I The Democratic Watchman. BELLEFOI(TE, PA " ONLY A.II4OMAN'S HAIR." After Serlft'a death there was found in MP urtting-tionk n trees of fitelisis huff. tht the riper enclosing it there erne written "Oniv Woman's Hear" "I M/y a ni,rna» . x hair r A seal, a sign, Nerving the knightly aria In Palextine, "Italy n witn»th's halt' r Bomae their lore Pale student! lay the pledge, And tttrivo the Thom. onle.a womun's luar r. t tad 11101 depart, Fumbling one little traits /1..1,1 to the honer. -Ottly n womnit'n hair 1" tinge of fond t runt, iiitriett with atttlwart forma, E=MMZI •v Phiy a woman's hniii" %Vita this a Kihr— t bitter sneer? so, Shameen thoperibef "Only n woman'n hair"' Wan this a sigh Borne on the midnight surge I )1 rosemary 7 'V )ntv a wornaren hair ," Lo I there lay time% 1% hen wailing troolle hlingn 'to necking avows. *lnky ""t "trunthn's ItulrL7 I4mt Stella's hair '" if he to rstennt, a lest, 11, by all that cure' •'thtly It Kameda hair ' ' l'rtio•—natzght Al.l vet IN. xoau•thw}t mare When :meth. titrtl TREASURE 'TROVE IN RICHMOND'S RUINS itowthe Strong Box of one ophe Banks teas Found and Spirited Away. IU kIUtEIII t IF THEP It KS! I ..EYPUI. PA la The Richmond nor the eon a try rut large, hat. ft,rg.•tten the etoitrover •-ite,. that arose, anti the inquiries that were instituted, concerning the disap pearance., on the night of OW f•V/WWltioll of Richmond, April 3d, 381;5, of an iron chest from the %milt of else of the bank , destroyed in the great elaillagration that crewed after the go trig up of tin cult h% the C'onfech.rnte 4,,vorenwtit Thi, chest belonged to the Confederate Go% - `eminent Treasur), and was depo•ited the hank vault , for greater SOCIInt . % at 'a time when the defy at of Lee's army be came most inuninent, and it wits feared the mob, in its trenty, would ri.r and attempt to seize the treasure of the fall ing government. The contents of that chest rune SO,id In gOld , bait as tire records on the hank bookA and the recorde of the t'enifeder ate States Trensur) were burned on that fearful night, t,r 1113 t, or 11011e11-8•1 Ilt tUrf'd in 110V111111•11(11N debri, about the .trots, Oleo, }afore tilt A ~rl,l not more eomylete than the rani, of that nairibiag of the third of April M , •fl 11 , r , nt their to it ' s Alleerq were tlx leg mail is lint little ot vului Llitty ourry ; the govern ment, with it* 111 - 1 . 1111% -peedleg• nit lit tin the , •-t u , flit -I.4•ltlit I 4111 hi 10 . 01/ 011 . 11. 011 But, slack An tiVt • ritlii,'ll r The inon rhe,t wits firrgtitti•ii- —tit in the mid li' behind in the doomed hunk, though none boxre, -111. ro,ed °Wain the to ntrure were illtintril„ the train The blink Ili the path of the 11..1 of lire, it weer 151 n in it is re‘ k of brick and grietiM, rind the ,trolig box, with Two Hundred Thou‘iind lit olio i n t In gold 1k Ii( dawn With the blink rumi, and lilt bur ied beneuth the wit , Suns itt rill et elltn—.nn . for the (11114 . being iit Itut ;;old trout the greeds oyeei find :nig 11R1141, of tit..tl A lull b e ll of nom, and ninke, and tfipor. bntlled itt•t.v.• and mbout it, loud in an tin 0.011, for dap. 1111(1 wr. k, 111 that 1•114.1 of gold 11'hen the Ilttrit, had •homt their fa the "bitrut 1 mot 6 , 111111 P an ob ject of mournful thouoinils of k , tratigvr,, and n t 141.11.1, (4.41 thOne rtho ..'ll to thu rimiureejok Well) of tiro 661 poseieseions hiked ihribiy- the lurid Dyed mnuwb•r, leaping hither unit thither lit o it renew/11h bonsL Th •re i, the merchant, who, lntl• a inilltkautire, gazes through tni.ta of tears upotlrt he glioddike and blacketnal skele ton wells of what was once his hmdlue4 -httaima, house crammed with 111., Idole Maxis, the fabric of evert nation Nt, rth lii sloe he rakes and seeks aitiong the ruins fir 1.11111. poor relic—sonn•r o ut ru Ir Of Ilia former prosl s •nty , but the hot vapors arising through the wows of the fishy grate that encloser nil, kisser out and drives bßin away • Weep, aged men I w eli you may ; Sur never again will shine the son of prosiwrity for .1 , , Ater on, for your life !w i l t b l o 2 ,,dorth he h arid or that pile—heant .crt7lied and lippe burled putt curse the tql (hon., of tilts 45Assetlatiutt _But your evrst, will l•eturn to you, for Here is 110 reparatioll t 4/ 1,1! Thule, no insuranee to Is paid , for the inaured and iAsurer hate been oxelot sw.ut together Y;.trider is the poor idiopitian, tr irlg in rain to distnsgu isli the sits of ho little stAire., over% behned by the gigantic walls of great warehouses So great is the flange wrought by ruin, le , wanders a stranger past his own pm...mem, and turret away in despair. all lost I" Then the, crowds of plunder/rs and ]]pilferers--the vultures of calamity—that hovered about the carcase of a ruined city, watched and trivia on by hordes of policemen and squads of troopsdetail oil from the victorious army of °erupt tiOn, to . pioteet property and stay the plundering hands. Ah, pie I it was sorrowful. So many old familiar places dad haunts quw und tinguishable, without landmark, in the long stretch of ruined column, broken colonade and•fallen debris ) and charred "household 'goods," tumbled into the chocked gutters., Here a tiny Cradle, once the soft neat of a cherub at some hearthstone; there a .braken and 'half burned piano, all its music gone out of it like a soul ; yonder afamily Bible, its sacred pages soiled by the mire and washad -- by the flood ; thousand dollar Confederate bonds by the bundle; bunk checks, filled out and signed; notes of hand and promises to' pay by the score. —all without a redeemer. Th&e Were wild stories of valuables here and there, buried under the ruins of jewelry storeS, and otheisplaces of de posit, and cordons of policemen kept , beck the vultures, or stretohod ropes and forbade their intrusion under. the penalty of being arrested. - But no one dreamed of the two hun dred thousand dollars in gold that form ed an immensely rich deposit in the cel lar of the Bank. The celebrated specie train, supposed to he henring the bullion of the hanks and the Confederate Government, during ell this eventtni time, wasstrugglingOn ward to the far Snuth, with the army of General Johnston for its d,pstina- Lion. Alarmed by reports of -the enemy inx pursuit; harassed by rumors vague and indefinite as id the proximity or where abouts of the foe, the escort trundled the trains here and there, retrograding Mee day, going forward the next, utterly undecided as matte route it was safest to pursue. Their mission was no secret, and an unknown aunt of silver and gold was at the mere) of any hand of robbers strong enongh and audacious enough to effect the capture of the train. ' At last the dash of the "robbers canZ; a band nwuntea and disguised as Fed eral cavalry, or Federal cavalry, in fact, swooped down like wolves upon the lamb with the Gol.nr.sx FLICKUIC, and ha \Va. , , horn of it. Those ..r the hank officer. and Got- ern anent odium'> then in charge of the, train—most ludo minting ILA it may seem -141.7 . 0 unarmed I The armed I.:wort had left than, and they were powerless Ge rea.t When the dank came there 1 . 111111• with it at volley, and .evernl voir4 , 4, cried out, "We surrender!" The challenge had been that of the high v, ayman, "Your money or your lifer Stand and deliver I" __(,,,,t . II cd, Not caring to risk all in the defence of that they knew would be taken, the venerable en , todiani or the bullion fdr renhlered the lkcie, and kept that which, to them, was far more abut I, h r 11•11 (hr V.11,,1e bond of r , LL r piled intn flfill I\ n the wagons 411a:1111441 bott.tv richer than over fell into the clutches 10f the renowned Caption hid, whir •5i0..41 three Mbill4 frOVII The waLTnns were •et ou lire , the prp clow: 61\1, cwt, uud klrht -441, by Ihe litil nr broken epen with l‘ateht.ts , the rich jtn , 4lent pottrlng gnid and 4111 er %MY lend I.r) hand, louder than the jingling qf trace chain, The freebootvrs, nested 1,4•011(1 (,11- trul _a the gulden, harvftd, tilled their porhet , v%itli.the largest of the pieces, then "'tripped .11 their trom,uer-, lip the 1,4, th,-reof, tilled tile 1,12: :id threw giirrnerit ii-trildtlic their 114,r.... 1 1 ., i in d 11,.1.t,1 • t. , their idu/dlc , , kiipmcki. 41Ili 1 , . 11114, emptied tutu ..f nluct• t• r tl.. t ~1 11.1611,11, and 1111011 .Lure w lii And clinked, And Act,. tt „i„r,L ,h„r‘t ciltrt , 111,11114L1 11 i :I- grain in per Ii• The er w e re Het t,, thought er was beneath the no tte,, the "1) n It I 011.. NOP, Ili I raped 11 1,40 X of th e lamer metal "I) — , 21 itr thin IN% ity wllli ta.l‘ er, s. hen guild to hail fur the Ltraldang ' hie of the 5 , ,11401,r, wan 1,1,,ziat4 I,) the , lupe, and thin inn,,ltern the 'lien, trial ef One \ crtici 1,1,, 1,4 lured n through' t lin• fwd.. In it ,Irviint Ten minutes, purlums, sufficed tie r1,1,1,er, was It cull 141 saddle and they nealtited and were uwlty is 04 MOO Sadli the gthathltam, of the atoll, W.llO 111141 1111414114. d nose Ly, witnesses 111.... till. %%hole-ale robbery they (hhulil not NI , 4 . 111, gathered the remnant of the des-- l filed treasure, and continued on their jounu•t. A fen hour , later what remained of the wltnderilig Argo.y )121,, Fedentl loiNe-,tott LS logitiniato ctiptin 0. 11111, tofill, due there rerhort front the las eu.toilian , All is mister) But the two hundred tl;oo , aTi(1 ut the ruins of Ihr• 6auk ! 11(piitlis lifter the eviiewition lifter blie pOiple, bail begun b lift shill ly their bowed heads, and hod, abut thew , the dirortsPrs !UPI 11 W111111 .11 010 book property eetutuetleed learn;; wii:t the rubbish of its ruins In stone portion.; of the uhurtie di - triet' v re heard— "The Mob!III of imouoe.notpoildia l ia Slowly the work of excavating went on i)t tbi , bank—now a bank of rums, (,rout ismbh r+ and blocks of granite were to be dot; out turd moved away, null by hull. Inge girder 4, gnarled and interlacing each other in a death einbnwe, as it were, had to be removed; and brick, by the thousand were to be retuned one by IMO. Gangs of work men tot led In the bowels ,of the debris by turns, getting down day by day, deeper and deeper—coming to the iron chest and the two hundred thousand in hidden gold) At last, in the declining rays of one' VI, ening, when the workmen were about quitting labor fpr the day, ono of them, in making a last stroke with his pick for the (lily, struck uixm something hard and solid. It gave not, but caused his tick to rebound, blunted and repulsed. He struck again, and the substance gave fordo a mound—the jingle and chat& of metal pieces Ile bad dimeovered the buried cheat of gold I - The lucky discoverer was poor; he had been a soldier in the service of the Confederacy, and had been mado poorer still by the turn of ovens. So he kept his own counsels, and said nothing._ But that night he imparted his dis covery to two Of his comrades. fellow workmen in the debris, who had Burs rendered the musket and taken up the implements of labor. That night, secretly, and under the cloak of darkness, the iron, chest was re surrected; the deposit of two hundred thousand was withdrawn from that bank, and the three workmen came no moeb to delve, but were missing ever afterwards. Reader, we have written the history of this remarkable "Treasure Trove," truthfully, in accord with etatenionts ,that have reached us at various petiods within thii past two years, from 'parties in this country and foreign eountric, living: thousands of mile,. apart. If the veracity of our history of the Richmond gold be questioned, then let he gentlemen who were iti3 CUStOdiflll%, speak, that he•tory may be vindicated 'and the historian set right. Ibis we know—some men are rich now wfio would have remained poor lint for the brenk-up of the Confederacy, the burn ing' of Richmond, the hues ur dispersion or the bullion of the Banks and of the Confederacy The hou r or the nation's enl am ity wits their opportunit y , and they profited it. Gold, ill-gotten, bath a tongue, that will sooner.. or Inter prorinon the guilt of the LTtter,llll , l O,IIN 10 it fore the tribunal. 01, God find men SIC hilly'', ()I,ollroll Prehistoric Remains, Dating Back For ty-Five Years B. C., found at St. Louis. It is generally known in this emititry, , and in scientific tin le , ui Europe, that the gigantic undertaking of lirldgiag'4he Mississfmil River at till.: point has !teen already begun, intil that for nano thll.l l N ear, When the state of theriver would permit, the sound of the, !Haub -row. , ma chinerY h a s ei.a.ed not .day not night, but the work wt excit% Mimi has been go ing on until the solid rock hat helm rcriched tor the foundation Of the pier main the western One of the piers above low-water mark-- a triumph of mechanical skill The block, tats ~tune of which It t, bath. area , huge at thou,. of the 101,1 In - the application ofortginul principle , of mechanical and ..tuznioering skill, these gigantic block, aro moved to ea=dy as the , ommon toundlitido ~tone- of our dwellings, The outer Ider not yet be gun, the exeltNall ,, n• therefor not being quite i'411111i11 . 1 , 41. At this point the won der- begin, the end of mho li i• not yet What , fleet lb, o‘, r% of till- twin, I under the 1110..11 the I.'ll - the board ..1 ngineors v. deb I 11/.111 . .\ bout . ‘u•turda% ON. workmen enzngeet in ).lading the rock, in the bottom of the ex, atlult fir the foundation thispier discharged all 4' tra. , rolinaiy large hen, intim iltatel 2,10 r report, a strange phenomeic , ll itself • Instead of having the (emit time for the sued:, to clear awn . ) the% isms it ascend rapidly in a column, a- though iissuing from the smoke tae I. ,f one Of our St;.;IMIT., lo•itrvd, and it wits found that a •teadt n%ovutit 01 air ith a gran damp i`o• 1-41111 1: from Ole that an 11:1 , 1 been 111111 k into ,on. I/1 1101,1,1 subterranean pas,atte 1. • ;aril V. tint bottom the 11.11111 1111/d 11:111 lit , r ha , disappeatisi through a dark, deep opening in the rock about ten feet in diameter, Made 1,1 the In , t 111-chart;eol s poWder huldur-, and tor, In : , were iminediatel% terueurtal anti careful explorations beget now enter into detailed it scrintion, but having }won 1111 itcd to Ile tile I.onrd of engine. Itil It front the leas. and !:,,,eiety, we must re•PtVo , it hill I•lrw.iti,,rl of the U (livery until we shall luaso made a more careful sun ey Snake it for the pr,.eilt to sal a i• certain that it pa--es entirely midi ;the rner to the Illinois shore, and whether it is v. holly the s tit k of some V. 1 1 ,, 1411 . 1• 111/1:11oltvd 11111 d, N.,hoseiiitere.ting remain- are •trutill •o thickly up and down thi grent valley, or whether it I, partly na tural and partly artificial, remains to be seen In any (11, , tt is vino the 1 ."•• •tupendoti• The nada pn••age judge to be about twenty feet high by Illteim broad, and e• -teniatieally ar, hid of erbend ; part of the way uttijut . through solid roe k and part Ly o•ubstail- Dud mie.itury Tin.sl , totterns stalled to Lo much WWII, Its If carriage wheel,' of Milli , . sort. 1 . 11 , 1" , • (.11. , - ,tiges, which, of course, we • had no tune to enter TM,e are about eight feet high and six feet wide In the \ main I,ll.4Sage wit saw no tool, or implements of workmanship, but on entering one of the lettere! pti , sagi-, we soon emerged into a large . healer 1-iimiortisl by lean ing pillars of solid rock when the donu t/U-1' wits I.X..l{Vtited .\ rowel the wall , of this clianilier there were a hat to be Mulles eloaed With , lowly -fitting ..111 h , 1111,1 , 1,1..rl•t1WIIII Inscription , in Ittinle unltorin eliarat ten., which to our eye, n liian resetublatu•i• t, 010 •ttl, to th,. .•icantil, Library, which cur brought frmil 1.111 . 1//p/I, of N/11011 )1 )) , tuna the welt, wori• prujeotlng pilasters, with draisql A t•% mai or Egs ['don hood-, u holt pre ounted It most impretAxe lust awe-in sptrtttL% effect, tu, they ii ern& illuminati,' by the torch-light. Those swi , t, -ad faces look+d down upon us front time Ml eient ago., 111,s the souls of the departed One of tip io sagesopeningon the tart side dlePlllea b. f”liOW the coons 01 the rear, and it is believed extends to tile great mound new being removed by the orth Afis , ouri Itailroad, which was the theme of much interesting remark at the last meeting of the Historical Society. those who have not seen the mounds around St. Louis, it may be neves:air) to fitly that the terminal known as the ilig liloutid, is about one mile above the great bridge Taw being built. The mound known S Monk's Mound is on the .011)(4 side of the river, awl., in but one of a contimems chain of mounds ex tending from tho river to the blutn, a distance of nine miles, It is conjectured that the tunnel under the river and the mounds are Intimately connected, and there wits in ancient times an opening thAnjih the mounds from this subtera nean highway. Of course every scirn title man is in a perfect fever of excite ment at these grand discoveries which inert HO full of promise to arch' (logical and ethnological inquiries after truth. It will be remembered by our citizens that some few mouths since alt examina tion of Monk's Mound was made under the auspices of some 'Eastern scientific society; and Outing the excavations. there were frequent exhalations of disa greeable gases and odors. Yet we will not speculate, but wait in almostbreath less suspense for future developments.-- As we returned from our haity exitmlna- Lion, passing through its pilastered hall *ltbati described, we observed n &secant ing opening about seven feet high by three feet wide. Following this in its windings about tiftyysids, we climb tea flight of forty-one steps, ascending which, we found ourselves, in anqther chanilier of wonderas•Ltival . tfi shape, iibout 80 , 1( . 11 feet long; twenty feet high, and three feet wide. The walls of this last chamber were sculptured in rnagni ticent laisrelief and Runic inscriptions. Professor Racal°, thc,dearned Sanserit Id ' the university, who was nith us, lies taken 1111011 himself the task of transla ting gat. in , eriptions. Of the meaning of f•Otni , Of the words and the cohissal i,cuipture, be also sPeuks very confi dently. One of the magnificent groups he is certaiii is intended to represent All fah MARIS crowning queen Elizabeth. And another group of colossal fignritit representing captives following the car of n-vietorioos conqueror ere portraits of Luke Deuteronmy and the friend going into captivity This remarkable discov er\ , following sd'imickl) theonent Rock Island, will awaken the intensest interest throughout the world It iv sir% desi rable that the wave into wIIO.O hands the, rich treasures of the Rock Island discovery lies fallen will send represent halves here, so that we may enfiipare notes, for it is possible that both these renders and Ilnee ihseo‘ered here were the works of the same ancient peoplt. Si Low., Ilrpublwon, Jan, 8, Outwitting- Hig Neighbors. e Not it great uhilo nett , nil ma , employed in it village, where 11, it well 1,11 4 ,w11, to dig it wi . ll, pi.. hf.it. The e iitract W dint h ivii4 to lie limit a rertnin per and wltt _ rant It frOl . Slipply N% :tier At it 1111 went with n is ill, and hi , ditily'progre ,, A I'll 4 intently witched h' intere.teil partio , • EitTly ' nnd Into he 41.'ikt41 .UWAy faith full _deep down in till.' earth, full td confidence in the speedy ciiinpletion Ile•hied reached the depth of alymt twenty-tile nod rerun to , trike mate] " Early olio tilortictilt. hit repstiNd t ,, tho •cono Im lidu.r, and horrible to It hut! oltt.d in, tind IN:, torn noltrlt 111 2 .411/.1.11 11114 . 111 vl.ll*. 111t.41 Ih.• rel•lt 111 Id lhnrtghl , 0 14.1111t10111al the WI uh ut V.Olllll Call.4. lulu .\ flit U. , 11, h 1.. Led carnii•itly awl NM. , thin, quickly hilt and e“at, he eurctull litthg 1)11 the w,in,11,1,—, nip! -peetlik made tracks hie). t he amid the uridiirtzroiwth, he quict4 avinitied ftr the progre. , ot e% the 'cwt.:sing wore inlittl.l -t,. 111 ,, 11 , anti . St.% et al wrrr t rattlftd t;; t tht V III, tI/ i t 11:1t. ogi ;t trot, I Ih•re, M, :I - , .1 I "hr...., b. I; tt.4 ut rtr h Sl/ 1 1111.1 1 11 . 111111111 1/11. rated that the 11:1.1 e11%.1 en tt The crowd 1.101111 tea, and st.Kl horri fied •et the fate of poor l'at A Inlet e.,n•ultation unw held, an , 4 I,lllll l n 111111 • other uuph•nu•llt, %%11 1. I right a ith whn to dig out the ull fortunate man To uork then went uith a toll When 1/111' 141 1 1 111;11111. 4 wearied Milt tin• wnt•uul lah , ,r, a I‘ , /,t, other re•ndc hand.. grarle•d the uupleuu•nty and dug Itn•tiit hit 4plietly 1 . 1,11111 N retr,it MI the Villitl , nee, While the mode - ii lu;;i• 4 11..1 nmii.l the w.•Il ittia %%nu with the work' {.. , , , ,111:4 bra% diggvr , elyn , nt, 1,441 the li6B - th.• I . XI tv,.• hrotand..l, grew Inten , , , , and !War 'Lama, gazinq foal full \ down tlo , %.•11 itli grrut .•nr• the dirt %%It. , lug 11Wi1!.., nll.l, M. 11 4 .11 th , • 1.1 tlllll %%ILA lit I.aigth ti•ui 111 . 11, 11. Pllt u•a to be found rolapt4.4l Into It broad Grua, which br4.l, forth in uproar:m/s rnernuu•nt,wLcn ttl veritable walked up, with a sunling IL/1,1 liddr...sed the 4.14 •t -fallen diggers, wito now stood weary, and soiled with their labor, "ISi. .1116'1 S, gillth . lll..fl, Mill it a l'llt Fogun sun. °tut is intivii 01,1.,gisi vees for (thin' of Oita tiny little pa, ,or work !" Tlll. fu t 1.1111 br bett , l• itton4ino..l than dc , cribed, It% tln• most atettvo of rho young num alunk off ; , 1141 Immtli (4l muttering-. Ifroko lortle that n 4 ,1111111.41 ITV 111114.11 1 . 11, 1.11,/ Thr , .wfli Rid f hi, fen,,,, Put II II ni-heil Ibp a nd It vllllllll, , 1011lig Ihr 111011111111.1itA of hi, r4.11;11,1.0 ILI+ 11)9, A Dead Man Before an Arkansas Court. An A rkttn,its eorre.pondent of thv Now Or 1 , .1111, PlOl2/11110 tells the "now ing .•tury' 4, the manner w which ju.tiei hi trryted out: to u u •n in that re gion • Some yi.ars ag‘7 it man without a fund- Ix or relations litfed run county In thin ;Aie, and wa , e wpor , of an estate Worth $3,000. It vent to New Or leans, and %YHA nbAit c for years without being heard from The Probate Judge granted administration upon htB notate, wound it uv, and discharged the admin. istrator. 'I he man at length returned, he had been to Mexico. lle applied to the Judge for his property, when in dpon Court the following dialogue took Dead man.—lf your Honor please, I want my effects returned to me, as you see I am not doad yet. The Ciatrt.—l know,' that, hi, I as a roan know that yvu are ali VP a ml in court; but as a court, I know that you aro dead ; for the reoords of the court say so, and against theli"ferity there is no averment. So sups/L-4 . 40rd Coke and a goixl many other books I never rent!. Dead man.—But I want my , 'lnft)erty , and its's no matter tc) me whether your records Ile ot. not. lam Mite,' have not transferred ray property, endko, deprive me of it' without my consent HI without law. y insinuate this court lie - the court will send you to jail. Dead nom —Send a dead man to fail. • afrort.—Mr, 'Sheriff take the ap parationYiut ,serif—Bo thou ghost or goblin ddannod. I'll speak to thee. Como on ; lot's go and take a drink. The Judge stuck to it that so far the Court . was copeorned, he wits dead, and lie should stay dead. The poor follow went into chancery and spent all lie had made in Mexico. "That Tarns! Stuff." To hear Dr. Woods tell the "drug ger" story is worth a quarter at any timer. The story is old, but the manner ua which the 1/r. tells it, is good , It it this A lung, loan gaunt Yankee, some thing over six lean, entcrod a drug store and "Bo you the druggerist 7" "Weil, r S'lllo MO, I Sell drugs:" "Waal, hey you got ally tiv this We centiiintla us the gals put VII their hoild kerchiefs ?'' "Oh v, " . "WaSl, our Samantha Jane is gwine to be married, HMI she gin me a nine pence and told me to invest the 'hull amount in seentiri' stiltr so's to smake her sweet, if I could find Homo to (+nit', 1.0, if a mind Just, smell 'rodnd Th „ Yank spindled around without be cni.2.Wiedirtitll the druggist - got tiroil of li!!.11, and ink Iflt; &Intl bOttIO of hearts liTirn, said . I ie got a c eentinstutt: that - I know will .ninon, A single drop on your handkerchief will iday for week., nod It in illipli,lllll i to Whi;li it lint; tint tin get the strength lif it oti utu.t like a og "That NO, 1114istvr 7 wand hold on it min ute tell I get my breath, told* m. hen I /4‘ , 011, you lint ponder. 1112, The benri.))4.lll eourre kuorlo.d the Y 01 k..,,,t% 11, [lO liquor line done Homy mun j I ) ',oppose lie got up and 'welt again, US the drunkard does. Nof hr; hut, rolling up hig f.l4•l'Vet. nit 1 11111 - Iirv4 h i pon(lrroui th,t, lie said • You Tiat, too smell that tarrial mid nuts 1 II snake smell lire and brine.torie." A's .‘ paing 111,13 ha,. jowl!) ,11t11)0,1, - 2, , f0• tor -it N. , It In nut, It limy bi• u.1.1,1,-.•d in, her own •••••‘, ttho u.otluo.urhtultirt• lint 'SW 14 a ino.r, iortnidaldo and tinatvlt there lir° 1 ,r,p4,r alum It 0111111111 h. , uned, it-e, that the it tier ‘ , ll. ne‘er tempted bt tit.. 6 ) 0.11 r I,llllard room, to tithe ‘‘ itio, lint the In n altenatnlv %.•r th , • •• r.. 1,1, Thv N... in r.f t en h- -rarPtit,- fr•nitt thuir. nu' la in•q t r,, la: ton of a thin:; that 11101 r lii riqi , and the t hilldren Ithont a %cr', lll•erinlintilie•ti 211 thee, [ill II kr HI ill chat th , t 11-k, ic 111.111 to It rttnit , mot re•tstata, to - rant- It ..hedtettee to (;nd, th,y co\ e..t tho Loon dewed, and if f l -i ~,nre it II0111.1111:1 6 rof 'N , i' a , t •hoilld N. uttered 1110111%. and ttlihout et rionsiiii for it, n In. It I. If , 4 , 1111.1. a 111 1... 80 . a -tiller, .li-di11.% kin.. k r• , .i1l that Ih,• hill In an-wer able 1.. r hate Isno‘‘ n tt )1 , 11 , • Intide IiII• , •::11.1.• fir it month I. a paren tal rl •IIIIII• 01111 v of I!iP Om and It. tit 1 , 7, , tt • mid nillky di.. Om , /it. - t,‘ fir ill, 1 1 ` 1 It•pewl i.p.,11 • th , I. “fldh--441011L.1111,,t h•i nun toil, dun rto vn in;2 ; ..No' than - Col ti.Koes (lint. —The .Rill .y 411,41.3 these Cooitole 1 pi, to thr , .tt ing the lasso 10 1111. turn at irt rintßitify; eliptlB, 4.4 of other 111111111 d ., 11. deer one .H.lltSlOll, .Iklll n (.11.114y11111f1 ut NOI Hand, %Alen Lip, ittittnitnit with it . Niolllltt 1 . ,f111111., denITU!. 111 i, herd throut;ll the forest, the) :ter silently rotamiti Irons he, %inter quarters The girl v.v tiniately, had the 11—.1 in her 'hand, Ith Vrent coolnes• uwh ,1.111 , she threw over his head as he wits plow iiintting his den, told at the t+nnte instant the end of the thong to ti tree. The brute, in finding lnn;.elf tin. to the at the A11)11/u/1 ; but 11.• 1.11111/1•(1 Olv (,11c hi tortuntitel tt.tteil hitt non, and, on l'lllllllll4 to tether. it sinlor brought sh‘,rt up, awl thrown hi the grotitill career wilt 6eon brought to an crid, for, t•eil.ing the thong \lll,ll hLY 1111 , 1 Iv -" 110111 g 11010111,1 g 1111 , he I,re•rntl\ inannged to strangle him self The ,9441111: the beast charge the girl, tAail, fright tool ran away,•• and, as the tsin.....iitence, the hold wett,li, who wa. to htitti been married to hint, n'rit lion at once to the right about, vet properi, retteiiiig to have :myth i tug wore to iuv to 1. 112,.turdly n fellow 1l.A111) ON 'I II K. EN(.1.1 N ERR --An en gineer on the 0..1; 141 ft It. bilk, thy following titory on himself. (hie night the train ' , topped to Wood iltoi Wator nnutll St/ail/II ill Illdilllllll While this ( 1 .-ration...w as gouty: on 1 olo•erveit two green looking countrymen, ill "111111/ , spun," eurion,ly in-pectitig the locomo tive. and occasionally gi‘itinswent to ex prestiionx of rwtonistitovot. F litany on . of them looked up at not and tkaid : 'titrang(tr, are this a lia•ilaiotiv,.?" "Certainly. Didn't yon ever Flo ono beforo 1" "No, haven't never saw one afore. come down to tic station to night purpose to see one. Them's the biler, ain't it? "Yes. certainly." "What yer call that you're in?" 1 4 1 V e mil this the cab." "And this big ?" the driving wheel." "That big black thing on. the top is the ehimbly, j eupposo '•Precisely." "Be you the engineer wet runs the machine?" "I am the engineer," , • "8111, 6 said the fellovi to his mate, of ter eyeing mo closely far a few minutes, "il don't fake much of a man to be engi neer, du it t" aboard I" ----- Fashlon - ftemc - 40. -I,ftvn, Rot Irt Etranean gold, Is a he ornament tor ylking IIItHOP. —A new comlnme, Adnittetl for Wisi ap4,11 the ittleelpette, IS on Ito way fron to Now York. npron - ,Mrllllant, In the birt pattern, WOlllll well, and can aearetay I tingttiebed from dhßtttr. y good eltrill'it AMR Ara now • New York at e 2 Mt a yard, hut black oil •wont more now limo (tier. —Fluddonahle writing paper for hull in nearly /mourn, firm and nuba6onit &Hagan Intelngx and liguren. week'! twenty-nlllO flughlannhin In New York were !Mende.' by lo,onn po kle,pent t!IbIon In vertinge biro, tine enpperk [Led when!, en or $186,009 In blilnt lirt.2lMt.l4, 19,.41 wore Jewel's that itggrelpthel ion -1,00 of thy ornamonta at a party York. last aevit, WWI On htirnelltm M 111.4 tirely forinc4 of ninnerdu• choice hot fold IFTlOnsllred font foot by three half, Illy+ ally covering one Of the ?Ire-ph duo I Irowilig-rbom. —A novelty for hall drosses is In tho RI I , l y ) 111 r,,10 tioi.euc of silk and ilte Iliterillo.'l3 Motile ery elegat drenses sto being made VI itti trade skirt it nudda In ilit“l it drrir of tiii• bottom of the underact!! —A tory golpl skating 1:11M11111111, 14 a Ilr dark gray corduroy with fur trimming tippoi skirt to 1noIH•d on the side au,t Int. Isla 1:11c paletid la of b h u•k with n fair 1101111.1., and ho fintMlll , ll with satin maul, trimtntal with friago. Muck l attx ith Inr, end'. —Among the bettor woolon gmmli for allornonn tit vaxen at home ore !. rem lin4 hill lino Mater at el MI a yard 7bart, Wool n WI silk face, It el 23, allk aorgo%, ,louhle fold, ni $1 211 II yard lavtijni Nary in pilot) from t.f. 211 1 , :11.1 e nJ nnldt tim then e they lir/. Ilia 11 , 11.r1Y till 1111101 VI An it. 16. E nl.lrt 14 nllll 111104. limit, unit rainumt iinif"rmly 140,1ped up nt th.• Nry.h.. /ire umth nhort.l thov are always Iltrgo rith-Ftiriped 61 Ilti N 41111,1,111.• 1.1111-i --Itllio not }.111 , k are limit fits "tit., un for rotllr , ndx thit p 1.... II) titellUtA, I 4 Ur.. ~ 1 11111 g itetinit trice, tilt. sI, in !wing II 11'14 , 10 ilt.oult., a lilt . 11h ft, Of fit nurrett illo•it, or one i. 1.: • ;Tit. 11l the, %/nit very fitment], mitt eettrlet main atut blur met mid 01111 son —Bon ne•tw sire worn ery high. (pail, and luau ' rhe twill li. clreeeed io; very far forvitir.l or h../1 Ibsl there lr D.. Poop, for the ha , 'rhri... obit the 11.011.11 Vll.lOl Mint aw loot in I Frentitli I. Hindi. lip In w Suirtil feather , are lute red together awn forehead, Nail 1011 n lif•M.r rotten, let stw th , like, 1,, any extent nail the sender kok the mole n he moth' 6413 , 1 , If, 11111 41r , +. , 111 unt ~ 1 +/IIIII ,) 11, i 511. 1 ,1111 It+ Mel MO, erorlrl+•lly. Itlltolfop.. r01..r, ittld Illricty of ant+ 111I,{14•11 , 1 , If II I .1, quite In .isnoie The tple_rids,ll.4ll4 l•l l'. 111 Ittitritipv 0i..1 11114 i4,s r4, II lirt nt r x yard • h.'Y ”41 11.411,144.11, 1.41 y.,114 t they hut,. i+•11 t Ilio+, nl,ell fir iirlgt. thy,l, r Pal Afili I.attpl-im• rtin1ii..112.1.1.• 1441)1K fi r Milk ',And Matil, hrileiLlit•li with 4 . ,‘ , :111+ Vlllllllllll, I+ Idogllll Risibili ties -1 4 11. n - 1$1.) A.l i; leicl thy . fll uip - t it il 4 th.• go h --lb. lads ‘,11..1“,i, 1,4 iyhad) I )110 0 4 41i/11' I.a la I -Ito so1.1.11)1/Igt. .'1 baying orn • 1w I alx tl lin )(A, 11,S, h, -1 pr0 ,, 11 111k,,1s land 11 , 14 111 Ili.? -- 11,4.114 rltti It pr• •trn c . ..n.111; ; I ill rr =EMI 1 ulh "HIM: if. P P. h ti.• .11.11.1 II lit Ph ah. li.a ‘% ) , +.l i. th , mid a 14*.plimt Pow tom I 1iii.111 , ..111 hl• 1111111, -- • N.,t " liLuau r si ill 1..1. 11 tot) L• 1,1 1.1 1 41.1 11. I. it • - V.ll . 4. .1 Mll,lllO to, thqn 11. , ,11lI'II, I , 1 1• • .(iiIKI, 'OUT% 1,4 111 , ..1 . 11. ~.ry —"I 1u..n•111.1.u1,t. 11.411g4 1..1 V,llll/4 111,1 r•,ii.• imodin g ...,1•11.•• • ..,••.t,”• t••. 1 ki lt•ot••••II, Ito I ••It-Ilin• II 1•Fr•I It.t.atto•••1111••titt.1•11• II•tt I• 4 • t••••fd p r• tart .1 ~ I rilit O• lily it 1 •r t• lo•rit) , 0 I .• N\ tii 11,11 tit I. 11, .1 I t /11tA f.. I iiri• ill. tit N ugh, N. 4111 111 I eof wt4l (IN. ti.,/ Ifi.il (lotto, 11. IN 14 NyIIIINri 01 i MN] I11,, • 1 ty Th. r.• I. n 11. I. h. 14 Iv ms.c. 111.• 11.111..,11 1111`41.• letl 114. kept \u 111.111tinti n 1,111.1111441 II I. :,4 hf t 5- !i il a II lor !Mil Thin 1.4+11 I i 4 6,10 111 It 1.1..1. Itel 111 N. S 1 1111111pS1111,/ .11 111 K ins 11.•• 1 1 11111 , 1 In Ilk , 1.1. 0 1 mll , l it (bar 41.• mitt till ntgMt loog 11.)111111 . 411.111 chart t 1.0% I I•1It -1 hen. an. OA.. reftw.ll. w I.y 04.arlq• don i th, ••Iniiii rnur vs. it.t 111... y 1111,11 I jelly 5.r....111, II :Mild 1.. I .ring 1. , It. linthw Mt, that ntVi.• ..r IffilmAl)ity lint hvg,, ith 4011 )t intim o•ritiK t 0 kr•tp It 'WV k. , 1, WllO,l I 'jut hitt JIM. Ilk, III: Irlitpot., non,.' 11111,1 tt . .lll ., •ilikt ttlll lint , it" • Ito how de, otionel Dee , (et '" emked a g../ lady of her Inv. "1. - v door, tio• I)..de t n ) Is lery tie% Ile tautly% keep% Iris herd binned In Ida 111 the eordrlhotion box has passed. -Inilt nlntt. male of null/ putti rtt helmet. with the following eamili vat R.•ntlom.ot, I mitt of ltm millet, thr• Momma fuundr whether h.• NILII It bilin3 ur ime hnuul.• not 11111.11111 Ki•nlgn 11114 111111111,0, rut nn w ft tett Ito nits. 1,111 Care for totorlt flottettm mom file woo. n snitrt•perch loading to it", tympanum ul !hi. 0/Ir. MO' the snorer toloreet he Itlntnr•l( rove! flrfo Impre.lott, hinds how ollnagreeald mud of euurnr , rorw —A city tnixn on a Omit to the count - wlth sorprke nt the ukill of it Milking a vow, "I didn't know you it that ay," mho mnitl wWI 0 , 1M , /-OYO , I "I Lloolklit thuy took hold of the eow'e t pumped the t ijlk out of her! What'e so long a tell for , - —An amateur viollniet lately gave a latitude In elittlee of tunes an the pro Holten!' need to give In hernia. He rot an he Foote With We bow, I.yo, play but one trine, now a hieh'll you NVltielt they all thouglit they would. eoeknoy at the Falls of Nlagan asked how he liked the Falls, replied. 'annome—quite so; but they don't quite my Isexpeetatlons; bealdee, I got vette lost my at. I prefer to look at 'em In It graving, hl 'tit weather, and LI The 'O4OO • —Senator Nye, of Nevada, in delve , week, defined Ida religions bedief. I that. "be bad - been born a Proabytert• lied been Judicially declared a Baptist; by habit an Epluropallan, and by maim methoiet."
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers