,t 115 . & „• 44 `. 114 110 4 8A1trEL WRIGHT, Editor and Proprietor. VOLUME XXX, NUMBER, 39.] I PUSBLIRED EVERY SATURDAY MORNING 9 ; Office in Carpet Hall, Nortle-teestcorneriy 'Front and Locust streets. • ter ins. of tbscription. ,4-I,l hae Copy perannum,if paidin advance. .. • • •• if 1101 paid within three -month sfrom eommeneemeniofthe year, 200 C'eana.ths; a Copy. aub.eripinni received for a lce• time than .ix ',lentils; and nopaper will be discontinued until all lette acne sa re paid,unlessat the optional - the pub latter.. - - :U"Molvey maybe - emitted bymail aithepubli.b risk. Rates of Advertising. k 4 quart [o.ines)ohe week, . 4 three weeke. .. earh.ohttequenuinsertion, IO [l2 inetlanecreek 50 three aveeks._ I. 00 at. .- ILargertdaerti.ernent , ln proportion , A liberal liseoum will lie made to quarterly,half trarly.nr:narly ylvortisers.who are strietlyeonfined othe;r huainees • DR. - •HOFFER, ' DENTIST.—OFFICE, Front Street 4th door Irom Locust. over 14.4ty10r & McDonald's Honk store ,10.olunsbi.• Pat sy - Rutrunce, between the Book and 4r. Here's Drug more. [Augwtt 21, , 185E • . THOMAS WELSH . , 4USTICB OF THE PEACE, Columbia, Pa. OFFICE. in %Wipper's New Building, below ack's Hotel. moot street. Er Prompt attention given to all business entrusted tdpollis care. 't November 29, 1957. H. M. NORTH, A TTORNEY ND COUNSEOR L Voluml.m. Pa. '4 Col leetton. promptly made.i n Lancaltei and Von 44444 Ma' a= J. W. FISHER, Attorney and Counsellor at Law, Columbia, 4 6 : clietnber ti, Its:11 4 174..6" S. Atlee Bockius, D. D. S. I)RAirrICKS the Operative. Surgical and Meehan Mai reparittlettle or I)riil6lty; (teeter_ I.ocu't .Item, helmet., he. Franklin LICIU-e and 1 . 0.1 Office. Columbia, Pa May 7 1.-t.511 ri - `O3IATO PILLS.---Extract, of Tomatoes; a cathartic mid Tonic. For .ale nt J. S v mi.pyrr & CO'S Golden Mortar Drug Store. Dec .3 '59 lnl ro RTKD ulso, Me nu', Weide Extract-, for the handkerchief, at - • • ' FI RRY GREEN'S. Oppo.lic Coln. Bridge. Prow St Feb. ID. ,SSI 1.11t001118,---100 Doz. Brooms, at Wholesale _LJ or Reinil.mt H. PFAHLEWS. Dec 11. 1857 I,nra.t caret. SINE'S Compound of Syrup of Tar, Wild Cherry and 13nn rhound, ior the r•uu• .•t 171.:01,1-, Whooping Cough. rrielp.ke. It of Me1:01,1K1,1 , ..1 DELI "rrs Fondly Medicine Store. Odd I•rdow,' October 23. Patent Steam Wash Boilers. 4.frllitiSS well known Uoilnra nre kept ronsouoly on J. hand ut HENRY 1.0eu40 street. opposite the Pranklin House. COIUIIIII,IB, July 18.1:5.57. 'lats for sale by the bushel or lar-ernan r;.0, 9 0. AJtity Cnlumb in Dec. !NI. I Du-in. -110BACCO and Segars of the best brands, witalesnle and reinil.at UM TUST in •iorr, a treAlt lot of f3rcittg & I million'. vel celebrated Vegeta',le Cattle Powder. nail for .ale by WII.I..IANIS. Troia street. Co.utabin Popt . 17. 1559 Soap. AL Boxe.ihr Duffey Brown Sonp on hand and for Gr 001 r low 01 the corner 01 Third and Ilmon tzto. A agust 6. 1•156 • Suffer no longer with Corns. T the Golden Mortar Drug Store you rnn procure tt no article which is warranted to remove Curtis iu -4 , hours. without plan or tvreitess. Fly Paper. A SUPERIOR article of Ply Paper. for the dettrue• al lion or &c.. hoe juet heel' received at the Drug Store of R WILLIAMS, Front greet. Columbio,July 30.15.50. Harrison's Columbian Ink i. a +uperior trrtiele, permanceuir black. VY and not corroding the pen, snit be lied in any .quantity. al the Vanuly hlcdiciue Store, and blacker yet is 'lint English Boot Polish. Columbia, Juan 9.1,09 11711:4,714 ittr Rs. wiNsLow•s Soothing Syrup. which will 171grearly facilitate th e prorec , of teething by re ducing ioflmnnlion. n:liiyitin pant, .pit•nnoilic action, Ate., In very tiliort time. For role It,— R. WII.I.TANI 4 . • 5ept.17.1e59. Front street, Columbia. I. ERRING I.; CO'a Russia Salve! This ex tremely popular remedy for the cure otexternal ailments Itt now for •ist le by R. WILLIAMS.Front si., Columbia. rept 24.1E59 (ALT by the Sack or Bushel, and Potatoes large or .mull quantities, for sale at the Corner entil,' and Union streets. [Jan 8. 'W. Extracts and Soap; en everlasting l perfume. at lIA REY GREEN'S, Fel. ID. '3D. Opposite Cola. Bridge. Front St. CISTERN PUMPS. !,51flpHF. subscriber has a large clock of Ci.tern Pump• • and Rums. to which he eal;s the attention of the ,public. He is prepared to put them up for use in a rubroamial and enduring meaner. H. PFA Locust Street. December 12.1957 FANCY TOILET SOAPS. •1T 11g . g fine+tu.rtonm e I Fancy Toilet Soupy ever nervred to Colurn l / 1 1211A. at BARRY GREEN'S. OPPo , ite Cola. Bridge, FrOPt. St Feb 19, 'r9 pOLOGNE WATER by the pint. quart or gallon Glenn's Extrac:s for the linnillmrchiti by the ounce or pound, or in any annualy to suit purchafter'i liAllnY Ganics'o, Opposite Coln. Bridge, Front St. Feb 19.'59 Just Received and For Sale, 200 Bldg. Ground Flouter; 50 (ado. Extra Family Flour; 55 lit to. No. I Lard Ott of best quality; 301/ bus. Ground Alum Sult, by 111 a reh 23,'39 TENKIN'S Celebrated Black and Green Teas, vity notice! Cocoa and Chocolate, at Corner of Third and Union •treeta. (Nov. 20.'59. Gni"- or, Bond's Boston Craekers, for Dyspeptics, and Arrow Root Crackers, for in warier; and shadiest—new articles is Columbia, at aka Family Medicine Store. . April 16. lEtrA. NEW CROP SEEDI.F.SS RAISINS. .• HE best for Pies, Pudding, .fresh supply at H SUYDAM'S Grocery Store, Corner Frontand Union its Nov. 19.1819. • Seedless Raisins! LI 14 . 7 Ak LOT or very choice Seedle s s Raisins. just receive'. at Q . F . EBERLEIN'S Nay.lO, VG. Grocery Store. No. 71. Locust st. SHARER CORN. J USI received, a first rate lot of Shaker Corn U. SUYDAM'S Grocery Store, corner Front and Union et. , Nov. 26, ISSI. SPiLIIIIB'SPREPAIMII GLIZ—The want of each an article is felt an every family, nue now It can be supplied; for mending furniture, china vrare., °momenta! wart, tem ac.. there i 4 nothing anterior. We kave.found ito•eful in repairing many armlets which have been unless for mouths. You teen obtrin.lt at the Jast.SS. . rEILMILIC MEDICINE STORE. e 50 There is a period in life when such a con fession is very difficult to make. From thirty to forty, which is a sort of chrysalis state, when one clings a little to past hopes, and feels quite confident their like will come no more, there is a decided sensitiveness in re gard to autobiographical dates, a shrinking from prolonged interviews with- genealogists and inqusitive old ladies, and even a latent dread of the cotemporaries of youth, who are happily married, and generously teach their offsprings to call you "aunt." This transition period has passed for me long ago, in fact, 1 am a score of years be yond it, and now, setting here by" the fire in my cap and spectacles and deep wrinkles. I will tell you my little story. I was very pretty when I was seventeen years old, 1 could not help knowmg it, and the knowledge was accompanied by a little flutter ing thrill of pleasure, which Mother and Anne called vanity, but as I always, to this day, have the same feel;ng at sight of any thing lovely and fair, be it human face or delicate field flowers, I think they were mistaken.— My mother was one of the best of women—to me, far the best woman 1 ever knew. You recollect the picture of Faith that hangs at the foot of my bed! I have it there, where my glance may fall upon it last at night and first in the morning, because the serious mouth, saintly eyes, and bands of shining hair are so very like hers, who is now, 1 trust, in Heaven. By this you will know that my mother was beautiful as good. Sister Anne was ten years older than I.— She was a great deal better than ever l thought of being, for she could do all sorts of hottse hold work ; and then sbe had a way of help ing the poor, and nursing the sick, and corn. forting the afflicted, and making garments for dirty children, like the good Dorcas of whom we read in the Acts of the Apostles; so every one in the village looked up to her with as much respect as they did to the minister's I wife. F As for me, I am sadly afraid 1 never did any thing to make people look up to me with re spect. At home I was so careless that if dear mother had not been a saint, and Anne a femi nine edition of Job, I should never have known where to find a single article of my wardrobe. And as for pickling, and preserving, and nice cooking, and the homelier offices of sweeping, dusting, and the like, I could not bring myself to them with any degree of patience. In vain the good mother often said to me, "My dear Rose, these actions that seem so slight to you may be done in such a -pirit as to please God, as good George Herbert says: lUMEES2 I liked the poetry—it was simple and sweet —but it failed to beautify brooms and dusters, in my estimation. Anne had a lover over seas, who was to come home some day when he had made a large fortune and marry her. They parted, with this hope in prospect, when she was eighteen and 1 a little girl of eight; and as years passed I should have forgotten the ex istence of Ralph Haven, had it not been for the monthly advent of a foreign letter, which Anne, with heightened color and shinning eyes, always took to her own chamber to feast upon in solitude. .When I was just turned of nineteen I had the first great sorrow of my life. We had been spending one of our quietly happy evenings—mother, Anne and I—in our cozy winter parlor. They had been sewing while I read aloud, and after that we had a little concert. Anne played very well upon an old hardsichord that had been a Wedding present to mother, and we all sang to that ac companiment, 1 think it was as sweet music as I ever heard. At ten o'clock, our usual hour for evening prayers, Martha came in from the kitchen, and I brought the great family Bible for mother to read. She turned over the leaves slowly, pausing at the record of her marriage, and at last selecting the Sixteenth Psalm, which she read through repeating the last verse three times, with great emphasis, "Thou wilt show me the pith of life ; in thy presence is fullness of joy; at thy right band there are pleasures for evermore." Anil then she knelt down to pray—my dear, dear moth ert There was a full minute of intense silence, and then Anne and Martha lifted her in their arms, and bore her a senseless weight to her bed-room close by. It was paralysis! This happened in February, and for three months we watched and prayed and hoped that she might in some degree recover the use of her limbs and speech. Poor Anne lost her little beauty in constant care and anxiety.— Her cheek grew thin and white, her grey eyes sunken ; here and there a thread of silver mingled with her dark hair, and two deep lines marred the smoothness of her low fore. head. But she was never weary, never im patient, and mother could not bear her out of her sight a single moment ; so there she staid by the invalid's couch, smoothing her pillows, holding her poor bands, and smiling sweetly in her lace, until it seemed to me that our Anne was little less than angel. Early in May mother died; and forgetting the few months of sufferingour memory gave her to us as she used to be—gentle, tender, loving— and we mourned for her with deep sorrow.— We buried her in the garden, under the shadow of her favorite tree—for we wanted to feel that she was near us still—and we planted shrubs and lair Bowers over her grave. And now that all was over, Anne began to think of herself. She kept it from me as long as it was possible, but at length I learned the truth. Long watching, and care, and grief bad done their work, and Anne was going blind. B. r. APPOLD, No I and 2 Canal Batin, gretsztirats. Anne and I. I am an old maid •'A servant th,s (duos.: Makes drudgery• thyme: Who sweep, a room, as for rhy laws, Makes that and the action fine." "NO ENTERTAtNALENT IS SO CHEAP AS READING, NOR ANY PLEASURE SO LASTING." COLUMBIA, PENNSYLVANIA, SATURDAY MORNING, APRIL 28, 1860. l'ne first I knew of it was one evening about a fortnight after the funeral, We were standing together it the open window, before the lamp was lit, talking of mother, when my eyes chanced to fall upon the new moon just sinking behind the dark line of pines that skirt ed the western horizon. I drew Anne's at-, tention, and for a minute or more she strained' her poor eyes to catch its tremulous silver light; then shaking her head, she laid her so ft hand in mine, and whispered, sadly: cannot see it, Rose." I looked down in her face—for I was a head taller than she—and I have never forgotten the expression of divine resignation that softened every feature. cannot see it, sister," I echoed. .11slo, dear, nor the stars. It is a long while that 1 have not seen the stars, anJ 1 miss them more than 1 can tell. 'They always comforted me so I Rose, my child, your sister's sight is failing l" I would not believe it. The thought of Anne blind—good, thoughtful, careful. Anne, who was now looking forward to one great joy, the speedy return of her lover—she to have her eyes darkened! Oh, no ! God, who was good and kind, would not sufFer it. Thus reasoned the foolish girl at eighteen. Since then I have learned to trust Ris love, although %often fail to understand the way by which be leads rne. Neither Anne nor 1 closed our eyes to sleep that night. We thought ant planned until day-break, for, if what she said was true, something must be done, and that speedily.— Surely ill ere was room for hope when there were such great oculists in New York and Philadelphia; they could, they must help Anne. As if in anticipation of our wishes, there came within th• week a letter from one of mother's old, friends who lived in New York. It was full of gentle sympathy and kindness, and she begged one of us to come to ter for a few weeks of rest. Here was just the opening we needed, and of course Anne must go. And yet, so careful was she for me that she would scarcely consent to the jour ney. She knew how lonely the house would be with mother and her both gone ; and then I knew so little about housekeeping. I verily think she would have given up the journey, acd been content to settle down to ber darken ed life for the sake of saving me the trouble and pain ors separation, had it not been for the thought of her lover, As it was, she spent a week in arranging for my comfort, mapping out Martha's wore• with the utmost precision, and even writing down on a slip of paper the things I must try to do and care fur while she was gone. I knew I should miss our Anne, but I had not anticipated such utter loneliness. When I went back into the house, after watching the stage until it was out of sigh,t I wandered about t rom room to room unable to set myself at wo.k. Every article of furniture was in nicest order. Anne's last work had been to set back a chair, and pick a thread from the table cloth. I think it was a great mistake to leaves me nothing to do but to'sit down and cry. Anne wrote immediately on her arrival at New York, but after that Mrs. Allen wrote for her. She bad put herself under the care of an eminent oculist, who gave her strong hopes of a permanent cure, only the strictest care was to be observed for several weeks. It was hard to think of Anne lying in a darkened room, when the dear world was so fair and full of bloom ; but she sent me such cheerful messages that at last I began to think that she was less afflicted than I. I might have known her better-1 who had witnessed her beautiful life of unselfishness and love. One day—l think it was the 2d of dune—l gathered from Anne's garden and mine a bunch ofroses, the first of the season, and carried them to fill a marble vase on mother's grave. It was almost sunset, and I lingered a long time thinking of the dear one whose body lay there, and pleasing myself with the idea that her pure spirit might be near me, though un seen, and also thinking of Anne, and wishing she were again at home. This reverie was interrupted by the unusual sound of approaching footsteps, too heavy and measured for Martha's. I looked up and saw, through my tears, a man of medium height, stout figure and swarthy complexion, whose deep gray eyes were fastened upon the white marble cross which marked my mother's grave. It was too nearly dusk for him to read the simple inscription, and turning to me, he asked, in a sharp, abrupt voice : ' , Who lies buried there 1" "My mother, Mary Wesley," I replied, brushing away my tears, and rising from the green turf. "gAnd-where is Anne? Are you the little Rose grown so tall as this? You were a mere baby then; but it is nearly twelve years— twelve long years! So this was Ralph Eleven, Anne's friend, come home at last. We walked slowly to ward the house, and he did not repeat his in quiry for her, but all the way I was puzzling my head to plan the gentlest manner in which to communicate the intelligence of her mis fortune; for I knew he expected to meet her in the house. When we came upon the ter race, under the parlor window, I stopped short, and looking up into his face, said, slowly: s.Sister Anne is not at home, she is in New York." "And yet she knew I was coming!" The tone in which these words were utter. ed was a reflection upon Anne's faithfulness, and I cried, are., sir, she knew; but Anne's almost Jollied. She is there for advice: I hope for cure." “Anne blind! Anne Wesley blind! Child, are you telling me the truth?” He was greatly moved, else I should have resented his 'ungentle words and manner. As it was. I sat down near him, upon the piazza, and talked of her and mother until quit* late, witnont lighting the lamps or going into the parlor. "Of course he will go to New York at once," 1 said to myself, after he left me, as 1 locked the hall door and closed the windows for the night—"of course and how happy Anne will be!" But I was mistaken. The next morning, while I was busy tying up a drooping helio trope, Mr. Haven came again, and stood lean ing over the gate, talking about the flowers, until I was ready to go in; then he pushed it open, and followed me up the path, gathering a few buds from Anne's rosebush, which nat urally led the conversation to her. I was only too glad to speak her praises to some one be sides Martha, and in Mr. Haven 1 had a most eager listener. 1 remember, as I watched his kindling face, 1 wished I had some such friend, one who would be as true and faithful. Soon after this I had a few lines from Anne, writ. ten by her own hand. "1 am better," she wrote; ••please God, I shall soon be quite well, and with you again, little sister. Do all you can to make Ralph happy; I give him into your care. The Doctor refused In let him come to me at present. how I long to see you both." Just as 1 finished crying over this note, I heard Mr, Haven's step on the graveled walks and ran to meet him, with it open in my hand. It was such a relief to find that Ire did not stay away from Anne voluntarily, that 1 was quite ready to obey her injunction. • He, too, had received a line, and I hail never seen him wear so bright a look as when I ran down the steps and slipped my hand through his arm, full of joy for the two bits of letters which had come like songs of hope. We sat in the parlor all that evening singing together, and wishing many times that Anne was there with her sweet contralto voice to make our concert complete. When Mr. Haven said good.night, I laughingly told him I was going to obey her commands, and do my very best to amuse him until she could come; in plege 01 which he begged the blue ribbon that bound my bair. I gave it to him, and stood in the door watching him as he went away, with my long, unloosed curls falling almost to the floor. Days passed so swiftly they seemed like the days of a delicious dream. I never paused to question my . foolish heart, which throbbed with new and strange emotion. It was enough that I was happy; yes, so happy I had not a single tear even for my dear mother's grave. But at last there came a letter from Anne an nouncing her speedy return. Mr. Haven brought it from the ofFieo, and we read it to gether,standing by the West window in the parlor. "She is a good girl," he mused, after a pro longed silence, abse:.tly caressing my hair with his white fingers. ' , She is a good girl. and so she is coming—when?" Hr gldnced at the date, which was a week old; the letter had been delayed, and even now she might be on her way. I felt his ddrk, magnetic eyes search. ing my drooping face, and I trembled under their power. "Are you glad, Rose?" be whis pered, bending to my ear, "Glad? Oh yes, I am very glad," I Siam meted and burst into tears. "Rose, you love me," said he plowly. can read your little heart like a page of sweet poetry. You love me, Rose!" My pride took fire at this. "And if I did," cried I, "if I did, without thinking or knowing it, I have not forgotten that you pre Anne's promised husband!" ''lt is true, Rose," he said, gloomily, "that before 1 went to China I had a youthful liking for Anne, but—" and here his tone changed to one of deep tenderness— "you, little Rose, are the only one I ever loved, the only woman I will marry." "And so," said I scornfully, for I was be ginning to realize the depth of woe into which I was sinking; "and so, because in your long absence Anne has grown older, and you fear she is less fair and gay, you would cast her 01 Alb, sir, I shall soon learn to despise you!" "Rose your angry words bring me to my self," said he, sorrowfully. "Forgive me, child, and tell ine how I shall expiate my of fence." , 431arry Anne, and never let her know of MOM “Marry Anne! Yes; I will, I will. But pity me, Rose. You did love me, little flower?” This tone of lender beseeching bow could my heart withstand it? For one moment I forgot Anne, honor and duty and flung my arms around his neck, sobbing. "Rose," he whispered, "dear child, let us tell her all. She is generous; she will for give, she—" "Never! never! never!" I wrenched myself from him as I spoke, and turned to fly, when lo! in the centre of the room, rigid and white as a marble statue, I beheld Anne! I. threw myself into her arms, and she held me there in a brief but kind embrace; then leading me out in the hall, she touched her icy lips to mine, and went back to the parlor, clos ing the door softly alter her. What passed between her and Ralph in that long interview I never knew; but he left the village at night, and I saw him no more for years. Anne passed through this furnace of antic. tion like the holy children,"upon whose bodies the fire bad no power." Whatever she suf fered was known to God and herself alone.— Ontsvardly,there was not the shadow of change. Twenty years after all this trouble as I sat musing over the fire one winter evening, a note was banded me, which read as follows: Dams Rost.:—Come to me. •"Rataa HAV ." The lad who brought it was waiting to golds me. I snatched a cloak and hood, and without a question followed him down the street to the village inn, and here I found Ralph Haven —dying—dying! He knew me, notwithstand ing my gray hairs, (for at eight-and-thirty I was as gray as I am to-day,) and he'beld out his hands to welcome me. I took them both, cold and shrunken as they were, and kissed them. "Sit down, Rose," he said. “You will stay by me until I die?" I took the chair proffered by the good land lady, and sat all that night with his dear bands in mine, praying that God would spare him to me yet a little while. But this was not to be. At early dawn be died in my arms, with our dear Lord's name on his quivering lips. It has'been the comfort of my life that I was permitted to be with him when he went down into the valley of the shadow; that my ear caught his last whisper; that no one but I closed his eyes and smoothed the thin gray locks over his forehead. Well; the old woman's story is almost done. 1 am neither lonely nor miserable. The world looks as bright and fair on this calm October morning as it did forty years ago; but 1 hope for one which is brighter and fairer, whither my feet are hastening. Anne and her children and grand-children come to see me often, (for Anne married a good minister, and has reared up a family of girls to imitate her sweet and womanly vir tues, and to alrhost adore their mother.) They also love Aunt Rose. Here, in the old brown house where I was born, wbere I have lived and loved and suffered will I die. You will see that lam decently buried, very near my mother and Ralph; and you will not forget to plant a flower over my grave. I have loved them so well 1 shall like to think they will bloom near me, even when I can no longer see their gentle beauty. And should your tender heart suggest a more en- during monument, let it be a broken shaft, (for my life has been incomplete,) bearing only my name, ROSE WESLEY. The Two Breastpins. I=l One day last January, Madame Lavogue, a broker's wife, of ['aria, took it into her head to want a breastpin. Moreover, she determined to desire a particular, sort of breastpin—an emerald encircled with diamonds—which could be altered ingeniously into a bracelet or a necklace by a clever contrivance of clasps.— Madame Lavogue therefore went to a jew eler's in the Rue de la Paix, and discovered a love of a thing—just what she wanted, in fact; and the jeweler, with that sagacious foresight peculiar to French tradesmen, insisted on her carrying the breastpin home to show her hus band, and examine more at her leisui e.— Madame yielded. That evening there Wai a dinner-party at the Calapasses', and Madame L. could not resist the opportunity it affirded of trying the effect of the breastpin by gas-light, upon a rose.colored knot of ribbon. The Paris jew eler was probably aware of the use that Mad ame L. might make of his courtesy, but he was perfectly resigned beforehand, having, no doubt, his reasons. The emerald produced a vivid impression among the guests of Mrs. Calapasse ; and Madame L• being much com plimented thereon, felt obliged to say that it was an old tamely relic, reset, and but rarely worn. The last she added, in case she should be obliged to return the jewel; for her hus band, on hearing the price—six thousand francs—bad rebelled. On their return to the conjugal hearth, there ensued a discussion. Mr. L. "could not coun tenance such extravagance—could not support it." Madame reminded Monsieur that he had made for:y thousand on the Pansy mortgage bonds last week. Monsieur hinted at other deficits to be made up: X shares down it ; no sales of T. stuck, &c. Madame began to weep. Monsieur put on his hat, lit his cigar, and went to lounge on the Boulevard. Lounging thereon, Mr. L. beheld the show_ window of a dealer in paste-jewelry. A bright idea struck him. He entered the store. "Do you happen to have an emerald (bogus) surrounded by (bogus) diamonds, in the form of a breastpin, which may be altered into," &c.? Thus, to the storekeeper. "Certainly, sir. Here is exactly the ar. tide." Mr. L. finds that the article does, in fact, resemble the six thousand franc bijou wonder fully, incredibly. He asks the price. "One hundred and twenty francs." Mr. L. reflects upon this fortunate speculation, and buys the article—conditionally. Returning home, he says to his still pouting wife: "We are going to the bal I at the Coqueli cots', to-night, you know. Put on the breast. pin again, and if it meets with equal success there"— "Well! what then ?" “Clikil we'll see about it, then V' Madame goes down stairs, smiling, to gii e an order, leaving Monsieur alone in the bou doir. That night, all the women at Mrs. Coqueli eot's ball whispered that Madame Lavogue was certainly over forty, and had a red nose, in spite of her famous emerald. As she disrobed, Madame L. said to Mon meta L : "Well! you saw the success of the breast pin I"" "Certainly !" "Now, you'll give it to me, won't you, dearest ?" "I will !" "Oh I dear. good, amiable Edward I must embrace you! you are a real treasure !" "Yea haven't called me that this long time." "Because you have not made me so happy this long time. Now, I'll tell you what, you give me three thousand francs for the New Year, to buy a set of furs: here they are ; renounce the tura , take the money, add the other three thousand, and pay for the Imes: t pin." "Not in the teas!! Keep the money, dear Anastasia!" • $1,50 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE; $2,00 IF NOT IN ADVANCE "What 7 Most generous of men ! you— you—!" "Yes ! keep it; or rather, give me one hun dred and twenty francs, and keep the rest." "One hundred and twenty francs ? One— what do you mean, Edward ?" "That's the price of the emerald !" A Edward, "moat generous of men," ex plained. Madame had worn the paste at Coquelicot's ball. (Note.—Behold the value of public opinion.) Madame was indignant. "Monsieur, it is abominable! you are a traitor—a tyrant ! What! make me wear false jewelry, to have myself vilified,called red-nosed, over lorty ! o—h! 1 shall never survive it 1" Let us cut short a scene, of which in truth we were not witnesses, but only gained these details through the indiscretion of a friend. The next day the two breastpins were sent back to the respective jewelers, Monsieur un willing to pay for the true, Madame refusing tv have the false. Fifteen days pass. The Lavogues are invited to a soiree at the Grebe lous'. They go. "How is this, my dear?" cries the widow Grabelou to Madame L. "You have not put on your famous emerald this everiiiig ? Do you not think my soiree as worthy of the honor as those of the ealapasses, of the Coque licots 1 You wound my feelings, believe me." Poor Madame L. begs a thousand par dons; tells a countless nembei of little fibs that eve- ' , Madame L. has not got her famous emer ald on to-night," says one lady. "No! but she has her red nose, though," re plies another. Madame L. overhears, and convinced at last that her husband can't be coaxed into the six thousand franc breastpin, she resolves on buying the bogus jewel in time to sport it at the Pardouillasses' ball the next night, and covertly seeks the paste dealer's where she is shown the bogus article, just as I it was returned, in its red morocco case, and I whence she carries it away in triumph—a very modest triumph ! The rest of the season is one long ovation. A year goes by. • • • • • But tirst we must retrace our steps, and return to the day succeeding that on which the two breast pins were sent back to the jewelers. On that day an American lady calls at the store in the Rue de Ia Paix, sees the six thousand franc emerald, likes it, buys it, and that' evening takes it with her to England, and thence, per steamer, to Boston. When the vessel reaches the harbor of Boston, the weather is bois terous that she cannot make the dock. The impatient voyagers and their luggage are put aboard of yawls and rowed ashore. That which carries the American lady is capsized, and, though the passengers are saved, the lug ' gage is all lost ; consequently the emerald I goes to the bottom. Now we return to Paris, and to the present January. Madam Lavogae, alter a long season of triumph, has begun to discover that as far 'as jewels are concerned, the bogus passes as well as the simon pure, and she has consequent 'ly worn her emerald bravely. But about the beginning of this January, encouraged by her success, she concludes to have a pendant at tached to the breastpin by way of variety.— So she goes to the paste.jeweler; but he tells her that a real pendant will cost but little—a pendant in gold and enamel—and that she had better go to a jenuine jeweler; whereupon she seeks the tradesman of the six thousand franc emerald in the Rue de Ia Paix. This artist is rather reluctant to work upon bogus jewelry, but finally consents, and Madame L. hands him her one hundred and twenty franc brooch. Tne jeweler puts his glass to his eye, looks at the brooch, looks harder, holds it up to the Tight, turns it, turns it again, and then ex claims: "But, madams, this is a real emerald! these are genuine diamonds!" "Oh! what do you mean, sir?" "1 mean what 1 say, and—hold! by Jove! it is the very breastpin I contided to you a year ago! 1. see my private mark on it!" "You are mistaken," exclaimed the trades man's wife, seeing Madame Lavogue blush and look indignant. "You sold our emerald to Mrs. 8., an American lady. Here it is on the books, duly credited and cash received a year air.." don't care." cries the jeweler; "this is my emerald. Here's my mark—a horse's head and a double cross." "But I sent it back to you," exclaims Ma dame L., "and your wife tells you you sold it to an American lady;" and she seizes her breastpin, which the jeweler had laid on the counter, "Look at your book yourself, sir!" madame—" «:4y husband shall come and rectify this, ago. If there is an error he will correct it;" and Madame Lavogue left in an inexplicable state between anger and mystification, and sought her spouse. Mr. L., after hearing the affair and reacting upon it, came to the con clusion that in returning the two breastpins, the day after the Grabelou ball, Madame L. must have accidentally placed the bogus emer ald in the real jewel's rase, and vice versa; so that Mrs. B. of Boston had paid six thousand francs for a paste breastpin, and Madame La. vogue bad obtained a remarkably pure emerald surrounded by brilliants for one hnuilred and twenty francs! The explanations which en sued between Mr. L. and the jeweler proved satisfactorily that this was the true solution of the mystery. But the real jeweler insisted on haring the true jewel back. Mr. L insisted on not return ing it except in presence of the American lady, and on her restoring the imitation article. At this crisis, a friend is found who has read—and I produces the proof,in a Boston journal—these. count of the accident in landing the pauengers of the steamer Massachusetts at Boston, seven months ago, and the names of those who lost all their effects, among which is that of Mrs. 8., the purchaser of the emerald. Bow shall the aflair be arranged now? [WHOLE NUMBER. 1,549. . Is Mrs. 8., who paid the six thousand francs, wronged? The jeweler, who innocently sold paste for genuine jewelry, has he any right to demand the restoration of his breastpin, or any claim for damages? Finally, have the sharks of Boston harbor, who have doubtless taken this green glass as the real thing, no right to complain? Mrs. 8., the American lady, is expected in Paris this spring; and Madame Lavogue has resolved to go frankly ro her and relate the whole story, resting entirely upon her decision, hut at the same time entreating her to allow Madame L. to enjoy the fruit of this singular accident. If, however, Mrs. B. insists upon having the true emerald which she paid for, Madame L. will equally insist on having the false one which she has also paid for. Where will Mrs. B. find it? We anxiously await the final act or this comedy of errors. Death of.the Gipsey King [From ihe l'intburg 26,11 j Owen Stanley, the recognized leader of a large band of Gipsies in this country, died a short time since, at Madison, Indiana, and his remains were taken to Dayton, for interment, beside those of Harriet Owen, a Lipsey Queen, who was buried there some two years ago.— The ceremonies were announced to have taken place with great pomp, and roving bands of this singular people were gathering to Dayton, in all directions, to participate in the funeral ceremonies, which were to be of a curious and imposing character, becoming the interment of deceased royalty. In noticing the fact of his death, we observe that the papers make no remark upon the character, life and personal history of the de. ceased. The "Lipsey King," Owen Stanley, and his numerous family, have frequently visited this part of Pennsylvania,and we know them well. The government of this peculiar people, among themselves, is patriarchal, the oldest member of the tribe or family receiving peculiar reve rence and implicit obedience from all its rnem bers. The Stanley family of Gipseys, of which Owen was the Patriarch, Chief or King, came to America some seven or eight years ago, from England by way of Canada. The Gipsey King was the father of seventeen children, all of whom, we believe, are in America and living. These, with their descendants now number about two hundred persons. They still keep up their nomadic, Gipsey mode of living, trav eling f rom place to place, in bands, sub-divided according to circumstances. The tribe is pos sessed of considerable wealth in horses, wag ons, and money, the latter of which they are not averse to loaning to persons in whom they have implicit confidence. Knowing themselves suspected, they are naturally a suspicious pen. ple, but when once their confidence is acquired ti-y are free hearted, open handed and jovial. In all matters of practical life they are well in formed. They drive a sharp bargain, are eau nous and prudent, and we can say that the Stanley family have proved themselves honest. for in all charges matte against them, which are not unfrequent, they insist open istweeti gallon and come out triumphant. We recollect that at one time when in this city, a man from Ohio, swore positively to the ownership of a horse which was in the posses ; sion of a member of the tribe and offered for sale at t he horse market, and he was tweeted. After he had, by questioning and cross ques tioning induced the complainant to svrear posi tively that the horse was his father's, Stanley produced the bill and receipt for the purchase of the horse, gave bail for a stay of proceed ings for a couple of days, and not only proved his legal ownership in the horse, but also that the man who was said to have been its owner still had his own horse. When the Stanley tribe first came to this country, the father and mother remained in England and joined their children in this coun try at the request of their son Levi Stanley, who sent to England a thousand dollars to aid them and some of the poorer members of the tribe to come to the United State,. The old man had many valuable articles which had descended to him from his ances tors, and which he desired to preserve as relics of the olden time. They were silver cups arid silver quarts or tankards, which bad been pre sented to various members of the tribe, by English noblemen and gentlemen, as rewards for feats of agility, strength, running, jumping, dancing, &c. When encamped upon large common grounds belonging to the nobility and gentry of England, amusements of this sort were common, but by an act of Parliament, passed about twenty years ago, there ground* were enclosed, and the camp grounds and the grazing of the Gipseys, like the boating grounds of our Indian tribes, were taken away from them. This tact, together with the fear that the younger members of the tribe might be impressed tor the Russian war, induced the Stanleys, together with several other Gipsey tribes to emigrate to America, where they I could find plenty of room without being regard ed as trespassers. When the Stanleys resolved to come to America, one and all, the question arose as to bow they should convey the family relics above spoken of, which were numerous, and being of silver, valuable. They feared that both in England and in this country, the pops. I tar prejudice which set down the Gipsey as a (thief, might induce the authorities to siezo them under the supposition that they were stolen, and that thus they might be put to trouble and delay, or might lose their cherish. ed treasures altogether. They accomplished the affair with tree Oipsey cunning. parches. ing a cask of liquor, they secretly placed the silver ware in it, wrapPed up so as to deaden the sound, ■nd then entered their liquor for regular exportation at the Custom House. The cask and its valuable contents Caine sorely through official bands, and the liquor was uninjured by the valuable deposit which it contained. The family are still in possession of these retire,