The Beaver Argus. (Beaver, Pa.) 1862-1873, December 05, 1866, Image 1

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ii at 4:05 . 11,.m., arrives in Pit burl
p.m, Returning leaves Vitlebur at 6
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:w Castle and'. Pittsburg , AceOmmodat
in leare'sNerriCttstle at 7:00 a.m., arri
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i:,26 pm. .I
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• F. R. 31YERS, Gen, Ticliettri
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A CARAWAS BRAN I I
Letois' .
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H ' ILYEItS, General Ticket
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:, P, CLA K Proprietor .
STA liL115(1 ochod
1 •
April 1. 1:6
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iell
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It is just as you say, Neighbor deem,
A treasure indeed is' wife, " -
Such another for bustle itud work •
t I miler have found in fry life. aL.
. 4 I But then she keeps every one else' .
As busy astir& on tbe wing• - '
.„
There is never a toomeuilfor rest,
•
Bliit lynch a fidgety thing. -
She makes the best bread in the town,
.
1 Her , piing are a perfect ; delight,
1 a Her coffee a rich golden brown, - ;-. -
5 14
a Her crullers and pudding just right, .
!But then. while I eat thim, she tills
6.; Of the Care and the worry they
8 " Ofthe martyr-Like toil shotaures,'
, 0, she's such a fidgety thing
iiil
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4 My bollie le is neat lui • pin„
You should see how the tfisor-hainilits•shine,
, t 'And all of the loft-cushioned chairs •
'And nioely• swept carpels are mine
• :' " J But then sho so frets • at' the dust,
At a fly, At* straw or, a siting,
i• That I stay out of doors4llomi, •
7 40
; she is such a fidgety thing !
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I °P- 31 She doctors the neighboO, 0, yeti - " • '
g 64, .
...1„ If tvcbUd has the melee or croup, .
: I t. She is there with her saffoons sill siltillit ,
11 " Her dainty-made gruel& and soup.
-" But then she insists on her right F
,•. To physic my blood ini the spring, '
...' And she takei the wholelcharge of my bile.
4.1 0, she'd such a fidget) thing! -
• it•
~.4 . She knits all my stockings herself, • -
"`"My ehirts are bleached white as the snow
i
My old clothes look better than /Um, '
Yet daily more threadl•bs,re they . geow. ,',
i i " But then if a morsel 0f .,, l int
--- . ,
'Or dust to my trouser cling, "
Ihw I'M sure of one sermon _a t least,
'' '" She is such a fidgety thing. t -
, , 4. You have hear: of a spirit so meek,
;AX• So meek that it never'opposes, '
I
" lts own it dareituever tol speak— 7 ‘ -
1 Alas, I im'' meeker thin Moses!
to, ~I Bat then lam not reconciled i
". The subordinate 'ZIIIIII4IO to sing;
":,1 I submit to get riti - of a rtavr,
She is such a fidgety Ithing f '
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1 It's just Its you say, neighbor Green;
A treasure to me has been given ;
" 1 But sometimes I fain would be glad.
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To lay up my treasure is heaven.' •
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s. put di en every life haiits crew; •
Most pleasures on earth have their sting,
`` ;She's a treasure, I know; neighbor Grier',
ME
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.„ ; Bat obis such a ailwiti thins..
, .
7 6 4 co ..•••••• ...p 111 et ............wwii. ;
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8 ” k--- , -r---TAe PAWAY., 0t.,R;11.4131* _
:5 " 1 Tim Pa4-1;--9::nipa imotitisroet ---
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tI Tim'
5 .. 'lowing remarks orillois subject: '
a'' The North German Confederation is
completed ; bat that is Merely the corni
to n
10 $, Jnencement of the tisk which the pol e ;
- s .— I icy of Pressialiiispi i roposed as its ob.-
es ' . tject. .The progranile- of Count Bie
at
k oo - ..inarck is known,
.vil., to found German
l enity, and conseq wetly to attract
tisn [Within the circle °lithe new confederi
° o Bation those countries of GermanY
I
vie which at present do, not form part of
' le V
it. Ali, sooner or later; are -destired
} lto come into the new confederation.
some of their owni accord, apme by
, f
compulsion. As or the secondary I,
States'ofs the` sou th,c Count Bismarck
reckons on their isolation and the:
i senile of their weakness. As to Aus-
I iris, she has been beaten' for the per I
t pose of forci .- ng her but, of _Germany ;I
;ex 'eh,' will be ruined Wizen the time has,
Iconic for taking. from her her. German ]
... •. I py•ovinces. With reiard to the States
j of the south, a debate which liar, taken
... I place in the Baden' Chamber shows
:„. I hr,w,accarate have been the anticipa
i ',ions of C'otrirt Bitiarck. -Wortem-1
berg and Bavaria cannot, fail to follow
1 the example of Baden, which appears I
~
1
I to be anxious for ,an unconditional al-1
.... .
----,,
.I.liance with the northern confedera.j
lion, and the. Kuig jof Holland- most
r r ely is not tinder l i htitllusion that the
:r's. P
uesian garrison Will ever evacuate I
.. Ithe fortress of LuxLmburg. Sweden
~. and Denmark are mild , tohe competing.
-• I for thi alliance of IPrnseia. Finally, ,
•••• ' information to which, we, are disposed
"' to attach some importance, directs at=;
7: .ention to the relatisns between Prim.'
ma and liurisiri. There is a-samor of
an alliance between these two Powers
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fur the purpose or'ehtnpleting the dirt ,
memberment of Austria, and sharing,
, - 0 - 4 the spoils between them. In order to
obtain its end of ar t new and-United
German empire, Pruitt.* has but- one
struggle more to bake-sa struggle
r that is singularly unequal, because it
p m , will bring face to faPe the conquerors
,3 and the «x«nquered—a country ag
graudized by large nnexations,l and
m'" an Austria trying to make , head
''2 i against the clisorgan«zatiou,disaffectioh
and disagreement Of her provinc i es.---1
icox 14 State bas ever bad - before. it such a
tot - minable task. Austria represe, tits
Om great European mteiests, but it seems
6 1 to be loft to itself, and destined topass o i
4 under the pressure et events, and, as
( . 1 it were; under fire, through , a social,
TUOrfai and political regeneration,which
it wduld require, many long years of
peace to effect. .Austria, however;
does not seem to despair of , hersele—,
The appointment von Benet bit
a two-tald signification, for n points to
m. in abandonment cf. the traditions.: of
the cqncordat, and to a 'reeistanee of
ihe rdquitementa of Pruisia. 11.1 car.;
genitive - Wet M.. von Bismaiek, ibis`'
is the match, and tea stake played far
is . nothing abort of t.hElata of 'the
Whole of Ifurope,
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-”,1 DAVE paemmi tbriough greet t ard•
6 03 a* the selitioner said; . tier
tbrougkx tle6t of irott.c ado:
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Peittilial Chdiiitilit t-L: Attlxifitiek.
• .., . 1411 atl,lll,ll49oatio._
.-- ;A:lCoii Yolicleeniaspiniaeit: c't :0 16
Preiiidince Jouh74l oild#P4r0 11.4 0. -
irmton reporter Mang years asci i -gives
the following :interesting illaatratioU
Of the rancor w,EPCWlWieh , Potiti* -e i l k
troversies aFesoiriettitms condoetedt—
Henry Chi . ) , once. *rote airliate let.l.
ter to Judge Bropgti,of VI rginitg - whie!)
created 4 world{, of excitement, and
give rise to multitudinous epaulette*
liobiidy,sive ledge; Briieke and i gi.
/ Clay hadthe, gl oat of laildea - In
let ence to the contents of the mistgig
but all the Democratic papers - in -,fhe
Ijnion swore that it embraced nattere
which, if they qould begot , it, weefild
prove to the letter the, Vyr4ste3DCW":o4
I - what Jot . ; • Randolph detiomirtatecithe
l'eoalitian ' between he Puritan and aid the,' back leg:" Mr Chty's friendi
,were defiantly called on, to predict:4 i
that letter ; Mr. Clay himself was im
portuned . io;pertnit its exhutriation
year after year by his immediate
friends; and. Amos Kendall avowed
i that ho dared not bring it tO the light,
Ibreause, if given to tbepublic,it would
convict Harty Clay of something next
Ito Mallen. 1 1 - , i
For a quarter of a century (from
1.1819 to 1844)' that terrible' letter was al
bone of antention,laod every black
guard who felt disposed to insult the
4* noble Harry of Ashland," outrage=`
ously east its gbost in his teetti, and
screamed, "That, letter convicting you
of treason,)or something very like it,
you dare not I show ; we defy you,
and demand its publication." .
In. 1844 Jilege. Brobke. not, - Kr.
Clay, but probably - with his' concur , .
rence, brought tortl4 the terrible letter,l
and at once oeknoliehed all the tower
ing airy moles of the political dema
gogues. And what do you suppose it
contained 'I I ~
In the year 1819 Lord Byron pub.
listed be first canto of "Don Jam.,"
one of tbe most powerful and popular
of all his pubiteations, though its fuer
ality, hke Pope's "Rape of the Loci;, , '
and Dryden's [ i matchless "liinde and
I the Panther," was subjected to' severe.
criticism, inot to anathema. Lord
I John Russ il, then in his prime, and
i f
redolent o i echolastie glorT, neat Mr:
Claya pre entatioo , bopy, at the re
quest, of it author. _
Though Mr. [Clay was neither a poet
nor a derdee of polite literature, be
read the copy Seat him with high eata
istaction, and I subsequently sent it,
with a coinmendatory note, to' his
friend, 'Judge Brooke, of Richrnond.--
Hie letter weaWarked "confldentia:':
rya{
- "i'llow - f --0- 91 - '" (76 " .
solved it. 'Six years afterwards the
existence of •this Confidential letter
'caked out, and Mr.' Thomas Ritchie,
of the Richrrond Eikquirer, having got
wind of itiigravely ,etated that, if it
could be produced it would-prove, the
existence of a corrupt bargain between
Mr. Claynd ,John!. Quincy Adams,
which resu ted
I .
in tier , election of' the
latter to t e Presidency. It simply
recommended the genius of Lord By
ron; but ati Don Joon was the recipi
ent of denbociationi at the= hands of
the pulpit end press Mr. Clay did not
choose to *ve it knewn that he had
spoken favlrably of) the genius and
talents of iti atithor.` And for no oth
er reason, liaded to an unwillingn i ess
to gratify e prarient' i and irnportinent
curiosity;Vr. , Clarfor five and twenty
years insiseti on his'injunction of pri
esey, and uietl,y submitted to most,
unjust anduunf unded obloquy.
Fortnnes in the South.
-
rj An Ark4eas , correspondent' writes:
Arkansas is not a detnrable State at
'present, 'and twenty-five years of free.
dons will pat a new fate on the coup.
try, and inlveitmecie of capital may
now be made to fine edvantage. Great
numbers of the old Plantere must Sell,
and others --43isgustO with freedom—
are &tot mined to get away - . Planta
, :ions, ef frcm 500 to 5,000 torei . are
offered at lo l w figures. _ One Man below
Pine Bluff sc tate a private soldier in,the
15th Illin is kj nfantry, has made a
1 handsome iorthne since the close of
1 thelwar, ife carne South.without a
doller, and now owns eleven .huudred
acres
tit . ...-tt io, , Gee*: Arkansas - Ayer
bottpm. ' e bats
,trodur...ed this year
over : a thon and bales of cotton. Be s
&aye be h* not found the slightist
ditfleulty i n procuring -
ail the labor
be bas to* ed. He has paid the freed
men_ good wageti rewarded the first
class hands with extra pay; paid
promptly and fed ;well. He says that
many planters 56 obliged to send
'every:year to distant places for hands,
beesuse they oppressed and defraud.
ed tbeir laborers; who cannot of course
to tniated to remain - with tnettt the
Second year. ' ' . • •
Swan-Liar McduuAcu Writes in rep
Ely to inquiries of L. p Morton & co:,
nglish bankers: . ' . _
"I rciitr4, as did also my, predecsa
sots, sll bon'ds of the United States as
payable in coin: The bondstbat bare
;natured sines tbe suspension of ape.
cis payments, bare been - so paid, and
-1 4:rano doubt that, the same ; will be
urns 'frith all ethers. This being, as 1
understand tt ;to 'IA - the established
policy 'of tbe 4 GoiCrament. the five
twenty bonds of 1862 will either be
called to at the expiration of five years
from their date and paid in coin. or be
iperutitted to run until the Goreinmeat
Is prepared to pay them in ruilr..”
Nerertiseleas' the London' .'lttitiat
thinks - it will not be amiss tea Con
'gross to 1 1 40011 TO such payment-bylaw
Ail bonds but the Fire•Twentiea bear
tbili obligation on their tare.
ttiggb, - ;
Nov ;
he is P; ; !at
Orlesust, t. 25
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fal
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i t m i ht t i : lit.
5. - eblor*V ' 'lli s titlar,l,%
Caritlidtt'lStll
d, ects tho yliw.lidir
with., Tidal pil!ethoy;
hien, inenatogy.ni,
litim.tbeitilliissdiiiial
Ortega-a% Ufa...pow)
will, atlo ... , ,th ‘ eat4
Orleans; ~Lri.bY;44 l
t t p
will, UV. 4, 1 4 1 :i 51 ! " A •
BA% grantiqg }hem
you , ota tli,dletn,„ g
lik!ae . ti'MP'illk .4 ' l
olosc en ,in l'ilide: ~
2 "1
L , - 'tit'
tf
1' 3 :1 sat ) in 4 .A. 1 4-
TM! wv4,i,pgata
it; an - 4
ai l k o ll -7 4‘4it
Oriegf. 1 : . .i. : - 7 L. ;,-if4144,'" -.- l'..
,Iramettioeb,oter bias et Gen
ort egs 04*, yp ti4it. 14611 Trotest
setting foti,th't . I
.., -- , 1
I. Tha kil4ttame there inAwmpany
with pi* ,L,11 , 415c ?demean - irsens,ten
route to - filli OLLlrit country. . ..' l'
2. VIA* ii`traveiled nod tie dpo
- 4 a:
toction o be United "Stitt ' because
It
travellit 1 a'is stciamir -en , .'ng the
i ci
starry ti and on the wa of the
'Paine *at 00,1 1 , , , 1
- ?:8. T i lt t ly4 ' wail arms _ witbont
any c ' ,!itssigned...-Ue ly 1. - not
that bet eist violated 'any la pi ''' the
I:united - 3*S' , 1
4. I do, Pboc'belierellatt. aii tbe
Pf°l 4o artfboillnited States.. 1 bi-sii
, Opine gt-ftrquent of this catiOn
tilittielpajitillii thle - act — .- -- brit!:
i'aol*-taerutiratiou. :' zlt:
. jai This tonsti talon. gip 4‘ l'A'
',. Vni ed at Les ' . 4.•';';.‘- -- ' '
Bus,
v.p
itif
violated, i i ;Ink protection, inst.,.
which lai irnprisoied.
S. '''lrb' he is the coniitittitiiirat
ii
Presicien ,fi 3 Of ' , Mexico, and his .arieSt,
fO i
r that esicin, is interferonee in , the
ii)ternal iiileicir, Of this country .7 .i
:7. Bislainisi, and`lenprisonmejit are
acts of
,tfulatlon' i.‘gaiMit bit person,
compellinViini.ty fora to reside in
tboltinitS • Stites againit him will. ,
81 He Will not retain 'to 'Sew Cir
leao excipt bit a, prisoner, and thitt
thitefficetiinikt d'i*Pooe; ( i tl ' l L Pl c '
sob as b e proper. ~ •
Thereto - re, as in presence 'of folio,'
right andikeason naturally ,is iallenp;'
but iightiabdlitason are grill Owers
in, Ibis replibli4led right; •and reastn
Will, soon": make theyseekes ' heard. , :-
Ito enters :hoirollowingprotest :
1. 1' p t . w 'against tbilriolont tot
of the mill aryforce,excrelsokagiiiat
lily persopi approbendioxmenn"beard
the 1 0514, tr Fat: Mei". - 114 keeping
no imprhiOtied until tO day, withoSt
anY ret o 4 6 loluititi this - Violent not,
thereby di regarding intheidualitus:r..
antees, given by the twos of this
country toi foreigners travelling therein
92.. I r rotes ,in the name of the
. 1
Mexican '7.,iipvi i
lip ? whoa° ',poweesl I
exercise there° , against tliiiieitid,acit,
because itk,inspests an Indira, inter'.
feire___, tieli, - bithe 4itimed -- forces' -of she
United 5t404, - .10 the sottitien cif local •
*Wolin , qhestions.
11 - ; That pte sytnpatbitalif:abaso.
eiltona abit loyal people of they United ,
. Sista. are ) n .lavor •of- .the .hfoxienn
ratiptiblits , and - the progressive.. party
w,biett be *iceman, SAO, that the ants
14! Benito I,,!tiscrez and kis Minister- t
Wasiiinglop are treasonable, in see, -
ierby intriwie itself other Clllll4ll$T o
WO TrprObiO r d
measures, the aid of)a
tarsus inn* th secure userped,power,
napresdatint thereby repnblimin prin.-
"pit* and IMpeding my entratico by
each MOINIdi; 1 u o rder that the pimple,
.wing no:iliegialisiste. - hand.,mpy of
ageessity acne de tto the destruction of
Pleb. constitutional principles, te ob
tain Whichand resulting fn peace,
cost •tbts.&do' people', thonsands Of
victline an en years 61140460 and
continahas_warfare: : '
Two :t3sauputi ltaavimitays.•— / 11
handouts ycpneg Ye,oirso . ped dies mode
loyojo Jsansttn' widow Ponnsylva.
Di*. Ilk sot ompaniodjkis neelsratinn
with se. allusion tttpeainten
to th4yr " t anion. :417,1 4 Tapii..thvol" iildid
the, wide": l'The weat ot AN* ,(1
si t u up- s
. retail store. 7 Ther.partsl
and the : widow sons the poddleie
04•01 C for maple 4 mot* Whop, t,,,hoy
nu:4'watt the pedOloy had hired and
ateotted - bis store;sad the oniitiogfialr
?no hogged to Illow the mhos twirls'.
I 'moot. "I have. anotbaritip t ' cried,
the notion dealo. '
INMANA giliTMereeX ,1 16 bal r e , h '
vierboge , is ' esigEn l ::s l l °
mibuedenee 411 1 • n croreenablteg
them to feeel 1.
t
r , •
; • Whit;?: - 44:61.• rreurot
Iv!zo
£~;
:: The J e - Empire is in-point of
teiritbryilareheid , of all other cons:.
tries "-Or- , sh# -world; ltd .present arils
being neirltdOuble. that of China,lind
'nearly three - times that of the United
Stairs; audit Stiff Continues to extend
at; tsi- "rapid •' . •tote;.-
,Thelindepimtlent,
, tribes- 'lining ‘the ,- soithern ' , frontier
halrengradiutH p k wi tietnir iitoserbed, and
Chine - and': , a • Lori hint 4 kkeede
prwrincea Gond. exteatt : taithelar-'
gest.thismef ..Etirepti..: - :' Daring thel
last': .L# :or, Ahrse year& theatdreeee
of:Bassist in -Ventral Asia' bait' attract.
pi' .pertieular :attention , "• l iberw is n'
'counter, mieloiitd, by , Bassia,:ohina;
'British India: and Versia.i and known
br the . siiiiieanf - Turkestan, Tann 01
Indiipesdont .Tertuty,•nrhich leflloli
. isishing the most illNientl additionia•tn
Bniudigtsteeritbsyro)lrtiOntalne **nit
osisfifth of Ittosstritory of MO-United'
Stevie, Isisitit si-nomadio . k us Atkin of
ante sibcint'l,ooo,ooo r : ?I . aging to.
ii'ffonaVitrities,- liad - -kentdists , of , : the
Imam , ofklie Tarrenninaii.thelittlii
Khanato.•• of .. Itagnsere,‘ and- the three '
[more Powerful ° - .Khonittin "of z4Chiya,
Bokbarit: and • Khokand; ..' liitestino.
wars harcbessi the chronic malady' of
these reglotir - from-time iminemorahle,
and as Teter& their foreign relational
they - were - on thei'wholo:restrictodto
csittiligeinsgainst `the leir mercha nts
and -iraiselons 'who rentired to peifei:
trattifeWthe inhospitable land:, For
scititeMita 1 4 08 eie,bas begun to gain, a
firtndeodagin - this con n ti 7. • It , bail
destreyid.thi Kliiimite Of IKhokand,
the largastelid-most poptilout of the
Sihanato I)3theacing All area-of more
than • 311 '. i i 'English i,iplare miles;
• Sid 'S'Ropf!lation 'of ' aliOnt4 3,000,900.
Last: eor 'a considerable portion of
the Khanate was formally.annexed to
Ritimiii ander the name of the •PrOrr
toes, of Tarkenton. Recently ; ihe
Russian papers inform nil of the for. .
trail finuexation of Taalikend, one of
the mast important citieof theemin-
try, which ; already nu 'hers 100,4400
inhabitants, and is rapidly beeotning
Abe greatest commercial city of Cen
tral Asia. The gener a l I expect:Wen
la, ,that the remainder of Turkestan
will be annexed in, the coarse as few
years, and that thus.Rassis and Eng ::
land will be brOnght faCe .to, face Jo
liaili: ~ -: ." , ' ! ' • .
- The gro wing powei of - Russia is
one 4xf- tho: . mess- important features
in the_political history of our eatittiry.
, Ther n is this important difference be
-4.lkßen the , atittitseil territories of Ras:
ptiLinditieokic*.of the other Greit
'..PAiiiiiif that 'most of '
.the
•.. __ --., _ - _..
ai' .
sstd:
tdi
:a
York
trio
• OA
tie
tar►
the,
41)rt0h
eaeritl
of tie~
ttjD
, '' , . . ~ . , 1, . ~ . • . . ,
~, ._ 'I , ' I .
.!., • ... . ' ' : - ,
..
~-7 1 i : :: : : :• -• ;:' ? ;, ; ( . 1 `..?- : :, ; ;,14- P L - ; . ": '`i . ..Wr.^: 4 'l
-:
- • --.'' ' C-- -• . - V :rr ' 477:7 ' 7 7 -- - ''''''' : -77:‘-::72''-' ` . .7..7::-::".-
-.:-. '- - '.l
:'' - • - . - NOTKE. ' 4 0YElk ' 1 . - ''-c:.'
, • . •_: .L. , .. ..,1. ~.- ~ -.-. i : •:' ',.: l ',N;i: - 7 * 2 `. -;'7 , ':' I. 11 , .1-;•1` ''' '''' -'-' z ''' . ' *--
---:
'"A'
..,,, .., z ;-- -- t 1 ~." i l ., ;1; 4TJ:,. • , 4 _ . , t , -....._........, ~. 4.41. -..
.. „
- . -..i: P.. •--..... --•,.-. --.;.“" ..:;"11 ... I- • ... ..., .
sweats
44 „ : -.4 . ~ •
-1' .34-. st i : i.,:- -:, a .-:.., ...1.,- •i , l-. ,, ..; ' , ..-...-'r" . L `T'r
4.- i...:' , ;.; rry , i,!•, , 'r.zrr r r • -r- . .....rr • r -::, • . J,." 1 - •. I _
re' • : •::: :--- --r '-'*. •., ..... - ,I. •-,-;
,
' 1 ,
111 , . ~. ' r• I iiiiistairilittir
. ~.!' f. - s , l -•/.., .':,.. ' ,-,' ' . ' •• .' ~ 1 '• l ''
........=
resume or • 'nom),
will, - .without doubt„thoroughly absorb
all the tribes of the'itinexed territory,
And thus cenetitnte one - nationality
*Lick it cut hardly be iionbted, will
W and remainthe most poweiint of
the World.--/T.' Y. Tribuite. •
The- Advantages .of, Having a
Womau With You When Tray
oiling: • .
, . .
4 *That seat is occupied," said A bright
eyed girl it the hotel table to a man
who was about to take it. "Occupied!"
he growled ;, "where'll' his baggage?"
With a saucy .upward look, at biin
"I'm his baggage," she said, -And
this brings Ime to say that ill yen ,are
going a long journey in regions Where
,it is "first come first serval," the most
deiraba piece Of baggage sou eau
take with you is not . a hat box or. A
blanket, but , a woman. If you have
none, then marry one,,for you are not,
th'oroughlrequipped - forithe road
you. do. When dinner is ready you
follow 'is her Bles sed' wake, and ure
snugly Seated betide tier. and exactly
opposite the platter of ehiekens,before
the hirsute crovutwoinatilese, as , Adam
Was till he tell into a deip sleep, are
lot in. at all,
_Theis you are, and
there they area You twain one, with
the , two best, chairs' in • tbe , house,
served and smiled on. Look' down
the table at the unhappy fellows,soine
Oi. thertittetually bottoming the chairs
they occupy, and thearmaind hands
reaching in every direction aCross the
tablalike the tentatnlit of al gigianttt I
TiOlYpns. SY hen nigh t comes and with
a border tavern, it is ,notymi that ,
shift nbeasilY from side to side on the,
bar-room floor. It , there, is any best
bed she gite it and yotrahire it. You
follow, her into the pat car; she is
first in 'the stage cosch - and yen are
too ; ' More than that, a woman keeps
u .
yo "upon
. :Votir, honor - ;"; yOU are
pretty sore beh ave yourself the
way:
-,. •
- Psi of our eichingee se,yal
might policy r of.A.ndrewiohn
Bob`olvfe;Oastrtiolaoli algmbritical y,
with the following reault. •
Let'.lfr. Johascas:
2 - ..y.&ristiefra States. ,
' x--Nete Orkawr. .• -
vphes tops=Pledadelphiis toitevetitin. l
z mast (y plat r);=-4lse peopie••r64.
2splus Cotsaa plies Itesselatl pima poo_riate ,
pew 221 F.f. 14101 1 1 488 r Rhili sae 'fig!: Fe.
"Ise te/r gpoerstatait,
400 z plys7ll Courts, bY ass, .toes
and so, muTtrpTied by 9-00000000" v4O.
To •
be a wom an of fashion is ,o o. of
the easiest things in the work A .
late writer ",thns, desenbes Boy
everYthinglon 'don't swabs, pay
'for'nothing Ott get; smileVn alt man
hied bi t , y our husband be. happy ay.
erywhera but at home ; Legleot ; yo_*
and nurse lap dogs; , go "to
Church -ereii• time , you get a; neie
dress.
1018‘
=MEI
Ell
~
ift i toilthisintan eif ther:Oldeb Time.
Col. Marcy recites-the fidlOWittgicon ,
rirtesticiti with an old 'irontiersmen
while-tnareldng it tali with a bath,.
it from Little Raik to Ft.-•Towannt
i t 4d
4re yon iffineti w
r pm, it'd ck
deign in Mexico?"- • i'-1 . '`, ' -
*i.No sir the' Mexican war is '0,..
and, we are , on the way Aff - itkir , C a , ..-.
Wr O natwo , • i. -: ' ,
' , - 1 4Wher.dttl yecoinotrorOttrangeir?"
4 W, e eatilnittet. from Paimsgbalai
lillought,ye be the bola beaeiferof
that:that . army?" pointing .toward the
men. •;.._. • - -•• • • 1.
- I'll am . the , commanding . officer
that detachment; air." . o
I. I !H. - - I •-
"Vall; • Mr: itossiki•r, tie thataitire
.'imalt :aogerd„ ler ..iatithey l inike,„llollevie
.°b*Pktilgfktorntli town ta ..9r 4 lllmir
t, I Thalr, - -titatte'l.anie 4 -o i 4 lll- :- ir
illetlein ar'.ar,, and I' ! m at t ey''bit - e
pioittiCtlietfiselveti not, not worthy
tile tarstellation -of real, iceoultie eol
die* Vat ofsatettns,r•tt o r.: .- -,:' -.-
.i.slinw, „I,,jesit - , want A -know one
thing more, boss; be ihein iliapti,rego
I,lrs, or be they melishr
' 4 41 assure You' that the y' :belong to
the regaliut ,artity .of • the illaked
States." • -.. .
1 .;
I "Then." pointing. tt. my uniform, be
added, - "appelientlY, the i r., ghtin'o
your trade . ' . •.• - _
. ' -.--- - 1 .. - -
"I adopted t the profession of arias
it an-early sige," I replied. • ,' '
-"War you at the Orleans fight,whnt
our bele gin sich.yarliclar fits to ole
Pick?' .1 1 , 1 • . •
• ' 1 answered , thatL "though` a pretty
old soldier, ! my commission did' not
date quite s.i far hack' l 1814 k" , :--
"Wall, ole boss, you lioughn't a
been that.; ,but you Ede't ,no ehieken
now, Sure." , " l ' '' 1 ' - '
n' Ile continued, ''One time me and
him, Ike Thompson, we went on a tio.: l
gerin' spree." . 1 ; r
• "Ali I indeed; in what place didyou
411
'serve, pray .i - - 1 . - - ''-'. I ,
"14 sevral places; but the last pop,'
we fou.t atl the battler of the Horse
Shoe, wbar we and ole Ilickrr cleaned
out thelrigincs " I t t,
1-
"That was a moat decisive and man
-1 gninary hattle," I observ'ed. i
"I . calherlate , Mr. liCsalfer z t t hat .
I war (be most 'decisivest 'and the most
• eanguinariest fight , you l ever i seen in
ler born' dayi. We boYy, we up and
pitched in that, and we gin lie yid,
ter-bellies the most particular hail .
Colum,by. t4 ., We
,chawed ,am all up; We
laid um.otrt colder -mu a wedge; We
saved every mother'slar of am—iirc
did , that ijiLltite i binbo . r " ~.
. 'the Indiana wire killed: '
that I bad alwayt been under the iiii..-
prei*ian• that some of them made their
escape , aid in fact, I was I very Vonfi.
, .
dent, that several Creek.lndians were.
then living apon , the Canadian River
who pirkicipated in 'the battle of the
Horse-Shoe...! • . - ;
' I
He said. he, "rather reckon'd , not;"
but, at all events, be Was quite certain
"ef any of the" dogon 'Farraints lid git
away, they war-d—d badly wounded.,
. 1
Bastin sure." . t ;
. Ito then produced a'lbottle of whit
key, and gave me a pressing invite
Lion ,"to liquor," rematking:„ - i
"That he war not too Proudl ,, to take
a horn .with a feller . Boger, even if he
war a reglar.” , I
After having taken a drink,' be tip.
proached me, and, in a senorons,tone,
said:- . (.
. "Thar's nary.paper tuck in this Tare
settlemunf, but I beam f tell that Gird.
rat - Jaekson ar 4 ' dead; . Maybe , yea
'ought hoer'd some talk 'bout, it as
yon com'd, 'long the road,lstranger ?"
cuntiai Ati4.
m]
A. VERY DOUBT/111: STORT.•--The
foll Owing ill *Gil a New York corresw ,
pondent of tba Spt ingficld Republican:
"Speaking of polttls [remands me
of, an incident of the rt ta of 186 g re.
kited to the by. an eye fitness. Yon
remember; the Tribune Ince bad been
threatened and was deli:aided by aimed
menu, The afternoon thit Governor
Sey moor iddressed thi!attitt from - the
steps of the Astor Howie, lone - of the
defenders 'of littil Tribune, a dead 'shot.
stolid in tbe-wiridow with telescopic
ran aimed at laisimoor's head. It the
knacrapalnue •ciemngelgae bad said
anything ici &unite the mab the ikon
tier' ot oar riftetaan was to shoot him
on the spot; mid he would have done
It beyond .:a question. - Fottamitely
for-Seymour, he Only saght, to cort
ciliate the iniitgents, and so escaped
with his ilfh. lt le not liSobsblis that
the crafty' politician ever knew bow .
near; he cants to baying a ball Icidked
in his Skull, gad- it may ha-that - kW
good rigor stepped between him and
bis natant' diaposition on Itbat memo%
rabid and:trielaricholylAsy -
.
retni• that ain stand.who're the .
Democratic party In" stout for six
years past Is indestrietable. —Sew .
Lirork,Worldi f
This n like the confidenne of the old
wombs who , said Fsbe had floticed thAt
when she lived through New Ifear'a
day she always lived through thereat
of 'the year Lovialßepthlims.
f tOW steal
A WA43, o bserving -0 i 111
fish and tint it under his jacket, Vadat
was too short fo conceal the then; call.
Id oat to the purloiner to Wear, hi &-
tura; &Inapt jacket, orates! ashortor
fish.
Its. beet; toast of - this- isesison' walk
via believe, given by *a tylio; a. - short
tins* stoic 'Fiz: "Woman—the
.Vs large, and 1); Sean - 'honk! be
-Yr4trivltt. CopT:i
Ativoitteiteititi St y ,
per squsi . 4".2
60 eeita.. -A oast' digAtfat 414 A
- to-Irriziv Mite* .
7iitaSE:;-;T
Special neeffeo 25 percent: matitaiestot:,-.
.11er rites. • • • - ;
I:taahMO, tittidp, p0r. 1 4#7, J
Marriages and D P01110: : 1_
and other Notice" If ikotta",:-;,..•.-.:
iplin ea. Slim t halt tke:414101110. 1 'H ,
A
07. Agatnat bli0019010i1o0A; r. - - "-
jlirsoni the Boston drsrelseetPoittifibitita-
•A L dispatch isYtlureatilkiifibi**,, ,,
a
that the presenco ofAigtftsi„-Sitt _ '''''.
tinder an assumed name, in Abel': '
army, which has beereitteke;oo , _ -;
ad at 'several recent 'Special 'ls)f: .
Mr 'Boatmen, has beetrdiflittelkilliC
whams& and that a for' dbilititik --
for his : extradition. was. made 'ii._,lftitt- ---,
F days agb by . , the, American htifinite&
that - the' 11in:1141. was iiersiiitid - , - , tat'
iftervidid broke front his guards . leitii _
eti'downa , preei teet'and escape& 1 -, I .
If-ever tsgain -American -hands hid&
,control of the.life ofloha IL •Surratii
we trust ,that -i.hisieitakfralt be mgwis '
`skiiiially•tudoiteo. thttli4st*trikPtA
7.
is felloyt-, , "-Iles,t4otliti4
only - ItneWn re . reseitative of Sc . , ;r',
&piracy whibk't bitgli it iriss,inOtid - -
end- ciiiminattinthin ;the la;tr t *to ,
yitixii tbough - .atx,orseven of iteiulik , _
h ers , hbvtAtomerstiltobd firkotit i *Wm, ,
esi, though he *oat smite 4egat,fitintut,
nave _been "
employed to sift tt lithe
bottont, is to. Jai soipped - in'ati . diniut '
and turfathotnabie ibyeterptiroortirb,
any similar ',plot iti.ttats ditnamitxtf Om
middle ogee. I l k; extentt444se gam. -
oral ignorance about .(it IrlaY =wet. 4 I
ganged, by the 'fact that - of 'tbd twit
well-known ientleirtettittict Were titti
t,.
in charge e'. thelcabe y„tite &nein* •
mept, end Istaditid. ill bg ,and closely, / ,
`ono still declares that _effortkim Davis •
wail, the Chief conspirator, ittok. tile
other `.taisetiliis ?eli t ists:tido .. .oh tEd
thocking
. ttrid-inctedlble - acciolitiOn
that thb present 'Preside El f Ottbedhi 1••
ted States. was: an ;accompilesin 'the
plcit.- 'AU the flints in the'-elan are
known to JObt: Surratt, intliolioent. -
er mad who can - i be iqtmed; amt.willit
his person in otirpovession [hernia:fix
could well afford to-offer lam his life,
his liberty, or any outer Brice which
' might he suffeciek to Ai' (pre it, to ob-
Lain irony .. .his lips -the ii.fermation
which will filed the light al , day larva .
,
the "most diffi-ult al -yell Iss'ttie most
interesting - clrint;i'..al "nlyster3` or oar
I time. 11.1thertdj the ,p , , liey of those
entrusted with ilk; hatter has tiCon to -
disdain all inftn inatior, in
~e:ueitfoti.v) t 4l
of the-prchlzru - frnra nat'-4. Oho stone
were able to giveckt; and Mre. gatratt
and the rest. lie in ithe:enriless silence i
of the grave, *9i, nor. records are , i .
defaced ,by., ill(Qtestirtiony of taupe
perjurers like Iffintrntery and COO- _
ver. White 1 , -Sohn, Surratt survives
there is vet a chanee to repair tEe evil
*hid], If he diet, Acids-44s lips *earcit,
k•
may be irretrteval.• •
c ‘ . ..\
.-,,:...,.__---
,'luring the first yea i, of the• war,
when , ebar.ge" was Sea rcc-a it d' 'soma '
large firms were istruivg -currency of
their own. 4 farmer went to a store in
a neighboring town and bought;some
gnoda, and gavg to the merchant afire
I ,e
dollar bill, of which ho waited sve
n.-
~
ty-five cents back. no merchant
counted.out the amonot and handed it' ',
over to the farmer. lie looked eA it a
mominknnd inquired, ..Wbat'a:this i"
"It's my currency,", and the •ssiet?,.'
chant.• "Wal , - 'taint. gobd tot inttsinl ,
'Where-I tire,' ra - :d the farmer: Teri
well," replied the merchant. -keep it
till you'get a dollat's worth, and bring
it to my store and I Hill give you 0 dol
lar bill for it. The farmer pocketed .
the change - and departed: A few
weeks after he - wbrit into the same :
store and bought goods to the amount
of one dollar, ar,d after _paying over. ,
the, identical seventy-five cents, ha
took ont a handful of pumpkin Seed's '
and counted out twctity five of . Tthenr
and, passed thern rifet-tu the merchisat...
"Why," says the merchant', _! . 'w *lift,
this r' "Wal," says the tariner,-"thie.
is my currency, and wtien. yin/ eat iii -
"dollar's worth Ming it out to niyptate
and I will giveyou d,dollei bill for it" ,
—Bellows Fall Tinw:s. , . , - -
_,.........a...------- J
A albott in Indiana is reported to
have thus addressetra prisonerl:teforti :
him, prior to passing itenitee t - r --:
"Prisons* 0 the bar; Providence lox
giteo you: a Agood degiliv... of ' hesOtit
and strength. instead of ,. .which,.yoit
go about the
. :country steitliag dueks;',.
-A. CONCEITED totals fellowleakilinin
uppa an old , lady friend previous_ to
ha departure tor China, was taken '-
somewhat by sarprio Wheti:thagood
naturettlady ad visedthini-to btfealiefil
of himself inthe "floweiy
t an she tinder - A
-stood the .0144016-40 1 .t0r , .-
1 on pnppies.
Tem Clermont., 0.; re . v
amount - 4f popitte. Iran; -lateFy-etit;.-
attar Bataohti onCo(wliteb_twere
tAifted /DROP shingles. 8,9 00 1f"*.r.9f
inch lua.ber, anti 10 wagon-tonttk
_44
• -.,(-1- -
mow D4Altk.--, , Scene. 'ilintittit
ia• the eeller splitting wont*. .. t illtptiteA
Daughiter. Ma in the- parlor _ris - :tit;
Clarence' Fitt Noodle ,the - *betty
ballad or - - who will etire4br vanities ,
new
ApeLtINT Once burst into s rani of
tears, after be-heiti4.ifie etetteeut'dt
kin council, eielsiniing, "I did net
think I suffered half so much tin 4.1
heard it this day."
Tai finsneisti editor rof -- the
York Independent think tLet
base not yet atthii4d theirinairimink
and that they will net do so I - 6r s
time, to aome, ' •
StARBIAQE 19 eelausif,to oe Itegiar.lo l :
am a mere casual tie, ittid ,the '40114.!
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