert them. The moments went by; the tunnel was near; the two young barristers IfHd long since, been fast asleep in good reality; Harold softly opened the door, and stood close to it ,with Alice 1 In his arms; ihe faithful Polly loaded herself with such of her mistress’s cloaks and shawls ami things us she could attempt to carry; the train begun already to slacken Its speed ; they were at rhe mouth of the tunnel; Harold said, In a whisper, 'Now, love!’ And Alice shut her eves,’ and pressed her face against his shoulder. The train rattled and crushed through the echoing tunnel. The hollow, hide ous reverberations aroused our. sleeping barristers. Sargent started up, and rub bed his eyes. ‘Hallo, Rossmore, this lathe Edgehlll Tunnel! We shall be In Liverpool In a moment. Shake yoursel f up. old boy 1’ ‘All right,’ replied Rossmore, yawn- ing' 'Glad we’re In But I say, Sargeni look hero—why—did we stop anywhere? 1 ‘Of course not. Why do you ask ?’ ‘Then where arc onr fellow travellers?’ ‘Good Heavens! To be sure, where are ley? I forgot all about them they were here—that’s certain ; and we stopped at no station, and now they are gone!’ ‘Confound it, I never knew anything like that! That-man, Harold, whoever he was, came in mysteriously, and now ho has gone out even more mysteriously, and spirited away tho two women along with him!’ ‘I say, Rossmore, how if your sugges l fclon of this evening should,have turned out a prediction? Have we hud ghoHs in oiir railway train?’ Both laughed—both were incredulous; and the train rushed into the crowded, .hustling, blazing station at Liverpool*— Owr friends spoke to the' guard of ihe train, who was much amazed at first to .hear of thf disappearance of the three passengers; but he seemed to think that, in the case of so audacious a lover as Harold Rivers, anything whs possible— and then, there was a momentary stop page In flie tunnel. So the bnrriatcrsmadenofurthcrinqu?- ries, hut took it for granted that all was right somehow; and went to (heir hotel. -They, heard the end of the story, how ever, even before they returned (o Lon don. for they met Harold Rivers and his young wife In Liverpool ten days, after. The pair had .just returned from Scot land, where they were married. They had, of course, written off at once t< Alice’s mother, announcing their were in good hope that rlnge, and they she would goon accept the situation.— They could afford to wait a little, for they were married and happy, and JTarold had made up his mind that ho would not. go to the \Veat Indies. ‘Funeral Rites, in Greenland.— There me some very curious funeral rifea In Greenland, where, on its becoming evident to the friends and relations of an "Esquimaux that, either from sickness or old age, he is in a very had way, a sol emn conc’ave Is assembled and a long consultation belli, in which It is debated pro an<l con, whether the sick man can recover, should U be decided against him. the riot is announced by a'deputation as a fact in which thesiclt man is bound to acquiesce. No extravagant demonstra tion of grief accompanies this avowal, for It seems to ho regarded by all parlies as an inevitable law of nature that the man must die, and they therefore accept? it philosophically. Soon after the decis ion is made known to the patient life is borne to the door of his snow hut by his friends, a how and arrow placed in his hands, and with such strength ns is left to him he-shoots; and as the arrow' leaves the how-strings to sever his con nection with the things of this life—for on the spot on which the arrow falls the grave of theliving man {officially regard* ed ns dead) is at once made; and, sewed up in his ‘kakak,’ with his weapons be side him, he is deposited therein with out further loss of time. The lust scene fn'the life of nn Esquimaux would make , a fine picture; the cluster of snow-huts standing like pigmies amidst the huge masses of blue black ice; around, the clear piercing air, illuminated only by the wavering flashes of the aurora bore alis, in the fore-ground the group of fur clad figures clustering round, supporting the fainting form of one whom they are instructing in his Inst voluntary act, which sever his ties to this earth forever. Secure tub Leaves.— The woods are now full of leaves Indeed they appear to bo more abundant than ever, hut far mere do not value them as highly ns we think they should. For barnyards, es pecially, (hey are profitable to. haul in. Tho> are; obtainable, too, when there Is but little pressing work on hand. Gath ered up l« heaps they can he loadily loaded in carts and wagons with close shelvings, by using either a cloth some two or tlireeyards square, or with a wood en rake and the arm. Hogs are very fond of them Ifor Utter, so are cows ; and for compost they are excellent. A ranker lent a graceless scamp fifty dollars, in the hope of getting rid of him; hut, to bin surprise, the fellow paid the money on the day agreed upon, and u short time afterward applied lor another loan. ‘No,’ said the banker, ‘you have deceived me once, *aud I am resolved you shan’t do it a second time/ * CATCIIINU A CORSAIR. The recent horrible massacre of pris oners by the bandits of Greece, brings to mind, the effective service against the pirates of the Grecian Archipelago ren dered by the late Comnodore Lawrence Kearney, of the United Stales Navy, in the early part of the present century. So successful were ids efforts, that he receiv ed highly complimentary mention in the British Parliament. There were many adventures which ho* | fell the officers of the ship, the old sloop of war Warren, while engaged in tills service, sonjo of which were very excit ing, as will appear from the following relation; There, was considerable excitement in (he hamlet which lies at the head of the little land-looked bay of Milo, one morn ing, when the Warren appeared off the entrance of the harbor, with the evident intention of coming Into port. There was a light, breeze hlowini! from seaward, and as the ship headed in, with all sal's set, the sunlight gleaming on the broad field of white canvas, the picture was grand and beautiful, a very few moments a rumbling of cionus was nearn, meu cm* suoueu spTbari of the anchor, and, as If without an effort, she folded her wings and ewang around to her moorings, with nothing aloft but the delicate tracery of rigging and spars, from which the nimble sailors were last I hurrying to the deck. Before night a great change bad' taken place in the appearance of the vessel. Yards have been sent down, masts hous ed, and a general dismantling, as If for a long slay in port, and a tbosough over hauling ofthe ship had taken place. It was not altogether an idle curiosity which cans d the inlmhltautsof the ham let to watch so closely the proceedings on hoard. In the first place, the stay of a .man-of-war in port is always a source of profit; and, in the next, the movements of the dreaded Warren were of too much importance to the pirates to escape the closest espionage by their agents and spies. The signs of an intention to remain some time in the harbor were, therefoie, gratifying in a double sense, and before night a swift felucca had sailed from the other side of the island for one of the pi rates* rendezvous, in an adjacent island, with the welcome news. That night there was music and rejoic-p ing on shore, in which some of the sailors, wdio had gotten “liberty,’* uproariously joined. • It was late before the Inhabitants re tired to rest, and the first who arose next morning.naturally turned their thoughts upon the warship. Where was she? In vain they gazed over the harbor, rubbed their eyes, and looked again. She was nowhere to be seen 1 With the midnight hind breeze, her sparsnnd rigging replaced, she had spread her canvas and flitted away like « mock ing shadow I The hamlet was soon astir, and hi the wonder and surprise of its inhabitants, it. was hours before the thought occurred to sehd advice to the pirates of the .occur rence. It was too late, howeveiyto avail j them Upon the Information of the previous day, arrexpedlfion had Baiied,and already one. of their .largest and best manned war fuluccaa was hovering on the path of the merfchant ships bound for Smyrna. It was late In the afternoon that a large, heavy-laden ship was descried from the deck of the corsair Her sails were old and patched, her sides stained with Ironrust, her yards carelessly trim med, her rigging badly set up, and all the evidence of a long voyage and a Hen cur-'d. , The felucca, which was to the wind ward at once lu re away for her; and, as soon as ills intention was .perceived on hoard the merchantman,- his character was suspected, and there was alarm exhi bited In her governments. The shin was got before rhe wind, and .sail after sail slowly set, ns If she was shore-handed, ft appeared nil too late, however; for the coraairgllded two knots,to the merchant miin’sone.and in little more than up hour she V'as close upon the latter's quarter. To the pirate’s peremptory summons, to’ ‘heave to !’ a hoarse, indistinct reply was bellowed through an old battered trumpet by a rough-vfsaged, gray-headed old sea man, who shook, his fists ip'aeemingly impotent rage at the intruder. This.pantomimic defiance was answer ed by a shout from the pirates, who how swarmed the deck, armed to the teeth. — Tho helm of the felucca was put up and' she came rapidly down to lay the prize aboard, hut just then she was abreast and before the vessels touched, a wonderful change had taken place in the ship! Boarding netting were triced up in an instant from her bulwarks, and her old, stained sine seemed to open ns if by magic, while a dozen cannon protruded from ns many port- holes and in ’an instant belched forth sheets of flame, and a storm of Iron hail, which tore through the hull, rigging and sails of the corsair with terrific effect, strewing her deck with the dead and wounded, and leaving her hut a wreck, incapable of resistance or escape. The survivors, who now saw the ‘Stars and Stripes’ floating from the peak of the mar- seaming merchantman, understood at once that they were in the grasp of the terrible Kearney and made signs of sub- mission. The hdats of the Warren soon rescued them from the sinking wreck, and taken In irons to Smyrna, they were delivered over to the tender mercies of the Turkish authorities. Tins was but one of,the many bold and successful strategems by which with a single vessel, Captain Kearney almost cleared the archipelrgo of pirates earning the thanks of Turks as well as Christians rendering his name famous, and confer.- rlng honor upon the naval service of the United States. A Lively Timepiece,— Down in Chester county, Pa., o clock pedler was tramping along, hot and dusty and tired, when ho c»rne to a meeting house where in, sundry friends were engaged In silent devotion. The peripatetic tradesman thought he would walk iu and rest him self. He took a,seat upon a bench, doffed' his hat, and plac* d his clocks upon the floor. There was a painful atifness in the meeting house, piesently broken by one of the clocks, which commenced striking furiously. The pedler was in agony, but he Imped every minute the clock would stop. Instead of that It just struck four hundred and thirty times, by the actual count of every Friend iu the meeting; for even the best disciplined couldn’t help numbering the strokes.— Then up rose one of the elder Friends at the end of the four hundred and thlitieth stroke, and said : ‘Friend, it is so very late, perhaps thee "had better proceed on thy journey, or thee will not reach thy destination, un less thee is us energetic as thy vehement timepiece*’ An Infantile' Impostor.— Chicago boasts, among her flagrant successes an infautide impostor. bright-eyed, neatly-dressed little girl accosts the by passer on a public street with, *0! sir, I’ve lost my way; I want togvt to—,’and fdio names a street a great way off Sud denly a thought seems to strike her — "Can't you give me six cents to pay my car-fare?’ The device rarely falls to ob tain ttio money, and her father who walks on the opposite side of lb© street and collects from time, to lime Is becom ing rich. A. young muu who carried a collection plate, in service, before starting, took from his pocket a live-ceut piece, us lie supposed, put it on the plate, and then he gassed it'round among ihe congregation, which included ninny young girls. The girls, as they looked at the plute, seemed astonished and amused, and the young man, taking a glance at the plate, found (hut instead of anickle live piece, he had a conversation lozenge, with the words, * Will you marry me?' in red let ters, Blaring everybody right iu tho face V0L.57.~N0. 20. WA K K Vl*. Tls past six o'clock in Iho morning, And Bessy is still sound asleep; r - Of this wonderful rosy dawning Bho’s had noi so much ns n peep. Tho btrds 'ucalh her windows are wild., ■ With their efforts to waken the w >rld* Tney thliuc 'tls an indolent child , Under tho coverlid curled. For they have been up since tho dawn With rosy touch painted the east, And from hillside, meadow and >awn Have gathered their morning feast; Have poured out the Joy of their hearts .In many a sweet roundelay; And now they hro lonely for Bessie, And are calling her out to her play. "Wake up. little Bessie,” they cry, And spring from your soft, downy nest, Tha sun Is fur up in tho sky, Tho fresh air out hero Is the, best. , At the very first glimmer of light That tipped tho gray hills far away, . We sung a good-by to the night. And welcomed tho fair, rosy day. Wo flocked to your window in crowds, And tapped with our beaks on tho pain; Tho« back to our homes flow again— Wo bathed In tlio brook ‘acuth tho hill, And dressed ail our feathers wfth care, Woaro back to your window, ami-stifle- Find you sleeping so lazily liter!. Tho robin Is picking tils berry, The woodpecker taps at the tree, The thrush on tho bough of the cherry Calls loudly for you rind for rae; Then wnico. little girl, In the morning When tho flowers arc all bathing in dow, When tho wonderful beauty belonging To young life Is fresh, bright and now. 1)00 STOItIEH, A dog belonged to a convent lu Franco Twenty-four poor beggars were daily served with a dinner, passed out to them tbrough.au apeituro in the wall by means of a tour, or levolvlng box. There was a bell-rope hanging beside the opening. Each beggar in turn rang the belt and received his dinner. Alter a time, the cook noticed that twenty-live dinners were passed out. A Watch was set. and it. was discovered that after the beggars had each received their proportion and ■ turned,, away, this dog would go up and ring the bell and get a dinner for himself The authorities of the con vent, learning the case, decreed that the tints nlmnM nnn. tinuo to have his dinner (or ringing for Another case, related by a gentleman who saw it: A party of huntsmen had to cross a river, which they did by swim ming their horses—the pack of dogs all following, except a terrier, who dreaded the plunge. After looking on for a time with many distressful barks, he suddenly turned and run swiltly up the.bank till out of sight. .There was a bridge some distance above. After a while tne dog came running down the other side of the river, and joined bis comrades. There Is one more anecdote worth re- luting, that is not in the hooks: I had it from those admirable gentlewomen of the old echo'd, the Misses R., long time my neighbors on the Passaic. They had a carriage dog that accompanied them in all their drives* Their course often took them across the river, over u bridge lour miles from their residence. The keeper of the toll house had a big surly mastiff, that always sallied outuud attacked their dog, who was uo mutch 101* him and some times Beauju suffered severely , so that at length he declined accompanying them if they took the road up the river toward the bridge. The way through the lawn from their house to the high road was nearly half a mile. One day when they came down to the gate, they found the dog (here waiting for them. As soon os he saw them take the up river road he turned and ran with great speed back to the house. In a very little while he re-! turned and overtook the ‘ carriage, ac companied by a powerful dog ordinarily kept about the house ami grounds and never went will) the carriage. The two troj-ted along, side by side, following the carriage, until they came to the. bridge when.the mustifl’sullied outua tßual. The little (Jog ihcu held back, and his big comrade went at'the assailant and gave him a .tremendous punishing.'evidently to the little fellow’s great satisfaction. IXllitS’ EVES, Who do you suppose makes all the dolin' eyes? They look so natural, now a-days that, unless we stop to think, we are apt to forgei that they have to he manufactured and put in. The fact is, the making of these bright little objects is quite an Important branch of manufac ture, and one requiring a good deal of skill,- Onlyafew understand the secret of making the best kind, and they conse quently, receive large orders. One doll’s eye mauulaclnrcr in Birmingham, Eng land,'sometimes fills sjouJe orders to the extent of £5OO, or $2,300. Think how many bright little doll-faces look out up on the world after an order .like this is finlshi d, and how many glad-eyed little girls meet their rather staring glances, Sure that nothing could be lovelier! All dolls don’t stare though. Bo they? some have really a beautiful expression. The shape of the lid has a great deal to do with that*. Drooping lids give a.sad look, and lids slightly turned up at the corners will nmk<-any doll look lively- I know a little girl who lias a doll with eyes, so like her own that you can see at a glance that the tsvo are mother and daughter ; and I know another dttle girl who coax ed her parents to buy a certain dolly for her because It looked so like a dear little baby-sister who hud died some months before. How she loved her treasure when at lust she clasped It in her arms, and called it by the little sister’s name! Eve ry one'in the house loved It for that mat ter —the sweet brown eyes looked at them wiih so much of the expression of their lost darling. Did you ever hear of the little blind girl who, because she wore a green 111-let over her poor, sightless eyes, always bound a fillet over her dolly’s eyes also ? Both were blind then, and so could un derstand each other better.— Hearth and Home. Day and Night in Sweden,—The peculiarities of ttie day and night in Sweden strike the traveler very forcibly, alter being accustomed to the temperate zone. In Juno the sun goes down in Stockholm u little, before ten o’clock. There is a great illumination nil night, as the sun pusses round the earth'to the north pole, aitd the refraction of Us rays is such that you can see to read at mid night without any artificial light. There is a mountain at the head of Bothnia, whereon the 21« t of June, the sun does not appear to go down at all. The steam boat goes up from Stockholm for the pur pose of conveying those who are curious’ to witness the phenomenon. It.occurs ouly one l ight. The sun reaches the horizon—you can see the whole face of It, and in live minutes more it begins to rise. At the North Cape, lutitudeseventy twt> degrees, the sun does nut go down lor several weeks. In June it would be about twenty-llvo degrees above the hor izon at midnight, lu the winter thesuo disappears, and la not seen for weeks— then it comes and remains for ten or fif teen minutes, after which it descends, and finally does not set at all—but almost makes a circle around the heavens. How He Fixed Them.—Zudock Pratt the millionaire tanner of Prattsviiio, Greene county, N. Y., has a hearty con tempt for stuck-up people. Learning oue evening that some young men in his employ were excluded from a ball room because of their occupation, ho repaired forthwith to the hotel where the bull was In progress, procured an uxo, and with his own hands cut down the stairway leading to the hall. Telling the dancers to slay there and enjoy their exclusive ness us lung us they choose, he turned to the landlord, and told him to employ a carpenter after the hull was over to re build the stairway, and bring a bill of expense to him; Hates for 3V&oertisinQ. auvkrtiskmknts win bo inserted at Ten cea per line tor the first Insertion, and five cea per lino for each unbfiequcnl insertion. Quar orly half-yearly, and yearly advertisements In ertod at a liberal reduction on tho above'rates Advertisements should ho accompanied by the Cash. Wnensent without any length of time specified for publication, they will ho continued Qntllordorcd out and accordingly. JOB PRINTING. CAUbs/HandotiiLs, Ouunn.Aas f *and every oth« description pf Jon and Card Printing. DISCOVERIES IIY ACCIDENT. Not a few discoveries in* the arts .and sciences have been made or suggested by. accident. Tho use of tho pendulum, sug gested hy tho vibrating oi a chandelier in a cathedra]; Hie power of steam, intfma led by the oscillating of tho lid of a tea kett'e; tho utility of.coal gas for light, experimented upon by an ordinary tobac co pipe of whlto olay{ the magnifying property of tho lens, stumbled upon by an optician’s apprentice while holding spec* tucle glasses between his thumb and fin*, gor—are well-known instances in proof of tho fact. . Galvanism was discovered by accident. Professor Galvani of Bologna, in Ttaly, ave Ills name to tho operation, but hia wife Is considered us uciuailv entitled to the credit of the discovery. She being in bad health, some hogs were ordered for her. 'As they lay upon the table, skinned; she noticed that their limbs became strongly convulsed when near an electri- cal conductor. She called her husband’s attention to the fact; he Instituted a se ries of experiments, and In 1759 the gal vanic battery was invented. Eleven years later, with that discovery r “«onr Alessandro Volta, also an Kalian, announced his discovert of tho 'voltaic pile.’ The discovery of glass-making was ef fected by seeing tho sand vitrified upon which a fire had been kindled. Biancort says that tho making of plate glass was suggested by the fact of a work man happening to break a crucible filled with melted, glass. The fluid ran under one of the largo flag-stones with which the floor was paved. On raising the atone fo recover .the glass, it was found in the form of a plate, such as could not he pro duced by t lie ordinary processor blowing. Glass pearls, though among the most beautiful, inexpensive, and common or-,, namenls-worn by ladles, are produced by a very singular process. In 1050, a Vene tian named Jaquin discovered that the scales of u fish called tho black-fish, pos sessed the property of communicating a pearly hue to the water. He found, by experimenting, that beads dipped into this water assumed, when dried, the ap pearance of pearls.' It proved, however, that tho pearly coat, when placed outside, was easily rubbed off; and the next im provement was to make (lie beads hollow. The making of these beads is carried .on to this day in Venice. The beads'areall blown separately. By means of a small .übfi tho Inntfipu nro he pearly liquid, and a waxed Coating ig. placed over that. It requires the scales •of four thousand fish to produce half a pint of liquid, to which a small quantity of sal ammonia and isinglass are after ward added. • . Lundy Foot, the celebrated snuff manu facturer, originally kept a small tobacco nist shop at Limerick. On one night his i-ouse, which was uninsured, burned to tin ground. As lie contemplated the smoking ruins, on the following morn ing, in a slate bordering on despair, some oftho poor neighbors, 'gropingamong tho embers for what they could find, stumbl ed impp several canisters of unconsumed but half baked snuff', which they tried, and found it so pleasant to their no-qs that they loaded their waistcoat pockets with it. Lundy Foot, aroused from his stupor, imitated their example autf took a pinch of hie own property, when he was struck by the superior pungency and flavor it hud acquired from tho great heat to which it had been exposed. Acting upon the hint, ho took' another house in a place called Black Yard, erected ovens, and set about the manufacture of that high-dried commodity which soon be c une widely known as Black VurdsnuttV Eventually he look a larger house in Lublin, and making his customers pay literally through tho nose, amassed, a great fortune from having been ruined. Injurious Knbltfl of tlie Young: Girl of Fashion. , The indolent inactive, voluptuous mode of living Indulged in by the thoughtless votary of fashloh, in addition to the ab surd and destructive manner of dressing contributes largely to tbo enervation of the individual and impairment of her general health. Late hours, and-lounging much of tin? day in a warm feather bed in illy ventilated apartments,-with heated air, Irrcgular.meals—hot stimulating food and drinks, excessive dissipation during the night, over dancing,'exposure to the cold and damp eight ait when thinly clad —entertaining company at unreasonable hours, mental condition varying from ex cess! ve excitement to extreme depression, which such a life invariably produces, all tend to render such manner of existence anyt* ing but desirable, yet it Is miscalled a life of pleasure, and longed for by those who cannot attain it. Tito t.ve.rlasMng complainings,the nicking headaches.neu ralgia pains in every part of tire body, the poisoning jbalousles, and the ten thou sand other’? ameless perplexities incident to such a life, render it one of extreme misery—not to be envied even hy the care-worn daughter of toil who earns her dully bread, 1 by dully 111-paid labor. After such a life of folly, frivolity and dissipation (luring her early years should she survive their Immediate results, and remain unmarried, in her declining age she will reap a full huYvest from the seeds sown in her youthful days and' nights.— Peevish, irritable, complaining, health sacrificed, and to happiness a stranger none to love because her slate of miiud and physical condition, will -not be*ucb us to excite that tend* r emotion in any ope, none to sympathize with her In her wretched condition, because all will re cognize 't us tbo inevitable fruits of early proflgacy, pride and selfishness,, and fi nally, at variance with herself ami the world she will sink into the grave un wept tin honored .and unsung, and the world will feel that it has lost little by hew demise. Should pome man bo so unfortunate as to become dazzled by her machinations, as to unitohlsdeatiny with hers, If possessed with the intelligence and sensibilities of a man, ho would soon perceive that ho has got for a., wife an empty sham, n toy, a gew-gew;'and worse than all, a thing neither ornamental nor useful; an incumberunce, a whining, jual-content, a perpetual annoyance; without intelligence or moral capacity to compensate for destroyed health, and mental irritability ; with all the sweetness of temper, gentleness, klndne«s amiabili ty and loveliness, characteristic of the cultivated and refined of her auX, sacrl- , fieed upon the altars of pride, selfishness and fashion. Can such a being expect or even hope to retain the affection, or even the respect. Of a man of sense and culture, however deep an impression she might have made upon his heart, by her bland ishments and show, before time had di vulged the grand deception of which ho had been made the victim ? Ho soon be comes dissatisfied with ids home, because, ho finds nothing there tn make It attrac tive. She in whom he expected to find centred all the endearments which make life happy within the sacred precincts of home, lias become an object of disgust, Instead ,pf adoration, and all the marriage obligations, and legal restraints that the ingenuity of men ever devised, are not strong enough to hold him in companion ship with her, by whom lie has been basely deceived, and whose perverseness and cold selfishness, have rendered her an object of übhorremfc"and contempt.— From the Medical Independent , Politeness —lu. a railroad car, the seats were all full except one, which was occupied by a pleasaut-looklug Irishman, —and at one of the stations a couple of evideutly well-bred and Intelligeutyoung ladies came to procure scats, but seeing no vacant ones, were about goiug into a back ear, when Patrick rose hastily and ottered them his seat with evident plea sure. 1 But you will have no seat for yourself,’ responded one of the yonug ladles, with a smile, hesitating, with true politeness, to accent it. ‘Never yo tniiul that,’ said the gallant Hibernian, ‘yo’ro welcome to It. I’ll ride upon the cow caioher to Now York any time fur a smilo from such jiiuleimmly ladies,* and ho re treated into the next car amid tho cheers of his fellow passengers. V
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers