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(T4t 61obt. HUNTINGDON, PA. MMIITES We aro but minutes—little things ; Each one furnished with sixty wings, With which we fly on our unseen track, And not a minute ever comes back. We are but minutes—each one bears Its little burden of joys or cares; Patiently take the minutes of pain, 'The worst of minutes cannot remain. 'We are but minutes,—when we bring Pew of the drops from pleasure's spring, Taste their sweetness while yet we stay, It takes but a minute to fly away. We are but minutes,—use us well, For how we are used we must one day . tell Who uses minutes has hours to use— Who loses minuths has years to lose. A Romance in Real Life. A romance in real life, of deep plot and thrilling denouement, is just now the chief topic of. gossip in Taunton, Mass. The facts, as related by the Taunton Republican, aro these : It appears that about twenty-seven years ago a Captain Brown, whose fa fully resided in Mattapoisett, was the overseer of the estate of Mr. Henry E Clifton, a wealthy gentleman of Rich mond, Ye. From some cause, which still remains secret, a difficulty arose between Captain B and Mr. C, wherein the former considered himself the ag grieved party. To revenge himself of the supposed wrong he stole. Mr. Clif ton's ii.fant daughter, (then but six weeks old,) on the day she was chris tened. The child was brought to Mat tapoisett, and secretly adopted by Brown and his wife as their own. She was naMcd Julia, and grew to be a wo man. When only sixteen years old she married Mr. Isaac 0. Pierce, a printer, who learned his trade in Fall River. Several years ago they moved to Tanntou, living for a while at East Taunton i but more recently nt the Green. Two children have been born - Daring this long period Mrs. Pierce has lived in blissful ignorance of her high parentage, and Mr. Pierce, who took her for better or worse, had never imagined he was the husband of an heiress.. He abandoned the printer's trade shortly after learning it, and for Recoral: years afterwards earned his daily broad by the sweat of his brow at Mr. Mason's works in this city.- -This is their history, until within a Nery short time; now comes the de. •nouement. Last summer, while Rev. Mr. Talbot of. this city; came acquainted' with Mr. Clifton and wife, who, it appears, at the breaking out of the rebellion, converted their Richmond property into cash and moved to Baltimore. In the emits° of conversation with them Mr T remark. ed upon the striking reseniblance of Mrs Clifton to a lady parishioner of his in Taunton: clothingparticular was t ought of it at first; but on his repeating the remark, Mrs C inquired the age of the lady. On being .told that she was about twenty-seven, Mrs C immediately said to her husband,— "Why, that would just be the age of .our daughter that was stolen." The subject then received their serious at tention. Mr Talbot was taken into their confidence, and inquiry instituted as to the reputed parents of the young lady. Ho returned to Taunton ; had a conversation with Mrs Pierce in re gard to her parentage; informed her of the Saratoga conversation, which led her to ask Mrs Brown, who, she had never doubted, was her own mo ther, if she really were such, at the same time telling her the reason of the inquiry. Mrs B, who had kept the se cret of the child's parentage for twen ty-seven years, was so overcome by the question and the development of facts that she immediately became ill, and died of the heart disease. Before her death, however, she acknowledged that Mrs P was not her own daughter. Captain Brown died a number of years ago. Within a few weeks the affair has developed itself rapidly. Mr and Mrs Clifton and Mrs Pierce have met each other; and the old colored woman who nursed the abducted infant, has recognized Mrs P as their real child by a "mole on her shoulder I" The identity of their long lost daughter having been fully established, Mrs P and her husband have been invited to live with the Cliftons and share in their wealth ; and this they are preparing to do, having broken up housekeeping and disposed of their furniture. The cream of the affair is that Mrs Pierce is an only child, and therefore solo heir ess to an estate said to. be worth hun dreds of thousands if not millions of dollars, or as an old lady friend of Mrs Pierce expresses it, "is trifle less than two millions." CEI WILLIAM LEWIS, Editor and Proprietor. VOL XX. SURPRISED, 'Ticket, sir, if you please P Between dusk and daylight—the warm gold of the sunset sky just fad ing into crimson, and the train thun dered over the iron track like some strocg, furious demon. Carl Silver became dimly conscious of these things as be started from a brief, restless slumber, wherein his knapsack bad served as a pillow, and stared vaguely into the sharp, Yankee face of the ob durate conductor. 'Ticket ! I suppose I've Rttell LI thing about me,' he muttered drowsily, feel ing first one pocket and then the oth er. 'Oh, hero it is ! I say, conductor, are we near New York?' 'Twenty minutes or so will bring us into Jersey city—we aro making pret ty good time.' And the sharp faced official passed on to harass tho next unfortunate man who had neglected to put his ticket in his hat band; while Captain Silver dragged himself into a sitting posture, putting his two hands back of his head with a portentous yawn, and smiled to remember the fan tastic dreams that had chased one an other through his brain during the half hour of cramped, uneasy slumber from which the conductor's challenge had roused'him-"—dreams in which bloody -battle fields and lonely yligllt marcht,„s had blended only with sweet home voices, and the sulphurous breath of artillery had mingled with violet scents from the twilight woods around, and gusts of sweetness from the tossing clouds of peach.blooms'through .. which the flying train shot remorselessly. And then Carl Silver began to think of other things. -'Conductor!' whispered the fat old lady opposite, in the bombazine bon net, and snuff colored shawl. 'Yes'in,' said the man of tickets, stopping in his transit through the cars, and inclining his oar. 'That young man with the military cap, conductor—l hope ho ain't an es claim lunatic dressetriip in soldier's clothes. T. CI beard thinmsovri,t I dolft a• bit like the way ho keeps grinning to lii.at;elf and rubbing his hands together. He's acted queer all day, and I'm trav'lin alone, conductor. The conductor laughed and passed on. The old lady brindled in offended dignity.- Bless her anxious heart!— how was she to know that Cap Silver was only rejoicing in the glorious 'sur prise' he bad in store for his mother and dimpled faced sister that night ! Was it not a year, twelve long months, since, he had looked upon their faces ? And now, Oh. speed on your way, exEress train, through quiet - villa-g-e-s -whciaii-frOdirs-Siiiiiikle all the - gardens with gold. Speed over sloping hills where springing grass sends up a faint delicious smell, and brooks babble un der weeping willows—past lonely churchyards, where the white hands of innumerable grave stones beckon through the gathering twilightand are gone; for every throb of your iron pulse brings one true heart nearer home I Shot and shell have spared him for this hour; fever and pestilence and foul malaria have passed him by; and now— Suppose there should be an accident! He bad heard of such things on light ning routes. Suppose ho should be carried home a dead, mangled corpse, the words of greeting frozen into eter nal silence on his lips, the glad sight sealed forever under the heavy eye lids! Strange that such morbid fancies should never have assailed him in the fire and smoke of Gettysburg, yet now come to him like guests that would not be given when be was within twenty minutes Of home. Would it break his mother's heart; or would she live on ? And would Kato Mariam care 7—Kate Mariam, the blue eyed, shy little fairy who would never look at him save through her brown lashes, and whose coy mouth always made him think of scarlet cherries and roses dashed in dew. 'To think !' ejaculated Carl Silver, bringing down his bronzed fist on the window lodgothat made the glass rat tle ominously and struck a chill to the heart of the old lady in the bombazine bonnet—"to think that I, who would knock down the man who ventured to tell me I was a coward, should bo afraid to say frankly to a slender girl that -I love her ! To think that the very touch of her glove, the sound of her footstep, the rustle of her ribbons, can frighten my selfpossossion away, and make a staring, silent idiot of me ! After all, what is a man's courage worth? There is no use thinking of it I I shall die an old bachelor,.for will never marry any woman except Kate Miriam, and I never shall dare to plead my case with Kate. I wish I hadn't such an - absurd streak of cow ardice through me I' yet Captain Silver's men had told a different tale when ht led them over the bridge in that dreadful charge at Antietam. Cowardice ! There are several interpretations to that word. 'Carriage l"Carriage !"No, I wont liave any carriage I Got away from me, you follows! You are worse than the locusts of Egypt, and twenty Mines as noisy,' cried Captain Silver, energetically elbowing his way thro' the swarm of eager hackmen, who were making night hideous at the foot of Cortland street. 'Do yOu suppose I am going to spoil my precious sur prise with a carriage?' Broadway by gaslight! How strange yet how familiar it seems to the returning exile, with its stately facade of freestone and marble, seem ing literally to rest on foundations of living fire, and its throngs of people, coming and going in everlasting suc cession, like the waves of a never rest ing sea. Carl Silver's heart leaped up in his breast with a quick, oyous throb at the old accustomed sights and sounds. It was good to hear his foot step ringing on ➢Sanhattaness ground No light in the house ! His heart stood still a moment. This was strange—ominous. But then he re. membered that his mother was fond of sitting in the twilight, and dismissed the lingering doubts from his mind.— HOW ItiCkyl tliEdOOr wns Oh the Ititeh; and swung noiselessly open. Hush I not a creaking chirp or clan king stirrup must betray him ; through the old familiar hall he passed, and in to his mother's room lighted only by the ruddy glimmer of a bright coal fire. 'Where the mischief aro they all P ejaculated Captain Silver, under his breath, 'No matter, they'll bo along soon ; meantime I'll wheel up this big chair and take a bask, for the air is chilly, if it is the first week in May.— Wont they be astonished ,though when they come in? Upon my word, things couldn't have happened nicer I Faugh! what a:smell of paint—whitewash, too, as I'm a living sinner! Confound it! I've kicked over a pall of stuff! IF tho The Captain gave an indignant sniff as ho surveyed the desolate scene. 'What comfort a female can find in turning things upside down; and delu ging the house with soap and water twice a year, I can't imagine. Carpets all up—floor damp—curtains torn down—not one familiar object to greet a fellow's eyes after a twelve months' absence from home. Heigh ho! I be lieve I'll light a cigar.' Which ho did, and began to smoke, and meditate. . There was a rustle and a tripping footfall on the stairs. The Captain 101trttro - ntgarand - listened. 'That's Minnie,' said he to-birnsolf— mother doesn't dance up Stairs like that. Ho rose and leaned against the door casing as the dancing feet came nearer and nearer. The next moment he had caught the slight form in his arms, and was showering kisses on cheeks, brow and lips. 'Caught for once, Miss Minnie!' he exclaimed. 'That's to pay you for presuming to clean house without my permission ! No, you're not going to escape Such a piercing scream as she re warded his fraternal demonstrations with'! Carl Silver let go her waist and retreated against the wall with faint idea of breaking through the lath and plaster, and hiding himself in the general ruin. For as truly as he stood there, quaking in his regiment als, the voice was not that of his sister Minnie, but—Kate Mariam ! 'How dare you!' she ejaculated, with crimson cheek and quivering lips,."l'll ring the bell and call the servants if you don't leave the house this instant. "Upon my word, I'm neither a bur glar or an assassin," pleaded Carl, re• covering his self-possession, in a meas ure, as he saw Nato's breathless terror. "It was so dark I couldn't see your face, and I thought it was my sister Many. Don't you know nio, Miss Mariam—Captain Silver !" "You are an imposter," • said Kate with spirit. "Captain Silver is iu the army of the Potomac." "No, he's not; he's hero," urged Carl. "How shall I prove that I'm myself? Kate ! Miss Mariam—" For she had sunk in the chair and began to cry. He knelt beside her with a rough attempt to comfort. "No" she sobbed, "only—only I was so frightened." The little trembling blue eyed thing! Carl Silver bad never soon her iri tears before. No silly assumption of digni ty now—no royal airs, only - brown, disheveled hair, and cheeks like red clover blossoms in a shower. He was the strong one now—howmaturul it seemed to clasp the tiny palms in his strong hand. . "Kate, dearest, I love you with my HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1864. caning 01180 -P,ERSEVERE.- whole heart. Nay, do not be so frigh tened; I would die to save you ono moment's terror. Only tell me that your heart is mine." And when the tears were dried, leaving the eyes like drenched violets and the cheeks flushed brightly, Carl Silver had license to. lie little. fluttering hand in his, and he knew that he was an accepted lover. "But where is my mother and els tor ?" ho asked at length. "And what is the solution of this strange riddle ?" "Don't you know," laughed Kate, "they do not live hero any more?" "Not live here !" "No; have you forgotten that yes terday was the first of May ? We occupy this house now—papa, aunt Millicent and I." "Oh !" quoth Captain Silver. "So they've moved. And I never heard of it. Upon my word they treat mo very coolly." "Ah, but you would have heard of it," said. Kate, "if you bad staid quietly in camp to get your letter, in stead of roving over the country without a word of warning to your friends." "Give mo one more kiss Kate, and I'm off to see them. One more, my betrothed wife. Does it notpeara-likei a dream?" - "And—you are my soldier now," whispered Kato, playing with the gold buttons on his coat with trembling fingers. "Mine to fend out into the battle field to dream and pray for.— Carl, I have always repined that I had no gift for my country, now I can give my best and dearest to aid her cause." _ "Spoken like a soldier's wife, Kate," said Silver, with kindling eyes. you but knew how much better we rough men fight for knowing that wo man's love and woman's prayers en shrine us with a golden, unseen hrmor —nonsense I I'm getting sentimental. Good night." So there were three surprises that May evening—one for Kate Mariam; (wouldn't. you. tUßlie been_ surprised, . - ttemoisotle, to be caught and kisinai in the dark, and not know who the kisser was?) one for Captain Silver, (a very agreeable one, though,) and the old original surprise, if we may so term it, for his mother and sister. nd Carl has cot yet loft off congrat ulating himself that his "leave of ab sence" occurred in the flowery and mi gratory month of May. For if he hadn't blundered into Miss Mariam's house, and kissed her by mistake, thereby bringing matters precipitate ly to a foeu§, tho probabilities are that to this day he never would have mus tered courage to tell her of his love. And when the golden armadas_ of autum leaves flout down the forest brooks, and the blue mist of Indian summer wraps the hills in dreamy light, Carl Silver is coming back to soil Kate Mariam's destiny with a wedding. A FAtIIIIONABLE PARLOR.—Hose many people do we call on from year to year, and know no more of their feelings, habits, tastes, family ideas and ways, than if they lived in Ram schatka ? And why ? Because tho room which they call a front parlor is made expressly so you shall not know. They Sit in a back room—work, talk, read, perhaps. After the servant has let you in and opened a crack in the shutters, and while you sit waiting for them to change their dress and come in, you speculate as to what they may be doing. From a distant region the laugh of a child, the song of a canary bird, and then a door clasps hastily to. Do they love plants? Do they write letters, sew, embroider, crochet ? Do they over romp and frol ic? What books do they read? Do they sketch or paint? Of all these possibilities, a mute and muffled room says nothing. A sofa, six chairs, two attomans, fresh from the upholster's, a Brussels carpet, a centre table, with four gilt books of beauty on it, a mantle clock from Paris, two bronze vases—all these tell you only in frigid tones. "This is the best room,"—only that and nothing more; and soon she trips in in her best clothes, and apologizes for keeping you waiting, asks you how your mother is, and you re mark that it is a pleasant day, and thus the acquaintance progresses from year to year. One hour in the little back room whoro the plants and and Canary birds and children are, might have made you fast friends for life: but as it is, you care no more for them than the gilt clock on the man- B. Stowe. A cat factory bas been discov ered,in Paris. Poor puss was found in all conditions; skins drying for gloves, furs for muffs, and the materi als for dinner delicacies. .-.. ,;:,...... , . 1 '.' t .• i.... :::,:,' 1 t • EDWARD EVERETT ON PRESI DENT LINCOLN. At the banquet given by the author ities of the city of Boston to Captain Winslow and the officers of the Kcar- Barge, on the 14th inst., Mr. Everett being called upon to respond to the toast in honor of the President, made a speech from which we take the fol lowing striking passages : " But I would not have it inferred from these remarks, that the President of the United States, in whose honor you have proposed the toast to which you have called me to respond, is en titled to this mark of respect only in his official capacity. Now that the struggle is past, I am sure that no liberal-minded person, however' oppos ed to him politically, (and you know, sir, that I belong to 'the President's opposition,') will be unwilling that, in performing the duty you have devolv ed upon me, I should say that I rec ognize in him a full measure of the qualities which entitle; him to the per sonal respect of the people,.. who have given him a proof of their confidence, not extended to any of his predeces sors in this generation. It is no small proof of this, that he has passed th• mg!! Ilory ordeal of the recent canvass, and stood the storm of do. traetion,.frein ,_linnfireds . .e,-vigorous and hostile presses, and had so little said about him (I speak now of per sonal qualities) which deserves even an answer. There is no one of his predecessors, not . even Washington, of whom as many and as reproachful things have not been said, unless per haps it be Mr. Monroe, who had the happiness to fall upon 'the era of good feeling,' and who was, in no one qual ity, either as a man or a President, su. perior to Mr. Lincoln. The President gave ample proof of his IntelleCtual capacity when he contested a seat in the Senate of the United States with Judge Douglas. When I sat in the Senate with Judge Douglas, I thought him, for business and debate, the equal 'of the ablest in that body ; but his apeeehes, in *the senatorial canvass, were in no respect superior to Mr. Lincoln's. I believe the President to be entirely conscientious in the discharge of his high trust, and that, under cir cumstances of unparalleled difficulty, he has administered the government with the deepebt sense of responsibili ty to his country and his God. lie is eminently kind-hearted. I am sure he spoke the truth, the other day, when ho said that ho had never wil lingly planted a thorn in any man's bosom. Ho is ono of tin:Li - nest labori ous and indefatigable men in the coun try, and that ho has been able to sus tain himself under as groat a load of -4:1111:41_ co tvfo .aver laid :limn the head or the heart of a living man, is in no small degree owing to the fact that the vindictive and angry passions form no part of his nature, and that a kind ly and playful spirit mingles its sweet ness with the austere cup of public duty. It may seem hardly worth while to notice the descriptions which repre sent the President as a person of un couth appearance and manners. But as Mr. Burke did not think it out of place, in the most magnificent die course in the English 'language, to l i comment on the appearance, manners, and conversation of the exiled French ' princes, I will take the libertito say that, on the only social occasion on which I ever had the honor to be in the President's company, viz., the commemoration at Gettysburg, he sat at table at the house of my friend, David Wills, Esq , by the, side of sev eral distinguished persons, ladies and gentlemen, foreigners find Americans, among them the French Minister at Washington, since appointed French Ambassador at Madrid,•and the Ad miral of the French fleet, and that, in gentlemanly appearance, manners, and conversation, he was the peer of any man at the table. The most important objection urged against Mr. Lincoln is, that personally he lacks fixedness of purpose, and that his cabinet and administration have wanted unity of counsel. I think I shall offend no candid opponent (I certainly am no partizan myself) if I remind you that precisely the same charge, on the same grounds, might be brought against Gen. Washington and his administration. Under fir oninstances vastly loss embarrassin f g, heplaced in his cabinet and kept there, as long as they could bo induced to stay, the two political loaders (Jeffer son and Hamilton) not merely of dif ferent wings of the ewne political connection, but the heads of two radi cally opposite parties. Mr. Monroe, though eleCted himself by an almost unanimous . vote, allowed his cabinet to contain three rival candidates for the succession who differed radically TERMS, $1,50 a year in advance. on almost every public question. It rarely happens in popular government, that any other course is practicable in difficult times. In England, where thetheory and practice of parliamen tary government have been maturing for ages, there has seldom been a cab inet in which the same dissidence has not existed. It does at the present time in the cabinet, of Lord Palmer's ton. At any rate, our friends of the party opposed to Mr. Lincoln, at the late election, must exercise some charity toward him in this respect. It was made up of two wings entertaining diametrically opposite views of tho policy which ought to be pursued in the present difficult crisis of affairs, and no little strategical skill was re quired to produce even a show of uni ty sufficient for the purposes of the election.. But I forbear. The election, iLt all but its formalities, is decided. It is duo to both parties to say that they accept the result, the one its defeat and the other its victory, with moder ation and equanimity. It is in this spirit alone that our common country can be carried through its great trial The , lest hope-of-the-Hostile-leaders - is in our diviSionii. With sure indica tions of a cordial union on our part, 'down their - idle weapons will drop,'" or be wrested from their hands by the indignant and weary masses whom they have betrayed into this desolat ing war." Crocodiles and Monkeys, From Henry Alerabot's travels in Indo-China;wo select the following paragraph " Crocodiles are more numerous in the river at Paknarn Vern than in that of Chantaboun. I continually saw them throw themselves from the banks into the water; and it has fre quently happened that careless fishers, or persons who have imprudently fal len asleep on the shore, have become their prey, or have afterwards died of wounds inflicted by them. This latter has happened -twice during my stay here. It is amusing, however—for ono is interested in observing the hab its of animals all over the world—to see the manner in which these crea tures catch the apes, which sometimes take a fancy to play with them. Close to the bank lies the crocodile, his body in the water, and only his capacious mouth above the surface ready to seize anything that may come within reach. " A troop of apes catch sight of him, _seem_tosnealt together, approaching little by little, and commence" iXiur frolics, by turns actors and spectators. One of the most active or most im prudent jumps from branch to branch, till within a respectable distance from the crocodile, when, hanging by one. claw, and with the dexterity 'peculiar to these animals, ho advances and re tires, now giving his enemy a blow with his paw, at another time only pretending to do so. The other apes,' enjoying the fun, evidently wish "to take a part in it; but the othor branches being too high, they form a sort of chain by laying hold of each other's paw, while any of them who comes within roach of the crocodile, torments him to the best of his ability. " Sometimes the terrible jaws sud denly close, but not upon the auda cious ape, who just escapes; then there aro cries of exultation from the tormentors,who gambol about joyfully. Occasionally, however, the claw is entrapped, and the victim dragged with the rapidity of lightning beneath the water, when the whole troop dis perse, groaning and shrieking. The misadventure does not, however, pre vent their recommencing the game a few days afterwards." FIST SAM.—During the last winter a contraband came into the Federal lines in North Carolina, and was marched up to the officer of the day to give an account of himself, whereupon the following colloquy en sued : "What's your name P' • "My name's Sam." "Sam what ?" "130, sah ; not Sam Watt. I'se jilt Sam." "What's your other name 7" "1 hasn't got no odor name, Sab. Fee Sam—dat's ail." "What's Your master's name 7" "Ise got no massa now ; massa run nod away—yah I yah I rse a free nig ger now." "Well, - -what is your father's and mother's name 7" "Pse got non, Sah—neber had one. I'se jilt Sam—nobody else." "Have not you any brothers and sis. tars 7"' "No, Sah I never had non. No brod der, no sister, no fadder, uo mudder, no massa—nothing but Sam. When you see. Sam, you see all dare is of us. TIMM Gi_lol3 JOB PRINTING OFTIOgi THE" GLOBE JOB OFF.IOV 4 k the most complete of any lit Me ecemit7, r smog il the most ample facilities tor.ptomptly eettln the best style, every variety of JolrPritittak, 01 # 11 os lIAND BILLS, PRQGRAMMES, T3tANI S, POSITS% UARDS, CIRCUL4RS ; i3ALL TICKETS, LABELS, &CI CALL •AXD TIMMY MCIMMI df STORK, AT LEWIS' BOOR, sTATiorttiti & MUSIC STOPS' NO. 24. HORSE FLESH IN PARIS.-01:10 of the secretaries of the society for the tire. tection of animals, at Paris, has giveri a lecture at the Garden of Acclima tion, on the subject of horse-flesh as human food. lie advocates the etti: ployment as butcher's moat of horses, freo from disease, but past work. He calculated that the adoption of this system would yield daily in Paris alone between five thousand and six thousand pounds' weight of wholesome meat, after making a large deduction for diseased.horses. As representative of a humane society, he insisted upon the great mercy it would be to tfie horses to be killed before old age, and consequent ill4reatment, over. took them. There would be no work ing them to death when Mine the cooks compete with costermongert arid cab-drivers. In the course of the lecture, it was mentioned that the cel ebrated Larrey, thrice in the course of his military career, made use of horse flesh as food for sick soldiers, and that in Egypt, especially, he had found it to cheek the progress of a malady which had assumed an epidemied character. In the Crimea, the lecturer stated, two batteries of artillery, fed, - 111 — COriformity - with the advice of Dr.. Bauder's, on the flesh of cast horse', bad been free from the diseases pre vailing in - the rest of the army. Itef erence was made to 'lhe efforts of pro tect ice societies in Germany to extend the use of horse flesh; and it was sta ted that a prosperous trade is carrie'd on in it by butchers in Vienna, Berlin, hamburg, Altona i and other Mlles, where it is sought and relished not only by the poor, but by all Qlasses of EiClelk ety. The lecture over, a tureen of horse soup, and a dish of horse flesh a la daube, prepared by a restaurateur in the Bois do Boulogne, were served up, and were partaken of by a number of persons, including many ladies,•who are related to have expressed high ap proval. A PARIS IN CIDENT.-A young boy of sixteen years of agq_ i was - brought before the police court, Farisroliargell with stealing and begging in the pub lic streets. He was a bright, Ono. looking boy, but very poorly °fail,. and when brought before the judge, he fell upon his knees and begged him not to put Jhim to prison; that his mother was sick and starving, end that alone bad driven him to steely that he could not rind Work ; and if he was imprisoned, the disgrace would kill his pOor mother. The judge seem ed somewhat moved at the boy's story,. but he nevertheless, after hearing the oviden ce, condemned- him to six weeks' imprisonment. As the boy was being led away, a poor woman, pale, covered with rags, and her in disorder, forced her way s thrc-zgh the crowd, and tottering up to the boy, passed one 'arm around him ; and then turning to- the judge, pushing back her long black hair, and exclaimed, "Do you not recognize me ? Thirteen years hate phased since yom deserted me, leaving me alone with my child and my shame; but I have not forgotten you, and this. boy,. whom you have just condemned, is your son ?" You may imagine the effect this an nouncement produced on the by stan ders. The judge, in a loud voice, or dered the woman to be carried from the court, and then left it himself; but joined the poor creature in the street, and carried her and her boy a in a carriage. No one having made just observa tion can deny that the Gospel elevates all who are in anywise obedient to its facts, principles, or spirit. While all other religious debase, Christianity alone has proved itself able to exalt and ennoble its disciples. It has rais ed entire nations out of the horrible darkness of barbarism. It has arous ed the dullest minds to the putting forth of marvellous powers; and it has quickened souls dead in tresspass es and in sins, with the flamed anew life. These are &oats incon.trOartke : They contain the argpmakti-m14.4*.: monstration of the_divit*tpc_ i ttrk` • power of our religion, which no sophi istry can refute. A HUMOROUS writer in the Chicago Post describes how he got out of a bad scrape in a Police Court : The neat morning the Judge of the Police Court sent for me. Went down, and .ho re— mired me cordially. Said he had heard of the wonderful things 14 11 4 accomplished at Bryan's Hall, and w as proud of me. I WAS a promising young man, and all that.. Then he offered a tons : "Guilty ornotiguilty?" I responded in a brief bat eloqUuut_ speech, setting forth the importance of the occasion that had brought us, to, gather. After the ceremonies I loaned the city ten dollars. BILL HEADS!