ERSHEY-’S I'IIK ATEO I %/'««. IE PUBLIC. UAL of over TEN CC. the subscriber 1» nr«l :M &i "KCP which toot others have been eivon *UhNI tied for gale. "•* Prepay safely, speedily, and effacfn.it -.n 1., no in ;‘',l Turpentine prep i in any shape or form • °?*““*iOr :non and so harmle^ J --“t may take It. ■ , “«ctio n ,u ° : l K'title \ i ■' l *. ilJ case, even. wheraeSie 1 e * n • b i >• ‘l‘iitcd, m ni tu >^2 fona ‘ „ul_ condition oftha JSSS? Bt «f Or. ': s of ‘ichness, or ' have used it are pjJSil preference toany^£^bt- !*H. M. D m B If **Tl UVEMENTENCOOK- ■f™ LT £y°MAmiurjpQ >1 iibUK>in offering to tlia imin. i.' SJMitC CONSOMINO P ■ which is destined to ■■quires- • IIO) LESS FUEL ■>, : m " n - quickly and rente, nt smell ot gasarises fromftj, 11 is i.ii consumed •« u cahi? -from emoko a» that uupl^t ■ ation is also consumed StuMc of i u any (lancer of flam ,or thlm. f. . 1 t' iot 9 r *“° mortar loosened by Ii iK.j stovca are invited! to call »t l - 1,1 Sfasonlc Temple, andsx. -1011 N shoemaker for Blair County ■ Cooking aad£u*' [Aug. 12,1866*1 ULICE GAZETTE— -1 il of Crime and Criminalx U i n wi l. ly circulated .'throughout ml the Circat Trials, Criminal ifniaUou the some, together with Mullers, not to be found to » B) r nuiram; $1 for »lx month*, u i. (wl ( o should write their n»m M -talc whore they reside plahilr.l O. W. MATSELL A CO, ” of New York Police Qaietfo, Jftxo Turk Ciiy. ‘ED LYE, FOR MA ■ 1 Soap Powder for Washing, one muon Soap; Castile Soap, Film .on hand and tor sole at ' A. ROPajrg. m, S U PER-C ARBO iistus. Washing Soda, Durkosi cid for sale at . ' A. HOUStf’S'Drog Store. [’Lane’s BRATED 11FUGE PILLS. vc to call the attcn he Trade, and more Physicians of the o of the most popu w before the public. 'Lane’s Celebrated and Liver Pills. recommend them as -alls, but simply for 2 purports, viz. r' RMIPUGrE,' Worms from the It has also been irh the most pitis to various ! Anunals ms. VER PILLS, ,iver Complaints, ■ Sick ice. In cases of .AND AgUE ? J _ I or after taking Qui :.st invariablymakej t rmanent cure*" ; for the above men they are Unrivaled, %vn to fail .when ad accordance with th< :c edented popularity t proprietors, j : Brothers, | 3URGH, Pa. I heir Drug business, have been success ror the last / will now givp thel ‘ c and attention* are. And being Dr. jfre and Liv« r p/J to occupy tow hold aniphg i of the M> p spare neither •, procuring material, and f°_, ..the most thoroug Iress all ordets to pos. j.ciun* ordering v.-01l to write M'Jxtna, flc ; > those r enn.il. poSt paid. >! Pill's for twelve of Turmtfnne i Iron) C*n»d* »n*t tmw' r. : ■:V 1 JIcOBUM & % *•]>>; av VOL. ,5. THE AL^OOm ycCSOil i r.r 4 ' ■ Aflp»P era dwcontmuod at.the expiration of the time. ~ r.- ' • *' ; s -^-’;■■ ■ ■ I '■' "i (* W rtaHS or ABTKUHBIK}. : T tohertfin* 2 do. 3 do. .-afUßWOrle*** ■ y>-'j«ssdt^s4#^ft. | u4 • $ ®0 KSwt I 8 »«w3 ■# '■ *1 oo **, •» :.(!« sste» 2 oo " w 200 2160 o»er three weeks and iMS tnen three months, 26 cents per Has* for each insertion. AO : - fe~w H 8 month*. Smooths. 1 year. 5, lino? nr less, ' ♦ «*oo‘ 6 00 oo lo w Ce 5 00-. .3 00 12 00 Pff ■■ _ 6 00 10-00“ 14 00. naif a column, ; 1 Ott<-.- > U W ;, 20 00 ZwUwxn. 14 00 , 2fioo_ 40 00 • .IminUtrsters «nd*l»ciltni»Sotleaii'- ‘ ■- 176 Merchants squares, si;h liberty to change, 10 00 or Basing* Cards, not exceeding & lin(3 with paper, per,year, , , . 5 00 Oitsmunicatlous of a political character or individual in vest will be charged occordingto the aboveratea. Adiertiscuients not marked with the number of insertions jeeired. will be continned till forbld'and charged according; w Hie above terms. , . -. .., Bcsiaess notices five eentapsr ltno For every insertion. Obituary notices exceeding te n lines. fiftyceau a square. 5.S aocs.s.i). , Vl . . T\RS. GOOD & GEMMILL HAV- U INC entered into Partnership In the Practice of jMlcine. respectfully tesder thetr serrieos to the Public in the several branches of their. Profession. Calls will oe answered either day or night at their office whicli is the same as heretofore occupied by Dr*. Hirst i Good. —or nt the Logan Boose. April 21st, 1869-301 ' , W. M. LLOYD & CO., ALTOmA, PA, JOHNSTON. JACK & CO., EOLLIDAYSBUBG, PA, (Late “ Bell, Johntlon, Jack $ Co.”) Dr a ft s on the principal Cities, and Silver and Bold foraale. Collections made. Moneys received on doposlte, payable oh demand, wlthont interest, or npon. time,-with interest at fair rates. Feb. 3d, 1859. r ANDS ! LANDS M LANDS!!! I i The undersigned-to prepared to locate LAND WAR RANTS la the Omaha and Nebraska City Land Offices.— Hood selections can now be made near th( targe streams &ud settlements. The Land* of this Territory, now In Market, arc of the boat quality. tra. Selections carefully made. Letters of Inquiry re quested, , ALEX. P. McKINNKY, Ouaroua, Casa County, N. Ter. Juiy 14,1859.-tf ftcri&SBCSB; Rev. A. B. Ciuuc, Altoona, Pa. Wm. M. Lt/mv* Co, Bankers, Altoona, Pa. McCacwA Dus, Editors “ Tuas. A. Scott, Supfc. P. B. R;, “ D. McMoamr, Esq, Huntingdon, Pa T D. LEST, ATTORNEY AT LAW PJ • ALTOONA, BI.AIRCO, Pa, , Will practice tow in the several Courts of Blair, Cambria, ilnatlqKdan, Clearfield, Centro and adjoining counties.— Also in the District Count of the Cnltcd States. 'Collections of claims promptly attended-to. Agent for the sale of Real Estate, Bounty Land Warrants, and all business pertaining to conveyancing and the tow. Benuscas lion. WilsonMcCondlesand Andrew Burke, Esq., Pitts burgh; Son. Samuel A. Gilmore, Pres. Judge of Fayette Judicial District; Hon. Chonard Clemons, of Wheeling, Hob Henry D. Foster, (rrcenshurg; Ifon. John w. Killinger, Lebanon; Hon. Wm. A. Porter, Philadelphia; and Hon. George P, Uamelton, Pittsburg. June 16,1869-ly. W, R. BOXERS, • ATTORNEY £ COUNSELLOR A 3 LAW, ALTOONA, BLAIR COUSTY, PA. Kill practice in the wend Courts of Blair, Cambria, Huntingdon and Indiana counties. Particular attention given to the collection of Claim*, ant prompt remittances mode. He speaks the German language fluently. £«* Office, for the present, With J. M. Cherry, Esq, op p:site Kessler's Drug Store. Altoona, August 4, IB6o.—tf VOW F 0 R FI T S!—THE SUB j.' scrlber desires to inform the citizens of Altoona that he has just received his stock of FALL AND WINTER CLOTHS. Khichhe is prepared to make up to order on short notice ml oh its reasonable terms as any other 'Tailor in the P'aei JOHN O’DOXMJIi.L. Altoona, Nov. J7th, 1663. Boots and shoes.—the un dersipied has now pa hand and will seii .cheap at hia store fti the' Masonic Tem- Hn pie. i laice and complete assortmentofßOOTS AXI> SHOES, ready made, or made to order, H Overshoes, Ladies’ .sandals, Oum Shoes, Cork Soles, and everything in his line of business, of* - iho b. st quality and on the most reasonable terns. All custom work warranted. Jan. 2, WM. S. BITTNER, SURGEON OENTIST. OFFICE in the masonic tEm . [Dec.23, ’58.-tt *8“ A Student.wanted. ~ DR. ¥5l. 1. FINLEY RE- M .SPECTFOT.LT offers bis professional Writes to the'people of Altoona and the cluing country. : He nuyr.be found at the office heretofore tapiod by Dr, O. D. Thomas. Altoona, 5epf.30,1858.-tf BF. ROYER, M. b., • Offers hi* ptMeesimwl aerrlces to the citizens of auaouattnd Tjetnjty. I"" best of references can begiren If required. Bffice at residence on Brunch Street, East Altoona, three above Conraffia^tore.,, Aprii.3B *S-ly? TECXdtI, A 'SATE SlttKtD AGAINST THOSE . d l 3eawB Bronchitis, 'other affec- More light i more light i Just arrived At tte store of X, Rdash, »sM|tindi4 J *«■ l.G^X&.Mhlchhe pet ©£ so * ,ot tf Jon* JSstent 0 YESi :Yj^ib^SBOT^MEN “*•* }**»• JQSBra #.TROUT innotm ?«A ‘Sy™-*. dischargehisduty Auctioneerwhenever W, Spectacles by® prbsee- forsaleet KESSLER'S CtfASS Bxlo TO 20x24, AND GUT order by - O'. W.KBaSLER; pUBE and zinc » OrocnCTeHow, Peris Green, dry ~^ IWIU> " V ~£MLJ £ i KESSLER'S be BstsHT aTh tuch’s, *JW»Patent,Shoalder Beta Fine Shirts OFF-A LARGE AS <* Bpoto and SboM, BaffiJo and Salt miTOH’s ‘.I-.':'. A 'at *Kf A- . 3 - £s® , lno *> e y *» .“Jwaya P*W back Ip ooi»,vrh«nev«r it U called fbr,«nd without notice, V*. Money i» Executory Jdminiitraiors, Guardians, and others who desire to have It in a place of perfect surety, and where Interestcan be obtained for it 5. The money received from depositor* is invested in Rial. _Estat*, Mortgages, Qrodto bests, and snch other nr»t class securities as the Charter directs. ' ®- owu. Om. J. SHOEMAKER. Lycoming county mutual jFIRE INSURANCE AGENCY.— The undersigned, agent of the Lycoming Mutual Fire Insurance Company, is M all times ready toinsure against loss or damage byPre. MayAanOite, Furniture and Property of crery description, In town or country, at as reasonable rates os “[ ““IW m the State. Office In the Masonic Temple Jan, a, sa-tirj joun Shoemaker. Agent WESTERN INSURANCE AND TRUST COMPANY.—lnsurance on Real or property will be effected on the most reasonable .Altoona at hit office In Anna St. .[OflN SHOEMAKER, Agent® TIN IT E H STATES LIFE INSTJ -Btne*> Altoona. March IT. 1850. - JOHN SHOEMAKER, Agent a. A # ADLUM, n o tar y puel i c . BOAD LAJjDS FOB; RALg, 0P AT LOW OF INTEREST /11HE HANIBAL AND ST. JOSEPH X B AIUIOAD COMP AN y. haring orerflDOßOO ACRES ® ."AND lying In.the State ofMiaedui, which waa grant £&%? Aciof to aid in the cousteurtiou of*SSr *Md, Mfer the principal portion thdreMf ftrnale, on the most IworjU tenna. ; The grwter part of these lands ore within dz, iug all “il 6 * of ‘he RailroaCwWchli how tod, and open’for nse Uironghtm* Ra enttee Tength t l hr . oa f jh » country which is unsurpassed at Ka climate, the fcrtiilty tfite *^WoesbrtV,^o!e nt ” f u mineral resources. oSS'.' r £ssg , ’.» Maaa*aa»: “OARER’S FLOTJR—— A YERT ISIT JUST RECEIVED X>t A *)•»» •*> tuhtniMbto tmbtiauaif at Uwsfcweof >« B mUOIAW. 1 All the standard patent HBMOHW AT 1-tf-' KBSSIES’S mssm-ssi ju SAVING FUND. National TRUST Company. CAVING FUNNATIONAL COMp „ ihx ' „ ' RULES. or " rec€lved ewy day, and in anyamonnt, large 2. Five pee cent, interest Is paid for money from the day tEurpntißu 1 V.v' SAFETY Within the last six months, a tale has come to the ears of the authorities of Ca diz, which, if true, is replete with all the horrors of “ The Three Spaniards,’* and proves conclusively that what is sometimes considered an evil passion is often in re ality, ;a second nature. “The Vendetta, or Revenge to the Death,” is a peculiarly Corsican plirase. It is the war which fre quently rages between two or even a lar ger number of families, often growing out of distorted notions of honor, and some times the revival of old family feuds, which for a time have been extinguished by the almost total extermination of the one, or even both factions, and which, af ter slumbering perhaps for a century, breaks out with redoubled fury and nnre laxing intensity. It is the same Vendetta which between the years 1356 and 1729, caused 666,000 Corsicans to fall by the as sassin’s hand ; and of these, a moiety ab solutely slain—the whole number being twice; that of the present inhabitants, which is computed at about 25,000. These statistics, which are well vouched for by Fillippinni and other Corsican historians, are only given that some idea may be formed of what the Vendetta really is in its primal birth-place. In the year 1832, in the city of Cadiz, a Corsican goatherd who fled his country, (a charge of insurrectionary and seditious cabal having ; been lodged in the Prefec ture against hiiu) kept a little shop from which he peddled the.cheapcst kind of lace and ladles’ trinkets. Giacomo was poor, but it.seems, from what little was known of him, Strictly honest. He had a son, then some ten years of age, who tended the storey while his father hawked his wares about the city steels. Matters seem to have gone on swim mingly, when rumor intimated that Gia c9“oJ~whO) it may be added, was still ybuifgj and handsome—sold too many of his gewgaws at the house of the Don Vel S- and, moreover, consumed more time than is generally necessary in these financial operations. In other words, the Don Vel g had the fortune; or mis fortune, as it may be, to own a wife who had been jthe pride of her native city, in a physiological way, when the Don first saw And sooed her. • Of course Vel S was as jealous as the old Hstramadurian who jbati dprie the same thing before him, as Miguel Cervantes tells us; and this in exorable rumor as plainly intimated that Giacomo was no especial friend between man and wife. But whether Giacomo was .proud [and stern in his own virtue, or whe ther h-e possessed the requisite amount of impudence; be sold his trinkets as freely ana prolonged his visits sit the Seuofa's house just as he.had al ways don eand not withsten&ng'his neighbors hid him be jiarein the Don, if ms suspicions should -happen to culminate to any possible con clusion, still the Corsican only shook his h^d,ipith'perhaps a smile on his hand some fences, still sold his trinkets, and took histiino in so doing. At length, one morning, when his little sonf Was tending store, a lady walked has ss closed. the door behind her, beforehimand then pass ed as Ipstfy; out again. It was addressed to the Senor Giacomo Benventiglo, and horsihc rampant grifiiobfthe Vm S-—- hie foand au invitation loMc evening tettulia, which was te be celebrated on the house-top, as is the usu al custom. He hesitated, however; before ALTOONA, PA., THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 1860. Uded Hfletrg. i THE LAMP AT SEA. BT LOKOFIILoW. The flight was made for cooling thade, Pcisi tierce and for deep; And *faen I waa a child 1 laid Hy fcauda upon my Ureast and prayed, -*• And eank to slumbers deep, Chlld-llke ae then, 1 Ue to-night ' And my lonely cabin light. ®ach movement of the lamp Sb&wg how the Teasel reels; ( And tfer her deck the billows tramp. And ftl 1 her timbers strain and cramp, With every shock she feels: It starts and shudders while it burns, And in its hinged sockets turns. • Now swinging slow, and sUmtlng low, It almost level lies. And yet I know, while tc-and fro ' Ijrateh the seeming pendule go, With restless tall and rise, < Hie stfcftdy shaft is still upright, Poising its little globe of light. 0, hand of 6od I O, lamp of peace! .0, promise of my soul! Xhongfa weak and tossed, andlll at ease, Amid the roar of smiting Theship’s eonvnlsiTA roll— ' I own, with lore and tender awe, Yon perfect type of faith and law! A heavenly trust my spirit calms I ' My eoul is filled with light! He ocean emgs Hls solemn psahns; Xhe w|ld.winds chant; I cross my pi™ ; Uappy.as if to-night. Under .the cottage roof again, I heaid the soothing summer rain. lpscellaiig. A MODERN VENDETTA. [lndependent in everything.] accepting; yet when he remembered that the Senora was really the most lovely wo man in all he locked his doors, and taking his little boy by the hand, was soon in the presence of the company. To be sure their garments were coarse and well worn ; but there is certain bold, wild pen cilling about the Corsican face, which needs none of the more delicate ornaments to render it pleasing to the general eye.— Why he should be an invited guest to a family gatheri ng,hitherto conservative, he did nut wait to conjecture, and so when the Don in person bade them sit;, he did so, expecting nothing else than an imme diate order ior all the trinkets be possess ed, with, perhaps, a few doubloons for his trouble. The sequel, however, probably disap pointed him. The wife of Yel S- commenced with •a rather ornate account of the various ru mors with which Cadiz had been lately rife, which she requested him to disprove in presence of her nearest kin, who were there assembled. With this Giacomo com plied to the best,of his ability. The kdy looked with a smile towards her husband; but Yel S frowned. It was a dull writhing of the dark, husky brow—a fe verish closing of the eyes beneath, bat neither moved nor spoke. “ You see,” said the Donna, gloomily, “you see, Signor Giacomo, that your'trin kets and my charity have wrought my ruin !” “How?” asked the Corsican. “Does your husband disbelieve us both ? What further can I say or do ?” “ Take your boy to the room beneath, andT will tell you.” Giacomo did as requested ; and when he returned, the Donna had drawn a stool to the very eaves, and bade him seat himself upon it. “ My husband insists that I love you more than he,” she says, with her dark eyes fixed on his own; “ but I will satisfy him.” The boy in the room below was startled by the sound of a struggle and a quick stamping of feet. His mind drank in the instantaneous thought that his father was in peril, and with true Corsican spirit, he wrenched open the door and sped up to the roof. He was in time to witness all. The Pythoness had fixed her fingers with a giant clutch on his father’s throat, and hurled him headlong to a certain and fearful death upon the tesselated pave ment of the court below. It was truly a Spanish mode of regain ing the love of a husband, who, through out the entire struggle, L which had lasted for some moments, had stood by, with folded arm. a witness qf the deed which was to heal his wounded honor. The young Giacomo fled, with the groans of the crushed and broken man still ringing in his ears. One week from that night the Carnival was celebrated in Cadiz. Among the group of orges and harlequins thronging the broad Alamanda, a man in rich, melo dramatic costume, stood pelting the bal conied ladies with egg shells, filled with scented water. In the height of feverish excitement and pleasure, a shot is heard; the cabaleero falls, shot through the brain; with a smoking carbine in bis tiny bands, a boy is seen stealing away towards the city gates. They raise the fallen man and tear off the mask.’’ It is the Don Vel S . He is dead, Through the following six-and-twenty years the same red hand appears to have slain no less than fourteen of the immedi ate kin of the Don ; and the assassin, not withstanding the efforts of the authorities, still eluded their vigilance. The Doilna seems to have entertained fears for her own safety, and offered an almost fabulous reward for his,dcteution and punishment. The authorities seem to have gone so far as to pronounce the civil ban of outlawry upon the murderer, giving all men full authority toslay him at slight ; but until within six mouths since, their efforts seem to have been unavailing. During all this period, the unhappy Donna gave way to paroxysms of fury, described as of tne most fearful nature.— In her ravings, : shc called Upon Heaven to; avenge the death of her kindred, and to- have heaped the most insolent of indig nities,upon the.grave of the elder Giaco mo. Early in the past year, she left her home in the nigh) time, and all traces of fter whereabouts were lost, until quite re cently. '7' “One evening/' to usd the words of the translator, “ a fisherman hurried into the city and besought that he might be atten ds by the watchmen (serenos) to a clump of trees beyond the limits, whence, as be represented, he had seen the missing lady stnggling with an unknown man. He described this latter personage as of most terrible semblance, with unolipt hair and whiskers,' and his clothing in rents and tatters. : He gave as a reason for not in terfering in the lady's behalf* that he was afraid lest his life might have been lost in an unarmed straggling with this denionia cal being. «On repairing to the spot indicated, they found the traces of recent struggling, and bits of silk herb' and. there .still bang ing to the brambles. And for sometime, although the sounds of i groans and sob bings were plainly, perceptible, they were unable to catch sigh of either. Making, however, a vigilant search, they found the unfortunate woman : buried nearly to' her mouth in a mass of loose earth and stones a mere, skeleton of whatsjie had been—' and with her shoulders lacerated in a fearful manner by the thorny hushes through which she had been dragged to this living tomb, While conveying her to the city, they were attacked by the same b:ing described by the peasant, who, with unexampled ferocity, had half reached the insensible foirm of the Donna, before he could be speared by the lances' of the watchmen; “ The Donna has since died, and con jecture can only supply the key to this terrible mystey.. The wholesale slaughter of the Vel S family i$ laid at the door of the youth Giacomo ; and that, too, with seeming probability, to those who under stand the revengeful character of the Cor sican. It is presumed that he in some manner, had. enticed, the lady from her home, and then forced her into the far in terior, to endure starvations, and perhaps frequent torturous flagellations at his hand It is quite probable that she was overtaken by him in an attempt to escape bis clutches—from the fact of being fouud 'so near the limits —and Ip a mad 7 frenzy of hatred sought to doom' her to the most terrible of deaths— ; that of being entomb ed alive.” We would''not be considered as endor sing the truthfulness of the story, which seems to us to partake of rthe melo-draraa tic element in no small quantity ; nor, in deed, are we willing to say that such things might not have occurred. Bui, be that as it may, it certainly goes to give us an insight to the mysteries of the Corsi can heart, when driven tp that desperate pitch of frenzy which the history of the Vendetta shows to be so easily excited and so hard to allay. An Adventure with Esquimaux Dogs. The following extract fifom Dr. Hayes’ “ Arctic Boat Journey” will be read with interest at the present time, when the writer’s proposed Polar expedition is one of the topics of the day : —“ The dogs were fastened by their long traces, each team being tied to separate stakes. They were howling piteously. Having been ex posed to all the fury of th|e stofm, with no ability to run about, they had grown cold; and as their master told us, having had nothing to eat for thirty-six hours, they must have been savagely hinngry. One of them had already eaten his traee; but we came out, fortunately, at the proper mo men t to prevent an attack upon the sledges. Leaving the hunters to look af ter their teams, T returned to the hut.— The blinding snow which battered my face made me insensible to everything except the idea of getting out of it; and think ing of no danger, I was in Itbe act of stoop ing to outer the doorway, iwben a sudden noise behind me caused me to looked back and there, close at my beejs, was a whole pack of thirteen hungry! dogs, snarling and snapping, and showibg their teeth, like a drove of ravenous Wolves. It was fortunate that I had not got down on my knefcs, or they would have; been, upon my back. In fac!, soimpetuqus was their at tack, that One of them hadialready sprung when I faced around. I caught him on my arm and kicked him down the hill.- The others were for the moment intimida ted, and at seeing the summary manner in which their leader had been dealt with, they were in tho act of Sneaking away, when they perceived that | was powerless to do them any harm, having nothing in my hand. Again they assumed tho dffensive; they were all around me ; an instant more and I should have been torn to] pieces, I had faced death in several shapes before, but had never felt as then; my blood fairly curdled in my veins. Death down the red throats of a pack of wolfish does had'some' thing about it peculiarly unpleasant. Con scious of my weakness, they were prepa ring for a spring. I had not time even to halloo for help—to run would be tbeitea diest means of bringing this wretchesup on me. My eyes swept around the group and caught something lying half buned in the snow, about ten fcecdist&ut. Quick as a flash I sprang, as I hever inning imfere or since, over the back pf a hinge ’fellow who stood before; and the next instant:! was whirling about me the lash of a Idhg whip, cutting % right 10: Wtfdßp retreated before my blows and my onset, and then sullenly sxulied behind the rooks. The whip, had dearly lived my life j there Was nothing else Wttiun my reach ; and it had been dropped there quite accidentally by KalntanahWbewenkdown to'the sledges. ; ■' ■■■■■ t&m " Mr. Timothy/ you tomind me of a. barometer that infilled with nothing in the upper story." * Divine Aials, M meekly replied the adorer," in thanking yon for that compliment* let remind yon ♦hst ym Occupy my upper &try Onfirely*” • • \ > \ “ What a PBfirtn Muw Bi.'~f a “ darkeyf* leaning on the guards. ;£‘X did h’jong to Massa William, sir, w|mn I cope aboard: but he is in.de in piajing pbker wid do captain, anjl don't knmo toko J b’long to how /**' ' ~ A Fools ' measure actions after they are done hj; the ovent j wise men hefore hebd,sl>j the rules oT reason and right— r Ihe former look to the end; to theaot. Look to the act, and leavethe end with Ood. : Black-eyed ladies~are mort apl Id TO passionate and jealous. Blue-eyMj af* feetionate, soulful, truthful, abd confiding* .Gtay-eyed, philosophical, literary, resolute and cold-hearted. Hazel-eyed, qhsek»tero* pared and fickle. I 9» Mary asked Charles, m?d dropped from the clouds 7" "Thai rain, dear," was the whispered reply- BOU We ought not to judgeamaafar his great by* thsudei® mißtfm ftoaso- EDITORS AND PROPRIETdfis. ■*.**’. ,'«* 'r i-f if# W ; 1 1: IBjr •> V 1 X"* • . X :3u is.