. ~., ,. ,,,1i., , - , ',..-,.. j ,.',' ;.- ..:-,..... , .,:,( .i. .. - .:,..,,::.•:,:,.,,i,...::,...::::-..:,..:,....,:5..,',:".,.,..:.,...:•.-,..,'---,,,..t.,_-.-.-1..,'., .. , ..... - - ..;,::;. , '.- 7:::,' - :_ 2, .. '...,,:',., • ~ .1-.;..i1i. . ........,;' . _);.:.i'',,f, -,ii.;`,.i,-,' . ;.I" , t , f':, . . .„ . . . ... • . . . ' ' . - , 1 • . . - .- .. :'.' - -"--',... '`.. 's-,,, , . 4 !j• . , -,... . ..:.. ', ..... .... . . .... . . , •- • 1 ,-•• i. - • • —.- 10 ' ! I se • ---, •,., -.•, , , (, .. .r . . , .e . ; 111.'''' ...... - ' 9 - • . '' . in": .. . . . .. . ...,. 4 - , •. ! . . . , . . - . - . , . . • . . . . . . ' ... - . , • . . • . • . . • , . . . . . . ' •. _ : . . . , ' . - , . , • ...... E. B. Et,AWLE7Z; Proprietor. , thionio.tarao. :14IIIPSIAN & CASE. waiejlartesi Ina Trimk makers. Sbnp In C_Ttogera . 141014,13211dinC.8r00k1/n. P. Oak UIIIISCSICT, bean. and Mt, Mae to order. Broaktra. 'April int —ir.ll • " • MI. D. SUITLI „ Ilaviin located at Jackson Center. Nana Earth ter of end Dealer in Ugh% arid Heavy IlanneArea. Col•nr., Tilalrs.rladdlea.dx..b , kplhr,hy Witt lOU to but I. him aud fair dfaillag, to have a liberal ithara l*MOTlare. ][arch 0, 1412.—a010-1 an. , , BVEINS & NICHOLS, paA.LR6 In Drat*, Medicines, ebernicali.. Dye .l I thl. Palate.olls, Varnish. IA go ors. :ttplerr :Patter I rt..rica, Patent Medlelnca, Perftenery and 'roller Ar rives. 01rPresertptiona carefully compounded.— prt et Block. liaatraler. Pa. 4. litrami, - Fab. ti,lns. lIRZ. 0. A. LATITUOP:. A.vlaisters 111rno st. Merv, Jail Pnot tif Chestnut stnret. and CODeillt Clunialn Montrose. Jan. 17. '72.—lla:—tir. • 3. F. SIIOEMAKER.. Ammer at low, Montrale. Pa. Orke nett dliat below the Tarbell Public . Vontitric. San IT, - - _ • C. E. BALDWIN, ATIMMIT and CoCNdFLOn ar UN, Great Bend. Penh tylvania. Sra, BALDWIN, 31TOISIT AT L.W. Montr.o, P 3 0/131 Vith James E. (N.rmalt. 31untrave. Auzust tf, • LOO7llll & LESS. Att.Dept at Lam. °Mee !act. 724 Lactate*ltl2 Avenr.e. itetteten. Pa. Prsctlee In the *event! Courts of Ltil tome and Susquehanna ConutlCll. F. E. Leous. Mt. D. LtaS l .. Svantal. ttopt. Mi. ISll.—tf. vv. t. cnossnolv. Attorney at L. Of!lca at Ma Court linw. in the Cionalsolonce.Offlea, W A. Caossxos. laostraa...E.opt , Eta, 1311.—it. Marna. . _ 4rieliENZIE, & FAVItOT. ester* la Ur Goods. tllothing. Lsdirs tied Nll.se• hoe Shells hno, agents tot the grant _tmertrau Tes and C.lTee Company. (Montan.) ■.ap DR. W. W. snirrn, e dwelling. nest door vdd of the foepnbilenn Fannin:o/c, tiatre boar, froya D 4. 14 , 4 P. 111. Montrusr„.ltoy 3, I:4l—tf TIIE BARBER—UM /la: Hat: Chart! 11flesh Is Owl:artier. swim cnnAn. sow Men to °ens, Cum Ostnrn, filnek End grizzies, to his oftlee.lns.t np stairs. There Son find htnt, over Gere..tort. below Nerienzles—lnst one door. Montrose, Jane T. In7l C MORRIS. .1. B. & A. 11. 'YIeCOLLI73 2 , ArroIIVIIII sa Law omen over the Dint. - Manines° Ca. .licogrnsi Lay ISM tf J. D. VAIL, 5EV:4,1=0 P31,1C11.4 &ND SC - 2.1..,,N. llaa pf•rnannlly larated hltroelf Sl.watru-e, %Omen ha will prompt- I% att.:at. to all Mit tz lila prcfr•lLio with wiaseh I, may he tarore.l °Mae aa.l re.t.lenco west of the , Court lloate, our Fitch L ‘l"Lt,nu's 31e.r.tro,e- Fehrnary LAI% OFFICE* • FITCII A WATSON, -itt•,rusit at Law, at the . oll ogee of Bantle) k Yitch, Montrtnta, Pa. T RTCI2. 1,1131.11. '7l t V la . R•TWS. CHIAP.LES N. STODDATILD, Dealer In boots and Rms. flats and Caps. Luther and !Indy:to.. 14.1441Streat. at donr Iloyd'p Store. Wort mad, (4: order, and repalrtni; done ue.ktly. 11..n.tr.se. Jao. 1, 16711 LEWIS KNOLL, 81111 VINO AND lIAIR DRESSING. Shop le the new PO,toffiCC buildiez, where he will I.r (aut ready to attend all who may want ooythliv la hie Da*. Ituotrose, Pa. Oct. IS, 1:69. Dn. S. Nr; DAYTON, PiITSTrIAN eIVUT:GEON. teedere We eel - rice. In cifieetla at Great tlend and vt. elSlee W. neeigence. appnalts Barnum Boole, G•t Bend Village. tient. Ist, 1301.- tf A. O. WARREN, ATTORNEY' A. LAW. Bounty. ttaci: ray. NDSICIL aed Szeula.---unAltatrac.aLtuatits l to. Orr. a oertkalelelloyd`slitore. 311ntitrove.Ps. [Au. I.'G9 C. surroN, Auctioneer, and Insurance Agent, Frlendavilla, Pa 13!131 C. S. GILBEUT, 17. a. 832.cre.viz.xxeoz-. rag! 6tr Great Bend, Pa Atli ELY, a. iSt. .A.azotioxi.oor. Aur. 1,13"3. , , Addrese, Ural:4l7n, Pa JOHN GROVES T isMOSABLE 'Noutresse, Pa. Slop. over C6aatdrer'ir6tare. Mordent 1111.411,1 firsvrate style. cuttla; dons on slmrtiaollee. add iruriaited wit. W. W. SMITEIi • CAMNET AND MUM .2.l4i2il.7l.&t:TErnEltS. — no i .f eircct, BILIMMar.:Pa. jaiar, ISO. 6TROVD nes .uu Lift tag .7.w.pieb. Activrs. bastusta tam:data tuvaptly.uu fair tams. Oftics tUst or north of • .401111,3te Wad," treat 11 kir o. Yastie Attune, Mantruse, Pa. [Aug. 1.130. tututcas timoun. - CastmEs L. .I;trows. ABEL TUIIILELL, - - LriALSIt. to mega Pattot httattottr. Chemlesis [doors. Paints, Oils, Up: mutts. Varnisher , . Win lintereirs, Ulan Ware, wall and Window Et, ner„titnne-were, Lumps. Kerosene, dinthinery Tresses, Guns, Ammunition, Knives. ',perdue - ins • !roams, Fancy Goods, Jewelry, Perta ry. ste.•• Velez ~u ne of the most nOmmuus, xtenslirr, and valuable collections or Gores - in unstosebneros Cu.— Established to iStS. • (Montrose. Ps. P. W. sEAULE, 71101 MET AT LAW. chine oihr the Store of A. Lathrop. In_ the Oritit Mink. Ziontrose. Ps. Willa Pao W. L. RWELAUDSON, Arinutax & teuderh his protoceint.a •evices to the citizens of Blontruee end vicinity.— OStee it Minable:nee, en the curner LoostUirSilyre S Bros. Foundry. Lang. 1. ISM. DR. E. L. GARDNER,. TaICIA.I4 awl UItIiELAN. Neutron. ra. Glee. en.aelal attVll.loo to dlae.taes of the than atm tugs cad all aluezical dixaaea. 4.161ce Geer Vr. p. I;o.tan.a Easier at *axles-111nel: - HUN r IMO 14E . T.S . , scr i viTos, PA whohmas a atuul Dealers in ikARDWARE, IRON, STEEL, . NAms, SPIKES, SIJOVELS, "UILDEIVS ILIRDWAR ; EINE RAII.OOUNT ERSEBIC4 . AIL 81 , 11:z4. RAILROAD a MLYINO AUPPLIEA. pazirrAute 81'13150b, AXL2CS, SKEINS AS I. DOZER. BOLTS. NUTS 4,4 IVAAIINBA. - PLATED BANDA. MALLEABLE IRONS. lIVILS.APoKES. FELLOEA: etzA AP/BMX% BOHR, de. eNVILS: VICO; 'STOCKS' and DIGS, IMLLOW. iIAVISIERS. SLEDGES. FILES. &e.itc. PRFOIEN: &ND 'RILLS/MS. BOLTING. PACS* 'MCKIM DLOOKS, PLASTER PARIS cRxENT. RAID, & GRINDSTONES, ' raiscn WINDOW GLASS. LC ATIIER lk FINDING:. FAMBANIVII §CALES. - • - .CrWitoll. ORURO HUBBIRDI rum= UNIX WittPACTURBI CIUMR- 01 . 3 lioist tot! DOU'ile pri re *heel. bolds Um 4rest. egr York sl.ste Natl9nal loreuiittm I . . Alsentiftilt Ohio tiitionat Pre:galas. htild at X2l/1- geld. tritt. An itttikennnyjnati. XszyinAtl and Virgm4' A M / . Pranturnst irt The - tias elgiple.toMpset, tcmcqed eitlrety from gm a istmAlA:Amt tOthose4 to A nest case : iti the to 0 umiagerillLt, ef.;e4s4 eocaLin IL fLuca grit 76s opttiphicitae be 4 4 10 !eidontly from A blgb Wad 64441144 MAW. Sril4Rt 414. poe ado!, lar itnalsl l ll4 ginee nbd tinbt dbd amyl no: . QIN bingo% Closidonele vockst- 'No i t sad one Taloa lard. 0' le beyond doubt the ittongeig itstelathe *Old. sad gint txt , depend tWon:it.ileiD2 edettbr ble!ili *TAT p,olinolon' i ' - - mentrete, bley s. seri.— - - . 504 1 R5.! - fotro.itkiit4' . ''''' - '• THE - LONG - REPOSE. [Thep'flowing hymn *Citis . ininslated.froni the German by thOlateVr.junieSGamllton of-Lon don.] Neighbor, zecepting our parting slant' The road is short, the rest is long: The Lord brought bete the Lord takeshenec, There Is no house of permanence. On bread of mirth and brad of tears The pilgrim feed these - checkered years; Now, landlord world, shut to the door, Thy guest is gone forevermore. Gone to rt realm of sweet repose, His comrades bins him as he GOCS ;- 01 toil and moll the day washill, A good sleep now, the night is cool. Ye village bells, ring, softly ring, And in the blessed Sabbath bring, Widelt from this weary work 7 day tryst Awaits God's folk through Juses Christ. And open wide, thou Gate . of Peace! And let-the other Journey cease! .Nor grudge a narrow couch, dear neighbors, FOrslunthers won by life-long-tabors. Beneath these sods, bow close ve lie I But, many n tnansion's in yon Pay:- Even now beneath the sapphire throne, Is his prepared through Coil's dear Son. "I quickly come," that Savior erica; 'Vt.-T., quickly come, this church-yard sighs, Come, Jesus, come, we wait for Thee— Thine now nod ever let ns be. TILE' DWELLING OF TEIE AU SENT. nr ur.s. JOIEL4 Q. tam. A place of graves! Not In Gml's Acre" only, • Where safe from pain and sin, And no more lonely, Sleep the unnumbered throng Of dear, dear faces, . While unto us belong Their empty places; Not where the oak woods shade That quiet meadow, Where saietnn tryst is made 'Twist sun and shadow, Not there alone our ghosts Of bygones haunt us; No' there the sad-eyed hosts Of memory daunt tts— C. C. r/VCDT. But up and down the street 1'11,7 come to meet us, They stay oar hurrying , feet, Their svitispors greeting us Touch of their shadowy palms Stills ell life's fever, Eir.ting what restful calms ' Are theirs forever. A place of [craws it seems, The dear old vilia7,e, Each old time garden teems With Deaths stern tillage; - Behind von cottage panes, woodbine grecta, • After September rains, Familiar faces .Pecr forth with yearning look, That instant flitting; We know in that dear nook No one is sittiag. Acrews the echoing floors Of Home. tends stately, Behind the sad, shut doors So winti•lltme Some soinulles:footfnils glide -- In noontielea Some dewier.; forms abide When eyes grow chilly, So when we cuter im , To greet the living, Our wandering thoughts they win To fresher grieving; Our speech of common things Sounds strange and hallow, We list the flight of wings That bid us follow. Alt 'Not in rain some night, When min is falling, Shell we essay that flight, Obey that calling; When shall the Autumn dawn, Through bronzed leaves stealing Of that oak-shadowed lawn Our share revealing, Wake in some genuine heart A quiet ~,,w row That Ire n tore have part In bled morrow Yonkers, March 15th. 'Auviticri awl Witiciono. -17,1itpened 7 — Garden making. —For ladies: A recipe for dressing the hair—First buy your hair. • —The iron-founders are "castin 7." about to see how they can raise their prices. —lowa has lost $200,000 worth of bees the - past winter, and is stung to the heart about it. • • —Miss Clam 'remise Kellogg, accom paui~d by her mother, sailed. for Europe a short time -since. -11erchainis in Dithuque,ToWaluroish their customers with car tickets to induce them toreOsit stiarei, • —A blind woman, entirely alone, is slowly feeling her way to California. She Bussed through Kansas City last week. '-:-Night-wedtlinzs are all the fashion at- Paris . now;niul it: is the . correct, thing to assume the bonds at the stroke of mid •night. , —lsn't it' a rather disagreeable occur reace when a soling man's supinders give way. while heTtlailces a schottische with a young lady Who never wants to sit down? sister is not set eighttvm She has a lovely figure and face,a large estate{ a Ira etiitnred mind. 630,000 'a year, golden halt and_exquislte-diamonds. —A Paris shopkeeper, lately fixed over his door a notice that • his daughter had -.made a sitlead matith," he would sell goods :it 1 2nd:1'010U:of 45 per - ceut. for a - —The-most . stOperaoni. canal to Me . - world. is-ene in Chinn, which .passes ores two tbomnd miler, 'arid fortv.-two cities; it was comniencedmi - far. tria.• as the tenth , Century . , —/iit4.114 toper' being asked One day sshy be persisted in drinking, - replied, "Dry tnekes me drink, drink =makes me drunk, kes me dry sgain." The expl4rittion wig considered ,quite snificient; . Francisco—Sans has altotel which is under the" : exclusive. management of the fair' sex. ;'The-proprieter,.svaters ' 'clerks, ',boots" and other officials ars. all ladies; and the,bArtendress is said to make the beet drink in.the State, and to, hoist, in an obeasional one herself with great noncha lance. MONI'nOSE, PA., WEDNESDAY, MAY 1, 1872. 5113 E •:VIVIIPE, OF BONEDFCT AU- HOLD. BY JAMES BARTON. We catch our first view of this unhap py lady on a bright May day, in 1778, when she took part in a famous and splendid pageant at Philadelphia. She was then a beautiful girl of eighteen— Miss MErgafet Shippen—the daughter of an opulentuud ancient Philadelphia fami ly, and one of the reigning belles of that town. Her ancestors were among the first settlers of Pennsylvania, and her great grandfather was the first Mayor of Phila delphia. In the course of time the fami ly had acquired great possessinns ; and; laying aside the Quaker garb, had became members of .She Church of England. Da ring the controversy between:the thirteen colonies and the fling, which ended in the Revolutionary war. Edward Shippen, her father, - the head of the•family, - was in clined to the Sins side. It was May the eighteenth, 1778. For many months the British army had been quartered in Philadelphia, commanded by Major-Gtencrul Sir William Howe. The Gearnd bad now been superceded, and was about to return to E.:gland. The officers oh the army, a wealthy class who had nothing to do, seized the occasion of hos retirement. to amuse themselves by gNing a grand festival in his honor, and this was the day upon which it was to be held. The affair began with a grand regatta upon the Deldware River; or rath erer lung procession of galleys and barges, fill ed with officer 9 and ladies, which were rowed slowly down the whole length of the city, in an avenue formed by .the shore crowded with spectators, and a line of men of war and transport ships. gayly dry- rd with flags and steamers. At half past four in thy afternoon the ourges be gan to mane, the oars keeping time to martial runsici and when they had ar rived opp:usite,Market street they all lay upon their oats, while the bands played " dial save the King. ' " alter which the sMdiers gave three cheers. Continuing their course; thecompany were conveyed punt the city- to where a grand tourna ment %Atli to' take place; and it was in this portion of the entertainment that Margaret Shippen shone. A spacious tient, surrounded by troops. bad been pre pared for the- contest. Upon one side were stationed all the bands of music in the army. Th:re were also two pavillions, with rows of benches one above the other, filled with the most disting,uished ladies of the coy. Ou the front seat -of these pavillions were !guyed seven of the most beantiful young ladies ; Pennsylvania could boast. rhey were dressed in Turkish costume— trowsers, tunics and turbans; and in their turbans they wore the fai ors with which they intended to toward the knights who were to; contend in their honor. Among these lovely maidens sat Miss ; Margaret Shippen. One of the knights who figured in the tournament was Cap tain Andre, her • himiliar acquaintance. Little emitd either of them have thought' on this bright doy ) how fatally their des tinies were involved. The trumpet sounded. The herald ap peared. The challenge wasdelivered, and the contest ocCured, which ended without loss of blood, to the satisfaction of all coucerced. At the conclusion of the tournament the company were ushered ; into a magniflcient ball-room, decorated, 1 we are told, tiy eighty-five mirrors, and lighted by thirty-four branches . of wax 1 ' candles. The bah was opened by fourteen 1 belles in Turkish dress and their fourteen knights—one Lieutenant Sloper being the knight who led Miss Shippen out to the dance. At ten o'clock the windows were thrown (pen, and a splendid display of fireworks Was exhibited. At twelve, • lorre folding doors, which bad hitherto been concealed, were sud denly thrown open, which revealed a gor geous saloon:. two hundred and ten feet long, forty feet wide. and twenty two-feet high, with three alcoves on each aide. This was. the supper room. Upon the tables there Were twelve hundred dishes. The guests entered the room a great num ber of 'black slaves in Oriental- costume, ranged in Awn lines, bowed to the ground. This east apartment was one splendor of wax lights, flowers, ribbons, flags, mir rors and silver plate. One of the regular toasts of theloccusion was " Miss Shippeu and her knight?! After supper the com pany returned to the ball-room and kept up the dance+ till four in the morning, reaching their homes about sunrise. This festival, as Major Andre remarks, was the most splendid ever - given by -an army to its Otter. And little, indeed. had that chief done to deserve th - An old pf (key Of the British army, who perceived the folly of„,. paying such extravagant hon ors to a gene - al who had won- it victor ies, said, Eailly. "What will Washington think of thii ?"- Exactly a Meath from that tley the British army evacuated Philadelphia, and away they sped across Jersey, with Gen eral IVashington at_ their heels. A day or two after a; body or American troops marched in, - „commanded by General Ben neilict Arnold. •-411 was changed. The red coats had disappeared- . —blue costs were in the ascendant; and the new Yan kee general Was the foremost man in the city. Arnold. a vain, week :nian t , ever fond of displi'iy and luxury, appropriated to himself one of the handsomest houses in the tawn,f, where'lle set np a costly cs tablishtnenN kept a great many servants; gave splendid dinners, and maintained, a handsome eiluiptige drawn by . four horses scale Of ,e;penge utterly Incompatible either with his fortune or his pay.' one, however, Ittiet at, the: . time Oat, - to maintain this costly . pomp; IM Con. cerned`in siieeitlutnti„un,iyo.riliy, of 'officer and gentleman, awl' sometimes p.us§ol - hishands.. . • - Inlirritink his guests, fis, the ritriotie portion of. the people-remarked-ivith i• prise; that ha was likely,to e.elettt Tories as Whigs. 11(i eereetl.to court •the tallier, eats of thi King, !indlin frequently *bed at his tabk the suire4.. and_ eau - Otero' of public enemies, who bad been ratalolf proSetibed, and had found , 're uge. with the enemy in New York. Among :the families who attracted his regard Was that of Edward Shippen, and he was soon ,oh served to pay. partieular court to ;his daughter Margaret, •Arnold - trai then a widower, tbirty-eight years of age; just tirenty years elder than the young lady. Ere long he formally ask her hand from her father, nnd, ,he - consenting, be ad dressed the daughter, and they were en= gaged. In the meantime Arnold had become so odious by his extravagance and his in solent, overbearing conduct to the people, that Congress was obliged to take evil . zenee of the fact. On the very eve of his I marriage be was ordered to ho tried by a court martial, Miss Shlppen, however, was true toiler engagement, and married him five days after. The court martial, as every one knows, sentenced hint to be reprimanded by General Washington, and he was reprimanded accordingly. Our profession," said General Wash ington to him, "is the - chastest of all; even the shadow of a fanltitarnisties the lustre of our finest achieveinents. The least inadvertence may rob us of the pub lic favor, so hard to be acquired. I rep • rehend you for having forgotten that, m proportion as you hind rendered yourself formidable to our enemies, you should have been guarded and temperate in your deportment towards your fellows citizens. Exhibit anew those noble qualities which bare placed you on the list of our most valued commanders. I will myself fur nish you, as far es it may be in my power, with opportunities of regaining the esteem of your county." This was more like a eulogium than a reprimand ; but it did not touch the heart of Arnold, who went from the pres ence of his commander, not to regal', the esteem of his country, but to betray that country. A year passed away. He was in com mand at West Point, in correspondence with the enema. Whether she shared her husband's secret during those mouths of preparation, will perhaps never be known with certainty. Just before the explosion of the treason at West Point, Arnold sent for his wife and child to join him ; and I sat, the letter which he wrote to her on this occasion. telling her the best way 'of reaching him, anti at what homes ' she should sleep on the road. She had not been many days at West Plint when the treason was discovered. Arnold and his wife were seated at the breakfast table with Hamilton, Lafayette and an aid. In the midst of a meal a , horseman aliglyted at the door, and, a mo meat after, a letter was placed in Arnold's hands which informed him of his ruin. He controlled his countenance, rose quiet ly from the table, and beckoned his wife to foliate him. They went up stairs to their room, where lay their intent child; and there he told her that he was a ruin eel noon, and must fly, that instant for his life. She fell senseless to the floor. Leav ing her there, he rushed from the room, hurried down stairs, sent some one to her; assistance. and them% - returned to the breakfast room. He told Ins guests that General Washington was coming, and he' must make haste to prepare for his recep tion. Ile mounted the horse of the mes senger who had brought the letter, and galloped away. Colonel Hamilton has left us an inter esting account of Mrs. Arnold's demean or otter her husband's departure. He says she remained frantic all day, and ac cased every one who approached herd an intention to murder her child. She con tinned, he says, to rave until she wits Ut terly exhausted.. But Colonel Burr; iu I his old age, was accustomed to give a very different account of the matter. He had knew', Mrs. Arnold from her infancy, and he always declared that she knew all about her husband's treason from the be- I giuning, and he used to -relate a scene which he witnessed at the house of Mrs. Prevost, whom he afterwards married, which somewhat confirms his opinion. Mrs. Arnold, it will be TeMembeied, was sent home to her father, escorted by a party of horsemen, and remained for a night at the house of Mrs. Prevost, where Colonel Burr was. Mrs. Arnold, he said, burst into the room dressed in a Tiding habit, and was.ahout to erak to the lady of the house, seeing him in the dint light of the apartment, and not recognizing him, she asked, anxiously: "Am I safe ? Is this gentleman a friend ?" Upon discovering who he was, she told them how. she had deceived- Gen. Wash ington, polonel Halpilton r and the other AmeriCaniiffiet;rs,--hy her frantic outeriei; and slit declared that she not only knew of the treason, but that it was she who had induced her husband to commit it. This was Colonel'_ Burr's story, to which the reader tanY.ittlieh the credit which he thinks it deserves.. Arnold, himself, does not say that she was low ant of his intention to surrender the fort ress. In the well known letter which he sent back to General Washington from the Vulture. he says: • . ' "Front the known humanity of your es celleticv. Into induced to ask your protec- of Arnold from every insult, and injury that a mistakep,vengeance of . my country - - may, espoie her to. - It ought only to fall on me; she is as good and as innocent as an angel, 11111 d. is Incapable. of doing,Wrong 7 . The authorities of Peunsylvania be. lieved with Burr that she.was il a traitor. Her papers were ,seized, ntid,! althotigh nothing was found in them to criminate "her, she was not permitted to emain at her, father's house, which she e id she de sired to do. , Iler , father &fen. to give security that ditring the war :she mould write nq letters to her husband, and send to thegov,ernment, unopened, any letters she might receive, limn, him. - His offer Was reinseti, tpid. t hey ,ordereti het; 'to de part, and notreturn dtlritt,,,a' the iyar: Be.: mg then obliged to join -her: husband Au' N e * York, tilm'soon recovered her epipti, and shone in society,,to, use.the ,latignage of the time,,as a"stor 9f :the-first magni tude.'., in jEngland,,too, whither she tie, - COMPitrtie4 her husband, - the -.attracted rattelt attention for her heinty,• and . was ranch, flattered. 1,41 - Tory- circles.' . The Pritish joiernment gOe-Areeld,-ht-eom ; pensation for his Anlericat4 katies, . some illiTig:less 'UmseTen Moils:mg - peg*, . • . „ -• _ and Ottled' upon - his iunilfa., sti tlibusimd pounds a year which Wasl.to he bentitined as bug aS, either the. hips hand or the wife survived.' - Their, fun increased in . England: Arnold,:fltidiug himself-pinched on an,' incoine_of thirteen hundred pounds per tin n open's tnuliu voyage to' Halifax , . 'With what success!is not known. It. Was thought by some that be was glad to leave ' , England for a while, to escape the contempt iii which he was held, even by those who had . employed Um. Mrs.!Arnold lived to 1804, when shci died, aged forty-three years.' That infant son whom she held in her arms, as de scribed, above, entered the Brisieb army inl7oB, rose to the rank of lieutenant• general, and was still living as , late" as 1851. One of her grand-children" is -n elergyffian in the Church of England, and it is said, a very worthy gr Orman, who has conversed with American v isitors up on his grand-father in a rational and coming manner. Two of her sons settled in Canada, where they acquired compe tent eitutes, and were living in 18'21 • A Practical Joke. It was during the Presidential campaign which Tesuheti in the election of Buchan an, that the writer of the appended sketch, in r ompany with three other politicians, rode from Paduch to Boston, Kentucky. in a buck. They were bound for one of the old-fashioned barbecues, and tells what happehed on the city thus: The joking Judge M. was one of the party,: nod the bottles that peeped out frum the basket under the scat seemed to improTe the sparkle of his wit, the flavor of his:jokes and the music of his laugh, until the happy contagion even roadbed the driver. On fun was let its highest when, turn ing a Curve in the road, we sale, dowudta hut, dusty stretch, a solitary es cart with its owner perched upon what proved to be bags df corn. As a kind of advance guard a grettt, ugly. brindle dog came trotting along in advance, and attracted by our noise;: he threw himself in au' attitude of defiance, determined to dispute our ad vance. With his savage growl, red eyes and erect bristles he indeed presented a formidable appearance. Judge M. could not let such an opportunity fora practical joke Vass. Said be : " 111 bet the drinks for the day that I can run that dug off the road." " Pune," said We. Shipping our hack, he got on t, and threw the skirts of his "swallow railed" coat .over his shoulders, stuck his old slouch hat on the back of his head, and going down on "all fonra," he scampered toward the dog with the most frightful yells.,reminding one of the fable of the ass iii the lion's skin. This was too much for the dog, and howling with fright, he took to the brush. The oxen also saw the fearfill monster coming down the road, and with one wild bellow they took to the brush, with their tails standing straight on t behind. Away they went, with wheels. houiicitig iu the air, bags of corn bursting openi and spilling their contents in a Con tinnOns drill. " Whoa, Blaze 1 Whoa. Ball ! 0 Lordy 1 what shall.l do r came from the fright ened, man on the cart, as lie was bound ing 11vm side to side, now grabbling a cart pule, then catching at a bug of corn as it went over the side. This kind of performance couldn't last long without a change for better of Worse, as the oxen went tearing down the steep bank of a little creek and overturned everything into the .water, about waist decp4 One ox, getting lose, went up the oppoSite bank and seed disappeard, while the other cowered down, piteously bellow ing as we came np the scene of . disaster. Thefe stood the poor man in water to his waist, his wagon overturned. and half his cum soaking in the water, while the other half ,as scattered in the woods. lie look ed Edema and pitiful, and said : "Q, Lordy, stranger, don't never do that;ar any more. I'm ruined." • kwas a splendid success, that joke, and there s'ood• the judge holding on to asap lingand laughing until the tears rap down his cheeks. V,e took up a subscription for the poor fellow. The judge headed the list with an atnonnt nearly covering-the damages, and !we added to it until we left`the man in thankfulness that ho had sold his curn so At the barbecue, the judge bet ' all his money on a little horse race; and lost,' and the effects of his drinks at our expense, we had to carry him to ottr ha& on A barn door. On his way home ho in: sisted upon standing on his head. Which was the ruined man ?—,Tcle do. Peanut Mar. Dy. Muter, in the pages of the rood Journal, calla attention to what ho terms a neglected source of food. &me time ago, while investigating cocoa by means of the microscope, he discovered an ingredient employed by way - of adulteration. to which. he Could give no name. Recently he bud a sample of a substance offered, on • the Marl; Lane Corn Exchange, as a food for cattle, forwarded to him for analysis; and here, again, he found the unltniawn- ad- ultentnt., It now. became. necessary • to deal with . the matter seriously, and so further-microscopic Investigation led to the4iscovery thut the mysterious ingred ient was simply the flour of the _orachis hypogerna, or African earth'. net. _The public have longhad-to -rest content with the'littowledgo that they'too often , have noldea_ what. they are . eating, and they will consequently hear , with relief and M tn* with satisfaction' • the bean of this earth nut is excellent substance, vrtileh. instead of IJoing-tised only fOr cat., tic rood, or by some adulterators more en lightened than their zeighbors, should be everywhete recognized as, s marketable article of 'diet." It is declared to surpass perirs in itermtritt . preperties, mid to -he, even richer than lentils In- Resit-farming constituents, ORS: it con :More :fat_ and mlorephospheris'aticl . thati either of them. ' -•- ' - Tbe lust CaliforniaectliquAo had the elfgct of _suddenly curing 'several _lamp beggam in tlarf -Francisco. Silver jewel!" is becoming • golf() fleltion!lble ; s. ' ---4i , .100 1 .1;nell. ctl.r.- • „ . . ' Meadow' Lake 'City; which was- once called Smirk City, Wasted' in the' Jaye , gone of a - population of 3,000 or 4,000 souls Io ; its day or prosperity it had fine. stores, good hotels; theatres, and an -ex-. change. at which mining stocks , were sold, In 1865, we think it waS, sonic' 'persons found gold-bearing rock in, some ledve around Meadow Lake, and, the assays, be ing talked about; the city of Summit, or . Meadow Lake, was born. In the 'excite nient ivhich followed fine houses were "erected, and business promis.ed to he brisk. The ledgeii; however, failed to yield np their treasures "by mill process," and peo ple became 'disheartened. The 'sanguine held on in hopes that chemistry would get the gold out of the rock, where mechanism had failed. 'The Burns process was invented, in a dream; to save gold, and for a time' Mend-. ow Lake City continued to hold its own In hope of the success of the Burns dream. It failed, and the doubters began to in. Haute that the gold was not in the rock; mid the assayers were wrong or, had been imposed ripen. Mills, chemicale l •and even dreams failed to make mining there a suc cess. So the city went down, and it is now deserted. A few days ago a friend of ours visited Meadow - Lake City. He went up on snow-shoes and took a look at the deserted and snow-covered place. The houses which 'were only one-story in bight were covered to their roofs. with snow. The two-story houses were surrounded with snow to the bight of the second Story. Not a living being was seen by our friend. He was monarch of that snowy desolation. Signs swing in the cold wind, and jot grated in their swinging the surface of the I snow. Prominent among the signs was that of a broker's office, just opposite the old hall of the board of tacker:. The large hote there was yet furnished, and the beds and bedding still remained there. Our friend, 1 standing in his snow-shoes, gazed into the hotel, while he stood on the snow surface, level with the second story, mid ho saw clean linen -on the deserted beds. Ile wanted to take a rest in the comfortable quarters, but there was no fuel or food in sight, and he had to go down lower to a d i tch-ten der's cabin to get fire . and appease his hunger. Many. of. the bousea have this winter- been broken down by the weight of snow on their roofs,- but many more remain just as they were when their owners left. The property is sate, as cold and snow have locked all against the de predations of burglari. Meade* Take is a wint.r residence no snore.—Grass Valley (Nevada) Union. • - • The Idea or Spinnlnr,Vlcony Suddenly (James Ilargreaves) dropped upon his knees, and rolled oa the stone floor at full length. Ile lay with his face toms:lithe floor, and madelines and, air. vies with the end of a burnt stick. lie rose.and went to,the fire to burn his stick. Then he sat upon a chair and .placetl.,-his head between -his hands, elbows- on his knees, and gazed intently on the flyer. Then he sprang, to his EM I . sad replied to some feeble question of his wife, (who had not risen since, tit, day she gave birth to a little atnu.ger) by a fond assurance that he had it; and. taking hey . in his sturdy-arms in the, blankets, the baby in her arms, he lifted her out. and„ held her over the Week drawingi on the floor. Thesehe explained, and shijoined a small; hopeful, happy.lungh with his high-toned assurance; that . she 'should never again toil at the spinning wheel—that beibbnld never again 'Tidy," and have his loom standing for want of weft. a Our fortune is made when -that is made," he said, Speaking of his drawings on the floor. "What will you call it ?" asked his wife. - "Call it? What can we call it after thyself, Jenny.?" :They called thee ‘Spin.! ping Jenny' • afore I hid thee, because .thou beat every lass in.Stanehill MOor at the wheel. What If ire call it 'Spinning Jenny ?'" • , • The spinning -jenny could spin twelve threads,instead of one as by, hand-spin ning. Tho :populace brolco the machine to pieces,•and . poor Ilargreave'a heart at the same time.. Richant Arkwright, a common barber,' mught - the idea of. Hargreaves, improved upon it, realized a fortune of half a mil lion 'sterling, and became Sir Birebard Arkwright,'Nlmse son, in 1444 4104 the richist commoner in England. Children," said a Sunday school gentleman visitor, who had been talking to the scholars about "good" peOn plo and' "load".. p , eopiti".ziow, children, .whentiro - walking in the street, I speak to soino persbnii.l meet, and I don't speak to others; and' what's the. remonl° . He expect - .d the .reply. would be, Vbeptise EoErle are good and others bad," but to his diseoinfitare, the general. shout was. cause some are'rich. and otherslare.poor young lady, .the. other day. in.tlie coarse,of a lecture, Said : ••f et married, voting than and be qiiiek about - it too. Don't wide*. the millenninth, hoping that the girls-will. turn to angels .before .yon will trust yourself to - one:of:Thew A.pretty thing you Would be alongside of an angel, wouldn't you, you brute."...- . . . Mr. Livingstone; an .Indiana eonriet, hating . a desire to regain his liberty, vitt. himielf in u box and was-carried out or jail. - I:lnluehlthowever, the box was laid on the grenud head downward, rind. the convict's feet, instead of his heatl.pointed toward the zenith.. Being unable to ex tricate himself, holiegatoOliowl for. Os" liiStoo,.. and. was ,soots escorted to ,Lie former Knirtmont - • RowEns—The - art:Of preervin& natnr. al flowers is it very simple cite: tup them one at a time in-melted parfilne just hot enough., to maintain its .fluidity, IS gep them in the liquid for nu iaitant being sure tq _}pose 'them :Omit -time-when there, -- •••• , /ln Tryliana, having got off tlie (rack in a love affair, coiximitted ifarry-Carrie with a logemotive. Those -ivera their vorugt acxtix! P1izi91..&.-144P*t 4 1 0 9 .77 -6 im; triodiiie,Green", latify,eitended ties to tho delegdtcs •to nu agrionlttittl' convention.. As one member was cindo&. 7 Iv examining the dirge and beiintiful - eol..:1 leotion of statuary-whirl rulorturthei•Tislai;, - .. - 1 tial residence: Green•; mho' seems, I. t .was everywhete and with'everybody,.tuppA, - •.:: ed him on the shoUltler.tuld saidt• :.;; Mr. seh you are an,adrnirer'of Abu beautiful; would-yaw not like.to• inspeOt.c..l - of the fine-arts?". oVirell,7.taLL ‘. delegate, as ho deposited awell m4.ltisAtect.l4 ; = quid of Virgirda weed outside thowindOwyr-q ./ . 1 don't Cara it / ;do, as I ,uns a littley, u ,, dr.) ll ' - , • •.; MIS DOT WILL Grr St. Peter, Dtinn., Tribuna tells thii tie Johnny Rogers, five years old, and of mischief; goes to .school.:-: :The .tithen?: - day, the teacher having eiliansted,moral?.. ! : ,- . suasion, gave Johnny a note to .deliver to. the principal, which read' .as;._followpi.: , :i - "Mr. Metcalf: The bearer.desenres, zi;ose; vcre punishment." John rip ions-!.-he smelt is mice—and on • :reilectimit , he concluded not to go .to the principal's room, Meeting a:Norwegiam boy - . ittAte,! hall, he inveigled him into deliveringlhme , :7... I note and went:off to pliy. , pal read the-note and. at 'OOCQ% !‘ the bearer," who departed a, sadder antli:.; wiser Norwegian. DON'T BMusEn.—A party of . young': fellows out.-on a . spreo, a few evening4.,..' ,, , since, in Chicago, bad beenimbibing yen ettensively of "burnt district whiskey;' an article which is said-to be iminetidelY!'•''; conflagmtorrin ita abameter, and' onei)1 1- ;.- , their number finally became quite sicktl Leaning up against a lamppost he, with n4ny groans and, retches,- proceeded - to.; relieve the internal load., As he iungry little cur pup canto" wandering , and sniffing - around the Mot orthe lamp.' post. The sufferer solilogidied:' know leer er got that lobs'er:. gird 'member 'alinctly leer ate those: oyeerai.-i but dam' me 'f cr know w'er, or, ate -thetl, dug." A Winn SEat.---Relatice- to the Indi 2 au s, a correspondent of .the Chicago Pali writes from. the far West! , ."I. so many Indiana in ruy life.: I sheath, ~4 . 1 think there were a - million A:least. won't takeldf an Indian, theiigli'SeveiV of them will get taken off "before'Spritig' if General Valpier moves westward. They; are dressed mostly in blankets atid , beries,,,:q grease. They are a • confiding .. Yesterday a squad of thirteen came 'iuto .• our tent, and the oldest availed the right of seniority sitting'. dotyrti +. - A our hot box stove,,whichtte mistook: valise. 'He was very much surp . rised,and the quartermaster has "lie it its tun, num poultices eVer since,' , - GREELEY O*T• TEM . CASTOR BRA:Si-, Horace. Greeley says that easter.bearls- 1 :" 1 may be vast or gut,. -whichever:yen ;so. The foundry.at, 'lllicit lie gets ins,seed;il.-t the best. 'lf the nest egg . lias been crack 7-,....„, ed by frost, the beans are - nrit' tt(tsiireife.: and shrink;which is not' the"case wit' oats,or hey wheu.p,rttperly dust mach has been fouud . to., contaiu too mach heat fur, the ortlinaly castor,„ ; ,., dried gigs from . fractured lanteruCtkir' 7 the peOpeirestorative'there the; beatt'' ' to be hastened, falloff ' cultivating.: litore_rain,water :should .I.ew: allowettto settle op the 114;43Iiiring weather. ALtItaTED -OTT. TUE apolts .Yerrs sup kruriawae Eeau3dili ;. • • couple were periled near .Sigle' Statiof, on the full ruu the other. day.. They stepped off .to hare the cereutony„per?-: formed. The train begau•-to• ratite beforo. the justice had tiinoto conelitde, - :and three started on the run, the Inudiandand' wife mounting the train, and , the.justiew. bawling after them, '1 -proneenee; yet man and wife,' and may the, Lox 1, pter4," or'werde to that effmr. AY APPROPICIA.TE REPTX.- I .A. cerfam, namoster of Maine, who was noted-foriiii long sermons with many . '.'disislons; out-. day, when ho was advanamg, among-111 , :1. Evens, and bad thoroughly wearied..hio. bearer.% reached,' at length,_ 'a resting place in his discourse, When paw--; ing to - take breath, and 'looking , shotiio'' oriir his audience, he asked `bet question (‘-: "And what shalt I say more l'74.soicit from the cc:mgr.-ration, ,rnore - suggestiv‘s than, reverent, earnestly' reiponded, "I,Sity Arno , 1 . . —Bridget came to -.her .mistress arid asked for.a needle and thread. , yon grant it fine or coarser' asked -the lain - . 4 Sure and I don't know rutin,' eau!';' Bridget What do you want its for?' asked her mistress. "if -you tellmo tka,t. I may know what to give."'Well. mum, the cook has jist towld,me to et.bring beans, nu' sure an' I want a neydlo . thrid for Oat" • ' —A Scrtoor teacher in Sur 'comity- N. C., who carried-his dinner with him tO the school-house, frequently. found hi-4 supply or bread short, and suspecting •hi scholars of appropriatingta portion ot.hil stair of lir ! ! to then' owu use, had resort a little tartar. emetic in his bread, 'Which soon had the desived'effect t - Ilia dinner has bepu all.right ever since. - -o.va who assnmea to .htaar,eays that notriatily dispuir for . the lbes.of a_locer. 'endures 8 months in winter and : B in t. ,nter ; the second Itionth, a halt bccOrnet,' interestO in the new stylecf the third:: she burns -her love.lstteti: Twee menthe atterward-sho.heara of hp lover's marrine:and.wontlers how she could tare a ma with a . red trantstiche wianlMP•o; —lnjared trees that hare had the i ! r branehti broken oft' by Rinds or tiorinv: ehoutd , hatt the rounded surface smoot1; 1 ly pared and then corered,witti a coatin E_ • of shellac' 'Taoist) or Enelteil grafting NVEaa j. prevent the( vtatet: penetrating aPg_ cattaingdecay,, —Warm weatner ;is :mining. - Tllirtr thautarai dollars' worth or fsps were in,. port(d lot week. LN+ i'IT;;V:j - t - i.7r4 , MEE