lq la MI uo.-(5,f • • -*'4l6' ' i . c . ..N MEM ME TOW of Publication tome • -51,51 Atm If paid within three months =51,00 if diayed a z'months, and 112,60 if not paid wit the year. Yhese teams rrillr.beritidly ad• Cored to a • ADVERTISEMENTS and Business Notices insert act at U s usual antes. and every deserintion of JOB PRINTING EXECUTED In the neatest planner, at the lowest prises, and with the atropin despatch. flaring parehased a large collection of type, we are pre. pared, to satisfy the orlon of our friends irsituss .Birettorp. S AML N 7 LINN %11,LIAM P 1.1"11.110.r. CfriliSpic IN II IJIIION A TTOrilrE V& AT 11 A 11, - • ram, ou Allegan y 'tree). iu bulbisug for. tnurly o 4.lupied by Humes, MaAllieter, hale k Co Dro,lioot Augupt '111•31.•Iyonr IBLAIR, ATTORNEY A f, LA W nri.ccrosTr, r nflloe with Ron. Jnn T PIA TIN •TONE & , A ITC I !OFFERS, DeTofmse, Ts , alll nti cod to all Conine's I o lhoir Inc with punctuality ciaAvitiry ntli.inicitur, WITH 12112211, 22.0RP1&Y & CO., DRY GOODR 27 liltarti&St , and 26 Chuiell Alley,Plifte ••f. A FAIIILANS, I. D J VI , 00111.11 S, N P wAsseradmis & zoonninr& & FIVRGEONK MILLI) OK fi 1.4 log house ou this side of Fiddler's Green, (Nakville) and Ilenryind myself had con eluded to rob them, bid the people were traveling to the Green to see a show that was there that night, and we thought it would not be cafe to make the attempt We then went to tho barn and got to • drinking pretty freely. At bud we laid down in the REITCUELLat mum barn, and slept there that night. ATTORNICY'S AT LA , IWe knew two or three old bachelors (the act t.scoots, errs s. to C. hlitohell and P Binkleya) lived alone in this old log house, tut2sioryartnershlri to ths pnwiternt• ILn Litir, I and Henry supposed they had money in the .Illirtb• pains et idlleh.d L bush, and will gi•ii prompt and proper sa.uu , u o, .11 business en- ! house. Ile seemed to know more about trusted is :km I them than I did ; but we had agreed on the Mies In heynulde rose the Court ! , Msg.. - ! way to rob them and were only prevented °Mee as Lerets*Jra on Blahnr street, opposite the 1 emperattou Hotel DR. JAMES M. UUTCIIIIIOI 4 I, PHYSICIAN A. nuoceseor to Dr. Wet J. blek lm, respestfttlly toe dm Wa profetutlottsl service' to the ett.te e tto to ( POTTER MILL, awl ticleity Otrioe ut the Eutaw House lle 11.t.tote, No% truhu AMIITUOTI'VES. ChYRTALLOIIP.A PllB k UrtittEllTYPtS AI.. (exelpt.f.mmlaTo) from 8 A w to 5 , /. .001..114 ••••1 , !!! , 1,1 •! e flu!!.J111 Peain•A • JA.111:11 Al. 1.1 01t NEI' AT LA Vt. 11111.1,11,,• rvxo, oe.• 111,0 Atrft.: er J44o' llamado. _ 12=3=1 • rwooto al Opal IS, AI lultN 's A 1 , w& A. 11A vAX, PA 01810 lu Itatrei 1101.1Ing, ulgrueu• Ow Fallon uums Budnes• of •Il kiude, I ortrin,g lts• pro Gunn, pn,mptty attended to MEI= POTTEU & ISITC HEE. PHYSICIANM A Sl'ltliEotis Dr tiro T. POTTOR lirks rem.% tol 11,• tt k House directly oppeette hie I.iriner I , and llf J 11 MITCUICLL to the bollix Cutely •vt opted by Wm Harris, keg ,° /tying et tiftict., next dour above Dr. Potter. resl.lebeix vite , re they can be Conga tett unless Forentitinally engag...l n . r71171.1Tr, ItIMIDENI' DENTIST 01lieu sod repodertea , 71 tllll North East tamer athe DhlJOOll4. beta tho Court HoIIRO I Will be found it Ida nal in et.wp: two nerls ktowok mouth, enutswen,lng on the firm Moinilly nr lb. Inoulll,when he will he moray 131 l ttg profevlitrirl dull.. 4.71111101011 111 MOW, I.lllCo‘.llS'f 8PLL21 . 04". VA 11111 At sat net Irest,sr, IV Perfumery, l'aints. Oil., VI, mljue, Brushes, Ifelr and Teeth sa , new nn 'renal Articles, Trussels aral Shoulder Draws, ihrlden Seeds. CusLomen will Sind out dock °mulatto, and freah, mid all sold at moderate pries% arPertoms roue f m m the country 111 a owned to @ZII,IIIIIIO IRAGLIK 1111071iL, OPPOSITIC VII:6T BltANell HANK MILLI Ulf/rola P. {VILLIAM , P IMP ItIETOII N. P.—Au osu, bus lo end nom the bort and Paf•ket Las/Wawa tee thee 110161, free of OblOo ilept DI Tllllllll' K ANK ; , u• nusres, .1 44. 'I . II tl N. SkIA I.Lurrrn, A. W. M. MI'ILRAY. = ItUM.BI3, ilionrLE3Tielt, lIALE k CO BILL/FONTS, VIISTRIC , PA. DEPOSITS RHOEIVED RILLS-OP XXCUAX4E-AJOD- 40T/GS COUNTED. •COLLECTIONS MADE, AND PROCEEDEJ,D - JUTTED PROMPTLY INTEREST PAID ON SPECIAL DEPOSITS FOR NINETY DAYS AND UNDER SIX MONTHS -AT TUB RATE OF' FOUR PERCENT PER ANNUM—FOR SIX MONTHS , AND UPWARDS, AT THE* ATE OF EVE PER OF,NT PER ANNUM iszonAW ON THE, EAST CONSTANTLY ON imp. • mimosa lON inurtraria °atrium. titlf Pabilaters of Tan Dawooltar 10 Wart:soar, here; lo oinnweitiow with their Newspaper Riitiqt tidmikusk, p• ahoy& sztatudve and ocuilphiti ; . JOB phixTnita OFFIcx, • To i f Jlonnd F ln conical Pommolvosio, oompoomi on. *11 : 1111f N$W MATERIALEI, haat and most Soottfonabie stylo of Plaln T7po 4 Sauk {to prefilinol to togttto•all 710044)11), 1.47114n1' J9a PALNTINfi. **1 9 8 14. 4 et NIOMI cam :h L . ; • 7,,... ......7 , SibtenntOUS• Y. Confession ofAnderson. 4 For, the following details of tho double murder we aro indebted to Mr. IL A. Macke 'held, the publisher of the Life and Con fession of AMerson," a book of ti 4 pages, giving a"cornplete history of the murder, to gether with nIl the particulars of his vicious and pagabond life = We core on to Speedy'lle Forge, and there we 'got our dinner. • The next place we stopped wan at a mill, where we got a piece to eat ; Then we came on to a house where there was no poison at home. Hen ry then said, " Let uslireak in, and steal what we can ;" but !said that woulirnt do while the tavern was close. He then said, '• It t us go on,'' and we went en to the cross roads on the other aide of Litiz. We enter ed Litiz on the cast corner and Caine to the turnpike, along Which we made our way to the place called Fiddler's Green. Before we got there we stepped into the woods until after dark, ea It vita our intention to plun der at the old log house that night. As .00n on it waq dark we came on to the old Iby the stir of the people going to and front the "show" at Neftsvllle. As we had been drinking bard, there is no knowing whaesthe trimequenees Might liana been if the chow hadn't been there that night' In the morning we went to the house,lntd 1 told the man my feet were Bold Ile told ifs er e should go into the house and warm ourselves, We did so, and they gave us our Ireakfast. nom there we went lo the next Loma , across tlid Acids, it here I got a chim ney to sweep for a hey and something to , eat. Prom there, wen eut to Ladies' tavern (on the Heading road,) and I naked him to cell me a pint of whisky. Hie refused, and said he would'nt cell a pint even to his own neighbors. We then went to the Black Horse tavern, and got our-bottle tilled, after ' which we turned from the Reading road and went hack to the Litt/ turnpike, which' we crossed and went to the Manheitn load Go , ing out that mad I saw the two men alto witnessed a - gainst us in Court Panting theta, we stopped nt n house a here they were butchering. Then we went on 11' little further, etopprii in a house and asked for work. The man said he had no work We then went to the blacksmith's shop and ask ed for work there. Ile told me lie had no work for as, and a e a cut on down the Man- I helm road to the next house and again ask• led fur work, but atilt did not get any. The itmd of work we asked for at alt these places was chimney sweeping. The next Lou.. ue eainc to, a little fur. , thee on, was Isaac ICaulfrnan'e. We raw 11, in and asked him for Ins chiameya to sweep. lie told rte lie did not want them elf aned. it'e (hell asked him f o r something to eat as it n a', p tling near thinner time, and one of the women gave us some bread. I asked in German, for some •• livpr wurstu j (pudding)' which made Ilenry laugh. They t said they heti no meat, and-we left awl w en t across the fields to altere the Garber& Int -1 ed. lYe did'ift knew there was any money lat Garber'', but we hail intentkd to rob at one of them three houses ((Infix's, man's and Garber's,) before we got there, brit we saw tip chance at the first and sec ond because the men Were about. When we got to Garber'' house, I went in and Henry follovied me close after. Mrs. Garber and Mrs. Ream wele in the kitchen. I hail been in Hitt neighborhood before, sweeping chimneys, and they may have known us, but I did not know them by name. Mrs. Garber had bee* churning and had got the butter worked of it lumps ready for market the next morningi. It was l4id outnisaktifitist on a kind of a hex' in the ne.s& t ropm drink it Wu wood' box.— Wirt ors went in Dialled 3trs, Garber If she did not wart! lier - ghlittnq swept. Shto said she did not . , , and I drought she spoke a little cresol or sharp, _ ih Illocir„.itile time, and felt it working' Split) , keg& 'We had int Wo:biut got the Black At a !Keit time before. I runnetbing ; to cot,. rind 'Nirs. bitutd enl altpletiukter, and liP;rd.rut.termilk.; ,vie !Pill '4 1 61 1 0 4 ott some Of that. , our t ipieoe," rind MI e• . on about her work. When satingootipot up and started poi outiridi of the dtior we " * no IPain wt 0 ,•1 1 t,,,•1106 . 41# r#o4 to lea r fir • istpoo.".ifii tunor t WU!, 1.01 heufs to pt a t of whisky itte the belies the nc^cild IZEISM I.' ME ===Z4Z time we met Mrs. Garber in the kitchen. '— She was cominig out with a bucket of hot water in her hand, which I think she inten ded to bake odtside to a kind of wash-house to scald the Muni or milk pans. Of that I am not (owe, but I knew she had a bhcket of water in her hand. As we went In' I met her face to face, and demanded of her if she had any money. She said no: I then said she must give us a levy. She again said she had none to give ode, speaking quite cross, , much more so than befoand was about to go out of the front door, ten i stopped her il and told het Ws an evitesi , -way, that she mum give us money or we wmat take' it.— ' This seemed to alarm Mrs. Ream, who then got up to go out ; but it - seems that when Henry came in after me he locked the door I • and put the key in his pocket. Henry took hold of,Mrs. Ream and said she must give him some money before he would let her out. She said she bred none fo give him, and astihe said that Mrs. Gerber tried once more to get past me out of the front door, but I took hold of her or pushed her back with my left heed, emstorew the hatchoLout of my belt with the other. And then the' big struggle commenced between us. She , fought desperately, and before I knew what I she was about she had jerked the hatchet lout of my baud and struck me over the back of the head with it. She struck pretty hard at ine, but I kept it oil with my arm, and it tlid'ut stun me. I then closed with her. ' wrenched the hatchet out of her hand and struck her over the heed two or three times with the pole of it,- but disint knock her ' down. IVe struggled on over the kitchen a l'ioott deal, and she broke loose from me and Imade to run into the room where they had I there money, but I caught her in the next room just inside the door and threw her on the floor. After she was down I hit her on the head with the hatchet, and told her to I stay in that room unlit I saw what Henry was doing with the other woman. I left Mrs, Garber lying there, stunned from tine I . teat blow I gave her, and went Into the kitchen. Henri had got into a struggle with Mrs. Ream, and had her down on th; `steps of the stairs. dust es I came out in the kitchen she had struggled up from i him, and was about rather getting the bet. ter of liiin, and he was in On act or shooting her, h ilt the pistol presented to her bream but I told him not tin 'shoot as the nonse might raise the neighbors. Mrs. Ream still had hold of Henry, struggling wideflion, alien I interfered and knocked her dour with the hatchet. I struck her on thu head ss ith the pole. While this was going on Mrs. Garber hail came to and run Into the room in here the chest was. I heard her Ma king a noise in there, nt the nindow or where the che st was behold the door, %%Inch afterwards made me suspect that the money was in there some place. I then left Henry ' with Mr N.Ream in the ktielnen andieeef in to the beck room N here Mrs. Garber was : 1 bull that room sal. so dark I could not see , her. I had about got in alien she collared me, and then the last hard struggle was.— She tonight furiously, but I got a hold of her , and struck her again over the head with the back of die !lintel's.:, and that stroke knock ed tier down. ft was from tints blot-that the blood New on and spatteried the wall and ceiling, that some of the witnesses spoke of' hilt it was'int done with the club for we did not use the doh at all. ‘Chen I bail knock-' ed Mix. Garber down, I took her by the arm' and-dragged her into the next room. Hen- I I cy rould'nt drug Mrs Ream in as she was too heavy for lion, so I left Mrs. Garber,and sent into the kstelnen and helped Henry to j drag Mrs Ream into the same room with Mrs Garber, where we laid'thenn the same 1 as they-were -fauna-after naleittherubseept l their clothes---- • • • ' • i 5 • Wo then had to . do *ii li both of the women, before they were dead. Richards had to do with Mrs. .Resin and myself with Mrs. Garber. • • • Mrs. Garber was gen/tibia-id, arid _knew_that I...eracdoing, dhe nilied...ist hand and tried to 'Utah inn away, but ire; t o o f a r gone. I don't know whether Mrs. Ream was or not, but I suppose sho was, as she was'nt dead yet when Henry cut her throat afterwards. We then went to ran. sacking the house. Henry searched the drawers, and got most of the things out which were found at the ".Bpook House," a 6 A some we left on the hill. I got some peonies in a tin-box in the cupboard. Wo found no other money. and I still looked round, and I said, .. hew lie II (sheet, there must be HOMO money in there," and I knock- ed the lid open and this:Arad the thitige out. Then_l :tithed the money ,in tlio_ bottom -me the chest in a imp or WWI, laid-tea the 1 whole of it. Henry was in the' sthet NOM too, and in hunting round for money got to , the clock, which hd stdpped, but I don't' know Just why ho done it, or whether he ' s did'ut go to do it, I suppose Isi. arks God. 1 ..,. log fur Monereilien he dose it. . Whim I got the money out of the sheet, I , ' &Nl' I watitto wait Mr any toile, but AS we were - going Wit'heartd the **teen emaitig y ...aent: •ffenry stye, " cut their throttle," and he went to the laiolien-auil got two butcher 11106/oaliud a rir treat the &motor. I took iHt. ttgd z i,,, .. ; , ; ,,,,, t . 4 11:i i . o fis , rber l : c s 7rit. !caw* iii ‘44sit 6,441- fled with cutting her thrttall ones. but webs hack end out her the Second time. He did, .1" • r T - At-,:1•44,• - - itiffidieF that - di . grown-tip child does not want amusement, *ben you Sae how greedy Children are of it I' Do net imagine w•e gron , out of that; we disguise eunielves i 1 "vjitioue solemni ties, but we hoe none of lurked the child nitre yet. ie nditherie birth, wealth, min ter ar fashtork-but in mind, A high sense al - tamer, pa - detevri;inatioir- Hater-to taker vtiritLga oliaothor, an adlierlince of troth, delicacy and' ialitimess torarda than with, whont we have dealings, ara,fta, essential characteristics. *inks loots 00 know dm:Mon:by looks 010etpnen• of a ',spits 'pith till wh*tiitlA it •.,"4- this because she kindot gro aned as we were going ont, and it intetried de it the women were not altogether dead yet when we left the house. 'Henry then pot on Mrs. Gar ber's bhoes. I forgOt to tell you that the only thing I . can mind of Mrs. Garber saying, was when, &thicked her the second time in the hack room, she said, " Oh don't—l'll gore you Mc hey," or something like thew words. But' the devil was in ate then, and f could'ot stop to think, and,l lad then gone too far not to fl nish the IntsOfesa, even if I had lis tened to what sheirawstrying.• - An Execution. The ex-Reverend (co. W. 'Storni, cou •icted at New Orleans of the murder of Mary Durand, was executed on tlw oth in stant, all eflyets to induce the Governor to commute the induce the failiinr. The crimi nal made a speech from the acaffoldr ae. knowledginorhis guilt, and expressing his willingness - to anifer the penalty. During his remarks he meld " Now 4entlevatulurat„4,ll yeti that I hare ncl bun brought to this end because I did dbt know better. I arts ratned'in - - county. Vs., by respectable parents, and re ceived a pious education. Indeed, I may say I occuted a reittpevittble position in so ciety. flutti fell, and fur the last fifteen yenrs I have been led captive by the devil, at his will, and now, by an ignoble death, I am about to receive the wages of sin. I have even held the position of a minister of the gospel, and was barred, and respected as such ; but this only shown the height from which I have fallen, and from which all are liable to full if they yield to their baser feel ings. " For ten years past I have (Wowed the path of ruin in New Orleans, end here • mis fortune happenvd me which darkened all my future life, but to which I do not wish more particularly to refer. I intend to cast Wilma on no one but myself. Allem ards I went to - Nicaragua, but, luifig fdrced to return a gain, gave loose rein to my veil propensi ties, and in due course of time becanio the murderer thnt I ani to-day." The.Sia.mase bins Nowhere A correspondent of the Louisville Journal, writing from Henderson, Ky., giver the fol. lowing account of o luctut naturw" in that place, that surpasses all fteaks of that oc casionally whimsical lady, Dame Nature, that was ever heal d of I have Just returned from II visit to one of the most extraordinary curiosities ever knon nin the history of the human race. it negro n °man belonging to Mr. Samuel Stites, of this phicu, rave birth, eight dapt ,agor.,to foul living children, mined together by pairs in a still more peculiar manner than the Sia mese Twins. The lon boys are connected t The shoulder.ipmrl-frnivr. the -hip to -The knee joint, leaving the lower;eint of the legs and the feet of each perhetly free. The Kirk are joined at the shoulder, with thin differ ence from the boys, that they have but ono arm issuing from the junction of their shout ', dere. They are joined from the hip down to the foot—the two legs ending in one foot. In reg ard to the color of the children. na wro seems to have bein quite as eccentric as in their formation, one of the boys being black, and the other as white as the child of a white woman t and so with the girls.— They all seem to be perfectly healthy. said the mother is tibing Uncommonly Silt Loved, of Tennessee, having lately experienced the bliss of kissing, dosci•ibee it in the•folluwing style: " I happened to pass next day ; ov cours stopped to have a look at the tempter, an' she *ir inigfity TovliTto me put 'ono - Min . asuund my neck and Luther ono whar the mrcingle goes around the hoes, tuck the in turn on me with her left foot, and gin me i kiss. She says, Setty, love. I've got some thing now for you, a sensation—and I be• lieved it, Ihr I began to feel it olreddy. My toss felt-4a if ationies-eear-a-wilktieilas- a cold stream ran up and down my back like a ?lizard with a turkey hen after him in eittinl time, and my sturoolick was hot and unsatisfied like." Govsasms Wring's ("miss Dzbi,oinceso.— The citizens of Montgomery county, Va., held a public meeting 4 their Court Mouse on . the Ath inst., and pesiggi strong pream ble and resolutions sustainiog the Adminis tration of President Dui:lberian oh the Kan sas question, and denouncing the course of Governor IVise: The majing seems to have been 'without distinction Pr party. MI En }tor the Democratic Watabmien, A Day Axaamg the Tombs. 'graveyard in a certain village, in the Easteni end oEour county, having, through negligence, boron much overVoWn with weeds, a day was appointed for the people of that community to meet in order to clean, .Ind dress it. Accordingly • large number of persons collected. themselVes in the told cemetery, on the day assigned, amounting, Mcluding women and children, to shout 1 4 50 pernons. The greater, poirtion of these re tuained and worked till 5 o'clock, P. M. It was indeed a gloomy scene to behold. Many sad and sorrowful Faces were present, par ticularly among the 'apes Numerous per sons that were there had just lately buried some very neer and dear friends ; most of these especially wore deeply grieved in gaz ing on, and ornamenting the sepulchres of their departed friends. And ere we left the city of the dead many a tear had fallen -on the graves of busied friends, who have gone to the-kr:We spirits. Although many people were in attendance, ova one was there who cad not a friend, a relative Vie - companion hurried klaath the hallowed spot. Yee not a sleet individual was present, who might hot mourn over the loss of a parent, a husband, a wife, a broth er, a sister, a son, or a daughtolit, who were interred beneath the clods under their feet. True, not every eye shed tears, nor every countenance expressed grief, yet there was a general tranquility. Every one appeared to hare sensations imitable for the occasion. People of almost every character were there, yet all evidently showed proper feelings.— Some few were present, who habitually use _Wane and vulgar language, but no such monner of speaking was heard there : even the voice of the jester was not perceived by the ear. and the laughter: of the merry was unheard. Every one appeared to be fully sensible of his own mortality : all seemed to boar In mind that they too were hastening to the grave, AEI were anticipating their go• lug to the ho of all living. That cemetery lias been the place of h• torment fpr the last 60 or 70 years, and in i bosom rest and decay the bodies of about 400 people, children inclusive. While gaz ing over the sepulchre% of these people, thoughts, many and Various. rushed to my mind, and afterwards, when meditating over my occupation and observations, during that day, I was forced to believe that many and various lessons were taught by that old church-yard. And indeed, dull is the pupil, who does not improve under the instructions of such a master. These instructions are a• dopted to make all-learners better and wiser. Yea the grave is a universal teacher, declar. mg the same truths in all clinics, in all ages, and in all the Islamics of the Earth. Here we may learn that death has no re spect to persons. The rich and poor, high and low, great and small, and good and evil are laid side by side. It (the grave) admen.. laws the proud to humble themilelves, the rich to regard the poor and needy, the health• ful to sympathize with the afflicted, the old to tem,h the young of their mortality, and the young to remember that they too may die. It speaks to the thoughtful of the value of our present existence and its 'outflows and bearings on immortality, .but especially does it teach us : —TtrEam nr ALL LIVING. Many other important lessons besides these aro taught by the grave, but I have not now time to write theuht The-thought• ful may at any time go, and learn precepts from this great Instructor, and when rein ing from their visit use the words of pie Poet: nEhir Nvesime visors illidhus-freo, 'Cu lbat unfathomed boundless sum, The silent grave ! Thither all earthly pomp and belie, Roll to be rwallowed up end loot, TO one dark war,'" REsnostmo, Ciintro Co Dragged too Knob. pr. 0. W. Utilities, better known as the funny man, in his valedictory address to the medical graduates or Uarward University, delivered recently. gives the advice to the medical students who were about to grad• nate t " With regard to the exhibition of drugs as a part of your medical treatment, the golden rule le, be sparing'. Many remedies you give would make a well portion so ill that ti e wouldsend for you, at once if he bad taken one ofyour dosea•secideutally. It is not quite fair to give such things to a sick man, unless it is clear that thily will do ..omgosttliban the Tog cionsidetaklstit v• you know they will cause. De very gm : cious wish the children especially. I have seen old men shiver at the recollection of the rhubarb and jalap of„infancy. You may depend ution it that half the Gummi of Homeopathy is due the street peset, blur brought into the nursery. Between & gut , gling down of loather() mixtures and the sasehstine deliquesoentie of a minute glo.. _bule,,w_hat tender istelbor_ervldjor a , mu. tuent hesitste I" . . , Cour'sd Pleiater. a brewer at Bt. pods', made a wager .LM t scald uplift shelf bey r4 of beer b9,6iikte•tk• Wb4l i eadesior. iog to sto ao be had his upper.** brolard.bt so frartbl alnatmer. 'that , it Is eitiox4,o , he wilt qis of his isteries: OriginM. E. J. W r f ~ Nn!MI Jkl• ---- , Bate of Presidents. Thomas Jetlemon died poor. r iffs forni• to nk and ills satiate waA sold to satisfy . his cialitore. •flis posterity was drivels from house and home : and his banes now lie in a I soil owned by strangers. En Wilily are scatterad.'•nd many Of his descendents are both natives and citizens of foreign( lands. James Monroe, the amiable and patriotic I Monroe, whose services were revolutionarf, and aliose blood was spiltin the war rdependence, nhose life was worn out in the publla service, had his estate- 6014 fronehim for debt--his family were' scattered, and his daughter died in a foreign land. , James ,Tqadison was a model of every vir tue. public and private. lie was remarked , for his love of order, his economy and his strict regularity in all his habits of bus( nes, : and yet when ho had been President eight years. and was about to retire, be sent a letter to Mr. Preston, enclosing"' note tor ties thousand dollars widish be requested him to endorse and raise money in Virginia. so as to enable him to leave the Capitol and ratnntto his modest reheat—Jda patrimont, al inheritance in the State. General Jackson, ■ha, at the close of big term of eight years, drew upon the consig nanntlia cotton crop at New Orleans for sit thoatand dollars, to enable him toicaro the zest of Government without leaving creditors behind him. The friends of General Harrison after his death, asked and received from the Govern went twenty five thousand dollars, in order to squire up 'the debts which lie ei as obliged to incur during his race for the Presidency. And President Pierce, io order to keep his expenses within his income was known to hire lived very economically. So much for the honor of being President. It to honor purchased at great expense, the salary be ing insufficient to meet the expenses of the most economical family that has yet occu pied the White Holum. Don't read the Bible Ohio editors are not very deeply read in the Scriptures," if the following, from a correspondent of Harpers' Magazine, is to be taken " for gospel :" " Governor Chase laded his proclamation appointing a thangsgiving day. To make sure of being right on the subject in hand, the Governor composed his proclamation al. most exclusively of passages from the Bible, which he did not designate as quotations, presuming that every ono would recognise them and admire the fitness of the words, as well as his taste in their selection. A learn ed editor of a_Democratic paper (the Gov ernor is on the other side) pounced upon the proclamation—declatid that he had reed it , before—couldn't exactly say where—butrhe would take his oath that It was downright _plagiarism from beginning to end ! That ; would have been joke enough for a a Idle, at least, and perhaps longer : but the next day the Republican paper canto ',nit reliantly in defence of the Governor, pronounced the charge false and libelous, and challenged any man living to produce one single line of the proclamation that had ever been in print be fore !" Maliateogs.-Let people prate Ili they will, the woman was never born yet who could not 'cheerfully and proudly give herself and her whole destiny into a. worthy hand at the right lima, and under fitting ciroutnstaii , oes ; that is when her whole heart and con science accompanied and sanctitied the jift. But marrying ought alerayeto be a question not of necessity, but choice. Every girl ought im be taught that s...hasty, loveliness union, stamps upon her almost as foul die booor as one of thole connections which omit the)egal ceremony altogether ; , and that, however, pale, dreary and toilsome a single life may be, unhappy tnwied life must be ten -fold worpe—and ever haunting temp tation, and incurable regret, s torment from *bleb there is no escape but death. - ro - anntraizii Loos. sumo Yankee boy could discover a means of preserving love. as we preserve pert, what an excel lent thing It. would be't„ltut alai! no sali could cure the great bane of love— too much' of each other's company._ My advice, said !Ala, fs, that married people part as often posaibte,tao as -to give., little tinge of freshness to their meeting:again. It. is a great deal easier to win a man over than to keep him.:• Strange it is to see what greet pains men and women take to win each othei: and how little to holden tomb other. A Down Faster,adVertised for • wifo in tfoluflow(ng ttittfinal " Any gal what's got know, • god &albet bed and fixfits, Ave hundred in hiud pewter, one that's had the moats, and understands tendi4 children, can bays a customer. for life by writing a billy dux, &dimmed s---- R and stick it on uncle nonuser's barn, 1 ; 1 1%41dd...11MA; the WS REn."' Among . the cooyiota at tortoni, in the StatoßriNw 10_1114W*. IS, 3., its. mak named Stonelake,k santonoed lb, passing oounterfaitWainen who was fiiivirly in as.. alitant: to ROT. /di. Pisa*, of thitiTeßt4rita• *salon, anti- is wall • Ocionatest sap hi wan pailtthe cwoativiiiit money 'fiw• a de doe Min thlakiai itigewn•- ina: fitietta of t>te Waihriat , ..~ ~ ; .:a.u~~~ __._ IN if )-- zu_,,, ,, - • .Tertur i 1 54) I How Xikt canto near losing Salli..but Didn't, Say, hart you- begird the hews 1" • • Mita pews ' " bk. Han and Sally Brown got I married last even u." •• l'he nation ! 'sou den% my in 7" • 1 . 1:11 111 , 1 burr as you live ; but botwoon yiut ar.! me Mike cithe mighty , near' out gettiti` her." How ftAR tliat 1" ..,0115-,%. I cmur! very neat gettin . Mier You t' " Yes: tell . you 'sh oo t tt. You wire Mike and Me went over tai‘the ilettia,meet• ing house one evening to peaty!r meetsnit for no other porpoie than that of going hems with Salty. mw him as soon Si t d gut ID, and he saw Mt) V) WC b Alt kp -w a hat we might depend on. .• When meeting was out We Wile mods • dive for the door to go in for the charm, a; WI as good luck would have ik he got miliwisied In atpong the people, and a 1 Newt Ma to Sally, MO cdt him out &I WWI` •• • waits tie. If fumed a chest of ;old II wbolds't . have pleased me ono.whit, batter, fue yon sob I was already in love with thd gal. ire talked and laughed along as merry as crick ets, and but for the fact that thcre. had been e Shower of rain the ovenin; before, which had left puddles of water hers and there in the road. everything would have boen just as it should be. For my part I didn't care a copper fiw the puddlefi—lo tact I'm not sere but T would rather have had them there, for each one of them made it necessary for me to take Sally' in my arms and leap over, which, by the wry was any thing bat disagreeable. It would ctrtainly have done you good to wee Jme put on the " agony" eviry time I came to one of these puddles. r done it for the express purpose of hurting- the feelings of Mike, who wee following along after us In the crowd as sober as a judge. Of Conrad Bally and f led the way all the tins/. It was very dark, so dark wit Pont' scsreeli abe I the ground, yet we could see all the puddles of wner very plainly by reflections -a/ they looked white. boon after we entered the hiirn ritMdbar up bs 'Tom Smith's I saw oh usinattat lasts, middle. Telling Sally to hold liar temper,!' , took her around the wets. and inede ad aw ltd leap. Do you think I lit safe and amind on the other aids 1 - No, sir : I lit a ith one leg on either side of the neck of an old white cow that lay hi the road, add which I had mistook for a puddle of water. The old cow beinriknibiless as much surprised an myself, sprung-up hind feet that, and antler , I next Instant Sally and I found ourselves landed on.onr heads But that wits not 1.- Trona of it—one of the old bastes horns caught in the strap of , ny waisicuit,, and a• ' way sbei Went dragging - me ikrien'the Urn. l and roaring like i lion. I summed 'shit had dragged' me nearly fifty paces, Wore her hold tore loose; but as the road was perfect ly smooth, I enstained but littitlnjury. Tho only serious hurt that I had reeneed was an internal one. and that was caused by the sharp squall that Sally gave when we lit Up on our heads. It went through me like 6 knife. and kept on tinging in n tny ears. for !- had no idea but the poor girl 'wits killed. ' As soon as I could clear the dfrfont of my eyes, I hurried batik to learn . th/a wort!.' 411 a very little while neatened ii, but in i ilif.. ferent way from any I had &pearl!. There came Sally down along the other side of the lawn swinging on Ilike'vratt. and laughing et to kill herself. Don't you think I was 'had i l'hietn't. a word to say, bat 'mutt , dropped batek*and cut 'bens! the fields and left theta. - ' . .• A few atilt" ago, t ogled on Bally with' a determination to pop ) the question and' Wing mittens to a close. I wont o?tr She • whole rigmarole, and she listened to me tett was through, and then with ono of tbsi most protAtmg laughs yea ever heard, she loohca up and tolditei j_was a httla,,ttritildet.. —she was engaged. Stilts bad pt, the basis of mc, and nothing undo - Am sun but that' old cow was the caul, of AWL C 7 likthloliAtt-Buitost47Wo toyer. after seeing the evidenoe, had a doul4 Of. this wanton's guilt In the horrid chimps , brought against her, andim4 It not bran for nut influence of gold, or the apopidity ai r blincincile, or soutelidur etas of • put Ale„ proiew:utlon, we think ale woold have ,boon , convicted. There is • prospect now that alit will yet bri brought to jusUcet , Now Ovid opements. we legit "P" si t ic ,P*nOwr tiblogi of grin earl I'di ! l . 3l .ll:9 l . lW Mig / abli be:lißit putilic, and the chief ioeidents of 1 4011 lily and bloody &limo he..,re-lreost,, wfth still more thriliihg isteria; _ money and induinbesigainmptitet iiair••• trail Adrertissr, A trirt7. • ' ' I - AhmolowstbJirtmlwoo iwso, ii R# gait^ w94.14V Pmethas .cittiotre. 'Ps*, 4 4÷45 4 / 4 4 - rfaato-11 1 4-4P,Orif"o. 6B * , VPA.nuttking." ll l. l 4444 l llif TVPVITitle`. aylpdi If *lee AO% likith but in the vieiniti onouneultbet tUltrbeti b.ddied, itebeg tbserpleeeetul akeeutostee eel of deetb. - witbarvilt pirtibelefikti , 11. Meade tiourbea hive ad deeli.' but-it aws *lw be asteetebed Vane in vc•II Ent hearty/ . • • M Mill !Ml EMS BEE El =I