.Itr "'n o -. it • • ..-.. - ~,,,, ' . ..... ' --, - 7 ‹ , ...,,, , ~, 0 0: '.. • ~. ,„,.,,,, 1 . 4 - 7 .- , ,• , c.- -,. 41-47,-7..1•74-.T.l4e' ." ) 4 ' 4iti r. '' • ~ -'4.° ... ' ".1 4: -; ' ' '.4 ;'''' A • ..!...".: , ' 4 i . '—' tri 1- ' , ,2 '• ', ' . .. 40% ~ ' l'. - "A , . .... ~ 4 ',,p. 4 ' • , idi ' ; Sei •• , • 1 4 1 .4 . ~, . - = , -0 . 4 -... .= < ,`,.. ;?i .110,r ' , :sd:,: -,:,- ' ' .0 14 a. 4 44.4 Th ‘.-..‘qtl4:j' .. 7r 4` "74.. N',',' -7; '':::l`.**:.- '• """' ...., . "'W" 4 4 '' w' `• 1 1 ,4.*: . .". - ..-', • 400.04, - - ,-, • 4 ' ~'",' : - ...,;-4, ~,,,.. -...:. ~..'" •,, . ..- -' , o''''' ~, ....,- • ''>'' , 1 „.' -:41'• ..„._ ..,_ .. ..- ~.,...,,,.., -..,.,.. ..• - A TO , - 0 . . ..._ 'r ..‘",-. - ' "P" . • '` .;,.- Air/elit • ' . 5...., __, , : , vy, , , , - ~,,,.* , w, \ . , . . _ ) 4 ' ' /,r s ti •!';',A \ . tor , ' .. I ,\Jegi i ... ..,,,_ • ~_ c 7 ..L, c - a , - ' /. . -- t css__ ' , -,..t ._. '•- i ~ "\ - .1- ,f A 1 •, -7-7. .- .. .-),3- ~..t ~., T., ~. ..; ;. 1 . 'a 6 =',--_ '..A Otik, - 1 1 : " , 1 4- :. th ...„.. .2 , f I . X P' - ' U _ _ ID \ PUBLISHED WEEKLY IN THE CITY OF READING, BERKS COUNTY, PA.---T 4 J. LAWRENCE GTEZ, EDITOR] P.II BLIaLED EVERT SATURDAY MORNING Alger, Forth-West corner of Pena and P41,41z street, ad joining the iltrraers' Bank of Reading. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION ,50 a 1.00 for e s a ix r m aya s fe in i adv an n 6. Tv aros : Four copies for WV, in advance. Tea copies for Ea, All paper* discontinued at the expiration of the filo , paid ivr. RATES OF ADVERTISING IN THE GAZETTE lt. St. Imo. arno. itmo. ly. jf,' Square, S Have, or lees, 50 50 75 9,10 11,51 6,00 1 101,00 1,25 3,03 5,00 8,00 2 .• 1,00 2,00 2,50 5,00 8,00 15,00 " SO " 1,60 3,00 3,75 7,50 12,00 20,00 [Larger Advertisements in proportion.] Sosontors . and Administrators' Nodose, 2 ittbeillolla *2,00 Auditors' Notices and Legal Notictot, 1,50 Special Notlcee, as reading matter. 10 eta. a llae for one blarrlgge 3011200 Yr 2 Callla each, Dcathe will be published gratuitously. ;Ws All Obituary Nodes., Resolutions Of " other Private Associations, will be charged. -•-• tit... Numbs, at the above rate.. . air Advertisements for Religions, Char.. attl.tal °Meets, onaltalf the above Tales. C? ill advertielng Will be considered payMp* on the drat insertion. — t Yearly adverdaere Isbell have the privilege (tf ditelred) of rouswing their advertisements every , three reeeks—bitt cut oftener. Any additional renewals, or adventaing Oa= ....ding the amount contracted for, Will be charged extra at one-half the rates above specified for transient &dyer. tiaemeuts. Yearly advertisers will be charged the same rates as rigisigut advertisers for all matters not relating strictly to Mc& Outlines -8. PRINTING OF EVERY DESCRIPTION Ereented in a superior manner, at the very lowest prices. Oar assortment of JOB TYPE to large and fashionable, and Our Work Rinke for itsolL BLANKS OF ALL KINDS, IRCIIIMEg TAWNY/ET and PAPER MEWS MORTGAGES, Fond. ARTICLES OF AGREEMENT, LEASES, and a variety of JinTICES' BLANES, kept eonetantly for este, or printed to order_ Dr. JOSEPH COBLENTZ, OFFERS HIS PROFESSIONAL SERVICES to the citizens or Reading and vicinity. Re can be censaited In German and English. °ince and residence, 441 Penn street. adjoining tbn Farmers' Bank. October 31, 1863-17. JESSE G. HAWisr."l", ATTORNEY AT LAW, FIAS REMOVED HIS OFFICE TO NORTH sixth Fooet, opposite the Keystone HOWIO, April u, 15041 NOUN RALSTON, ATTORNE) AT LAW, QFPICE WITH. A. B. WANNER, NORTH Steth Street. (above the Court Iloace,) Reading, PI, ebruary 21,1868-ly REMOVAL, WILLIAM H. LIVINGOOD, ATTORNEY AT LAW, has removed his Miles to the north gde of Court greet Ant door below Sixth, [dec 22-tf Charles Davis, ()ATTORNEY AT LAW—HAS REMOVED HIS (mice to the Office lazely occupied by the Hon. David _ 2 Mon, deceased, in Sixth street, opposite the Court MUSS. reprlll4 Daniel "Ernientrent, ATTORNEY AT LAW—OFFICE IN NORTH Sixth street, corner of Court alley. [ang 13-ly David Neff, WROIESALF. AND RETAIL DEALER IN' Y Foreign and Domestic DRY GOODS, No. 25 Bast Pann street, Reading, Pa. [March 10, 1860. LEBANON VALLE ANNVILL. SELECT of loot= oar 074 limit Fspeneed per address, March 7-U] #9:1104/4,k,Asinvilae, Pa LIVIIII United States Bounty 'Pay and Pension Office, COURT STREET, NEAR SIXTH. T_TAVING BEEN ENGAGED IN COLLECT- Mg claim, against the Government, I feel confidant that all who have heretofore employed me will cheerfully endorse my promptness and fidelity. My charges are moderateand no charge made until obtained. WILLIAM M. LIVINGOOD, °et IS-tf] Attorney at Law, Court 81., Reading, Pa. DISCHARGED SOLDIERS (lAN NOW OBTAIN THEIR $lOO BOUNTY IL) from the 11. 8. Government, 8y application to ABNER R. STAUFFER, Ranh 7-tt] Collection Once, Conrt Street, Reading. ABA M. HART, (Late Dart sr. Mayer,) apEALER IN FOREIGN AND AMERICAN DRY GOODS, CARPETING% &c., Wholatale and Re. t Philadelphia prima. Sign of the Golden Bee Hive, No 14 Bag Penn filgtart [april 17-tf P. Bushong & Sons, iIVIANUFACTITRERB OF BURNING FLUID, AlNlate, Deodorized and Druggists' tacobol; *leo, Ine Oil, which they will sell at the lowest Wholegal° prices, at Reading, Pa. idir Orders respectfully solicited. G. M. MILLER, M. D., Eclectic Physician and Surgeon, AGRADUATE OF THE ECLECTIC MEDI eal College Philadelphia, offerer bia proteseional ser vice/ to the cttliene of fteleberg arid tricleity• I PI4 Surgical operations, sorb as Setting Broken nod Dislocated Limbs, Amputations, Cutting Cancers, Tumors, de., win be performed under the induenee of Ether, at the consent of the patient. lar Ones at his residence in Main street, Hamburg. PS. 1863-1 DR: T. 'YARDLEY BROWN, SURGEON DENTIST. GRADUATE OF PENNSYLVANIA Dental College. Teeth extracted by Fran in tea es' Electro Nagnetii proems, with Clarke's improvement. With this method teeth are extracted with much lees pain than the usual way. No extra charge. Once in 'Nth Wed, opposite the Preebyte. lan Church. [aprll 2-17 SOLDIERS' 11017111 PET-MONEY. PACE-PAY AND PENSION maxims PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO BY x. sTAIIFFEA, Attorney at Law, Office In Court Streets JAA3I-O3 READING, PA. BOUNTY XONEY, BACK-PAY AND PENSIONS. AiPPLICATIONS PROMPTLY ATTENDED W. E. H. SHEARER, Attorney at Law, t toy 34-ti] Ogles In Court Street, Reading. IL WESLEY SELMER% Sign, House and Wall Painter, No. 10 NORTH FOURTH STREET, READING-. N. B.—GRAINING, GLAZING, BRONZING, Gilding on Ghee and Chips, Glossing, to. .RA Work In the country promptly' attended to. . I "veMber 14,1963-4 i F. P. HELLER, WATCHMAKER, JEWELER, AND DEALER IN WATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY, SPOONS, SPECTACLES, GOLD PENS, &c., Hignet the If BIG WATCII4 I, He. UM East Penn Etreet, above Sixth, north side, Reading. Pa. Every article warranted to be what it is sold for Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, &c., repaired with particular attention, and guaranteed. [fah I—tf ICISTSTOI/21 SAM NO. 369 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE, WASHINGTON, D. C. ,CRE UNDERSIGNED WOULD RESPECT follyinform their numerous Meads throughout Berko County, that they have leased theabove Hotel, and are cow prepared to accommodate all who may favor them with their patronage. At our bar may be found the beet and purest Honors, while the table to a:applied with the beat the market affords. THOMAS : MYHRE'. BALTIMORE LOCK ROSPIIAL, 4114PESTABLISIIED AS A REFUGE FROM QUACKS:tr. The Only Place Where a Cure Can be Obtained. TAR. JOHNSTON HAS DISCOVERED TILE mom Certaio, Speedy and only Stoctual Remedy in tun World for all Private Disesnes, Weakness of tlio hack or Limbs, Strictures, directions of the Kidueys and Blad der, Involuntary Discharges, impotency. Gennrat usbitity, Nervousness, Dyspepsia, Languor, Low Spirite, Confu sion, of Idaus , PAlpitaidu of the lloart, Timidity, Tremb ling. Dimness of Sight or Giddiness, Disease of the lined, Throat, Nose or Skin, Affections or the Liver, Lungs, 'Stomach or Bowels—those Terrible Disorders arising from the I.:ornery tlebito of Youth—those BECUST hull colliery practices more fatal to their victims than the song of Syrens to the Mariners °lA:Vines. slighting choir most brilliant hopes or anticipations, rendering marriage, Ain,impMintb . le.. VOTING- =EN • ;' - E.pooguy, wtle have become the victim! oc,folithity that dreadfal and dretrnetive habit to an untimely grave tbousande of toitayr V exalted talents and brilliant intellect:4l4 • _ Wise have entranced listening Senate.,of eloquence or waked to eostauy the lining,pisyi e ll WWI fall connden - . . , , .. sCs .....- . 5.- .-:l -410***:', - '•!', " 4, - •:..•71 - r . -"I id,e4, ~ : , ;.• ! .4-vi , -..04:. .'..reugv —.., - . , iliii7 ....Ni hour* aifsilittawlernO v ixtd Cins‘ it im Addrairrei a nii macilliast, illyalehat. •- • -,. - .i . ..i,. 1 .-''''..• '. 9 AMOMMI4IIOI_. 1199r* , ' ImMediatel - lad- IgUll , Vigoraestiand:. :• . -.-: -•-- ,1 2.Aire*OldesitioliOrinide*Lili and liar-_ ' ..$ . alidikitiniji th4sifflty siattAl his Tisinis of im itahlrienefliOcAtiftioimmiia.ite timialield Ocillkial - exinfonerriiist •lii4Nog,-..awat• of PitidOtat44l*9" - qaoo9et.linatkil:litifs.,44l - rf nhiAlikt .11 1 , 4 4 9.. sUbJeetVll:rfiniDid Di ikerty Abaleche , pOW*Kif.meornw--' Lion Is 101 l sooner kitithoscilailing into Dirtratier '• , CilsWits'• than by the prudent 1 - Beafffelbeln deprived of theVisas are of healthy offspring, the moat serious and destructive symptoms to both body and mind arise. The system be- Comes Deranged, the Physical and Mental Functions Weakened, Loss of Procreative Pow or, Nervous Irritabil ity, Dyspepsia, Palpitation of the Heart, Indigestion, Con stitutional Debility, a wasting of the Frame, Cough, Cons snmption, Decay and Death. - Office. No. 7 South rrederick Street. Left hand side going from italtimoro street, a few doors from the corner. Fail not to observe name and number. Letters meet be paid and contain a stamp. The Doetor'e Diploma hangs In hie office. A CURE WARRANTED IN TWO DAYS. No Mercury or Nauseous Drugs. Zion. SOMENSWOM Member of the Royal College ol Surgeons, London, Grad uate from one of the mom eminent Colleges In the United States, and the greater part of whose life hes been spent in the hospitals of London, Paris, Philadelphia and else where, has effected etane of the most astonishing cares that were ever known; many troubled wish ringing , in the heed and ea. When asleep, great nervousness, being alarmed at sudden sounds, bashfulness, with frequent blushing, attended sometime with derangement of mind, were cured immediately. hr:t4 , 111.4?-1,31 , ' Dr. J. addrel.sos all alarm, who Lye injured themselves by improper indulgence and solita.ry habits, which rein both body and mind, unfitting them for either bueiners, Andy, society or marriage. T.- ..Crimm are some of titel;a4 and melancholy effects pro duced by early habits uf youth, viz: Weakness of the Back and Limbs, Palns in the Head, Dimness of Bight, Loss of Aluacular Power, Palpitation of the Heart, Dys pepsia, Nervous Irritability, Derangement of the Digestive Functions,General Dehility,Syniptontsof Connumption,Ste. Manse .r.—The fearful effects on the mind are touch to be dreaded—Loss of Memory, t;onfimion of Wean Lepree alone of Spirits, Evil Forbodinge, Aversion to Society, Self- Distrust, Love of Solitude, Timidity he., are someef the Trioitt 4 et ett toppla, tows F 'thin - c 'AKeir go; htleibMal‘. Zoete,- Milano seem ow ted, haeteg appearance abotiffhli o • li ket*ltrigniii, x . ' Who I,l ' 4 gliutedAttraceritx a carte& Pnottee , gedin when aloie. ha •rftegiwictlip rearnedlttorktur corepardonaror atoehoot 'i`Pftwfkof whir:Vire ntahtt felkeowa what asleep, Let ffhtaratied eadart marriage:l Imptcodbla,. and desire's both mind and bodyi ap- I telfeei theta soul inianieltes to prom, .aippinees. faileei, with onitpliese the Jeanie, through life becomes a weary pit- IMAIIIPI iIN Prellpent bowl) Mutat' to the view; the inlng.wecomeolibatviwwl with despair and Ailed with the nosilineholy reflection that the happlants of another he- COMM blighted with oar own. .1)1111:1134511 of lIIMPILI7.III2INCE. Idtit&bigralt4, 'and ',liapradent *ataxy of pleasure; Ai ' - issiablbd the essdantrthteratufurdlsenee, ud -tra it too .° ' ripens that en ;111-timed sense of shame, or dread of diseiiVery, deters him from applying to thosewho, from education Lad respectability, can alone befriend him, delaying till the constitutional symptoms of thin horrid disease make their appearance, such as ulcerated gore throat, diseased nose, nocturnal pains is the head and limbs, dim mom of eight, deafness, nodes on the chin-bones and arms, blotches on the head, face and extremities, pro gressing with frightful rapidity, till at last the palate of the month or the 'Donee of the nose fall in, and the victim of tide awful disease becomes a horrid object of commis eration, till death puts a period to hie dreadful sufferings, by bending him to that Undiscovered Country from whence no traveller returns." It le a meletucholy fact that thousands fall victims to this terrible disease, owing to the nnekilifalness of ignor ant protendeau, who, by the nag of that Deadly POißoh, Mercury, rain the constitution and make the reeldue We mikarable. sTRALNexas Treat not your Item, or health, to the care of many On learged and worthless Pretenders, destitute of knowledge, name or character, who copy Or. Johnston's advertise ments, or style themselves, In the newspapers, regularly Educated Physicians, incapable of Curing, they keep you trilling month after month taking their filthy and poison ous compounds, or as long as the smallest fee can be ob. tained, and in despair, leave you with ruined health to sigh over your own galling disappointment. Dr. Johnston is the only Physician advertising. His credentials or diplomas always hang in his oaks. Ells remedies or treatment are unknown to all others, prepared from a life spent in the great hospitals of Europe, the first in the country and a more extensive Private Practice than any other Physician In the world. aNsonsommirair or Tall rilkratis (march 12 The many thouenda cured at this Institution year after year, and the numerous important Surgical Operations performed by Dr. Johnston, witnessed by the reporters of the •' Sao." "Clipper." and many other papers. notices of which bare appeared again and again before the public, beeides hie standing as a gentlemen of Shittaakee tad re sponsibility, is a sufficient guarantee to the afflicted. • Skin Diseases Speedily Cured. 4 No lettere received unless pest-paid and containing a thump Wbe 'tied on the reply. rereone writing aboard state ago, and send portion of advertisement describing symptom.. SORN M. JOBNBTON ■ Iff. IL, EMElMiMirMaiiiii WILLIAM PENN HOUSE, CORNER OF PENN AND TENTH STR, READING, PA. BERTOLETTE GRANT, Proprietor. rrll/S HOUSE BEING A LICENSED TAVERN, the best of Liquore are kept at the Bar, and as good at able tos any other Dotal In tire horlety_ deeetalliodi lions for Boarders and Travellers, Charges reasonable. ril?' Lunch from 9 to 11 o'clock, daily. Pane 6-tf LADIES' CLOAKS I A BEAUTIFUL ASSORTMENT OF FROSTY BEAVERS, A NEW AND ELEGANT ARTICLE FOR .ICa .416 Jo , x 31: 107 3IM -EL , MIST RECEIVED AND FOR SALE BY JAMESON & CO., CORNER OF SIXTH AND PENN STS. oct 24 COAL OILI GOAL OIL I An, BARRELS COAL OIL JUST RECEIVED stock, which will be sold at the lowest wholesale and retail Fria., by OEO. LERCEI & CO., Oat 17.1 GU Market Square, IleadittO, Pa 500 Near Shape Stoop Skirts, OTIIE BEST QUALITY, JUST OPENED J and for onlo nt low Prim, act 171 f74OR SALE AT THE OLD JAIL, 200 WHIET Granite Tea Setts of the newest style. ' IOR SALE AT THE OLD JAIL, 360 GRANITE Dinner Setts of the newest style. 08. SALE AT THE OLD JAIL, 1000 SETS 7 Common Teaware. ipIQR SALE AT THE OLD JAIL, THE LARO eat assortment of Liverpool Ware ever offered in nding. FOR SALE AT THE OLD JAIL, A LARGE assortment of Pittsburgh, Boston and Preach Glass ware of every description. VOR SALE AT THE OLD JAIL, THE CHOW .I2 eat variety of Bar and Rotel Glare, China and Queens ware furniture ever offered in Reading. .FR SALE AT THE OLD JAIL, 60 BARRELS Racterol 1$ ridladelptd!..Priose• -Amm . an - waLIAIE BROM% Jr . .• . THE COLLEGE GATE. [Poloy's fine etatue of Goldsmith stands now in front of Trinity Cottage, In this city, where it commandethe aduli. ration of everybody. It to only placed there in a tempo rary way, but when the pedestal Is completed the statue wilt be erected upon it and inaugarated with due cere• mony.] " lie took bls depot of Bachelor of Arts on the 27th of Fehrnaey-,17911.711 . 40an tkeloineliitheller."—Foltere 'NOV C ArragritkY 414 a 1111 *Li Vs St; .! ; • `St HottfeatodelepsLtll #ei 414 y ThO iellubbed blur w4o , 7linehon the Mt!" , • .;Yee itotito of ogre; L iffiltehna etd tdmbtB d inlstiir,rl7 "444 6-, 001.011 0 1010:v# • 11 Wiert4i , luitW , VtAlaitak f litOrniO40'' . " . , ' I: l l4Wilint a=a foinkdittotalrhareow.T2. ' Mafia tit t 'With soaking?* earth to direst; liCihnitta drawing room ': .. .ritro , l4:*4+l4Atatel" - Re h ik ka 41a . 'iani nithared up in ; ' "What—what shall I tarn to—Phyalo, or Law? ' - Or Divinity—folly to try ! °The colt, or the mitre—it le not for mo I shall ne'er be addrosied ea ' my lord :' And as for the baton, or Hag—blase my heart! • Only fancy poor Noll with a sword " Well ! jests, at leash at the gate again None shall fling at the Gradnate'e ' head ; since fellowships, scholarships are not for me, I'll take to soy flute for my bread!" Now as you enter that college gate, Lilt up your eyes and you'll see, Towering . over your hada, a bronze, In Its proud serenity. Teal the Milting from that wretched flute To the ends of the earth have aped; Though "1ioll" was a drudge Co long as he lived He's deified now that We dead. And what Is Ulla world!—the college gate, Threugh which pules may eliuk with diem The list Is the measure of life's seams, And the statue is posthumous fame. VIA. SOLITARIA. Alone I walk the peopled city Where each been]e happy with hie own : 0 frieode, I :ink not for your pity— I walk alone. . . - Ifo more for me yon lake rojoloso;,' , . L TL ugh wooed by loOlogpYro,gf.44ribit„ 44b, i t mrroweiii•Akro4ls.4lAOlTio;tl.';,,., . is lanai a hnthery ePrike' .01.* L. - 4 ,, In Tail thf eTcnteg'f stain' InaT41 I 1 !; - ! . V .. ::: a. ,•, 7 : -" j'' • - - In "Alb yon;:beanty,loifir oitiiok groikkh•'- ME Yet well I know the tole, of Duty, And therefore lire 'and .bealtb Must "erive r Though she who gave the world its basely Is in her grave. I 11% 0 loot 000 I for ibo Bola Who drew their earliest 11fe from thee.. dnd wait, until with glad thanksgiving, I ..hall be free. For life to me to tat a station Whereto, apart, a traveller stands— One absent long from home and nation, In other lands— And I as he w ho stands and listens, Amid the twilight's chill and gloom, To hear, approaching In the diatoms, The train for home. For death shall bring another making— Beyond the shadows•ot the tomb, On yonder shore a bride is waiting Until I come. In yonder geld are children playing, And there—oh, vision of delight I see a child and mother Waging In robee of white, Then, then, the longing heart that brashest, Stealing the tteaeuree one by one, I'll call the blessed when thou makeet The parted—one. Gaits sub 3iiicivs. A PERILOUS HOUR. I was apprenticed to a decorative painter, but being of a bold, danger loving turn, I ran away to sea beforo my time was out. After some years of knocking about, I got tired of a maritime life, and having married and determined to stick to the shore, I got work with a builder, whiles peculiar line lay in greeting tall chimneys. I had alwaytt a cool head, and could stand on elevations that made most men dizzy, and so was soon - aferferite hand with my • master. We had on one cesoigiipltrte fasten a lightning Conductor, which had ' sprung near the top of a very high chimney, and Mr. Shaming chose my self and one James Colly to do it, as the most daring of his inert. About half a doom of us went that morning with a handcart, containing the necessary ropes, blocks, the kite, and a box or cradle. Having flown the kite, and dropped its line across the top of the chimney, we soon drew up a rope, at the end of which was a block, through which ran the line whereby we were to be drawn up. Cony had only been married a fortnight, and as we stepped into the cradle the men bantering ly asked him if he hadn't a last dying speech for hie wife; and then, Mr. Staining having shaken hands with us and bid us be cool and steady, we were drawn slowly up. It was known all over town that the conductor was to be fixed, though as the day was not named, I did not expect we should have spectators; but as we got Meter, and the view opened under our feet, I saw that the Streets were already thronged with starers. Cony was very quiet, and when I waved my cap to the people, he said, snappishly, that this was no time for such folly, and that he thought I might think of better things than how to amuse those gaping fools who, he dared say, desired no better than to see us meet with en accident, I bad come up in the best heart, thinking, in. deed, nothing about the danger we incurred ; but as we drew nearer and nearer to the top, and ' had nothing, as it eeerned, belonging to this world near to us but this straining rope, I began to see the peril of the undertaking. What Colly thought of it, I don't know—he eat at Milk. A. M. HART, Pak MarkekSquare Vosivg. Fl•ani lhv. Llet!ilin Unitweitg Mailazine. r lowers; 0:0 r:--' eoa'u,u SATURDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 5, 1863. torn of the cradle, never looking out, though told him he would do hater to keep his eyes about him, so that he might grow used to the height. Good Heaven! what was this? Here We were within a yard of the top projecting coping, and still they were winding away without slacking the speed in the least! I guessed in a moment that they mistook our height, and that with the great purchase of that windlass the rope would be broken when the cradle eamelcithe block. I sprang up, and catching the rope, climbed hand over hand to the coping. f . Golly,:too, sprang op and followed Me. e ' Go got safe and still lie they went on. winding up; till the rope gang again with the strain , there was upon Then it snapped, and oinfile, hauling line, and the Miln topfrit, , with its bloOth- Tikatv Appinktyo'io94'• mak led,knWin . kkiespetii.te, 01. ji*04,393P101.9 4104:thisipmftionetffgot"the leg, lah . WSli' only; a fteit'.jind a biObilild, heolid ."Where ein I pray f.L4hoie osii I l cel and -.„ - n o d no I: said very solemnly •- • • , ;;•;, Ged will. , fieer us if we pray osai4itini gown." 1 1 4eaolai of his face war of a transparent blue; ineii.-maa distorted and twitching; as if he was in a fit. Ric ii3Pea were very.wild, and drawn into a squint, and he couldn't sit steady, but swayed his body backward and forward, so that I felt certain he must topple over. ~,-.' ".,Bsr a4Y.; ~ M ~. ..h , , EliNl "Come, Jem, lad," I said, thinking to take the fright off him, "it's bad enough, but it can be mee'itst flitch up a bit and put year arm around the rod—may be it will steady you." " Where are you ? and where is the rod?" he asked, in a hollow voice, though he was looking straight at me, and the rod vs only a foot or two to his left. By this I knew that he had gone blind with fright, and self yr enervation said, don't go near him ; bat then remembered Mt new wedded wife, and that taking him all through he was always a decent fellow; and I thought how I should have liked him to have done if I had been in his case ; so I determined to run a bit of risk in his favor. Of course, I durst not get on my feet, but working myself on my hands, I got to him, and putting , my arm round his waist, 4. and telling him as cheerily as I could to keep cool, I him with hie arm round the rol. however,.epting•tbe stapling frzir'Ve yards down, and it was so loose that it '1:31l Witt hint and I eapeeted any minute to Seetilkfalti4 head and heels down, and 49 rod Baring away..with him. • 'we -.Therea great bustle down belOW ; people weroameltint,round the yard and pushing to gat in; prat ne yei t there ,Wera but Some score of men at ti, fiot - of 4chinsnei, and; by looking r. 69 40 9 4 en a ilimitan4 carry - i ;:'_~ ice'' .~' mites, While I was welshing them'below, feeling sor ry for my poor master, I was startled by a wild laugh from Colly, who began , making catcalls, and yelling as if he was poeeeised Then I knew, of course, that be had gone mad. Even now I tremble when I think of that time; it was horrible to peer down the shaft, black and sooty and yawning, and scarcely less so to look outside and see a flight of pigeons, sweeping round at considerably lees height than we were. Then Colly—thank God he was so dazed that. he could not see me—called my name 1.6`40 as I sat fairly cringing in dread that his sight might clear ; and with a grin, and chewing with his mouth, be began working himself towards me. I worked away from him as noiselessly as I could, with every hair of my head standing on end. He followed ivrioe round that horrid coping, making most hideous noises, and then being once more aside of the rod, he got it into his muddled head that I had fallen over, for he never lost a sense of where he was all through this trying time. Then he tried to get on his feet; but, at the risk of my own life, I could not let the poor fellow rush on certain death without one more effort; and I cried out to him to sit, down, and he cowered down like a whipped dog, dllitremb— ling. I suppose it had been pikt intqiis head that I was a dead man spealNetkliire* That, morning my wife' je a a litter from her sister in Canada, anOteAhite werettprtrie we could not makeput, I had , pitt,i,t,,,its,p#,..;pooket, intending to get our Gine-keel*, to road it for me. It had a eater, of rinetetereNiptint at 'the bottom ; and byenother goo , ,vi, petted to liere a bit of re -- - peaket. I wrote OR di 14- dowio 7 - Colly'e gone mad ;" this)whin fn, Wiy.tobit4o-. box, and wee fortunate•ericingti jutikto drop kit the feet of a oouple of"men Who Vie standing by the engine -house ' • ' , . i t Directly all was bustle to.rasnueil % Thiiygot the kite up agaie, atitt 1414teli t elevAltig slowly—slowly; and wheOthe.sl k twine'lell between Golly and myself, , took itin my hand, and could have kissed it. Poor Golly, with his teeth chattering, still fancied I was a spirit, and I did all I could to favor that idea until they got another cradle up to us. Then, having got him in, I scrambled in myself, and clutching him fast, I shouted for them to lower; and so we got down, he Wrestling and fighting me all the way. He was in the madhouse for some months, and then went to acavengering, for he never could face any height again ; and I have never had the same clear head since that adventure. OLD AGE. I cannot tell where childhood ends. and man hood begins; nor where manhood ends, and old age begins. It is a wavering and uncertain line, not straight and definite, Which borders betwixt the two. But the outward character' ... old .3 s l age are obvious enoug Abe IWO Man is co ~,: 44 41 tat forty, .- , - fifty. A . 7 ' - th y ahrinktki l' height 46 :"' r k as tit cartilage be and . 1 and 0,7,'"r '' airNene and t 'ram's:f . ‘,4 , t" alio beoomee,,j a:. ~ have less animal and more earthy matter. Tho senses decay, slowly and handsomely. The eye is not so sharp, and while it penetrates further into space, it has less power clearly to define the outline of what it nee. The ear is dull; the appetite less. Bodily heat is lower ; the breath produces less carbonic acid than before. The old man consumes less food, water and air. The hands grasp less strongly ; the feet lees firmly tread. The lungs suck the breast of heaven with less powerful collapse. The eye , and ear take not so strong a hold upon•tha*orld And the big meaty sok, Taming again to childish ttibitiontriesAyr . .. , ,, And whistles In nommen. , •-• Tha animal ..life : is making reifiy- gtobti4 The very old man lovia ibiktinshittecti*ttliii fire,' the arm -chair and shady nook. L would kale the fall rows apple from lie bough`, full ripe, fell-colo; &p - `43teriittletO4reippn• . activity s one Whioltittt.:thw- , onngnparAt las. eflP• thilikalitetild Inittik. l, '4ele:neevipturesine he keetilf# hied; ,ttAget . wiee s t ile . klm late quickening lifej now Aitgt.d.tly , l's no more buzzing in hisiati. Midatne de Steel finds com pensation in science for the decay of the passion that once fired her blood; but heathen Socrates, seventy years old, thanks the gods that he is now free from that " ravenous beast," which had disturbed Ma philosophic meditations for many a year. Romance is the child of Passion and Im agination ; the sudden father that, the long pro traction mother this. Old age has little romance. Only some rare man, like Wilhelm Von Humboldt, keeps it still fresh in his bosom. In intellectual matters, the venerable man loves to recall the old times, to revive his favorite old men—no new ones half so fair. So in Ho mer, Nestor, who is the oldest of the Greeks, is always talking of the old times, before the grandfathers of men then living had come into being; ..not such as live in those degenerate days." Verse loving John Quincy Adams turns off from Byron and Shelley and Wieland and Cloethe, and returns to Pope, Who planed hle childhood and Informed hle youth The pleasure of hope is smaller; that of memo ry greeter. It is exceedingly beautiful that it ie so. The venerable man loves to set recollection to best the roll.oall, and summon up from the grave the old time, " the good old time,"—the old plaices, old friends, old games, old talk, nay, to his ear, the old familiar tunes are sweeter than anything that Medelssohn, or Strauss, or Rossini can bring to pass. Elder Brewster ex pods to hear St. Martin's and Old Hundred chanted in Hiaven. Why not? To him Heaven comes in the long . used mpsioal tradition, not . in the neologies or eonti. • • (. • * * *. : : 16 ,• Then the !choler becomes as ttitiquary ;;Ae, aged' man leeks round'at thet4tsen ; holopes I: less and works''mcire.: ea Juan locks beck on thellelds be has t: “ this is the tree I planted ;, t ' ,Iyfoo p,' , and he loves his , , . old hen, oarriago. oat, dog, staff and friendr...in *here the vine grows, I have seen an ' elding ' lean ;14 long, a sunny autumn day, beim his cottage door; in a great arm chair, his 'old dog crouched at hie feet, in the genii:Kull The autumn wind played with the old man's venerable hairs ; above him on the wall, purpling in the sunlight, hung the full cluster of the grape, ripening and maturing still more. The two were just alike ; the wind stir. red the vine leaves,•and they fell; stirred the old man's hair and it whitened yet more. Both were waiting for the spirit in them to be fully ripe. The young man looks forward; the old man looks back. How long the shadows lio in the eetting enn ; the steeple a mile long reaching across the plain, as the sun stretched out the Wile in gro- tesque dimensions. So are the events of life in the old man's consciousness.— Theodore Parker. THE EARL OF ROCHESTER. Among all the gay courtiers who crowded round Charles lf, none was more celebrated for his conviviality and wit than the Earl of itochester. Ife early displayed remarkable tel eat, and was much distinguished at Oxford; had he lived in better times, he would probably have graced his high birth ; but, after making the grand tour, as it was called, be came to court at the early ago of eighteen, there quickly to be come the leader of every excess. ALI his com panions found that his wit was greater at the close of a long debauch than at the beginning, it „vim their amusement to make him drink deeply, ,:,vies he himself confessed that for five years he neier sober. During this time he was writ :ing„.initires and squibs upon all around him, /may be supposed, making himself many conies; In one instance he handed the king a lialter which Charles opened in the expectation of finding a droll description of some ladies, but it proved to be a witticism on the monarch himself. On another occasion, he scribbled on Charles's bedroom door the well-known mock epitaph : . 6 mere lien our sovereign lord the king Whose word no nine relics on; Who never says a foolish thing, Nor ever does a wine one." lie joined Charles in many of his wild pranks in the streets of London. At one time he disap peared from the court. Just then stories were circulated about a wonderful physician, necro mancer, or Italian mountebank, who was premi sing on Tower II111; those who consulted him were startled when they found him disclosing secrets which they hoped were known to none hut their most intimate friends; the life of the Court 'seemed laid bare by his wonderful powers; and nothing was talked of for some time until the shrewder minds felt sure that only Roches ter's talent could carry on such a game, and so it proved, At other times he was inimitable as a porter or a beggar ; indeed, he could personate any character to perfection. That be had a spirit for better things, had be been wisely directed, is evident from his volun teering to join the Earl of Sandwich when he went to sea in 1COd; during the engagementthat followed, it was necessary that a dispatch should he carried from one ship to another in the very • : the fight, and In an open boat. Roohee— twmillsep this mission, at the imminent risk of Ills PAO -4111tC I, the court used to Autittlint ";, avoiding the duels 4 4 / 1 ) 01".* : $1.,50 YEA, 1 3_, IN- _Lk . A/NCE. which hi; brought upon him. Sir C Serope thtm wrdto OF him : "Thou caned hurt no man'. Inane with thy pi word, Thy pen to full Re hannlens a. thy His constitution was not strong enough to hear his eircesaes, and early broke up; then, con vinced of his pest folly, he sent fur Dr. Burnet, wads oonfossion of his reckless life and negation of all religion, and entreated to have hie double about Christianity dispelled. Burnet has left a touching account of the unfortunate nobleman's , last &Lye; be desired that all his wicked writings nitoyitteetroyed, and longed to undo the evil heti by making his deep repentance liktrtsi.tOst*lge svorhtlittlied at the early age of:hliirtAlireibilte4, - -- ~, 4.);.'14*•.?•;. • ‘e • 41 CHA PTERIii 4: i JCPPLES. - • . 2 1: 41 1PlAttbeliwatfare perhaps the most - • impious end so deli— . cione tp both arlght. - ind scent, The walker is fretpiently tempted to turn and linger near some more than usually handsome one, whose blossoms are two•thirds expanded. flow superior•it is in these respects to the pear, whose blossoms are neither colored nor fragrant ! By the middle of July, green apples are so large as to remind us of coddling, and of the Autumn. The award is commonly strewed with little ones which fall still-horn, as it were—Na- ture thus thinning them for us. The Roman writer Palladius said : t. If apples are inclined to fall before their time, a stone placed in a split root will retain them." Some such notion, still surviving, may account for some qf the stones which we see placed to be overgrown in the forks of trees. They have a saying in Suffolk, England: At Michaelmas tin's, nr a little before, flair an apple goes to the core." Early apples begin to be ripe about the first of August; but I think that none of them are so good to eat as some to smell. One is worth more to scent a handkerchief with than any per fume which they sell in the shops. The fra grance of some fruits is not to be forgotten, along with that of flowers. some gnarly, apple which I pick up in the road reminds me by its fragrance of all the wealth of Pomona—carrying me forward to those days when they will be col lected in golden and ruddy heaps in the orchard and about the cider-mills. A week or two later, as you are going by or chards or gardens, especially in the evenings, you pees through a little region possessed by the fragrance of ripe apples, end rim enjoy them without price, and without robbing anybody. There is thus about all natural products a cer •tain volatile and othereaj• 'quality which repre !onto their highest value, and. which cannot be .iirtilgarlastkor banght . a4pAck No mortal he' i! joy'erl the PaTtollavor of any fruit, and ""i-.;gaiNg men begin to taste its Man twirryliag a load of fair end fragrant early apples to market, I seem to eec e. contest going on between him and his horse on the one side and the apples on the other, and, to my mind, the tipples always gain it. T'lioy mop that ap plies are the heaviest of all things, and that the oxen begin to sweat at the mere sight of a load of them. Our driver begins to lose his load the moment he tries to transport them to where they do not belong, that is, to any but the most beau tiful. Though he gets out, from time to time, and feels of them, and thinks they aro all there, I see the stream of their evanescent and coley dal qualities going to heaven from hie cart, while the pulp and skin and core only are going to market. They are not apples, but pomace. Are not these still Iduna's apples, the taste of which keeps the gods forever young ? and think you that they will let Loki or Nand carry them off to Jittunheim, while they grow wrinkled and gray? No, for Ragnariik, or the destruction of the gods, is not yet. There is another thinning of the fruit, com monly near the end of August or in September, when the ground is Strewn with windfalls; and this happine especially when high winds 000ur after rain. In some orchards you may see fully three quarters of the whole crop on the ground, lying in a circular form beneath the trees, yet hard and green—or, if it is a hill-side, rolled far down the hill. However, it is an ill wind that blows nobody any good. All the country over, people are busy picking up the windfalls, and this will make them cheap for early apple-pies. In October, the leaves fallin a apples are more distinct on the trees. I saw one year in a neighboring town some trees fuller of fruit than I remember to have ever seen before, small yel low apples hanging over the road. The branches were gracefully drooping with their weight, like a barberry bush, so that the whole tree acquired a new character. Even the topmost branches, instead of standing erect, spread and drooped in all directions ; and there were so many poles supporting the lower ones, that they looked like pictures of banian trees. As an old English manuscript Bays, " The mo appelen the tree bereth, the more eche boweth to the folk." Surely the apple is the noblest of fruits. Let the most beautiful or the swiftest hit'ic it. That should be the " going" price of apples. THE WILD APPLE AND ITS FLAVOR The time for wild apples is the last of October find the first of November. They then get to be palatable, for they ripen late, and they are still perhaps as beautiful as ever. I mho a great amount of three fruits. which the fikrmers do not think it worth the while In enfher—wild flavors of the Muse, vivacious anti inqpirit log. The farmer thinks that he has I,ntkr in his barrels, hat lie is mistaken, urlesti h a walker's ap petite and imagination. neillyr of Which can lie have. Such as grow trite wild. and are left out till the first of November. i presume that the owner does not mean to T?:ey belong to child ren as wild as themselves—to c..-nain active boys that r know—lo tho wild-eyed woman of the fields, to whom nothing comes amiss, who gleans after all the world—and, moreover, to us walk ers, We have met with them, and they are ours, These rights, long enough insisted upon have oome to be an institution in some old countries, where they have learned how to live. I have heard that 11 the custom of grippling, which may be called apple gleaning, is, or was formerly, practiced in Herefordshire. It consists in leav ing a few apples, which are called the gripplos, [VOL. XXIV - NO. :33. - WHOLE NO. 1997. on every tree, after the general gathering, for the boye, who go with elliahlog-pules and bags to collect them." As for those I speak nf, I pluck thou' as a wild fruit, native to this quarter of the earth—fruit of , tid trees that, have been dying ever since I was a boy and are not yet dead, frequented only by the wcodpecker and thesquirrel, deserted now by the owner, who has not faith enough to look under their bows. From the appearance of the tree top, at a distance, you would expect noth ing but lichens to drop from it, but your faith is rewarded by finding the ground strewn with spirited fruit—some of it, perhaps, collected at squirrel-holes, with the marks of their teeth by which they carried them—some containing a cricket or two silently feeding within, and some, especially in damp days, a Aeneas snail. The very sticks and stones lodged in the tree-top might have convinced you of the savoriness of the fruit which has been so eagerly sought after in past years. Almost all wild apples are handsome. They cannot be too gnarly and crabbed and rusty to look at. The gnarliest will have some redeem ing traits even to the eye. You pill diii6OVeP some evening redness dashed or sprinkled on some protuberance or in some cavity. It is rare that the Summer lets an apple go wilt etrenking or spotting it on some part of its sphere. It will have some red stains, commemoratin g the mornings and evenings it has witnessed; some dark and rusty blotches, in memory of the clouds and foggy, mildewy days that have passed over it; and a spacious field of green reflecting the general face of Nature—green even as the fields ; or a yellow ground, which implies a milder flavor —yellow as the harvest, or russet as the hills. Apples, these I mean, unspeakably fair...ap• pies not of Discord, but of Concord! Yet not so rare but that the homeliest may have a share. Painted by the frosts, some a uniform clear bright yellow, or red, or crimson, as if their spheres had regularly revolved, and enjoyed the influence of the sun on all sides alike—some with the faintest pink blush imaginable—some brind led with deep red streaks like a cow, or with hundreds of Sue blood-red rays running regu larly from the stem dimple to the blossom end, like meridional lines, on a grim oolored ground —come touched with a greenish rust, like a fine lichen, here and there, with crimson blotches or eyes more or less confluent and fiery when wet— and others gnarly, and freckled or peppered all over on the stem Milo with fins crimson 04 on a. white ground, no if accidentally sprinkled from the brush of Dim who paints the Autumn leaves. Others, again, are sometimes red innifie, potful eil with a beautiful blush, fairy food, too beauti ful to eat—apple of Ilin Hesperides, apple of the evening sky I But. like shells and pebbles en the seashore s they must be seen as they sparkle amid the withering leaves in some dell in the woods, in the Autumual air, or as they tie in the wet. 'itritas, and not when they have wilted and faded in the house. I * , Moat mean Toward the end of November, though some of the sound ones are yet more mellow and perhaps more edible, they have generally, like the leaves, lost their beauty, end are beginning to freeze. It 14 fibiot-cold, and prudent fanners get In their barreled apples, and bring you the apples and eider which they have engaged; for it le time to put them into the collar. Perhaps a few on the ground show their red cheeks above the early snow, and ocoasionally some even preserve their color and soundness under the snow throughout the Winter. lint generally at the beginning of the Winter they freeze hard, and soon, though undecayed, acquire the color of a baked apple. Before the end of December, generally, they experience their first thawing. Those which a month ago were sour, crabbed, and quite unpal atable to the civilized taste, sueh at least as were frozen while sound, let a warmer sun come to thaw them, for they are extremely sensitive to its rays, are found to be filled with a rich, sweet cider, better than any bottled cider that I know of, and with which I am better acquainted than with wine. All apples are good in this elate, and your jaws are the eider•press. Others, which have more substance, are a sweet and luscious food—la my opinion, of more worth than the pine•appies whit* are imported from the West Indies. Those which lately even I tasted only to repent of it—for I am semi-civilized—which the farmer willingly left on the tree, I em now glad to find, have the property of hanging on like the leaves of the young oaks. It is a way to keep cider sweet without boiling. Let the frost come to freeze them first, solid as atones, and then the rain or a warmVinter day to thaw them, and they will seem to have borrowed a flavor from Heaven through the medium of the air in which they hang. Or perchance you And when you get home that those which rattled in your pocket have thawed, and the ice is turned to older. But after the third or fourth freezing and thawing, they will not be found so good. What are the imported half•ripe fruits of the torrid South, to this fruit matured by the cold of the frigid North ? These are those crabbed ap plea with vihiek I Olmsted my companion, and kept a smooth face that I might tempt him to eat. Now we both greedily fill our pockets with them —bending to drink the cup and save our lappets from the overflowing juice and grow more social with their wine. Was there one that hung so high and sheltered by the tangled branches that our sticks could not dislodge it ? It is a fruit never Carried to market, that I am aware of—quite distinct from the apples of the markets, as from dried apples and cider—and it is not every Winter that produces it in perfection: HOW NEAR WE ARE TO DEATH. A writer in the Independent thus dieenurees on our nearness to death; 44 When we walk near powerful machinery, we know that one single misstep and those mighty engines would tear us to ribbons with their fly ing wheels, or grind us to powder in their poll. tterous jaws. So, when we are thundering across the land in the rail car, and there is nothing but half an inch of flange iron to hold es upon the track, 59 when we arc at sea in a ship, and there is nothing but the thickness of a plank be tweemus and eternity. We imagine then that we see how close we are to the edge of a preci pice. But we de pot see it. Whether on sea or land, the partition which divides us from eternity, is something thinner than an oak plank or half an inch of flange iron. The machinery of life and death are within tin. The tissues that bold those beating power§ Irk their plane, are often not thicker than a piece of paper, and if that thin portion were pierced, it would be the same with us as if a cannon ball had struck us. Death is inseparably bound up with life in the very structure of our bodies. Struggle as he will to widen the space, no man can at any time go further from death.than the thickness of a stow of paw," THEIR BEAUTY TUE " FROZEN-THAWED " APPLE