castit Nottiltiturer, - _ ,unwp...kinmikiczypopswAy BY t ..I1 . cr.i.s . ffirmarra. co. IT. G. OBIT/X.', A. 4. STEINMAN TENMS—Two Dollars . por. Minna; payable all imam In adYaMOM Tull Dam:ULSTER DAILY /NISLLIGNX O ZU IY publlabed evorys ovonloQ, Etinday excepted, at 55 perAnnutaln advance. .: 061 0 1.03-3300T . IIMMOT COANFR OF CIENTRIC 8417A11.E. • rittg. DEATH BY RLV. A. J. RYAN, ()IOINA.) Out of the slindow,Ofsfulness. Into the sunshine of gindneas, Into the light of the Bleat— Out of the hind very dreary, . Out of the World of the weary, Into the Rapture of Rest. Oat of to-dars sin and sorrow Into a blissful to.morroW. Jute a day without gloom— Out of a land filled with sighing— Lend of the dead and the dyln g In to a land without torn)). • Outof n life of commotion, Tempesteswept oft as tho'ocean, Dark with the wreak drifting .eor ; Into a land calm cod quiet ; Never a storm (tomtit nigh 11; Never a wieek on its Out of the land. In whose bowers Perish and hula all the flowers— . . out or the land of decay— Into the Eden where latreht Of flow'rets—and eweeteet and rat cid— Never ;Mall wither away. Out of the world of the walling. Thronged wlllt the a: gulmhed and ailing, Out of the world ofthe mad; lulu the world that rejoices-- World of bright vislonm and velecm, Into the world of the glad. Out of life over 'orate], Out of a laud very mournful, Where In bleak exile we roam; Into ajoy land above um, Where there's a Father to love u. illto "our Home—Sweet Home." literal. Mrs. Thompson's White Ware Mrs. Thompson stood by the kitchen table paring potatoes fordinner. Some thing was evidently wrong with the little lady, for there was an unmistaka ble air cd " spite" in the way she tossed the potatoes Into the pan of cool spring water, waiting there to receive them. It was a sultry July day, and In the open window calm) the sound of mowers whetting their scythes, blended with the call of the robin, and the faint notes of the cuckoo in the shaded wood. But it only Irritated Mrs. Thompson, Indeed everything Irritated her that day. Look ing out from the bark door, one saw a lovely landscape, with broad reaches of medow-land, fringed with graceful bells of birch ; and softly rounded mountains lifting their velvety •foreheads to the white, fleecy clouds, that went slowly sailing across the exquisite ether, like huge drifts of thistle down. But this also Irritated her; every I hi lig could be beautiful save her like, and that was cold, and rude, mid barren. But to begin at the beginning. Jane lawrenve had been an unusually PO mantle girl. She had always fancied she would marry some famous artist or liChalar, \Vila WOUld take her to Rome and Venice, where she would live In a perpetual dream of beauty. She so loved beautiful things! Perhaps all women do, and perhaps that Is the reason so many barter love for gold. But, contrary, to all her pre-conceived notions, she married Robert Thompson, a plain, practical farmer ; and instead of Italy, Nile went to live at the old homestead, which had been the abode of the Thompsons forgenerations. And Instead of lounging In elegant studies, or gliding down storied rivers in pictur esque gondolas, HIM made butter and cheese, and raised poultry, and cooked dinners In the lung, low celled kitchen, for three or four great, brow ii handed, ravenous 111011. tZndlu a contrast, you will admit. If she could have hail things a little different, she wouldn't have minded the work so inueli. I f she could have had soft carpets, and tasteful furniture, and books, and pictures, and flowers. To be sure, she had a little strip under the south windows, where a sweet briar grew, anti pinks. sweet Willlains, and Marigolds blossomed in their season.— But, they were so old fashioned ; and she pined for the rare and elegant plants she had seen in conservatories and pub lic gardens. But Robert Thompson would as soon have thought of buying the moon ' as such useless things us flowers. And though his wife had earn ed them a dozen times over, It never entered his heart that she did. Indeed he considered It a very liberal thing when he gave (?) her twenty•tive dol lars, fall and spring, to buy her cloth ing, and wondered vaguely where it all went to, end if she had not got some hoarded away somewhere. As for books, there was the family Bible, with the record of all the ThomP• eons for three generations. Then there was Fox's Book of Martyrs, and Pil grim's Progress, and an English Reader, which her Thompson had when he was a boy, and went to school in the little red school house up on the " pine barrens." Besides, there was the Re port of the Board of Education, Laws and Resolves, Patent Ofilce Reports, and a pile of the Farmer's Almanac for twenty-live years, besides any nuni• her of documents upon the best and most approved breed of cattle, the theory of under-draining, rotation of crops, grass and forage culture, etc., etc. What could any reasonable person ask for more than that? And as for pictures, there was "From the Cradle to the Grave,'' an allegorical picture printed in colors, with a descriptive couplet attending each particular stage of the Journey; a sampler which his mother had I' worked at eleven years of age," and a mpg affecting scene illus trative of the " Lover's Parting," wherein a very red-cheeked damsel in puffed sleeve, short waist and very low neck, dissolved In the arras of her de parted swain. Certainly, Mrs. Robert Thompson must have been very hard to please. But the particular matter of grievance on this particular day was of quite another thing. "The Eastervllle Sewing Cir cle and Ladles' Benevolent Society" was to meet at the farm house the next Friday, and Mrs. Thompson had set her heart on a new Hot of white ware for the occasion, and that morning had broach ed the snidest to her husband. " What's the !natter With these dishes?" he asked, pointing to the " mulberry and white" plates, which Mrs. Thompson was washing. "'They aro all out of date to begin lelth ; half of them cracked or broken ; besides, there kW now here near enough to set the table." " What's become of the china? Mother used that when alto had company." "It won't look well on the table, Robert, with this Mulberry, till cracked alp as it is," "I guess the victuals will taste Just as well out of 'mu anyway." " But wo really need the dishes, Robert, There has not been a dish bought dillel3 I came here, twelve years age, and -- "They'll do Just as , well for twelve years to come. You wouldn't have thought of It, if It hadn't been for the Sewing Circle. If they can't come and eat out of such dishes as we've got,they ar,e welcome to stay away;" and he took down his hat to go to his mowing. There were tears in Mrs. Thompson's oyes, but she crowded them bravely back and tried hard to steady the tre• mor In her voice, as she said pleadingly: "Please to give me money to get them Robert. Grover has got some real pret ty ones—and cheap, too; I can get all I need for four dollars." 'Well, I guess Grover 'll keep 'em for All of me. I've got no four dollars to spare," turning to go out. "By-Lhe• way," looking back from the door, "Jones, and Lee, and Hubbard will be hero to dinner, and perhaps supper. We want to get allthe south meadow • down to day, if we can. Grass is stout this year, there's a third more than there was last. And, oh, Hubbard wants six poundsof butter to-night— don't forget to have it ready;" and with these words he went out, leavipg his wife to her long, weary day' work, darkened and made distasteful by her disappointment. She was both grieved and angry. It was a little thing, per haps, but it is the little things of life that delight or annoy. Life looked very bare and homely to Jane. Thompson that ,summer day.— With all, her love of ease, and beauty, and symmetry, how rude, and coarse, and hard looked all her surroundings. was only one long, monotonous round of homely toll, unrelieved by any of the little sweetnesses And graces thattnigh t make even toil pleasant. She, did' not often think of it; but she remembered that day, with, the, faintest little, stir of regxe,t, that she might have been far differently situated; and as she looked up to the pretty French cottage on , the hill, 'embowered in a - perfect foreat of lilossominrvinety and caught the cool Of urn , and fdutiltain;somethYng - yery aelgh treaibled otakertips; ”Aglvilre Etes'wite dlilia'llave to; begroi four-d' liata4kal she might, be atalalinleeenUrNahe thought • :I- mlfrtr; A e 4 f..: , And then, as one does why feels ag ):1 ---- .. - ;...,. ~ _, .TT, ~"- ... 57:t, (..i.. ,. 7.' , .. 4 . .__ i - ' -I, ' ~, 1 t 7-"..J A - -OTLII.II - DIT - GI: I Nr. ..1_.).-111:: - 4 \i't .."--V't ' t L' ... * 4 1 '. 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' 'i L.% .... .I" '.} .:,.0 'LOX , ,-,`:::,),. , . e,.. ) 0 5......i :.1 ~.,;.• •'.... ,:,•.! ,0.,... 1 , r.l" d!"..*.. • : ;,, ,/ :,!.... .. ' •., , , •'. .., • . ~1 ...,‘• ..„ .., . .• , . .. , • VOLUME .69 „ krleved, elle retetenlbereirattedre of other things, equally meedfu : , and equally within their meanal'or kobert Thomp son was not spoor man by any means— which, had. been' as , churihthly refused. There was the parlor carpet, it was half ' cotton and faded and threadbare at that; and the . paper 'had been on the wall ever since she' was a child, and was stained where the water had leaked out last winter, And yet Robert said ” It was. good enough for what little they used it," and abtolutely refused to get new.' Aud, so a score of other things which she i'emembeted that morning ns she toiled through all the long, sultry fore noon; with an aching head and dis couraged heart. What did it matter to her if grass was heavy, and butter up tp forty cents a pound? 'lt only brought more and harder work, and no recompense save her own board and clothing. She could earn more than that in any other man's house. " Well, she had no business to marry Thompson," she said, moodily to her self, her slender wristaching from beat ing over the butter for " Hubbard :" everybody always said he was close and shrewd, and prophesied that he would be rich some day—what did she care for riches, if they didn't do her any good— didn't make her life auy fairer? She was not fitted to be a farmer's wife— and yet she had loved Hobert Thomp son !" She said this half-savagely as if she was disgusted and angry with her• self for it. And yet Robert Thompson was not an unkind man—only thoughtless. He was a type of a very large blase of men— more especially farmers—who do not feel, in themselves, the need which a woman's more iesthetie naturedemands. Absorbed in his stock, his crops and his politics, he did not realise his wife needed, and had a right to a few of the things that, with her peculiar organism, were as much the need of her being as the food she ate. And so, its the years ran on, they grew .furtherapart ; getting more and more absorbed in gain, and growing more thoughtless, and less tender in regard to his wife's tastes, or tolls, while she grew bitter, and despondent, and Irritable. Robert Thonipson was, besides, a little inclined to faultfinding, and not being at all of a sensitive temperament himself, ho did not realize how keenly ho woundedirle wife ; and when, some. times she gave a bitter retort, he won fiord what it was that had soured her disposition so, for he remembered she used to be called unusually if weet,tem. pored, All through the long forenoon Mrs. Thompson had nursed her wrath.— Robert was selfish and unreasonable, and mho did not care who know it, She would not have the el ride meet there, and set tin. table with that old fashioned ehinit o and that stained and cracked mulberry—no, not for twenty Robert Thempsons. The rooms were shabby and out of date enough, mercy know; and her thoughts reverted to the Pretty, tasteful homes of her friends, where she had met on a " circle day." Fifteen minutes before noon, and full that time before dinner would be ready —for they were always usually n little behind, and Mr. Thompson always wanted his dinner boiling hot—Mrs. Thompson saw four tired, heated, hun gry looking men coming up through the orchard. The table was not set, and she hurried quickly about it. Just then Frank and Charley, her two boys, came rushing In from school, each shouting, " Mother, ;nether!" and each wanted something " right oft" She felt tired, and hurried, and out of temper, which was not helped by her husband's impa tience; " Wily isn't dinner ready? I told you we were in a hurry to-day. If I hadn't anything to do all the forenoon but get dinner, I'd try to do it before night." A bitter retort sprang to her lips, but just then Charlie sang out— " Oh, mother, mother! Just look at my new copy. I un't going to write a, b, ab'n any more • I'm going to write sentences, Just likek Frank. Just you read it, mother. The teacher said I must get it by heart, and always re• member it." Mrs. Thompson glanced up, laying the plates as she read. " A soft answer turneth away wrath, but grievous words stir up anger." It was not that it was new—she had road it scores of times— but something in its appropriateneas, that fell like a cool hand on her heated pulses. " I will have it ready in a moment, Robert," she said, quietly. He looked up; evidently he had not expected just that reply, for if the truth must be told, he had thought more than once that forenoon of his wife's request; not that he thought of granting it, but that he expected that she would, as he termed it, sulk over it. " I say, boys," he said as they went into the cool north room to their dinner, " it don't feel much here like down in the meadow. A woman has an easy time of it; they don't know what hot weather is." Mrs. Thompson, waiting on the table with a scarlet face, din not reply; but Hubbard gave Jones a queer look out of the corner of his eye, as he half glanced at her. " Why hadn't you set the butter in the stove? you might as well. I don't believe there's any need of having the butter like this, if It is warm weather," ho growled. " I took it out of the cellar since you oame in ; but I will go down and get some more, if you think I'd better, was the pleamaut reply. "No, never mind. Well, I declare I why don't you holl;this meat ! It's hard as a rock. Not much like that I had nt your house, Hubbard. Your wife knows how to cook a dinner that's fit for a '1 tried' to have Unice, Robert," Mrs. Thompson said,struggling hard to choke down a rising sob, as well as an angry word. The men did not speak, and Mr. Thompson finished his dinner with a thoughtful face. 13y-and-hy he grew to watching his wife's face; there was something In It he could not understand. He looked down at the "mulberry and white;" it did look old and dingy be slue the snowy table•cloth—he wonder ed he had never noticed it before. lie wont out Into the kitchen—how hot and stiffing it was ! A vague Idea that it wasn't such a comfortable place after all, flitted through his mind. He went out towards the barn, the sun was hot, but there was a fresh breeze blowing froth the south and the men were loung ing In the shadow' of the barn. "I never pitied a woman so In my life," Hubbard was saying, "she works like a slave, and don't get even thank ye for It." "She'd never ought to married Rob Thompson," replied Jones, "a delicate, sensitive little thing like her. How ever, he won't make money out of her blood and bones many years. I never saw a woman run down so fast. She looks as faded as the old licuse, that Las not seen a drop of paint since old grand- father Thompson had fixed up for his second wife." " And Jennie used to like things nice, so well She'd better have married Squire Burnham—l Wonder if she isn't very sorry !" Was she? The thought came rushing like a boltof lire through the heart and brainof Rob Thompson. She might have married Burnham, he knew. And then he remembered how proud he.had been thatshe turned from the wealthy young squire, to marry him, and come to the 'old homestead to take care of his Invalid mother. And how tenderly she had done it too ! He could bear it no longer. He stole noiselessly away from the un conscious talkers, and started at a quick pace doWn the street. Mrs. Thompson had washed and put away the last dish, and with a weary step had taken down the broom, when the sudden sound of wheels coming into the yard sent her to the door. " I've brought down that ware, Mrs. Thompson," said tpe brisk voice of Grover, sprin.ging to the ground, and llftinga large basket carefullylioni.the wagon. • "But, I didn't order them, Mr. Grover," she gasped in. a frightened voice. "I only said perhaps, I-" "0, it's all Tight. Mr. Thompson came up'this noon and ordered them. I thought you didn't send him, for he didn't seem to know what - he wanted, only the' gave me ten dollars and told me to bring what was necessary. I have brought you:.' tea and dining set, in cluding three dozen plates. If there is anything you don't like,l'll take it agaid and make it all right. "O Ishall like them, I know," she added, trying hard to control her voice. "Well, I'll leave the basket, and rir ...i. Itobart'car(b log it np some•thne,!', ha said springing, info, the wagon, and driving oft: ' • • • . Then sane Thompson sat- down on the floor beside that basket of Crockery and pried writ Per heart would-break. They were magical hears , toci,fOr they washed all the; weariness and despair. froni her eyes - and 2 heart. She , forgct that she was tired, 'or that the daY was hot, but went to unpacking and un washing her • new treasures, singing , softly to herself the while:. She put some nite clean p.rpers on the shelves,- and then she folded some and cut them In scollops, hanging them over the edges, and then she arranged her beau tiful ware with Its drooping sprays of convolvulus and fusohias, standing off every few moments to admire It: I doubt if Mrs. Squire Burnham was ever, so entirely happy In her life! She had got it all arranged, and stood in the pantry door, with a bright, happy smile in her eyes and on her lips, when a voice—it was a trifle husky—said, close beside her: " What is it, Jennie?" (he used to call her that in Old days, before hard ness or indifference came between them.) " 0, Robert!" taking a step toward him. Ho opened hie arms and drew her to his heart, kissing her fondly and tenderly as he ever had in the days of his courtship. "I have been a brute, little wife," lie whispered, huskily; "can you ever forgive me?" "Forgive you? 0, Robert! I never was so happy in my life ! I have been to blame; too, I haven't —" " Yes you have! You have been an angel compared to me. I've made a slave of you, but you shan't work so any more. Jones' Laura is coming up to-morrow to help you till after haying, and then I'll make some permanent arrangement." "Oh ! Robert, I can get along now, I feel just as light as a bird." "And you are almost," he said, smil ing a little sadly into her eager face.— " No ; 1 tun able to hire some one to help you, and I am going to. And by the way ; I saw Leeds this noon. It's a tlull time Just now, and so I thought I'd give the poor fellow a job." "Oh! Robert! You ain't going to—" "Ain't I?" he said teasingly, laugh ing at her enthusiasm. Are you really, Robert—really go ing to have the eld house painted ?" "Every squardinoli of board, Jennie, Inside and out. Anti when you get over the summer's work, you can be looking up something to brighten up the old place a little." "Hobert I" " Wlint?" " T wnnt to tell you something—you won't be angry'?" "No," smilingly. " Well, to•day—lt was wrong I know, but I felt so discouraged — l almost wished I had married Squire Burnham; but now, 0, Robert! I wouldn't marry him for fifty French cottages!" Foranswer ho stooped and kissed her tenderly on the lips, A KIND HEART A Tut*: nerawn HOMARCE, Knowing that the general class of readers are more Interested in tales founded upon feats than fiction, we give the following sketch, which, although rivaling many of those romantic pic tures drawn by fiction writers, is vouch ed for by an old English journal as be ing founded upon a reallife occurrence, and merely polished by the pen of the writer. A. newly married couplt had Just come frem the altar, and were about starting one bridal tour, as the follow ing conversation took place: The newly married husband took ono of his bride's hands in his own. " Al low me," said he, " thus to hold your hand, for I dread lest you should quit me. I tremble lest this should bo an Illusion. It seems to me that lam the hero of one of those fairy tales which amused me in my boyhood, and which, In the hour of happiness, some malig nant fairy steps ever in to throw the victim into grief and despair." "Re•assure yourself, my dear Freder ic," said the lady. " I was yesterday the widow of Sir James Melton, and to day I am Madame de la Tour your wife. Banish from your mind the Idea of the fairy. This is not a fiction but a his tory." Frederic de la Tour had, indeed, some reason to suppose that his fortunes were the work of a fairy's wand; for, in the course of one or two short months, by a seemingly inexplicable stroke of for tune, he had been raised to happiness and wealth beyond his desires. A friendless orphan, twenty-five years old. he had been the holder of a clerkship which brought him a scanty livelihood, when, one day, as he passed along the Rue St. Honore, a rich equipage stop ped suddenly before him, and a young and elegant woman called from it to him, " Monsieur, Monsieur," said she. At the same time, on a given signal, the footman leaped down, opened the carriage door, and Invited FrederickJo enter. He did so, though with some hesitation and surprise, and the carriage started ofi' at full speed. " I have recerved your note, sir," said the lady to M. de la Tour, in a very soft and sweet voice; "and, in spite of re fusal, I hope yet to see you to-morrow evening at my party." "To see me, Madame!" cried Fred- " Yes, sir, you— Ah ! a thousand pardons," continued she, with an air of confusion. "I see my mistake. For give me, sir! you are so liken particular friend ! What can you think of me? Yet the resemblance is so striking that it would have deceived any one." Of course Frederic replied politely to the apologies. Just as they were terminated the car riage stopped at the door of a splendid mansion, and the young man could do no more than offer his arm to Lady Melton, as the fair stranger announced herself to be. Though English In name, the fair laay, nevertheless, was evident. ly of French origin. Her extreme beauty charmed M. de la Tour, and he congrat uiated himself upon the happy accident which had gained hilll such an acquaint rne. Lady Melton loaded him with civilities, and he was not ill-looking, certainly ; but ho had not the vanity to think his appearance was magnificent; and his plain and scanty wardrobe pre vented him from doing credit to his tailor. He accepted an invitation to the party spoken of. Invitations to other parties followed; and, to be brief, the young man soon found himself an established visitant at the house of Lady Melton. She, a rich and b,mutiful widow, was encircled by admirers. One by one they disappeared, giving way to the poor clerk, who seemed to engross the lady's whole thoughts. Finally, almost by her own asking, they were betrothed. Frederic used to look sometimes at the glass which hung in his humble lodg. log, and wonder to what circumstance he owed his happy fortune. He used to conclude his meditations by the re flection that assuredly the lovely widow was fulfilling some unavoidable award of destiny. As for his own feelings the lady was lovely, young, rich, accom plished, and noted for her sensibility and virtue—could he hesitate? When the marriage contract was sign ed his astonishment was'redoubled, for he found himself, through the lady's love, the possessor. of large property both in England and France. The presence of friends had certified and sanctioned the union, yet, as has been stated, Frederick felt somestrange fears, in spite of himself, leit all Should prove an illusion, and he grasped his bride's hand as if to prevent her being spirited away from his view. "My dear Frederick," said the lady, smilingly, "sit down beside me and let me say something to you." _The young husband obeyed, but did not qUit her hand. She began, " Once on a time"— Frederic started, and half seriously exclaimed, "Heavens it is a fairy tale!" "Listen to me, foolish boy," resnmed'the 'lady. "There 'was once a young girl, the daughter of parents well-boru; and at one time rich, but who.bad declined sadly in circum stances. Until her fifteenth year the family lived in Lyons, depending en tirely for subsistence upon the labor of her father. Some better hopes sprung up and induced Wein to.come to Paris; but it is difilefillto stop In the descent down the path of miefortuntftFor three years the father struggled hard against poverty, and at last died in the hospital. The mother soon followed; and the young girl was left alone, the occupant of a garret of, which the rent was not paid. If there were any fairy connectJ ed with the story this was the moment Lik.N.Q.A , STMip.A( foi key appearasieei bn • tie E.! came. The young glrlreirfainedalone, without Wench' or Proteatollo, lillirflased by' debts which she could not pay{ and seeking, in_vain for Some apebleSof employment. • She fotind•iione;• still it:was neceasasy-, for bertnitaVeliod.: • Ofifiday paincedbn whielt she tasted nothing-. The night that followed.was sleepless. Next .day pooragain' pained without tood,,and the poor girl was forced into' the resolution of•begging: - She covered hethead with her mot h er 's s Veil,' the only heritage she had received, and stooping so to SIXCIU• late age, she went out, into the West. When .there, she held out her hand. Alas! the hand was white,. and youth. and delicate. She felt the necessity of covering it up in the folds of the'vell, as if It bad been. leprosied. Thue con cealed, the poor girl held out her hand to a young. Woman who pissed—one more happy than herself—and asked, 'A sou—a single sou—to get bread!' The petition was unheeded. An old man passed. The mendicant thought , 1 that experience of the distresses of life might have softened one like him, but she was in error. Experience had only hardened, not softened_, his heart,' " The night was cold anCrainy, and the hour bad come when the night po lice appeared to keep the streets clear of all mendicants and suspicious °liar. acters. At this period the shrinking girl took courage once more to hold opt her hand to a passer by. It was ayoung man. He stopped at the silent appeal, and diving into hie pockets pulled out a piece of money, which he threw to her, being apparently afraid to touch a thing so miserable. Just as he did this, one of the pollee said to the girl: " Ah, I have caught you, have I ? you are begging. To the office with you! come along!" " The young man interposed. He took hold hastily of the mendicant, of her whom he had before seemed afraid to touch, and, addressing himself to the policemen, said reproVingly : 'This wo man is not a beggar. No; she 18—she Is one whom I know.' But, sir, said tho officer—. 'I tell you that she Is an acquaintance of mine,' repeated the young stranger. Then turning to the girl, whom he took for an old and feeble woman, he continued "'Coins along, nay good dame, and permit me to see you safely to the end of the street.' Giving hie aria to the unfortunate girl he then led her away, saying : 'Here is a piece of a bun dud sous. It is all I have—take it, poor woman.' "The crown of a hundred sous passed from your hand to mine," continued the lady, "and us you walked along, supporting my stops,l then, through my veil, distinctly saw your face and figure"— ''My figure!" said Frederic, in amaze men t. "Yes, my friend, your figure," re turned his wife, "it was to me that you gave alms on that night. It was my life—my honor, perhaps—that you then saved I" "You a mendicant—you, so young, so beautiful, and now so rich,' cried Frederic. "Yes, my dearest husband," replied the lady, "I have in my life received alms—once only—and from you; and those alms have decided my fate for life. "On the day following that miserable night an old woman, in whom I had inspired some sentiments of pity, ena bled me to enter as seamstress in a re spectable house. Cheerfulness returned to me with labor. I had the good fortune to become a favorite with the mistress whom I served, and, indeed, I did my best, by unwearied diligence and care, to merit her favor. She was often visited by people in high I life. One day Sir James Melton, an Englishman of great property, came to the establishment along with a party of ladies. He returned again. He spoke with my mistress, and learnt that I was of good family; in short, learnt my whole history. The result was, that he sat down by my side one day and asked me plainly if I would marry him. " Marry you cried I, In surprise. "Sir James Melton was a man of sixty, tall, pale and feeble-looking. In answer to my exclamation of astonish ment, he said: ' Yes, I ask if you will be my wife? I am rich, but have no comfort—no happiness. My relatives seem to yearn to see mo in my grave. I have ailments which require a degree of kindly care that is not to be bought from servants. I have heard your story, \ and believe you to be one wilt, will sup port prosperity as well as you have adversity. I make my proposal sincere ly, and hope that you will agree to it.'" " At that time,'Frederic," continued the lady, "I loved you; I had seen you but once, but thatonce was too memor able for me ever to forget it, and some thing always insinuated to me that we were destined to pass through life to. gethq. At the bottom of my soul, I bb leved this. Yet every one around me ssed me to accept of the offer ma e me, and the thought struck me that I might one day make you wealthy. At length my main objection to Sir James Melton's proposal lay in a disin clination to make myself the instru ment of vengeance in SirJames's hands against relatives whom he might dis like without good grounds. The objec. lion, when stated, only increased his anxiety for my consent, and finally, under the impression that it would be, after all, carrying romance the length of folly to reject the advantageous set tlement offered to me, I consented to Sir James's proposal. "This part of the story, Frederic, is really like a fairy tale. I, a poor or phan, penniless, became thewife of one of the richest baronets of England. Dressed in silks, and sparkling . With jewels, I could now pass in my carriage through the very streets where, a few months before, I had stood in the rain and darkness—a mendicant?" "Happy Sir James I" cried M. do In Tour, at this part of the story; "he could prove his love by enriching you." "Ho was happy," resumed the lady. "Our marriage, so strangely assorted, proved much more conducive, It 1s pro• bable, to his own comfort than if he had wedded one with whom all the parade of settlements, of pin money, would have been necessary. "Never, I believe, did ho for au in stant repent of our union. I, on my part, conceived myself bound to do my best for the solace of his declining years; and he, on his part, thought it incumbent on him to provide for my future welfare. He died, leaving me a large part of his substance—as much, indeed, as I could prevail upon myself to accept. I was now a widow, and from the hour to which I became so, I vowed never again to give my hand to man, excepting to him who had suc cored me in my hour of distress, and whose remembrance had ever been pre served in the recess of my heart. But how to discover that man? Ah, uncon scious ingrate! to make no endeavor to come in the. way of one who sought to love and enrich you! I knew not your name. In vain I looked for you at balls, assemblfes, and theatres. You went not there. Ah, how I longed to meet you!" As the lady spoke she took from her neck a riband, to which was attached a piece of a hundred sons. "It is the same—the very same which you. gave me," said she, presenting it to Frederic; "by pledging it I got a little bread from a neighbor, and I earned enough after ward in time to permit me to recover it. I vowed never to part from it. "Ah, how happy I was,Frederic, when I saw you in the street! Theex cuse which I made for stopping you was the first that rose to my mind: But what -tremors I felt even afterward, lest you should have been already married! In that case you would never have heard aught of this fairy tale, though I would have taken some means to serve and enrich you. I would have gone to England, and there passed my dayk in regret, perhaps, but still in peace,-B ut, happily, it -was to be otherwise. You were single." Frederic de le Tour was now awaken ed, as it were, to the MI certaintyof his happiness.. What he could trot but be fore look upon as a sort of freak of randy in a young. and wealthy woman, -was now proved to be the result oU:deep and kindly feeling# most honorable to her who entertained it.' -The .heart of the young husband overflowed with gratitude and affection tothelovelyand noble-hearted being who hadgiven her self to him. He was too happyfor some time to speak. His- wife -first broke silence. . ' . " EV, Frederic," saidshe gaylp, "you see that if I am a fairy it is you who has given me the wand—the talisman—that .has effected all!" At a recent trial cif the Henry;rePeating ride at Woolwich, England, thirty ehotg were tired in forty-four seconds. rrrr rT.T r"").77..AT'57 'W!fNtAlllV;:aitgdiMiilegti:ti,:.:iks . '"'::: „...„ ..„ Between -Clay- and Randolirh.. ' • ' ' • .Y.CriEs' PARTON: - • • • Mr* Oat YikaSearet4 l o9,Argetc 4 o. llo time ,Mr. 4audolph smart miter nom Virginia. lain' !Quincy: - ddmil" , kin, President of the United' State'. l'ohn Randolph, ton prone' Ur-believe' Arvirof ail men, and especially . of - tart 'Politiell opponents, was-persuaded that ...Itepryi Clay lrad gained the office - he . thdie held toys corrupt bargain with the'Predident. Helinnly believed that Mr. Adana : had Sahib Mr. Clay. in 1824, when theeles tion,ofta Prelident devolved upon. the Muse of Representitives: '” Make are President, and I winap .polntion Secretary of Btate, and adopt you as niy successor." • . Thin believing, it waa hard for &man of Mr. Randolph's unscrupulous fhterey to avoid betraying his belief. Moor ingly, in April. 1825, in thb course .of one of his wandering, sarcastleal rangues, after insinuating that. Mr. Clay had forged a public'docutnent,Ran dolph. concluded with the foll owing, words, in reference tu'a recent vote:' " "After twenty-six hours' exertion, h ives time to give in. I was defeated, horse, foot and dragoon—cut up, and clean broke ;down by the coalition of Bllfll and Black George—by the com bination, unheard of till then, of the Puritan with the blaokleg." Bull and Black George are two char aoters In Fielding's celebrated novel of Tom Jones ; Mill being, a sniveling hypocrite, and Black George an auda cious robber. Every one who heard Mr. Randolph use these 'words under stood BM to be tho Yankee President John Quincy Adams; who, however, was no Puritan but a Unitarian, like his father before him. Black George could be no other than Mr. Clay, who early in life was known to have been a gambler, as most gentlemen of the time were. The passage of Mr. Randolph's speech relating to the alleged forgery as follows : "A letter from the Mexican Minister at Washington submitted by the Exec utive to the Senate, bore the ear-marks of having been manufactured by the Secretary of State." On reading the report of this most In sulting and most unjustifiable speech. Mr. Clay wrote a challenge and sent it by his friend, General Jessup, General Jessup called upon Randolph, informed him that lie was the bearer of a mes sage from Mr. Clay, in consequence of an attack recently made upon him in the Senate, both as a private and a public man. " I am aware," said General Jessup, "that no one has a right to quesslon you out of the Senate for anything said In debate, unless you choose voluntari ly, to waive your privilege as a member of that body.". Mr. Randolph replied that he would never shield himself under the protec tion of the constitution, and held him• Bela accountable to Mr. Clay. " I am ready to respond to Mr. Clay," said he, "and will be obliged to you if you will bear my note in reply, and in the course of the day I will look out for a friend." Gen. Jesup declined bearing the note, saying that ho thought Mr. Randolph owed It to himself to consult , his friends before taking so important a step. Mr. Randolp seized General Jesup's hand, and said " You are right, air. I thank you for the suggestion ; but as you do not take my note you must not be impatient if you should ,not hear from me to-day. I now thinleof only two friends, and there are circumstances connected with one of them which may deprive me, of his services, and the other is in bad health. He was sick yesterday, and may not be out to-day." General Jeiiup requested him to take his own time, and bade him good morn ing. This was Saturday, April 1, 1825. Mr. Randolph immediately went to the lodgings of Col. Benton, of Missouri, and upon finding him, asked him bluntly, without giving him any reason for the question " Are you a blood relation of Mrs. Clay's ?" "lam," said Colonel Benton, "That," rejoined Randolp, "puts an end to a request which I had wished to make of you." He then related to Colonel Benton the particulars of the Interview with Gen eral Jesup, and as he was taking his leave he told Colonel Benton that he would make his bosom the sole deposi tory of an important, secret. He said that he did not intehd to fire at Mr. Clay, but meant to keep this intention a secret, and enjoined secrecy upon Colonel Benton until after the duel. In the course of the day Colonel Tatnall, of Georgia, conveyed Mr. Randolph's acceptance of the challenge, which was couched in the following terms: " Mr. Randolph accepts the challenge of Mr. Clay. At the same time he pro tests against the right of any minister of the executive government of the United States to hold him responsible for words spoken in debate as Sena tor of Virginia, in elimination of such minister, or the administration under which he shall have taken office. Col. Tatnall, of Georgia, the bearer of this letter, Is authorized to arrange with General Jesup (the bearer of Mr. Clay's challenge) the terms of the meeting to which Mr. Randolph is invited by that note." Some further correspondence took place between the parties ; relative to the correctness of the report upon which Mr. Clay's action was founded. Mr. Randolph admitted its substantial cor rectness. He acknowledged that he did apply to the administration the epithet puritanic diplomatic, black-legged ad ministration; but he peremptorily de clined to give any explanatlon whatever as to the meaning or application of those words. Owing to the several' causes the duel did not occur until exactly one week after the sending of the ohallenge, Turing which the frlends.of the parties did all that was possible to promote a reconciliation, but in vain. Col..Beu ton had been for some time estranged from Mr. Clay, owing to polit ical differences, but on Friday evening, the night before the duel he called on his old friend and political chief, to show him, as he says, that there was nothing personal in his opposition. The secret had been well kept, and no one in the house knew of the impending event. " The family were in the parlor," Col. Benton relates, " company present, and some of it stayed late. The youngest child, I believe, James went to sleep on the sofa. Mrs. Clay was, as always since the death of ,her daughters, the picture of desolation, but calm, conver sable, and without the slightest appar ent conclousness of . the impending event. When, at length, the family and the company had all retired, Col. Benton approached Mr. Clay, and assured him that his personal feelings towards him remained the same as formerly and that in whatever concerned his life or honor, Mr. Clay had his bestwishes. The Secretary of State responded cordially, and at midnight they parted. 'The next morning Col. Benton called upon Randolph, chiefly anxious to learn whether he still retained his intention not to fire. He told him of his visit to Mr. Clay the night before—of the late sitting—the child asleep—the uncon scious tranquility of Mrs. Clay. "I could not help thinking," added Col. Benton, " how different all that might be the next night." Mr. Randolph quietly %piled, as he looked up from writing in his :will : "I shall do nothing to disturb the Sleep of the child or the repose of the mother..' A few minutes after he sent his man servant to the United States Branch Bank to get nine pieces of gold—a scarce commodity at that day _as at present. The man soon returned, say? ing that the bank had no gold: stantiy the master's shrill voice was heard exelaiming:- • " Their name is legion! and they are liars from the. beginning ~Tohnny, bring me. myiroree." A few minutes -after lie-was at the bank countei, asking the state Of his account. Fehr thousand._ dollies' was the amount of money-which:he had. in the bauk, aud•heaaked for it. The teller took up some packages of bank notes,' and politelY aslred him in what sized notes he Would haveit. • " I want money i" roared.liandolph. The teller, a littlepuzzled;said, "You want sliver?" "I want my money," replied the ir- ritable Senator. ' The teller then lifting some.boxes to the counter, asked him, in his politest; tone: L _ • : • "Have you a cart, Mr. Randolph, to put It in?" ,lo 13 i ,ts: (.0;:tr.:1:A '=W ~I 'glut le.lny.buaineal; air,'? said the , Virginian.. .; • . • ,At thie niciinett't.,the caehier cam for. ward' and tufoertainett,litat itan-' dolph Wintedilmti *me hini jileciesot .gaid, .1/hien , be oon'destielldett to.ltaket afid.r9illfflediwith thern tolls lodgloga....There angerve Col. Benton a nOte, - refineating 'him; If 'lie was killed; to feel in .bia left - breeohmiveliet, and takeout this gold/`- Three of theepleees were for. Col: Benton himeelf,for and, the other ,el* were to ~b e. divided among two other frbility, for the same . . It . was a bout ` sunset, in a thick foreat, on the Virginla•shore of the Potomac, that the. antagonists met ta deelde their difference toy exchangingehote...A pis. tol was handed to , Mr. Randolph, load. ed and set liair-trigger, and it was aeoldentally diseharged, Willa the neszlal was pointed to the ground. Randolph was exceedingly mortified at the accident. . "1 - proteet against the halt. tilgger," said he." • Mr. Clay instantly remarked, 'lt mas clearly an accldent,!'anitevery one on the grounci•ccinfirmed,the assertion. Mr. Randolph, It . seems, hid changed his mind and was now deterthiped to direct his' pistol sans, if possible, to dis able his antagonist without doing him any serious injury. He came to:this deterthinatlon after hearing that Mr. Clay objected to the shortness of. time allowed •by the seconds'for firing,-say ing thatthe did'not think he could die charge his pistol in the time specified. Randolph misunderstood the remark, and'considered It indicative of the de termination on the part of Mr. Clay to inflict a fatal wound. "He was determined," he wrote, in a penciled note to Benton, "to get time to kill WO. May I not then disable him? Yes, if I please."' The men were placed. The pistols were discharged. Both *ere remarkably well aimed, and each bullet came within a 'few Inches of its mark. Col. Benton instantly went forward, and offered to mediate between them. Mr. Clay waved his hand, as though putting away a trifle and said: "This Is child's play. I de,wand an other fire." Mr, Randolph also demanded another exchange of shots, While the pistols were loading, Col. Benton took Ran• doip aside, and implored him to consent to an accommodation, but he found him restive and irritable. Ho evidently having regretted having aimed at his antagonist, and he now explained to Col. - Benton why he had done so. He declared that he had aimed below Mr Clay's knee; "Dior," said ho, "it is no mercy to shoot a man in the knee, and my only object was to disable him." He then added, In his most impressive manner: " I would not have seen him fall mortally, or , even doubtfully wounded, for all the laud that is watered by the king of flood, and all his tributary streams." The men were placed n second time, and the word was given to fire. Mr. Clay's bulletpassed through Randolph's coat. Randolph raised his pistol, Ws. charged it in the air, and, as lie did so, said: "I do not fire at you, Mr. Clay." With these words he advanced, and offered his hand which Mr. Clay took with the cordiality which became him. "You owe me a coat, Mr. Clay," said Randolph gaily. "I am glad the debt Is no greater," was Mr. Clay's happy reply. The parties now ull returned to the city with light hearts. On reaching his lodgings, the eccentric Randolph took the nine pieces of gold from his pocket, and said to the three friends for whom he had designed them : "Gentlemen, Clay's bad shooting shan't rob you of your seals. lam going to London, and will have thorn :bade for you." And so he did, taking great care, too, to get upon them the correct armorial bearings. On the Monday after the duel, the antagonists exchanged cards, and they remained on terms of civility dur ing the rest of their lives. Seven years after, when• Mr. Clay was In the Senate, and was expected to deliver an import ant speech, poor Randolph, who was near his end, went to the Senate cham ber to hear once more the voice of the great Kentukian. As Mr. Clay rose to Urdu his speech; Randolph said : "Help me up, help me up. I came here to hear that voice." When the session was over, Mr. Clay offered his hand, and they had a brief but cordial interview. The Oundbox Bemoan'ruction 11111 . . The following is the omnibus bill so called, as it passed the Senate: An act to admit the States of North Car olina, South Carolina, Louisiana, Georgia and Florida to representation in Congress. Whereas, The people of North Carolina, South Carolina, Louisiana, Georgia, Ala bama and Florida have, in pursuance of the provisions of an act entitled "An act for the more efficient government of the rebel States," passed March 2,18!37, and the nets apertaining thereto, framed constitu tions of State government which are repub lican, and have adopted said constitutions by large majorities of the votes cast at the elections held for the ratification or rejec tion of the same; therefore, Be it enacted etc., That each of the States of North Carolina, South Carolina, Louts' ana, Georgia, Alabama and Florida shall bo entitled and admitted to representation in Congress as a State of the Union when the Legislature of such States shall have duly ratified the amendment to the Constitution of the United States proposed by the Thirty. ninth Congress, and known as article 14, upon the following fondamental conditions : That the Constitution of neither of said States shall over bo so amended or chauged as to deprive any citizen or class of citizens of the United States of the right to vote in said States, who are entitled to, vote by the Constitution thereof herein recognized, ex cept as a punishment for such crimes as are now felonies at common law, whereof they shall have been duly convicted, under laws equally applicable to all the inhabitants of said State. Provided, That any alterations of said constitutions prospective in its effect, may be made in regard to time and place of residence of voters. And the State of Georgia shall only be entitled and admitted to rep resentation upon this further fundamental condition, that the first and third sub divisions of section seventeen of the fifth article of the Constitution of said Stute, ex cept the proviso to the first sub-division, shall be null and void ,• and that the Gen eral Assembly of said State, by solemn public act, shall declare the assent of the State to the foregoing fundamental condi• UOl3. Sc.E 2. That if the day fixed for the first meeting of the Legislature of either of said States by the Constitution or ordinance thereof shall have passed, or haves° nearly arrived before the passer of this act that there shall not be time for the Legislature to assemble at the period fixed such Leg islature shell convene at the end of twenty days from the time this act takes effect, unless the Governor elect shall sooner con vene the same. . Sao. S. That If:m.llra section of. this act shall take affect as to each Stale, except Georgia when such Stateshall by its Legis latureduly ratify article fourteen of the amendments to the Constitution of the United States proposed by the Thirty-ninth Congress and as to the State of Georgia, when it Audi, in addition, give the assent of said State to the fundamental condition herelubefore imposed upon the same. And thereupon the officers of each State, duly elected and qualified under the Constitu than thereof, shall be inaugurated without delay; but no,person prohibited from hold ing office under the 'United States or any State by: section three of the proposed amendment to the Constitution of the Uni ted States known as article fourteen, shall be deemed eligible to any office In either of the said States, unless relieved from dis ability, as providpdin the said amendment. And it is hereby made the duty of the President, within ten days after receiving official Information of the ratification of the saidamendment by iheLegislature oreither of the if ald States, to. issue a proclamation announcing that fact. The Issuim o[ the Campehrn, The :14:T. iferaid - eays The real issub Is- between civil Uovern ment. or Military. domination. in this land. • Grant'S success means Infinity domination, either , by his:will or spinet his will—with his knowledge or .without it. . 'His 'party is pushed to that point that it can exist only Has despptle,ohile-Algarehy: Popular Vitality is departed, front it ; popular prin. s eiples and thecauae of the nation are oaten .outAit Butierkun iurd the.radiaal rot. Le purpose hi tofide, atiTes it:cannot rule "by the . concept . of the 'people it Will'rule everywhere - es the South. ' Ii "hae're beaised'the dramain 'the SoitthAtiat It:ill endeavor to PlitY in,the North; and, recall ing-the countenance tit ths'otrtitry'hilthe caching elention;:gine being so given Ircit, . it will deliberately..arganizeAXlM govern ment; not:only, ItontodAle the cortatitution," but on the ruins of the constitution-la;oy ern-meat without an Erecutiim, ut. a , Supreme :.and nOWNAn gress=tlieabsolute and .indatlidte itie'PartY_V9Wer, thetskoligarahalegitiret, Ingthenstielves into tlidiepitieettfortint iii -deginite.terrnlts BHtisli,`-ParlitiMentehOe •Acineln - peat-times. atatio people *mild oppose this with any chance of success they must fight it. 1...:3': ...:Li.:::..,:::.:, OM= 1;;;.1.1 Grit Reinsirk • (Frani the 'Tra r vtler, Julie 4.) the =oath* of the Massachusetts Med ical Society on Wednesday, Dr. John M. Hula% pbysialah and - surgeon,orWoburn, but-formerly of Cavendish, Vt., read a • pa- Per conMining.theadatory of a most Inter- Rsting case of : it:kiwi to the head, and pre sented'io 'the ineliting the, veritable skull Which eusdalned theinjury. ' Thie.case' oixtfrred:some twenty years agovin , Ca.vendish i Nt., and was described at length in' the Traveller a few days later. On the 13th of September,-1848, Phineas .P. Gage, foreman of,a gang of men engaged la bhisting a deep cut ,in the continuation' of the Rutland and Thirlington road, ' had a tinaping• • iron . blown through his brains, and recovered within sixty days, living twelve years after. The case 'caused great discussion when reported by Dr.: Barlow in the medical journals at that time, and it was largely disbelieved; many eminent. surgeons de claring the occurrence as described to be a physiological ithpossibility. Dr. Harlow, in presenting the paper to-day, justly said that, 11 *due to:science that a case so grave, and which; stualeeded by such remarkable resnlisr!abould ndt bo' bast sight of; and that its entaaspient story should have a per manent redord. Gage was a perfectly healthy, strong and active youngman, twenty-flye years of age, of nervo bilious temperament, 51• feet in height, average weight 150 pounds, postiess log an iron will as well as an iron frame, muscular system remarkably well devel oped, having had scarcely a day's illness from' hildhood up. • Its described in the paper read, it ap pears that a drilled hole bad been char with powder, and lie was about tamp ng it lu, (or, more:popularly, ramming It down,) when his attention was called fora moment. Looking over his shoulder at his men, he at the same moment, ram rued down the iron-, supposing his asdstant had poured sand on the powder, aids the custom. The iron struck lire from the rock, the charge exploded, and the iron was driven up into his cheek and out of the top of his head, high in the air, and was afterward found several rods distant, smeared with blood and brains. The tamping iron was lli foot in length, 11 inches thick, and potiltod at one end, the taper being sullen inches long and the di ameter of the point a quarter of nn inch. It weighed 13 pounds. The point was up ward, and the iron smooth. 'rho missile entered, by its pointed end, the loft side of the moo, immediately ante rior to the nngloof tho lower Jaw and pass ing obliquely upward and slightly back wards, emerged out of the top of Cho Muhl In the median lino, at the book part of the frontal bone, near the corona! suture. The ordinary reader will understand it bolter, if wo say that, pointing upward, it entered the cheek outsiclo the tooth, and under the chock bone, wont inside au Inch behind the eye, and out of the top of the bend in the centre, two inches buck of the lino whore tho forehead and hair meet. Thu patient was thrown on his book, and gave a few convulsive motions of the ex tremities, but spoke In a tow minutes. De was taken three-quarters an mile in a sit ting position in p cart, got out or the cart himsolf with rho aid of his men, and an hour afterwards, with the assistance of Dr. Harlow holding his arm, walked up a flight of stairs to his room. Ile wait conscious, but exhausted from loss of blood which found its way from the mouth into the stomach, andwas ejected us often as every fifteen or twenty minutes by vomiting. Ills bod and person wore soon a gore of blood. • One piece of the skull had boon broken out in fragments; another piece was raised and thrown back, like a door, tho scalp serving as a hinge .and on the opposite title of the wound there was another frac ture and en elevation. Theglobe of the loft eye was partially protruded from its orbit, the lett side of the face was more preminent than the right. The opening in the skull was 2 Inches wide by 31 long, and tire brain was hanging in shreds on the hair. The pulsatlon of the brain could be die. tiectly seen, and the doctor passed his finger in its whole length, without the patient say ing he felt pain. The paper gives an account of the treat, men tof the ease. In fifty-nine days the patient was abroad. On the third day there was Inflammation and some delirium; and during several weeks there was occasional delirium ; for two weeks of tire time the patient lay in a stupid condition and his death was expected and his grave clothes prepared. On the 20th of November he went in a dose carriage thirty miles to his home in Lebanon. The subsequent history of the case is in teresting. Gage came back to Cavendish in April in fair health and strength, having his tamping iron with him, and ho carried It with him till the day of his death, twelve years after. The effect of the injury appears to have been the destruction of the equili brium between his intellectual faculties and the animal propensities. He was now capricious, fitful, irreverent, Impatient of restraint, vaseillating, a youth in intellectual capacity and manifestations, a man in physical system and passions. His physical recovery was complete, but those who once know him as a shrewd, smart, energetic, persistent business man, recognized the change in his character. The balance of his mind was gone. Ha used to give his nephews and his nieces wonderful accounts of his hair-breadth es capes, without foundation in fact, and con ceived a great fondness for pets. - Ho went to various places, being engaged here and there ; was a year and a half in charge of horses at a livery stable ; was ex hibited at Barnum's Museum in New York; and in August, 18.52, font'years after his in jury, left New England forever, and went toValparaiso with a man who was going to establish a line of coaches. Here he lived eight years, occasionally driving a six-horse coach, and enduring many hardships. In 1858 his health began to tail ; in 1860 be had a long illness, the nature of which cannot now be ascertained, He now left Chili, and Dr. Harlow lost all trace of him for some years, but finally found out that the mother and sister were in San Francisco, wrote to them, and rower tallied that Gage had got there in 1860; worked with a farmer at Santa Clara, and in 1861 was taken with epileptic tits; after wards he worked in several places; and finally in May, 1861, had a succession of Ills which lasted a couple of days .and carried him oft There was no autopsy made. Dr. Harlow made overtures for the possession of the skull, on account of its scientific interest, and the world at largo is under obligation to the relatives who wore willing to sur render It for the rises of medical science. It pears that tho man could see out of his left eye, though the lid was not fully subject to the will, and that bu was troubled with uneasiness In the head. . . Dr. Harlow, In the summing up of his val uable but interesting paper, presented these views: let,, The recovery is attributed sole ly to the vie vitro, vie conservatrlx, or If some like it, vie medientrix nature. In plain words ho had n good constitution. 2d. This case has been cited as ono of re covery; physically the recovery was near ly or quite completed for the four years im madiately.suoceoding tho injury, but ulti mately tho patient succumbed to progressive disease of the brain. Mentally the recovery was only partial; thorn wee no dementia; intellectual operations were perfect in kind, ,but not in degree or quntit,ty. Despatches oy the At!antler Cable an nounce that Prince Michael 111, the ruler of dervia, was assassinated in Belgrade on the evening of Juno 10th . The Prince, ac companied-by his cousin, the daughter of the latter, and his usual attendants, while walking in the public park of Belgrade, was suddenly attacked by three brothers armed with revolvers. The aseasetne com menced firing at the princely party indis criminately. At the first shot,the Prince tell, end expired in a few minutes. The cousin vast also killed, but the lady was only slightly wounded. One of the assasins was promptly captured; the other two have escaped for the present, but their detection, it's supposed, is inevdable. The city of Belgrade was fearfully agitated on learning of this murder, and the excitement will extend into all the principalities. The cause of this outrage la as yet unknowni'but it is conjectured that Prince Michael's intention to co-operate with the Sultan, in his liberal policy, has aroused the fanatical opposition of the old Turk party. Who MOH the Capitol? The Capitol of the United States, us it stands, is the work of many persons, of whom but two or three are noticeable. Dr. Thornton made the that design, said by 'Washington to combine "grandeur, atm phony and convenience." The architects retained but two or, three features of Thorn 'ton's design,find preferred ono by Mr. S. Ballet. B. H. Latrobe, of an enterprising Maryland family, began to rebuild the .capitol after the British burnt it, and Mr. Bullfirioh Completed it.' It was thirty-five 'years after `the laying of the cornerstone lbst. ore a completed National Capitol existed In America. The extension of the Capitol has already occiipled eighteen years. Wash ington laid the collier aton e of he old. Web ster of the new Capitol. The llrunellescbt .of the house Is Thomas 11 Walter. the G hi berti--of it is - Thomas Crawford. Them are :three - ' jtames,: therefore—Ballot, Waller, craWfOrd—with whom are associated tho merits of the capitol. ,Walter is incompar ,ably-flte, national. architect ; , Ire built the :01rard'college arPl3lladelphiNand Citi that 'blinding arid' the .dorne of the capitol his fame will rest.' ' The'-engineer of the • bridge across the 34thisdgutippi at-St. Louis, J. B. Eads, has Written a report .demonstrating tho practi cability of bnilding; 500 feet brldgc-spans, fiq contends thatit is possible to throw a Etn le arch '4fmar - steel, 2,000 feet long, etOSl 2, :the: Mississippi:'• The ,Kni:inliorg bridge, in Rolland, has a truss span 615 feet long, which sustains a double railway trade; :t1.4iiiiaii1. , ...'..: , • ._• ;News , The Damocratlagalu In the popnlar vote in .Orogon is about 3,690. . . • , 4. young lady Newlrork bnAbail thirty summer drosses made for the approaching season. • ' • 3 The Dommirats carried the' Charleston election by a large intOority. A man In Pooria,, recently ate six dozen eggs in a single day on a wager. An Illinois editor propoies• to "board round" with hii non-paying subscribers. Nearly 9000 barrels of eggs reoently ar rived in New York city. . Tho now Tammany Hall, In New York, seats 2000 persons. The town of Reno, Nevada, which Is ono month old, &attains 500 Inhabitants. Twenty thousand sets of Chambers' Cy clope3dia have been sold ha this country. Conjecture is rife as to whether Grant will unbottlo Butler to make speeches for him. A "patent vaceinnator" has been Invent od, to render iuocoulatlon painless and err lain. A carriage with India rubber wheele, for the nee of Invalid:l, bne been produced in Loudon. A tiger died In his cage In a traveling menagerie at Detroit recently, at the rare old ago of forty years: Thorn is a Judicial District in lowa coin. prising ton counties, in which there Is not a single lawyer. In Evansville, Indiana, flower gardens, cultivated by the pupils, are attached to some of the public schools. Two whaling vessels recently arrived at Now godford, which, together, made n loss of $70,000 to thoir owners. Trnvol ovor the ,Penuaylvaula Railroad la the present tlitte la very large, and on I he Increase. Senator Gritno..proposes to prosecute the Now York Tribunc and the Cincinnati (bi :deo for libel. A wealthy physician of Cincinnati im posed upon his hob' the condition that ho should (lover use tobacco. Coburn and ItlOCoole hope to proceed with their light uudor more favorablo dr. 'cumstances. There aro ouo Ilundrod and eighty-nine lecturers on Spiritualism In this eottntry nriap.got their living thereby. Thowns Temple 11'161)80n appointed Pont !molter ut Marehallou, Chester , county, In place of' Joel Dailey, (lounged, Hon. Michael C. norr Us boon ronoininn tad tor Congromi by the Democrats of tbo Re ootnl indict:la District. • •• • Senator Sprnguo boo boon po•eleolodao tbo Unitod States. Amato by ,tho Rhode Island Legislature; without opposition. John Crnwfctrd, tho distinguished orlontal scholar and ethnologist in doad, at the ago of loyal:ay-aye years, , Four moll woro klllod ,by tUo oiculoalon of n boiler In n atonal nt Water ford, Canada, on Monday. The journeyman carpenters of We'd (Mester recently struck far an Increase from $2,25 to #275 per day and worn succo4sful. A now Odd FeHowe' Hall will bo dedica ted at Hnydertown, Northumborland coun ty, on the 30th lust, Exulting competition to the paper culler trade In North Bridgowntor, Mugu., hem (.or tied the price down to onocont a box. Sixty-live negro delegates attondoa the Chicago Convention. Ho soya tho Cincin nati Commercial, Tho Prosident has appointed a son, of John C Fremont to ho uildphiptnan. In the Navy. Brute Butler Iwo given tip for tho proeont, ull:idea of getting poseenelon of the 'moons of the Whit° .ll.oueo. The Gorman sclontthe expedition to the North Pole boo stilled on Its voyage of ex ploration. Tho expenses of President Johnson's do• fence come out of private pocket*, but the Rump bill Is saddled upon the Goyerutnent. The Hays City. R ailway Ache= says that the survey of the 'Kansas Pacific has been completed to the 411th mile post, and the road will be extended immediately, • The Yale Cdurant, a paper published by the students of Yale College is about to be enlarged, and the weekly issue, it Is ex pected, will reach 25,000 e.oplee. Potter& Co's planing mill, and Smith Kimball's dwelling In Williamsport, Pa., were burned yesterday. The loss is over 830,000. Gen. Stoneman has removed Joseph M. gum ph reys,one of the Councilman of Rich mond, Vu., and has revoked the appoint ment of IL L. Wlgand as Tax Collector. San Francisco is so largely built on made laud that the timbers of old wharves were recently exhumed half a mllo from the present water front. Nr.• No less than 100,000 rats have been caught In Marlon county, Minn., during tho last winter. The ilur trade Is quite lively ln that region. Paradise Valley, Cal., lying between the Tuolumne and ;Rantstaus rivers, contains an almost unbroken grain field of ono hun dred and tiny thousand acres. The Central Pacific Railroad Company is negotiating for a reductloreof the freight and passenger charges on that portion of the road operating in California. The cables for the bridge at Niagara Palls have been received, and will be put up im mediately. They are iu fourteen coils, each coil weighing fourteen tone. Chief Justice Chase says that the pardon ing power Is certainly a constitutional pre rogative of the President, and Congress has no power to abridge it. It is stated that Mrs. Lincoln is soon to publish a volume of revelations of things at the White House during her term as Presidentress. The news of the suspension of George 11. Stuart by the Synod of the Reformed Pres byterian Church creates much comment In Philadelphia. Fashionable ladies In .New York have adopted the Parb fashion of carrylpg their parasols hung on ono side or the dross like a sword. The national tax collected in the Hart ford, Conn., district, for the month of April was only Eis4,Boo.77—agnlnst $125,000 In the corresponding month of last year. She Tennessee Democratic Convention met, and chose delegates to the Now York Convention. A majority of the delegates are 'understood to favor Pendleton. A Washington letter mays that Stanton bankrupt. Irmo, ho is certainly doing all he can to make tho notion his companion In nolsery.—[Prentice. Gam Meade wont to the South with the good opinion of all. Mu lute now the hol low and mocking praise 'of the Radicals, and tho respect of nobody. Tho Connecticut Democratic Convention mot at Now flacon, and olectoil &legatos to ilia National Convention. No inetruo thane woro glean for any particular candi data. Kit Carman, the celebrated mountaineer and guide, died at Port Lyons, Colorado, on the alult. lie attained th) rank at Brigadier General during the war, and wee Ilfty-eight yearn old at the time of his death. The Massachusetts Slate Temperance Committee has issued an address urging the formation of prohibitory clubs through out the State, with a view to the political success of the cause. The Grand Lodge F. and A. Masons, of the'State of New York, have elected the following officers: Grand Master,' James Gibson; Deputy Grand Master, John H. Anthon; Senior Grand Warden, Christo pher Fox. The Union Pacific Railroad has been completed andopened to business'6oo miles west of Omaha. sixty Miles havi been built this spring. The company have a larger force of laborers at work Limn over before. Steel rails for rearm's are decidedly get.' thug Into favor. Upwards of one thousand tons have boon ordered for the Camden and Amboy lines in New Jersey, and the New haven company proposes to lay Its entire track with therm A letter . just reoeived in Boston from Athens, says that the Greek Government, by receiving a Cretan deputy, has virtually recognized Crete as a part of Greece, and predicts war with Turkey In consequence, and eventually a general European conflict. Tr you want to keep poor, bny two glasaes of ale every day at teh-cents each, amount ing iu the year to ST3; smoke three cigars, one after each meal, Counling up in the course of the year to as much more, and keep a big dog. An institution of learning called "Whit tier College," in honor of the Quakert, has been opened at Salem, Henry Co., lowa. It is to be conducted according to the prio ciplbs of the Society of friends, and open to all allke.who will conform to its rules and regulations. The merchants of St. Louis are moving vigorously for are-opening of Bayou M un chac, in Lonialanal by which a'diroct water route to Mobile , will' be' opened, diverging from the Mississippi two hundred miles above New Orleans, thus leavlug the latter city out of the way. . , The annual meeting of the Illinois Cori lral-Railway was held a Chicago on the 27th of Iday. Jonathan hiturgor,, B. S. Ifeweip, Traoy, W. B. Osborn and Getarge Bliss ere elected DireCtors. The contract, with m the Dubuque and Sion: City Co. wordontlrMed, and a stock' dividend 'of 8 per coot. was declared. -' - Prices at the Sweetwater ' mines in Mon tana aro qu'oted rather high. ,plour is thirty dollars a sack ; 'Whlkirk twenty • ,dollars - gallon, and " very. scarcet,n bacon; Tit?''rk, balm; butter-and anger onotiollartipotind ; lard;bofted au& oataileasaggintpfivk tints a pound; tea and tobacco Thar dollars' a pound; potatoes t wenty-dve cents a pound, and eggs two dollars a dozen. gums OP ADVEITIIIII/0. - 811SSISISS-ADVIIINTIRILKESTI, Si: • yrir per r • nano of ten !Insert! per year On aeon ad. • Illi ttittk REAL All Auvta . Tango, Wanda a Iles for tholtrat, and mat Mr non antrequent In. GIUMIAL ADVSMTISINO 7 coats Ilno I nrst, luxt owls esad stithequentln ser tion. .„ . . . EPTAIAL N IC= 11:1 LOOlll Colain!" / 5 canal Pirrins.:; i • biakmat - Kant?* pridkllDE MarflAoB Ind deaths, 10 ant,' per line tor Ant uissruan crruN 240 ..MlRlgkintraturi st.to Itscaneer notice, ...... 2 . 50 Anduarso ut.tloos,. ... . la. no . taros Luau '06,5 at Cuthinn. Ready-Mide Clothing ! CLOTHING MADE TO ORDER SPRING _ ot . 1 SPRING AND AND• SUMM R SUMMER READY-DIAPE CLOTIII NU, s l READY-MADE CLOTHING, LOW PRICES. LOW PRICFN MEN'S, YOUTHS' AND DOI'S' CLOCHIND MEN'S, YOUTHS' AND BOYS' ULOTHINO READY-MADE AND MADE TO ORDER. 4_ Z.::...11^-1 3.‘ 1•1'',7.•[1:1 11 4'o „ ' / • A. 3 4„••••:;1 i Q•0 "I,' .••:g 5 • I •.;.• , MEASURES SENT US, AS PER DIACIIIAN, WILL DE ATTEND ED TO PROMPTLY. WE ARE CONSTANTLY RECEIVING NEW GOODS FOR SPRING AND SUM- MER WEAR, CLOTIMNO MADE TO ORDER FORISIEN AND BOYS, ON THE MOST REASONABLE TBIthIM ROCKAIILL & WILSON, nomutim, & WILSON, ItOOKIIILL it WILSON, :003 AND26OO, CLIESTNUT HT., PHILADIMPIIIA apr 1 ORM gitedical. DR. CALLIIALL'III VEGETABLE CORDIAL! The only known Curo for the °ravel, Dia betes, Weakness and Inflammation of the gill• boys and Urinary Organs. Dr, Carrell has made the diseases of the kidneys his spode' study for several years, and is now able to pot before the public A PERFECT CURE FOR THE CIAME. The following are ovltiene. s of the kidneys being al:Noted t First a distress In the enroll of the back when walking, Mantling or lying too long, especially when nut getting up ha the morning, or in case of too much exercise. This Is generally followed by LI distrimi In tiro sides, sillfoolui °Cilia limbs, swelling of thelimbn and stomach, also a,tandeury to dropsy, shortness of broath and rheumatic, pains. Tide isan Wee. lion of the kidneys. Persona may know this by feeling worse when having cold, and in tills ease the urthe will have a very 'high color. Many people are confined to their homes with this disease, and have given up to„illo with the dropsy or rheumatism. EMISZZ! This in a woaktions or.intiaminatton of tho kidneys and urinary organs, causing frequent, discharge] of urine both day and night; ilium) dihnhargoa being at times unonntrollablo, at oth.br thrum with much pain and dinagreoablu burning. I=3 This is a stone, caused by a sediment which colleata at the kidneys when they fall to get freely; then passing through thou:ll3w chan nels into the bladder, thige becomes an in creasing stone. All till:: brcauaed by the kid neys not performing their proper function,,. The experience of thousand:: is that Dr. Carrall'a Cordial Will Diraolvo This !none. so that it will pawl :without pain, clear out all that sediment from which they collect, and stimulate the kidneys to their proper action, therefore remove all the above mentioned trouble, The aloof this article, from ono to three months, will cure the most revere cameo. PRICE ONE DOLLAR. Prepared by DR. O.tIIItALL, oMce No. Tel Harmony street, Philadelphia, t 23 Hod by all Draggiste. A. Cure is legally warranted In all eases who call upon Dr. Carrall. Write and ask these parties what tills article has done fur them: Rey. B. C. Lippincott, (I lortsboro', N. J. Mr. Allen Wells, Mount Holly, N. J. John Handbert, 2122 Sommer street, William Wattis, 1028 Mouth sth street, Polito. .4RrOrders throated to Johnson, Holloway St Cowden, tO2 Arch street,PhiPa. Job lyw 23 LADIETAKE PARTICULAR NOTICE IL TIM REAL VELPAII FEMALE PILLS! These Pala, so celebrated many ycare ago In Paris, for the rellefof female Irregularities, and afterwards for their criminal employment in the practice of abortion, are now offered for sale for the first time in America. They have been kept In comparative obscurity from the feet that the originator, Mr. Vol pau; IN a phyal elan in Faris of great wealth. awl strict con scientious principles, And has withhold them from general nee, lest they should be employed for unlawful purposes. In overcoming Female Obstructions, Nor vane and Spinal Affections, Palau In the Bach and Limbs, Fatigue on slight exertion, Pal old Wien of the Heart, Hysterics, dm,ud will effect a core when oil other Means Ha to failed; and, although a powerful remedy, du not Con tain calomel, antimony, or anything hurtful to the coned Lotion. . . To married ladles anti young girls who have navor boon regulated; tboy are pocul tarty suit. ed. They will, In a short time, bring on the monthly period with regularity. litorton.—alarried Ladies "Mould never take thorn whoa there is any reason le hollow) theinsolvea pregnant, Ladies can procure a box, coaled front tile oyes or the curious, by enclosing one dollar and. I 4,noldailn stalnl4 to H.W.MADOMIIER, Utmerai Agent for United Hiatus and Cantu at Albany, N. Y., or to any authorised Agent. Dr. D. AtoCORMICK, Agent, Laucastur. sold by all Drugginto. I.ly 21 lyw • MEDICAL. DOCIOR N. B. ISHISISINP, Physician for Chronic Diseases, lins a per klUtlll I, on/C0 at NO. tO EAST KING ST., LANCASTER, l'A., Where he hen boon engnged for some time port, in the ouceeemful treatment of OLD OBSTINATE DISE4 MEE. The Doctor 'night present, a volume of cer tificates and testimonials of cures, but, Lilo must satisfactory evident:le will be given thu public in a trial of his skill. Darer lirlsbltie devotes exclusive attention to the class of diseases, lu which his prsctico has been uniformly successtul, eir•ctifig cures w..en they have bottiod all systems of treat. moot. CONSUMPTION, PARALYSIFI, RHEUMATISM, BRONCHITIS DYSPEPSIA, ASTHMA, PILES, AND DROPSY, DISEASES OF THE - I.II.IIErtHEART, LUNUS, STOMA CII, SKIN, AND O& TILE NERVOUS SYSTEM, And all thud() Diseased peculiar to females through We, are promptly and permaneutly cured when curable, end reasonable charged made for medicines. The Doctor's principal remedial agents are selected carefully (rota the Plifirmacoprela of the United States and Germany, and prepared and given out by Olin at hie °Mee, mid com bine all the modern Improvements of medi cine, among which are Inhalation. Atomiza tion, Electrical and Magnetic treatment, which are ail used with SUCCC/48 In tide late day of progresq. The Doctor invite, all who are afflicted, to call and consult him, free of charge, and give him and his medicines 0 FAITHFUL TRIAL. Doctor Brlabine Diagnoses by the urine, ono of tile mo.d. Infallible teats of Diseases known, tilling Optical, Chemical and Mlerculeopical testa, enabling him to employ a rational sci entific find curative Ire ftment; and he will in •nO caite give encouragement for the sake of fem. The Doctor lea graduate of Sterling Zdixlical College, and the old German Eelectio School, was Surgeon and Medical Director In the late War, has had a large experience, both In civil and military practice, and only desires repu tation on hie own merits. • • OFFICE AND REIIDENCE: No. 93 East King street. a few doors above the Eastern Ro tel, and a little over a square above the Coact Douse. fur Consultation free and confidential. apr '2ll confidential. 17 • GI H OA DR , FLOUR, GRAIN AND. PRODUCE CO Al MISSION ..X.NRC ft ANT 18 LABALLE'STRICEro Particular attention paid td the pare/mai of Grain and•Produce.toc eastern orders. • , . . REFERENCIE3:• ig;:fahorig &iir&Viankere,Readlier, Pahl . • Herat:ark& Kam, Grain uleuera, E.L• • Whitlock & Wallace, MM.' kterenakte, City HaUonal Bank, Chicago, /11.. apr 1 Maw.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers