The Deinoctatic Watchman BZLI.P.PONTIE, PA - . LLEPONTE, PA: Frlday istornlng,,,February 19, 1889 `FAITHLESS. We swung at anchor„ where the wave ehewered great sea banners far below: jp waters rippled up to lave ler hand, that with lie bracelet's glow thatig , with trembling tide, MA 'by ed to kiss co lair a wrist: In the dim distanceoresto and wide, The white sails glimmered through the mist. Theorems, • aflame en the SOS. A silence that I would not.brear ;. liolW.teet that en It seemed - to me To float, and ' for my lady's site To wavemy fancies into rhyme, • • That she would praise POMO happy day; For then no fateful atter-time Had come to sweep my dreams away. 'Twere well It had been but a dream, Ind yet I trusted In her truth; Fier non eyes had an evil glearin That slew me, and she knew no troth. Smd still the white aalle,pes, Pne shore knd melt Into the purple WA ' But with them never more, As tkithlartselo her (Marling* lair. THE BRAVE OLD PINE The,oek is fair when skies are blue, Amine birds of the sir to its branches woe; The maple s stately trunk loth slow, And the willow that ever bonded; woe; But lord of them all In the warm sunshine, Towers the Ilflng green of tho brave old pine. Cirwen when the Autumn's shrill windn blow, trul November sends the many snow ; amen when maple and willow aro bare, And the oak's leaves whirled in the piercing lie shakes to the blast hie fringes free, (Mean to Lbw but is the brave pint, trot) Come Wlnter'alme or flummeex tOOM Come shrieking tempest or peaceful tudeat - Coup , . altadowe that darken, lights that gleam On the changing madam of life's Agin tdream, Keep green, 0 heart, In storm or altlno, And leaf to the core like the brave old pine Jefferson Davis at the Battle of Manaus. We copy the following from E. A. Pott.sitn's "Life of Jefferson Davis," published in thil Richmond Opinion * * the morning of the eventful day, President Davis hail left Richmond for the field of battle. What carried him there was never explained , it was not—as President Lincoln and other civil magis trates often did—to visit a field already decided, and' to re view or meditate upon it; there• was, indeed, a carping commentary in Rah. mond that President Davis should have been present at Manassas un that day, and should have left his office at the Capitol to thrust himself into a wen° of actual battle, and, perhaps, to interfere with tht.Confoderate commanders. It was known only to those very intimate ~Kith him amt._ he had left Richmond that morning to command, in person, the army • and hence the ,euriowi code take which appeared in all the paper. oi the South mkt day, mid winch the agent (if the A vioeintod Press had id,- iliciabed on what had been whispered to him of the imentiom , of Mr Da. is, that "the President commanded the centre in the action of the .day. Mr hid not summand OSP centre ; hg ioo late for the battle, and •risit 11 y whrii is said that rnl Benurvgard his ',NM fr." Ilteu, and that in tlii, originated hry first di-als %nig that commander, whit II erwarels carried to the corm) was flying he never fergave for the rortirelern, ty was MEM= MEI P i ny of enraged rrsecution ilowever this may he, it is certain that General Basuregard had never notified like Pre sident of the time alien he, proposed I give battle; he was under no obligation to do-so, sial,iferheiv, he ste , peetot the intention of r Dam lir to lead hi, arm into action ; all be was compelled to do was to apply to the Preaident tar au thority for the army corps of tieneral Johnston to join him, and it it positive ly known that thus was the oily iuli matune hir e Davis had that a Until.. pa, 10 be , frliVeKit . ii, arrived too late to take part in it, or to gather the milli:lr% sun of which he had dreamed the night before. But be did not arrive too late to make some di pies ar• l wrsorw heroism rods from the cars towards the sublime sonic in which the battle fool culminated and broken on the of evening. A cloud of intokt , nod duet had lifted from the plain and hung sul lenly in the sky; there was the distant clamor of battle ; the strok es of artil lery, slow and isaiderous, smote , black masses of !lien, wavering, wells tinguishahle, ?sulfide(' the It ruliwil ion and rierpleited it. It Wit, rurp, l •+oo_ bi,. Le tell, from a distance, which army had won the day, or what flags rode in Lim nosed Well.' Phe President gal loped forward to /earn the state of the field No one could tell loin amid the roar and confusion As he rode swiftly through a stream of stragglers, it Seemed aa if he was in the fludst , of a retreat, breasting its bad mild dusty current At that moment his brother, desepli Davis, galloped to his side l and said, "The (lay ie lust; let us go no lurther " "No;" said the President, grandly, "if the army is defeated, so much the great err reason that I should be with my brave men and share ther fate." They were the words of u kn.rfoniti courage %%Idyll nothing in his life ever turned or daun ted ; and they were, perhaps, remem bered when a distinguished sun f,f Vir ginia, recently reviewing the leader of "the Lost Cause," declared briefly that he was a man who had had many favor able chances, and who had attainai greatness only from comparison with a race of ixditical idginica in Mississippi and the Southwest, and who, with all ^the advantages of fortune, had but two virtues—a devoted espousal of his cause and , !indomitabteislack." The'seene changes from the grandeur and tumult of battle. The night has fallen, and the stars have risen above the combs of the Blue Ridge, now a dusky boundary of the Wide plain. Jackson has gone to his tent, gloomy and reluctant, muttering, "It is not say business to advise thet,Commander-in Chief to pursue." Befdte 'nether tent, larger and more pretettabous, above which float in the night air tho emblems of the Southern Confederacy, a quiet, elderly gentleman is seated, dad in simple' gray, his brosmabaded by a felt hal of light color end ample dimensions, biimouth garnished Nellt a fragrant el gar, evidently ii, person. faking his man, and indulging self-conwhicency. This man is Jifferson Davis. Thorn is . a group of 'aced officers around him ; General urcgard sits among than, Ind General Johrusixnaseomes -end goes, sharing thd light slid desultory ounver 'Nation, and anon' retiring to perform some duty . . Not II man speaks of pur suit of the enemy; not ouches conceived speak it. They, . of some incidents of the field • Mr. evils inquires of some of his Mississippi, friends ; the conversation becomes greral, of politics, of persons in Wishisigton, of anything else.but the fugitive enemy ; there is an abandon• ment in the scene, and every one is die posed to well-pleased and sociable. hit e A few arli fitrther from this fight re crest oa r t re an groat, broken mass's of men in Mad retreat, the hum of their 11 ght rises in the black hollowness of the night; panting, struggling, press ing on in inextricable disorder, • id yet with nothing et their heels but their own terrors. This is the Federal Army, the Grand Army. It dips through the night, it makes its escape, it is already shivering on the banks of the Potomac; sviiile Jefferson Davis picturesquely smokes hit cigar, strokes his neuralgic f.artii, and tells anecdotes at the door of Gen nesure. , rd's tent. Popular Superstitions •W clip from an exchangotho Follow ing gossip about some of those remnants ul old superstitions in which no one avowedly believes, whilo very few are entirely uninfluenced by them Yea, sir, you will lind very few peo ple who do not entertain some super stition or other, though perhaps sera few will adinit it. 1 hope no one will adopt any new ones from reading these remarks, and would like to impress up.siu parents the importance of hiding their superstitious beliefs (if they can't overcome them,) from thlf children, for superstitions are certairffy useless, and often incon ven lent, if they are tin worse. 1 was maintaining that nine persons out of ten held sovuo superstition, winai a gentleman insisted elan it that he ' hadn't a single one. 1 lay in wait for him, and at last 1 caught Min. Ho didn't like to count the carriages :it funeral I "Why ?" "Oh, I don't know." A superstition, Mr Blank Many wait until a whole 'intend pro cession bus gone by, rather than go be tween the carriages to cross the runt A lady assured nie she hadn't a single superstition. One day her little girl took up her mother's hat, which was black crape, and was going Lin put it tin her head. "Minnie," eiclairmxl her mother, "don't put that on." "Why ?" acid the child. "Because I'd rather you would, not." Then turning fu nun she said, sotto voce, "Somehow or other 1 never do like to have the children put on any of toy black crape things " Su 'wrathy al, Mrs. Blank Then if a dog howls at night, how Many tun. pule I "Motile one in the ii g 1 is going to die, sloe " I lutist say I was itston 'shed one evenurfr, when a dog !WV/10d ,'intend' tail MI 11,1,,N5, to see a really good, pious ..Id Methodist lady deldier ate> told on' her slipper and turn it wroog ode up upon the rug "Vs hy, ; "11 re Mn , k.siolusild, what is tint for +" say if you hear u dog howl, you must take "If ymir dipper and turn It up " "1%. ell, will your slipper Is• hough loSi• fn.. lave., of 1.11 in Lin 111Iii%V, 1.. one of es 1,,11,/M st" ..I.ll'l. it ' Ali.. said ; but I notieed she allowed tie •lipper to remain there until she wain that the .14,..4 had taken ”tr "nut Es en the oil/ I/I that superstition, lor to tdd friond, "►)e , l.e'howl tredt,il 11,4 night, and son I Int. (4 lipinine morn irlg, sot iiiV in Then, how many believe that the' -eissors, knife, or tiny 'diary thing Inll to the thssr and starers up straight, sone visitor Is cr.inllir4 I Why, I'l young hulas nI the curly morning put down their sew nig take the (limps o u t of their Ita!r an hoar or La., earlier than usual, jla.t. I 1441L1141. the s, I,l‘norn fen off the lap and stuck up straight If a blue bottle COMP.; suddenly into the room unit around pretty in dustriously, they say, "A strung, r is coming " (I should s.sy a stram:er eome ) ()no lady told mo shr waitti't Fi11...r 5ta.14,1/8 at all. “But,"slt /44(1,x1, "[hero Pi our tiling that 1 do not liko to do, and that 1.4 t , / hrrrdc a fooling gho. " 1 said, 1V..11, 1 110111 'My of U. would 000ttpy I hat pt•rfortnitno• just for,liniusetni lit —lllt, hut," i.ltr wont on to 4.1 y gloss, or L. Ili a "r" any o no cl.i• brooking, one, that tho perqmi twroking it, or 1•0111.: r.:111111, 1., 111.1111. Solo.. hefore loreakfa.4 6.r fear they should .•r herone night other.. won't give a it friend a ithout nialoog hrrn gite roan , , or nom ~f 1110114. y f or It 11-4 it Fli Id "Mt OM. " A gentleman once aglied um if I had tlifit (quits ahead roe I t nit " Olin to hoop t tot " won't--you'll give them to tne for this knif ''-- (a silvOr mounted hrrinl t and very (le tip for the mount) —4l I the rittv from ban, an.l we remained ver3 car . aalfr,en.he uallting with a Lulu the other rho, and ...dubbed" my toe itgaited. rt ..tone She tamed and tAttat no• with Whitli find 1 stumbled WonderinrlY, I ...died her what pa , sible difference it made. She stniled, but in.dsted upon I now ing ; so I told her it wni lit right foot "Then au'll.ho welcome where uu aro going " onto , lumded ''a gentleman and scholar" a cup of tea. Ile reized the teaspoon, shimmed off tho bubble,' em the Purim' , of the ton ' saying, Oxtilting ly, ‘ , 0,111 look I" anW hastily popped thin into his mouth. Well," said I, "what of it?" "Wavy!" said he. Now do you, suppose that that man thought that s% allowing those bubbles would bring Lim any !mod had( in the money line? Of course he didn't; and if he should sec Oda in print, hr would hr shocked to think that I cotfld im agine him serious in the matter, hut tako my word for it, lat would never allow his tea bubbles to (*.ape him for lack of diligennehn his part to gather them. I have lawn on the lookout lately for the stiperstitionia of thoso about me, and mould give you hundreds of others, but these are enough for Nemplie of thnsn "remuitnta." NO TIME LIKE THE OLD TIME. IT OLIM WINDILI. ROLM& There le no time-like the old UM, when you And I were young, When the buds of April Mowed Wed, end the lbfrehrof Spelpfrllfme asergii • • - The garden brightest glorloshy summer suns Sr.. 'mined; But, oh, the sweet, sweet violets, the flowers that opened flretl 'Moro Iv no plant, llko tho old &en, where you - and I were born, Where we lifted tirat our eyelkim on the aplen torn of the morn From the milk-while breast that warmed on, from the clinging armr that bore, Where the dear w.ll,loUktemal o'er on that will look on on no ntorn 14 There in no love Ilko Übe old love, that we eourted lit our Firldo, Though our lettere are frflling, rollingand we're God In note by lode 0 There 0 bIOPPOOIS n i t nmand no with the eel ern of obi. dew). And Co live In borrowed sunnhine when the light of day In gone There ore no tlmeo like the old thnen—they shall ne‘er he forgot! There in no piney like the old pinee—keep green the dt m old kiwi! There Jiro uo hien& like 0141 frlentle—may beaten prolong their liveAl There ore no lutes Ilke nor old !oven—God Mesa our loving riven. Sarah, and the Piece of Calico "'I shall never forgot," said a lady ono day to me, "my first, and I think I may justly iiity,lny last theft.•' I entreated her to!tell me Lim eireuntstionties, which she did, and I will try to tell them to you as nearly in, her own language as my nihmory will ailow When I was about siu en tir eight years 'old, I went to a diti, school in the neighborhood , and nuttily every adorn ing, nn my WRV there, I used to step 11l at Airs BenneWs to see her little girl, Lrzio•,a darling ehild, Oars old, tine morning I found Mrs — Bennett making a tint's for Liziir, of the most beautiful calks" I thought it the vet ties.t I had ever Ft`i'll I had read about prineei•se., and genii, and I thought it most have taken many of thQs.• Ilibulinis le rue to halo compotiil and ereatiWiiii - eli 17)1r ely Tart I e !shed I had a }deco of it to put in a !latch -work quilt a Idyll I was making, hut did not like to ask foe any Oh, liuw prvity it wait! lougirig vri.o lionnvit•.l l u u.k % ,y. t r; turn , il I rek..l up thrvi ,, oeTipti vivo. f1i , 711 tile floor, DIA hid in nY • 110%“111 In two or three 111111114 , 1 t I was on my way to school, every_ n w and then look ing at my heautifureitheo, and thinking how clew rly t lillll managed to get it. But all at once it struck ma that I had stolen i,t-rand I began to feel very had; Iv -At .1“ hail I couldn't attend to my Ite.:•ion ,, ; there seemed to Ire great lumps in my throat, and the tri-cornered piece nI calico, in my INNtorgn. 10 It 8 ,, if it wore piercing or with in't•trrid fit 111 y tv:ultirr a•Io d if I 6 , 1 t. sirk I was going to n•ply ^ l'es," but furtu mar ty I thought in tfme • "No, I will not till • 110.11kb " SO, I au.oren.d that I 6.1 t, badly the very loudly t. 4.1 we to go out in the ploy-ground for it lad , ' while I. how I w Ow blot not Lein xo kind N. 6.1 to Inv,lf, "II she drily know what n svu•loll girl I wax, Vo,ottld *ttv speak to 1111. tiro" • I welt out, and determined to get rid the 1 alien , but where to put ill livery hod . % N., , .1111 be %lire to 'WV It , find ISIIONSt. l e u '1114.11 It )1 , )11 , In 11 'or-4, :Mit 1).11,11011. taut W 011)() II" for n 111111111.!-Ioill, I. I f4iilevzva it 111, Slid fanci,4l th.it 1 felt hapiner, but the hrwlit awl healthful colortt hattotoil not vot Tioidten would foto it I must lint! -4.111, more ...core place I got it J AL :at it ) t.od teed ,hew suit astullow it Rut It IA 1,111.1 !MI. do Oh, how wrvivii otli I nit- latgintow:, to feel ! 5)5 itiN may Worn seltool, I hit,' to a 111 141 g.• user a running stroain of wat, r, Ml , llllll, I 1111/11g111. I ettnid get rid of it. I throe it user, and uatithed It Now tt ))111r1- .d in it littlotaltly ; and now eatTIV %Wirt). mind baek again it !loser float wit of vit4lttl and if it did, ViYii•rii would ago? NV 1”..1114. to Ilul right in front of some lOW who w..uld know that it Wall NFI-N lion ton • ealwo, anti that I had mtolitn tt. N 1 lid, I leaned oter the bridge, and d tt with all the aguny of, chtld rh it ottil4lit against the root or a. Lodi that grew upon the bank Yes, there it slw k, where every one w ould I w as 'life illo;y couldn't and woultlit f. .44• anything else. I heard °ming mining towards the broht, I felt , email' that Mrs Bennett was tl ut N 11114,11, :led all iny uncles and aunt., and plapinites, mid every 4411` o , la 1,111 . 14 . 110' ' l . lloy would all MP t h e talc° • and know that I had been steal ing I , liiubrd over the budge at the ri ,k of breaking my neck, crept down tho bank, mid hid till the wagon had pa5.,141 ‘‘ )1 , a ell an oiUkt, I NUM. lUt of toy lil.llllg-plaVe and tried to reach the calico ; Pro) WHIR tirit hlitat I took oil my hln.e4 and 'docking , Oh, if no) one should see too nowt With it dei.peratii •jinn I reached tin; cake" Ilia what S ho uld I do with it now I had got it•t While putting on 'my theca nod kiickings I determined what to do. I ran along toward home. I remittal Mre She wax sitting near the iipea winifoiv I opened the gate, went onto the window, threw in the etir c01a..., and was running away when she, culled after me. "Sarah, Jay dear child, what nilelPresir'''' I hardly dared to turn back ; but she ealled Rohs I went slowly. "Why, Sais.h, what u the nutter look with you? u quite pale. What did you thro the piece of calico in the window for ?" .1 stnle it!" said I, desperately, ex porting that she would toll nisi never to come to her house any morn; that elle couldn't k . ave such a wicked girl play with her dear little Lizzie, She put down her work, laid hold of my hand, draw in. towards her, put her arm around we, and said, pityingly, "My poor child l" I had not shed a tear ell the day ; but My bead felt as if it. would split, and my throat allied_ Those three words opened the flood-gates of my poor little heart I leaned my heed on her boacirit, and burst, into tears, ' , Sarah, .dear," she Paid, as she held use close to isel,Ptell mu all shout IL" I did tell her and my heart grew lighter and lighter. When I had finish ecl, she said, "I I m auto I need not say a word to add to yetie•sorrovr ; ,you have suffered enough to-day, and I don't think you will ever be tempted to be dishonest again. Tali° some of these pieces of calico and put them in your patclirwOrk, and *homer you we them remanber this day.". My own children now sleep under the hed'.quilt which I was then making. And the brilliant pieces of calico given me that. day by Mrs. Bennett, and which placed conspicuously in it, are to them and ins silent but unfailing monitors. TIM ITILUX.ND Oir TIIIL WILLOW.-0110 , day s golden-haired child, who lived where no treee or flowers giirw, was gazing wistfully through the open gate of n beautiful park, when a gardener chanced to throw out an armful of ;dry cuttings. Among them the little girl discovered one with a tiny bud just starting. "Perhaps it will grow," she whisper ed to herself, and dreaming of wide cool boughs and fluttering leaves, she carried it carefully home, and planted it in Use darksomr area. Day after day she watched and tended it, and when, by and by, another bud started, she knew that the slip had taken root . Years passed, and the lowly home gave place to a pleasant mansion, and the harrow area widened into a spacious garden, when. many a greet' tree throw its shadow. taut for the golden-haired girl, now grown into ii, lovely m a id e n, the fairest and dearest of them all is its this one she had so tenderly nourished. No other tree, she thought, east Such a , cool, soft shade ; in no other boughs did the birds king so sweetly Rut 4vhtle the tree lived and flourish ed the girl drooped and faded tsisi•rter and sadder grew the light in her blue eyes. till by and he and'• nngeb-tranda-d than with a dretonle.s sleet, Loving ! hands cross ned the Al loto bytiv with 1 myrtle, and under the bramylfes , he had loved, laid her tenderly to rest. • But front that hour, as if in sorrow .k.r. r the one that I arftentleil it, the stately {,?,..,0r mw borwer—trn4-ltrw«, bent the :40 fmine ,es, lower and lower, until tivi caressed the daisy mound that co;,,csriA her form 4 , See ! ' raid her voung companions, "the tree weep.; if/F . [lee Whii 11,c1.4 it. ' Awl tlie) ended it the Weeping, Willow. 1 ,GPI IN Intarr.g• Yatits --Lt il;51, Alr ittit finnan (rib Mini•ter to England, Captain George IS McClellan VIM ilauded on ,weret, ,ervICI. in the har bor oP Cuba,. under itudruetions from the tieeretary of War General lleauregard and other., were plotting filibustering raids agaim4 the i,land , for which the Government 1400 n after 'linden!) oiler of $100,000,000 Parson lirownlow hail written a ,itvage -work i+t---iietiuteii of slavery, 'and was rhxllrnging northern clergymen to (11- rite it, divine authority DerritSinith, Lk. float, henry Ward..l3emher, and a few hundred "then were doing a Hotel and limited business Ii (hounder-ground railway John Broan had not yet left hi , farm in the northern adds An oh wure indt , ,idtittl, remembered by a lea nn hits trig once represented Sangamon 111,11(tIALI., Ilhnots, ill) thll 111111 op posett the Mexican war to stwowkwitrd, itisingemmuli and extremely unpopular argument, reeet)ed a oily —midinwnt nry voter for Vice ['resident, in romp._ tition with Mr Dayton, the nominee Captain C. S. brunt, hardly suspected or being an ex-army oille . er by those who bought nuolaanes or cord-wood of him, WWI generally token for a mteam bat captain, tentporurily stranded by stress of ill-luck, or who hardly had the energy and pluck to succeed to any business calling, and therefor, I oilfired into It speculator in.aundrier W T. Shorn to was teaching in Louisiana. tienerak Sitkles, Butler and Logan were rough-and-tumble Demoeravie him - y er4 Of Horne . notoriety Tao of the to 0,l priiinent and promising ollieers of our Mlle army were Colonel Albert Sidney Johnson and Lieutenant-l'olmod Hobert E Lee. DRILL sus tiinct.r. VOLU TEERN - Mill in-- Love with I.ofrie nnuuble and virtuous young woman on the first op portunity you may hit% e. AO...talon Puy to her inooduovedy and respectfully. Right Fwee---Pop the question like a man, and accept you. Quick .Marchi--With her to •the church tund go through the Fierviee of holy matrimony. Halt —And reflect seriously for a few moments; then determine to devote yourself entirely to your wife. Right about Face—From the }numbs you have frequented when single, !tint prefer your own {mine. Advance Arnie --To your young wife when out walking togaher, and don't let her walk three or tour yards behind iireakoti - Hilliard playing, betting and staying ont itt tight, if you' wish to have a happy 'tome. A (hum STORY .—The Dayton Ledger tells the fullowinS A good story is told of Ale of our railroad conduetors, who runs a night train on one of the roads eutcriu , Columbus. The joke is all the better for being true, as our informant avers. A few Sundays ngh he concluded to gratify his religious propensities by attending divine service at one of our city churches. lie soon found himself in a comfortable pew. Unfortunately the habit of sleeping in. the day Um% was hard to overcome, and our werthy friend fell into a doze. !icing aroused by the rising ofthe congregation to re ceive the benediction, and imagining himself on his train, he sang out, " nem- Mani •ten minutes for refreshments." The effeet upon the congregation may be imagined but not described. —A handsome young Yankee pad— dler made love to a buxom widow in Pennsylvania. He accompanied his declaration' with an allusion to two in pedirmets to the union. "Sante them," said the widow. "The want of :nests to set up a retail store." • They parted, and tke widow sent. tke ddler , a When the mcheto c a kg aifno,r ample means. hired wed y ptoeked Ms the or pd and the smiling fair one begged to know the otherimpediment. "T have Mother wire , ." Isadie notion dealer. Interesting Brevities. —Vir g lidarar — thiediiiro planting corn. —The New York pollee TlUMbellil twenty-one hundred. --13weet oil In redommended an n cure for bola In homes. —Excellent chalk thipionitn hate been. found Fayette county, Ind ann. —Abnyntho is asserted to be a more deadly poison than prussic act& —Fivanavilln,lndiana, la said to he lug nvivnoy at 24i per cent, —A,. student has been turned out of Cornell University for lying —The New York charity halt lust • Tuesday night nuulell2o,ooo profits. --Queen Victoriri'm eldest daughter fa a wrs. maxis rights champion. —A livery tit:4llle keeper in New York calk his notablinlimeut the "Hotel de Herne." —That Napo!emit tont Waterloo boeaulut 10 Was sleepy la the latent bit of tilroory. —The .6erman" in going out of fashion in New York. —Tito !oleo for Uchida to fin Inauguration hall at Wwitngton, including moppet, in PI —Private Frtuo•ia Gatisott, of the !hilted (Velem Army. stationed at Mariou, Vs., hue (al- Rot holy to $18,001) in gold. —John W Forney, who is trjavoling In the South, wrtitia that he tan nut town a drunken mail ittnve hi) entered Notth Carolina. -.A negro woman he ilt.itrlit has staryei tO death from laziness HI a xmd she was (Mound' Intended to stay so. —ln California the Melt olantiMber the wo men tom to one; to Nevada eight to one, and In Colorado, twenty it/ 011,1, —The - New York' Times says • "Messrs. Ma son and Slidell will shortly return to thin Nutt,- try in company a WI Jefferson Davis." _ I hoimn saw More then tine-tiftletir the ltielieel pert) , is in fat, of the reituillittlfin or the Nmiotukl 11,1 A. —A olowu - east ctittor c itlimentn a brother thtt.ly "Mr Iran w in vicar thinker, II rr•ady+uul vagorout, a rater, nada ttrbt rate b•flow to 6out ' - 1 hely tit Nee York nff•rt GI inve.4. slot 114 I it unelty• Of .1 fond for provelite; hot the tilt gttunate mum enla xlto aru 'tow gottamdly murdered in that t Ity e 1111110), b 11)) W 11.4 fognJ 11) the •tnrn.u•he of it 1.1.1-1101 ft, ently caught Hi the Mee.e—oppi Ile 1• millopopoooot to. have ...eon.- ponied harrilver , fleet up the river _ --gladralyajpors complain of a mamcalimg tiger !War Mnil ran, %I 110 Iwr kd 1.1 tour,, 0 0 , 0 proric., ill - calmed lite prim of intlllloll,l, e ila i r•••••11 mul VI 1../(1 • - Brox flov. umt pardwie.l out fifteen oriminak front th.. l'ennensee penitent is- • ti•er three Ilittidrea convict* acre par t nn, a ,Alt 10411.1114 the plat year --Ketlitif'hy eongtatalation She. lin.. been a !..,tale venly-%/v yearn, and Intl never hug ac , at by leftl, at 1011 Oil t h e 1.111% of ally official A girl lit Ititt•pite .•uuttly, lima, having In ru Olt Ity all:114410y I. didn't IV t r.. 1 and t,k.• iw1.011,1 , 11t tollk a tuck ttf %twit anti tilted hint tier th.•Vn•ati —A white women of SaV2MI3)I ha. proeured not arrelit of lier two 41.11016,ra (ordain& not 4 itte)y hut too at II a parr or rttn.eilLialv., I t0•,1 , ,u,, titer t, rat Thi r ty Nlm. , prgFirng •Ftlnoy urn r !Moll In t h .• IoWII Of Alton, IT A Ph.. I .in hr p, gg. J m two nunutt•+ with tol)f , thrrr nuv 11ew Freurh hook MI ternalr beauty nai • that ItH. Ain“rlean w.iriort AT. 621 In the sr..rld, and that nett to thd.us e.,me ti,. Itte.paatt - b., of Rich mom la, Ing ttrang , nu IJn I at rond n.tlignra tinn Ilan They mu they aunt " rep:, tatatv,nl,t ehee• at the gr ' Alr gun. .r” the Intr«t xenpon of New York rwintprern 4 4 clerk, ruing ulnae In a brolo , 411, .•, rm. .It , Pl fit s.ir it •ow of trumentx lust —A rinrinnat 11 .1 .1111101„arl'0,41 14r 1.1. aling fifty rouwir 1•1 n1.01..gbp,1 f, r t aking 1 ."1.0‘ I') 4t.ffita 11441110 km(.. tip t tit it —A MAP in N. I. 1141 eft 11,0 r Mud, /40 I.irK^ n. rap 1••••• Le ul n••wpnyrnr • 111•1•1110 /hiring thn purl MI %Nell year. And now a urtn t•• ; • II th.n, —A r,r:.pontivat apeaka 1.1 3 aot"lo r of tongn 1.11 I loth , Liill I Pulnnier, at N.irratt.... 11, 1 1 , I al t . 4 aa t 1, 11 gc, ni i•tf rho. +1.31 —A ntm,i. 1..111 .L .11 ,h,. tipt. , timitag hone firm I:si I hi 1 a 111 L 1 is. th. .I..ath r f It , fie thr ,, W her' , 0/0 h 1 •d, Ili!' I :all t"., tired hco. , I will NI • p In Ito. 110111111 g — N , ' . 14 1 .p/11/01 , 11/ 1 11/0/1110, 1 v, 11 1 / 1 1, d 00111 1191111 LO blind . 111fd 1,011114 .1,0.1 1. 1 / . 16 11. , IL I.IIOW Tll . opoo d L0r • L1 1 11111011111 01 11111.1,. und type(0111011y ILL 1.1111009 1411 d 101 1 111 1111' i.ir eign 11111 d, prihrinK —TA« itintr of Ilnrvrhr ban or.J.•rod a neck tare of magioncent no ark, elm 11 writ 41,44 hundred t4/1/ .n/1d fle , rlfl l, . /1.”.1 who h h.• ant prevent to Ids nth:tilted bride tiro. “rrit,ti in Munirli —A Lontinnn i • Or,P.INITIIient Writ*, "'.lnes lN' /A 1 it. grllker an Ow pyre in.. r t 0..; ,1• ~• No - - A farm . • onlanlitur on , I,llr. It . twnttly tivt. air. r, , itinitt h.; adjoining Inudn ut I lll'w ill.', Il,.Nrr J.. 11111 . , within tune uulrr of iiit. .0 , 11/•11, Intitt• l• 004 Ili m or( hard of Ow elo.o am u.. of Ina. I o '1 ho 111.1 rovvtia • lLL . . 110 , 1141., hilllll and all 1/1.11, n 101 , t gv " To 4 -4, farm rma.alning ••ro• hfin 1. , I ao • vanty-tiva avren, mats de 111 r 4 lil adjoliiing lauds% of Jolka %l 1111 Alp '..ail a Swartzonwhl.h In 1,4 a .1, 11111, h.. 1 barn jii , t ''jilt uml vq I. I. 1 w Ilk k MN/Mr) , MIA 11. r•I)11)11 011))Mtilittir. I la rimininK wall r ./. ri, 1114. Wirtr:h to a r r L.lllyg I poi V. fx”, .011 (mind a *...1 orl marl of rh.n.r • I rt tr k . lull Innumg N A tr.'L or I.'llll[llft loot. •it , i sl , Spring to* , whip, • 4.1101111111 S ,111. stereos, Well Liniber.4l .11.11 ILu L Lend young s' :111.1 Nail 1111 ~ 11• si • nitant 1.11 1 , 001 th, ',ow,: lif 111.0 For tern. of 'olio :old •1111 , rj2ll parttes nosy apply to •ISTI2-2,11 S4)4IN N \II I , 11)1,1, Ni iakerP, tfronfectionerito T u N NV It K E Y, (IF H J StrlK)‘l, 1%1.1 IN tho only Own where ',it ti quid tty of BEAD, CAKES, PIE.;, AND I c‘rEc'i I. oNK RI EH IIIIIO!o • sTEIN 10/i CUE In Neamorar lit' feels thltOLIo! to 41,0 for pawl. (sworn Roil hopes by a 1•1010 , attention to hla btlittlletlB to retain the patronage oi thany frlehalg no low the faellity to got PIP the nowt latallionable cakes to be 6m1. 4 .1 * where. Give him avail v HO. I) GEl' (JOOD BREAD BY ('AI,I , log at the new 1111111•21.1.11,11% 0 Bakery eatabilanhment of / = Opposite the Wrreeete Care, on Allegit.), street, where he furnishes every day Fresh Broad, caknn of all kinds, Plea, sto„ ete., Candles, Mathes, Nuts, frrtale. rod . _ 'Anything and Everything belongins to the business. Having had yearn of sandarac° In the hasdnesa.he &Man htmaskf that he co guarantee satisfaction .0 all who may fay°' him with their patronage. viln4.l J. H. BANDS