GIBSON PEACOCK. Editor. XXIII.-- THE,BIVE AT GETIrySBUR64: 4Y,JOIEN WHOTrinii: In the old Hebrew myth the lion's Mune, Ho terrible alive, Bleached by the; desert's sun and mind, "be The wandering wild bees' hive'; .And ho who, lone and naked-banded,:tore Those jaws of death apart, In after thee drew forth their honeyed store To strengthen his strong heart., Dead seemed the legend: but It only slopt To wake beneath our rsky ; Just on the spot whence ravening. TroaSon crept Back to its lair to , die; Bleeding and torn from Freedom's mountain bound:3, A stained and shattered arum is now the hive, where, on their flowery rounds, The wild bees go and come. - Unchallenged by a ghostly sentinel; They wander wide and far, long green hillsidesysown with shot and shell, Through vales oneo choked with war. rh6 low reveille of their battlo-drum. Disturbs no morning prayer; Vith deeper peace in summer noons their hunt Fills all the drowsy air. And ani'on's riddle is our own to-day,— • - Of sweetness from the strong )f union, peace and freedonrpluelced away Froth the rent jaws of wrong. • From Treason's death we drew , a purer life, As, from the beast he slew 1 sweeter for hisbitter strife The ohl-time athlete drew PERIODICAL!. .1. 11. Lippincott 67 Co., in publishing the 'pelican edition of the Sunday Magazine ud Goo , t Words for the Young, have intro uu•d •to this country a 'pair of periodicals hid) probably excel all others in any land u• the high tone of their written contents, sid the profusion and splendid quality of enilsellisbnients. The Sunday Magazine Deceisibor cOntains Dr. Howson 's' (the (qt.! of Chester) portraits of the companions of t. hall, with a line study of 'Luke. Lamech's wig, or the. Song of the Sword, is by Rev. Itintel Cox,' with :an illustration. "The ti in Fenara,", by the author of 'e ProltindiS, is parsued. These are rt a few among , the :excellent and tiled contents of the number. The tpt rat ors .of this admirable book, Alle of the best in England; have made every umber a true Gallery of Art.: , Houghton, inwell, .Maltony, Small, Fraser, ' Walker, ',Outwit, Virolf, and Dalziel, _share heir labors between this magazine and the 'test illustrated .standards issued by the Lea nt publishers. "Good Wordstar/he Young," hied by George 'Macdonald, LL.D., author of . krinals of a Quiet Neighborhood,",presents a t of contents most admirably winnowed em the literary departments of natural his ry, trave6, adventure, fairy-land and fiction. he illustrations are as rich, artistic and pro se as In'the above-named magazine. A good ttion of the value of these two periodicals ay be obtained by glancing at the tables of literati, • with authors' names, published in .tiiiiLLLITLY. ' &W.; Encyclopedia, with its capital de ideas and liberal illustrations, reaches No. and Commo-uv. it is gaining on itself. It 11 be completed within the coming year, and - tr *umbers (32 pages) will hereafter be ,uell under one cover weekly. But no sub :Then, the indulgent publisher assures the 'blic, need feel obliged to take the numbers ter than at present issued, in 16 pages, at 20 nts, helxiondnally. Applelon's Journal, Monthly Part No. viii, Is vived from Claxton, Remsen & Haffelfinger. contains its specialties of elaborate art-sup- ments, engravings after rare French pictures, portraits of great men whose faces are ',familiar and inaccessible—such as Sir Wil • 2 ix Hamilton, Dr. Faraday, Fronde, the his 'lan' and Daron Liebig. The first picture the monthly number is a very" excellent - ,el-plate. by •S. V. Hunt, after Suydam's :long Island Sound." The letter-press is a itai selection of instructive articles, whether cience. local history, philosophy or geogra t. intermixed with gossip and fiction. We te never seen any unworthy articif • in . . ....... ii,l(ton's since the start; even in its persi ,;e it knows how to be informing and sug- Over/and arrives front San Francisco; th its hunter's bag :smelling of the red-wood -Ives and of its proper wild game. The best .. l ig among its contents is F. Bret ilarte's yl of Red Gulch," which we partake our readers itt'another column. The pe ar freshness of the Overland is guessable a the following list of articles, mostly redo -4 of the Pacific; In Lava Land, by Agnes Nannin g ; In and Around Astoria, by Capt. N. Scannuou ; Expectation (poem), by iixles Warren Stoddard;' Quicksilver and its • ne, by J. T. Meagher ; Legend of San Juan Los Lagos, by Louise M. Palmer; Down !ong the Dead I f etters,by Josephine Clifford; ada (poem), by Mrs. F. F. Victor; Oa* by William Wirt Pendegrass ; Those • deans, by H. D. Jenkins ; Tea Leaves, by i. Tileston ; Minna's Betrothal, by Rev. J. Ver Mehr, D. D.; For Three Weeks, by a Rosenblatt ; Old Lamps for New? by h Brooks ; Her Letter (poem), byJefferson ;.k; The Idyl of Red Gnlcb, by F. Bret .te, Etc., and "Current Literature." le interesting magazine of Charles Scribner 1., /lours at Honie, beOns with an article ev. George W. Bacon, in which he makes • able fun of the sayings and hymns of the tualists. Doesticks, (Mortimer Thoilipson) 'Antes an article entitled "Twenty Min under the Knife," the first we recollect in .11 a really graphic writer has given an ad-. t of the effect and incidents of a surgical 'ation ; the business in this case was to re- :e splinters of bone bruised by a shell some e under tho axilla. The most instructive Ile of the month is that on Roumania, (a :.-known Wells,`' full of strange interest) by Wm. Wells,' entitled "A New Nation- Mr. P. rAlphouse, Perrin furnishes a ;1010111 stud very interesting . article on 111oier Hyacinthe and the "throes" bt.' Celt- .• , , , ~,,,,, ;N. - ..., •; ' " ~..., , ,,f ,(4;•, .. , . . .. . .' '' . ',''' .' ' --' - , .',--- ~• '' ' • ' ' ' ' •' ' ~ .-' - • . ~ . . , .. .. . . . _. ' . , • . , . - ' ~, ~ . , f • ' ', '• ' 1 , ' , . ' .4 1 • V -: , . I, ' .: .' '','' -' • , '., ', : • .: , • , , ".' • , , . -... -• : ••'. 2,,- , . • . . • . •,,, •,, ~' '-: • - . , i, f • : ' '_. , :. : ;:, , . . ' ` .; `..: ' :-, - ' t ~.. ' : ,', ' • ,' ',, •,; --, ~ ,• , ".'',., • ' . , ': , . :, . .. - ' • '' • / ' . , , , , i , • r , .; : . ' - ' ' ' 3 : ::; ' ,'.; ' ,l'; , , . r ' ; ; . . - • 'c 1' r .:.,'"1. , •;.`,, 4 ~ ._, . ~ ~ . , ~ .. , - . • , 4 . . , 4 ' '' ,:. .' ' „ ','' . ', l ..„. 4 ., ,'...;f:. ~, ;. ~,,, ..; ;, • ' ' ; •;.: ' ' ~s, i ••,' . ,';,, . ,(.I,' ~,,:il 7- - 714 e. Independent Postcript to the famous article in the Quarterly Ileritu, on the' Byron 'business, showing Lady Byron's letters to Mrs. Leigh; they are ritten in a tone which quite forbids us to think there was any impression in the proide fume's mind of culpability on the part of lher correspondent. The same number begins a story of Russian high life, translated for ; and . copyrighted by the magazine; it is entitled, Frenchily, ',"Clemence D'Orville," and has a great deal 'of merit. The tranplation is. from the German of Carl Detlof. Russian literature, elcuacter and society, contain viens of gold well worthy of being worked by Anglo-Sa_xon miners, but as yet almost unknown to our novelists. Oily:aril, Captain Mayne Reid's magazine, has a brave number for the month. It has now completed a year of its existence, and the gall . nt editor promises to lead it forward during another twelvemonth with the best results of his experience and natural ability. The unsatis factory figure of Ithariel on the title-page will be replaced by a new design of Minerva, in the January number. The Journal of the Franklin Institute for last month contains colored, that is, chromb lithographic, views of solar prominences in illustration of Prof. Zollner's observations of those protuberances, translated by Dr; A 'fred 11. Mayer from the Report of the BoyalSaxon Academy of Sciences. The whole number is edited with Prof. Henry Morton's usual ability, nothing of interest in the scientific progress of the month being allowed to escape. Daughaday & Becker issue fbr December a number of The &koolday Visitor which can hardly be exceeded tiir interest and merit Mall the close-pressed ranks of the juvenile periodi cals. It continues the second part of Dr. C. D. ( ; a rdette's story ~P luck," and has its usual selec- tion of sketches, poetry, problems and puzzles. A handsome engraving, called "Help Me Up," is sent for twenty-five cents to every subscriber for 1870. William M. Clark (Uncle ehailie), Daughaday.and J. A. Becker, with Alice flawthorne`as musical editor, will continue to conduct . the enterprise. Oltice,7 424 Walnut street. ._ • The Little Coi•poral; we learn, has a larger circulation than any other juvenile magazine in the world; the November and December numbers will be sent gratis to any subscriber for 1570. Grace Greenwood contributes of Mount Vernon" (Eleanor Parke Custis) to the December number, and' there is a full page Illustration representing Santa Claus. The publishers, Sewell & Co., Chicago, have started a new child's repository, entitled The Little Corpovad's School Festival, which has for young folks: the charm of plum-cake that is all icing, or fables without any morals; that is to say, the new comrade has nothing, whatever didactic, but4s, devoted entirely to school exhibitions, recitations, dialogues, tab leaux, charades, etc. A good idea, and one destined to popularity. The January number Is now ready. . - The Nursery, by the elegant taste and the art-' character of its illustrations, and its pure literary tone, so far as pare literary tone can mark a child's magazine, takes, a place all by itself. , We can only fancy it read by small ladies and gentlemen. T e most 'idtelligent families in the Union appreciate and receive this cbarming little journal. The December number has some'excellent designs by Frolich, and a variety of poems and sketches: Some capital 'Christmas pieces are held over for the January number. Shorey, publisher, Boston. Tie Proof-Sheet, a type-founder's trade' pe riodical, issuing from 705 Jayne street, exhibits some new and brilliant typographical designs. Literarily, it has a paper by Dr. Shelton Mac kenzie. Artistically, it displays a very laugha ble "Map of Boston and Adjacent Country," This represents the hemisphere s 'viewed from. such a, point in space that Boston appears as the geographical centre of the globe, "flattened out at the pole, and revolving on ita axis in about 24 hours." The Dub is represented to. admin. Dr. Sanford irot,-; sensihle chapter oftitik on "Conifo'rt its relations to Physical Culture." 'We+ , obtain finin" It 'the half-guilty, modl titat the great , , Dr. Graham—lie of the "Graharnno" vegetarian faction—has spoiled „ the New, I.?;ngland physique 'and introduced consumption' by means, of his super-viiimons reginten. "The Childhood of ;Joseph Addison' Alexander,"' an extract from the forthcomingLifenf sub . jest, by Rev. H. C. Alexander, describes a pro . , „ digy of genhisand early" acquirements with a. relation's partial fondness. Dr. Horace Bush nell considera that our Goanells a gift to the imagination ;: that its tents and Ideas; con ceived in an atmosphere of exaltation and rap ture, Can only be reepOnded to by the imagi nation of the hearer, and are not comprehen sible by the mere understanding. He insists on the metaphors hidden in the : - short phrases and mere words of the oriental tongues—a re minder proper enough In the case of the lati page which often calls a . spark "son of the burning coal"—and teaches that no Imprison ment of religious truth in words is possible, since words in the course of time lose ' their metaphorical significance. Prof. - Schele de Verse contributes "Birds of I'as- age." The author of Mary PoWell continues "Compton Friars." Alice Cary and A. 11. Stoddard furnish poetry 7 -the latter a translation .from the Persian: The number is embellished with some fine engravings taken from the recent publications of Messrs. Scrib ner* Co. We can point out no magazine for the'month which excels Hours at Home in the variety, entertainment and instruction of its articles ; it exhibits some of the best thought of some of our best writers. There are 'full book-uotlces and collection. 4 of ephemeral aria. In the January number .will be commenced a new serial story by Mrs. Craik (Miss Muloeh), entitled "Hero," writt.en expressly for this magazine, and- to appear in no other periodi cal, even in England. Philadelphia agent, W. B. 'Lieber. Lille Liting Age. The 1381st number of his inimitable eclectic 'nag-4 . 7.11w contains the 'e about the size of Lake Ontario, and NevlT YOrk Is **Mail tO. : tigure at The great lakes are the Boston Water Works; Mexico, Iceland and . BOtttliatneriat contain the Gas Works; the South Pacific is dotted with bath houses; Madeira is the Yankee vinegar -factory; and in the centrept: :Africa is.,,the Timbttetoo.• Oflitc'of . Thc Aftaidk 21f6nt/ity. • .11itelteock's Monthly for Ncivartilier has a portrait of:Carlotta Patti, and choice music and literary matter for the fantily eircle. r. ,Pnbltihed at 24 Beekman street, N.Y." „ • The next . sensation will he Old and New, a bran-new Unitarian monthly, under the Con duct or E; E. Hale; wbo as' a " brick Moon" • will lead, up the tide of suecess.-,. The first number, to be published December 15, will contain articles by Harriet Beecher Stowe, Julia Ward Howe, Hannah E. Lunt, Henry W. Bellows, W. TOrighara, Robert Conger, Sidney Andrews ("Dixon"), B. W. Emerson, the Bev. E. E. Hale, J. B. Torri cell', James Walker, and other authors of dis tinction who reserve their names: The Old .Franklin Almanac. for 1870 vie re-: eoivc this morning front A. Winch, No. 503 Chestnut street. The great qUantity of just the information that every man needs compressed into this pamphlet of 08 pages' \is remarkable; we are getting accustomed to; wonder at it, however; December after December. Mr. Thompson Westcott, the editor, has filled the new number with the memories of the past year (beginning betimes with November, 18070 and .with lists, formulas, tables, catalogues, &e., of the tustornary variety. The Necrology of the year occupies 'twenty-seven columns, and is compiled with extreme exactness.. • —We iclarowledge the Christian WOthl; Organ of the American and foreign Christian Union, for this month--Dr. Payne's Philadel phia Unirerßiiy Journal of Medicine, for No vember.— The Medical and Surgical Reporter, a weekly,' from Dr. S. W. Butler, 115 South Seventh Street.—The American Stock Journal,' for December, from Boyer, & Co., Parkesburg, Chester county,-Pa. . —BOOK CAT tLOGUES.—Bossartge's Cata logue cur Periodicals, received from Penington & Son, places before ,the eye the names'of all the principal papers and serials of France.—, Porter & C'oates, of this city, issue a splendid holiday catalogue, especially rich ,in juveniles. --Little, Brown & Co, Boston, send us a 7S page catalogue of their large and 'valuable stock of law, foreign and miscellaneous hooks.-- Childs's Pithliahers' C'ircular and Scribner's Book Buyer. for November, have interesting literary gossip and neWs. --•••• • PIJBLICATIONIS OF' TIME WEEK. By J. B. LIPPINCOTT & CO. In Both Worlds. By Wm. H. Holcombe, M. D. 12mo. • Divisions in the Society 'of Priend.S. By Thomas H. Speakman. 12mo. By PORTER ,& COATES. (Little Rosie Series.) Little. Rosie's First Play-Days. By Margaret Hosmer. 16mo. illustrated. By SHERMAN . & - CO s . FOII THE RATT ROAD COM PANY. Guide-Book to the West Chester and Phila delphia Railroad. - 12 no. 14 lithographs by Thomas. Moran. By PIIESFITTEEIAN PHDLICATIONCOMMITTEE. Golden Songs and Ilallndoi for the Children. 16mo. Seeing Jesus.. By Rev. Henry A. Nelson, D. D. 16mo. Illustration. Joseph. In Bible Language. 16mo. By C. BCRIDNEH & CO. For sale by Clacton, Remsen & Haffeltinger. Fraude's History of England, first four volumes. Bible Animals. By Rev. J. Cr. Wood. Bvo, po. 652. 100 designs. DARPEH & BRos. Forsale by Turner Bros. & Co. Lost in the Jungle. Narrated for Young People. By Paul Du Chaillu. 12mo. Il lustrations? By CARLISTON. For sale by J. B. Lippincott .& Co. Living Writers of the South. By James Wood Davidson, A. M. 12mo. Phemie's Temptation. By Marion Harland. Strange Visitors. By a Clairvoyant. 12mo. By M. W. DODD. Lamps. Pitchers and Trumpets. By E. Pax ton Hood. Second Series. 12mo. The Spanish Barber. By the author of "Mary Powell." Illustration. 12mo. By the CATHOLIC PUBLICATION SOCIETY, N. Y. For sale by Lippincott & Co. Early History of the Catholic Church in New York. By Rev. J. R. Bayley. Second Edition. lano. Portrait. By FIELDS, OSGOOD & CO. For sale by Lip pincott & Co. and Turner Bros. & Co. [lllustrated Edition.] Gates Ajar. By E. Stuart Phelps? Designs by Jessie Curtis. Dickens's Christinis Books, with the Origi nal Etchings and wood-cuts. Comic History of the Unifed States. By John D. Sherwood. Illustrations by Harry Seratchly. 12mo. The Trotty Book. By Eliz. Stuart Phelps.' Illustrated. By lirzatv HOYT. For sale by J. B. Lippin cott & Co. The Yachtville Boys. By Caroline C. Kelly Davis. illustrations —A venturesome Gentile of Salt Lake City, who married a Mormon wife, while express ing a contempt for polygamy, announces his dislike of the "blood atonement," which die thus describes : "Well, these fellows get a grudge against a man, and they make out he's done something he can't atone for except with blood, and then some of the Elders have a revelation that the man's got to be out of the way,and then they go for him. 'Taint no use, then. The revelation does the business for him. Man's found dead, throat cut, or some thing of that sort, and that's the last'of it. No b Ody knows anything about it, and if you catch 'em at it tain't no use, they all stand by each other, and you cant halt one of 'em no way. "Why;l said to my father-in-law one day, says s'pose if old Brigham should have a revelation that it Was your duty to cut my throat . , you'd do it, would you?' and be said 'yes, if it was the wilier Heaven. Well, now, if it isn't a nice thing to go to bed at nightin sucha family as that, with your own father-in-law liable to have a revelation any time in the night and get up and cut your throat because it's the will of Heaven." —Here is an old but good rhyme : When Eve broughtwee to all mankind, Old Adam called her wo=man; And when she woo'd with love so kind, He then pronounced her woo-man. But now, with folly, dress and pride, Thoir husband.s'ockets trimming, The ladies are so full of whims, That people call them whim-men! •—A Hibernian Society,,out West, speaking of suicide, said: "The only `way to stop it is to make it a capital offence punishable with death !" .—The editor of the Detrott Post seems to envythe Patagonians, who wear no clothes,' because "all that they earn goes as spending- Money," COINWnr. t , bought. , himof — iolinion,lhe Immo-doctor, and be said he was dammed by Flora Temple, sired by black ilawk, and desired by all the innse l lockeys in the State. I wish they had got him. He *as fourteen and a • half - hands high and one finger over. His color was dun and. his purchaser was about in that condition also. lie was slightly sprung in the knees, and his tall had once been cpt, so that It stood right on end, and looked more like a bmich or straw nailed to the end of a log than anythin g Ile was rather a fine-loOking horse, arid the man warranted him kind., • But it Was a poor kind, I afterwards found. He said lie could make his mile inside of 2.35 Withont an effort. it was two hours and thirty-five , minutes he meant, unless he in tended to deceive me. He could make a mile inside of that time if he exerted, himself and didn't get one of his fits on him. He was a peculiar horse, and was subject to, a variety of complaintslhat would have killed • any ordinary animal;. but he seemed to stand them well enough generally., The first night I had him, I plat him in. the stable and gave him a feed. The next morn ing my wife remarked that she didn't sleep a particle on account of some locomotiie or other out on the railroad, that was puffing and blowing all night, trying to make headway. I heard„it too, and it struck me as queer that the engine couldn't get past that place. 1 wept out ,to see about it. It wasn't a le- Comotive, it was my horse. He was breathing and sighing unlike any other horse I had ever heard before, and I was alarmed about him. I was afraid he would blow the whole end of the stable out. I unhitched him, and took him around to Johnson. Johnson seemed surprised, but said he only bad a slight attack of the heaves. "Most all horses has it. It'll pass off, - said he; so i drove the horse home, and created an impression in the town that the wind was freshening up for a hurricane. • About half way up the main street he came to a dead halt; I clicked my tongue for him to go on. He never budged.. I touched him with the whip. He began backing, and backed the buggy right upon the pavement and through a plate glass window, worth two hundred dol lars. Then be started down the street like light ning (slow lightning), and ran over two boys, breaking their legs and crippling them for life. I won't mention the expense I was, put to. You wouldn't believe me if I gave the figures. I was so busy attending court for two weeks that I hadn't a chance to use him; at the end of that time his lower jaw had swelled up un til you couldn't tell whether he had got his head on up side down or not. So I drove him over to Johnson to see what was the matter with him. Johnson seemed to feel hurt that the animal should behave so. But he said it was only a little touch of the glanders. "It don't hurt a loss a bit to have now and then; it does 'em good ; but it'll pass off," said Johnson. So I was more hopeful, and drove home again without any serious accident, except that the here slued at a ehiekni in, the road =and took a wheel off by running the buggy into the fence. Still I didn't blame him much. Mr. Johnson told me that "it was good for ahoss to be timid; it's a sign of pure blood." The glanders didn't affect his appetite any. 'He ate more oats and bay than would have run an ordinary livery stable, and not satisfied with that, be gnawed the feed-box all up, and tried to eat his way through a yellow pine par titian. Jolinson said it was "a good thing for a boss to be a hearty feeder." I never owned a horse before,'and I was a little set up about it: So I thought I would drive my wife and family in town to church the following Sunday. He went along all right until he came in front of Ferguson's house. Mr.. Ferguson is jealous of my having a horse, and oar girls don't speak to the Fer guson girls;. because they said we were "stuck up" about our horse. When this animalarrived there he suddenly began to stagger from side to side and bolt around, butting his head into tree boxes and one thing another like some old rain. At last he fell over the bank at the side of the road, turned three or four somersaults, dragged the carriage after him, and then lay stretched out there apparently as dead as any dummy. The women had on their best clothes, and they were completely spoiled, while Augusta sprained her wrist so that she couldn't do a stitch of work for a month. And the whole Ferguson family stood at the window , and smiled and smiled. I walked two miles to get Johnson to come • and look at the horse. He came along and ap peared as if he wasprovoked at the horse for his conduit. • Then he stooped down and stuck a knife Wills neck and let out a barrel or two, of blood, and the horse gradually got better. "Ws nothing but a slight attack of blind staggers," said Mr. Johnson; "Every Koss has got to have it. It's just like measles in children. pass off, and he'll be better for • I, We got him home by easy stages to the sta ble, and there he stayed for three weeks, until he seemed better, except that he still had a touch of the heaves and the distemper. Shortly afterwards I had to drive over to 3lillville to see a man, and I gave Mr. Johnson ten dollars to go with me, in case the horse came to pieces on the road, or anything of a serious nature happened. We started at daybreak, and had progre_qqpd about a mile and a half by dinner-time, when the horse Suddenly stopped short, and wouldn't budge an ineh. 1 swmested that perhaps the barbed steed had ibrgotten something and wanted to go back. Mr. Johnson said, "No,IIL was only one of his little tricks. Most every horse had some eccen tricity or other. Just let him alone for a min ute and he'll get over it." We waited three-quarters of an hour. Then Johnson got out and undertook to pat him on the neck, and the horse got frightened and kicked until he got one, leg through the dasher and couldn't get it out. I asked Mr. Johnson what he thought we had better do now, 116 said, "It was all right, All really good horses kicked. He wouldn't give a cent for a anindle that hadn't pluck enough to kick. It was a sign that he felt his oats." So we loosed his leg and got in, and before we had time to pick up the lines he gave a jerk and started down the road at lightning speed— lightning for him, that is—and ran the buggy into a ditch, and them tried to, jump over a. : fence, but failed miserably and got another blind stagger on him and laid there until nine o'clock that night. ' ' I didn't get to see that man at and, in fact, I haVen't'seen him yet. Johnson said it Was a good tbing,.'atiyhoiv, for, they bad the fever doWn there, and I,ouglit: to consider, it a. Providential thing'that the. horse was •taliekt just as be was.' If we had gone' to we "night both have been dead men. THAT 11012 HE OF MINX BY JOBB QUILL. it 1$ singular liow Johilson always looks on the brig4t Side of things when that horse is cootertod. ~Then i thought that perhaps . after - all I bad better sell the horse, he was so :much trouble; I advertl.sed hint. Trionum who came. to buy bin was not as hopeful as Johnson; Ile Said the horse was spavined, foundered and 'distempered. Ile had-the glanders,and bearea and blind staggers and bots, and rivbone.and number of other infiruilties that.l deret care to mentton.. He said the horse was too hard in the mouth, too. . "And I,don't like :to p A ull . too hard: on : hoMe, you knoW,". said he, "for I larow a man who split a horse' in half jerking at him." • So I told this man I wasn't much at driving a bargain, but still if he would take the horse off of my hands for any reasOnable 'sumo he might have him. Its said he wouldn't assume the risk of driving him for less than ten dol lars. So I gave him that sum,ami he took him away. But he hadn't gone more than a half a mile before the horse got another blind stagger on him, and laid down, and gasped, stretched his legs out and then died, and broke for home heaven for all I know. Mr. Johnson was called in, but he cOrthhi't do anything for him. Ile only said he con sidered ita good thing,"for the horse, you know, must have- suffred aa good deal, and now he is out of his misery, and as you're a kind-hearted-man, Mr. Quill, you ought to be glad." So I was, but I didn't feel exultant .when Johnson handed ima bill of ono hundred dollars for professional .services. It didn't seem fair. But 1 never. had any luck with hoises,any how, and I don't care to specu late again. ABIUSEAIENTS. —At the Arch Street Theatre, to-night, the ..comedy entitled 9 The Wonder will be presented, with the drama he .S'even For Monday, Tom Tavlor's• play, The Over land Route, is announced. • —At this Chestnut, this, evening, Bald 9iilt's comedy, Hunted Down, Will be giten, with the comic drama, The Jacobite. On Tuesday, Patrice, a new play by au American author, will be. roduced. The theatre will be closed on Monday night to secure proper re hearsal of Patrice. —At the Walnut this evening, Uncle Tom's Cabin; or, Life Among the Lowly, will be pro duced. On Monday, Miss Bateman in Ilan/ Warner. —At the American this evening there•wiil be miscellaneous performances of unusual ex cellence. —On Monday night next,at the Academy of Music, Mr. John B. Gough will deliver the first of a series of fbur lectures, given under the auspices of the Young Men's Christian Association. The subject of the discourse win be "Circumstances" - Tickets for these lectures can be procured at Ashmead's, No. 724 Chest- • nut street. The remaining lectures will be giv en by Mr.Gough,Mr. Horace Greeley and Rev. Henry Ward Beecher. —Signor Blitz, the great, necromancer, will give an entertainment at - Assembly Buildings this evening. —Messrs. Carneross & Dixey will produce, this evening, several amusing burlesques at the Eleventli Street Opera House. ---D uprez & Benedict's minstrels appear this -evening in an excellent Ethiopian entertain- Mew. The prograuuue includes several laugbar , ble burlesques. —The first of Mr. Charles H. Jarvis's series of six classical soirees will be given en Satur day evening next, in Dutton's piano ware rooms, No. 1128 Chestnut street. —The new organ of the First Unitarian Church, Tenth and Locust, will be opened this evening, on which occasion there will be an organ concert. —The lectures -on cookery now being de livered every morning at the Assembly Build ing, by Professor Blot, are worth hearing. They are full of instruction and are very pleasantly delivered. The Professor will ap pear every morning until the 9th inst., Sun day excepted. —The Junger Miinnerchor's concert, given last evening at the Musical Fund Hall, was one of the best musical treats of the season. The Germania, Orchestra assisted, and, led by Mr. Hartmann, their playing was much better than it has lately been. The overtures to ..oberon and William. Tell, the scherzo from Vendelssohn's ilid-summer _Night's Dream, the love by "Andante con moto" from Beethoven's bth Symphony, and an arrangement from 7'annliiiuser, constituted the orchestral part of Pze concert. All were well played, though . 31r. Hartmann is disposed ,to take .the tempo rather too sloW. The vocal part of the concert was worthy of the old fame of the Junger Miinnerchor Gade's song "Die Quelle in der Wueste," is novel in style and very beautiful. popular song by Silcher, followed for an enc,ore by the favorite "In einem kuhleu grunde," gave great satisfaction. A remarkable work, mn sioby Schubert to Goethe's poem - the "Song of the Water Spirit," showed careful and intelli :gent study, and delighted every .hearer. Franz Liszt's "Reiterlied" iS agood example of the new school, excessively difficult, with queer modulations, intervals and phrasing,. and Therefore a test-piece for a musicalsociety. It was admirably sung. This is almost the only singing society in America that keeps pace with the progress of the age,and grapples with the moSt difficult pieces. The proffimanne of last evening, with its works by Weber, Wagner, Rossini, Mendelssohu, Beethoven, Gade and Liszt, was an illustration of the ex cellent eclectic spirit in "which the Society is managed. It is rather to the discredit of Phila delphia taste that but few of those who espe cially plume themselves on musical knowl edge and culture were present at this capital and most enjoyable concert. Still the hall was quite well filed, and .with people who thoroughly appreciated the treat presented to them. —An English traveler in California, who stopped at Clark's Randle, near the Yosemite, thus describes the proprietor: "To look at him, with his rough dross.'-rougher beard and rougher trowsers, Western fasldon, stuck into his boots, you might carelessly put him down for a coarse, tobacco-chewing, swearing son of the forest. But take a flower or a fir cone in your hand and ask him what it is. He will at once give its Latin =mein soft measure& speech, and with courteous rejoinder. He bad a few hoots in the window of the rancho. I laid my baud at once on , Giithe's Faust and Robertson's Sermons. Again and again we met with combinations or contrasts of cha r . meter in the same individual which,. I think, could hardly be found in the old world." —On her way to Egypt the Empress of the French passed through a.village, the depot of which the loyal villagers had decorated with a festive aroh; the inscription was as tumid, "Vire l'Empereur !" but in the middle of which viera the letters N and 11. The Empress sent ono of her officers to the Mayor to ask what these letters meant, and he received the reply that they were the initials of their sovereigns : Napoleon and Ugenie! • , • =lt is mentioned that the congregation as sembled in the parish church of a Cornish village were greatly astonished en a recent Sunday, when their minister went Into the pulpit, to hear the following announcement— !Ai beloved parishioners , - last Sunday even ing I entered into an engagement of marriage with a gentlewoman °limitable ageya widow, and childless like Myself.. 'With God's assist ance, She will shortly take the' place of that beloved wife lying iu thei church-yard you der." I".•.:LIZIVCRM - „Tat • • revzsiarn razor= t A Temwtontan h owl . , i Cone—Come--comir—COMZ! j Come out from your blessed 4hodc't r. waited three weeks, and Pm gorgawl tired, s Fa For you M the forks of the road; The flre-ily darts like au angryshark 't At a sailor's leg in the se;i— And the gad-flies hum like a, rolling ; While I watch and wait ib thee 4 , For thee—for thee—and onlytheet • , No other party will do! I have sworn to this fact on my solemn anillr o :s With a revenue stamp thereto 4, • My passion may burn with volowaio force—% My lbosom with earthquakes heave— But bore I shall wait at your garden gt 4, , For MOO my. Genevieve , k• O Gonevieve—my Genevieve! Give your cruel parent some lip If this won't do out his wizen in two-- Give bun poison and then the slip r You are mine—you are mine—for I swore rC. the rose, And the sunflower likewise heard:, And I linger and sigh for a note in reply, Ileitonly a single Word! , • I envy the horse-marine's careless life; I I envy the cankker-worm's bliss, When he looks his love in the eye anddiae.---: And 'I long for a fete like this I never will go the fierce bassoon, . , Or a game .of keno play, If from the palace where you are chained , • You will cut and run away! • ' The east is light with a sudden glare f 'lt tokens, the coming morn ; I hear the cry of the mute sea-gull, And the hunter taking his horn ; Night picks up its stars and other traps, . And commences to take its .leaye ; She throws a kiss through the palace blinds—. She comes! my Genevieve! J. H. L. —Clipper. A. painstaking man--the doctor. —A woman'of Mato—Cleopatra. —Clerical loans—Lent sermons. —The hardships of the ocoan--the ices clads. • —ln buying sausages one should be lynx- --When_does a man have to , keep his' word' When no one will take it. —When does a bonnet cease to be a bonnet?' When it becomes you, my dear. • . —The Chinese picture of ambition Ls a man darin trying to catch a comet by putting salt on its tail —Western wags are trying to deceive their readers by giving particulars of the shooting of "A. J. Byrd" in their respective localitim —Why is a man who hates writing like one of the inmates of Chelsea Hospital?—Because be is a pen•shtinner!—British paper. —A Wisconsin. couple quarrelled. aboutt whether there should be saJaratus in "flap jacks," and applied for a divorce. —A Southern exchange tells of a negro who, insisted that his race was mentioned in the Bible. He said he heard the preacher remit about "Nigger Demus wanted to , be born again." —A Texas Sunday. scholar, Misa Mollie Stacy, mollified her pastor by learning five hundred and sixty verses of Scripture, nrhiok . certainly aught to preserve her from ago- , Stacy. - _ _ —A professional beggar boy, some ten years of age, ignorant of the art of reading, bought a card to be placed on his breast,and appeared. in the public streets of a Western city as so "poor widow and eight small children:, —"Here lies a man of good repute, Who wore a number sixteen hoot; • 'Tis not recorded how he died, But sure it is that opened wide The gates of Heaven must have been, To lei such monstrous feet within." —A 'western newspaper having repeated the old paradox that if two letters be taken front money there will be but one left, the Dicks burg Times remarks: "We once knew a fellow who took money• from two letters atuU there was none left." —The following singular advertisement' ap peared in a Canada paper: "All does people what I owes I'll not ax 'em for dat, But all dose people what owes me Must pay me up iminediat." —A Buffalo poet, while containing three half pints of divine afflatus, produced the-fal lowing stanza on dying to slow music The swan, till then a silent bird, Upon her dying day, In tearful so/ /a solo, slow, Doth breathe her solo-a. —Speaking of undertakers, a - well-known. member of the fraternity iv established next door to a popular livery stable, and one day an individual popped in, and accosting. the first person he saw, who was not the proprie tor, said : " Can I get an open buggy here ?"' "No sir;" said the interrogated, "we haven't got it'biiggy, but—(pointing to a hearse which, stood at the door)--we can accommodate you with a skeleton wagon ?"—Boston paper. —A Frenchman by will left his property to his wife on condition that she should put over his grave a stone with this Inscription: Here lies Adolplie • Who died at the Age of Years, in the Possession of all his Teeth. Thanks to the Dentifrice Wash of the House of X. & Co. No. —, street. Ten Francs a Bettie. —Here is a contrite literary confession, which we find in the Pall Mall Gazette. "Not only are there American adapters who adapt from 'the British.' but we have lately discov ered that there are British adapters who aAiapt.- from the Americans—who not merely alter American plays to suit the taste of English • audiences, but moreover alter American novels to suit the .taste of ' English a t it re qs. The tales published as original in a ~ eeiclyjournals used often to be imita ti ', more or less disguised (but better dis guised than, the majority of adapted plays), from the French. Many of them are. now simple adaptations from the American,pre pared by gentlemen of experience who. have gained their .spurs as dopyrlght . destrosieze.--; All that is required of them is than they shalt alter well-sounding American names to. well-sounding • English names, ' comic Yankee names to comic cockney names, what is specially ebaracteristio of New York . to What is specially characteristic of London,. and so on.'. .-. . . —A historical roll of bread has come to light in Vienna. In lel6 the price of bread had risen to its highest, and the "rolls" of the in • • bakers had decreased size day by day. .One • day an actor named Scholz apppared in the • Carl Theatre in a kind of ehounsette t which. .• • • I excited general hilarity, for instead of being ' fastened with the ordinary buttons,a pair of the , diminutive rolls baked at that time were used • - for the purpose. Scholz was punished by the •• city authorities for his joke. The rolls of, 1816, . • therefore, have become historical in • Vientiap ' , .. 1 , W and one of the identical shirt buttons has beem:`, , ..•- • carefully preserved, by an antiquarian sever.4 -- '. since. Not long ago the city, anthoritlixt de eidedto found . a museum of antiquities • c. ing to the.history of the city, awl called upott the inhabitants to contribute to, the ,institu tion. tion. One of the very first 4 4iistoricarltd*-1' jeets received was'Seholesiditorical•breed.roThl- - • • shirt buttons t which, however, the aushoott eiv „( returned, with the remarkthat they were not ' I going to begin ti collection of curiosities, but a Set of historical archives. t v4.: . =EMS 4; ~: : J.._.~;. ~~~ H ~;~ i. vii.i~ t. rry.r. IiENN 4 :t: i. ,y -t. ~iti ;;;