STONEWALL JACKSON The following beautiful trabbte In lbw ;nowt gallant ehieftan of this or any other day is front he New York raise", and said to here been 'written by en officer ol , w'nwtewl Steles Nowy lie sleep., all winietly and fold, Beneath the "oil that gave him birth Then break hie battleobrand In twain And lay it with hint in the earth. No, mum at midnight shall he urge His toilsome march among HAI pines, Nor henr upon thin morning air The war shout of him, charging lint.. CORI Ss the eye whose meteor gle im Flashed hope on all within We light , And still the voice that, trumpet.toned, Ilan through the serried ranks of fight No more for him shell cannons park, Or tents gleam white upon the plsi e Anil where his eamp-grey blazed 0 , Ilrown reapers laugh mid the grain ' No more above hit narrow bed Shell sound the trend of marching feet The rice volley end the erm9 Of mbret when the for eon meet And though the winds of Autumn ruse. And Winter snows fall this k arid deep Above his Mennt, they can not mole The quiet of his dream lee sleep. We luny not raise a marble shaft Abide the heart that now is dust But Nature, like a mother fond, Will ne'er forget her sacred trust Yming April, o'er his lowly wound Shell shake the violet., Irani her hair And glorious June, with reserened kir Shail bid the rumen bluest= there. And round about tho droning Lees, With drowsy hum shall come and go While west winds, nll Um livelong day Shinn murmur dirges softdnnil The warrior's stormy fade as o'er . The midnight gloom has passed away And. like the glory from the East, Breaks the first light of Freedom day And nhite-wingail Peare, o'er nil the land, Broil& Ilk, n lion upon her nc•l . Whiln iron war with .laughter gorged, At length hath load him down to re.,t An.l Where err won "Tr onward Ivey Wdh fire end Mee!, then' yonder wood The bin•khvd tett Intl°, and the quell U lore enewer to her tuned brood. Vet oft In dreoloo hi. fierce brigade Shall Fee tie fora, they followediar Still lend the furthere,t lan-- A lan k in the cloud. tavola ' And oft when white•heired grandenes tell of blood:. Id goo. The chill, SPEECI CINCI On Friday yenning alt, General (too W. Morgan aildreaneil tho Democracy of Hamilton county, in Cincinnati, The con cluding remarks of the General, no appro ao eloquent, we give below They will commend them...dyes to every man who love. hie country amt hi, fellow man. Ile said • We are antotrytntii. The name hernia Moot courses through our veins, and the lime destiny awaits us (Ma section can' not remain free while the oilier to enslaved IVlstlem and pairtottent can make nor mutt try ruo.,+ glorioon, more runt - Atreus and happy th in ever it.tfore, The brave rospent the brave It tsp•ot 11 the only solid btsu of affection It t. sir veg.., indeed, that we should h tee AO little tint we each other prior to the war And one or the outs valuable lei toes it It" I‘11;'1:. 14. that Amei leans, without rag vrd to seet r ion . or party, are heroic men Atl.l 1111 t, nand the din of arms one or the other (lag went down edit] the red atorin of o ode, the defeated party had null the runt satisfaction of knowing that in either CV •/1 , , were •ic- Curious u but could have conquered dud boil our troubles bins left to it counwil of soldiers, reprcsen ti ig the two greet itrtnies, the war would not have at Ilion Id it single year The brave respect the brave And such a coun cil of heroes am ill 1111/ proved that there in more wind In in the aspiration of untfel fish patriotism than in the cold nod heart less 'calculations of the mere 1/011t101,111 Bet while the sot tier fought, tlmpolitican schemed, and the bloody work o went o I But,thauk iiod,the crimson inlet ties nt length cle teed awry front the liel,„4„,o( bat- tle, ant once again peace smiles {{poi our land. I lent that the 'peoplel r f lid North and South were countrymen, Itp , l we tatts be friends. In hrgtme years it was more than once Illy rOllllllO in ye., Northern ant Southern regiments battling n common mac my, under the starry II tit. *lsm York and Snail Carolina well and bravely fought side by aide, and the blood of their heroes min gled together stye, my countrymen, the blood of the braves of Ohio; Indiana and Illtnois,Michtgan nod Wtsconsin, New ling I laud and lowa, formed et-notion currents on the same field with the blood of the valiant men of the nanny Soutn—of hi ifl.ll9lippi sad Peorgta, of Keatuoky and Tennessee, of Alabama and Toffee. And are wo user again to have a eon, mod enemy . Is Prance our friend ? Does England love us • Do the crowned heads of Europe desire the restoration of our Union and tilt porpetuDy of free institiitions " It is not inevitable that 90.119, or later we t omit be forced 10 jolllilitt 1,90 i 0 with allied Europe' And when that hour comes, as come it will, shell we 110 any stronger for having made the heroic people of terystides hereditary enemies? If the Confediraelt were able to , light tic during four long anti bloody, though glorious years, what would be the result of a war in which the C.infeil entity and allied Europe were combined against us! Daring the late war, the Con federate Slates had no just cause of war. and had their cause been just, they could not have b i vin conquered. Let us then be ware, my untrymen, how we put ourselves in the wrong—let us pause before we give the /tooth a seared cautia'Of future war, and bring upon our Selves' the curses of man kind. Let there be no Poland, no Ifungary no Ireland In Alerloi. Bat rather let our stateemen emulate the magnanimity of 009 soldiers, and by their wisdom command the gratitude and admiration of prosterity. In all ages patriotism has hem regarded as the noblest sentiment which animates the human heart, and he who is insensible to love of country Is but a monster die guised in human form. For country, the Spartan mother girded her son for war and told him return living with his shield, or dead upon it, For country, when thepray ere of the Senate and of the Commis failed to appease the wrath of Corlolanus, the no• ble Veturia, forgetting the worngs of her son, sad thinking only of her country, at the head of an embassy of matrons, went to the V 01813164 oemp and implored her son to forget his injuries for the sake of a Roman eappliant at hisfeet. "Mother! thou hail saved lome,",maid Coriolanus, "but lost thy son." Rome w ti, but Coriolanus died. For country, the inspired virgin, Joan of Aro, braved the rough perils of camp and held, and with prayers and bless ings for France, and her serene eyes turned trustingly toward God, she perished at the stake. For country, the great-soled Ma dams Roland died upon the guillotine, and with bet` lest breath exclaimed, "Oh, my sonstry I oh, Liberty I what crimes are eimaisllted to th 7 Dame i" VOTi.XII And during the late Coufetlernto war an .hundred iliqtvoind mothers, an hundred thousrand wives, an hundred thousand vio lent and daughter., with swelling hearts and tearful blesniugs, offered husbands, fathers, eons and brothers ne willing slie r rifides upon oar country's-alter But what is oar country r La ita Ipatiati—a coneolitl 'tied empire An that of Russia , Or ' to it nut a salon of Slates?—Staten sov ereign as to their own internal affairs States which ronferredot. few cnreftilly specified power„ on the Feileral Government, nail re , eisuil ti'd other powers to themselves And all these Slates symbolized by the grand con.tellatton on the azure ground of our Union flag—all thin land embraced be tween the two great oceans—betwixt the noble lakes of the North and Oho sunny eons of the Sonth— all this glorious land, all three sovereign States, constitute our . c unman countrt t But, citizens, country is mutilated; .r flag is torn tad blurred The Consti tution declares that each State shall ho guaranteed a republican form of govern ment, and yet, in contempt of the Constitu tion, in flagrant violation of the declared rights of the States, instead of republican forme of gov'ernment, military despotisms hove been established over lea Status, anti officers rho.en by the people Mine beento moved by military usurpers Nor to this all. Our white turlow.cn.zetin are distrait °limed by te . ps of thousands, while the ens tody of lie laws is deltrmed user to the ig norant and incapable negro Behold our flag' In the centre of that grand constella two to the star of old Virginia, the nitither of States, the home and birth place of Wash ington Bid wh it t o the condition of Virginia to night Reduced to the condition of It con quered provrince The descendants of IVash ington trodden uniVer foot by the negro Now, my countrymen, in melee to violated truth, shout I we not restore lit Virginia her rights tinder the Constitution; remiss,: from the grave of 11'nahington tho murk of the negroe's heel, or blot from our flag the grand and lustrous star which symboh men Virginia an a Slate and represent her true condition by placing, imeeml of the ntnr, the form of a huge negro with his foot planted oo the bren•l of a prostrate, while man ' hut we are told that Virginia a nail her s wise breeding Stres did wrong inntlemp tang to estnblish an Independent confeder acy of their own. fironted , I v. - , believe Ilia point me to a single individual in this concourse of thousands wholllVerlllll wrong and I will agree that the Southern people should not he forgiving. 15 mild it not be well for ins, any nounirylllPll, to remember the divine precept taught 1111ile Lord's pray er wherein we me told to pray that we lily he forgiven cur sins as we furgivs those who have sinned against 119 Anil bow dinte we hope for forgiveness (ruin Al mighty God, while no reins, forgiveness to our fellow countrymen' (tint 19 no , 4411,.? 111 he punished Punish ell • Does Sint question em mats from u bum in hoot, or is it Ibll 1118glrallon Irrn bend of hell? l'iimned tt by, Any 11 ' 01111- tryinien, never in the history of civilized adore Wan such dire punishment inflicted upon a conquered people at that endured by our countrymen of the South. Towns and cities backed_ null hurucd;_jvbplg distrists char, I and desolated as if by 1110 demon of distract non,land toillions who were rear ell in effluence reduced by the shock of war to penury and rrtllll. 11111 19 0 0 one to die ' Iv no blood to be •hed" Almighty Cod' No one to die! la.l the five hundred liiouv,nd Southern grave•, ni stand which lac melancholy cy - pressen bland as spectral sentinels mourning over the victims of n fallen cause, ass err the hyena cry for blood Five hundred thousand graves, the sad monuments of the error of a heroic hut detested people Five hundred thousand Soot (tern homes are drop ed in mourning for the lo•ed ones who slum bar in defont beneath the crimson sod Five Plumbed thousand Southern homes are desolate, and the night wind as it sweeps across 1 , 11 hundred eneatignined battle fields IA et ill burthened with the groans of anguish and the sighs of despair which come from the graves of those who died in a lost and mistaken cause Five hundred (hems and Southern mothers, widows, orphano, are the living monuments of the blight of fratricidal war. And who nsks for vengeance more than this? What demon in human shape cries for blood? My sou'ittrynten • the very earth t is still red •with brother s blood, by broth ers stsett, Oh, then, let us stanch thdlgap l'hg wounds of war, and cheek the crimson tido as it away And our dead heroes, what of them The laurel blooms upon their graves— the . starry banner, under which they nobly died waves over them liiheir.hedies are dead, but their names and glorious deeds will live forever They died for the Union they loved, for the Bag they adored. Oh, my couteieymen, let it not ho said thatthey die in vain ! But upon their tombs, to con secrate their deeds, le( the temple of the Union be restored. And , let us all, North ern and Southern, Join hinds over their graces and swear that our free Constitut. (ion shall endure forever ' A FINDISTI Ace —On the 18th, eays the Baltimore ComTeretal of She 2lst u'l , we recorded an act of barbarity on lbe part of a colored man, who brutally broke the leg of a little white girl, and we are now call ed upon to record a more diabolical out rage, the perpetrator ibis time being a col ored woman, and the victim a white Infant, twenty-Iwo months of age The. facts, or the outrage are these i On' Tuesday night tut Otficer George Hays arrested MarOta Green, charged with placing the la at daughter of Mr. Geo. N. Stubbs, residing at No. 426 West Lombard street, upon an almost red-hat stove. The amused was employed as a nurse In the family of Mr. Stubbs, and in retaliation for a reprimand, which she had received from Mrs. Stubbs, she inhumanly sealed the child upon the Move, burning hel. eo horribly that she lay la ponvultione for nearly three hours. What rendered the,aet more fiendish is, that the child was singularly httached to the fiend, many time. havlngtrefemed food unless of fered by the nurse, and would not be nursed by any one else. 4statiee Bei? aompit- Led the woman to jail to. oral the sego of the Grand Jurrt It is slat that the woman (Green) in knottier Instant's, when employed an a aurae, out an lOW eaten the fine with a razor. ht Prinntratit 4 1111411 14.iu NOSF,S 1 4 heze luvobably no lecture of the hu man countenance, that hex been thoki•ered that to much au eritses the Inside. it, man's kneader ere ooze Located na It it:, in the gengrnpli tenl °in ter ur the face, it it a sentinel alertly/int its It smelln out trouble from afar, especially old and sekret things But, Mato it can outsmell eon; thing that hez appeared ye', it it n gillebOrti nv karacter .1 The following clossilicalion i.fnonev 1.11.1 ben good tiring for the young stolen! who is struggling for knolledge First --The long and Icon nose, WILL book to the end ov il, denotes n thief, and when ono ov theme kine in in ii4n, 311 had belies lock up your saw logs, a n d lake your 'lrby slacks in the 11011, 09 nights Second —The short square noon 11)111.0mi perseverance and grit , if a malt or cue or these noses should offer to bet cents that ho could eat half n 'millet or bread and milk in DI minutes he a mild back tit. off, for I know he would do it if be :tamed ev ery hoop. Thartkv,The humped backed. noon tz un evidence of great eonmevcial genius I have known turn float furrin 4 parts, niih one oc these noses, or lurk ipital tui„turt 1,1• iness with, and glt rich in 2 yearel t , iew re tire to Sing Sing, Just by dealing 111 third cilia/ wearing clothes and abort pieces or lend pipe, that folks had fgyuil nights and bi ought to them. Fourth—Tae pitted nose had nothing par tikler to it but the ante, thud is a hinge, artfully keno reeled, which helps the no••• to ruck lip al pkasure , I have seen them away op or, tall that file pa,prietor ov them had to etanil out the npr on trio loot. Lew keep !rum ft:ceiling something Ftftb—ilthektiltort,,ltharp and dect.nve nose, wittwa tinge of Wool un it, will smell 11.1111g9 oner 10111 the Stale ov New 3,4,7, and if yoor wife lots got one o• Lim kind, and y on don't won't to git lysld beforo your Emir ' OOlll,, )011011101 been," as 111111111, to every good looking woorin ntryttre negh borbood Sit lb—TLe reidilakr, (so called beknose it flares out like the bottom m'a key bugle, I and has a big braft tew,l in owned by I Ito fun overt and fri , ry cueae tnen easy to snort, rind who out atin - tot ,ore something tew laff at even at a ',Mineral, Mir nouldn do it for awl tire world Somei,men throe otesi are merely wagr , and sAiteriner bits of litintoristr, a happy, generous Crew, born like the butter:ller , ten mutt of berm and generally lett by others to Marro and die to shirt Illettotehe, Seventh—The red nose is not no touch a ' science az It In a I hoary, it has no part kit lar hubd any mole than a hr o hat, and le admitted intod he Isongress of noses only on ilkount ov its fait color, as it grows old it ""econtes morbid and liar I. good deal of the blows I have seen then, Hitt looked az the they hod jest got rater the red small pox, and a err the objects to be pdled This noun in not pat Itkler or rho company it keeps and often ; ul.O for )ears with :a root hole rate 1111.1, =1 _ Iw oplla of ON ullurin uf the lt.fi wed, /II avoid 11, Ills linanmal Ontlittoll Ot the COllll - bnx becon. a llllrol 101.1 ruing i•objeci of public attention. The people believe that 4 considerable peril. of the burthens um posed upon theta might be lifted from their shoulders They itte heartily ~, y enor mous and useless expenditures of the publio ' money They tee that with about one thou sand millions of tax, annually wrung from their toil and sweat, the enormous national debt is nol reduced, but on the contrary in increased They liner grown restive, rind I will not be polished until a change is el !coed, Their eyes have been opened to the enormity of maintaining a tolalldlati . army in the South at a direct expense of a hun dred million year, and an indirecLppetiso of nine. to keep MI while rare in /mlueotion to the negro ~ T hey knew anti feel that the only safe and direr 1 road out of out financial difficulties In le be found in a poll.) wLuli wdl restore pence and assure the prosperity of the States re cently iii rebellion 'The masses of the North have tried the iladical plan of keep. Ing ollie the plosions ' of,the war They hero found that tit ilorA oilt pay • ')hey might consent to put the whiles -of list s South tinder the feet of r ilie negroeit.if !try coultquake money by so doing, but when such lnn infamous course take, money out of the pocket of every tax-payer and pro ducer in the North, it is not strange that a great revolution should take place in public sentiment The end , of military establish ments, freedmen's bureaus and other costly elikliancen for perpetuating Radical domi nation through the agency of African au premacy,,is rapidly approaching. The eyes of the peoplrehave been opened. They tire reply to endorse fully the wise words of that attempt, statesman, Horatio Seymour, who struck the key note when he said •' Reatorn the South and restore com merce, and then the greenback wilt be equal to the gold dollar in value, and it will be a point of no practical imporlanoo whe'her you pay the bonds io coin or legal lenders " The esigency is no great that Congress will be compelled to give some attention to the financial situation. That they will be gin in the right place or attempt to go to the root of the evil no one believe; They will attempt to bridge over thedifficulties until after the Presidential election, but they will find that tinkering will do no good now. Thing. have got pact that point.— In the minim ime, n. the pockets of the peo ple are being touched, their eyes are being opened —Lancaster Intelltgeneer WHAT Naxr —The head devil and prime Trader of the Radical party, old Thad Ste vens, bits joined the party that proposes to pay the National Debt to the greenback currency of the country, and publishes a letter to that effect. If there is anything that would make us doubt the propriety end honesty of this suggestion, it is that Thad. Stevens has become a cdovert to it lle has already .demoed every radical measure tbat he has thus far espoused, and we feels delicacy. in training with any such mass of political rottenness:. But let us be charitable as we become powerful, and remember that: perhaps it may be a CABO '•Thal whitelhe lamp holds out to burn, The vilest olohrdtper return." "STATE RIGHTS AND WEDDIULL lINION.,' IFITNITIOffM=I,' THE END OF ANOTHER POLITICAL AN ENLARGEMENT OF THE RADICAL PREACHER. PROGRAMME-WHAT IS TO FOL LOW IMPEACHMENT. ; The country has I.ieen literally corned 14 nevernlyeni, pant by a net of intensely boy. , of scamps who tuts, got up as preachers, and donned the livery of 'leaven to Wit , 1110 Devil to Ilere in an account :torn tit!, N. Y Veil 'one of the end of nnothe r , if these fellows • The self cly led WII r,n," rho bait been convicted in Litchfield, Conn , of the murder of his wife, by pot nn, he 4 riot 5 race of crime dining lb.. I net two yearn which few men, 10 'I long life, equal lie first became conspicuous in the wectern pert of New York, in the fe'l of Ito tI, es the Ucv George W Long Ile rut:stinted forged credential., purporting to be (ram Coe fereoces in the South Ind IYe•t, and obtained the ministry of the et melt at Centrerilb Allegkeny e nasty, Ile proved an accept tine to all the brethren, ODD, after a two week, appellate:ice, I, atarn4tu one of the eighboriug and took het wife home in it It lino Ile then commencol borrowino, 1,11(.7 -to n oit Ills lacceased expenses," end 1101,0 1',117 hid run up a debt 01 C- , 7111) Tlntiking that b lind -eme,' Die en i of his 1o:T.11e L :row oil menu, io pay hie empeui-is to Dunkirk, phut, when lie pt.:leaded itint lie i 3.1 real wilt,' t Meet Ills return 1+ anciouel expected by /I oeteaccil but time and iii=teed 1,l (be iing expecitti Long, .tweed u letter mLym he had gone to New York to coucludi the axle of ht, '1•C2511 VlOlllll7 Ile toll lt+ nee to lie contented nod p uni t and to i r fin Irani Exit Rev. 17r Long—ent at l'i tea the lon 111111,1111 II I; reen..l pre,h er, pot:Dell sleeker, and tamp ranee mo tor Temperance lecture., around Ite I vu try were the .I,b+; 'eapeiliiint for rondo, the trued but this WWI, 1 no profit Oil' at flue clerical fraud, for the titan he employed to per ante the habitual sot bail 5 010111elli I f subtlety, and teltioed to Cral.lllo , l 1111. Itil‘- neeship unless be or Is paid On the '2l of No . December, "Green" morns' Searloss, t Gunford, Chenengo county,. New York, and in March moved to West Cornwall, Connecticut, where he made Ins 'tt ns a refugee from Tells, and deliret etl loyal speeches, be mg engaged as n (lump orator by the Republican Cniventitio for Litchfield comity AM May 1,1 le ‘lr. Glee died, liaising been ;akin with convoltionit The physictatei thought e'er detttli 1.1111qU,1, lief till It'll dint nunLuic 1 fo 11 , 11101. eauw• tea the fourth day afitir her den!, Mrs Lrcen won burled, an I in a 111011 ill Ike i•lteterend" left for Mien, er)leme only lino week, after the death of his wife be °r red an Nook chambermaid employed tit ti hotel Rut lie wax hurr)ing matters 1., I touch Ile conduct excited sit-picicn flip linty 01 Ins wife nos .1 isiatcrred. stomach I.ver examme , P and Ilie "11,r creed r" rave is .4 run. Btryclitime found, mud -Green" was arrested and ina 'insetted Mill pope her est...mons In the Lltclifteld .7511 he °Mile 11,0 attempt, in de stray himself Ile II intimt hie lived agint,t a will and cloaked Z11•1111111,,- °LIO' Meanwhile lief\ 11trrell 1115101100100 e 1,19 E week. lie wee tried tit Loctili ttl b 1. ie Judges 10001,4 :Ird lie inger, .11,1 in4l,nsheil contend .ippiaring upon eloh toile The or idenee Mt 1 oLerwhel-inlj e.m 'toted, out, Inc ma) irtll sbortly be tinunainoiliaiii sat/ ec 1111, .x Galan penalty al llt, 1101 1!IIM21111111!1 THEDAY OF RETRIBUTION IS COMING • het woe a 144.. t mnke• .11 thengi 4.44 44 Ana II 110 1111 het watch the hoe, There nerer t ‘,ll human That 4,1111.1 evade. II oraorglst The ',latent ...reit, and 4 httl 14•1/ 411 hen rvtr tre.kturet up wr 4t44.' portent movement 1.4 be 4” .octi• EITEM raled in the oily of NI, York, an 111, .22d of I'o).i:l,y nest. L.w:u.• for ripoor Is e retirees of t o wiling. ul tlinvr wh.. 0111,, ed under the Iron and in:relit:, lip Iron of the Llneoln \ dot In:etrotwo tve hail 614 itll.lllCloll.l.l'ol of iLl llllles with uniningleil leeinres of yq . and we only wonder that the project hm been no long delayed, nod lutist justice hair 1 , 1 . 4 . 11 SO tardy m enfdrcing her stern and inexorable tnandaie The fart to. the ut.tlrue tiprodng of the peeple,..which 11114 4,1 to the achievement of such .plertilid Deniocrat is victories, will be almost barren or .itilistantial z estilis— will be deprived of half tit solid value—if the nampteins of American liberty, the rout-- deters el the Count notion, in the dark awl dreary days 1/I the country's ogoiry, are not brought to f,Cl'lllll Rod made to wone for their monsirt. crimes. Their names must be made odious and black with in fausy, 114 n warning to would-bo tyrants all future time They must stand out after hixtory, and nppear in the eyes of gem orations to corny (known Only to be loathed and elect-Aid) as the Catalines,-the Bur gles, Ole I/Anions and Robespierres of the past, appear to the present Nor !oust tin work atop Lere. Something more is doe to the down-trodden masses, who, borne down with altar-weight of taxes, have men up like a falleigiant and struck the Radicals in death blow The thieves and villains who speculated upon the miseries of the nation when she was sweating blood at every pore, and filled their coffers of id go tien gait., and who now dare to flaunt the symbols of their wealth in the faces of the people they have impoverished, must be mn.4 to disgorge, and give back lo the gov ernment that of which they have dispelled it Let the good work go on, and Ood de fend the Right I—Sunday Mercury WHIN 110011.11 PALL Out."—The ne gro party is tifOinqpio pieces Greeley says'ifie negro must be made in all respects the equal of the white men So soy Forney and about half of the party. Judge Agnew and another part of the party think differently. Some hug die darkey land some curse him. Some think he le the t.oomming man" and some think he hos come and gone again, oarrying off the Republican party with him,about the waybill 'carried off the palm" In the army. For ney is puffing him down. Ben. Butler oh preaching iirepudiation, and the Tribune is preaching death. to the repudiators. Al together, the Republican party to gelling badly mixed hissing been routed in the late elections they seem to be, scattering and retreating in great disorder. Greeley, however, thinks it only the Bull Run of a Republican triumph, which, of coarse, means only that it is a bad run for the pro gram of begrotem.—.Ex. I r i h,-, I • noj il`:! to 113. 1741V.1 •11 wear lett p ieof a 111110,-- T l . 'l..“'" b ''" l ''''P' - ‘ ch ‘ n g• I. `" ' ln "' and hut 1.1,1.11er,t to his •10n.„.i.e Johnson has been butrere.ttwiatl etnnewan, ; and ;Ito or hi. wire h, ho„ wilt of siirtir Niert argne irwa 0: Its eels, l'"' Ito clierigh a whining wow., • Talab Were the erclette•• It wouht give of 1 . , y itg n."• 0 .." 1 °'l'..-r"r"' ur '" • .1 .I,•ril at the II:ell:fart 1.1b.e, would 'Pt to r ' cb " Lb " .; " n.. "'• nn, .0 t eve•sin, when returned nom his rel.eritil it from the cernteionv nee „bor— of s trAtt, , r in the 11 title IhU•• ill. • theFe, n.tetc.l tik nceen.s • Douhtlels ur OIL these re tint, t`lt act „ i i,„ • „, 1 , 13 wool.) be of gre rn .rit•nt lot! thorn .- hack ncLtn an I can • Carrel) eland.' woubi one result of the V. , e 4 .fithft's i•apetaltral.n. to II -, f „ ird i n sod eonvietion ritual Las not been cons td, r. g ,„ t I ,„ r 1 .nn ILe ed. li hen on, An.iron Johnson stnn4s re- angelit . to n - .•listand them without •flinch corde Iby the semi,el of the S•qt.tie. ir.111 , :7 in, ...tam the c /11,e of Mira,: rectilu.le of hug'. et tine t tncl totedetne.n , ,,, i t n 'the twat, i t• nof Deirelige hen 111 teen tempt t. laws ml h.tras Ihe tie imi rorrnient of the earthly eondlliuu .."'"n• P " mr " b ' ‘• trout ud of 111,0 n ot n re..pect No per., nr.n nr. 1 •7. it ' ' ' ' •`' ' b " 1 " . " 1 "'" . 701,111, cemplates to ter,age Will/011. U 7 r'Y " " urr ' 1 eel ing to better Immo lf 01 herself 1 nian ri•hrb, 111.,.1nr 'r too ton frctl< of bun) for it pair of well 1. Len once ber fart) e trier ra roped to,l rt re , ey e ., r per'ty tlintoelf fir rr ' ur P' lrr " °, °Uhl ' r''"" Ith n •it wife, , vet tam!) nitrelt air.! C110,...,101,1 mode in furtherance ot bin o nolo", of man- Intorno ore to be litt rrtde The plot I,lllllr, ner tor.nrl her Ile glinald her e rein more been " °c° "' lrr " r t .l) I lr°r°j ' oloterele In 11.. , choir, Re.) oboe:, and t'er record , ' h " .. l " "le " rop- dancing (moth arc very rittroettle to the err ) .4 r ' r " r " °a to°ran ' I°r " t. en nnd slier !mon tape ronittlinte e l pie r a W ar " if lute re . :lie Aron Gros hats that hold a lat noting t l legahy why,attrre tteto , nre .. :ono Leo a oar or tan of• iiror 114%; il t nnd tot.' fbe loW 'r itrut id, tutu:play only fonoll in wedded life, ° Pl' rr T rrr° rw " harria arur " """ t'ongrera rlou h! ter! opt!, Atli nil the In:none,. tlrtt either I° rho erra " r " l ' allrlon. potty e:tert line I on lire thre•ll6l.l and me low rh° S.lny°• a ' rli ' " by an a n ' nyeq lit c lrite niterl4 1111 invnitd, how the tact-, mI declaring what ao and •a•• mind, .4. toritemonn tilde! to bin op be, de no ' n r " enrlY " a hy rop of married eNttnenr , ‘, be tither Otto,. arm vend, and let, in' • tottrt,t I tie. o,r ,1,00..0 th,r ,h• r- nr ever •, nhtn.lant vLd in their pi also nl lat,?:,1),(le It my I , e lola dewn As There are serirol prrnoinent roll, I. erin Irsini , lLat nn ion he'lllt mall „.„ tr.t,tor nere•enry II In the Inqrrio , l roloonn irarrlon cruscavarl 1,.0111 The marl • ronilri if 3nu w^n l . l 3.•lif try. ~,,unictitt..l pin. it , o,“ t • if you would maid a dieposillon to uhino," and II ir render you permnnent. le line mforla. le. , er In II 011 t our wire In r hen Irby triton lonain to whom l'eltlar he, col backache, • re morsel,' of other folk', ,totrtdor.tto plrdpipt. 1..10 ~nre 1, , en wrung usklus•fi font o.e Sr, dmen uric p .I,+ Lore bin ni r odor,. ;,, I, btur of pretended pAr.11. , 5 n', then rolling e•Mck.lol.l mono, .0. G.sr 1, h ice I , een gin need f.,comp .Hies of t grant...llol,lJ be tivelnr,••l t. 1-- l'oogro Otoltia 'I nit Ilse agent, . 1 the Tio.t•ut) to rloottete all noch forf,trd l rude and hold Vient as of 11, • tole too•erted 1 the upon prior to 1.,,44 1n 't. dead, t I ..r colored molt. as \nrlb extolitto. fore, d ell and poot , lted ....ling rota, fore,. Cory ore to I. e t ,,o,:nt ed, own grunted, Old die I.lle I elm,/ nth lured and imprisoned Such refuels :al pii he treated WI tiloettor4 nod accompliet s or Jolialbon rut Situ Irevsiln 111/ I inellnl Inmle m our 1tt".31,410tt, Tee do tito nerd to peed any (urthet 111,1 11-, of vonfisestion trrying out the the not, e oti toting trattors luckoutt•eAtiou their rAtateA, bold, th: such londs e I hen poAArsvon of luring lb. rAr Nelleeed ntllyullico to o lite negroett 111.44e.D1, er to Aril the pr m onet tti a bran rate ey n n.ot, rot now, La cud on thotr hid e, Iu tttoot Ices thy rot,' to sell di,. I Ind. tLu true Lnn deuce .DAII not set. as I olny In l o. Willa, stunt turned tut.. ISO et', eel.. Lou 1,4, 111 1/1141$ 1 / 1 11011 . lon i hen 111,1,41 ‘0“, I ue uegro trlll I • n to delete' 1111., IMM=I I=l itrachtztent rf 1011.1,11 .44 It u^1,9.1 try pt 1.1111/iry r.lOl , lo ulll relehitig INC n 1,141 11 g,ron.i.i of ,a 4 —0 win liar a nio Iniiinint.l .!n iit a stn win 1. , w I.e claw, no I n Ylep rum 11.., lII= I n~rr, I) ; ••/•mvr:i,,rr. 6.,0 ,u.,, /5n J Jto•, ,toi , II VI ,zro 1140,1 / • in our llue, we ••it II .Imo the South ',lt we mend All clue eiteile nto I. o te, nt n er .totaA• , what the le do 10an i 'f hat ',lot °Rae fixed, our tr .able •Ifl,pnUTTlfllfl DON'T STAY LONG It is r rrlp, iadeel, th nn) thing more titaLftill) pnh, t ..iti 114 sulvoinell sad'. wenchire hod f'• ntuopg our escluoigss I I hot C. i. husband in Our bind wool I r. a I In by frt • Don't stay I itre. young bride tenderl) in my present' one evening. ns her !instils I woo preparing to go on: 'I lie srl'irils theinseln, were insig niter int, but the look of fuelling, Inert with which th'ey wrrn sccoropanie I r , , , oke volumes It the whole 0,1 depth of n woninn's love--of her gVieT when the 1•g1.1 of las smile, the source of all Ler joy, I .1 not brightly upon her 4111 "Don't stay Ilng, 1.191,1"1,1'" and I fan mod I vow the loving, gentle wife, sating alo . pe, ansintmly counting the moments of her husband's absence, every few moments running In iho door to see if he AV 14 pet in sight. end finding that I?cw . a. not, I thenct'l I could hear her exclaitning, in ilisnpp `ll ed tones, •• not yet " " Don't stay long. husband:'-' and I again thought .1 could see the young 'wife rocking nervously in her great arm chair and weep log as though her heart yronld break.os her thoughtless "lord anti master" prolonged his stay to a wearysome length of tt sir. / 06, you that have wives to ee)—" Doo't stay long," when you gn forth. think of them kindly when you are mingling in tit • busy hive of life, and try just n little to makr their itofnes and hearts happy, for they are gems too seldom replaced You cannot end amid the pleasured of the world, that peace and Joy that a quiet home. Wess el with ruck a women's Itresenoc will of ford Don't may long, husband:' and the young wife's look eeertted to pay—fur here la your own sweet home to a dosing heart whose matte is hashed when you eve tattoo( ,-here is a eofebienstio lay your head up oh, mud pate lips, unsoiled by elms, that will pay you kisses for coming book so soon. run Woolen Tioggr' etwotua'r on In A freedman, en teturaiag home Ruin the election Met week, wan asked what no did Re J ul not knew any more than a child. "Well," inquired hie interrogator, '• how do you know whether you voted rtoht or wrong I" "Oh, I know I voted right, 'mune I had the right ticket, Al no other could be put io —for I mewl it tried. The wrong ticket couldn't,go Id.—Le Grange (Georgia.) Re porter. ,4 ,_ WHINING WOMEN 1 1ots kfulneh. In erskine of the tuna- Ml , l'ol' 11(nen in Foci el uses the ful , on ing Intittunre • "Oh ! if 'gloomy' women lit but t know whnt comfort there iv in n cheerful spirit— how the limit leaps', meet avunshiny face, n merry tongue, n henrt which, culler nub nenlly, or, who! In better, convelentietiv prine,ple, has I, O IIIQ . In bike all !Lingo on ihe bright side heliev:nq that the Over rf life, being all per fret love, the best olTerirg we eon make In hint is lo l enjny to the frill what he vend. of Band. and what he allow, of evil—like n child who, when once It he lie•en in its ;other, believes in till his da rngl,ttoilh it, whether it underotands them or not 0' Th it lin , lnind rho has a perpetual elm i•tio• in his home in the rhape of a cheer Ail ;!le, hliciil.l he one of the happiest of turn, and if he he not, Vrovnlence hes hero too 1- it'd to 1111 U. RECTIFYING TAEIR PLUNDERS Nlonz of tne lllurelerl r the Itmlieni baler.] in ISgi9lation L t•-e been reettned by the ceurt.LAmi ninny 3( I enmin to hamper tadhenry and in plmpe lit penple ateng I' i rl rto lb^ C0ti.1111.,. nl,lel lra, !ail by t' men-, IHt ti d,able par ika..e t:ier o i1t.1.11{.....iff.r , t`IY , m 14br: , 1+ ILA 1'1111.4111g the Colt), . ern , eepe,, p!ICItIg upon them !he be , ,- , -ree. -.t. that 11l Iv., •npice.l Lt 'l' t L. Lot, tot l o co .114,1 loos hot rsed I' lone ill outon Suailtern 00110010 re on .he lon It of 000lnr pro olio. on el ilte tants of the 1.1611 Ur. Ic • ul o r wont l3 reduced their 111COUle, I imier a: proote-tony nroon•I the Ins l'he tot tun on null lettooo oe 01 l'hol t lo•l , 1 Ine.naig the hod... tuo the purl ono ul oololrensong u .e Itotntp no Nem oh the repeal ,o• ;au tax. :tool I. ' Ot'w irti nor.nufne I tie Scu'lieln ne,ruc, bave I et0.,11,1 1.e.,' (.ante ,hula ho . ,ery little the till Loots:0,o pointed economy lie t Ott taws of It I, and how unworthy Hit} , +.l' o 1 , 1 I,Ve C , IIII..! of .I , ty penmenf :rt, 4lt idic ti legudatinu, beendts It, lag ••oute..ii• the l'onliitutoin. in all es hitt 111....'. and very bungling at il 9' The iin,n n, enl111••:1 by ten! of o k ; Car t, ilou tax, bill atilltone rot dellota have already Lien twit to tine tien,l,—white and hl tnk and Numb tua South—and many totElanit mote will be lust hr Giro the It , unlit of a rectill.attion eon be felt ' A a ery,lerge Dumber of nelsons ha,. abandoned the rultnotion of cot Inn, and engaged in otht r p.. 10110% Sinn° of them mull borer resume the culture of cat ion, and ilioxe wino may, cannot, r .d e o n . l . la a proper return (or their Investments under two years. There to 01,11 another donwbneL—ialely iblrothieett by perern I of the Sumpe and likely to be incorporated into the ten' laws slid conefflotious which the bll, I nn , l Inn contentious are manufacturtni, —sum a ne gro laborer's lien upon the colon crop, which takes precedence of all other liens. , Under bush a regulation the cotton crop sonnet be removed form the plani•tions un til the laborers are paid, and factors will ate be likeby :to advance upon growing crops Under such crounistances, planters must necessarily become hampered too greatly to make cotton culture either pleas ant or profitable The enactment of such a lien will, therefore, neutralise any good effect which the repeal of the Gott.' tax might effect. Planters will find the culti vation at other products, not subject to tax and liens, inner profitable, and to each the attention of thousands or old oatton grow era has already been practically directed It will take many years to rectify the blun dm et the liadical leaders and to repair the waste and loose* of malignant and partizan legislation "outside the .Coustitti tion."— Patriot t f L'n 1011. =I ItoW ro OAIIIII Stuoau VOtlti —The rail hod tiskete used at the elect too is Norfolk, To . on the sth lost , were orratuented with vigoette cut of A. Lincoln's bra diful phis. As thu utgger rulers conic with* grand rush for the pone, they woeltl cry out to the extent of their lunge. ••li de me olio of Jens Link= tickets-4's tle_did bass I wotea fur I" The beet of the joke was when one of these long boded voters was asked what his mime was previous to depositing his ballot, his bawled out at the top of his voice, "Abs . Linkuut,dalt !"—Rx. NO. 48 IF WE KNEW I .e 1;13 I% knew tha ~,,o nodl.enrtnt he lVt• tt Inv r tltt un the rt,nti TI t•nr Ityt• watt.' tn•t” the h•trm II ttor hat eaul I reel the I. ntl 11 ..'dal tnt• 'l,l, I In ~f 1,11114. I'or n true th •I neer ran lie' IVl,old i.e watt in ruch onpnluure I I ve Loin llt. I,nts r.nr y rw Ironed eganwt the window-pine tatltl I , •. ..61 and null to ha.rrnty Nt our trttal In or agnia Ilould the bright errs tot our tlttrhn t y huh , . the Iran,, ~ y,, ...ur brow' It tad I Oh itt nit r 1 e'. then n• Ow, 11/.nger4, II Iry rl,n) nur 1/11.111, r) 8. f the 11,1 j nords and th (Inn*, Strewn alvng,nur kwarcl track' Ilntr latlo , hand rcz.,nnol •I,in •n grace they he Not lu a atlvr thorns--14,, r „„,_ I t.r. OW 1,11,1'4 • i) And 1. r. frantic we Jeier priz e th e toir r ie " 1 tb' bird 11••srn . • plight the t t. deft I ill the ',sell 11. i„,.„ no of lenge that hue: atomit half.„ 1-„r triir C•i ,h.tke tle ir shit, „ r • • ft 'ttt t,uttl' the it,. to not but ittol ; du.ttt.. in •ut h lonat to.tuth 1.• tt ""r tl,•tt t ,ern. n the". „.„„, f„i pc ct . '• t" tt. ow •teneeent•, 'lt the ~ f the t•teth l.cttttt ,r I the • unbent., 1., r „it ,-land ear path , ''' p the nh,•tt and ~,,,,, ttn; out the tht,ont and chaff tt r '' I.ntl ono enettteot comfort it , 'he Itie•tofigo .t I Int Oen IV" a pt,,, Itar , l reno, tn,t . 1, 1 the Ito.er• tottt, CENZIA THIS, THAT AND THE OTHER -- I. ire Ler a mat rt • t r .ttLtnect— fter thr t. rt al it) . ——M here there t h , te at thy heart. t het e aro ritinlontrs itt the mem, telt ertng every 1, 1 le , t elt , ml with I,ritt.oun hue, —lf tll-41e 61•c1.dl Toe, lb ink that it taav he a hlega , ng to atmatl.mly cite, and that yotyr Isk 3 olir•elll.ohire ppooklng 111 of nny won - it right Second— is tt kind neer.,nr., --- —A wronan who no%len a man's polote,ho nutronger hall upon him than the Woman Who merely to,h,nl hi. heart —The w In of General (feu W °mother of I. , ,ltioir Ile, who it set only hur core obi brought him n fregh in Lunt Inst week. --The nner of State,inen aril *lv , hat Lauds of netrektes are newt to be the saild,t pea pie in the nurld. —The man who Imp:. “0, breathe nn mean that %outdo went into the smoking ear where the air was mare mixed hart] loot & h," paid n toper to his com panion i•No greet Iola," en id the othit, — as )ou Imo made it Ohk.. Demo rzt canto Inane all the way from Chili llauth Atner,en, to iota the rtr n.tht tzt lee lle r reastrth.d. --'flit Parii hilds mado half it mal l:an or 11 , 41 a, by hearing of as amid h If an hatir bef , re anybody ti t3e non will due, nu niure than nhat Ise may jo.11:, e ilietritiute ebeertull, nnil lirr erntenti ill, it —Senator Gulhr tail, bur (nem! that Ln k^‘lth k off !Lilt trestoreti.t.,_lad.o t al at the cola tag *e•ali -- - 'I I ct.t• ratrteailli'l3 are about rtart leg aet t• girk rr LI burg, to Ire culled tl••• :t ••• t• ~ ,•/,0 m .1q••••5•11.11 • the rrtcy•••l•s 'e frond• threaten to turn out rano•t trent biet Olive of Secretory of the Sen 'lto for a 'leged troll hery to gong or er to he oldest iiol.paper In the world to published in Pekin, China. It in printed on elk and has appeared eery week for at tenet tile thous nil years ---- I Ire funk t a the heal theology ; e good life the hest philosophy a clear tioneereneo the hest Tao , holust he twal pulley and temper the best phy - Freui • at is tiled to the reed it of bei:l l 7, the first man in the Untied ittiteri net i,enerall) regard,' e n r"oi r.2as parted his hair to tho middle • • y , •nog in in it go tn through bank ruptcy in Do, on who,: only creditor ton piting lad, with a ncOltt of tiro t boioand dol lars for breach of promise. umsro heir le soe Gf tv acre. of tin prov IQ land in Inibur) am m ' , fetne I, Conn , as •fiddenl) turner! on, ILO , / properly owners are Wo • I sAyi, to nritinA ruin that the holier 0n Lung totruilueed to • strang er, ro I. upon br rug eutbruieit'lleart. throbbing againiit bent , " 110 for Lrvd ' -- • ularu, why don't jou t e ,,.,„0r matte r an I tell hill] to !u) up treasure/1 111 heaven ••tVhnt's do uao of lu, in' up treasure; Jur ! lie never see MU noin " - flung lady at cahoot. ranged in the study of grammar, was asked if kias was a com mon or proper noun The girl blushed deeply as she septic] in a low tone, that "It was both proper and common.'• ---Wait until the Presidential election, and then— , o say the Radicals, with meaning twist. of the week. This is like the beaten schoolboy threatning his ad, array with a big brother, who is coining home from a whaling 'voyage. --- g Sydney Smith Pt Id to the Canons of St. Pour* when they wrote is him urging the ad , itabilityV wood pavement around the churchyard, e 'NW them lay ' their heed, to gether, and it will be done " --A boy in Reason, WI., was seat out to catch a horse, and while leading him home, carelessly tied the rope 'bout his waist. Some hours afterwards the horse was caught, with the corpse of the boy still dragging after him. ---A lawyer, being on the point of death, wade his will, leaving all his estate for the ben• eft of fool, and mad men on the ground that he got Wall out of them, and ought to restore It to Its rightful owners. —The richest men la Congress am Sena tor Sprague of [that() Island MO Sonator E. D. Morgan of NOw York, and Representative Oakm Ames of A4ssaohunetls. Boob of Ulu* gentlemen hatlt Incomes of nearly half a mil lion a year A writer in tho Charleston Courier says the cotton factories in South Cat...lino ore doing well. The one at Pendleton Is about to double its machinery , A factory near Greenville 0. 11., worked two act 4 of hands during the War, running thy and night. --Fear, when a good is up, is a fool, and shouhl ice kittiod out of docent company "lt has caractl the Failure orate plaus'of mil hoes of moo end Women. Fear isn fool, but a fool of power. I fYou meet the thing, out it, or savagely cut it up• , IMPROVED KNEE-SWELL, Some of the mum's, deem use what It termed an "Automatic Swell," and attach ment consiating simply of a sloe wire in serted on one edge of the bellows and beat so that the other end will come beneath one end of the owril ■trip. When the bellows are contracted or expanded, thin wire wilt more so as to Mime or ,lower the 'well, and thus Increase or diminish the tone. But this kind of a swell is capable only of a gradual crescend• and diminuendo: for 'Mould the performer be playing loft, and desire an immediate Intimation to loud, for an expressive aforsanda effect, It would be imposetble to obtain this, no, In playing softly, the helloes are 'expanded; and, be fore they can be contracted on as In clause the wire , to open the swell, tile performer must operate the blow pedal* long enough to contract the bellows The same difficul ty occurs In I lie ;ration,. from load to soft; and therefore the • Automatic Swell Attachment is not under the perfect con trorof the player, and in impramitiable for effective 0.0, though iiii•ertired under a highemiuding name. If ibis attachment is really goad, then it is certainly an advan tage to have u , bat on 11, other baud, ony atiachnitut which Ia not of real value be- conies aSC 1,00 •t detrautent UntittentiOaa it), some attachuteute ate made far the Bole pnrtiose •tr basin: nnineth mg in adver vertiee no I t ilk about, Olsen it is evident to any one underetouiling the matter that they ere of nit proct icil ailvaninge All other set Ile hared upon this '• Auto matte' principle ,ro equally an in efficient, , nOt wore •n thin tine one de/teethed ill ,Irene Ii Olcu !tiro are obviated' iu the .1P or I lie bhprinYti /in re-SWell contliurkl a IN, Aliotrotaro Oryans It cumantn of it mall projection at the rtzht of the player o that n slight motion Ito knee, with at the lest Inconvenience ❑t position, will inerea,, the tone If 'II. fret ore oonotont ly onvit :he blow peddle, null the ea prett. e:re p I,e^ of the lueleutoeut to under full cautrul of the urgvutet —E.,Ortoje THE SABBATH elcome, sweet day of rest No books o post, no orders to fill, no prOjects to bulk over, no politics to eliflCUß9—none of he thousand worrying, temper trying leak.worrying cares of the every day orld, to day One day of quiet and Iran. luthty—• emblems of etetual rust Ilew sweetly comes the peace of the Sab• limn morning offer the 1..11. and agitator. of the week ' Btaluty not odors •f oriental op:ey gro•e• , gentry as the breath of oleept..g oils:its: et the dying !Judi of eveu:v pare 11. 11.0• ..L . trite that tires Ls:- fore the throne Of i; , ,:1 euinen the Gahm of tins 1:..1y morning, •• lay of all the week the best." It it ;he day of home—brim,. bash ed an I quiet, home I eaoeful and full of Ticorn G .-t day the (tither in at home-and the ntrolter with brow fire from week day cart P. tits beside and memories of the Sablath in by-gone time, when sly love made the day of repose a time of joy, come back in all their plensantness Father Is at home, and the little ones hang at his knee, telling their joys and trouhles of the past week, and rejoicing that for n whole day be will ho in their company, and lav ish upon them, uninterrupted, his loving words and smiles. Aye, pure, sweet and holy is the day of root to the family ; but leis all too brief— traslent as the outline of the silvery viper that floats on the summer sky—for the tur moil el the troubling world will come bank to morrou Let nut that thought mar the geode pay ut this sweet de) ; remember, rather there is a ••home" whose peace is never interrupted, whose Joy is never brok en, whose repose dreads not to-morrow, and that a part of the privileges and happiness of to-day is Ls, secure n plooet in that family whose circle is united forevermore, in our Father s home on high Too Goon to PC Lost —At a recent else lion in the State of Now fork, n lad pre seniter himself tit the polls toolaim the bon slit of the eleotive franchise. Feeling a deep Interest in a favorite can didate, the father, who was evidently op posed to the boy s ' , referent:le, stood at the ballot bon, and challenged his right to vote on the ground of his not being of age. The young men declared that he was twenty-one years old ; that be knew it, and that he in sisted upon his right. The father beCom ing Indignant, and wit.hing a. the Baying is, to '•bluff him off," before the judge, said •• Now Bob, w:11 you eland up there and contradict me! Don't I knew how old you are ° Wnen't I there '" lq.oh looked hie contempt for the old men', speech, se ho hastily replied "Thunderation ' eposneyon wee, wheel, MEITEII Th. nettled the sire, cud in went lh• =MIMI , - Toe Lt t IL. us ute Dessuzies —Daniel Webster had an anecdote of old lather Scant, the minister of hill briyhood, which is too good to be lost It Was oust.misry then to wear buckskin breeches In cool weather Ono Sunday morning in the au tumn, Fattier Bear! brought his breeches down from the garret, but the wasps had taken possession during the summer Moe, and were boring a nice time of it in them By dint of effort he got out the intruders end dressed for meeting But while read• log the scriptures to the congregation be felt a dagger from one of the enraged small waisted fellowr, and jumped around the pulpit slapping his thigh. Bat the more • he jumped the more they string The pen plp4hought him crazy, but he explained the matter by saying : "Brethren don't, be alarmed ; the word of the Lord it him mouth, bat the devil is in my bretatekel." Webster always told . it with greet gliq to the mintiest's. —II it related that in Virginia Chi, Nevada, a poor sritow, examining as old vest of her deuasahusband's founds dir ty paper in the pocket, which, on examina tion, proved to be the deed of three feel of • valuable mining claim. The Seatelary of the Company informed her that it vu gen uine, end that $l,BOO to dividends vas die on it. She took the money, sold the dirty paper for $14,000, and want to her boon and friends in the East.—Ex. —There art tome um too oelllelr.to Joey themselves, even to give' plumate to their ohildreu. Sash a man woe old David F—. Doe day he at does to I rout turkey, which he attacked 'elgoroesl7, with; out leaving • morsel for hie frill!. irifillt he was picking the lAA bellw. the IlltvlPll children begs, to cry for it ; upon which be threw it at thaw, onellaintittli If" 4114°6 if . maNyr: Go. lake k ! awl let , your father starve." • • preeteoe opealesso Of yeugs:Aiset tee ge,t test cee414,411} ipaleketaeremy,. end Waal toterlies .rower, mu* ',oohs ea • oppteee of some yitiot-wpfte, teLebeieked the qurik pf big Ult iieemejVh eupprolesearsobs. Reit wz 1 that's whet'. the Rol*. tmesik Rip P ea thineehe'd lose me." !!=l;I
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers