EC. H. VOLUME. It gluoineallirectm. ; o JOHN BEAUMONT, WOOL 02LIMKIL moth Dower caidYanittadares, at the old TT stand known as Smith's ovate lladtdas: Term made blollill when the 'work Is brongqt. Jespjp. „ ' , • '• - 1:11t:'11 a DLMOCK, • c -- '; yourmtmele o t sugGr a ugrosag e. %,46 1. 1: 4 1 moutzeie, Petatar76lNlB63.43l;s • . -: • - ' a la.' tßotuut,_..., - v.MMIWRIKITIAIIM - of Ltuhumheals. • WooterbeilsOneel• head& Oludg-eeel& be, &e. Wou&turnbes awe to ankh, se d ..e makes =men lumina' She; egul Wheel Fishery hi Eleyres• louedrp Berl ding, up wain lemmas, Jima, Wth, 160.41 . B. B. BENTLEY, JR, NOTARY PUBLIC, 261OPPPROBIG. PA., aBRB Lettunrledcalett of Deeds. Marta-wok &c., toy elute to gm United ewes Permian Vnacitera and Pay Cer titkann sanowledgect beam biz do not require the cernicsta of the Cleric of the Conn. Monacan Jan. 2, 1862.--$l, CILIRLIS HOLES, EIBALER IN CLOCKS. WATCHES, AND .116WICLRIr Repairing dr sa usual, stoat nonlife and reasonable Penns p ou on eact r at ri Pa ci lle grams in F. B. Chandler% Mare. Dn. - It "L. HANDRICK, MS:WIWI, sad 151TROZON, riveataly tindery di prob. donalvervtaesto the ddrsasot arrumaresnesad vicinity. 01 In the office of Dr. Lest. Bawds a% J. frlmadnllleaul7ll7,lB64.4l E.- W. SMITH, A TTORAZY A 00IIN8ILLOR AT LAW and Licensed Mix Ajtrot. 012 a arts Lelit Drqg _OM muquelauxos Dozixtt Jantiael II& /S 4. H. BURRIIT, Ili SALIM In gut Fine, .1a Goocts.thulcemillt Lron. Wm. Chia and Patata,flocta and ehoei (*.n, ram Banta bac /31 , 00211:11. nO‘WDZi t New NMI* 4. 1 1ra /864.-4: S. H. WOMB & BROTHERS, A2O37AOTUBEBIS of 111110attings, of WI ilia v d , tovea 6 Tin and 'nett Inst Wore= l:l =Lmplendoda Dry Cfoools. Groceries. 0 . alontrow Pa.. Ternary t8,18£4. BILLINGS STROUD, LAND LIFE 121231034111GY AGENT. Mee la LAG, rcro's tai end of Brick filo*. In bla &Imam bab us at the office will be transacted by C. L. Brown. Montrose. Yebroary I, 1014-u J. D. PAIL, M. D., HYII2IPLI'HIC PICTISICLUT. Ma permanent!, ilatited tdmaelf la Mtn:aroma, Pa, where be will promptly attend to all oath la hia proferalou arab which he may he farored. • (J and Helldal. Welt of the Court Hoagie, near Bentley kiltch`a. liontroee, Feboary 1, Met -Oct. W., 1811. A. 0. WARREN, A'MENET AT LAW, BOUNTY. BMA PAT and PEN SION CLAIM AGENT. All Penton Clams carefoNy pro pared. Offoe lo room formerly oomplad by De. IA W. H. Bora% tmildba & below Searle% Hotel. 11ml:rose. Feb. 1. 11.64.-febl73l UAL S. B. ROBERTSON, w ilvinicrnniza of BOOTS ItSHOESIE., Owego Street, Montrose, Ps mattress. rstarsry 16, 1854-5! LEWIS KIRBY & E. BACON, iT Alt? co estanUy on ball a full Wyly of earl valet 7 a 11, °Rocm aid sad (70311vACTIO AI r.s. By starlet altar lon to Imalaas and Gamma dal, they hopeto merit. o the llbaal = w fe , / tlo public.. An OYSTER and vim; SALOON la the t Grocary„ where blvalvta.ln alma lite laved to eV. ary style that the tastes of the Wale demand. Ita;tembez the pp lace. 010 Yoh Grocery ran/iron Mahe Street, below the ro u g, blontfae, N0v.17, 1561.—meh17A3-tf Da. CALVIN 0. HALSEY, pEITEGOILB AND AND EXAMINING OLON for PENSIONERS. OE ea over tvo store of J. LT= •Mt, Febße ammo Boards at BM lObaridirea. Yoatrom October. ISPI.-tf D. A. BALDWIN, A ITORNAT A? LAW. aad PoOna, Bo=tj, all Batt Pis A Aiwa!, Chen Beal, Baaluebaaaa Oosmly, Pa. Ural Bawl, Aural la. 1!IPL-17 BOYD & WEBSTER, warns to alarm Mono Plpe, 19a, Clo, tad ghee Iron Ware; oho, Wlntos flash. Panel ofo, irtonar ad Lab , Ptne Lumber sad all amda of Bonding ltaterlala Tin Shop south of &arida Hotel, and earposier &hop mar the WU:toad (launch. Mormon. Pa-, Jamary L Ma-Er Da. JOHN W. COBB, tonrsicrma and 817RGEON. resew:Molly tenders Me servlces I to tee enacts or Soa_guehatore County. Haring ttaA alms a yearimpertmone In the Ouitcd Stoles Army, as Sureeon,AepeeLO Mend= be elven to SIIRGIOAL OPERATIONS. Or ftceldena, on Maple Street, Ems of J. S. Tarboro lintel. Montrone, Soup. County. Pa. June lA. 1268.41 Da WILLIAM W. SMITH, SURGEON DENTIST. 012ce over the Baotios .14.,... (IZ u ce f ,, b , r w orq;er m r 42‘ i 04r i rloo l ererrariem Rarourthoellee ' forteerly of H. thaltrr i t Son. It QUM.. .Ithaery 1544.—tf E. J. ROGERS, lifAH117•021111.1121 of all dewerhotloos of WAG. ONS, GAltalotOSS, SLEIGHS. &he 11l the beitetyle of Wwlhooaashlh and of the beat matedals, at the wall bolowa Lana of E. EL EDGERS. a few rods end of heaeleo Hotel lo Momtrosee where he will be happy to roe toter the calla of all who want anything In hl, line. lloattoae.Jtelal,lCB3.4l BALDWIN & ALLEN, rk CALLUS to FLOUR, Balt, Park, FM, Lard. ONn Teen .11./ wail. Clown and Bead. Al.o GROG such an Swam Malaaaaa, STrula, Tee d COMM. West Public ara Qom bap. J. StbsrLiga. Mamma, January 1, 11364.-tf Da. a W. BEACH, Dermas AND suaanozi, Iwiy er. P.rmAnerAli bated ntronelf at Brooklyn Cent.. Pe— ten h a te profele/onal ter ron to Me cni tea of tkoquebenna County on mum corm:ocean.. ettb the Occupies the oflee of the late Dr. B. Diehard an end bowels o Mrs. alchardsotee. Brooklyn Canter. Pa-. Jute 6.1864-11/ F. B. WEEKS, Daearwal. BOOT AHD SHOE YESES: also Dealer b Boou. noes. Lather. and Shoe II =Mori. Uegallins data Lib =omen and aspaLch. Two damns abave Starlet - 130W. Montrose.Janaary 1. 11311411 JOSEPH RICE, ANUTACTURIR and DEALER 1202A113,,Bedgeed co tti cod h ottani Wore. fitropfour miles cut of Boor B orou Milford. OCtobefl,lBlll.-tf DE, PATRICK & GARDNER, PIOIA.NS AND ZUZGEOZE, 4111 sttezd nrahftily and Panetully to ell t a ilbezdtere may be entrueed to their cam terreeeemroaesorate 'nth eem. Diemen ta4 deforraltire If the ZY Z.Nundoet .iperalloon. and ell Smztrol Diemen portico. ertt o strended to. Office over Webb's RAZZ Orbet boarefrom I. Z. PATRICK Jr, I blon i trer "' .jartosunr 1.1004,81 Z. L. cuatiniss. WM lb WM. H. JESSUP, iTTOPOSETH AT amfdara. WaWy.e l i Womg ad -- P L r a i scatlleee bS Coun l2 t l4 iels3l.! Mantrap, Pa„ January Ist. 1811. ALBERT CHAMBERLIN, rAISTRI OT ATTORNEY AND ATTORNEY AT la Oat. am dui &cm tarmerly occupied by Pme Brielem. itoutrma, Pa.Jaanary 1. 1860. J. ,LYONS it SON, ... TiBLLII2BB TN Dar GOODB„ Gimmick Monkey. Bardwak • LP Tiimark Books, gem:loon; Pianos, and a.ll kinds of Must ea: Imminent& Sheet Slink, ikkAilso any on the Book Bind Ike lowness to all Its homed& I. LTONS. Mouthne.Jaavarr I. ISO 4. " . - r.a. Lica. . ABEL TITERELL, • rissLau Txt DAMS, ld mums. CLUCKICIALe. LP Palma 01la, I;gal:p i Vandal" Wlndo, Glau. r u I.Nogra Groan" Wall.Papmlatal Um rimy Goo" I.N.stazatiy?Eatawala, Tras am Clot linlabey ac.--and dart Ice all of 1.40 molt..P9l** /I:l lar Yaaeat ei:Lem. Illottrome, JanVar7l. laL C. 0. FORDHA3t, M A tio v p r o miT iffu t •l ot s l "9, rr=e l :l ordcr, reMiks dam_ neatly. Work dote +l+ prom. lloatrook, April S. 18E1- I CHARLES N. STODDARD, " ssuca. In BOOTS & BROM Leah. and BP lax en Man a. third door below Ewmrle's T wa lt N. B. Work made to orrice. and repairing done 7. linnirma Ps. Dec=l3. t L H. BURNS, A TTORNET AT LAW. eft* whb Wan= r Tama TAI 011.4ie twaylelPension and Buauty China akAaW T. pant. oe Cleeama motopOy made. na.s. B. R. LYONS 446 CO., ri6AL6II InDBY O , XID3,OIIOOF.JUE& BOOTS, PRom Lad kialscra. (U.paa, 1L Clotlla. WaL and Pe, Viz Palma. Oa , are stale as thellerl able of Public Amu. I. I. Laura. D.Uttio, Youtavea. January 1.1!66.4( READ, WATROUS, & FOSTER, naesaktirlaDlSA er~t"a.. Drug, irealetaesPekta 01 tr.2,7:"...rdrzuf,r4LiTiAwm-b-le rananta ..160.Kaaa• KOrtircea January 1, 1864 PHILANDER LINES, wnslliosseLs Td/1181. Brick Block, orcraca/4 .I.` ay... a Foster?. Skim Bfroaticks. /Urcciircr Jaly T. no, JOHN GROVES, vas EtIONARIA TAILOR. Shop StPal Wan E.t.sm Plitt.lr4 Ottlce. Yoguow., Y.,. Coact. 15, 1639-11 • D. A. I. r 43118 ., num la Dry Oral& Orrourtee. Criiherm yriv. YAc.rs bl i g4treb ...meomes - , . ' ..... , ' .. .. . .. - •” • . . __ _ _ _ _ . _ . - . . •. f! ' Tral . i? - ••••."_ 4 , .. L5v....1.t.'s .. , ., , :....,,Itt .... -, t - r{± - `^'; ii ii 1 ,-. 1 .qn". - '.'- -- I: t z _.--,.:•..',.' .)•:.:r .r.)-D.:1:.:}71 . -.TD arra I ', .:11:, - .).!:5,-.::::;- . ...-',' 7:, ';' i -; t A.; ,- rin 71 , finry..C7. P.; . 0 , *.' ~..1ip,...,5,.. ~ . 1-:,•,.- .-.v ..,,.„... 4 I• „. ......:J. ' -:- ..., .-.: - .. .1t: ~ •••,:- •,•_.... . 4.... • ..., ..,cr : ..ite"..ll l IP - 4- 1 : --- nt •, ._. J ‘•••• „:. ~ , ,.., - ,1, ~•.:-.--.,7 4...2L-, ~, f_,•• a - - ..ii i ..4 , , , -rEs i ...:.-: -, I. ...; . .-• , r i si/1.0 NA' 0 . -.... ...... s -.' ;, • 3:,...? :I 4 _1 • • „, .. •. 0 ;,•,•.: i• ••-• - ..i ....: • - • _,•-• .•;) ; r.•••Cr• •',1.2 ',.; .• • •••, - •:•,..f..: :. ' • • c.....,,,::-..,, " -',4,••-'''' • : ..:,.. ,•:.'•_. 1 ' . . 1 . , 1 , ''''' ....- ..•••t• , ' 7.. - ' ..-.. - .„ - - . . ..,.. .. -: :•:j.,. - . r . . ...... . _ . l ; _,... ~J . , ...„.... . _ l e, .•,.., „,........•....:. 1 , : ..,....,.,_._,.;.,..„ .., .. • , ~;:_,......;;.....,.,,,,,. .. . ,_. ... !.........,..,.., ...g, . .1. ... .. .ot , .• I. , • - . , . . " '• --\ . _ . . , • - - . .- . . ... , • .........,.. , ~ _ _____ =a P'eiblialter. „ '141.43P, OP ! OLD WATER. iszpiroThs:Nupwr OP cum Within hielonely.room was Ambrose sitting, Where half the night in study deep had sped; The lamp was low, Me sinking tire emitting • !small= of red. ' • upon his knees reposed a Mai/se nlatlp An ancleat tome, with posurrous clops boast Upon theme Its title biisoMid quaintly, • ' tt_Te ed lassigicem • • 1 , Atithrmse, the curate, single-minded, earnest, • In'labor cettscless, In long-sutlwing tvied, Mese spirit; Melte silver trebly fr-rua.W, Wks somsw-puritiest. - • • Through that old writer's Strange and antique die, ttou Ambrose bad labeled, striving in bold feet L. Rh author's atm and ultimate conviction Still closelyto the last; But dusted oft by unaccustomed pleases, , By eccentricities of thought and style; Had lost the thread amid unending iterae.e,. Too certain to beguile. • He closed the volume with its triple claspirm, Sighed with relief to think the task 111$0.W, Like one who after wintering flings him gasping Upoe the waken:re shore. Then, es be musing watched the ruddy ember, A feeling all unwonted o'er him erert: And If he woke he never can remember, Or whether 'twee heulept7; But ho or saw—or dreamed tassaw--a vision ; A glerions angel stoodbefore him them_ Whose parole - pinions dried with dews Myelin, That pm f. nmed all the W. " AmbroM, at your bewildered goers petition, To lowly earth from lovely paradise I come to *how you, by Divine permission, The accepted =ace." Betook his hand, turd teem that anther sweeping, The twoUrough air peased silently and dew, Nolselesa as sunset clouds in heaven sleepieg= Unseen by all below. ' . ' TD saw saw the monarch in his splendid palace, While cannon bellowed from the outer wall, Quaffing the wine from out, Hurled-gold chalice, At some high festival. , And at the gate, to sound or trumpet's blaring, A herald flung amid an eager _crowd Largesse of Money, with a ban d .unsparing Amid rejoicings land. , They saw the rich tien, In their fine sectarian From want and - care, who held handout 'state, And gave by servants' bands of, their profusion To beggars at the gate. But the eeleatral guide still onward hastened. Deemingtbese offerings as of little price: And Ambe:ee longed to view, wittraphit chastened, The accepted sacrifice. • . Then he beheld a child journey wending, , _Tolling on painfully with wearied feet,' While from the fiery sun there seemed descending A very weight of heat The sultry air was tremalormend hazy, 43ellerce the dronth' that on all nature ray,- The grass was withering, and the hardy daisy Was tiding . fast Way. And now he watched the little traveller gaining A bumble dwelling,; trellised o'er with vine, Whereon the sunlight was Incessant raining— OS duster, leaf, and vine lialf.fearfnl by the porch be saw her linger— Poor little birdle,lateiy holm the nest— He beard her tap there with a timid linger, And make bet ere& request. Then, when the tiny traveller basket-laden, At own boldness ecarollybegsn to shrink, There came a sweet-faced gentle-hafted maiden, • And gave to her to'drink. - And while the child was gratefulli receiving The cup of water, clear and eool as Ice; In Ambrose' ear the angel whispered, leaving, " The accepted sacrificer! . • sr Lows IL ALLAssom, V. E. ILAI3-8111P Oh ! that the bell in east' spire In our nation Would vibrate thetoila through heaven's free air, Swell every heart with the glad declaration, ?care, Peace is declared—Peace, Peace, every ' ; *hint! , . . • ' Over the plains - where our braves'are deting The steel of the foe, the halls and the shells ; Through the foul dens where our brothers are dy ing, Freedom will dawn at the sound of the Della Faithful, trite lovers will bush their hearts beating, Fond lOving mottora the sad-tears now Fathers and brothers will eh/Mt the glad The bells are all pealing the long prey for peaca- Bat to some hearts, thought promi„ those tones will be knelling A long, 84 farewell to their manly and brave; - Oh ! tyranny again can never find dwelling For dark plotted treason, nor home for its stave._ Cannon of heaven swell, swell loud your booming. Fierce dashing lightning, emblazon the sun : Homeward with glory the Otraverborarecoming, Our minim is triumphant—the battle is won. BOOTS'S DEATE Account of Colonel Baker WASEEP.i. GTON, April tik.—A bard and ( frizzly face overlooks tee _as I write. Itainconst emble forehead Is crowned with turning sandy hair, and the deep concave of lts long insatiate Jaws Is almost hidden by a dense red beard, which cannot still , abate the terrible decision of the large mouth, so well sustained by searching eyes of spotted gay, which roll and rivet one: This lathe We of Lay fayette 'Baker, Colonel and ChieT of the Secret Ser vice. He has played the Most perilous parts of the war, and Is the captureroS the late President's mnr arrer. The story that I am to tell you, as be and his May; dependents told it to mt.:will aptly commenced , here, where the net wastrel= Which took:the dying lire of Wilkis-Booth. THE START. When the murder occurred, Colonel Baker was absent honk Washington. He returned on the 3d morning: and Was at Onee'brigight hylAwnstary Stanton to 3oln the hue and cry against the escaped Booth. The sagacious. detective found that nearly ten thousand cavalry awl onetetuth as many police men bad been meantime scouring, without plan or compass, the whole territory of Southern Maryland. They were treading on each others' heels, and Mix, leg up the thing so confoundedly, that the best place for the enlprits to bale gone would have been m the very midst at their pursuers. Baker at Onee. 117=himself of , th e little the War Department 1, and 'Started immediately to take the usual detective measures, till then neglected, of off ering a reward, and getting out photographs of the suspected ,onea. He then dispatched a few chosen detectives to certain vital ports, and awaitsd results. ' ATZEROTH CGSPII7IIErt The first of these Faa the capture of Aleeroth.— Others, like the taking - of Dr. Mudge, eimultaneons. ly occurred. Rut 'the district suspected being-4e mote from the ralliesy routes, and broken by no tell ecmph station, the Colonel, to place himself nearer the theatre Of events, ordered an operator, with 'the weessary instrument, to 'tap the *he running to Point Lookout, near Cbapell a Point, and send him prompt messages. - CLUE. The same steamer Which took the operator detectives, brought tiackotie of the same detectives and a negro. This negro,,. taken to Colonel Baker's office, stated so positivelythet be had seen Booth and an other man oafs the Potomac in ft fishing boat, while be was looking down upon them from a bank,! that the ColOnel was at drat skeptical; but RAMO` examined tbenegro answered so readily and intelligentiy, recognising the man from thek photo grapkh's, that Bakerinew at lost - that he badge true • etn 4 2htwaY he wit ,to_klenerai. Hancock/or 25 men, and while the order wasrdng &eV down his carat survey amps with that quick detective idol thin amounting to inspiration. He east up on the probable - route acid destination of the,rect gees, as well as the point where he Ifeti l dettOnell strike ticent Booth, he brew: would not 'to* . alellgtkecololf. with innurotdeep rivers to crew% uor,• Weed, in any direction east of itiebintiod• whereto was liable litany time toeless our lines of occupation; nor; taticr bum could lie ride OD horseback, WAS voplace himself very far'west from hie point of debarkation in Virginia. --ad he ' ima m traveldirMle. to Bluff; Polo, , when be crowed into Eastern Maryland,.aiod this; would, take- him through Port Rook oultieltaPpahareinek Elver, in time to be intercepted thereby the ontgolagar ;:_,.; TOLIPWING ZIP • Nmea,-tablblbtAdger tatelpiteb vAll% • I F II3I P III PX: 11 : 4 ' VIO TOBY. " Freedom and Right against . play and. Wrong." MONTROSE, SUSQ. CO., PA.,, Lienteiumt Dougherty arrived at his office doors; 'llakerplaced the whole ender the control 01 his for Lldatenimt-Colonel. E. J. Cancer, and of his consK tientectint L B. Baker—the fist 01-Ohlo, 'the"of Netr-York, and bade them go with ail dispatch to Belt Plain, on the lower Potomac, there to disembark - sad scour the country faithfully around - Port Royal, but not to return anima they captured their men. TO BELT. PLAIN. QUlttleg Wulttngtm!st,two o'clock p. m. on Monday, the 41W-tires - and cavalrymen disembark ed at Mil Plain, on the border of Stafford County, atten o'clock, In the darkness. Belle Plain Is sim ply the nearest , landing to predericksbur g , seventy milmfrom - Washington city, end located upon Po es Creek. Is a wharf and warehouse merely, and bee: dire it/Ammer John 8. Ida stopped and made fast, while the party galloped off In the darkness. Conger and Baker kept sherd, riding up to farm houses. and onestituring the Inmates, pretending to be In :search' of the Maryland gentlemen belo agtng to .thoy.arty... But nobody had seen the pp do scribed, de scribed, and after a futile ride on the Frekshurg rode, they turned shortlrto the east. and kept up their baffled enquiries all the way to Port Conway, on theßappatrannock • AT PORT ROYAL On 'Tuesday morning they presented themselves at Port Royal ferry, and Inquired of the ferryman, while he was taking them over in squads of seven at a time If he had seen any two such men. Con tinued their Inquiries at Port Royal, they found one "Belli* a fisherman, who referred them to a n named-Lucas, as having driven two inert a abort-wro, die taries towards Bowling Green. In a wagon. It was found that these men answered the descrintldn, Booth having a crutch, as previously ascertained. HOW THE ASSASSIN CROSSED The day before Booth and Harald had applied at Port Conway for the general ferry-boat, bee the ferryman watt then fishing, and would not desist for the inconsiderable Lire Of only two permits ; bet to their supposed good fortune a lot of Confederate cavalrymen Just then came along, who threatened the ferryman with a shot in the head if he did not instantly bring across his craft and transport the en tire party. These cavalrymen were of Moseby's disbanded command, returning, from Fairfax Court House, to their homes in Caroline county. Their Captain was on his way to visit a sweetheart at Bowlinellreen, and he had en far taken Booth un der his patronage, that when the latter was toweling with Luells for a team, he offered Booth and Harold the we of his horse, to ride and walk alternately. BOWLING GREEN This is the court house town of Caroline county, a amen and scattered place, having within it an anc ient tavern, no longer used for other than lodging p but here they hauled from his bed the captain a foresaid, oresaid, and bade him dress himself. As soon as he comprehended the matter he became pal lid, and cagerly narrated the facts in his possession. Booth, to his knowledge, was then lying at the house of one Garrett, which they had mn.ed, and Harold had departed the existing Iry with the intention of rejoining him. THE HIDING PLACE. Taking this captain along for a guide, the worn- Pnt horsmett retraced, though some ofthe men were so haggard and wasted with travel, that they had to be kicked into Inrchigezerzi. before they could climb to their saddles The objects of the chase thus at hand, the detectivee,Jull of sanguine purpose, hur ried the cortege so well along that by two o'clock early morning all halted at Garrett's gate. In the pale moonlight, three hundred yards from the male Mad, to the left, a plain, old ['arm house looked grayly through the envlroning locusts. It was worn and white-washed, and two-storied, and its halt-hu man windows glowered down upon the silent caval rymen,- like waiebirg owls which stood as sentriCs over lotus horrible secret asleep within. TAE BARN Dingy seen behind, an old barn, hinh and weather beaten, faeed the roadside gate, for the house itself, lay to the left of Its own lane ; and nestling beneath the barn a few long corn-cribs lay with a cattle shed at.baad, THE ROUSE SURROUNDED. In tbsrdead stillness, Baker dismounted and forced the outer gate; (longer kept close behind him, and the horsemen followed cautiously. They made no noise. in the soft clay. nor broke the alltoreboding silence , anywhere, till the second gate swung open gratingly, 'yet oven then nor Imams nor shrill re sponse came back, save distant crooking, as of frogs or owls, or the whir of some passing night-hawk.- 8o they surrounded the pleasant old homestead, each horseman, carbine In poise, adjusted under the grove of locusts, so as to inclose the dwelling with a circle of lire. After a pause, Baker rode to the kitchen door on the aide, and dismounting, rapped and binned lustily. An old man, in drawers and nightshirt, hastily undrew the bolts, and stood on the threshold, peering shiveringly Into the darkness. QUERIES. Baker seized him by the throat at once, and held a pistol to his ear. "Who, who la It that calla me ?" criedthe old man. "Where are the men who stay with yogi" challenged Baker. "II you prevaricate, you are a dead man I" The old fellow, who proved to be the head of the family, was so overawed and paralyzed that he stammered and shook and sad not a word. "Go Not a candle," cried Baker, sternly, "and be quick about IL" The trembling old man obeyed. and in a moment the imperfect rays flared 'von bbs whitening hairs, and blulahly pallid face. Then the.questlon was repeated, backed up by the glimmering pistol. "Where are these men r The old roan held to the wall, and his knees smote each other. "The g ere "BO%" he Bald. "We haven't got them in t e hones ; I ware you that they are gone." THE TRUTH AT LAST. In the Interim, Conger had also entered, and while the household and its Invaders were thus in weird tableaux, a young man appeared, as if ho had risen from the ground. The muzzle of everybody tnrned upon him in a second ; but, while he blanched, he did not lose loquacity. "Father," be said, "we had better tell the truth about the matter. ' Those men whom you seek, gentlemen, are in the barn, know. They went there to sleep." Leaving one soldier to guard the old man—and the soldier was ,very glad of the job, as it relieved him of personal hazard in the approaching combat—ail the rest, with cocked pistols at the young man's head, followed on to the barn. It lay a hundred yards from the house, the front barn door facing the west gable, and was an old and - spachrfa structure, with floors only a trifle above thegrnund level. ON GUARD The troops dismounted, were stationed at regular intervals around it, and ten yards distant at every point, four special guards placed to command the door, and sit with weapons in supple preparation, while Baker and Conger went direct to the door. It bad a padlock anon it, and the key of this, Baker secured at once. 41 the interval of silence that en seed, the rustling of planks and straw was heard In 4de, ea of Demons rising from sleep. A PARLEY At tho same moment Baker hailed: ' "To the persons in this barn I have a proposal to make. We are about to tend In to you the eon or the man in whose custody you are found. Either surrender to him your arms, and then give yourselves ntod:ir we'll set fire to the place. We mean either to taleion both, or to have a bonfire and a shooting. match." No answer rams to this of wry kind. The lad, John M. Garrett, who was In deadly fear, was push. ed through the door by a enaddm opening of It. and Immediately Lieutenant Baker locked the door on the outside. The boy was heard to state hit .appeal in under tones. Booth replied— " yoei Get out of tere I Yon have betray ed me." At the same time be placed his hand in his pocket as fora pistoL • A remonstrance followed, but the larry_sdipped nn and over the re opened panel, report ing' that his errand had failed, and that he dared not enter again. All this time the candle bronght from the house MAUI barn was burning close beside the two detectives, medering it easy for any one within to have ehot them deed. Title observed, the light was cautiously removed, and everybody took care to keep ontof its reflection. By this time the crisis of thepoeltion was at hand, the cavalry exhibited very variable inclinations, some to run sway, others to shoot Booth without a admmons, but all excited and Adel), silent. At the house near by the female folks were seen collected In the doorway, and the neeescities of the cam provoked prompt conclusions. The boy was placed at * remote point, and the sum moetrepeated. "Yon must Surrender inside there. Give up your arms and appear. There's no chance for csespa— We will allow you eve minutes to make up your mind." A bold reply cams from within, so strong as to be heard at the house door, • Who are you, out there,'and what de you want of as'" Baker again used:—" We want you to deliver tip your strum and become our prisoners." ' "BO Who are you? hallooed the same strong Voles • • Baker- , -" That makes no differences. We know Who you are and we want you. We have here fifty men armed with carbines and pistols. You cannot mte." - • There was a loogiawse, and then Booth sold : " Captain, Main a hard ease, I swear. Perhaps I am being taken by my own friends f" Ho reply from the detectives. • Brioth..“ Well, thew ere was Ilitlatitas to can' dder.e , - 124 - - ' - '4 litif Weal. TekkgrerAP Here ensued a long and ettntful_pitute. What thronging memories It brought to Booth we can only guess. Baker, after a lapse, balled tor the laat lime. " Well, we have waited long enough, surrender your arms and come out, or Welters the barn." • Booth answered thns:.—"l am , but a tiipple, a one legged man. Withdraw your Wives one hon. died yards from the door, and I will roma. Give me a chance for toy we, Captain. I will never be taken alive." Baker—" We did not come here to tight,' but to capture T on. I say again appear , or the barn shall be fired." There was a muse repeated,blrokeu by low discus. alone within tistween Booth and his associate, the former saying es If in answer to some remonstrance or sp. " Ott away item me. Ted am a eoward;' and mean to leave me in my Mame ; bet go, go.— I don't want you to stay. I Won't have you stay." Then he shouted atend—"There's $ man inside who. wants to surrendar." - Baker—" Let him come U he will bring his army Here Harold. rattling at the door, said. "Let me out, open the door; I want to Surrender." Baker—" Hand out your urn then." Harold—" I have not got any." Baker—" You are the man who carried the am , nine yesterday ; bring It out." • Harold.-4 haven't got any." The was add in a whining tone; and with an ala most visible shiver. Booth OW aloud at this hest- fatten:— "He hasn't got any arms—they am mine, and have kept them." Baker—" Well, he carried the carbine -end must bring It out." Booth—" On the weed and honor of "a gentleman, he has no arms with him. They are mine, and I have got them. At this time Harold wee quite np to the door, within whispering distance of Baker. The latter told him to put out has hands to be handcuffed, at the same time drawing open the door a little distance. Harold thrust forth hls hands, when Baker, seizing him, jerked him Into the night, and straiglitwav do• livered him over to a deputation of cavalrymen.— The fellow began to talk of hie Innocence and plead so noisily that Conger threatened to gag him union, he exceed. Then Booth made Ws last appeal : " Captain, give me a chance. Draw off your men and I will fight them singly. I could have killed you six times to-night, but I believe you to be brave men, and would not murder you. Give a lame man a show." It was too late for pules , . All this time Booth's voice bad sounded from about the middle of the barn. THE BARN FIRED. Ere he ceased speaking.. Colonel Conger slipped around to the rrar, drew some loose straws through a crack, and Et a match upon them. They were dry and blazed op In an Instant. Behind the blaze, with his eye to a crack, Conger saw Booth standing upright upon a crotch. At the gleam of the are Booth dropped his crutch and car bine and crept to the spot to espy the Incendiary.--'- Ws eyes were lustrous like fever, and swelled and rolled, while his teeth wsre axed, end he wore the expression of one In the calness before Ireozy.—: In vain he peered, with ven geance in his look: the blaze that made him visible concealed his eaemy.— A second he turned glaring at the are as if to lea upon It and extinguish it, but it had made suchhead way that this was a futile impulse and he dlsmtssed He then made toward the main door of the barn, with carbine In one band and plithi in the other, and when about the centre of the barn a pistol Shot was heard from near the corner of the building.— Daring this time Baker was bolding the door par tially open. On hearing the shot he opened the door and went in pot in time to see Booth fall. Con,ger, who immediately entered the barn, said : " bee shot himself." Baker reached the body and clasp& Booth by the arms, thinking he was probably only wounded. But,_ finding him power less, with the aid of Conger. Dohertyi and timing.- diem, he was carried out of tint bath; and lea upon the gram a short distance from the door, and appear ed to be laser:l4bl°. By application of water, bath tights race end bead, be revbr,' - opened Ma Impala,. and trade an effort to speak. Col. Conger placed his ear to Booth's month, and beard him say: "felt mother,' die for my country." The heat became so Intense that Booth was taken to the porch of Garrett's house. Col. Conger im mediately sent to Port Royal for a surgeon, and an hour elapsed before the surgeon arrived, during which time Lieut. Baker constantly bathed Booth's bead In lee-water, and placed in his month a wet cloth, Booth being unable to get his lips to a tumb• ler, owing to the fact that he could not be raised up. To the meantime it was discovered that the wound had been Inflicted by a shot from a pistol In the hands of Sergeant Corbett of the 16th New York Cavalry, the W.l passing entirely through his neck, perforating both sides of his shirt collar. Shortly after Booth was laid upon the porch he made an effort to speak. He said : Tell my mother I died for toy country. I did what I thought was for the best This was said with mat difficulty, end apparently In the greatest pain He said two or three times at interval. •. " Kill me—kill me!" and by signs Indi cated that he wanted to cough, and that be wanted (longer to put his hand on his throat. Conger did so, bet Booth did not :succeed in coughing. Ho seemed now to be falling rapidly, but revived again and said : My hands." His hands were then ly ing motionless by his aide. Baker raised one of his bands so that be could see It, and bathed it In Ice water. Booth, with great. effort, his eyes glaring at the band, sai d : " Useless— useless Baker let go the hand, which fell powerless by thedylugman's side. Again Booth sank s w ay, and was fast falling when the surgeon arrived. The letter examined the wound for some minutes, and said Booth might live for twenty-four hours. But Booth's countenance soon changed, his eyes assuming a glassy appearance. The surgeon then said he thought be was dying. About this time Col. Conger left for Washington, with orderr to bring the body when death ensued to the boat at Belle Plain. Booth seemed now to be in the agonies of death. Iris face was terribly distorted, his chin drawn down and to one side, countenance turned bluish, and be seemed to be In the most terrible agony. It was soon over, however, and the surgeon pronounced Booth dead. ' . _ lie received the death wound at fifteen minutes past three, and died at twenty minutes put seven on Wednesday morning Beside Lieutenant Baker and Lieutenant Doherty, and the soldiers, there were present at the death• scene four or rive of the Wiles belonging to the Garrett family, the old man Garrett, and his two 60138. After the surgeon bad pronounced Booth dead, Lieut. Baker took his blanket from his saddle and In It rolled the body, sewing the blanket up about the reef and head. Previous to this the surgeon had tied up the dead man's chin and hands, and closed his eyes, The body was plared in a rickety one-horse buggy wagon, belongingto a free negro living near by, and taken thirty miles over the country, to Belle Tlain, where the boat Ida was in readiness to bring' the Party to thin city. HAROLD. AU the way associate with the c a re s s' went Har old, shuddering in so grim companionship, and In the awakened ream of his own approaching ordeal, beyond which loomed already the gossamer fabric of a scaffold He tried to talk for his own exoneration, &tying he had ridden as was his wont, _beyond the East Branch, and returning found Rooth wonlided, who begged him to be his companion. Of his crime he knew nothing, so help him God, &c. But nob°. dy listened to him All Interest of crime, courso, and retribution centered in the dead flesh at ,hla feet. At Washington, high and low turned out to look on Booth only a tew were permitted to see the corpse for purposes of recognition. It was May Preserved. though on one aide of the face dialdrted, and looking blue like death, and wildly banditilke. WHERE BOOTH LIU Yesterday the Secretary of War, without Instruc tions of any kind, committed to Colonel L. C. Ba ker, of the flecret Service, the corpae of L Wilkes Booth. The Sean Service never Joßilled Its voli tion more secretively. " What haveOu done with the body ?" amid Ito Baker. lie rep lied': " That Ls known to only one man living besides Anyeelf. It Is guns. I will not tell you where. The only men who knows is sworn to silence; rover un til the great trumpeter comes, shall the grave of Booth be discovered." And this is true. Last night, the 27th of Aprils small row-boat receiged the carcass of the murderer; two men were In the boat, and they carried the body off. Into the darkness, and out of that: darkness it will never return. In the darkness, like his t peat crime, may it remain forever ; Impalpable, invisible, nondescript, condemned to that worse: that; damns- f..-W we. years no. In tha great Stetter India" lived nourished a poplar gonna male& He was not specially noted for his grayity,-and some of hie Mende evrasaing an opinion that he was entire. ly too wild for ono of hisrofesion. a little 'ygirt of some tea stemmas repliedtlUluit it was not so : at least, if he were wild -at t "he'was r tamestede eno do ugh in the pulpit I" and th ere defence . . ,abwrb ,grb,L k,..,= upposo bootaßdib.ml.4.lllle. TUESDAY, MAY 9, 1865. Long I RP. • poor widow Woman lived down near the forge, by Enniscorthy, and she was so poor, she had no clothes to put on her son, so she need to tlx him In the ash-hole, near the amend pile the warm ashes' shoat him: and according as he grew she sunk the pit deeper. At last, by hook or by crook, she got a gnatakin and fastened It round his waist, and he felt quite grand, and took a walk down the street. 80 she says to him next morning, "Tom,- you thlef, you never done any good yet, and you are slz foot h4h, and peat nineteen! Take that rope, and bring me a Drama from the wood." goes." " Nevelt !say Mice, mother," said Tom. "nen When he bad it gathered and Ued, what should come up but a big giant, nine foot blob, and made a lick of • club at him. well, as became Tom, ho jumped moanatde, and picked • up a ram•pike, and the g rot crack he gave the big fellow he made him Wen the clod. • " /Upon have o'er a prayer," says Tom, " now's the time to say it, before I make bathe of you." "I haven° ra," says the giant; "but if you spare my life I'll give you th e club; and as long as You keep from sin you ii win every battle you eve , fight with IV' 'Tom made noloons bones about letting him off; and as soon as he got the club in his hands, he sat down on the bream, and gave it a tap %intake kippeen, and says: , Breen', I had great trouble gathering you, and run the risk of my life for you, the least you can do hi to carry me home." And sure enough, the wind o' the yowl was all it wanted. It went off through the'wood, groaning and cracking, till it came to the widow's dour. Well, when the sticks were all horned, Tom was sent off again to pick more sprigs; and this time he had to light with a giant that had two heads on him. Torn had 9 little more trouble with him—that's all; and the prayers he said, was to give Tom a lite, that nobody could help when he played it. Begonios, he made the faggot dance home ' with blmseff sitting on it. Well, If you were to count all the steps from this to Dublin, dickens a hit you'd ever anive there. The next giant was a beautiful boy with -three heads on him. He had neither prayers or catechism no more nor the others; and BO he gave Tom a bottle of green ointment that wouldn't let you he burred, nor scalded, nor wounded. "And how." says be, "there Is no more of us. You may come and .gather sticks here till little Lunacy Day in harvest, 'without giant or fah7man to disturb you." Well, now, Tom was prouder nor ten pa co and used to walk down street In the heel at the evening; but some o' the little boys had no more manners than If they were Dublin Jackeens, and pet out their ,tongues at Tom's club, and Tom's goat skin. tie *didn't like that stall, but It would be mean to give one of them a clout At last, what should come through the town but a kind of bell man, only It's a big bugle be had, and a huntsman's cap on hie' head, and a kind of a painted shirt. Bo thhi—be wasn't a bellman, and I don't know what to call him—teigleman, may b., proclaimed that the king of Dublin's daughter was so melancholy that she didn'tgive a laugh for seven year% and that her father would grant her In marriage to whoever would make her laugh three times. "That's; the very thing for me to try," 'aye Tom ; and so, without burning any more daylight, he kissed his mother, curled his club at the little boys, and off he set Mom the highroad to Dublin. At last Tom came to one of the city gates, and the =llaughed and cursed at him, Instead of letting it Tom stood It all for a little time, but at last one of thein—ont al fun, as ho said--drove his triplet h a lf an i nc h or so in his side. Tom did nothing bat take the fellow by th e scruff o' the neck and the waistband of her conturoya, and fling him into the canal. Bome ran to pull the fellow out, and others to let manners into the vulgarian with their screeds and daggers; but a tap from his Midi sent themtied langinto the moat or down on the stones, and They were snore begging him to stay his hands. Bo atlald one of them wasglad enough to show Toni the way to the palace yar d; and there was the leinglind the queen, and the princes, in a gallery, looking 11)411 sorts of *existents, and sword-p layin and rinksrinksradices (long dances), and murmuring, g, W nicest* theprinces but not a smile ever came over her handsome face. Well, they all stopped when they saw thoyoung giant, with his boy's face, and his long, black hair, and his short, curly b eard—for his poor mother couldn't afford to bey rashers—and his great, strong artne, and bare legs, and no covering but the goat skin-that hatched from his waist to his knees. Bat an envious, wiezened, bastbard of a fellow, with a red heed that wished to be married to the princess, and dldu i t like how she opened her eyes at Torn, came forward and asked his business very snappishly. "My busleeek" says Tom, " is to make the beau fel princess, Ood bless her, laugh three times." "Do you see all them merry fellows and skillful swordsmee ?" says the other, "that could eat you ire with s grain of salt, and not a mother's aoul of 'em ever got a laugh from her these seven year.." Bo the Idiom; gathered round Tom, and the bad man aggravated him till he told them be didn't care a pinch of snuff for the whole - boffin' of 'em; let. 'em come on, six at a time, and try what they could do. The king was too tar off to. bear what they were saying, what did the stranger want. He wants," Kaye the red-headed fellow, "to make har ps of your best men." " I "says the king, "if that's the way, let one , of them turn out and try his mettle" So one stood forward, with sword and pot-lid, and made a cut at Tom. He struck the fellow's el bow with the elnb, and up over his bead dew the sword, and down went the owner of It on the gravel from a thump be got on the helmet. Another took tds place and another , and another, and then half a dozen at, once ,• and 'Tom sent swords, helmets, shields, and bodies, rolling over and over, and them !elves beirlhig out that they were kilt, and dlsablee, and damaged, and rubbing their poor elbows and hip., and limping away. Tom contrived not to kill any one ; and the princess was so amused that she let a great silvery laugh out of her that was heard all over the yard. " King of Dublin, " says Tom, "I've a quarter of yonr daughter." Ad the king'dirt not know whether he was glad or sorry, and the blood la the princess' heart nutted° her cheeks. .- . __ Bo there was no more fighting that day, and Tom was Invited to dine with the royal fatally. Next day Redhead told Torn of a wolf, the size of a yearling heifer, that need to be serenading about the walla, and eating people and cattle; and said what a plena :we it would give the king to have It killed. "With all my hest," says Tom ; "send a jackeen to show me where ho lives, and we will see how he be. haves to a stranger." The princess was not well pleased, for Tom look ed -a different person with doe clothes and a nice green berrcdb, over his long, curly hair, and be• sides he'd got one laugh out of her. However, the king gave his consent; and in au hour and a half the herrible wolf was walking into the palace-yard, and Tom;a step or two behind, with his club on his shoulder:ft:at as ashepherd would bo walking after a pet lamb. The king and the queen, and princess were up safe la the gallery, but the officern and people: of the court that were padrowling about the great lawn when they saw the great beast coming in, gave themselves up, and began to make for doors and gates; and the wolf licked hls cli p. ° ms s as if he was saying, " Wouldn't I enjoy abr h tof a couple of " year' - The king shouted out: Oh Gills in Chreok an Gour take away that ter rible wolf, and you may have all my daughter;" hut Tom didn't mind him • bit. Ho pulled out his life and began 'to play like vengeance; and dickens a a man orboy in the yard but began shoveling away heel and ; toe, and the wolf himself was obliged to get upon- his hind legs and dance "Tatter Jack Welsh!' along with the rest. A mod deal of the people got Bade, and shut the doors, where the Wry fellow wouldn't pin them ; but Tom kept play. lug, and the °Walden kept dancing and shouting, and the wolf kept dancing and roaring with pain hit:legs weneglving him; and all the time he had his eyes on Redhead that was shut nut along with the teat.' Wherever Redhead went the wolf follow ed, and kept one eye on him and the other on Tom, to see if be would give him leave to eat him. But Tom shook his head, and never stopped the tune,. add Redhead never stopped dancing end bawling, and the wolf dancing and roaring, one leg upend the other down, and he 'ready to drop out of his standing from fair Umomenesa. When the princess saw that there was no few or any one being kilt, she was so diverted by the stew that Redhead - was ln, that she gave another laugh; endow Well become Tom; he cried out: "Xing of Dublin, I have litWO halves of your daughtek" "Oh, halves or ails," says the king, "put 'sway that dlvtl of a wolf, and well see about IV do o*lla_put his life In his pocket, and says be to the baste that was Milo' MI his combing° ready to - .W ' alk off to your mountain, my fine fellow, and Ave like a respectable bos*; and Weyer I fiats you Come within seven miles of any town, I'll—" Ife add no more, but spit in his teat, and give a fiouriah Ofelub, It was all , the poor divil wanted- He put pis Lill between his legs, and took to his pumps. without looking at man or marital, and neither Mtn, 'moon, or athra ever AWN Win In sight of Ptiblitl *Pim At dinner. every onelaughed but the foxy fellow; sad, aunt enough, be was laybig out how he'd settle poor Tannin next day. _ .Wid4 . to be sum!' says he, -"king of lanblln, ts ta te, in luck.- There ' s the Donee' imildbering Ens iitien4. _Dee;• run- to Lick. ' sent andliany eltedrillugfidia'szat I thlOMUfto,l* US AN ramit LEGEND. CM - - goat-skin. There la a thdl harnrhe on the eoflar i beam . hell, and neither Dann nor diva . can hand before It "So," -Rasa Tote to the Wog, "win you let me have the other half 0410 princes. If I 0108300 the "No, no!" says the princess, I 'l:d:rather be your, wife than .see you In that danger. • • - '`• But Redhead whispered and nudged Tom atm/ how, shabby it • would took to rem:ague Um adventure. Bo he asked which way he was to go; and Redhead directed him through a street where a great aunt bad women lived, and _a great mapy alatuben houses were open, and away he set. Well, be travelled and traetile& BB Caine eight of the walls of hell ; add, *diet, and Wore lie at th e gates, br rubbed himself over With: a greenish ointment. IV hen'ho knocked 'a holidta l ittle imp ! poppt.l.l their Itunisput tloon,ghttm_bare,. atul axed what be wanted: . •" I want to speak to the 'big dicta of all," !Mrs Tom; "ope n the gate," /L wasn't Jong till the gate was throne opem'end. tho Onld Boy received TOM with• hows end scrapes, and axed as haziness. "Idy,truslnesa.lan't says Tom; only come fortis! load thstdail that. see hanging on ther collar beam. tar the king of Dublin to give a thrasing to the Dan's." : • • " :ways the other, -"the Thattes'areasuch better customers to me, but sinre.yon walked so far I wont refuse. Hand that says he to a yam*. Imp, and he winked the far-off eye at the wen dme. Cio while same were barring the gateti, the young divll climbed up and took down th. dnit that had the handstaff and bonen both made of red-ho/IriM. The little vagabond was grinning to think bow It would burn thehabde off o' Tom, bnt the dickens a burn it made on him no more nor Int was a gold" oak-sapling. " Thankee," says Tom •,"'" now would you open the gate for a body, and P I ) give yon no more,tron hle." "0h,.h0 !" says Ovid Nick, "Is that the WaY?'„ It is easier getting inside them gates than getting out again. Take the tool from him and give bath a dtde of the oil of stirrup." Bo one fellow put out his claws to seize upon the flail, but Tom gape him such a welt of ft on the side of his head that he broke off one of his home, and made him roar like a divg as he wee. Well, they rushed at Tom, but he gave them. little and big, such a thrashing as they didn't forget. for a while. At last says the ;mid thief of all, rubbing Ida elbow, " Let the fool out; and wooln whoever let& bins in again, great or small." . • Bo out marched Tom, and away with him, without minding the shouting and cursing that they kept up at him from the top of the walls; and when ha got home to the big lawn of the palace, there never was such a running and racing as to tee himself and the flail. When be had his story told, he laid down the flail on the atone steps, and bid ito one for their live* to touch It. lf the king and queen and princess made much of him before, they made ten times more of him new; bat Itedhead„the mean setoff-hound, stole over, and thought to catch hold of the fla il and make an end of him: Bit fingeitt hardly touched it when he let ,a iv:trout ;Leif heaven and earth were coming together, and kept flinging his arms about, and dancing so that - it was pitiful to look at him. Tom ran at h i 6 as soon as he could rise. caught his hands in his own two and rubbed them this way and that, and the burning pain left them before yon could reckon one. Well, the poor fellow, between the pain that- was only gone. and the comfort that he was In„ had the conalcalest face that'you ever see, it was such a haixtberum-gethernm of laughing and. crying. Everybody, burst out- a princess could not. atop no more than • the rest; and then nays Gills, or Tour, t' :Now, ma'am, If there were flay _halves of you I hope you' ill give me them all." Well, the princess had ,na. mock modesty about her. Bhe looked at her father,,. and; by my word, she came over to little, sad pather two delicate•handeinto his two rough ones, and I wish it was myself was in his shoes that day! Tom would not bring the flail into the palace. I'Yort may be sure no other body went near It; and when the early rivers were passing,nes3 Awning, they foUnd -two long-clefts Id- the 'stone. - where it was after burning itself an opening downwards, no body could tell how far. But a messenger came in at noon and said that the Danes were so .frightened when they heard of the MU coming into Ltalillm.: that they got into their ships and allied away. Well, I suppose they were married,.Olila got, soiee' man like Pat Mara, of Tomenine. to larn him' the "Principles of Politeness," finxions,gunnery, and fortification, decimal fractions, practice. and the rule of three direct, the why he'd be able to keep up I a conversation with the rod al Wally. • Whether be ever lost bin time laming . them Iscleoces, mm not etre, but it's - as sure as fate that his mother never more saw any want till the end of her days. ' Win EMYLMICS RAGS LT 'n , 113 One night four thousand persons perished of the plague In London. It was by night that thearmy of Bennacharib was destroyed. Both in England and' on the continent, a large proportion of cholera eases, In several forms, have been °Nerved to have oc curred between one and two o'clock lathe mornleg,:• The danger et exposure to the nightair brut been a themeof physicians from time Immemetial t, but it is remarkable that they have never yet called in the aid of chemistry to account for the fact. It [cat night that the stratum of ale- nearest the ground meat always be the most charge d with the particles of animalized matter given 'o t from the skin, end deleterious gasses, such as carbonic acid glut, neve. duct of respiration, and sniptuunted hydrogen, the product of the sewers. In the day gasses and-vett , ons substances of all kinds rise in the air by the Tel• fractimilot the heat. At night, when this rarefaction leaves, they fall by an increase of gravity, if Imperfect ly mixed with the atmosphhere, while the gasses evolved daring the night, instead of ascending, re main at nearly the same levet. leis known that carbonic acid gas, at a low temperature partakes so nearly of the nature of a flubs, that-It may be poured out of one vessel Into another. It rises at the tent pemture at which It is exhaled from the lungs, but its tendency is towards the floor. or-the bed_ of the sleeper, in cold and unventilated moms. "" At Ramberg, the alarm of cholem at eight in some parts of the city, was so great that many refused to go to bed, least they should be attacked unawares In their sleep. Bitting np,tthey probably kept their stoves or open tires horning for the sake of warmth, and that warmth giving the elpatialen to any deleterious gasses present, which would 'best promote their dilation to the atmospere, the manna of safely were then tmconaciensly assured. At Buena Leone, the natives have a practice in the sickly sea son of keeping fires constantly burning in their huts as nights, assigned that the fires keep away the evil spirits, to which In their ignorance they attributed fever and ague Latterly, Europeans have begun to adopt the same practice, and , those who have tried it assert that they have now entire immunity from the tropical fevers to which they were formerly subjected. In the epidemics of the middle ages, fires used to be light-a In the streets for the purification of the air, and in the plague of London, in 1685, fires in the streets were atone time kept barninglnceasant I.y, till extlegaiihed by a violent stems of rain. Latterly trains of gunpowder have been Bred, tied cannon diseharred for t h e same objeet, but it is ob vious that these messurce, although sound In princi ple, must necessarily, though out of doors, be on too small a scale, as measured against an ocean, of atmospheric sir, to produce any tensible effect. Within doors, however, the Can is diftent, . It 4 quite possible to heat k room suillantivtO pro. duce a rarefaction and consequent dilution of any malignant games it may contain, and it Is of - course the sir of the room, and that alone, , at night, which comes In contact with the lungs of the pergodileop ing.—Westottniefer &elm. WHEY A* EDITOR .IfranT nava thnts.—Holland, the editor of the Springfield (31ass.)Repubitcan, has been up in Vermont, to "where be came from," and thee sketches what he should have beat LL bad not left home and become an editor: Yourcormspondentwould have grownstalwartand strong, with horny hands and a taco ea black et the ace of spadea Ito would have taught school winters, worked on the farm summers and gone out haying fifteen days In July, and Anima for pay the iron works and running gear of a wagon. , • , At twertmd;twenty, or thereabouts.howcraid have began to pay attention to a girl with s father worth $2,000, and a spit curl on her forthesd-ia girl who always went to singing - school, -- and:"set In the Bede." and sung without opening her mouth—a pret• ty girl any way. Weil, alter seeing her home trom singing;-school for two or -three yeanr, taking her to a fourth of July, and getting about $lOO together, he Would" barn married and ,settled down: Tears would have passed sway, and the girl with the spit earl would hero eleven eltildren—justas earn as you . -five•!-seven boys. and foie girls. • -.- . We should have had abard time in bringingthemup, but they would soon be abletenpugh to dothemilklog and help their mother wash days, and I getting tie dependent at last, and Meting a little 'Mirk the Joints, wpuld ba elected amemberld the legislature, having been an assessor and ar acboal Committee maa for yearn. = In the evening almy dams with my pi in my mouth, thirteen barrels of cid.rta the , and a nestapaPerr la- my hank.l should slt and leek at the markets through a pair toMuld moan ted spectacle*, and wonder why should -Inch a 'strange ailly.pieco as this be published. — • • ••• farrrom the let ot October. 18*. talent/my 4tu 1889, TAM men bad deteritentahti cOule* erale armies east or the 4WD! pph • Diet% Prlta's remit invasion or Wasotui; nod;slt , tbe , 3 da,0041104V,90014044100' , t0,,q.p9,0er E -1 PLIJIS Asovr wen; - If too =eh food Is taken the stomach cannot Aimed:lomo.* perfewbbottmaterts=serlO purfect - blood la made; sod that tieing* ' with' the other blood In the body makes the whole Moe jof Weal bnPurs, ,benceosker an over-hessir person PieskiW . alrover." theownwstlng Is. i ltabloal, there Is always some uncomfortable Inal ig t ar d • Saab new neter.steX Atursithongb : may eat heartily, they do not get strong nor 111 -up to nub; It is because the stomach - has been 'writ , tax•cl; Ind has not the power to extract the niwukth med from the food. ' ' When persona do pot• get strong, Ohm* they eat a great deal; tbey will get stronger 'by; atatteg ,on6liall time. • Ils=areickly servant In eltenipting to do a large amount of work, does none of It well.- 'whereas, If th e task vitiers lighter one, the libels 'imuld be thertrugbaydotie. When'snlyinscomfortable reeling is expeiteneed • after eating, it b bemuse some militia deal curt agree with the stomach, that to, moot be digested by P. This altrayseriatte froth quality or quantity, general. ly the latter. In such mew take less and law until • no discomfort, la produeed; triscrapecial doings Is 'observed, it Is because the quality G unstilted to the 'condition of the stomach, or thegenerai system does not require it. -1 • • An article may not agree with the stoloacht Ys to - defr hut may'sgtee with it very Welkin a few da,' weeks ; or numthaTarterwarde, because Its dheft - 4.. re alto iiT./CUta Par thee be mded thosystent- cat per. ls on s instin dti vely turn' aviay from rout port In mid summer—it would make-them slck-;..bat la winter time,..wha the thermometer Is. eaf , urge quantities are eaten with a relish and nompecine comfort folkArs.-. As a Vint! rule, Indite Is the beat guide, and that wb. la aost alished - is . the thine which should be eatent. but if some Macon tort invariably Woes, itairould btfornittekat least until • change' of 'air, mason or ocemattha . It IS pployalcaland moral wrong to. take - tdbathfel whet rally It is not wanted, the Mtn being merely to at even, to at it out of • the way,. es fanny that if It is not eaten it -will he throwe away by the cook. if thus thrown away some in• setter worm, or 'animal'unty get It; If 'Wen - by Ytelteelf. Ii 0 111 9 oPPrases the system that much. The finer food la divide 4 or cut up before mallow ed. fhb sooner; thb easter;atut more perfect it IC' dl tested,-for like ims it Is dart &of hum without, In. nerd*. and the amelMr the pieces, the sooner they are melted. „ Bread andn butter t and * re the ontv two art. clim of food which have ail the elements, of natal tion; hence from childhood to extreme old UN 1 .11 are never tired of them —Hafra loured et Matt% ONXIICEM IN A QIIMiXf. " I never, but once," said the Colonel, ." ins In What I call areal genulde quandary. It was dur my eleeticmeering for Congress, at which "thar i i strolled about in the woods so pullouts:ly pestered. with politics that I forgot my rile. Any man , may forget his ride, yon know; but It Isn't every man that can make smenda for lib forgetfulness by his tamines, IPa& • It chance a that I was strolling along, eciniddersbly deen Id eongressionals ; the first thing that took uly fancy was the snarling of some young beam, which proceeded from a hollow tree ; but I soon found I could not reach the cubs with my bands; so , I - went feet foremost, to see If I ecmla - dmw them up by the toes. I hung on at the. top ofltbet, bole, straining with all my might to reach them, until at Is* my hands slipped, and down /went, more than tsreut7 fent, to the bottout.of that bole, and there I found myself all:lost - hip deep In a family of dne stung beats. ,i soon found that I might as well undertake- to climb the,greeeleet part of ► ralltbowas to get bath, the boleti: the tree - being ao huge; and RS sides 'so smooth' and ellppery from the rain. - • Now this, ass teal, genuine quandary if I teas to shunt, it would be donbtftd whether they would Lear me at the er-ttlement, end If they did It - would rule my- election ; for. they were _of a quality too mite to vote fora man that. ventured Into a place that he didn't underatand. how to get' himself dot . . . . • Well, now, while I,was.Pleulating whether It wee best to shout for help orto Walt in the bole mita af ter election, I heard a kind of crumbling and growl ing overhead; and looking I saw the old bear com ing down stern foremost upon me. ktyleotto always was " go ahead," and is soon so' ohe lowered henvelf withicaLreach, I got a ,tight grip of her tall IR my left and with my Uttla back-bore hafted pen -knife - fa other, I commence rid spurring ber forward . •rti ba abn 'raver %M -be; of Oongreas rose quicker In thy world than She took me Out of that hole In tie) shake Of a lamb's tall. • I Fla:{lilil/u:{1)40:11:14:r11:1m:1 • The primary ovation of Dr. &ea&•• connect 'goo with Lens fieminary'is Oven In the following charameristio anecdote from ids own mouth. one wog that Indirectly occasioned my being thoncht of, I have no dentrt, wale Uttleelrcametlacs ;that had happened not rang. before,-on one of the North 'tier boats. I was coming down the river. whenl CMS crowd whore • pest fellOw,la akWle. was Whim... I drew near the riwto hair and:wie what he was doing. I soon saw that Ida antagrodat was net his match, and needed help. He wu show- lug up the contradictions of the Bleb ;among oth ers, Jades hanged himself, and in &nether place fell headlong, etc. ' And how do you reconcile tArd,' , said he. •-• ' Why, sir,' said the rope broke, I suppose.' 'How d'ye know saldpe. '-How d'ye know Indian tf• add I, and that dashed him. Terrine began to laugh. Then . I stepped asp close to Ma aide and kindly said : 1 'ventore to say you are a child of Plontgrenta. and - are eglatingsgalnat your conscience. tla a d=geroua Hang, and yotrbad betters's* it 1, told hie, It ever he came to Boston to call on me, • Why,' tailhe, r dant know who on' be,' and half a dozen voices cried,—' Dr. Dr. &weber.' I told thls to Taylor; Taylor told Arthur Tappan eulogistically ;Auld 'o, when 1411 CILMII, on to. New York, he for a Tappan so well affected to me that be offered to give $20,000., oneonditton I would go. That, with what be had known of , me before, I al ways thought settled' it. Ro great Wogs ottenpow Rut of little." Two business gentlemen from New Sean. who occasionally indulge In a little aporting,,rocieorissa— ea. visited Southington on a hunt tho other de. Birds were not vempteuty, and doubtfcd of meow the gentlemen started for the depot tows*tO u Lco rake the train home. Coming aerosa an they occidental!, asked him If there were any rabbift: partrldm Turas, foxisi, , °ray other game about there. , Bedsd there Is that! I can put my Omer one nisi of faxes where than Is live young 'nns and the old not They yeas tame, pea can stroke iem aria yer band." This was a chance to capture the that must not te lost, and after some dickering, Pat agreed to plot, -them to the nest for there dolma Alter through the woode about/toile. the pMty came i to a clearing where stood a log house. With a horrid Ilillealan grin, be pointed to an old'women'end dee young Imps lying loess about the main-100r. err cisiming Bee tame..crattmre — Mrs Mara Itsr them hunthere are after yea! Good' dab pette• men I" . , The bunters - got beet to the de ioe.late Mr tie tale that deli but they ordeal Wm.s3l, ode the next morukt It , they atettlaitt, Atm. ever, that It not to them we are Indehted,. for the above he-U.—Kew Zama imisnetr A rowans -FA poor lan ;certain - village died alter along Illness, wing escaped this too !stare, presented himself at tba , gite of llama. wham be Sound he bad been preaadrd hJ , a deb maa, of the same loeslityi who he l Jett died, led WI: 1 E prethmely knocked, hat Jett been admitted bribe apostle Peter- • .•• The bborer wio enchanted hj the revishlntsoinad of rejoicing and sweet witude, which appeared to lOU thee:strum of the tieltinim. and having knocked in, his turn was abo admitted, But what was the pool , man's satonishineitt at find lag silence wttere - semphie somata 644 so lately bees uttered!. icier , " G How this he de o ea the rich man entered I heard batiste and- stagings is there the same dislinetloit batsman tiell slid pow In Heaven as on earth r s. Not at all," replied tbit'Appitle. µ tint the tines. come !oilmen everylay,!,..Mberesa, ts rine. In onehundred rests mion , domi ska= Loatomeraitancix..-leptianaltlee w "Aa.etth • Now Etshaintdea ski Ideu lfa Cretan, theyeenni, NOmealets *at a liar. lbet,ll he Wth a lien then , the eitatek real riot I Nose, If the thettee were not Ile* itjAteenthes ens not a liar. - ' • • But, It ha was stet i Hari !ha theta= Non Dank . . file:AitaiVi4Oliitt• Jsidg i has itecklal at 4 ab, iim i ug ut opim s wife& V ,u at do oftito aiul VIM* by*. XII; 44.4 * tirillak ill •. _: ~ ' ttith , OS .rF;z hfwt ~S"Ji' i MEI ON] A TOY Burr.