A. J. GERRITSON, Publisher.' THE wmurirctcgg mown PEET. esse et.* ]toms®. I bad vowed I-would go to naceremo sies in Rome. -Mock them I would not; respect there I could not. Why should I see anything, sacred others, that could but rouse ridicule-to my mind ? But the account given me of the washing of the pilgrim's feet, not at, St. Peter's, but at Santa Marie del Pelegrini—tbe descrip tion of the peasant toil-worn pilgrims made me absolve myself from that part of my vow and take steps to procure ad mission to the spectacle. Very difficult, every one said, to get a ticket., every one was so anxious to go ; and I bad quite given up the idea, when late on Saturday evening—Easter Satur day—a note came from a friend to offer me the vacant place in their carriage and a spare ticket. A little before nine o'clock we left via Condotti and drove through the dark narrow streets,"Nt hither I knew not. Stopping at the darkest corner of a great church and a tall gloomy building, the hospital adjoining, up a slippery, dim, Acleamly stair, we stumbled, tearing to be too late, and, passing through two small ante-rooms, joitled a procession of other ladies through a narrow passage made by wooden rails in the middle of the long, - large, bare-walled chamber, where the supper was to be. On one side of us were long narrow tables, as yet un covered, with attendant narrow benches. On the other a smaller space, occupied by a board, on which the materials for the sapper were laid as they were brought in from another room by half a dozen or so of little women, with black silk dresses and red pinafores—ministering angels with very much the air of housekeepers and ladies' maids, but who were coronet ed peeresses, countesses, and marchesas, every one of them. A gradual pushing .and shoving bro't ns to the door, and down a perilous dark stair, to the room where the ceremony was about to begin. A. large oblong stone chamber—not un like a laundry—a raised stone seat with all around cocks of steaming water pour- 1 ing into small tubs three sides of it, and a wooden beam to keep separate the be holders and the performers in the impen ding sight. By a side door the peasant women came slowly in one by one, seating themselves shyly on the stone seat, and pulling off their thick woolen socks and their strong shoes. An old crone, wrinkled like a withered apple, laid her hands on her knees and stared indifferently before her. A shy, brown faced girl, shame-faced, with the most beautiful wild blue eyes I ever saw, coarse white cloth over her head, and ma ny beads round her throat, sat next her. A stout, stupid matron by her planged her feet at once into the hot water to soak. Theyowere mostly old women, none of them ragged, and few that did not look strong and hearty ; but their fa ces wore, for the most part, that melan choly, weird look that is so southern and poetic, and that, means so little. The red-aproned ladies had dropped on their knees before the tubs, and all was quiet, when a Plump priest, in pink and calico garments and a scarlet skull-cap, entered and p'aced himself in the middle of a long frow of pilgri ms. Af: era cheery word or two to'the old dame on either side of him, the priest began a nasal monotone, a Latin prayer, instantly fol lowed by the pilgrims. The ladies began to splash the water in the tubs and look around them and smile at their acquain tances. A curious scene enough. Deep gray shadows, a fitful yellow light here and there resting on a dark, wild face; harsh voices ri,ing, and falling in an unfamiliar tongue, and at once all the strange sense that these were unknown fellow-occupants of this dream-like world, fellow-travelers to the eternal world to come—faces that I should never see again, and that had each its own fate and history, for good or evil, in this life and the neat. - - - • - Small zeal, I thought, the ladies be stowed on their office. I should like to see English girls doing right heartily. the scrubbing and sponging that they did not do at all. The, prayers ended, each pil grim drew on her socks and Alines; each lady placed the hand of -her.whose feet She had washed within her arm and led her from the' room. The women slouched bashfully past us, and the ministering-an gels nodded 'rind smiled to the frieT4 they saw amongit our number, but seem ed to take no beed-of -nr interest in,their companions: - - _ , • We made our way, as speedily as might be to the supper room, while a new set of Pilgrims, ladies and spectators, took oar Places. — - • - - , , Up stairs; thelong t a bles .:were-already covered and rows of s unhand guests-spat ed, waiting for grace to be said, more red Pinafores flitted around with round bowie of salad and thick brown loaves, and witli them were here sod= ihere'stout,-beingfas Pink calico gamnentsfroliroat-ta the feet; Ifhclae- gray us_from an other wiselainfai Auseettoint EIS 40 their aq With' glee I recognized my friend, Prince as benign and better shav en than mina!, amongst the pink dressing gowns ; and he told me that with sundry others be had finished washing the men's feet in a separate part of the hospital, and had come to help keep order here. A oheery sound now filled the long room, the salad, bread, fish and wine made an ample supper in the eyes of such frugal, hungry folk as the Italian peas ants, and talking, laughing and whisper ing, in groups they ate and drank. Some did not .eat, bot stuffed theirportion into a leathern wallet or yellow kerchief for the morrow's use. Some helped their neighbors, pulling the shining lettuce leaves out of brown wooden bowls with yet browner fingers. Here and there a sad gloomy face looked out from the white head-gear, but there was many a flashing eye and happy countenance a men('b them. Only one girl—so beautiful that her face haunts me still—looked so lonely and so sad that I tried to coax her to take her untouched food ; she shook her head and a tell-tale tear tell from her eyes; she would not even carry off her bread and wine, as did those who, dog like, were too shy to eat in public, ut sat with locks of tawny hair on her shoulders and long slender hands clasped in her lap, a poem in herself. I wondered why she was sad, and composed a rapid romance for her, ending happily in the third vol ume. Grace was said and a move made to ward the sleeping room,, and now began a strange scene. Wooden bars were again put up to keep a-passage wide enough to admit two abreast to the doorway. Countess E— stood at the exit to see that too many did not crowd into the dor mitory at one time, and' Marchese took up a position a few yards inside the room, to keep order in the procession as it passed from the tables. Within the sleeping-room a hymn, chanted by the la dy attendants, was joined by the voices of the peasants, in: turn, as they left the sup per room, not an' unmelodious ring of rough and uncultivated tones in a-slow , yet glad cadence, but we only beard the sound at first, for they would not go qui etly, and a trampling of heavy feet drowned all save their own noise. Much to my amaze thetriktitetied,grave women became bold, half fierce, and:Tery boisterous, Aiming, exclaiming, push ing, with flushed faces and muttered words—all strove to be first. So wildly did they push that at - Last - tbe matron, lit tle active Marchese threw herself self between two stout women, and with bead, bands, atiVelbowx.fotteit till she bad driien back the foremost in the melee, and had restored order iu the pro cession. " Curious folk," Prince M— said to me ; " they are so fierce at times in their dormitory th a t it is ,hard to manage them. Certain beds are special favorites, certain parts of the room are much esteemed,and they fight for these ; also, those of one country or of one family are - wild if they be not together at bed time." The Prince told me that in another'sec tion of the building the • male pilgrims were tended, as were here the women,but that all through the year the institution was open for the relief of all the poor wayfaring people ' • only, to merit the spe cial privileges of Easter,—the six days' food and lodging , the clean linen, and warm - water,—thy musk have journeyed sixty miles on-foot tmwasired; then for sit days they may receive food and lodg ing, and on one of those days their feet are washed by the delicate °bands of the high-born Lenten penitents of Rome. The pilgrims•spendileir dayin visiting shrines and churches, and on Easter day they_ throng the great place .of St_. Peter . t o'receive the Papal blessing. I was mistaken in my supposition that the pilgrims regarded themselves as fa vored beings in being so treated; it ap pears they consider that the privilege is theirs to bestoiv when they lend them selves to aid the good works of the fair penitents; the favor is all the other day; they think themselves very gracious in al lowing the Roman countesses and prin cesses to urge a claim on Heaven by washing their feet; and there is great "concurrence" among the Roman ladies for permission to do it, so• much so that the Holy Father bad declared that hence forth no orte,should be eligible to the of fice who did not six times wash the feet in private before, the public washing. The whole thing is so utterly apart from any English charity or good work, Q. -thoroughly -"foreign" ..nts• we call it, that I"scold iostittite no comparison be tween it and any institution in our coun try ; but I left the gray walls of Santa Marie del Pelegrini with' realregret that I could only have this one glimpse at the iilt•eWl4n..g,PAßtrYWQMtirt,ti.: - .11318.1n0it poetic land, and that there was so small a likelihood of my ever: revisiting,a sce ne" so novel and so farsoperior, from its ab sence of theatrical effect, to anything I had yet aiett la the. Holy; Ci4i." fragrA curious initiin Taunton, Mulls., insecild ea Sundays red-hot. poker into the fuse-hole of an old shell, to see wheth er it a*lgad s a,ll. thit it ;was, bat rost the biro elifbis head, also a leg and an arm. MONTROSE, PA., TUESDAY, NOV. 13, 1866. Macaulay's Description of the Puri• They mistook their own indignant feel ings for emotions of piety; encouraged in themselves, by reading and meditation, a disposition to brood over their wrongs, and, when they had worked themselves into hating their enemies, imagined they were only bating the enemies of Heaven. In the New Testament, there was little indeed which, even when perverted by the most disingenuous exposition, could seem to countenance the ind ulgence oftna levolent passions. But the Old Testament contained the history of a race selected by God to be witnesses of His unity and ministers of His vengeance, and specially commanded by Him to do many things which, if done without His special command, would have been atrocious. In such a history it was not difficult for fierce and gloomy spirits to find much that might be restored to suit their wishes. The extreme Puritans, therefore, began to feel for the Old Testa went a preference which, perhaps, they did not distinctly avow even to themselv es, but which showed itself in all their sentiments and habits. They paid to the Hebrew language a respect which they refused to that tongue in which the dis courses ofJesus and the epistles of Paul have come down to us. They baptized their children by the names, not of Chris tian saints, but of Hebrew patriarchs and warriors. In defiance of the express and reitera ted declarations of Luther and Calvin, they turned the weekly festival by which the church had from the primitive times, commemorated the resurrection of her Lord, into a Jewish Sabbath. They sought for principles of jurisprudence in the Mosaic law, and for precedents to guide their ordinary conduct in the books of Judges and Kings. Their thoughts and discourses ran much on acts which were assuredly not recorded as examples for our imitation. Theprophet who hew ed in pieces a captive King, the rebel gen eral who gave the bloon of a queen to the dogs, the matron who in defiance of plighted faith and of laws of eastern hos pitality drove the nail into the brain of the fugitive ally who bad just fed -at her board, and who was sleeping nudes the shadow of her tent—were proposed as models to Christians suffering under the tyranny of princes and prelates.. Morals and manners were subjected to a code resembling that of a synagogue when the synagogue was in its worst state. The dress, the language, the de portment, the studies, the amusements of the rigid sect were regulated on princi ples resembling those of the Pharisees, who, , prond of their washed hands and broad phylacteries, taunted the Redeemer as a Sabbath breaker and a wine bibblhr. It was a sin to hang garlands on a May pole, to drink a friend's health, to fly a hawk, to hunt a stag, to play at chess, to wear love locks, to put starch into a ruff, to touch the virgins, to read the Fairy Queen. Rules such as these—rules which would have appeared insupportable to the free and joyous spirit of Luther, and con temptible to the serene and philosophical intellect of Zuingle, threw over all life a more than-monastic gloom. The learning and eloquence by which the great Reformers had -been eminently distinguished, and to which they had been in no small measure, indebted for their success, were regarded by the new school of Protestants with suspicion, if not with aversion. Some precisians scrupled about °teaching the Latin graminar, because the names of Kits, Bacchus and Apollo oc curred in it. The fine arts were all pro scribed. The solemn peal of the organ was superstitious. The music of Ben Johnson's Takes was dissolute. Half the fine paintings in England were idolatrous and the other half indecent. The Puritan was at once known from other men by his gait, his garb, his lank hair, and the sour solemnity of his face, the upturned whites of his eyes, the nasal twang with which he spoke, and, above all, his peculiar dialect. He employed, on every occasion, the imagery and style of scripture. Hebraisms violently introduc ed into the English language, and meta -1 phors borrowed from the baldest lyric pa ! et ry of a remote age and country, and up plied to the common concerns of English life, were the most striking peculiarities of this cant, which moved, not without cause, the derision both of prelates and libertines. Q' If your sister while engaged with a sweet heart, asks you to bring a glass of water from ,an adjoining room start on your errand but you need not return. You not be missed. Don't forget this, little boys. —" What makes you looks° gram, Tom ?" " Oh, I bad to endure a sad tri al to my 'feelings." " What do earth was it ?" a Why, I bad to .tie on a" Pretty girls 'bonnet while her ma was looking —Prentice says Butler makes, war as boys isleep • n cold. wpather----spnott fasb ion. -4.liNtijdO. not believeVi magic, but the other ,day a yeraciool seas actually saw a goring min" UWE! into a public house. A Sensation-Novel of Real Life. It is'not often that a man who begins his career by embezzlement turns out right in the long run, and refunds with interest the amount abstracted; but an in stance of the kind, very remarkable in its character, has come to light in Liverpool. About six or eight years ago, a young man, who bad been educated at Trinity College, Dublin, arrived in Liverpool to push his fortune. His conduct while at the college had been so loose and wild that his parents declined to have anything further to do with him. But he was clev er, dgood linguist And apt to make him self useful, and soon he was engaged as a correspondence olerk by an influential firm, in whose service he worked himself up to such a point of efficiency that they increas ed both his pay and his responsibilities. At length, however, the " Old Adam" as serted itself, and, in order to cover his per sonal extravagance, the young man help ed himself to his employers' cash to the extent of £3,000. He of course himself eloped, and all the ingenuity of the detec tive officials could not•disclose his where abouts. In the meantime the fugitive went to America, and (as afterward transpired) engaged himself to a well known dry goods merchant in New York, with whom he remained until the out break of the American war. His master being an ardent patriot, offered to ad vance handsome sums of money to any of his clerks whii would volunteer for the war, and the hero of this brief narrative was one 'vho accepted the offer. He went through some of the severest brushes of the campaign without receiving a wound, fought at Fredericksburg, Seven Oaks, and other places, and held a subordinate command during Sherman's great march. At the close of the struggle, he fell in love with, and married, the wealthy young widow of one of the Federal Generals who was killed at Gettysburg. After their marriage, the lady wished to visit England, but there was one little difficul ty in the way—the £3,000. Ultimately, however, it was decided that the wisest course would be to refund the amount ; and, to the delight of the Liverpool firm, they received by the last steamer an or der for the amount, with 5 per cent. in terest from the date of the cashier's elope ment.—Belfest (Ireland) Whig. Wonders of the Telegraph. The annihilation of time and space by the telegraph, now that it reaches nearly half around the globe, is so astounding that men have to reflect to take in its full meaning. The New York Independent gives the following as an illustration : " On. Monday, July 30, Mr. Field receiv ed a message of congratulation from Mr. Ferdinand de Lesseps, the projector of the Suez Canal. It was dated at Alexan dria, in Egypt,-the same day, at half past one p. m. , and received in Newfoundland at half past ten a. to. Let us look at the globe, and see over what a space that message flew. It came from the land of the Pharoahs and the Ptolemies—it pass ed along the shores of Africa, • and under the Mediterranean Ocean, more than a thousand miles to Malta, it then leaped to the continent of Europe and shot across Italy, over the Alps and through France, under the English Channel, to London— it then flashed across England and Ire land, till from the cliffs of Valentia it struck straight into the Atlantic, darting down the submarine mountain which lies off the eoast, and over all the hills and valleys which lie beneath the watery plain, resting not till it touched the shore of the 'New World' In that morning's flight it had passed over one fourth of the earth's surface, and so far outstripped the sun in his course that it reanhed its desti nation three hours before it was sent ! To understand this it must be remember ed chat the earth revolves from west to east, and when it is sunrise here it is be tween 8 and 0 o'clock in Alexandria, in Eopt,;and when it is sunset here, it is nearly nine o'clock in the evening there." —American Artizan. Politeness in Business. Politeness kti business is a large addi• tior to your capital already invested. It kee?s your customers in a good humor, andgains new ones for yon every day.— It, it the charm that smoothes and softens therough paths of business. It is the piilosopher's stone" which turns every thing yen touch into gold. It invests cotrtnercial life with most of the poetry that ever adorns it. It, makes men respect you and love to deal with you. It gains you the good offices and kind words of le tho with whom you daily come in con tact Ithas been humorously and truly said of oie that he preferred making his deal ingewith a polite merchant, who would diet him. a Mlle, than with a rnde,rough, andbabitually impolite one, who would honat him a great deal. Honesty and how! are commendable and shining goal. ides: it is time ; but they never look bet ter "than ,when they are found in a setting of guinine politeness and good breeding. nit, ; e n n icii ian t 's h is in te g lio th o s d n e; b e r a o y i n hl a r w ho rlt il e e r , ,; d o far ttetarmed foinomitOet.• . •'• - :':., i anted by it confectioner, a naidid . yotni woman. Youth and maturity. There is a certain even handed justice; and for what be takes away, , he gives us something in return. He robs us of elas ticity of limb and spirit, and in its place he brings tranquility 'and repose—the mild autumnal weather of the soul. He takes away hope, ,but he gives us mem ory. And the settled unfinctuating at mosphere of middle age is no bad change for the stormful emotions, the passionate cries ad suspenses of the earlier day. The constitutional melancholy of the middle aged man is a dim back ground on which the pale flowers of life are brought out in the tenderest relief. Youth is the time for action, middle see for thought. In youth we hurriedly crop the herbage; in middle age, in a shel tered place, we chew the ruminative cud. In youth, red handed, red ankled, with songs and shouting, we gather in the grapes, in middle age, under our own fig_ tree, or in quiet gossip with a friend, we drink the wine free of all turbid fears. Youth is a lyrical poet ; middle age is a quiet essayist, found of recounting expe riences and ofappending a moral to every incident. In youth the world is strange. and unfamiliar, novel and exciting, every thing wears the face and garb of a stran ger; in middle age the world is covered with reminiscences as with a garment—it is made homely with usage, and it is made sacred with graves. The middle aged man can go no where without treading the mark of his own footsteps. And in middle age, too—pro vided the man has been a good and ordi narily happy one, along with his mental tranquility there comes a corresponding sweetness of the moral atmosphere. He has seen the good'and evil there is in the world, the ups and downs : the almost general desire of the men and women therein to do the right thing if they could but see bow, and be has learned to be tin censorious, humane; to attribute the best motives to every action, and to be chary of imputing a sweeping and cruel blame. He has a quiet smile for vain glorious boasts; a feeling of respect for the shabby gentel virtues ; a pity for thread bare garments proudly worn, and for the nap less hat glazed into more than pristine brilliancy from frequent brushing after rain. He would not - be satirical for the world. He has no finger of adorn to point ' at anything under the sun. He.has a hearty " Amen" for every good wish, and in the worst cases he leans to a verdict of not proven. And along with this pleasant blandness and charity, a certain grave, serious hu mor, " a smile on the lip, and . atearin the eye," is noticable frequently in middle aged persons—a phase of humor peculiar to that period of life, as the crysanthe mum to December. Pity lies at the bot tom of it, just as pity lies, unsuspected, at the bottom of love. Perhaps this is a special quality of humor, with its sadness and tenderness, its mirth with the heart ache, its gayety grown out of deepest se riousness, like a croons on a child'sgrave —never approaching closer to a perfec- - tion than in some passages of Mr. Haw thorne's writings, who was a middle aged man from earliest boyhood. And altho' middle aged persons have lost the actual possession of youth, yet in virtue of this youth they comprehend it, see all around, it, enter imaginatively into every sweet and bitter of it. They wear the key of memory at their girdles and they can open every door in the chamber of youth. A match Factory. A match factory in Western. New- York is noted for the carious machinery used in the manufacture. Seven .hundred and twenty thousand feet of pine of '-the best quality are used annually for the matches, and 400,000 feet of basswood for cases. The sulphur used annually for the matches is 400 barrels, and the phtispho rous is 9,600 pounds. The machines run night and day, and 300 hands are employ ed in the works. Five hundred pounds of 'paper per day are used to make the light, small boxes for holding the match , - es, and four tons of pasteboard per week for the larger boxes. Sixty six pounds of flour per day are used for paste; and the penny stamps required by' government on the boxes amount to the snug little sum of $1,140 per day. There are four machines in use for cut ting, dipping, and delivering the matches. The two inch pine plank is sawed up the length of the match, which is 2+ inches. These go into the machine for cutting, where at every stroke 12 matches are out, and by the succeeding stroke pushed in to slats arranged on a doable chain 250 feet long, which carries them to the-sul phur vat, and thence to the phosphorous vat, and thus across the room pod back, returning them 'at point just in front of the cutting machine; and where they are delivered in their natural order, and are , gathered-up byhey in tr i axa, end sent tp , the Paehiug Then 1,000 gross pr . 144,000 small boxes of matehes,nr9 mad e per day. , TO, maehineu for Mlllong small, thin aP4 Ateq, eOVOS, arc qtkite,ae w,ondertully and . itigenienils cnntrived asithose tl!apille,thompfettpu t inng 0 . 1 of papery Nv,toe4is,* to . -- tong, sayplyevin,A, ylipeloif to.. ink In the machtuh;!AUTf r iilasi4o rollers, where din printing is' one, and VOLUME xxm, thence to the pastehOies,:whereaTii 41111 ts and - en4s are only pasted;:kite thew, t th e folding apparatus, .w:here - thlt We ! nicely folded-and-the 'AM.!, box ig . pastml t o gether and' drops intO a basitet. A 'aim: ilar machine is ut *cork 'it'the * ba thus 144,000 boxes per' day are- minufacw Lured.. • Watsit6,s AND Mt7;i;--The Of the Laneaster Literary Gizette- Gaye she " avo,uld as. ;loon nesthrher ilostria rat's neat of Swingletown,a4 a man with' whiskers to kiss her," We don't believe a word of it. The objectioue Whiclisome ladies pretend' to; have to whisk* ell arise from envy. They don't liavis-Asity. They would if they could; but the fact is, the continual motion of the lower. jaw ia, fatal, to their growth., The ladies—God : blest theta_ r- . --adopt our faihions tudires they can. Look at the depiedatiorietinif hay e committed on' our wardrobes the last few years. They have appropriated our shirt bosoms, gold studs. and all. They , have encircled their soft bewitching cheeks in oar standing collare and cit. vats ' driving us to &Wes - avid 'turn downs. Their innocent little hearts have been palpitating in the inside otour waist— coats, instead of thumping, - against the. outside, asnaturallYindeed.. They thrust their pretty little fe'et and ankles through our unmentionables, nuthinkabouts,- and they are skipping along' thy streets in our high heeled boots. Da you bear ,P--we. say boots. A wag, the other , day-, bad a fifty cent note of the fractional currency, soitmd in substance, but rather defaded. As it pur ported to be a legal tender For postage stamps; hi presented himselfat the stamp windoWiae the Poet Office, and dematide(l l ' stamps therefor. • The clerk replied-that - it was good,. but too much,worn—iie, would'nt take it. Finally, be relaxed his official dignity' under 'the good nature of his petitioner, by tel!inghim to go to the wholesale department. Thither went the holder of the stamp. The official there examined the little legal tender, scrutin.. ized it with his paguifier, thin s ight it was good—but there was a curve'about tlttr signature with Which be watnet quite fa.; miliar. He recommended an application , at-the Treasury Department in..Plueut. Off trotted our holder to that plays : The, official there examined - it, vOttuiteeredifie opinion that it was goOdoinir reconirereii:' ded application to the Frictional- Curren cy department. -To that- department,went the noteholder. A close scrutiny by the official in charge resulted in a judgment in favor of the soundness of the noeh; that office did not redeem in teas _sumo_ than-4i. - Then," - -(period - the tieteoviti= l er, "I must go and buy fivemore, poi you'll redeem the whole." "Oh;' said the clerk, "you'd better dell it to ac Tiro• - ker." Conjured up by the - sound,' up stepped a buyer of national currency. Hie examined the Oleg, shook his-beadinisr , amined it.again, and then offered 19 matt% for it. Wool,-Ssen.—The wool sack for many ages be.in termed the emit of the Lord Cbancellor;in the 'English' House otiorde: It is a 18%44y:tare-bag" of wool, without back or arms, covered' with red cloth. It is representedlits bit= log originated in very early titnel-4W6iii the great business of lifirwan fix keeping • herds and flOCks—in prodlicing tbesit n ple ' necessities of life;and manufketating, • hri the primitive way, the fleeces' Of 'thiii! flocks; Which were their principenniterie' at Oat:tithe for tbat'purpose, tnitt‘'olotk" ing. Wheti'aePdielintinfose; thejudgia or Justice in the case rachmted 'it' Wont' sack. Hence the introductionref bar the dignity of the ,legislative or parliamiri tarp proceedings 'of Great Britienx: looks liken large feather bed:' TheLorl. Chandeflor is said to' have takii(his upon the wool sack, butihe beside it. •• ' Thereist one thing' sure, said.Mrbi rao l tington, the rfernaletr of the • - present reges;" eration arm`a heap- more independent 'that they used to be. Why ‘ l saw agalpihr to day that; r itito* belongs to the . historp - cal class of 'sobiety, with her 'drtisel tucked up to .her knee, her bairn!l bin:l4ff, up like as ifelie hadn't' had' One it for a week,' and one of her . granamOtb-' , er's caps; bleu awful ortnplediVinittion,r l on her head.: Why, laws; hani•itt'sebtiiti' I`, was a gal, if any of the fellowitanietilobe ) when ' had my 'clothed' itkelaid'ap Oat' way, and my head :liivOreit with att..:-Old w hite rag; I would rutr.fot 'dear BROOM' hide ont'of well; the. tali then- were introcetit, tuidcrofbibata tares; now they. are what thei•Frotieli call c blazes.' '' • • bas been asked,. when the rain fsllBs does it ever 'get at,' egain ti 1 ' Of cool: ft' doet-40' dew' time. , The ( late r.se ;.. rpglir.weis stt • ,z 44;:prisideiiii tight, lacing 'bad *Or *it" sigvtichl: ' t pt at alkit.. ll . l ooll`rwiir „ 4 wise 9a , MittY, is'apiebe 14(1We:snood hit.:( certa i n article) Z.;.Bactineet bare aoil,(bearlsOil.)— tr. , b -•,•)1) • t‘tfie iteittia leave it a loan. .1Q 4 2)141 Circumlocution Office. MEE