__ ______. _ ;-) &_ ".ka I.* al,tu• y• *-,-* T— 1 ,41,:fi 3 t) an le alakSZ:}L;:k4-4(rjaile. tj0r.,,1 f ..atvs44 ::•: - Je.r.'r..;i7l.';:ll 1:;4 .4::...:1',0' w:','''' I . 1. 11 4 k, 1.4 ' - ' ,. .. 4 Z1 , t)iirr.7, :Tli - ir.LIAL -:•:.7* ,c,:*3 *: . *:• ,l ‘)';r.", , I;ritryk i..:: , ::;:i,-..'; i'4.-.1 , • ,4 1 ;11..i1l ," . r . .' " ~..? LEISIJ. 'I , i .. , ...-1. \ .7.." ...-. .. f,, , ro• -.- c Sit: Li ........-• II ~ yr • , . . . 4 „„-_.„., ,-.,*-, -77,77.5-,..1;17..::. c.*:.,.;.-- ;;;;-, .if.,ti..i r a.'77lP4H .: ! .1`.% 7,9.-.. c .,.4 . 1e. ' t ~..4.....N.C. a .., Y . ...,„ t , .„:• .i • ' ,.-f 1 gi.) 3.,•::• , .! - . •-:•ir.7,:!..) .i ~. ` . .. '1."1.°: '' 1 ' 1 ' - '''''.l' ; i , '-.:.".' i'l - .T.. t . - llft.l. ~ .rl,l .1,4-,izi...t:0l a..r..t ,:..,;,':,,::,:.',. „.., 05 .,.. -; - - 1.7 . - *:',N --, 9:!- -, 1 . :.: - ,•* ' •, , eci. •••.!--:ER , „:7,' ' . ' 1: T i ~,,,i,, t y. ' -Th , , , . ,1- :,:".:' -:'• ''llln,r' "•' 7 , 1 i% '..; 7? •• •• . : . :L: 7 , -. A6 ...... 'ILI' ' ''.:_: 1, 7: . ,,-" •-• .i. . !•.C, 1 „. . .` • ... io.,t .V- - :!I - ~.iO2l , ..,:, I , ..., . , i 7 7 ' -•,- -I - • 1- ', .. - ..r*4 ,, • • • - ,-, . _. • , ...0 1 r. • , ~ .+-• ;•I• . 1 --. - " . • - ~.. .. ... . 0 0 ,• . -.,- • ' . r fii , i • '• ' , .. .. '' " .41 1 1111 W" -/& • -. ' ' _ ' ~ • , • • .. _. -,,.. ~_..., '. . . . , i J rti *-,,i*,:*. , . - ;:: ~ , i, . ii,:, 1, 1.- - •,-i- • ..., , I.T ,'."--•• .- .; • ' . ~.. ~, ... . .... _ . P , i 5,._ 3 ,-,. azn - --tag- -Ir-li:•-lishei.I. A:. _-;•. - i. - ,..iix2.:. 11- ,5.,.,"1 CASTC:IOB333EL: BY Tfl 4.A.T80Yit1415 GAY4O4II C.LAJIK. - -• Sterna yet beautiful to view, Month OTOffearlifiiin Awn* iere, With s4F*ifAe.4. 1 pw .840 stPow, Itatis4.oo4e**l46oolY: - -bicit bt itty; Vtlal he* An the ied•sunserdies And bursa phrple douds'aPpeat, Obs'euriug eVery western star. Thou soletnn month!, I hear thy voice ; It Win' my soul of otbei days, When bat to' liVerwai to rejoice, When earth was lovely to my gaze ! Oh, visions bright—oh, blessed hours, Where are theirliving-raptures now ? I ask my spirit's wearied . powers— I ask my pale and fevered brow ! I look to Nature, and behold My life's dim e mblems, rusting round In hues of crimson-and ofgold— The year's dead r honorsqu the ground ; And sighing with the winds, I feel, While their low pinions murmur by, Bow much their sweeping tongues reveal Of life and 'human destiny. When Spring's delightful momentsshone, They came in zephyrs from the west ; They bore the woodlarks melting tone, They eared the blue lake's glassy breast: Through summer, !hinting in the heat, They lingered in the fil,rest shade; But changed and strengthened, now they beat In storm, o'er mountain i glen and glade. How like these transports „of the breast When life is !resit aud joy is new ; Soft as the halcyon's downy nest., And transient all as they are true ! They stir .the leaves in that bright wreath Which hope about her forehead twines, Till grief's hot sighs around it breathe, Then pleasure's lip its smite resigns. Alas ! for Time and Death and Care, What gloom about, our..way.they Like clouds in gusty air, The brilliant pageant of the spring, The dreams That each successive year Seemed .buthed in hues of brighter pride, At last like 3fitherecrleates :Wear, And k , sep in darkness side by side. G313.11G AWAY AT EIGHTEEN. BY VIRGINIA IP: - TOWNSEND. It seems to me-that the old house nev er looked quite so pleasant as it does to night, in this still harvest moonlight. I know ir i s a dreadful old house, brown and low, and weather beaten—oot mach to boast of in its best days, and now it shrinks and . „quiversand:!gitet held its own against aigale and its roof leaks with ev l . cry cup full of a shower, brit it's my dear old home for all that ; and" now that this. is the last night, and I'm going away to the great, vast, noisy city to morrow, a strange sadness comes over me, standing here by the little brown gate, and look ing at:the old-place,-and wondering what will haPpeii belora Timid -here again. There are the two great cherry trees rve clambered every summer that. I can remember, and tossed down the fruit un til it lay like a thick red hail on the grass; and there is the -line of currant bushes, that hie the old worn eaten, shaky fences, and there is the'quince tree in the corner that sweetens _the air all about it; and just beyonnd the well curb stands the old gnarled apple tree, with the birds' nests rocking up in the boughs—little robins, will you sing on just as sweetly up there when I'm gone ? I never expected to feel like this. It's I hard to realize now ttat mylife here has ended—that I shall never drive the cows up in the hill pastures again when the grass is sanded all over with shining dews ! —that I shall never mow , down the sweet clover nor go shouting among the blac k ! berry patches, nor heap up the • ripocars in the great coinfield. over Yonder, and. some how it makes me sad to feel that everything will go on just as it al waytifia; done, and nothing will mind when' rm • gone away. _ • Come now, :as, -though .I'was going to make a fool- of myself:because Attest'l'm going -to the ,cityr- 2 the city' after which my thoughts , and &sails have panted for I years—the-goal of all ,milorses and 10ng..; lags, whiCh'has eeetied*:',far Olt "which I've reached at length: Your'e going ' 100 makcycniifcnituie, Tom Reynolds.qustlttink of - dial.!.. No Noreekopinat'AviOd4n4 : ioiiiairsit the plow, no 'more =king days ;totting grass the. - kileadc4o.o. And' A3OrnioOdek. tired ens with tbe'l,t4;wot,lvo,:nti244o drive the"Cnivii . home; you're . wake a -Wein jafirself, to, tajw : your chances inthe thiev xdithe.figiiiant_yon. der in-thugruat eivniunkitiabaiLreakm.d w ith Yott ifYl4l-4114-04444i1i-014144 pluck your prize with •the best of them. mean to' make money—to be a -rich man. • be &ithful; industrious; shrewd, and make my way up. to the top of the ladder. .r.,. And some day I shall come ,back here to the old home, and people willstareand say, "That is Tom Reynolds, who used to go barefoot to the cow pastures and drive. the old ox cam down to the mill." The old house shall come down then, and in ire place shall stand abaodsorue man sion,for mother; and little.,Amy—Amy, will have grown a woman by that time, and I sball,make a lady of her, bless the dear little, chubby 8181 how pleasant it will be to see those Nay cheeks of hers Shining bellied the blinds of the stately new home, and how proud the little laughing puss will be of brother Tom when he fiends her into his fine carriage and dashes deivn the village street with her by his side ! • • And the poor old mothir—ah, that's the best of all, she who had toiled so hard to keep Amy and me under the old roof since father died—she shall have the rest she's needed so long then ! She shall sit by the window of the new house in the pleasant summer afternoons in her black silk dress, and her pretty 'white caps, and the hands that have worked so hard lying idle in her lap then, and her Pyes, full of pride stel tenderness, shall follow her boy around the house—her boy that is a rich man now, and that has never forgotten what she taught hint, to be hottest, and just and true, in the thick of all tempta tion. And Abell ; ton, somebody Will be grown a lady—little Lucy Ames—the Doctor's daughter, with her hair that has the gold of the spring dandelions, and her eyes the blue of the cool spring away up among the rocks off there—little Lucy with your sweet, shy face, and your kindly words, and smile always ready forme, tho' I was your father's choke boy ! I shan't for get it then ! • And what will say when I come back a rich man, with houses, and lands, and an- honorable name ? You wilt be a lady then, little Lucy, but. will , your blue eyes smile on me, just ab sweetly—will you come dancing out of the door with the light in your golden hair and the old bright welcome in your face ? What if—what if Ah , Lucy, the ques tion will do to wait, for I have only seen my rigitteenth birthday yet, and you are: inside your fifteenth. .But I shall carry the thought hidden away down in my heart to Inc great city to morrow. 4th, the old, swift hopes arid longings —the strong, fiery ambitions come back, and stir the blood of my youth again. I long for the morrow to come so that I can be away, and at work. Good bye, old home, and yet f shall carry you too in my heart as you looked that last night when I stood by the little gate, and you lay before me asleep in the moonlight. CO3tINU BACK AT FORTY FIVE ' It is just a score and a quarter of years ago since I stood here by the old gate, and my bleed ,was hot tin n and my very heart throbbed high with the fierydreams and hopes of youth. Am I grown so old then Y I have not passed beyond •my prinie yet, though my years lean - toward fifty' and my hair is overshot with silver hero and there. And yet-to night the years lie heavy on my soul, and they seem like the burden of age as I come up to the scenes am) , youth. Nothing looks changed here. The har vest moon gathers the-old house-into its silver folds just as it did then—the tall cherry trees rustle over my head—the currant bushes make their dark greed line where'the - fence has gone to decay, and the quince shrubs flutter in the soft wind. , And another wind blows up from the coasts of my youth. Oh forlthe'old boy heart that stood here and dreamed its dreams and made its plans' twenty five years ago! " I was to be a rich man I" I said, standing here, in the strong confidence of youth. The world says I am that now. I would tell you, too, that I have an hon -1 orable name—thanks to theprayers of the old mother who sleeps under a little pil low of green grasses by the Willows out yonder. I wonder if she can look 'down and see her boy standingnhere, leaning on the old gate to night ? She has gone to another house; a fairer one than I was- to make her, and which still comes back to me in visioul3 of the night: tuunetiuies, - with' Amy's sweet face shinihg - the windovrand illy mother sitting there 'with her black dress and snowy cap. I am nova man much given to senti ment or romance of any ion. Years of hard grappling with' forttioe haveovergrown all that, tind'they pall me stern,end keen;:and practical in thialworld' where I have to deal with Facts hid !ten; and:thedim .of my ymith bat: **shed long ago; still the old memories seem:to melt zny heart:into the heart of little chat as: I stand here and 10010 dOWn the king.':highway", of the 'Tears nr4hich I haretravelled'again . tei.thiselghtV- • ipLittleotnlYilvith therebObbriliftlee themerry flirraantifit nivherezVi night; stalwart boys and fair haired girls: NEONTRoSE, FA., TIIESDAT, OCT. , 39, 1866. call, the faded matron., motlpo, as dt6ers call me "Father !" And )ittie r e ttex Amei Searahing titnang the , graves out Yonder, I game up- On a, small granite thooiment, and in the gray stone was gritven. 61 LUOr t AGEp TWX.NTY." Is that all! Luey,' with the golden hair, and the'eyea likifresli Violets ' Standiagliere to night ? 4m14 the lost visinne l and' happit of il l y y9titb; I could almost smile. derisively on what'men say cifine—Ahtial have been a , 1 suttees in life." It is . true I have grappled bravely with circumstances ; I hair() hewn out with my own right arm a path tofortune. But it looks small to nigh; coming back here and standing by the old gate with the rusty hinges, and looking at the bld house, beneath whose low roof other lit tle children sleep to night, and on whose door step other children play—oh, the fortune looks small to me now, and it seems as though I would almost give it all to feel is I used to when I went bare foot through the cool meadow grass and up into the hill pastures to drive the cows home. You have not changed, old house that I left thirty years ago standing in the moonlight, but you cannot give back to me the strong Heart, the bounding pul ses' of my youth. The birds sing, the grasses shiver, the trees move in jny about you, but in place of the strong, restless, eager youth that went out from yon, a man, worn, burden ed, wearied with the struggle, comes back as pilgrims go to worship at old shrines, and theee comes now an echo up and doWn the deep places of his soul the wordh that, long ago, his mother taught him, "Vanity of vanities, saith the preach er, all is vanity !" Revenge on a Bank by Rothschild. An amusing adventure is related as having happened at the Bank of England, which had committed the greet disrespect of refusing to discount-a bill of a large amount drawn by Aoielleen Rothschild, of Frankfort; on "Nathan Rothschild, of London. The bank haughtily replied; " that they discounted -only' their 'oWn bills and not those of private persona:" Bnt they had to do with one strdnger; than the bank: "Private persons," ex-, claimed Nathan Rothealtild; 'when They reported him the fact. "Private persons ! I will make these gentlemen see' what kind of private persons we are !" Three weeks after, Nathan Rothschild, who bad employed the interval in gathering all the five pound notes be could procure in Eng land and on the continent, presented him self at the bank at the opening of the of fice. He drew from his pocket book a five pound note, and they naturally coun ted out five sovereigns, at the same time looking quite astonished that the Baron Rothschild should have personally troub led himself for such a trifle. The Baron' examined one by one the coins, and put them into a little canvas' bag, then draw ing out another note—a'thini—a tenth— a hnndreth, he never put the• pieces of' gold into the bag without scrupulously examining them, and in some instances trying them in the balances, as, he said, "the Taw gave him the 'right to do so." The first pocket book being emptied and the first bag full he passed them to his clerk, and •received a second, 'and thus' continued till the close of the bank. The Baron had employed 7 hours te ' 'change 221,006. But as he had nine of his em ployees of his house engaged in the Same manner, it resulted;lhat the arouse of Rothschild - had drawn .£189,000 - in gold from the bank, and that he had so occu pied the 'tellers that no other person could change a single note. Everything which bears the stamp of eccentricity has always pleased the English. They were, therefore, the. first. day very much amused at the pique of Baron , Rothsehild.• They,- however, laughed leas when 'they sat', him return next day at the opening of the bank, flanked by nine (clerks,• and follow ed this day by many drays, destined to carry away the specie. • They laughed no longer when the king of bankers said with ironical simplicity, "-These gentlemen re fuse to pay my bill. , I have sworn not to keep theirs. At their leisure, only, I no tify them that I have enough to employ them for two months." " For 2 months?' " Eleven millions in gold drawn from the Bank of England, which they have never possessed." The bank took alarm; there was something to be done. The' next morning a notice appeared in the journals that henceforth• the bank • would pay Rotschild's bills the same as their own. 41101.7--- • ---General Sherman hitsoffthe "bravo" men who new wish to , etterininate the South, in: ibe folinwing home" thrust, eon- Wined in a recent, letter :•. ~ • , . . is amusing to . observe how, brave , and firm men become when all.:danger past. I have noticed Icon-the field or . , bat tie braverFnenrcever insult 'Abe captured, or mutilate the dad; butthdpOtiarda and' braignms' Ownys- Aci'.• 'NOVO, whQn the , rebellion' in 'our-tend is' dead, tonsil pa: onotPtrap:pear,'WhrandiStPlifeilideciee' Of their valor; andrntertiAofiii.ittipliiiiiihitta iirsomaiiitit•lilin4r 'TO tie Vet; .s' , ; Wr'l.!Pi7C' were done." Arbamas filbakopeare , * Tomb. [Front the Lcitehin 'Punch.] I've been: lingeiin by the tomb of the lantented Sbakspeare. ' . It is a success: • I do not hes'tate te pronounce it such. Yon may make'neruse of this opinion that you tteetfit. , ' yot think its tied' will , subserVe the intitkof 'fiteratoori. you may publicate it. I told' my, wife Betsy when I left home thatl should- 'got° the birth-010e of CO. Thella And othet Plays. She said that as longinelkept but of Neurte she didn't care where I went. " But, ' I said, "don't you know that he was the greatest poit thatevei lived I" Not one of those com mon' polo, ^like that young idyit who writes versus to our daughter about the rowseei that 'growses and the breezes that blowies, but a boss poit—also a' philoso pher—also a man who knew a great deal about everything." She, was packing up my things at the time and the only answer she made was to as k me if I was a goin' to carry both of my red flannel night caps. Yes. I've been to Stratford.onto-Avon the birthplace of Shakspeare. Mr. S. is now ne more. He's been dead over Beo years. The people of his native town are justly proud of him. They cherish his foolery, and them as sell picture of his birthplace, 4te., make it prof table cher ishin' it. Almost everybody buys a pic tur to put into their Albion. As.l stood geeing on the spot. where Shakspeare is 'sposed to have fell down on the Vice and hurt hisself when a boy (this spot is for sale but can't be bought, the town authorities say it. shall never be taken from Stratford.) I wondered if 800 years hence picturs of my birthplace will. be in demand ? Will the people of my native town be proud of me in three hun dred years ? I guess they won't short of that time, because I say the fat man weigbin' 1000 pounds Which I exhibited there was stuffed out with pillars and cushions, which he said one very hot day in July, "Oh bother, I can't stand this," and It ommenced pullin' the pillars out from under his Weskit, and heavin' them at the audience. , I never saw a man lose flesh so fast idmy life. The audience said I was a pretty man to come .chiselen my own townsman in that Way. I said, "Do not be angry, fel let citizeng. - 4 exhibited him simply as a work of art. I simply wished to show you that a man could grow fat without the use of cod-liver But they wouldn't listen to me. They are a low and grovelin set of people, who excite a feelin' of loathing in every brest where lorfiy emotions and original idees have a bidin' place. I stopped at Leamington a few minits on my way to Stratford-on-Avon, and a very beautithl town it is. I went into a shoe shop to make a purchis, and as I en tem: I saw over the door those dear fa miliar words, "By Appointment : IL R. H. ;" and I said to the man, "Squire, ex cuse me, but this is too much: I have seen in London four hundred boot and shoe shops by Appointment H.R.H. and now you're at it. It is sittiply unpes sible that the Prince can wear 400 pairs of boots. Don't tell trte,".l said in a voice choked with emotion—" Oh, do not tell me that you also Wake boots for him.— Say slippers—say - that you mend a boot DOW and then for them ; but do not tell me that you. make them reg'lar for him— don't do it." The man smiled, and said I didn't an. derstand such things. He said, perhaps I had not kroticetf in London that dealers in all sorts•of articles was By Appoint ment. I said, "Oh, hadn't I 1" Then a a sudden • rtbongb t flash? over Me. " I have it," I said, " When the Prince walks through a street, be no doubt looks in at the. shop windows. " The " No doubt." "And :the entermisin tradesman,r I continued, OM moment the Prince gets out of sight, rushes frantically, and has a tin 'sign painted,'l3y . Appointment, H. It 11. It is a great, a beautiful idee I" I then bought a pair of aboi3 strings, and wtingin ,the shopman's honest hand, I started. for, the,Torato of Shakspeare in .a hired fly. It lookt, however, wore like a spider.. And this," I - said, as I stood in the old churchyard at Stratford, beside a tombstone, "this marks the spot where lies William W. shakspeare. and this marks the spot where— - " You've got the wrong grave," said a man—a worthy villager— Shakspeare is buried inside the church." " Oh," I said, "a boy told me this was the 5p0t.",, , : Tire - toy laughed and put the sbillin I'd given him into his left eye in •1,k . ., inglorious manner, and Commenced mov in baokWard toward the street. Iri !Send :and captured, him, And after talking to piin,a in,sericastie !' let bun went, • The oldclittreli Was damp inaom. "fl .main.,.jl:4o,°nAY ecr4OPBAIMrP wh en I 'entered irni old; gentlemapp, who was taltkin manner to a fashuibly Yoang Maii t "No Brae tilentreasor " the old gen deman saY/i, 4 1 4,04 1 .1?P?r"!fm 0 1 , 8 , 0 0:1 .1;0: faro . o;ilir ( 14:ciii•APYor -1( 0 1 41 5 :M:, W n lff!r'Aulll is eV in Piccadilly Without a umbiedar. I said their, as I eay now, any young man aa venture out in. auneertain. clunit, without a umbrellar; leek's foresight, Peution,:pres epee of mind and stability, and, he is'pot a proper person to entrust.: a,danghiter'e happiness to." , • , • I slept the old,gentleman•on the shioni l Air, and I:said, "'You're right Yon're, one of thoie.kind,or men—you. are--r", . He )yheeleil, snddenly around, amiria a indignant voice eald-- - - - . 4 00 way-go way. This is a private interror , didn't stop to enrichtbe •i4d gentle, Tail's, mind with my. cony' &antilop:l sort of inferred that be wasn't much inclined to listekto me, and .I wept, on. Bnt be w,aa' right about the nmbrellar : , ain really delighted with this grand ; old country, but it does rain rayther merously here. Whether this is owing to a monarkel form pf government or not, I leave to all candid and ouprejudiced per-, sone to say. William Shakspeare was born in Strat ford in 1564. All,. the cOnimontaters, Sbaksperyan scholars, etsetery,are.agr,eed on this; which is about the only thing they are agreed on in. regard to him, ex cept that his mantel hasn't, fallen upon any poet or dramatist hard enough to hurt said poet or dramatist very much. Aud there is no doubt if these commontaters and persons continue in vestigatiug Shaks peare career ; we shall not-in doo time know anything about it at all. . When a mere lad little` William attend ed the Grammar. School, because, as he said, the Grammar School'wouln't at tend him. This remarkable remark, com in from one so••young and inexperienced, set people to thinkin there might- be sum-. thing in this lad.' He subsequently wrote "Hamlet" and "George Barnwell." When his kind teacher went toiondon to accept a position in the offices of the Metropolitan Railway, little William was chosen by his fellow pupils to deliver a . farewell address. •' Oo on, sir," he said, "in your glorious career. Be like an ea gle, and soar, and the soarer you get, the more we will all be gratified l" My young readers, who wish to know about Sbakspear, better get these vaLlya ble remarks framed. I returned to the hotel. Meetin a young married couple, they asked me if I could direct them to the hotel which Washing., ton Irving used ; to keep?" • " I've onderstood that be was °nano. cesfAllas said the lady " We're understood," Bald then young man, " that be busted up." I told !em I weal) stranger, and hur ried away. They were from my country, and ondoubtedly represented a thrifty lid well somewhere in Pennsylvany. It's a common thing, by the way, for a old far mer in Penusylvany to wake up some morning and find ile squirtin all around his back yard. sells out for an enor mous price, and his children put on gor geous harness and start on a tower, to as tonish people. They succeed in doin it. Meantime the ile it squirts, and time rolls on. Let it roll. A very, nice , old town is' Stratford, and a capital inn is the Red Horse. Every, ad mirer of the great Shakspeare must. go there once certainly, and .to say one isn't a admirer of him is equiv'lent to aayin one has just about brains eneough to become a efficient tinker. • Some kind person bas sent me Chawk er's , Poems. • Mr. C.. had talent, but be couldn't epel. No man has a right to be a lit'rary man unless be knows bow to spel. Ws a pity , that Chawker, who had geneyus, was so medicated. He's the wust. speler I know of.. r , 1 guess Pm through; and so I lay down the pen, which is more mightier than• the sword, but which I'm afraid would stand a rayther slim chance beside the needle gun. •' Adool Adool —ln a'sleeping car recently, a man in one of the berths became greatly annoy ed:by a crying child whom its father was endeavoring in brain to uiet. 'The irate individual at-last shoute d out : " Where is the mother of that child, that she is not here to pacify it •PO At this the poor gentleman in charge of the child stepped up to the berthiand said : " Sir, the mother of that child is in her coffin in the 'baggage ear!" The grumbler immediately -arose' 'arose and compelled the' afflicted' father to retire to his berth, and from that 'time utitil mor ning took the little orphan under his own =The Washington Star says the gift of invisibility 'was , formerly belieVed to be procurable by means of int% seed; but no peculiar power of-rendering people invis ible resides speeially in the seed' of fein. Put *m any very :seedy suit of clothes, and Walk about -in'' the , streets. You will vi3rysoon 'find that 'yottcr acquaintances will pass you without seeing you. • Mn:Wbite, iltyetilitiveth'e'kindui nese toledd.ine teeraellats •-• 1,4 "tertaiely—uod Ode 44 Il dtrie it3 9 / t .1 V • •' ' !'!) 41 Thit you tell me-tviiyWitetequifit is likeihe WO:11E 1 06 W eetitrq. 1 , • •. , 114 I MEl4lol4.4tßatij i . k: I •-;il'. ; " Well, it is beititti IttitOtitAivri iVOIiUME XXIII, NUM3E.B, Treasure Trove - 7 : 4 404 )113 - 1611 **. An anelent gold, cross , iwasfciunt ; winter.in an excavation in the iiii'nebt Cline _England; or *birth 'lea Queen desired to know the histOry*. - 4/11 treasure' trove, it became the-proper:F9f themrown,, by , the 44 Deen's:';Dnultill19 antiquarians ,barefourld' put elf a . There is strong reason, they 441,T0f lieving that it, formed at one %awe it , 1101 of the royal collection ofjewelatelizgum wiring .Edward.lll, far it; isjoserde4_ that he had, upon); his jewebl, kePt,44 safe preservaiion in the Toier'Oflon. don, "uncroys," or donfifti' fare (pie est-de °la title Jhesh 'CM; et n&pnit eStie'Lpreisk"-,0 6 44 ef_g which 'represents orDIAS Christ, set, w4hy!arls.p4 cannot De iriu• ued." This description - exitetlyltni4erst to the crthie found "at Cleits,lbr' Wei had four large pearls,,•one' each transverse aeation of the cross, while theorem) itself, with the figure orour, Saviour ; upon it, wan most beautifully foliated,' and 'the, chain, about two feet was of he richest description. • lioviihis ' . Preeions royal jewel came to be found-: •;rn the to ins of Clare Castle is , thus accounted-for:: "It was the , common pnrptlce, -0 , 1 , our sovereigns in . former ages,td &tam on their children add grandchidren; as wed=` ding gifts, rare jewels-arid reliceValtd ad Edward Hl:a grand daughter. Phillipps was married to Etheund Mortimer, Lprd of Clare, , and, upon;, her marriage came to reside at the Castle, she in ,all probability had this jewel given to' hewn the occasion, and it, 'War by her taken to ther-Csatle, Luker_ it got lost. e_Whal, eon:- firms this •.ibiatory; Onion beyond all doubt, is . the fact that this particular jew el,, before described in old French, disap peared-front that very time from nu merous inventories which are eitanyof the Royal jewels. Thus this once royal' jewel, which has been buriedat 'Clare, lost for five hundred years, has (Inceptor* come fine iciyalposseqiiin." ' •-• • . Nilo/to liumou. 77 -A- ,Yirgi . ttia, rtbal, who hakistm,O, a •boolt • giving hismpati ence. naia-prisoner in .4,e- ~han,dt2 AP FederAla 4 •POitit.,-.4 0 40,ni #44 TAP*. tells the following, atom :', ,: t , ",.,•,,,,,,.„ The boys are hiughingat,tdie' stir:mop, which S., one of my fellow„. Pact:Shur-, gars; got ,to daY fro•ln A . 12 .tgil Ohn.timpi- S, - bati On whencapture d ;, enAtitlPPosei, still poseesses, a : tall beaver of tile 21:41pe patter:4-PM Olqi.d 1 4lieParabl e from, ex-, treme respectability in the istit„ decade ) , and for a . Many, a, ,year before.,, Mill wandering around the _enclosure, seekitig, I,suspeet,,, i what,be, Might :develtr,",'Pe accidentally? stepped , beyond the!'a4!. Rae," and,. !Was 04ddelitY, arreste d 44: summons from the nearest negr o cl i t,llo,, parapet, who seemed ~to be ; :AR dui lit whether so well.. dressed. a _ 'man, oga i tae, a " rob ) ." and therefore yfbetheOegtiOutdi be abot at once. • evi•ir - , ;.- '. t ‘• White man, you VioßgiaLditi'.l, :; 1 ! Yes.r 1 i • ~..•:,--._ " Well; WO , Y?!' , i t•' 3 ° ' 4eM , ei: PAPAW Jan to cross dat line. .'. ~,,, ;,- .;-(1.,• ,i ;3 1/0 " I did :FlatA ,4Pi!ne..".": ,. .. 'i - , ..Well, you ;ha • bitte m 7 ottPe•ittl l 5 dat itticif,ar•lll ow•bajf•dati_,M4 ; ar - AitriCatrS WARD. . . . ) r l- ' - ' 7 . 1 .!'"1": - .77.7.7 7 • ~—"Pat down that pickle!" thelftrdiv are ittifeit htirtit3dly add: harshly tilite sbrgitint;t Wen ltnigritointigpthliteilwinv e ittrinditit* -hungttpitOoliailisie iiiittridien'tiink t kilVont• W 04.! I m Add ) 44' r put dio will thni • T had o irk Qiithies t he tnivattOnildir: pat, do t al fhat gale :yotym tetutnedlll4' #o6iniiWiletertnlandli, Atieullt diem „,.1 ii ,i.114,42c•1 , 'Arlie. 116 Ongnsiins.—ln • • certain villagoof theirfar Welt - Was an atheiit. He was a great adinirer of Dale Owen and Fancy Wright; but he could 'see no hi:an ti in' the' Christian religion: Qf amine lie never entehireily ' 'place 'of '%forship: In fruit steam; be the 'Sabbath in defending his orc!mrd from— hisat,..ederti,ieti; the wadi - pecker' yid' theidtaliraßgate4creoneuf'theinhks . l who eli•thar,itay - usurilly i inicTe aka - ft - 00o' aitiongOe ap ples ' and "ee if, while at WorieWith law'—aii atheist like himself,' althotigh more kind and courteous gentleman—al a pastor' of a tongteglitien-wii& visaing, he, ' very rudely, thus aceeited the ter : "'Sir,what is theobse of yotir ing f bat good de you by it ? • 'Why' don't you teach thelie fellows 'better suer- - els ? 'Why : don't you tell them sonieihing' about' Stealing 'in your sermons, 'and kt•ii them fro& robbing my orchard ?" - To this the minister pleliaritly - repliod:• k 4 My dear 'Sir" I ant seorry.that you:firer' so annoyed; andl would most vrillifigly read the fellows who rob yeller' orchard a lecture on thieving, but the truth is, - they are so like you and the - Major here,' that I never get a chance.' " Good, good," replied the' Maj o r; laughing; on which the 'elder -atheist blushed a little, and, hi au apologetic& to le, sa" id : , "Well; well, 'believe it is true . enough . ; —it is pot the church going peopleftV: steal my *plea."' • itiNiA r' . r a , 146 . 1 1.1- 1 7Anai..4 e 4.