, . .. . , • .... --_ Nic, - / - * .. , . • i , • . •, , / ...., • ' ' ' - ' - , - . . • • lr.r.: Ili I, 344 1 1 i i . , , . .. -E4- .... T' A C''' t • *'-'7:-' l'A •• _ -• ••'". - iA ' t , . • „ :~ \ N •4 ,- A • . :47t . ..t.,:2., „ - '... T -.. • ~rte t• • f c -. . ' , ' ' .a- .0' e . ,7, • - ‘/ , ,, 1 P,..),,,:',, , - -4.- . - \‘ - '\ 7 \ c ~..•...,-ir7w ', YN, . i Or I ...,, 11 it ' rmp o s. 11,11' ~', • , ‘.. V t - '44: 7 7,,,' - -> : -... . 'll- l' „t - " 1 ! 4 4 • • IA • \ / , 4 , ...1 • I ' . ' ~.. % ..,. . -. ..--,,,‘ -' 'via. , , t. •"'' . 4 r - -,.--n - 4 1 / Q ' lt ' ''`' ''' ki Al l h ''' - .., , '.:::'.., ' - - 7e°,... k.,...41: 5 g- -...--- ~...- tf. /•••‘' -7 4; 4 44 *. Airi i -... ---4- ~ ... • A ' f l ;:. t A :, 1 , , 41 ~ “- „ . 1 / 4,.. ( 7 t: 1 ,/ ' 6! ~ • . --.• • .•,.. •.- • il l 4, _ 1 t , . " -. • A. "ft * 1 1N., , i ,- • 1;4 io- 111 .4 -1 V , .4.- ''.'" I ' -1- - '' -'' -•• / / *) •-Cl' 1 . •• • / / 41 /:fe .t/Llie:;0;/ / , ‘ 'f _:_ , , .„.....- ' • ,i ' 411 : '\" ''.-- ~ . ~., - • 4 _ , 1, .: , _ - • - -1-. :/7 1 ...41. - 116.r . %'----_______-_-_______/-- , - Q . -.., ~- , • / • • ..- !.- •4• • ' --..4 *. C.. • •'• • t---"L'''-...-v -....1,,,..t,:i.......,...-,../ : 1 -• ~....N ' •:),.. N P •• • ' -"- *•:',' l t - '•• ' . '- • .. . . . - - . • . 4- . ~• -.- EMI PRO/PM .•11D PORLIIIIIIND IT t. S. SEEtitit J. B:BARNHART. Torino of Publication _TERMS :—sl,6oele If pee within three months $4,00 if dlayed sic month,. and an if not paid within the year. These terms will be rigidly sa bered to. ADVEItTISEMENTB and 1i111440111 Notices Insert ed at the usual rates. and every deeorintion of JOB PAINTIAG EXECUTED In the neatest manner, at the lowest prices, and with the utmost despatch Having purchased klarge collection of type, we are pro pored to antis the orders of our friends fusintss fitettorp. E. J. INOCRMIAN, SURVICYOR AND cornla A NICER. ett.t.n•orte. rit!lN'• WillA.l4lll tt. 111)LAIIR, ATTORNEY AT LAW naLLtroPrra, r• 'Office In the Arende, meereurt floor VI X M . Al.l.lNixlt JAMBS A BRAYER RAIL a. , *HAVER, A 11011.NEY8 AT LAIL exiLicrorrs,-menrie24. ..11 — A1111011 111. RANKIN, ATTORNEY AT LAW, araddrronre, Pllllll . l Office, on the Diamond, one door weet'of the Poet Office EVEN I. BLANCHARD, ATTuItNEY AT LAW, BELLICFONTR, PICN'NA. OTHa• formally oncuplad by the lion James Burn spin. J J. LINGLE, SURC: EON DENTIST. CZNTIIII CO , P• la now prepared to wait upon all who may &mire him profcrisoinnt service' Room. at his residence on Spring street 1=1=121173 I=l LJNN Ar ATTORNEY'S AT LAW (Mee on Allegany miner In tho buildihg for nie rly occupied by iillllloll, McAllister, lisle A Co , Winker, •11111 ROT VPICS, PHOTOUR APIIS A Will I/ BR HKOTY PBS, Taken daily (except SundeyWfrotn H a w to be. BY J 8 BARNBART, In hie splendid Halrxm, in the Arcade Building Bellefonte Penn's CYRUS T ALEXANDER ATTORNEY AT LAW, PALL IPUIC TR H CA •TRE CO , PA Ogee et hie rent lenee in the clone building for utterly occupied by Mrs. Burnett.. own door below Taunter & Steel's Store lit A Ir. !MITCHELL, ATTORNEY AT LAW, NKLLNYO AT[. PICNW A.. Will continue the practice of hia profearoon, in the office heretofore occupied by him, and will at•end promptly and faithfully to all business entrusted to hiss. MARTIN %TWIN, A UCTION EER. 661.1.1CF0NT6. PRNWA. W 111 attend to all business In hie line with punctuality. Office at his Store . on Allegheny street. DR. G. 1.. POTTER, PHYSICIAN A SUItUEON, ■aaaarorra, ( ENTRE CO , PA, Offlos on High Street (old office I Will attend to I,rofeasinnal calls as heretofore, and respectfully °iron bin Berrie., to hie friends and lb• public DE. J. D. II ELL, MILO EON, , r♦ Will attend to profeenional calls be heretofore, he respectfully' offers his eervioce to hu friends and the public Oboe next deur to hit residence on Spring sliest Oct 2H MAE J. D. WINCIATE, RESIDENT DENTIST eifTRIS CO , P♦ Office and residence on the North East Corner of the Diamond. near the Court Noose L e - Will be found M his oinee except two week! n each month, eommenotng on the drat Monday os the mootti,wheo It will be awa filing professional duties NANKIN 11101118 E, WM. F. REYNOLDS 44 CO.. ISSI.LKIVONTZ, C 10.1711.3 CO.. PA./ Dills of exchange and Notes discounted Col 'tuitions uvula and proceeds promptly remitted Interest paid en special deposits lizchanie in the eastern Mtsne constantly on hand fur sal.. Depos its receiver' I=lMl A 0 lLitlIN DEPOPUT II %PI K, 11USIES . , MoALLISTER, ,lIA LE & Co =I Depeallajpeatved—ililis of Exithange •ud Notes Diecitunte&—lnterest Paid on pedal Dalmatia— Col'mahout Made. end Proceeds Remitted Prompt y —Exchange on the East collet, ntly on hand J U. STOVIKU, ATTORNBY AND OuUNSIILLOR AT LAW PUNM'A • Will practice his profession in the several Courts of Centre Comity, All business intrusted to him will be faithfully attended to. Particular attention paid to collections, and all monies pro Aptly re• milled Can be consulted Is the German as well vihiweireliesPakt-4wrirserger-- °Moe tin Highf, unnerly oodupied by Judge Burnside and D. 0. Deal, lisq. k J. aZ W. P WACTIANUS, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, BULLAPONT•, PA James Maomanum has usociated with Wm. P Mann:lentos. in the prectio• of Lew Profes sional buelneulotrunted to their mire will receive prompt attention They will attend the- act eral Donne In the Counties of Notre, Clinton and Clearfield. Ogee on Allegheny street In the building for snarly 000upledby Linu A. 'Wilson. ■. P. GREEN, DAUGWEer. 111LLIITOPTII, PA. WSO AMC 1111pAll DIALSA IN Drugs, liedleines, Partial/wry, Paint*, Oils, Var nishos, Dye - Stub , To ilet Soaps, Brushes, Bair and Tooth Brushes, Feuer and Toilet Articles, Trammels and Shoulder Braes'. Garden Seeds. Customers will And my' teak eomplata and fresh, and all sold at moderate prises. urrannera and Physiciana out tha oountry are netted to examine my stook MEASLES II HALM HALE Or HOY, - ATTORNEYS AT LAW, as clamors.', Will attend promptly to all business entrusted to thoir oars. Odle In the building formerly octe¢ plui by Ifou. Ju T. Hole. A Odtt.D. Messrs II tot & Flur will attend te my business duriu; iny abaJuas larilmgrass, and will be so aired by - ms in the trial of ate oattsm entrusted to *am. JAMBS T. HALM. Deal 04:1* 18, 184. • Stied Vottrtr. • Deeds of Kindness. Suppose ihe little cowslip Should hang its golden sup, And say, " I'm such a tiny flower, I'd better not grow up, Bow many a weary traveler Would =Mt Its fragrant smell' Row man► a little child would grieve • To late it hom the dell 7 „Suppose the Sides d.w?dropis . Upon the grill should say, • What can a little deli-drop do? I'd tietter roll a The blinlo on which restad, Refire the day was done, Without • drop to moisten it, Would wither in the son. Suppose the little 'breezes, Upon a summer's day, 'Should think themselves too small to cool The traveler on his way , Who would not miss the smallest And anneal ones that VIM, And think they make a great mistake If they were talking so? Bow many deeds of kindness A little child may do, Although it has so little strength, And little wisdom too! It wants a loving spirit., Noah more than strength. to prove How many things a child may do For otbsrs h♦ bin toys. Beauty, Wit, and Old. In a bower a widow dwelt, At her feet three lover, knelt; Each adored the widow mush, Each strayed her heart to touch; Grie hod wit, one had gold, One was east in beauty'. mould ; Clues' which was it won the prise, Tongue, or purse, or balm:looms eyes ? Pint began the handsome man, Peeping proudly o'er her fan , Red his lips and white his chin— Could such beauty fail to win' Then Mopped forth the man of gold, Cash he counted. coin he told , Wealth the burden °Phis/Alfa— _ Could such golden prospect, fall Then the man of wit and sense, Wooed her with his eloquence, Now she heard him with • sigh, Then eke blushed, moire knowing why Then she smiled to bear him speak, Than a War wu 00 11411 r 911011 k DP math .aatai. l intd, depart? - Wit his won the widow's heart Rlisrtllartolls, CONSEQUENCES OF GAMBLING. Morquis Angelo Poscarini Wag the last of his name anti title—one of the oldest (+fo llies in Naples. lie had been traveling for Its health for the last three years, when his physicians recommended Dieppe to him as all other places h.d failed in restoring his strength T),ts occurred in the month of July some few years since Ills Brighter accompanied him : the most beautiful of Italy's daughters, where there are so many competitors for the prize of loveliness. Olympia was an only child ; yet the mar quis had been married four times, Devoured by ambition and pnde, he could not even from her conceal his annoyance about her sex ; for now his name, which had been handed down in the direct line for four centuries, would perish with himself. He would freely have given his immense fortune twice over, his life, his child's life all, to have possessed a son wbo would hand down his name to irvisterity. At sixty lie was the widower of two Ro man ladies of high descent, and of a German princess and all three had died without his wish being accomplished. He wax old now, arid worn by the intrigues of place and am hilion: Ile felt himself going ; death stond before him every moment more visibly, and to try to conceal the painful fact from his view, this last of the Foscarini endeavored by gaieties and pleasures to crown himself with the semblance of youth. Ike raised around him a rampant of debaucheries; orgies, and gambling: he flung millions away and when, by aexident, a thought of hie child came semis him, it was In bitterness " A woman ! woman P' he exclaimed.— " There will always remain a sufficient tor time fol. her, a child of eighteen 1 She would be affrighted by the heaps of gold which I had accumulatett for a son ! On, on, let us amuse ourselves while we may . I shall, perhap., die to-morrow !" Olympia knew why her father lived this. He did not spare her the knowledge of why hif was so reckless. Without ,pity, towards hinq k not caring how much he pained her heart, he was constantly reproaching her as the cause of all. Cursing her and her dead mother, he oared not how much she who so tenderly loved him, beheld the unsightly wounds of his •robitiotis heart ; and when Ike caw her in tears, his only resource was to to leave her alone, to weep in the bitterest sorrow • child might d know. arising from a father's cruelty, And yet Foscanni loved his daughter, not as • father should hale done, but as something belonging to himself —as something beautiful. the moat exquisite of his possession, a handsome piece of furni ture—his own., That was the reason he al ways kept her with him, made her travel everywhere he yent,_antirritfuseihez_haliii in marriage to the wealthiest nobles of Aus tria and Italy. =3 BELLEFONTE, CENTRE COUNTY, PENN'A., THURSDAY, JUN E 28, 1860, .' Ste, with me," he said. "I want to have yon near me. You can marry when I am dead." When his feverish nights of excitement had paned, broken down and trembling from a debauch of 'wine ■nd gamtding. ho was in the habit of going to the baths, or seeking,dn the wave a renctial of vigor to pursue an existence capable of killing a strong, man of twenty, And yet he was too unhappy to relinquish the excitement. fink day he endeavored to bathe alone, wlthmit. his attendant, when the tide Was Coming ip ; bat weaker than usual,. he was carried away, and then flunk in Vaunting' state 'limn the beach. The next was taking him away to destruction, when a young man, who was bathing, qwam to his sense less form, and bore him to latid in safety. When F. , mrairini opened his eyes. he turned to thank the one who had saved and, to his annoyaitre, reeognivil an MTh er from Trabans, whom he had met at the bathe of Pyrmont and at Vienna. and whose as ilin. ties towards OlytoPut had 1.-,tven him ttruch I== ft few words of cold thanks and politeness were exchanged, and the young (terms II asked permission to call soviet mss at the marquis's hotel. Ile was fog idly told he could do so. At the end of a month., the marquis and Stephen had become Fist.; aratile. Still madly in love with O' inpia, the lat ter was, however, too clever this time to manifest it so openly as he had dime at P% r mont. Ile allowed FoFicarim to think that he vas cured of his pntedon. lie spoke to Olympia without trembling or turning pale. and with perfect ease of manner, addressed a few cemmon place compliments to her, to which she replied in the same indifferent tone Quite blinded, the old man unsnapicion.ly yield‘.l himself into the other's bands. lire made him hr companion and confidant. and raised the 7artain lwlore him which had eon coaled all his past life, and revealed the hor mrs which had been lin;den beneali the splendor and garlands of his Ir,rl. Stephen however, knew it already ; Oh mpia hail concealed nothing from him For tao whole years he had followed in the hack of Fosca. rim an his daughter. Thus ti.eplien passed almost evvry night at the Marquis's, and to local his tastes, Mad, at the -isms time. If possible, keep him from goim.: among paean gers, he became' a Heem.lig gambler, to re itrain the real one. During a month ho I,ld played away all fhe money It e pogseq , ,ed about torn and all he could borrow, and ilua_niore ho loNt the bettor Fosearitit loved Inin for the tnartrim knew no happiness but in dice, no plea,ure Nave in winning. But luck changed. The marquis had a passion for a sort of lon called boitilotte, which Stephen erected to like ..,ttlitally well, l' 'tad already cost him ten thousand louis: when one eat ning he arrived at the marqui.'a half an hour ear lier than uu.ual, with the fifty louts he could then command m the world, and firmly rt solved that if he lost them, he would no lon ger carry on the fretful game he had been playing. but at once throw off the mask of hypocrisy amt. demandinr, Olympia, again in marriage from her father endeavor by other means to win him from his love of gamliliog. If Olt were refused to him, he felt the des peration would seize upon him which was natural to a, young man like himself, who had vainly aonght the one he loved 'to long. Stephen's motive throughout had been a good one If he won all from the marquis. he hoped by a marriage with the daughter, then more than probable, to win the ru ined gambler from his propeusitieu to peace in the bosom of his family. Foscarint and Steplum were seated oppo site to each other At their lon table there was a Perlman banker, an KIICIISh MIMII of ficer, and two planters from lissom Stak a were immense. Stephen commenced by ten lonia ; then ton more. again the same and the ' , tartlet All were lost. ll.' trembled. Foscarini laughed at the timeliness of his stakes. With a hand which appeared in stinotively to draw bark, Stephen Placed his last-territmin-heftwe-hint be. betel three:deu ces in his hand, and gained a hundred lonia from the parisian bunker. At five in the morning he had won two hundred thousand piastera,t ho banker eighty four thousand, the naval officer twenty thou sand, andithopther two more than thirty thousand , It was Foncarini who had lost all that. The gamblers drank a glass of punch. and amicably gavo each other rendezvous for the evening. Evening came, and Om play of the one preceding had been that Of a child in corn psrison with it. - Angelo Marquis of Folmar ini lost all that he possessed —all his palaces at Naples and Florence ; all his villas attho foot of Mount Vesuvius, and hif property in the Campagna at Rome ; his gold, diamonds, horses—all. - The day broke through the crevices of tho shutters ; through the double curtains the daylight cast Its pale light, which made thitt a the expiring wiz lights of the red glare which we fanoy an emanation of the infernal regions. Of the six intrepid players, four of them looked lilie_statuta.s.__The_ immenae kmuter-ot their host, the piler of . money" and 1 0 U'e placed beforothem, had petrified them. Only two men there found words or movement.— These were Fosearini and Stepheift . The for• mer was searching in all his pockets for something more wherewith to gamble, and he found nothing. Never before hid a Man in this world such s physiognomy as that At last he advane,eetwo (liming eves close to the others face. and in a low voice, which stiemud to roll in his bosom like distant and threatening thunder, he said • •• Monsieur, all that J possess yours : what those other gentlemen have won is a trifle but you—at this present inontent. 3on might say to Itpn, 1 tpn, • Old enah, leave my house "" Maritvisr exclaimed Stephen. Let me continue 1" the other 'cried, in• terruptiog hin " " We met at the waters of Pyr . mont ; at the casino of Naples 01.0. Young man, do yiau recollect that twice I told you that pour attentions to my daughter were displeasing to tne ?" " Hot t margins —" " You lovrd iny daughter then and I find thr right of showing you the door. But you loved bvr, did you nut 1" •• Mu you love her still ? Say, do you ?" I do. wish my is hole heart and soul!" ‘t Well, then, I'll stake her'." At these horrible words all the other gam blers started up, electrified and speechless ; but with clasped hands tipritised towards Stephen, and by the expression of their frees imploring him to refuse. But he ! A fl rsh of heavenly joy lit up his countenance. lle endeavored to chop the hand of the marquis, hut he . was coldly pushed hack , and seeing that play hail made a mortal enemy of that man, We drew himself uti with a nobility of fu cling, to which his antagonist was a stran• ger. and said in a solemn tone • •• Marquis. If you will accept Me for your eon in law. here, before these gentlemen on my knees T implore you to take lia:k all you have lost But I fear it wilt be listless hop. Ing— " Perfectly !"replied the marquis in a trine of rage. Well. then," answered Stephen enialv. " I neeept your proposal : for)on to lin what•l shall lose if you win." The spectators titte•rerl a cry of hor)rir Fill.'Can't' 1100kM1 Ilt them, from nne to the Cohn. with iittallo of cootenitt; and repTioi to Slenhen'q lent words with : Whatever you please " There %VAR R lerrsll)e foIIIIRO. " 1 plat• for Pour ilaiighier "Halal the ()Meer of Tratians, "ngninst all that I povs'•aa tenth here and nt home against my pnternal in heritanct , my "Warne, any position, .honor all '" 'Tis well " replied the marquis, nn.l he flune three cards on the table. They were three aces Stephen, without looking at his own, turned them up They were three lens, and the fourth of that number idgo. .‘ Four tena!" exclaimed the naval officer in terror Four tens '" responded the two planters and Parisian brinker And as all foresaw some fearful catastrophe, they picked up their hate. collected their winnings. ■nd prepared to deport but 119 they were easing wood by to the marlins the ruthless gam filer even were 'fleeted by the countenance of the father who had lost hie child w hos,, face wee bathed in tears, that millionaire who wee reduced to beggars', seemed to ask mercy of the young man who hind won all. ‘' Marquis Fosrnrmi.'• exelaitned Stephen, advaneing towards him. and speaking in a trembling voice, •. this is a horrible dream • yon have lost nothing, I have gained nnoth• ing." " T hove lost nothing " cried the old man with bitterness: ask those who have gone away laden with my gold if T have, lost noth ing if my countenance and my tears say that, my fare and tears he !" Thus saying he disappeared before any one could stop him Sherd; afterwards Stephen fousid himself alone in the apart ment. It was eleven in the morning. ----TheirownroHiner-rekadt awo.•tha—papawa, the engagements. and tlo I 0 U'R scattered about, and flung them into the fire. Ile wrote to tell Olpnntik what had passed, and then he quitted the hole! • Fifty steps from it he saw a croaki of people advancing Oa a litter they were carrying a man who had just boon taken out of the water. it wax Vosearini Ile had plat been sav ed, in time to preserve life Eight days afterwards Stephen, at mid night; entered his own apartment, and was informed that two persona were awaiting his return up stairs. Thdy-wore Fonenrini and his daughter. My visit at this hour surprises you, doubtless. mon .sear," said the marquis slow ly : nevertheless, soon qr late, - it Was neces sary that I . should (mime. I ant here to re deem my engagement. You hive won my daughter ; hero she is. I bring her to yoh. I have used no force to accomplish in' slk has followed me willingly. Is It net se, Olympia." Ile asked this with a bitter: smile, and then continued : 1 4-have-new-noileivighwar butr-yow-lurre note wife yet, Monsieur Stephen. I will never acknowledge you as my son.lti You are not noble enough for that. Olympia cannot be your wife until after my death nevertheless, she is yours. You sec, then, monsieur. whetherthere remains Anyt hing to play for !". And while these gloomy words left the two lovers petrified, With the feeling of im pending evil, in the room, he quietly shut the door and placed the key in his pocket. " My revenge, then !" he cried In a lo4i , voice, talking two pistols from his bosom ' gee, they are both unloaded, and pairs will charge one, and you shall , have the first choice. If l kill you, My daughter will he mine ; if you kill me, o.ympia will he free, and then she can best judge whether her father's assassin can become her husband." Stephen endeavored to earmatulate. If you lake a slot fo,waid if you ut ter a cry," ekclaitned the exasperated old num, •' I will diseloirge the pistol at her !" And as he Apoke. In pointed the weapon he had charged, while speaking, at her head. Stephen, in terror and agony fur one he lov ed dropped into a seat, Fotearnii, without plying the aightest attention to his child, %alio senseless on the floor, presented two pistols to Stephen, which he had placed loge' her fur an instant, changing them be lend lt a beck. Fire, or she shall fall the victim !" cried Fo4cartni, hohliog the corner of a handker chief to his antagonist. Ignorant of whose weapon contained the hall, Stephen grasped his. The two went oil at the same moment. It was Stephen again who was victolious. The Liberator of New York. In one of the littlerdlages in Westches ter county lived an old 'fellow, antnewhat fond of Ins glass of toddy arid hanging , ii , mer from Buckwheat —lt has been around the bar-rooms or the village taverns, to hear the g, sap, and occasionally '• ascertained by an experiment in Germany duigc.„ and s„moisses to " excess or winch so says a writer, that an acre of buck wheat he wins afterwards very much sshanied. Ile 1 1 1 1 full I.l"nm will yield fourteen ik.unds of day. went by the name of •Old Sam,' and was re- l' iineY per mlY• The Japanese princes desire to obtain ally a very entert•iiling personage. lie had seen (;, , n astongton and was ac( . nrd , ng Arneriean weapons, and tools for making to MA own story the enure of the Ilriti.h them. When shown a musket or a cannon evacuating the city. ' Come Sam," some they "Y. "Very good. Keep Englishmen village tavern bump r would say, '' tell is oft Very g ood." *lion your driving the British out of New fl - 7 . If the head of a fish is 12 inchea long York " now, 'Squire. I don't ex. and three times the length of his head. plus artly Rev that I dol.ln it. but I'll give you 15 inches. equals the length of his body. the ort•, and you can draw yaor oat, crm-, hoar I "ctig is the tail of a Tkitaiwa cat 9 Seam (I,igioum : Yon .ee, the fact was I knew the and 6 months oT& was in New York : and"! knew, end , (1 - 7 We see it stated that some of the we sit feet that they had been there long doors leading to the Senate chamber of the enough and for one I was determined they !Capitol at Washington, cost twelve than.nnd shouldn't be there any longer One night dollars a mere, enough to buy a good sized after we had been talking about it for some farm and stock it well. time t.loco IZtoinL! to bed I said to our folloi, 1 el. 7 Japanese never °pocket a blow " I shall ride to the rite to morrow morning They blow their noses on square pieces t f and he there before day break : and I shall soft paper, which are thrown away with 2, , 0 armed " I went right out to the stable ()nee ns,ng. Our system of pocket-bandker. a tuba lantern, three hours before (1 afr 140,1, cl: ''s ir, to them, very uncleanly. FUl.iled one (.1,1 white mare, put two loath il rl - 7 - - i he first hive of bees ever seen in the po.tols in the hitter of the saddle, and took Watta•li Valley, WAS taken there in 181.5, by Inc fit her . .. so m-. 1 that he carried at Bunker ~---.. Mr t urges. The Indians, who had'nev Hill. and 1 got into New York early in the , :r tie. n any before, after being stung a few morning. and -the !kiosk had left "'- - times called them the white man's fly. ' They had evacuated the city, do you mean to gay ?" •I ?nom to say they hall retreat- 11 - 7' The American Photographic Society e d _ goo.. —min away ! Now, I don't won in New York are taking stem; to send a Pho tographer with the propostd Arctic Expel to nay that the British knew that I wax com• tom of Dr. Ilayes, to take perfect imprwr tog, but I do nay that it located very much file it aiong of the scenes through which they may A BAD ir eIIARALTRIt —WC Illwaya were aware of e impottance of preserving a good reputation for truth and honesty, but we haVP mel with nothing lately so well eal Ciliated to itnpress the disadvantsges of lin v• ing a had eliarart,r upon the mind, as the following not Mote • A mortal lever prevailed on hoard a ship at sett, and a negro man was appointed to throw the binlies of those who died, from time to time, trio I,he sea Ono day, when the captain wa9 on /ea, he me the negro drugging out of the forelastle a sick. man, who ails struggling violently to extryzate himself frow the negro's grasp, and remon• striting very bitterly againet the cruelty of being honied alive. ~.•Whe: are you going to do with that man, you black'raseal I" said theyaptain. ~ doing to throw him overboard, massa, '"Peed I you scoundrel," said the captain, "don't you see tha' he moves and speaks 1" "Yes, Mt 18.42, I know he says he no dead; but he always 1M ao, nobody never know ichen to belterr hmt." • DZODORIZINR rite Tneuss.—ln 1859, du ring three months very,dry weatfer, old Father Thames,---that once clansio stream famous in historic verses of English poets of the last century—became a huge sewer, sending forth reeled odors over all the jlrit• ish metropolis. A ropok recently presented on the subject contains the statement that £17.700 (888,000) worth or deodorizing material was thrown into the Themes during the months of June, July and August The deodorizing agents employed were chiefly chloride of lime, of which 478 tune vt , ere used, and of chalk limo, 4.280 tuna *ere used. These were chiefly throWn into the saviors, and while the temperature of the river remained high—from 69 to 74 degrees, the river remained proof against all efforts of dendorizatien, Great preparations have been rt)atta this year to provide a sufficient ppircelhiciturchlartde of - trolriihnodiff the pungent 'Oskere of tither Thames' utile box. tut, j un ank try - The wheat harvest has commenced in Virginia, in the neighborhood of Lynchburg "What's in a dress ?" 'skit a popular writer. &menthes a great deal mid sortie timer; a precious MIK 2 - 7 - Slanders walling fmfl fed and %serum lid Una, are-tike foul spiders crawling from the blushing heart of a I^ol4o. (17 - Why is the first chicken of a brood hke Ih, foremast of a ship I Because ilea a hid.) for'arti of the main hatoh.'°• • ,Ti •• f must leave in dis gest," as the darker said whet) he bid bis friend "erd night;" during a thunder-storm. 11 - 7 . Tiernan has Issued a peremptory challenge to John Morrissey. to fight him rot any sum from 5 cents to $5OOO 1 17 - gayene right arm is Rani to be mint ed beyond cure, dm tendons having been snapped by Utensil's terrible blows. 17 - Why is a man who spoils his children litre another whe builds castles in the air I Because ho indulges in bine) , (infancy) too much. T7' There are three kinds of friends : friends who love you. friends who do not trouble themselves about you, and friends who hate you. a--7 Some Clergyman earn that your wife your stomach and your commence. are three companions with whom you should always be on good terms. 13" i An old toper was heard advising a young man to marry. "Because, then, my boy," said he, ''you'll have somebody to pull oft your boots when you come home drunk " plea Cowliided.—Mrs Alire Yell. on Sit urdav cowhide(' Mr Lay, of Camden, for promising to marry her and not performing. —Wo.(liln von ( Ikansas) Gazette. An he wouldn't make her Lay, she made hltn Yen Q? Queer doings.—A party of males and foniales wen arrested in the streets of Porthamooth, Ohio. the other (ivy, the rev males being dressed in m‘le attire, ivhd the men in petticoats. Their object was to have • little fon. • Why dii you leave your laet placer inquired a young housekeeper, about to en• gage a new servant.' Why, you see ma'am," replied the applicant, ••I was too good looking ; affil when I opened the door folks took me for the misvus." g 7 The Scientific Amarkin gams the oil springs are probahly the result of the de 'eninfinantowntveltntsbhriminitsnresirr-the internal heat of the earth. It is not likely any of them are inethaustible, and their extent will no doubt vary like that of coal beda and other geological deposits. most magnificent cave Mu; been' discovered Dorado county. Caliiornia. Several large rooms were found in it seven hundred feet in length by nearly as many broad, and a lake, the extent of which is yet unknown. _The_floor_iati well as the alai actites are all of a beautiful white crystinimal marble. 1 0-" Mother, don't you wish you had the tree of evil in our garden 1" " Why, Joe, what do you mess 1" " As money's the root of all evil, If we hsd a tree couldn't we get all the precious etuft 1" You're getting too smart ; that's what comes of sending boys to the macadamia," (0' We learn that a few days ago, the bodies of two females were found in the tire er at Cincinnati, Mocked in each other's arms ; and from the description of the parts of clothing on Weis,. they are beliirrod to be -bodies- of-the-Miss--Kirt&-whp--Were drowned_ In the Oonsenangh river above Baltturg, pn the &Mot last March. ' II 601! ADYAMI• VOLUME 6-NUMBER M. • Something to Pali Back Upon If therwis any one thing in the earth below calculated to make the angels in the heavens above look down and 'smile at, we' think it must IW the sight of the man who lives to get gold enough together (or his children to spend when he's deal and gone to grass.— Many a man thinks moneymaking has its curses extracted if ‘ there is a son or two to he blessed by - Die goodly heritage. No he works,on, oatirg the bread. of carefulness, Icing up yellow dollars and warrant deeds, till old age writes his face all over with wrinkleerecord of care and privations, and Death gives hint cis last band title toot dram mare feet in the grave reed. The boys r trim- Nally fee.or'ry that the old fellow did"n 't last longer, but console th anselves that the fn pion of making pockets in shionde has gone by, and that the hank account stillattar viers. We have always noticed that the paper currency makes excellent blotting pa per for the tears of grief. We have made close calculation of the time it takes a young man. who inhurites a fortune, to make pro rata distribution of it between his horses, bus harlots, and his heart's delights of faro and French brandy. The larger the fortune the quickt r pace the man goes. You may be sure of nine not of ten fine fullovra going to the devil with inch a provocation. Nor has the old gentlemen. who turns nut into the world a bright lad, with all that "our best society." and our best schools" can do for hint, done quite the fair thing for him in our opinion. till he gives him something "to fall back on" in case he should find, on experiment, that a man can't always live on his wits, or -go on his grave," when the money and the old man are both gone. Now there was an old Frenchman. Ste-, phen Girard, who preached a. very good ser mon on this suhject. It has • great deal more se ktiom than his will had. Old'Girard had a favorite clerk. and he always said "he always intend. d to do sell by 'ten Lippin• colt •' So when Ben-got to be twenty one, he I' preied to hear the Cue say something of los future prospects. and perhaps lend • helping hand in starting him in the world, 'ut the old fox (irefully avoided the sub• ct Ben ministered courage. " I suppose I am now !me. sir," said hr, "and I thought I would say something to you as to my course. What do you think I had better du I" g• Yes. Yes. i know you are," said the millionaire. "and.my advice is that you go and learn the Cooper's trade " This application of ice nearly froze Ben out, brit recovering equilibrium, he said it Mr Girard was in earnest lie would do so. " I am in earnest :" and Ben forthwith sought the hest cooper in in Spring Garden, he,-ame an apprentice, and in due time could mako as good a barrel OR the best. He an. nnunced to old Slep . ien that he had gradna 'e 1 and wan ready to set up bil'inNts The old man .i• me(' gratified. and immediately erd,red three of the htua barrek he could turn out. Ben did bin prettiest, and wheeled ilitm up to the old man's counting mom.— Old Girard pmnonneed them find-rate, and demanilid the price. •. One dollar." Paid !ten. "in as how ac T can live by." •.Cheap eunuch —make out vot:r till " The bill wan made out, and old Steve set- filed it with a cheek, rot 320 000, which he accompanied with this little moral to the " There, take that, and invest it in LEM the heat possltilo panner, and if you are un• fortunate and losdit you have a good trade to fall back upon, which will at all timed afford you a good living s !! We ahould Irks to see all the old solid fellows trying that experiment. t might spoil a Larry! or two. but it wouldn't spoil the toys. A Grim Spec tre 1a the Forest' On the Pith ult , near 'Valparaiso. la . the R k plc ton of an unknown man was foun4 han , ing in the woods by s hunting party, suspended to a small black oak by a ',Lick ~ilk neck handkerchief The skull, part of the spinal column and ribs, were hanging, the remainder of the bones were scattered shout, as they would naturally be by dogs. The hones were perfectly bleached, the hair, a Air auburn, which had fallen dtf, the teeth, except three which were absent, were hut slightly worn. shovrinettlilt he was hot more than 23 or 30 years of age. le clothes tirlffiTfie . I Eifitlifißif were decayed fragments of a jeans cost, summer pants, i woolen shirt. "A TI. chip hat, were scattered around. In one of hie boots—a thick pair of stops little worse.- were part of the bones pl the root, the other was empty. One pocket containo his wal let, containing one gold dollar, one Spanish quarter, and dfnall change enough to snake it 44 in all. The ot,berpoplFet contatned a i ie. knife a _plug of tobacoo„ i and a Piseel of paper, auboaed 10 be it. wrapper - patent medicine. No one in that vicinity has yet been able to disooter 'who the sui cide wag. Now DPNOMINATION OP %WAGS awns. —ln order to facilitate the prepayment bf pnatage on letters addriested to fon:Ws coon- tries . . and to avoid the necessity of adloring. thereto • tugs number of Mums, which would in some instanCes Increase the weight so as to subject the letters to additional postage. the Deportment bee ordered the issuing of new stamps of the &eliminations of 24, 30. and 90 watt respeediety. The 24 vent stsitlpiqinl he reedy for distribio• tan oeirCiropk,Aleit.:44osll._._ hereafter, and the 90 'aiitilleoppo atmeedis they ow be protereg. 0