The Democratic Watchman. BELLEFONTN:, I'A [For the WATCIIMVf SHALL WE? = Shall we when we go to sleep • In the ( - Inlet of the grave— Cease to sigh, and eenae to wren Cease forbidden joy% to crave' t- hall we care for anything That we Invell and thottglii a e tweet When we lived and breathed and moved' Or will obllvinit. tie complete? Will we weep, and think anti feel All vet 11. el and weep for here' Or will we sleep—and only xlrep And never know a nor fear' - I - TM the dead e'er talk together' , - Ito they lone? And lie they hale , Or are they only lying there In roll and silent abda•t Shall we when we go among them Know our friend. , Our ;eke before •' Or will we. IC, lie thnmint And feel and mode no 'anus , Shall we, when the trnmp u. Smile In hear it. eelme. cell "Judgment ISay" to eonn• at lush+ :"dinll we feel with ne Ti• well Shall we , Shall vie' Who ran tell, FN . tIIP WATCHMA• FOR AN ALBUM. When von glanet• o'er Ire leaiea n( On. dearly !oven! token • And gaze nn the line. tau h:uh • me In VIII von think of n •nord or phrann 1 have .poken Or even a 111111 1 true here tonight' rerhop. in the hren•l a qI linger unhroken Some Yaw of the Piesent—aomn Ire n( the To prone the word• that to night 1 hate apnk en if love-Ilillllll,Aleffig that Itllvava will lent all tip from i nor 10 , art wonielftnder nferetion And hid it repent the iov. we h ive k note ?I For life ilnee 11011110 H — with all it. perfernoti— Four•h fernulihil hoar, a. I how. that have flow Perhstp, the linglit glitter of rain enritilv lreivoiro. B • iII lent from 1 nor I , Pert nit image of 010. And ,nano con to tone mid height half. of One for more nine,' its the ridden. , of tiolit If curb be the ev.e. ntav your heart ever pon der. Win n Oar light till, Wer the land and the eon And till Ilk of o 11. to 111411 la 110 a iii ,, lllll`d In wander, That once In thy vonth dwelt neare•l 1.. thee Perhaps, NI ',MI Ihlnk of the lo',. that hare pertnlied A tear nn thv cheek nohld , len nviv rail A fond e. if 'tin', thou ha•t ..41— F.r.010, ther I= JEFFERSON DAVIS A Four Days' Journey with the Con federate Chief -How He Looked and What He Said-- His Alleged Coth plicity in the Assassination Plot —His Travels and Probable Future. l'orre•porulon , n ..f 1 , 1r1,111111 e.,111114 WI II A tide trim New GriertnN" ii li the in the rii% al craft, the Great 1/tliiilda% .:due tile WI nit litiontiiiiw Mr .letrermon Data. •Ile mite :Omani at Vicksburg, nriil primes hid a• far it. 11f tea rom•amiamee of the leakage "lone ,d the hailer.. nil delav at the 1114 MTh lime river, the lottrile% was At Green, ~liere the hunt arrived ou Sunda la.!, th e ~e w , spread that "I're , i7lel , l 1)1v •-'• hoard, ariil a crimsil of nom mit. Mill fired per.on• eagerly to the cabin to have a Itml, ot, mor e 1,,r to aatek. to got a shah, the 1,11,4 Ird , in their !wilier Ili ietta in 'I he -:me was repeated vt hen the limit 'limped ni Ile Jena. Arkati,t.., It ‘ta , tudiceahle that many colore d pereopa dinplayed as niueh iutere , t euth.h.la-ul a•• the whlte nerd le, a,..1 seemed equal :\ gr.t titled to get a lea fruit the mail Orion( %Omni mach nun rt.s"etations clustered. VII j,tv is' I.f. 11,0.. %PA 1. bad host I.el, Pre Meell \lr I) I% IH htrei pictured, Irvin a-. tall. hunt and radii% pron. All the etigra, toes and pbutu en to the piddle wake the.c a imrfo trrrnucn noire prominent, than lon real alq.earance Him height is a little, it any, idiot e the foe rage If is face in wellshnped, %id!, regular telitare 4 . hen nose belllg neither protninetil nor eropilianued n Ito Man as is 11N1111111 1 . 011%e% ed be his phi (op niw . The hover ',art ol hit lace is 8111R11 riot indo•a the pristi n e e, ag grefiNive. or hull like qualm., linen noticed in the rotiteeiniits iit the nob tuvtl mire's. but. On the ciiiiirsrN, nob eating a delicate orga nit:it ion, a n ann able nlicponnioin. /11111 general culture It is not it ince t•Xttressive or poHos or great ilea. II iN eve. , are Wire, and, riot withiaaribling that the left rt e ix defective rind illoosd add to the inildne.i, ul his e. Ills hair is quite gray, an are his thin whishere and beard, rued his moustache, Which Is exceedingly short, in Himont white. The tones of owe are ideanniit, and,lini speech is deliberate Had 'lkea cured seldom tion,..eneed be any one alo) lallot a natural or trained orator. In some important respects, empeciallv iii the tones of bin voice and manner • speech he is almost a counterpart of .nudge Leavitt, of this city, save that lie is ten years younger than the judge. Mr. Devil* manner is exceedingly quiet and unobtrusive. lle-does not appear to seek notoriety, but rather to avoid it, and the attentions paid him were received in am undemonstrative a way as they might be were lie miinnly a well-bred country gentleman, Mstead of having been the political head and front of the moat memorable chit con vulsion the world has ever yet wit nessed. Ile is a man whom accident has forced into a position of factitious prominence. The quality that makes and marks.a leader among men, some times called " personality," "individu ality," "eharacter,"—that something which impresses the mind into the mood of his mind and carries you along with him—this Mr. Davis does not possess. Mr. Davis's health has also greatly,j4aosoatisinge his reJease frwn contiaemint.. liim friends wlro saw him duritrg the'troubled and' anxiofis tittles of 1802, 1863 and 8864 expressed their surprise and gratificatlon at the marked improvement in his appear ance and general health. = The four darn' travel board the Great republic gave me the opportu nity of inquiring of Hr. Davin about certain matters connected with the re-- hellion, of which t h e true history has yet to be written. and not leapt among them his nomplitlitv in the plot to as sassinate President Lincoln. Mr. Da vis said that, owing to the closeness of his confinement at Fortress Monroe, and his subsequent travels, he had not even read what had been alleged against him. The testimony sworn to at the trial of the coospirators before the military commission at Washing. ton, and which is still credited be tens of thousands of persons at the North is in brief, as follows: Testimony of Lewis F. liate4, a wit. nems for the prosecution, Mar 30, itifirt. as pnblished An the official report : I reside in Charlotte, North Carolina. I am a native of Maientelinsetts. On the I.2th of April, Jefferson Davis stopped at my house in Charlotte, where he made an address to the people from the steps of my hoilke. While speak mg, a telegram from John C. Breckin. ridge was handed him. The following telegram cc as read to the COM In 114 , 1011 R KENS11010?t nu, April 111, 1865. II is Excellency President Davi , • Pre milent Davis was assassinated in the theatre of Washmgtoo on the night of the 14th inst. Set%arffs house %%ati en t creel on the same night, and he erns repeatoily stabbed, eel is 'probably mortally wounded Jottx BRLI hiNRIDGF In coru•luding los speech, : Jefferson Davis , read that dispatch aloud, and made thm remark " r iVOctre to be June, It acre hotter flint it acre well done." I ant quite sore that these were the words he mod. A ilaN or two afterWitrd Jefferson D.llis and J. Breckenridge we're present at in) horse, when the 71.85/11441I111(10i1 01 the President was the subject of romtersa lion. In speaking of it, C. Breck inrnige remarked to Mr. Dal in that he regretted It very much , that it wan MI fortunate for the people td . the South at that time Davis replied • '• Well, (lenernl, I don't know : if it were to he done at all, it were better that it were well done, and if the sanie had been done to Andy .T"hn•iurl, the beast, and to Secretary Stanton, the job would hen be complete No ozlker witnesses testified to these RPPl'rt 1(711 tf:olitzit five witnes4em were ratted ul suiTort of the ifer , offal 11111 meter and relialolit% rd\ thin witnen, I repented 1117 now] pronto of this tes Homily to 11 r. hat Tn. and, in him 811171 and listhitnall% undenumstnune 1111111 lier, he pronounced the whide thing an entire and nLvdatr falsehood =I =WM • !si r I)s si .., eohVerSllll4,ll, gning Pertly relro•p+et oh, his intvels, nl Great liri tam waftdeep 3 inteiemting I,lst-every educated American, whose ideal assn 1•1:1,11n,its stnh the I hilg's if the past, are ilerit4,l flout hooks, lie seemed to lia,e inteii,el3 In, tants to the catlicifralit and the ruin• of minas lane', omit ithltevt., tvlitch earrtrd lint hark to flie dais of e.tri, rn ilization Ills rerellu.nl 111 I C ,, tlllllil or as p ‘ irlii.iii,ll.l% p•ordial. and 111. Si,lls to dalereltt 'point, of iii terc-t dicer, attoriling grit 'I he iteciiiitit or his ‘INII Io ihr (ii.iiit n I , but 'twie esperiall% that u, the IPluud /it !WWI he nal ra'ed aidh witch entliii,ia,irt -- lona, a little Huand a Inch lea ,dr fhe 5t eat ,•"Rm of si.it noted for its eat-lout. basaltic col vallitl.ll-141.4 like caverns. hut and Ipittreri lie 'pictured a- it once existed, die seat of learning nmi 311115, snit the 1;4,110 tthenle Chrin U. 11,111 In said to hate spread oser the a hole of Great Bruin!' Its tisited upenientlie of its pant glon its ruined rr,, , ,,eq • and the tondos ot and ancient king- , , sail spoke a Ai intellectual rev• relice of the 'ilea II it:lorded Inns to ,taint beside the gr.t , e. of Ituticati aryl Nlnvi.etli. I= I understood it to be Mr Davis' intention in dile nine to glue to the world his uersion of the fans in which he so figured employ it phonographic mannen.is to facilitate his labor., and he )1:14 al ready c.llecteti j it goodly st,,re of mate male, lie publication may not long be delayed. Air Davis IS 11111ffie,1 for wally things respecting ‘vloch it will h e interesting to hear Mtn ui lijs own defense I know he is censured by many In. the South tar the prolongs tion of the war. I have again and again heard it said by Southerners that, after the battle or Gett)Aurg, General Lee urged measures of coin promise to the end ni thinning 'wave, wtrioli Mr Davis persistently of posed. The lamily of hI-. Rini s Is. still in England Of his own future he 111.1 not speak positively. his friends beliese that the United States will be his future home, and that he a ill not return to Europe, save lo bring home Mrs. Davis and his ehiltires. --judge _Kingsbury, of- Portland, Mel while travehug in Cal ilurnia, wan ted to buy a couple of newspapers, and asked the newsboy the price. ""I'wo bits," said the boy. The Judge pulled out a twenty-five cent stamp, and han ded it to him. The boy looked at it uriously for a moment, tairrt&l it over and said : "What's that?" "Money," said the Judge; "twenty-five cents." The boy sung out to several others of his fraternity, "I say fellows, come and see what the people East use tor mon ey." Tire boys gathered round and discussed it, and the Judge was hoping that the boy would not take it, when the news-boy turned to him and said, "Well, I guess I'll keep this ; it'll do. to give toysome of my poor relations." A Detroit girl of•tlte period woars "beaver" and carries a cane. 1 A NEW YORK MISER Death of Lyman Allyn, a Millions, e, ,in Poverty and Destitute—A Man Who Wronged No One and Did Good to No One. Lyman Al lyn,born as the fly leaf of his Bible says,on the 18th day of May,1797, lay, on the 27th day of November, 1889, in an undertakei's shop,, with his heart cOVerod with ice, no trionds near him wive the boys 'who wear tacking the frills to the edge of hie eotlin—a kindly work, for which they were paid in geed currency of the United States lie was a poor CIOSP, and the beard of it month's growth upon his chin, for he had been ailing for a while and could not shave horwelf—a poor, neglected old man, with only about a m Ilion of doilitr.—thwt is. if ive count his real estate, which could not he locked up in in two trunks and put into a fourth story room—m'ire's the pity. And then, too, people can have the use of rep Plestate—hire it, lire on it and he happy ; unfortunately, tl cannot be put into it true::. Mr Lxinnti Allvti, the subject of this obituary, commenced life with utterly fair , and inimornil ideas. Ile deter mined to ho just, to give to no num less r' inure than what was strictly duo him, and this principle determined the char acter Of his life While vet a boy he was sent by his father to n tradesman, with whom ho was to earn his living After a a bile he found that his employ or used liaise weights and invii.ir re- IVlnit %%us he to do? Ile was young and inexperienced, but he had a prim !- ph , within, which forbade its giving Mrs Smith less or more than jit.t one pound , ho had ;ead of the tragic cud of George Barnwell , perhaps (he %%as young enough) he load seen that. terrific drlllll/a repre•Vnted tin the 'logo "1" ii native town, Groton, Connecticut After many struggles he went to his father and told him abet he ciiiild no longer remain in the employ of the dis honest, grocer Entreaties, prnvors, floggings, were of no avail—lonian would flit stay, hat romaved to this city, where it is in possible to commit frnii s without being detected and y oung t Ly mitt', like all such honest men, must name bad the fear hf rtetection e% or before his eyes, for he was ritterh just and would have welcomed the fni-oe to which a lapse from jristwe so frequently brings it man About the year 18'27 or 1825, he '•set up for hirnself,.. a• the sat - trig in, which by no mining 111111 11 connec tion with the tiri•wthing of other pe r son. lies papers• show that in some way lie wan eminected with the shipping; 1,11.1- nes., , and here, as ever, he kept his principle of justice steadily before his eye man was e% er derrirtnl ell 1)% Imin—no woman iniii-ed__no uul- Itonare ever lost SlO.OOO through nor , ' mnlionl or his; 110 111.1pIr!“ I.llld-111.111. 11••• 1N 1 ft• e% er received from 111111 more than her due -neither less nor rnon. than jll.l. OW• pound- wit ever his motto For %1•1115 46 worked and struggled with tbe hardships of riches, with no prospect ,it e% •.n li,•01111ria poor 5411110ti111.4 he 11.1111 i itrtened as he looked elan t him, an d s aw %out; and dissipated men 101410 0 . reeklessnt ss had entailed dp(in them the harden of wife and home and lot e, but in-art was set like at flint , he would none of these things Ile looked from hi- easement and beheld the young man staid of understanding , 1111 I.IIW 41111 among his eonipanions enjo . ylng the frivolous or wine 1111 d tit, dance brit he knew that that mm's wets WPl.e the wets I,t the wieked , he looked abroad and caw young fools falling in fate with en( VI other, and he chuckled (11 , .11!Zht how apt W 11• the word • toll In time the reckless compan ion, of hot youth whet would Er.ive n rw , t" the "1 . 1 . 01 , ,,WP11...r, • er and Ittuer, until the% Ronk into a husband s grave And then how be did lie turned to the bonds and •ttn•kg within Ills trunk• and folded them ui hi. "c m , Here was the triumph of louden, e and ju•tit•e 1 Ile loied them and the% ii.ked nothing from him in re turn , they were cold, but stool% friend. , the y ~1 11, 1 110 t a% press their frteroblitp or their loge, hut that was all the better 11411 not n grl.lli. Marl Flllll thilt %fltS bull a no,in, or thought linw winch hr•lb•r to gn to bed with them 111 In , Nairn than a brace 'lnv: children Five or 'is years ago tin. just nnd thoughtful man went over to .lerses to live, mid took a front room in Til% Whi•n• he lived alone, tit pent, and amid ts tine collection of bone. nod -to It= and dirt lie strongly olijetited .to the pre.ence iiritny person hut hots sell within his riuop, and was allowed to lie in the full enjoyment.of his !slyer t'. The riains coat hut four dollars II week, mid his meals were pith tired tot !melt a price As to keep 111, Wl•ekk .'s pen• se n within Si!. allowing for washitez the extras tigant SUM of—welt, from .1111 v t. tel September 21,52.78 Thew, w h o may feel inclined to upbraid his memo rd for great an expense must remem ber flint it Wits incurred during the warm months ; in winter it wan hilt $1,25 for the tame number Of tints When the new proprietor of the hotel, Mr Fisk, took the management of the house, he proposed that Mr Allyn shuniti, ha ve his room cleaned ; but this would occasion nnnecessary expense. It had hem] elearied three or four pairs ago So Mr. Allyn removed to a back room, for which he paid live .101111 r/, a week. For quite a timn he lived in hi. modest room, which measured about fourtoon feet long by night wide, and in which his only and, it most be confessed, innocent amustimenyconsis ted in spitting at the wall. -Hut let no eituvists sneer at this humble recreation of the poor, foi• he who ha-, neither smoked nor chewed in his youth. may well Le allowed to spit in his old age. Another amusement was to stand at the window and look at the Cunard steam ers, and while enjoying the eight to tell the housemaids that he wished he had some stock in Mem—the steamers, not the housemaid", In this unobtrusive way hit old ago was spent, although he occasionally di versified his life by walking ten or twelve miles into the country to collect rents and other trifles. He even refused to ride, nnd it is a remarkable coinci dence that, although he had stock In al most every other enterprise, he would have nothing to do with horse-car corn parties he said they encouraged men to ,be lazy. Shank's mare wits the mare for. him ; and, as he was very thin, In that case a inick me to - lie mare. Well, on Tuesday hod, Mr. Allyn's nervous creeping about the hall (he fre quently wandered about the hall all night) was missed. No one could think what had happened to into, until finally Mr. Fisk's little' boy remarked that "there must be something the mat ter with the old gentleman 'who had money sowed all over his clothes. So the proprietor went up stairs, rapped at the door of Mr. Allyn's room, but re ved no respOnse to his knocking. lie attempted to force' the door, but there wits something that hindered its open ing. A boy pressed his way in, and .there-with it s-Imek-agninort flue-doer;-to prevent oven in death any one from get ting at his trunks, sat the aged map. stone (load His head was inclined n little to one side, and his arm lay across his lnp. lverything in the room was in order--kunks all locked and papers in them HA bureau wits fouLd to contain nails. wrapped in paper,; n broken tum bler, carefully stowed itiVny ; some good, strof;rrown pnl er, wrapped in new:- Ipapers, tshowing how prudent the teen ad beeln. Ilia trunks contained old clothes and stocks worth together about $500,000 50! Everything was nice as a llis trunks contained old shirts, thirty or forty years old and of curious texture and pattern—evidently the Mall Was it connoisseur of second-hand coats nod hats There wits is little piece of looking-glass in the en vel, pc—dal the 01,1 stoic ever look it himself • Altogetgher, the room was that of a jil4 than, to whom d e ath had IMO n just flut, after all, death got 'Aced of him, fur on his shoulder was fOlfrid the un paid lull of the week—the bell-boy, uu ahle to enter do , room, hall thrown the paper, glowing , that the man was i 1101/1, over the 11011 r. and it had tipped him on the shoulder like a cynical pm Beeman, and remained there an evi dence' that. even the Pititeot man may find when he is lend that ill his bill have not been pa.d 1" lrodd A Touching Case of fnsanity A reporter of the WM.l.lngton Star bar; recently voitte.l the government a.tylum for the 111S11.111i, anti among other int...knot of hot vont,g.‘ee the fidlowlng: A lady of rather graceful figure was liming the laniard balls with considers ble brilliane% We thought she might lie an attendant, but slie proved to be a "patient. " The mil% ,1 , 211 of 11P+811111' was a Iluftering rent lesonens which kept her conslantlt in 111 , 010 a. She OH/Wed raltl%atllla and intelligence, and seem to feel it her duty to extend to us the vou ' irte , ies of lIIP ward took us to see her birds, her plants and an nn meni , e number of pretty 1, nick muct.' nhe had aorked willi needle arid scissors, amongst them a draper lull of 111%1111. lul Corniworino sbe bad prepared for ' the I • hristnuts tectrt•itien She made a _sett deal of I ' II rist alas at 1111' :old 'mend this tear to oat 410 all their pn•vioue celebrations, as she told nn Iler history is rather romantic and 11;11 , 11111r. In her youth slue was a Philadelphia 'leanly. A derangement 01 mind Mllowed upon 1+4,1111. 111111`Sg 1014 she was sent to an to sane as% hon. wao cline.] to all appear anon, at leagrr in the (minim' 01 a %ming pli-leirati who attended al the hospital, alio in lose, with her,anul married her Butt soon niter Marriage the taint of mmanite again showed it sell Again and again she stint to the hospital, and twain and twain rear ied !ionic apparently cured. She wan naive when the attacks were corning on. and a ith tho Maine heroism I,nd de yotion shown Mn. (0111'111110V hr Mary 1,101 ,1 .. the sister of Charles Lamb, wan accustomed to take tearful leave of those dear to her, and ‘oluntarily make her way to the a••ybnn In thin eat she is at the gayer inient asylum, and slays there cheerfully and content teulls as the tact place of the kind she has been in 'Caking the other Amin ! : with a ;ten tlentisti tvlso etstws elint with the Into Ed ward Ey, rett, the following little anecdote wit' , nutted " The di.lit,.tia.ll,l orutor, nfferting not to be nvernita le elated at. Kitt..., wit.. known to be it eeditittlt 111 1 11 , 1111V0 to 110 11 /1 ft, Of rid it ale A roan 111 loon town tintionl Wnn, Sehottler, it the tit,ii• of which i• write, Wll,l editor of the Itii.t a A tin. It wan nal in r 's ilia. to be [initiator) of M r Es matt Q u ito the rTverso The " short, sharp and devisise" little shots which the Atla• Irian lime to time levelled at Mr Everett, wi re .0 H a neloo iniz that x friend of hoth Ltentlemon went to Col Schouler .aid • " Now, Colonel, this is too had ; you ~uala to NIT' Eve' ett, you know, la not in g;,aal health, and thus sort of thing troubles him " " Why, what's the matter with him —is he ~iek NOt o net y .ock, but a 14tle under tbo Avnlher." " fin. Mprry.. fur flint ; whist is tho tr'otillin " Well, Colonol, 114.'14 tf . restly aflected with the gravel." " Really ?" said the C:dwv.l (.4 ' ", Well, old fellow; ull I've got to say is, that for a man who has au much gsascliin3 has less grit than any man I know of " A omile 31 . 1 , med to cow naturally to the colloquitile, And the dialogue 1.49:1T TII Et a A I'PETITZ. —A colored 'boy, who may be meet' any day, with Imuslcet of edibles on his arm, entered an office on Well street with hie usual esclanuUion of "cakes, pies, sand wiches," when the following colloquy between the proprietor and darkey en• sued : ' - " Ah, Sam, how is the pie trade to day?" '• Well, trauma, it ain't aet good now, mince tjie gold excitement." " Why, what liae the geld excite• wient to do with the pie bush:ten, I ghoul." like to know?" "'Oh, you pee. air, I used to sell a great many pies to the broken+ all along Broad street, and now it 'pears likethey hadn't say appetite.—Tribune Among the Yellow Boys CO wiling the OVOld Coin in the Sub- Treasury Vaults Progreas of the Examiontion. Since yesterday afternoon a commit• tee representing the Treasury Depart ment, General Butterfield, and ASSiti• taut Treasurer Fo!ger, have been en gaged in examining the coin contained in the vaults at the.Bnh-Treasury.'and are progressing in their inspection at rate bt-alient ten million dollars a day. The work is conducted in the gold the coin in brought; hall a million at a time, on trucks from the vaults situa ted, in another part of the building. 'file coin is in bags containing $5,000 each, and each denomination is packed separately. The process of counting is simply this: An attache of the Treasury De partment at Washington selects a bag from the lot upon the truck, opens and eounts-thecontents piece by piece. Ile Olen IIaMEICA it over to *wither attache, who pours the coin into one pan of , an accurately adjusted scale—three of which are in the room—and in the other pan are poured the contents it the remaining. bags upon the truck, one after another; the roil in each sack being weighed against that winch has been counted, and.the tuuouni lip on the hogs verified. Should any per eeptible ditlerence iii weilzhL be noted, the contents of the deficient bag are counted, and the ("Mil ("MA eMPiI. In examining small coin, mi.eh as dollars and y mnrter eagles, it shade of differ. ence - in weight Is not unlrequent, hilt a count of the contents hale invariably shun n, so tar, that the amount was nor. rect. 'Fiore are about ',75et),(10i) gold coin, slll,oloii mil% el- coin, and about $:4,500,0011 }t old in the vaults and tinder the control of the Asiiii4taiit Treasurer —Nrui rot k nI my /Irpuldie, Good Thv f. , ll.iwing• it it good 0110, end I rivmk our. t limns that 110 fx tIll• hero iit the oeviiskin Iln hnd proinoinl divor, limo; out of mind, find wii• reinetod a, utter. N.it witlittati.lin all he hat not tak , q) to rinLt, ns he jollity rtnutrloq, the Ittielikla.rry ;aid dim!, 11, I+ "tie or the 1 . X11111111e.. into which /1.111. 1161 . 4 not milk,• Litany alarm inf.; etto•nt, and tel 110 tnst•tirt that 1)ihrll t' lot fir 1),..1..;1..ma it no faitchin In- But hear hi, tille of woe done op Is 11 At his int , T- VieW 1014 01011 , he hernme extrotiocll 1111 110‘ nt 1 111pOrt 1111 11 , 11 1111 101 , 1 i» /11 Clint .ht, • could jut mail, 111111 , that their .pint,•ri., like, and itt•diltite wen , . f.ii.t, ' +aid " Mr lir - I don t think thi , r, it our tithket 011 earth upon Wii/Vll we ME " I u.•un , V4lll, mu lwn, that ‘i,ll aro mi•takrn," mud and I ,•art "II N./11 will Iflo•lit 111111 °lle l6tng Niooill titrrN.," I will tEtt!=11!111 " Well,' ...id 11, ..• I rill /1// 1111110, 11/oW, %/el /111 , 1 I WO O l, ti “,,•11r)L% t“. getli,r, /11,11,11 at 111:.711t 11l all 111111•1, and th..r. AVerl . I.rd i /Mt , In nne Own° %,,ndd In , 0 1111111 le ()then a W01111111—n• n vvlin•l) ,s.ndd tnu sleep ro,. tult , iin ritlN . and replied " W Ith thr• wnnnun, of r•,,ur+,, Rif •• Ww.1 , 1 I," Mlnrno , t I,,ponded our fro.' d THE W I,VR Nll OF AN ()1.1/ BF 1 'l l -The wind yesterday iirteriiiiim MOIN 11.11311, .porti.e, and p l ayed norm, prank. that were infinitely noire ;onus rig to thehe 1, 1 1110. Au extremely courteous elerk Niessrs St.einwit% , Came nut liarelivAded 10 v. curt two ladle. to their carriage tine hand was politely waved, tho other Wan f.o. l lFookozlitly on the old !wadi wig A glance pulse I, lie tweet) the Iwo misehie%iiiim beauties One lair one held out her—bawl nl greet ing, %iv:lw') theeiiiirtempt gentleman warmly gralied :llio other rngnlih girl bell out her. The D . 101(.111,1 , 1 wan ritill 11111•,..1 One lady hail 1/111 1 hand end would not relinipipdi it, the other licl.l owt her hand for low len Ile gale It with a nigh A pull of wilid ca Ille, hi.% wig a Wit I' 111 the AI rectum of 11,...1(..u.1em , . The %tielce.l beauties lir.t out I• ringing laughter --1 N Y Sun --" Mr!icer vou schiffidtz. ill 111111 be allowed the goer , ' lom how Imig have von I.evii married 9 " " Yoh, dat ish. you shall mav Loa long tune wh rt t h n I says to the tnnr Later dat I shall belong to mine %role, and tell toe it que4riou 7" " Y e s, t hut's w)iat I mean, it Idyll is the some an tiskuo.t how long you have been married ' " Vt•I,111.11 to von ling %ot. 1 ' , Alton' don't tii talk ninnit ; but, ven (Jaen, it /teem. , to he so long will it never y —A debtor who owed eight hundred pounds, 11111.1 . 01 his creditor eight proin Wore tittles or a hundred pounds each, payable on the first day or eight souse cutise months, %%ditch VIII accepted. The first note with protested. on its coining due; and on the creditor's ask ing the debtor lor an explanation ) the latter mid "The filet is, mV friend, I eun't ply you anything, and deviled the debt in. to small portions to iiliVeyog the shock ()Nosing it all at once." --While a magistrate-was sipping hie maraschino, a country lad arrived with a letter which required an imme diate answer. The squire good uatur edly poured out a glass of wine lbr the lad, and set about writing n reply.— Having finished a letter, lin [Oohed up and watt ittnitzed to see that the bottle had been emptied. ,Turning to the boy, he exclaimed, "Do you know, you i p, that that cost me "lateen "billings ?" " Well, it's worth every penny on't yet honor," was the reply of the --Poor whiskey is called "Fif teenth Amendment" in the South, he. cause it in hard to swallow. All Sorts of Paragrap —Mexico has a population 254. —Christy's Minstrels aro p Austria. —Gov. Palmer, of Init. °is protaetivo tariffs. —Droves of hogs in Texas for wntt t of water. —Eleven rand idates nsp Moyor of Memphis. —A (Introit girl of thif pori( “beavor" and carrion a curia -England contains about t pri neonses Of tho blood royal —Tim young Duke of Genii not to become King of Spnin. —Chicago rnfution to pny sf ) tertiting the Californin pioneer —Gen. Pitman,- Mexican I the Insane A4ylii —llliqsouri has n town rally( and 3notherentitled Jo —Patti has been getting $ for seats to hear her sing in Pt —A New York rertatirant mi4m t "Whi.key free from fu.•ll —Boston hits Just - sold for tltr the right to collact its swill for --"Pnther .11yneinthe' iv the play now boing performed it is c'.tinnited • en ,•nntnins an average of 1.5010) goy! , —Dr Livia:stone for haring found hinpulf alo.r long lost --Hornet. Greelpy ord . % ra ahead hift party at the lid, e l O New York —Womsin brokers sir, lit the Part* 800 rrff just 11. - th NV:tll street —Picky ekvt4 And portable fa hay. , bad n good har vl,l at thi ern State Fair'. --A lady in Virden, lllin earned n farm of seven hundred teaching school —Thu. gritrw fourth le:4n in quuntity thasi yrukr ago, but its quality n' --A mono nrent over the Prssiiilent Lincoln's moth , r, count% , Indianir, rx til.iler. d there Now lin :dual I iiink beilliion to the tici k Timid le, labelled. with f o r nnn timinutk . - A pip,eflg,r train Nu. te. fnnrr Chietago Yu Ottmlin 472 I 17 hours and ten mintior , . stopptit:e. --Sonrch kr the lend of tl w,.41 th-ao.rwr 11:mo-re-ult.] in Inc ul 111 114 Threo 01 th Wel, 1 MIMI ---A editor hilt' h e . ted lit it li two lem on. grown i n t et 11 hurt 01 shut Stitte,eiteli weir, and It half —Mulr,•„l,ttnn llPta )IPI. or Switzvrianol hsr the purr..., t" the filetUOr 111 . Ten it. Ow Cmitim of —ltear• ere nituter,et. l'it The, le,oc Ile. tic and tritest the cultittitctl rc. sc.trch of chestnut. IS 111.1111111i' 1.11111;:, 1 , 111 lit.too•k,•••por 10 4 , HPt It flint IZolf,. pill lii tvo.•r, 111 'truth! v •‘‘ lu 4,11. —The iliniurr !riven by the Si (), I 17, at th e I hthila Bit h•Le lit (%.1,111 fit uople, In holm!' 4/1 Enernie. roe( If0,11111)1'a al. lit $s,1101) in erpl,l —A omit vl- rrrrntly fotokl r,•ll.ir in Princos illy. 111 v, Ist" Loth, au I,nun•,l nn 111. 1,011. I, Ilnr uurl.n No 2 w 111(1 '•••11111.• 111.11 r I.llllllla 111 Lot. nigh( " 111110,1 l h. w au lint ' IIN Shi. C/1110(1 (( tdd Li _ Ftorl •• Al•v wr,o, itiat , mw ....111f. " t '..1 thy. F.,rt rued k. 1 .1 tort.. bienung —A imun r‘ , • l 114. tel ul ti..,l:l:tn, twin, nichlg,wn ?hut had 1.1,•11 t (dm k watt th.• L. 11/1.,•1111,1 --"l'reth girl Amanda tit tint 111 1 Is Ow I•ll,riflr or Lrn WHY 1,111 , ,i t ior‘• "1)L, •It.• I;n4 v• ..r en , 1 , lho repiv - Chief dioitice believed that we could reNuw payment a itli six %yeeks miner end in is iii tit% or retina to hard 1110lieS . , uud p. 1.0111.1 be effected before 1863 --Aiming the entertiiiiimeni del I.r the Empre , a Was a marriage in high lite 'll tlenian and lady Were gwdered Vicemy to !Harry 1 4 1(1,1..01y for The soVereigni kindlti the ex peitses. '!'he best rebuke to a imenr we have read, ia that of a NI landlord, who had a man of tht ingest kind Flopping with lin Mobil it nonce lime and finally hint tip stairs, and slowed low which lie said lie hart fitted up pose for swearing. —A wit .bring told that an quaintanen way married, exelain "1 ion glad to hear it," Bat nut a moment, ho added, in compriasion and forgiveness, "Ai don't know why I should he ; did me any harm." —"Well, Jones, I suppose y' been out to look at Taxis? set, anything of our friend S %Item?" "Yes. gone _deranged." "Ho has ?" "Yes indeed ; ho - doesn't , own hogs from those of his nei
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers