Dolunteer, uS HEI) EVERY THURSDAY HORNING BRATTON Jc KENNICBY. irruE-souTH iubiiet square:. Two Dollars per year if paid strictly «nVn‘ Two Dollars ana Fifty Cents If paid ihroo months: after ■which Three Dollars These terms will ho rigidly ad in every Instance. No subscription dis iinflii until all arrearages aro paid, unless at SoftboJWitui. ffrofegatottfll ."I'IUMRICII. I WieB,PARKEB JJIBIOH & PARKER, A TTORNEYS a t la w. o on Mala Street, la Marlon Hall, Car f '2i. ISfIS VITBD STATES CLAIM and A I ESTA TE A GEN.VYI M. B. BUTLER, . attorney at law, Jin Story ofluhofTs Building, No. 3 South Ver Street, Carlisle, Cumberland county ons, Bounties, Back Pay, &o„ promptly [cations by mail, will receive Immediate It attention given to the selling or rent- Real Estate, in town or country. In all let inquiry, please enclose postage stamp. IUSCT-tr bei/tzhooveb. [TIOBNJSY-AT-LA W, CARLISLE. PA. Office on SontU Hanover Street, opposite i'i dry goods store. (I,IStfS. H. J. SHBAEEE, Attorney and CouNSKLLon at Law, has removed his Io the hitherto unoccupied room In tho East corner of the Court House. 'C9-1V KENNEDY, ATTORNEY AT LAW Carlisle. Penna. Office same as thato/ aerican volunteer.” LJSM lES H. GRAHAM, Jjt., ATTORNEY AT LAW, 50.11 SOTUH HANOVER BT., CARLISLE, PA. rE-AdJolulng Judge 'Graham's, lit, 1870—tf L. SHEYOCK, Justice of the enco. Oaico No 3; Irvin’s Row, Carlisle. \lSti9-ly GEORGE S. SEARIGHT, Den t. from the Baltimore College oj Denial Ofllcaattho residence of Ills mother other Street, throe doors below Bedford .feima. . IS&S. .... J. S. BENDER, Homoeopathic ys/dnn, Ofllco No, 6, South Hanover st,, t occupied by John Lee, Eaq. i, Ml—ly, - I. Y. REED. Homeopathic Phy iu, has located In Carlisle, Oftlce next St. Paul's Evaugilical Church, West Street. Patients from a distance please io forenoon. 117,1870—dm* VARD shilling; m. d, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, .Vo. 28 East Pomfrct Street, ■ CARLISLE. lliiugwus associated with Dr. Zltzer. In e, for a year or so, and has been praotlo* ickluson township, f6r three years. All ornil business promptly attended to. ■ ,IS7O-Um ’ * 3. B. HIRONS, Attorney and COUNSELOR- AT LA TP, fIFTII STREET, BELOW CHESTNUT, j Cor. Library. I Philadelphia \, isco-iy EHT OWENS, LATE ROOFER. 1 DEALER IN SLATE LANCASTER, PA. ill' Work Guaranteed. Mws Loft at tills Ofllco will receive lailenilou. October 14,1800—1 y. • gats anii tfaps. 3H BUMMER ARRIVAL OF ALL TUB HEW STYLES OP • ATS AND CAPS. lb*crlbor has Just opened at iVo. 15 iVortfi 'Street, a low doors North of the Carlisle Bank, one of the largest and best Stocks land CAPS over offered In Carlisle, ais, Casslmore of all styles and qualities, ms. different colors, and every descrlp !)fi Hats now made. mkard aud Old Fashioned Brush, con n baud and made to order, all warrant e satisfaction. . ' A fall assoi tmont of MEH'S, ■ BOY’S, AND CHILDREN’S, • HATS, io added to my Stock, notions of difl'er- Js, consisting of V AND GENTLEMEN’S STOCKINGS, Suspenders, f lari, Gloves, ‘Peudk, Thread, Sewing Silk; ■. Umbrellas, do :b segars and tobacco ALWAYS ON HAND. roar utook ns I jfpel (Wpieaafng aiiTt'osidcs saving you mo ’ JOHN A. KELLER, No. 15 North Hanovcfr Street. S AND CAPS I OB WANT A NICE HAT OB CAP ? If so. Don't Fail to call on J.B.OALLIO, AO. 29, WESI MAIN STItNBT;^ beaten the finest assortment of ATS AND CAPS (ught to Carlisle. He takes great pleas pvlilng hla old friends and customers, rew ones, to his splendid stock Just re koiu New York and Philadelphia, con ** part of flue 11LK AND OASSIMERE HATS,', na eudloss variety of Hata and Caps o L l of which he will sell at th Prices. Also, his own manufaotur ways on hand, and manufactured to order. ‘the best arrangement for coloring Hata mdsof Woolen Goods; Overcoats, &c., at test notice (as ho colors every wools) and Also, a flue lot ot ■ OBACCO AND CIGARB on hand, Ho doalres to call tho attontio ns woo have CO U NT R Y PURS te pays the highest cash prices for tile tho above number,.hie ,ild Qereela confldont of giving entire satis* boots ana Sfioes. R STKOHM, W. D. SPONSLER, JOHN W. STROHM, w and P OFULA IS., }pHOE, trunk AND HaT STORE. 8 ' BOUTH HANOVER STREET. Oabuhlu, Penn'a. iTo r ?„ B< 2 tUil or Jnhoffß building, T «just opened the largest aud best stock BOOTS and shoes. * n Carlisle, and continue almos knt» 0l Y? such goods In our lino os every bof Cur stock consists lu all kinds and te a l Mis3e B and Childrens’ strong Leather Misses and Childrens’Lasting 5-vi? onß, Cl°vo Kid, Turkey and French J 8 , aud Boys’ Cal/, Buff and Kid 1 xrL’ J , nd Boys’ Call and Buff Congress |.i r ° a 8 and Boys’Lasting Gaiters and film °d 8 snd5 nd Boys’ Calf and Buff Oxford U \VA~ ada^8 * Buskins and Overshoes: lens-n ns ’ G °at, Welt and Carpet Sllp- L. 8 »Boys and Childrens’ Fur omd Bnx- IShetannH S} 2 ? 8 and prices; Traveling wds ifi a , t Valises, together with a lino K hat“'A®} 1 wo will sell to suit the times, Rtur^m 8 an »..m alls profits Wed no eroforo « la Issuing our card, It hjdftp m l i, Qo * c l tlir °ugh our stoqk without ind nn igutlons to buy unless suited In itfvnMfti o, Wo shall always try to deal evfirt oin * a Btr alght forward manner, We L CUsto . lner a full equlvalant forhlS HonniJw? a A I wld avail themselves of °PPonunlly to call and see us. a i, u, BMy BTUOHJd a BPQN3LER. 'i BY BRATTON & KENNEDY. :arus. . IMfscfllanemis. QREAT COMMOTION DRY GOODS, On account of tho reduction In Gold, tho Dry QOods Merchants who understand their business and tho certain signs of tho times, have reduced the price of tholrgoods correspondingly, Thesab sorlbera have Just received from the cities a largo and full assortment of all kinds of FOREIGN & STAPLE GOODS, . which they will sell lower than they have done since 1801, - x SILKS, Wool Do Lalnes, Alpacas, Poplins, Serges, Bom bazines, Tamlso Cloth, Grenadines. FLANNELS OP ALL. KINDS, Plain and Fancy, Linen Table Diapers, Cotton do., Checks, Tickings, Ginghams, Counterpanes, EMBROIDERIES, a hill lino; "White Goods In great variety, , HOSIERY, GLOVES, TRIMMINGS, and a fall stock of DOMESTIC GOODS, Calicoes, Muslins, by tho piece or yard; Grain bags, CLOTHS, CASSIMERS, &c., of all kinds and at the lowest prices. CARPETS, OIL CLOTHS, Druggets, Window Shades, Matting, MILINERY GOODS. of all kinds, Including Ladles and Childrens Hats and Sundowns, and the best assortment and best qualltyof fine Uibbons ln»tho county.— .Kid Gloves; (best make,) Jewelry, Fkncy Goods and Notions In great variety. This MAMMOTH STOCK OP GOODS tno largest in this section of country, Is-offered a. prices that defy competition, and all wo ask laa fair examination by good judges of goods to satisfy the public that this is the place to buy and save money. LADIES' UNDER WEAR, A nice assortment of Ladies’ Under Clothing very liandsomely stitched and trimmed •at reasonable prices. WOOL taken in exchange for goods, BENTZ & GO. At the old Dry Goods stand established Feb* ruary Ist, 18-10. March 31.—70 THE GREAT MEDICAL DISCOVE RY! DR. WALKER'S CALIFORNIA VINEGAR BITTERS, More than 500,000 Persons bear "testimony to their Wonderful Curative Effects. WHAT ARE THEY? TAEY ARE NOT A VILE FANCY DRINK Made of Poor Rum, Whiskey, Proof Spirits, and Refuse Liquors, doctored, spiced, and sweetened to please the taste, called “Tonics,” “Appetiz ers,” “ Restorers,”, «fcc., that lead the tippler on to drunkeness and ruin, but are a true medicine, made from the native Roots and Herbs of Cali fornia free from all Alcoholic Stimulants. They are the GREAT-BLOOD PURIFIER and LIFE GIVING PRINCIPLE, a perfect Renovator and Invigorator of the System, carrying off all poi sonous matter, and restoring the blood to a healthy condition. No person can take these Bitters according to Directions, and remain long ftnwell. 8100 will be given for nn incurable case, pro vided the bones are not destroyed by mineral poisons or other means, and the vital organs bb yond the point of repair. For Inflammatory and CUronlo Rheumatism, and Gout, Dyspepsia, or Indigestion, Bilious, Remittent, and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases or the Blood, Liver, Kidneys, and Bladder, these Bitters have been most successful. Such Diseas es are caused by Vitiated Blood, which Is gener ally produced by derangement of the Digestive Organs. Cleanse the Vitiated Blood whenever you find its impurities bursting through the skin in Pim ples, Eruptions or Sores: cleanse it when you tind it obstructed and sluggish In the veins cloanso It when It is foul, and your feelings will tell you when. Keep the blood pure and tho health of the system will follow. PIN, TAPE, and other WORMS, lurking in tho system of so many thousands, are effectual ly desttoyedand removed. * , In Bilious, Remittent,and Intermittent Fevers these Bitters have no equal. For full directions read carefully tho circular around each bottle, irlnted in four languages—English, Gorman, •’reuch and Spanish. J. WALKER. Proprielor, 32 Commerce St., N. Y. R. H. MCDONALD & CO., Druggists, and general Agents, San Francisco and Sacramento, California, and 32 and 31 Com merce St., New York. . • SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS & DEALERS. March 17,1870-3 m # . QARPETS! CARPETS!! FIIVSIMIt & WEISBII, CAR PE T STORE, No. 23 East. Main Steeet, In the BENTZ HOTEL. The largest and cheapest assortment of CARPETS, OIL CLOTHS, MATTINGS, WINDOW SHADES, LOOKING GLASSES, MAT AND " CARPET CHAIN’S' always on hand. Wo aro prepared to : furnish mrcuasera with all grades of'Carpets at the owest'rates, March 17, IKO-Sm 1870. 1870 SPRING AND SUMMERIMPOTA TION. RIBBONS, MILLINEJBY AND STRAW GOODS ■ARMSTRONG, GATOR & GO. IMPORTERS ARD JOBBERS OF BONNET, TRIMMING «fc VELVET RIBBONS Bonnet Bilks, Satins and.'Velvets, . Blonds, Nets, Crapes, Ruches, Flowers, Feathers ORNAMENTS, STRAW BONNETS AND LADIES’ HATS, TRDniED AND UNTBIMMED, SHAKER HOODS, &a. 237 and 239 BALTIMORE3TREET, BALTIMORE, | MD. Offer the Jargest Stock to bo found in this Country, and unequalled In choice variety and the latest Parisian nov elties, . > Orders solicited, and promptattontlon given. Fob. 21, IWMin* TjIGGS! EGGS!! EGGS MI "From light Brahma fo*is, pea combed, strictly pure from Imported stock. s 00 PER DOZEN. No order will be booked unless accompanied by the cash. A few pairs for sale. Sl.OO PER |PAIR. A few Half-Breed Italian Bees for sale in movable comb hives—cheap. Ad dress O.U.HOPPfiB. P. O. Box 147, Carlisle, Ira. March 3,1870- pFEIL & CO. PRODUCE COMMISSION MERCHANTS, No. 10 North Water Street, Philadelphia . Solicit consignments of all kinds of PRODUCK Also, Butter. Eggs. Poultry, Ac, Ac. Philadelphia References—N. O. Mussolman, Esq..Pres't Union Banking Co., Philadelphia; Messrs. Alloa A Ollflbrd, and Messrs. Henry. Sloan A Son. „ . N.B.—Please send for Weekly Price Current .reo of charge. March 10, l»7o—Cm A GREAT CHANCE FOR AGENTS, 875 to 8200 per mon-pi. Wo want to employ a good agent In every County In the United States on commission or salarv to Introduce our World Renowned Patent White Wire Clothes Lines; will last a hundred years. If you want profitable and pleasant employment, address R. S. BUSH A CO.. Manufacturers, 75 William SU, N, Y., or 10 Dearborn St., Chicago, _ April 7,1870—4 W » * . . • • ~ , 1 , 4 4: . . • . i ti . s ; ; • i 7 - . pi . 11' . . . I . ~ . • . ' .... '. ../. P .:,. , 4 . 1111 : 1 .,,,,‘ • , . Y i* [...' ~ . .. ~.. .. 111 ,.•• f..... -t • • ~ . ..,111 . . • . . . CARLISLE, WEISER. ~iS~IY%YI~IYA'b~o '•MY TBICMPH.” BY JOHN G. WHITTIER, 6 living friends who love mo / O dear one gone above mo! O careless ofother fame, Heave to you my name. Hide It from Idle praises, Save It from evil phrases; Why, when dear lips that spake It, Are dumb, should strangers wako It ? v Lot tho thick curtlu fall; I.bettor knowthau all How little I have gained, How vast tho uuattalned. Not by the page word-painted Let life bo balncd or sainted : Deeper than written scroll The colors of tho soul. Sweeter than any sung My songs that found no longue; ‘ Nobler than any fact My wish that failed of act. Others shall sing tho song, Others shall write tho wrong,— Finish, what I begin, And all I fail to,win. What matter, I or they ? Mine or another’s day, ■So tho right word bo said And life tho sweeter made? Namaurora, RETRIBUTION, BY BEVERLY. “A haughty spirit coraeth before a fall.” “ It was an ancient looking house, with its great deep windows, clumsy stone steps, and dark, heavy doors; nay, there was about it more than a look of olden days. Sombre almost to dismalness, was that old, dust-covered, time-stained home of the proud-spirited, high-temper ed f exclusive Graildervills. It had been handed down along with the Grander vill plantation, from sire to son, for seve ral generations ; yet so rich end inexhaus tible is the alluvial valley of the Mississ ippi that the GrandevlU' plantation was as black and loamy iu soil at the time of which we write as when first the forest of heavy cane was cut off*,,generations back, to let’iu the fructifying.rays of old Sol. " . Richard Grandervill had sprung from an overbearing, high-tempered, proud race of sires. The family had been per petuated since its lirst settlement in Lou isiana by onlyone son to each generation, until Richard took the place'of bis fath er in the important matter of extending the family to another lino of Grander vills. The fickle dame, Fortune, then set her mind upon the,extinction of his name; and to him was born only a daughter, who, notwithstanding a sec ond marriage, was the only 'child ever given him. This fair, chubby little creature at once became the especial aversion of her father. The handsomer she-grew the more he.seemed to disliko'lier, for in truding her* feminine form in 'place- of tho true Grandervill, the male heir, whom .he* regarded as the right of the family, out of which she had. cheated him. No matter how rapidly she devel oped into a strength of character like his own, tboro wao ho getting ovai* Ifc. no for giving the fraud practiced upon him p. t ler coming into, tho world. Ritter rail ings against the-loving mother for pre senting him with a daughter soon chaf ed the high spirited life out of her. The second wife had married him for his money and had no tyanuical love, lashing her into discontent; so lived on iu spite of him. The chi|d whom he reared by oppres sion and storms of passion, after growing to womanhood, was not permitted to know a man whom he had not intro duced- to her; for he had determined to wed her to one who .would, by an act of Legislature, accept with her hand.and fortune the name of Richard Grander vill. When was Cupid known to fleo the wrath of tyrannical father? He af fects shady bowers, rippling streams, •flowered dolls, moonlight and starlight; but defies bolts, bars and angry mand ates. The morning was clear and beautiful, with varying shades of rich.golden and amber. t&Jp softly resting upon waviug cane, graceful corn and branching cotton for miles of level earth around the plan tation, when Mrs. Grandervill seated her self at -the breakfast table, paler than usual. ‘Where is Myrua, madamo?' ‘The servant tells mo she Is not iu her room. I have sent out around the grounds to have her looked for.' This answer came forth faintly, and she trembled as she gave the reply. ‘How dare she absent herself from the table? I will teach her what it is to pre sume to violate the rules of my house.' From garden to orchard, from orchard to.lawn, his augry csll rang throughout; no answer came; he flew back to the house, from“ room to room her name sounded loudly and violently ; -his own voice echoing back, gave a mocking re ply *, up the stairs he went three stops at abound. Out from Myrna’a chamber Mrs. Grau dervill came, holding a folded paper in a cold, trembling hand; a stony white ness settled upon her pain-distorted fea tures. ' Without award theenraged fath er caught it from her. , ‘Father: If I was 100 weak to resist your tyranny, I have at least outwitted you and thwarted . the dearest purpose of your life. Ere you get this I shall no longer be a Grandervill* ‘lt is useless to follow me; oven should you ovettako mo you will meet a map more powerful than yourself, and quite as deterrainedr , • ' ‘lf X regret anything in this act it is for my weak, submissive stepmother, for I verily believe that you will now kill her simply for being a woman. If she dies suddenly I shall surely ferret out the cause. Your dutiful daughter, ‘MYRNAv' The fiend glittered in Iris eyes, as he crushed the paper hard in his hand and muttered, from betweeu sot teeth and livid lips: . • . , 'Yes, I well pursue her. aud if she has married against my .will, I will slay her before his very eyes.’ The great brawny arm outstretched in space, the clenched fist shook as if before his victim ; the chest heaved heavily ; the eyes glared wildly and fiercely bright, then rolled back in their, sockets, with a leaden hue glazed upon them, and he dropped as one dead, save the white froth oozing from his purple lips. Still was tho house, as the wife had him silently borne to a bed. She never, left the room until the physician said he would recover; then a few hours rest and she was back to wait, watch and tend: but the.mind only was with her duty, the soul was watching a proud, haughty, vindictive woman madly adrift upon life’s tempestuous sea. Three days old the hard, cruel man hover between life and death; the death of such a muu is Invested with peculiar horror; a dark pall seemed wrapped about the house during those days ol un certainty ; even tho fun loving negroes walked lightly aud whispered low until the crisis had passed. ~ . . ..Wo leave tho home that Myrna had deserted, and some three years after, we turn to a cottage situated in tho outskirts of tho Cresent City. Rare Jlowera and shrubs surrounded It in such taste that fancy might have been excused for sup nosing that Venus had taken a moon light gambol with tho boy Cupid through tho grounds, and every foottread had called to life some exquisite beauty* Tho interior of tho cottage was voluptuously luxurious, with its groat arm-chairs, poft, springy lounges,. Turkish-loolUug 0 CARLISLE, PA., THURSDAY. APRIL 21, 1870 ottomans, turfted carpets and rich, dark, damask hangings; while a grand piano, harp, guitar and flute gave evidence that its occupants wore votaries of pleasure, who knew well how to enjoy the luxu ries of wealth. It was tho middle of April, when in the Bouth every hue of nature is as deli cately fresh as tho golden tinges of tho early rising sun ; but upon tho night of which wo speak, a drizzling rain had been sp long falling, that damask hang ings and tufton carpets could not wholly close out a" damp chill. The bouse was as still as if no living creature was with in ; a woman sitting in the luxurious enclosure of one of those great arm-chairs, there seemed no living thing to add life to the elegant apartments. Alone she sat, with the daily paper crushed in her band, an open envelope and a check for a thousand dollars lying on the table; no line came with it, only, tho paper, with a short paragraph mark ed in great brackets. Letters, words, sentences and paragraph seemed burning in upon her brain and festering in her heart. It was a fearful thing to look upon the violent workings of tuat hand some face; the glands of the throat swol len out rohnd and full, the delicate veins enlarged to great purple cords, the mouth as white and fixed as marble.— Now and now the chlist heayed and fell, but no groan, escaped her lips, only a hissing sound as the breath camo and went through tho clinched teeth. Great God, was she woman or fiend ? She arose; herstep was even and firm, her frame had uo more bend or curve than had it been wrought of iron., Bbe moved to a bed iu an adjoining room and stood over as fair a boy as ever gave back a rippling laugh to caress of mother, but no softened light stole over the rigict features; only a convulsed shudder pass ed through the stately frame. She turn ed away, drew about her a cloak and hood and went forth into the chill rain— went forth into the dark, pitiless night, heeding only the black storm within her own heart. CHAPTER 11. Yon palatial looking residence,’ within a few blocks .of Canal street, vies with • the enchantment of the East in elegance. To-night, a blaze of light throughout the apartments reflects from mirrored walls, room after room,’crowded with guests.— The house is thrown open for the first reception, after their return from Europe, of Edward Durant, and bride. The mar riage of these two in high life, six months before, gave the fashionable world of New Orleans nine days of gossip, and now they had returned to tyke the lead in that same New Orleans world.— Strange to tell, true happiness crowned the blessings of wealth and position, for love mingled into one two lives that marrirge had united. The night was a ; aoft, balmy October night. In an inter nal between the dances, the fair .young bride stole a moment from the crowd to pause before a window for air. Edward Durant stepped to her side. ‘Darling are you weary ?' ‘Slightly. 7 Concealed from observation by the ft Ids ofa heavy curtain, he placed a hand on her shoulder and drew her head to his breast. For an instant she rested there,, when her heart gavea quick bound and she started forward, pale and tremb ling. ‘What is it, my precious wife ? What a timid little bird you are. Surely nothing can harm you when I ain by you.* • ‘Oh, husband, that same horrid fuco peered at us from over the railings that frightened me so the night before our de porfnro {Vkf TT.nvnpn. Who oan- shn hft? Such a handsome, yet fiendish looking woman I never before saw. I am sure her face will haunt me to the Inst day of my life. 7 , r The husband was ghastly white, and his Jlipswero closely pressed as he again, drew her caressingly to his breast; but the deep shadow of the curtain conceal ed it from the frightened wife, and when bespoke the voice was al mostlightin tone: . ‘Dearest, how nervous you are! I have not seen the face either time, but T shall watch until Ido, and if she bo flesh and blood, I will soon find the means of rid ding you of her. . Bo cheer up; feel that I am ever guarding you, and fear noth ing; come back to tberefreahment-room ami . take a glass of wine. Our. guests must not see yoii so pale and agitated, 7 They soon joined their guests. The dreaded face no more, awoke the fears of the young bride, and at the close of the entertainment she bade adieu to guests with the usual vivacity. Two. weeks after, as twilight drew her soft,” dusky, mantle over the earth, ere the dazzling gaslights eclipsed her gen tle, dreamy light, the young bride walk ed the porch of her elegant homo’, while a bright smile played over her beautiful features, lighting them up with a fresh brilliancy, seen only when given by a full joy of the heart. Thegato-latch clicked, and a tall, gaunt form, bent with age, a stray gray lock falling out from a black sun-bonnet, slowly entered. ‘Lady, will you buy some candy? It is very nice. You cannot get like it any where else. I make it myself. 7 As the dainty little basket opened to display tbe snowy bits of candy, Ella Durant’s heart, out fulness of its own happiness, was* touched with ex ceeding pity for. the distress of poverty, and calling for a fruit salver, emptied the entire contents of the basket, and drop ped in it as it was held out.to receive the pay, a llve-dollar bill, The old woman only bowed her head low in token of thanks. Mrs. Durant thought her heart -was too full for words, and was glad to escape them. Could her eyes have fol lowed her beyoud the corner nod seen her drop the note from the basket, with a proud scorn curling a fine mouth, she would have changed her opinion toques tioning astonishment, as the erect figure, no longer bent itself to the alow steps of age, but hurried forward with all the elasticity of youth. ' Gaunt her frame was,, but seemed rathor as if terrible pas sions or suffering had stolon away the flesh than age. The strange woman en tered beneath a low roof in the outskirts of ITenchtown; went straight back, and disrobing herself, placed the faded black dress upon the open grate fir© and stood watching the curling smoke and, ascend ing blaze until the.last vestige was ashes; then applying a bellows to the level of tbe coals, blow them up the chimney, then the black bonnet, and next the .basket, and nothing remained to toll the J tale in case she was traced-even tbe gray wig was a charred cinder. Had the young bride seen all this, she would not have continued to walk up and .down, slowly eating the candy, and try ing to discriminate as to its peculiar fla ■ vor. Two hours after the house'was in In. frightened commotion, and Edward ffiurant hung in speechless agony over tho writhing form of his beautiful young wife. Oh! it was terrible to look upon that lovely creature tossing in the dread ful distortlonsof pains, which the strong est might not bear; and see death surety stamping itself upon the face as dear to his eyes as the sunlight to flowers. Neither love nor wealth might stay tho icy hand. Morning saw the husband bereft of his young wife, bereft of all that made life worth having. The physicians said iho died of chole ra, and tho wretched husband upbraided . hlmsell that he had not left tho city with the first appearance of the disease. The announcement gave tho servants a fright, and two fled tho house at once A youth, whoappeared to bo about eigh teen or nineteen, offered to supply* their’ place; averring that ho could do us much us they both did. Tho need was immediate, and notwith standing that white servants wore then rarely employed, tho housekeeper took him witlvbut few questions. Hia work was readily and well done, yet he found time to be’ often present with tho muster. Hud Edward Durant been less absorbed in grief, lie would have noticed that’the hoy stood back in tho shadow of the room, and seldom spoke j and now and then, as ho passed 1 beneath tho light, bo might have aeon strange workings of passion on tho hand some, bo.vish face. • Loug after the neighborhood was quiet in sleep, Edward Durant stole silently to tho side of his dead. Ho cast himself upon tho lifeless body and pressed warm, living kisses Upon cold lips that had never before refused to give back tho loving pressure to his touch; ho took the dead face between hla bauds and laid his cheek down upon the mar ble flesh; ho sank upon his knees and tried to pray, but his heart rebelled. ‘My God! my God! why hast thou for saken me?* was all that his heart would utter; and the exclamatldn came wild ly forth.upon the stillness of the night.— A voice low and husky with passion came as if from the dead: ‘Because you betrayed and forsook an innocent woman; becauafc you deny your own child. 1 •He started to his feet aud glared senrchingly around; no living creature was seen ; bo strode through every part of tho room; he looked in adjoining rooms; no one was found.’ He seemed alone in all the house, with his could not enter that room again Sshe voice had been too distinct, too vindic tive. Surely the dead, even his own loved wife, had become the avenging angel of mother and child. Wildly he pressed his cold, clammy hands over his mad brain ,aud fled to trfe most remote corner of the house. Morn ing came—the dead was burled from his sight. He could not return to the homo re cently so dear tohim, so wandered forth anywhere out in the open air, but go where he would the avenging spirit fol lowed, and in some quiet hour of the night upbraided him with his desertion of a betrayed woman and her innocent child. Conscience became a living tort ure- His brain seemed maddening; his heart was one burning passion of re morse ; , yet ho would have preferred death to taking that woman to his heart as wife after Ella had rested there in al her chaste purity and sacred, wifely trust. Ho rarely remained in the house; he only seemed to-live while out of doors. . He was passing from street to street to check the slow fever burning out his life, when a light hand was laid in a firm grasp upon his arm. !Edward Durant, come with me ! 7 was hoarsely whispered in his ear. Ho would fain have torn uimocU nway, but a spoil seemed laid upon him that he could not resist; light ns that touch was it seemed like a grip of Iron upon his arm, he could but obey. Rapidly.she drew him on, on far down in Frenchtowu. i Low was tho roof she passed him under; on she led him to a little bed-side; a hoy, beautiful, with the. promise of manly glory upon every feat ure, lay, with his dark tresses thrown back upon the snowy pillow, the other across the little chest, and a smile, as lovely as if caught from Heaven, playing fitfully and dreamily over his features. — The picture was one for a Raphael’s pen pil. ‘Look upon your boy, Edward Durant and tell me if I, his mother, may yet bear your name ? If ho'may go forth in life from his father’s roof, bearing his father’s name and inheriting his fortune ? Answer me, Edward Durant, as if God himself questioned you. If .yon say yes, I will wait one year. Nor need our mar riage be binding upon you save before the world ; nay I will have myself re ported dead and leave the countryi You know It is as easy to have a mock fune ral as a mdfek marriage ; and you'remem '"“'lyoii carried that t hrnnn iVm ‘A deserted woman will find no diin culty in hiding herself from the world, once, and for all* will you in tho eight of God and man, make me your lawful, wife, and acknowledge your son before the world ?’ Hecastoue look upon her, and turned away. Slie was answered as decidedly ns if he had spoken. ' • < ■ Then let your life bo thrice cursed with murder.' Quick as thought she drew a short, keen dagger and plunged it Into the babe’s breast, and sprang back from the grasp of Durant, exclaiming: ‘Live, wretch, and die every hour of your existence! 7 and plunged the dog ger deep-in her own heart. , Edward Durant staggeied back, and fled into the street, a gibbering mad man. Never from that hour did one ray of reason.sparkle from his eyes. The following morning, as the popu lace crowded to the scene of tho murder ed mother and child, a stranger, fiom the country, joined the- concourse, and entered beneath the low roof, looked upon the dead, and muttered, in hard drawn breaths: ‘Oh! -the boy, too! 7 Tho face darkened, and th© eyes glared; but hi# will was' mighty. The blood of fhq Grunderyill’s must be spared this sbnmo, and by its powerful effort, that which coursed in his veins was forced down from the head, and.made to circu late evenly. A few words whispered among the crowd; money freely and judiciously dispensed,and itsoon dispens ed. Money is potent; afew hours sufficed to bury tho dead. Sosuddeuly andsilently went the crowd; so quietly was borne forth the dead in oue coffin, that suspi cion was soon allayed among the curi ous. The mornjng papers only announced that an unknown woman was. found dead in No. , street , Frenchtown, That afternoon the stranger took passage for some miles up the river; the next morning Richard Graudervill was found dead in his berth. Dame Fortune had tri umphed.-’•Not a living soul remained to hand down thenamoof the Grandervills; nay, not one in whom flowed tho proud blood of that old family. The haughty spirit had its fall; and wrong and oppression its retribution. A youno gentleman happening to sit at a church In a now adjoining one in which sat a young lady for whom he con ceived a sudden and violent attachment, was desirous of entering into a courtship on,the spot, but the place not being suit able for a formal declaration, the case suggested tho following plan : * He politely handed his fair neighbor a Bible, opened, with a pin stuck in the following text: Second Epistle of John, verse 5: ’ • . “And now 1 beseech thee, lady, not as though I wrote a new commandment unto thee, but that which we bad from tbe beginning, that wo love one another.” She returned it, pointing to the second chapter of Ruth, tenth verse: “Then she fell on her face, aryl bowed herself to the ground, and said unto him: Why have I found grace in thine eyes, that thou ahouldst take knowledge of me, seeing that I am a stranger?” He returned the book, pointing to the 13th and 14th verses of the Third Epistle of John: “I had many things to write, but I will not with pen and ink write unto thee. But I trust I shall shortly see thee, and we shall speak face to face.” From tho above interview a marriage took place. An allegory.—The old man was toiling through-tho burden and heat of the day. Jn cultivating his field with his own hands and depositing the promising seeds in tho fruitful lap of yielding earth. Suddenly there stood before him, under the shade of u huge linden tree, a vision. The old man was struck with amaze ment. .T am Solomon, 7 spoke the phantom, Ju a friendly voice. ‘ What are you doing hero, old man?' ‘lf you are Solomon. 7 replied the ven erable laborer, ‘ how can you ask this ? In my youth you sent me to an ant; I saw its occupation, and learned from that insect to be industrious and to gather.— What I then learned 1 have followed out to this hour.’ ‘You have only learned half your, les son,’ replied the spirit. ‘Go attain to the ant, and learn the rest in tho winter of your life, and to* enjoy what you have gathered up.— From (he German. t 13 Tin; RENEGADE'S DOO.V. A STORY 6f COLORADO. ' A atorm bad raged all day ; the bellow ing blnst carrying with it dirt and fine particles of sand, until the cloud was not only blinking, but till it was next to im possible for a human being to venture from under covtr without having the very flesh lacerated or peeled from his bones. Tents lay scattered and rent In every direction, and even some of the ‘dobio’ quarters bad been leveled with their mother earth. Indeed, Fort Sedg wick presented much such an appearance as might have been expected had a band of Sioux Indians made a successful as sault upon the place. As the darkness came on the wind ceased to some extent, and then a steady storm set in, almost as terrible as was the sand-tempest of the day. It was densely dark, and this darkness was fa vorable to the movements of a savage band, who had lurked In a shallow ra vine behind the bluffs, back about two miles from the Platte river. The bugles at the fort had just sounded the tattoo and taps, when one of the baud referred :to arose from his prostrate posi tion ; and as he did so, gave vent to a I coarse and mocking laugh. Immediately after, a small light shot up. He had ignited a match for the pur pose of lighting his pipe; and the brief flame, as ho protected it from the wind with his fift cap, revealed his features. He was hideous in the extreme; and,- although painted like a savage, it was.i easy for an experienced eye to detect the I fact that he was not one. Then his voice | and words were another proof; for turn ing around he spoke thus: ‘Mou, you will understand that our work must be quickly performed. At the first alarm those whom I have desig nated will dash Into the quarter-master's, (ho sutler's and commissary's. I have business at the commander’s quarters; and this I shall perform alone. I shall be successful; .and if you are not equally so, the fault will bo your own—not mine. In all casqs of this kind you rhuatreaolve that you will succeed or die. and the you will never know the meaning of failure. Come, and bo cautious,! 7 . Some twenty or thirty dark forms were seen to arise as if out of the ground, apd then they silently took their way down the bluffs toward tho fort. Soon, how ever, the band .separated, and every one of the number proceeded" on warH alncly. Those who had.received their instruc- tions from the master spirit simply con tented themselves with gaining certain Snsitions, and avoiding every sentinel. V)t so with the leader. When this person bad arrived within a hundred yards of the hospital ho paused and stood silently surveying the camp. Here and there were dim lights, butbar racksand tents generally were wrapped in gltfom. After a time the man muttered: ‘Everything favors me to-night, and I feel like a tiger. Oh, shall I succeed? If I do. not, death will be tho only thing which will prevent me. Do I love that girl ? I scarcely know, I have strange feelings when in her presence. Some thing of the past domes up before me ; but the recollection is like a dim dream. I am puzzled. Many is. the time I have felt an inclination to spring upon her, even as the tiger would upon the young fawn, and rend her to pieces; and then I have felt again as though I must hold her to my breast, and weep. Curses upon It —what is this? Hang mo if I don’t think that a tear drop has already started from my eyes and dampened my cheek. Pshaw I Mad Leon the Rene-- gade weep! Preposterous. It Is only u moUfld tpft-dron—molted . it*. with my warm cuuok, tfut nover shall my heart be melted. 7 Slowly did the renegade now advance and as he apnroached the hospital he crouched lower and lower, until he actu ally crawled upon his belly like a ser pent. Now ho reached the building, and then lie clung,closely to Us walls, still retaining hia prostrate position. It was but a moment after that a foot fall was heard, and a guard passed the villain, who was not discovered. Tho soldier was closely wrapped in his great coat, while lie carried his carbine in such a manner as to protect it from tho damp. He dirt ■ not even dream that death was hovering so near him. A moment after, ho .turned, and then paused exactly at the place where the renegade was lying. But quick as the lightning's flash he.was burled to th.e earth and the dark monster was upon his breast. A sharp cry arose; and then it became a death wail, merg ing into n moan and silence, fora huge knife was plunged into the quivering breast of tho guard, and his life gushed forth with his crimson gore. The murderer had clutched the throat of his victim in order to prevent an out cry from the dying man, and-hud only partially succeeded. He now raised his head and listened attentively, but no sound gay© indication that tho voice of the soldier, hod attracted attention. — « Raising tho corpse in his arms, the reue- • ,gnde bore him some distance to tho rear, and .deposited him in the dead weeds. Doing so, he exclaimed *• ‘A good general always leaves an open ing for retreat in case of defeat, and [ will do so by disposing of Svery guard in this direction. There is but one more to deal with, I think, and .he is behind the quarters of the general commanding.’' •Mad Leon crept forward as before and soon the soldier referred to shared tho same fate as the first; but his cry was louder, and was not entirely unheeded, for a window, where a light had been burning, was thrown up and a voice asked: ‘What is the matter down there? 7 Tho dying man struggled hard-tospeak; but this the renegade prevented, while he answered himself; ‘Nothing that I am aware of.’ ‘But I heard a cry. 7 ‘So did I; it was one of the prowling coyotes. 7 No further Question was asked, and tho villain saw that tho light which he had before observed had disappeared. He knew that, tho strong wind had ex tinguished it, as tho window was raised, and he muttered : ‘May the devil favor me, and leave that opening before he gets another light, for I can then enter. 7 But tho devil did not so favor him. The sash came down with a crash, aud the jingle of the glass told that some of the panes had been broken by the fall. This was of some importance and the villain know it. The guard once quiet, Leon cautiously mounted a shed and crept to the window whore he had heard tho voice. Now he could hear voices, for there wore two persons in conversation. Applying his ear to one of the broken panes, he listen ed. He could hear every word distinct ly, aud tho blood ran like lightning through his veins as tho sentences wore understood by him. • The voice of a female exclaimed through her sobs: ‘O, Harry Graham, is It possible that you tell mo this? I shall die. Ob, I cannot live, for you no longer love me, 7 ‘I only love you deeply,. Marianna, 7 was the reply. ‘Then why do you tell mo that I can never be your wife ?’ ‘I cannot explain —I dare not;’ ‘You must, if you would not see mo fall dead at your feet, or live to become u rnauiac.’ - ‘Marianna, I feel that you have a right to demand an explanation, and this much I will tell you. Something which oc curred years ago renders it necessary, that, as a just avenger, I should kill your father. Can Ido this aud then wed his chlhl ?* ’ . , ‘Why, then, did you over win my Jove?’ ‘I was only Informed of the facts with regard to you Ihjs day, uud I hastened at once to toll you us much us I dare. •Harry, you must toll mo all. I have never known my father; and it’ his crimes have been that ho deserves death, I cannot blame tho hand that strikes. For the love of heaven tell me ul!. 7 - ‘I will. Your father’s name—so old Brant, who has had you in his keeping VOL. 56.—N0. 45. from Infancy, tolls me—was Paul Black* burn. He became . the most deadly foe of ray own parents, and lor no other rea son than that ho was rejected by my mother. Ho swore the most deadly ven geance ; but those who knew him did not believe there was any danger. 1 can well remember the night of that revenge, however. The Ware of the flames which consumed my home, is before me still; and the yells of the red demons led by Paul Blackburn, are yet ringing in my ears. The ghastly and bloody forms of my parents are before me; and evoh the exultant words of their murderer are not forgotten.’ 'Ob, horrible’ And ray father was this monster ?’ ‘He was. And this is not all.’ ‘Let mo know the worst.’ ‘After my father’s marriage, your own also took a wife, but his constant brutal treatment of her proclaimed his hatred. Who interfered to save his victims, and with a single blow ho struck her lifeless to the earth.’ *Hq murdered hia own wife—my moth-, er?’ I ‘He did,' ‘But how were you saved—how wns I saved ?’ ‘Hero is a strange part of my story. I was a boy of seven years, and you an in fant of six months. I remember seeing you fall from your mother's-arms as she was stricken dowm I remember seizing you in my own and crawling into a place of concealment by tbo river a side. You were taken from mo some ufter by old brant, and although ! had forgotten ’ him and yourself, I could not forget those events. Only to-daj v , as I before informed you, the old man gave me these particulars.’ ‘Ts that cruel father—that .blood-stained man—yet alive’.” ‘Yea, and I have just learned that, too. I must seek him out for i shall never rest until I have met him face to face, and methim as the'avengerof my slaugh tered parents and desolated home.’ The candle had been relighted, bdt it only cast a feeble'ray around the apart ment. Still it shone full upon the faces of the speakers, one of whom was ayoung officer, and the other a iovolygirl of some eighteen years of ago. The villain out side the window bad gradually become 1 more and more excited, and finally ex tended his hand through the opening; ho pushed back the spring and raised the sash- fin nmiti/Mialv harl t-hio that the lovers,did not observe the intru der until ho leaped to thVir aides, hla eyes blazing with an unnatural light, and bis already bloody kuifo clutched to strike.' Upon beholding him the young officer leaped to his feet and asked : ‘Who are you ?.’ ‘I am known as Mad Leon, the Rene gade,’ was the firm response. ‘And wbat do you want here?’ ‘I came for a single purpose, but I liud that I have a double one.’ ‘Then explain, and quickly too, or I will call the guard.’ ‘I will explain. Not, howevo, because I fear your guard, I came for the single purpose of currying away this girl to ray mountain homo. But find I must kill you.’ ‘The game of death is one that two can play at, you shall find.! And Graham leaped toward the table upon which were lying his two revolvers, but a single shot was fired by the villain and the officer fell. As he did so the renegade seized the girl and cried : •Go to those whom I sent to their gjaves years ago, and tell them that Paul Blackburn sent you there, *for I am he —*'« through the window, with Muriau»» i n !„•« 0 ,.„ v . Here,'however, he met bis mortal, foe, old Brant. The fainting maiden was torn from Ilia grasp, and a single blow from u huge knife sent the polluted soul of the renegade before his Maker. Aa the blood gushed forth, the monste let tered a few bitter curses, ahd then fell from the roof by the aide of the murdered guard. This was not the only work performed by Brant. He had discovered the sava ges, and a single volley, which blazed out on the night air, sent a portion of their, number to the ‘happy hunting ground/ and others yelping like wolves from the fort. , Young'’Graham-was only wounded, and lie recovered to make the orphan bia wife. Lira; in GkrmanY,—You enter a Ger man bouse without knocking, through a door which rings a bell and thus announ ces the ingress or.egr'ess of some one. At the fool of the staircase you find a bell handle, by ringing at which you call a servant who conducts you to a parlor or reception room on tile next floor, which you enter.by knocks. You will find the parlor and the best rooms in the house adorned with beautiful’ pictuies on the wall; and elegant laceourtiua at the wih ’dows, but probably without any carpet. The door, however, is tessolated with beautiful patterns iu various colors, and varnished, oral least it is scoured till it is as white us the driven snow. The amount of flue white linen which a Ger man housekeeper has, and which she is not reluctant to show,her guests, is fabu lous. Tbo Germans in this country, and i: .. such cities as Gottingen, keep early ..ours, breakfasting at eight or earlier, dinner at two, ami usually going to bed as-early as ten. We attended a concert of most delightful music, but it began at live o’clock in the afternoon and closed at seven in the evening. In short, tire child-like virtues of simplicity, candor, naturalness and heartiness which have almost died out in fashionable American society, still exist in Germany in ail their primitive perfection. , ‘I ijtKK to attend weddings,’ .said Mrs. Partington, as she came back from one in chutch, hung h.-r shawl, and replaced the black bonnet in a long preserved bandbox; ‘I like to .see young people come together with the promise of love— cherish and nourish each other. But what a solemn thing is matrimony—a very solemn thing, where the minister comes into chancery with surplus, and goes through the ceremony of making them mau and wife. It ought to be hus band and wife, for it isn’t every husband that turns out to be a man. I declare, I never shall forget when Paul put the nuptial ring on my linger and said, ‘with the worldly goods I thee endow.’ He used to keep a dry goods store then, and I thought ho was going to give me the whole there was in it. I was young and simple, and did not know till after wards that it meant one calico gown a year. It is a lovely sight to see young people ‘plighting their trough,’ as the song says, ami coming up to consume their vows ’ A I’a.v ton Husuanps. Tbo Temple Bar says: Tbo husband Buffers ,by tbo mistakes which his wife makes about him in gen eral. She fancies he has more weaknes ses than other men, simply because she knows more about him than them. He might turn round and say, though lie would probably not oouvlnco her: *£)on t ydu imagine all tho men you see are Im, variably so heroic as they appear to bo before you. Because.they are all pretty speeches, and smiles and nonsensical ex travagant attention toward you, do you Imagine that they always maintain that admirable attitude' Don't bo a fool, Anna Maria; butbeliovo that all men are pretty much alike, and that I am not tbo only monster in the uuiverso. 1 ‘Witat have you got that's good'." said a hungry traveller as ho seated him self at a dinner table in Halt Lake City. ‘O, we've got corn-beef, roast mutton, boiled and'fried ham, and broil ed curlew.’ ‘What is curlew?' asked the stranger. ‘Curlew?’ Why curlew is a bird something like a snipe. ‘Could it lly.?’ - Did it have wings? 'Yes.' ‘Then I don’t want any curlew. Anything that had wings and could lly, I don't want for dinner. Hates for wlii bo inserted at Ten Cent per lino for tho first •Insertion, and five cens porllqofor each subsequent Insertion. • Quar orly half-yearly, and yearly advertisements In serted at a liberal redaction on tho above rates Advertisements should bo accompanied by the Cash. Wnon sent without any length of time specified for publication, they will bo contlnned until ordorod out and onnrgcd accordingly. * Cards, Handbills, Circulars, andovory olh er description of Jon and Card Printing. Slpplty sup, slpplty sup, Broad and milk In a China cup, Bread and milk from a silver spoon, Made of a piece of tho silver moon ! Slpplty sup, slpplty sup. Dlpplty dash, dlpplty dash, Wash his fac o with a merry splash. Polish It well with lit towel fine, Oh. how his eyes and his cheeks will shine, Dlpplty dash, dlpplty dash. Ulpplty rip, rlpplty rip, Untlo his strings with pull and slip, Down go his petticoats on tho ground And away ho dances around and around, Rlpplty rip, rlpplty rip. Tlttcry trot, tltlory trot. Oil*ho goes to ills pretty cut. Whore ho falls asleep with a Utile song, Thonugels watch over him all nightlong, Tlttcry trot, littery trot. A knapsack A pillow case. Always tired—a wagon wheel. Tin; Women’s question—ls he rich ? Tub rjghtful hair— not the chignon. Flat falsehood—lying on your back. A bard mind—mint! your own busi ness. ... ■ Dry groceries—cod llsh and red her ring. • Academy of design school. “What are (ho wild wuven saying?” Le,t tis spray. A dead reckoning—calculating one’s funeral expenses. A grocer resembles highwyamen When ho lies in weight. The time to buy an umbrella—Just aft er you have lent one. The procuring of a divorce is called courting after marriage, Anna Dickinson proclaims-that she does not entertain any anim-mosity to* wards the man. 'Hurry, mamma,’ said a little inno cent with his Huger cut, ‘hurrv lt.’« loab- The heat hand at the trick of dnser iug natural teethMs a bull*dog. -The artist who Is at work on a picture of spring, is requested to draw it mild. A conceited young lady remarked that the young men are a very covct-us set. Why is a jug’s tail like a carving knife? Because it is flourished over a ham. Punchinello asks the question : ‘Frank ly speaking, can Senator Revels’ letters be called blackmail f • A sign on an Academy out West reads: ‘Freeman & Huggs, Freeman teaches tho boys and Huggs the girls.’ A member of tho Kansas Legislature * rejoices in the appropriate.name of GaSa way Sprightly.. If men’s faults were written bn their foreheads, brbad-brimmncd hats would' be fashionable. We hear a great deal more of persons ‘dead in love witli each other/ than wo do of their living in love with each oth- 'Wjvuu not- uenovo uiui is'urtriipossi’um to arrest the ‘/light of time for who are ley that cannot stop a minute ?' A LUiKAiUAN arranging his books ae* cording to their subject matter, put ‘lrish Bulls 1 under the head of agricul ture. A plain girl alwa3 T s has one consola tion. If sho’s not a nretty young lady, she will, If she lives long enough, be a pretty old one- A man who served four days on a jury this week, says he is so full of law' that It is hard work to keep-from cheating somebody. Boy, vou are not far removed from a fool.’ • • . ‘Weil, as we ain’t more than three feet apart, t give in to that,’ was the reply. A ckusty old bachelor says that Adam’s wife was called Eve because when she appeared man’s day of happi ness was drawing to a close. Punch’s ‘He smolo a ghastly smile,’ and ‘Many a wink he wunk,’ have been imitated by a minslTel wit, who said ‘You sneezed a snooze and said I snooze, it-’" ' An* incorrigible loafer being taken to task for his laziness replied : .‘I tell you gentlemen, you are mista ken. I have not got a lazy hone in my body, but the fact'is, I was born tired. 1 ‘ WouimN’T yon like to bo a woman when you grow up, Tommy ?’ ‘No!’ ‘Why not ? ‘Because women can’t turn summer sets.' _ A little girl while playing on u collar door was severely stunned. Her mother on lifting her, anxiously said : M.y child are you killed ?’ ‘Killed!’ the girl-ex claimed ; ‘I guess if [ wore I couldn’t tell you.’ Lately, at a dinner table at Massa chusetts, a gentleman remarked that 'A ,who used to bo given to sharp.prac tice, was getting more circumspect. ‘Ves,’ replied Judge Hoar, ‘he'has reached the superlative of life. He be gan by seeking to gpt on, then he’sought it great honor, and how he is trying to get honest.’ ‘When Sally’s arms her dog imprison, I always wish my nook was his’n, how often would I stop and turn, to get a pat from a band like hern; and when she kisses Towsor’s nose, oh ! don’t I wish that I were those ?’ i* Panny Pern thinks ‘there is no man who would not rather be shaved by a wo au than to have a gteat lumbering mau pawing about his jugalaryoin, and po king him in the ribs to get up when another man’s turn came. I don’t say how kliis wife might like it, but I am very sure ho would, and as to his wife, why—sbo could shave some other man could’ut she ?’ Henry Ward Beecher, returning from church on Sunday, passing a number of specimens of ‘Young America’ amuse ing themselves with a game of marbles, mixed with fancy swearing, ‘My boy,’ said Mr. it. to an interesting youth of eight years. ‘My boy I am frightened.’ ‘Are you ?' answered buttons quite naive- ■' ly, ’Why the dueco don’t yon run then.’ Nat M —wasaqueergenius. A neighbor ■' found him one day at work at an enor mous wood pile sawing away for dear life with an intolerably dull saw. ‘Why don't you sharpen your saw Nat ?’ asked tho neighbor. Looking up with an ini mitably droll expression. 'I should think I had work enough to do to saw up this wood-pile without stopping to shaproa saws.’ Here is tbo extravaganza of a Mem phis lover: 'lf the ocean with ink were tilled, and every leaf of parohmeutmado, and every stick on earth a quill, and every man a scribe by trade, to write tiro love I have for you would drain tbo ocean dry—nor would tho scroll contain tho whole, thought stretched sky to sky.' ‘She died,’ said Polly, ‘and was never 1 seen again for sire was buri.ed in the ground where the trees grow.’ ‘The cold ground?' said tiro child, shudder ing again, ‘.No, the warm ground,’ re turned Polly, ‘whore the ugly little seeds i are turned into beautiful Mowers, and \ where good people turn into angels an d . lly away to heaven.’ JOB PRINTING.