=I 0t littibutlitte. OFFICIAL_. PAPER Of Pittsburgh, Allegheny City and Allegheny County. Gr. Iniur lid i iierold Strut. VIRDAY. APRIL I. 1810 -------- Beams at Frankfort, 051 Ptrwilatri /intworp, 546 GOLD closed to Now York on inster day still Mn. TIALOI4• who contcati the Con go:salons] mat oft*. Reading, from the Vth District of this State, has established his own claims by s majority of 73 to the satisfaction of the Committee, which will !sport in.his favor at once. Tim concurrence of Its Committee on Finance is yety likely to carry the judg ment of the Senate also, In Ayer of the Reuse resolution, passed last month, to collect the fire per coot. taz i on incomes this year, and extend it, at . fluto per cent. for one year more. Cowman Is intensely absorbed in her municipal canvass, for members of the City School Board, at next Monday's electiMi. Political consideritlons seem to be forgotten, the main issue being upon the exclusion of the Bible from the schools. The friends of the excluding 'piffle, fight hard, but are not likely tootle- Tam Naturalisation law ism construct Vd as to deprive all foreign bon colored canons from becoming citizens of these United States, and the Win Amendment does not remove the disability: ' This re maining discrimination in favor of the white race, will in all probability be wiped out, a bill to thatelrecthailng been prepared and presented to the • Judiciary Committee by Senator Swaim. Tux final addition of the XVth Article to the Constitution has come too lath to qualify the full colored vote in Connecti cut, for the election of next Monday. The State has a registry law for all its voters, under which the lists were closed south days since. It appears, however, that a limited number of the colored men have been "provisionally" registered, in' ad. ♦ance of the Proclamation, and their votes may be admitted. Tug newspapers outside of the Western Associated Press are endeavor' ng to prove to the satisfaction of their readers that the Western Union Telegraph is owned and controlled by the W. A. P. All Journals interested in the latter associa tion will hail with, delight the 'establish ment of suchowneialdp, but we think this formidable Telegraph Company will hardly - submit to the transfer of their valuable property into . other hands. Ton colo . red people • of these cities will celebrate their political. cmancipaticin on the . fouith Tuesday of April, : with the oereinonies of a jubilee. If they shall be joined is expected by numerous and huge delegations of , new voters from other parte of Western Pennsylvania, the cc. culon will not fail to be one of great in, taut and, in more than one point of view, of sigulfiCant ! importance. We welcome them to the fullest franchise of American citizenship, and ecmildently await the satisfactory proofs, which they will know to afford, that they are worthy of every equal privilege with the most favored race of a previous day. - TER Cmnbetiand Transcript, remark ing upon the local benefits to ensue from the early completion of the Connelhrille railway, alludes to a broader view of the matter, as follows: This road will supply the link between . the water tranaportation of the east and west which will complete thschatn. We are not prepared with the at:Claxton toile. tall this slew of the matter. Suallee to name that the freight from the rut can be brought to Georgetown by seabbard vessels—thence to our oily by the Chesa peake and Ohio Canal—then to Pitts. Wag h by the ConneLlaviLle road, and thence by steamboat to all points In the west, northwest, south end southwest, that giving a water dr ninuntratiors from east to west, and ewe versa, with the ex *option of about 100 miles of rall between Pittsburgh and Cumberland. Coarscrunas to which this journal has given expression, within the twe weeks put, touching the final settlement of the Fending bill in the Howe, are strongly confirmed by the progress of events. It Is now more than aver probable that, with certain concessions already Miff• caged, the bulks will . have to content themselves. The four per cent. rate for bonds will be struck out; the effort to se cure five per cent. u the lowest 'rate, though vise - Mardi pushed, will not pro. bald: succeed. The one per cent. tax' n &natation Is quite outaln to be dropped. Not only. the Secretary, but it majority of the Haase Incline to make the bill accep table to a potential Interest, If It is practi cable. True is a bad business I Oar its idea . of a ship•canal, between the River and the Likes, which was to bring the fleets of the world, the "argosies of Ormus and the Ind," to the wharves of this city, has been slain, strangled' in the very house of its friends. Oar fraternal • ealabtmer in the promotion of this spien- . did enterprise, the Benidor from Erie, has deserted us, and in the same hour gives the carp dot vacs to that remarkably prointhing scheme of internal navigation. 'He secures the legislative - sanction to his last bill, surrendering the dried up canal to a railway company, who are to lay their =eke in the ditch, and so make an end of the idea - eta canal enlist gemsnt for all time to come. Why, ob, why; could the Senator go back in this shameful way upon so charmingly eadrittlie a project? '.oer 4tielinp are. harrowed up quite too exquisitely with torture, by this shocking cue of =parental abandonment of off. , • win, to say mach upon It now 1; When present griefs shall be assuaged by th e healing leaven of time, we may indulge, in tassioriam, in a brief tribute to themerits of oar departed ship canal. Avian the San Domingo tmainess hiks teen shelved, the gossips at Washington again begin to talk of Cabinet-making. One rumor is that Mr. Fisk will retire and be replaced by Oen. Butler; -another that Attorney General Hoar Is about to return to Concord; and still another that Mr. Barnwell alms at a scat in--the Senate from Massachusetts, eke Wil son, and that he will go luta training at Coos for the next Prelldentlal nomina tion. Our own advices support the latter two of these rurnons--in which our only present occasion for concern is lest the cotmtry may lose an A No. l &ors. tali of the Treasury, to get in return a defeated Presidential aspirant: General Grant himself will feel constrained, we think, to accept the zarobretion for , 72, if urged upon him as persistaitly as it is likely to be, and If be -can make rip his wind to be content with the Chief Magic tmey of only so much of this Wed= world as is bounded between the two • roam. If he should Insist upon hating snore, it would be the only possible con tingency in which ho may realize oon• aulcrably leas, alter the close of his present terse. Grant and the Republic as k is, will make a very fair campaign cry SELP.SACRIFICING PATRIOTS The banks have made their organized assault upon the Fending bill, and retire without having carried their point. On the contrary, their chimpions before the form Committee have revealed a case intrineically ee weak - that ground has been-actually-iota, and the bill, In its main features materially strengthened. The Secretary, who was also ln attendance,- has not found it necessary to present any formal reply to their arguments and ap. peals against die brn, all of which were colored with Imputations against the gen eral policy of the tlecratarY. When an issue is suffered to rest in that way, it is significant of the strength of the position which his resisted attack. In any points of view, Mr. BOVTRELL has exhibited an admirable discretion m thus respecting the capable Judgment of the members of the Committee. The bank representatives insisted that the Onvernment had no more right to require thins to change their bonds than to demand It from individuel holders. They seem to forget that the banks arc the creatures of the Government, while the citizen is not. The Government, nevertheless, robe neither clues; to each alike is offered the option of payment in cult, according to the face of the con tract, or a fresh loan of the money on different terms. Certainly there can be no hardship in this to complain of, especially from the ono class which obtalbed its corporate existence tinder an express engagement to submit to the national will, at any future period, in the way either of an amendment or-an abso lute repeal of the law creating these Insti tutions. Bappose the Government should, instead; order them all into liquidation and extinction I Against that, too, these institutions could protest with the same degree of jostles, and no more. The banks dwell upon their patriotism In coming to the aid of the nation in its hour of need. Take five per cent,—the first Aye per cent. in the order of time— of this number, and'it might be admitted that patriotic motives counted, more or less, in their reckoning of both duty and profit. 'with the remaining ninety-five per cent. of the National banks, it was simply a rush, a jam, almost a dead, glut in the Treasury door way, of a sharp eyed crowd of tit.. lams who saw a good thing moan. chilly, and each would be the first to seize it before his district could be fait When we have such a cheap parade of loftier motives, we most be excused for looking a little closer under the surface.. We, who remember the race of the hankers to absorb these valuable privileges, after a few sharp bell-wethers had ventured through' the gap, cannot easily forget so much of our financial history as to give these gentlemen credit for purely disin terested patriotism of motives. The committee were told that the banks could take their money and do better with it, than bank on four and a half per cent. bonds. Who hinders them from doing so? Congress . bee. no Idea of any compulsion in the premises. ' It la a great mistake, said they, to sup pose that they bad made large profits If this be as they said, it is the first thne we ever knew figures to lie. - —ln short, never before did we see such a to-do made by losing parties, be cause the facilities for still further loam were to be dented to them I The Com mittee will soon report, and we shall thin know how well the beast:aye succeeded in retaining their most unprofitable and burthensome fianchlwa, in ungrateful re• !Wanes to the merciful hand which offera them relief, and gold at par for their bonds. SAX DOMINGO BL.II.XBA.LLIED We shall not need to Interest ourselves, or attempt to bespeak the Interest of our readers, to the politics of the Territory of San Homing°, this year. The treaty for that annexation le very dead indeed, the time limited for the exchange of ratifications having expired without any Arne:lean acceptance, nor even a fair show for it. Had the scheme been lied by the Senate, we &cold have been expected to enlighten our readers at any time, upon flee minutes' notice, in all the details of the new territory's &UM ; how the canvass stood at its ,-prtmary meetings—whether Cabral would beat Baez at the polls—who were the opposing candidates for Congress whether to count our new island for protection or free trade—and bow she wUtild go for President In '72 or '76. From all this tax upon-the vigilance and reach of our journalism, the Senate has handsomely i relieved us. Let us be thankful for so much Yet it is not everybody who feels com fortible over this result. The San Dom !likens don't like it; they had made up their minds to annexation, with either an unanimity most remarkable, or an amount of ballotbox stuffing which would have done credit to the Sixth ward of New York, or the Fourth ward of Philadelphia, under their extremist Deus. ocratic control, and which; as we must candidly admit, would go a great way to prove the thorough preparation of those intelligent Islanders for annexation, to at least so much or our beloved country as may be bounded within those wards. Disappointed now in their sanguine ex pectations, all their fond hopes for an American citizensblp blasted, the too con fiding islanders will not consent to aban don all hope for an ultimate absorption in the Union. We can have four months more,—or fourteen if we wish-4o make up our minds; we can take all the time we want to consider the question, if weshall only take them at last to our bosoms. This is very kind of them= too generous, indced;for our own sense of Justice! We shall take more time than they know of, before the American people can consent to the incorporation Into their Republic of any portion of this earth which one of oar pioneer emigrants cannot make his own unaided way to, walking with his rifle on his shoulder, by I the aide of the covered wagon which holds his bona:bold goods and gods. Si far as the swelling wave of American progress can roll on unobstructed by any physical tants; so it will surely cover. in Ifesiven'a good- time, the whole of this Northern Continent, and then press south ward to the keys of both oceans at Te. huantepec and Darien. Wherever it Ind ■ a sea-shore, there only will the move • meat •bo checked. What may come otherwise, after the people have bad time for reflecting upon more complete Infor mation upon the fects, to promote the absorption of the Weida in the West Indian archipelago, will depend upon the accurate tudor with which these facts shall be collated and addressed to an in telligent people. But our destiny Ls not manifestly in that direction,. for the test Part of a generation to come. oar President, who is himself better persuaded or the expediency of the pres. ent annexation. than either Congress or the anderst,Ja to 1.."' to hls favorite . projeciWitt• • '''‘..!...iterisUc te fthelt7 of MIMI& sualt give it up Yet. but ProPmea, with the consent of pougreas, to Mad out, during the sum- mer, a commission from that body, to examine and report upon the material situation •of an Domingo, in the hope of a more favora ble judgment, upon the facts thus ascertained and digested, at the session of next winter. Wo fear that all this would bo hut time and money lost. No ono is in danger of being persuaded into a consent or convinced by argument to take a soli tary Island of all the West Indies. Tho President's surer way would be to get up a national quarrel in that quarter, which would provoke us to take the entire. archl pole& by a strong hand. That is the only present chance for any such.annex• ation. George U. 2homas. The ablest of Grant's lieutenants is the lint to go. General George IL Thomas, whose death we record with muck pain, was, of all the army subordinates, near. est a counterpart of the great leader de veloped by the rebellion. Moro deliberate in planning, he was hardly lesa.daring In conception; not less stubborn in resist. ante, he was only leu prompt. in acting than Grant. ' In both private and' public career be was without reproach and above suspicion. Twice he refused pro. motion at the coat of others; again and again he declined to accept rewards for hie services which he thought might bet ter be expended in the Interest of the private soldiers; throughout his ca reer of thirty years he so bore himself as not to excite the ha. tred of a single rival; always he was modest and generous and just; always patriotic, always helpful and true to all. Lotus not forget that he was a Virginian who never faltered in his allegiance to the Union, a Regular who war the Idol of the 'Volunteers, a West Pointer who never sought a promotion, 'complained about his pay, abused Congress, or in trigued for place. Some of these are traits that made him very notable at the outbreak of the war, others made him very notable of late, and all entitle him, to the grateful remembrance in which his name is sure to bo cherished. A fortnight ago, writing In the full hope that we might still count on a score of years of service from him, we said that In the Judgment of the Americen people George IL Thomas would long remain the model soldier of the war. Now that he is gone we can do no more than repeat that esti mate.—.N. Y. Tribune. Another sketch of the carver of this diatinguished servant of his country says: Liter the close of the war, General Thomas was appointed Commander ofthe Military Division of Tennessee, embra cing the States of Tennessee, Kentucky, I Georgia and Alabama. In this difficult position he administered the affairs of the district with admirable 'kill and patriot. ism. President Johnson made several attempts to win the popular General to his side, but met each time with the most inglorious defeat. When he heard that Mr. Johnson had sent his name to the Senate for promotion to a Mreret Lieu. tenant , Generalahip and General, he promptly sent the following telegram to Mr. Wade: Lounivms, Fob. 22, 1868. Hon. B. F. Wade, President of rhaSenals: The morning papers of Louisville an nounced officially that my name wu yesterday sent to the Benito for confir mation as Brevet Lieutenant General and Brevet:General. For the battle of Nub- vine; I was appointed Major General United States Army. My services since the -ever do not merit so high a compli ment' and it is now too late to be regarded SS a compliment if conferred for services during the war. I therefore earnestly request that the Senate will not confirm the nomination. Gamma H. Tuousa, Major General.. General Thomas was in command of the Department of the ()timberland, head- quarters at Nashville, until some time last year, when ha was assigned to the com mand of the Division of the Pacific, Including California, Oregon,Nevada, Arizona, Idaho, and Washingon Terri tory. Els adm inistration of Aids has been admirable, and he -was highly respected by all who knew him. la the army he was universally beloved, as is shown by the endearing epithet of "Old PB9 Thom as," which the troops always gave him. He was a thorough soldier, and totally free from all political aspirations. He stood as high In the estimation of Gen. Grant as Sherman, and will be mourned y the whole peoas. It is probable that his remains will brought to Troy for interment, and placed near those of the late Gen. WooL Legal Tender. In the Supreme Court. The Philadelphia Lodger says : The legal-sender question was involved, at least its directly, In at least half a dozen other cues decided in the last two years at Washington, and now In print; yet there being other grounds on which those cases could as well be decided, decision on the legairender Faint was avoided; and it was always avoided until the case of Hepburn vs. Griswold presented the point In a form pine and simple, when it could no longer be avoided and bag to be decided. And the reasons' of this are obvious. No court wilt unnecessarily decide a great question of Constitutional law. If the cue presents grounds on which a decision which every one will admit to be right can be made, no Court, while acting in_• regular judicial way, will go out of its way to make a incision by which values over &whole land are affected and by which a people are ' thrown into paroxysms of party - rage. We apprehend It to be clear therefore, that unless the Supreme Court seta In • way In which It does not usually act, the lets! tender question, it existing In the case referred to, would not, under any circumstances, be passed upon. And as there has been a solemn decision already made, and lust made, in one way, on the point, it will require &still greater depart ure from ordinary judicial action for it to go out of its way and unturcauaray reverie that decision. Whether they will do all this, supposing that possibly they could, Is • matter about which nothing positive can be affirmed. • It can only be affirmed that the Court never has yet, In Its history of eighty-one years, acted In such a way. If 'it did now first so act, the act would Indicate that the spirit of party which has so Impaired the dignity and lessened the authority of some State Courts, ,had, et last, reached that august tribunal, and that there is now no place • in the whole land where men can go In suite and certain hope for J own= True republicans, we are sure, would deplore that such an event had happened In the ascendence of a party which bore their name, and which they follow, though not Its errors, even when arising from a zeal that they would admit was patriotic. All men, under whatever party standard gathering, would have cause to deplore even the beginning of such a state of things. It is of compara tive unimportance what has been or may be decided on this legal-tender point;, but it la of infinite importance that the highest tribunal of our Republic remain above the reproach of faction!. Today one party is in the ascendant. Two, six or ten years hence, its rival for power may tritimpb. Let that first party show that iv bas been "packing" the Court and why, in turn, shall not its opposing inc. comers "swamp" it f STATIC TAXATION or NATIONAL BANK SNANILSO—The Supreme Court of the United States held that the property In a bank called a share wee distinct item the capital of the bank, and that such& share, as the property of the shareholder, could not be taxed by the State, notwittistaad leg the fact that all the stock of the bank was Invested in Government securities. The law requiring thebankoffleers to pay the tax, It is said, does not make it lax upon the stock of the bank. The banks are held to be subject to State laws in res- pect of the tax on shares of the holders, and they may be compelled to pay It. They could be garnisheed for a personal debt of a stockholder, and It Is thought the object of the State law In this case was to make them similarly responsible in respect of the tax . imposed. This de. eidon was In the case of the First National 414n:.isville agai n st t he State of eek? and the op ini afli ma the::tbecavor a ppea rs ofhil tnuchcfjutente. Tits snow at Cinten Bay is without =el , the reeds never having been so Wed an by the snow storm week before isaL In the main street of that city drifts were eight feet high, slid the travel almost supended from the country l eveed.- But on the whole the Breen Bay Advocate chronicles most favorable auspices for the coming session, trote rteg t„ as the snow bas been COntinnons through the winter, has covered the wheat, has e na bled the g of lOi, of timber, of cord w of shingles, • fcharmed, ati, VIITSBURGH Did ,Y onzEnt : FRIDAY MORNING, APRIL 1, 1870. The Baby The perfection of the providence of childhood is easily acknowledged. The care which covers the root of the tree under the tough husks and stony cases, provides far\ the human plant the mother's breast and the lather's house. The tiizt of the nestfer is comic, and its tiny, be• 'etching weakness is compensated per fectly by the happy, patronising look of the mother, who is a sort of high reposing Providence toward it. Welcome to the cereals the puny struggle, strong in his weakness, his little arms more irreeletible than the soldier's, his Ups touched with persuasion which Chatham, and Pericles in manhood bad not. His unaffected la. mentations when he lifts up his voice on high, or, more beautiful, the sobbing child —the face all liquid grief, as he trice to ewpilow his vexation—soften all hearts to pity and to mirthful and clamorous compassion. The small despot asks so little that all reason and all nature are on his side.' His ignorance is more charm ing than all knowledge, and his little sins more bewitching than any virtue. His flesh Is angel's flesh, all alive. "In fancy," says Coleridge, "presents body and spirit In unity; the hotly is all animated." Lit day, between hie three or four ,sleeps, he coos like a pigeon house, sputters and spurs and put on faces of Importance; and when he fasts, the little Pharisee fails not to sound his trumpet before him. By lamplight he delights in shadows on the wall; by daylight, In yellow and scarlet. Carry him out of doors—he is overpow- ered by the light and by the extent of natural objects,- and is silent. Then presently begins his nee of his fingers, and ho studies power—the lesson of hie race. First it appears in no great harm In architectural tastes. Oat of blocks, thread spools, cards aid checkers, he will build his pyramid with the gravity of Philadio. With an acoustic apparatus of whistle and rattle ho explores the laws of sound. But chiefly, like his senior countrymen, the young American studies new and speedier modes of transportation -mistreating the cunning of his legs, he wishes to tide on the necks and shoulders of all flesh. The small enchanter nothing can withstand—no sonority of age, no gravity et character, uncles, aunts, grand sires and grandmas, fall an may prey; he conforms to nobody, all conforms to him; all caper and make mouths, and dibble and chirrup to him. On the strongest shoulders ho rides, and pulls the hair of laureled heads.—Emerson. Papal Infallibility The following is a 'translation of - the additional article to the Schemata defining Papal infallibility, which was published by the Colope Gaza.: Chapter to be added to the decree on the .nupremacy of the Roman Pontiff, stating that the Roman Pontiff cannot err In the definition of matters of faith and morals. - The Holy Roman Catholic Church poe. sessos the highest and complete supremo. cy and predominance over the whole of the Catholic Church, which she truly and humbly recognizes to have received with the fullness of power from the Lord himself through St. Peter, prince of apostles, whose successor Is the Roman Pontiff. And, as she Is bound to defend before others the truth of the faith, so also any questions which may _ aerie re. garding faith must be defined by her judgment, becsure, moreover, the words of our Lord Jesus Christ, saying, "Thou art Peter," &c., are not to be passed over. These words have hien confirmed by subsequent events, for the Catholic tell. glon has ever been preserved Immaculate, and its doctrine has ever been celebrated, In the Apostolic See. Hence we teach, with the approval of the Holy Connell, and define as a dogma of faith, that by the Divine assistance the Roman Pontiff, of whom, in our Lord Jesus Christ, "I have prayed for thee," stn., cannot err when, acting as the highest teacher of all Christians, he authoritatively defines what should be adhered to by the whole Church In mat ters of faith and morals. and that this prerogative of the Incapability to err, or infallibility of the Roman Pontiff, is equally extenalve with the itirallibility of the Church. If any one should presume to contra dict this our definition, which may God 'red, let him know that tor thereby falls away from the truth of the filth. A Card Extraordinary To run Ammuosm Psorti, Ursaing: I em commissioned to procuce the name and address of every person in the United States who takes a friendly inter est. In Woman's Enfranchisement. In order to compile this role of honor, I hereby request every such person. imme diately on reading this announcement, without waiting long enough to fOrget or neglect it, to take pen and Ink, write the name and address legibly, and forward the same to me, postage paid—a trifling cost which you will not beerudge to a good cause. Anybody sending in one envelope all the names in family, village, or association, will render a helpful ser vice. Three thousand American news papers will oblige a brother editor by generously trading this card in their columns. T he purpose of this registra tion is to knOw to whom to send Impor ; tent documents. Friends of the cause are urged to respond so simultaneously that their letters shall fly hither like a snow storm.' Sign at once. And the day will come when your children and children's children will be proud of the record. -Fraternally, TIIIODONI TILTON. . Editor of Oa indepoirtent, Box TM, Now York City P■per, Haskeretillefe The Japanese paper hatidkereheifs are assuredly coming, if a contemporary be right . The piper collar manufacture now has been extended to less prominent but to more important-garments of great strength and flexinility, which can be sawed with a machine, giving seams almost ea strong as a woven fabric.. t, The inventor has aargcularly applied it to the production ofpeticoats, which are either printed In i mitation of the faehion• able skirt of the day or stamped out with open work of such beauty and delicacy as no amount of labor with seiner and ncedle'could imitate. The marvel is that these really beautiful productions can be sold at retail at fifteen cents each Imitation cretonnes and chintz for bed furniture are also made, a set costing at retail about $l 50. The felted material Is so flexible that a curtain may be twist ed Into • rope and shaken out again, showing as little creasing as chintz simi larly treated. There are also tablecloths embossed with signs of great beauty. This felted paper may in the end have a serious influence on the production of the woven fabrics it is Intended to displace. Imitation leather, impermeable to water, is likewise made of it, and produces a cheap and nseini covering for furniture,- andeven serves for shoes.—Paper Trade Reporter. Tirana appears no longer any doubt as to the passage of the bill extending to the District of Columbia s territorial form of government, although the mruure Is strongly opposed by Mayor Bowen and other city °dicta's, and they arc making a determined fight againstl, it. With the exception of a few. office hblders, the Re publicans are almost unanimous In de siring to take the control of the city oat of the bands of the present corrupt officers. The present city government have been very reckless in the expendi ture of money, and the city has. been In the bands of the "ring," the parallel of which cannot be found-outside of New York. . REGISTRY is resorted to now, very much, for transmission of ordinary let. tens, without enclosures. Particularly is this feature on the increase m to foreign letters, many of which now come in registry en*elopes; the writers being willing to pay the extra expense to secure greater certainty of delivery. - Should the rates on registered matter be reduced the number will largely; Increme, and it is more than probable that a very 'substan. till portion of the letter mall matter will be registered. Therefore, Instead of .bo• ¢gMoliehed, very greatly Increased fa. ditties will be required, to transact the business. - . Erreassuman sending telegrams by the government lines, mail letters shnultene. only to let their friends know the des. patches ire coming. CARBOLIC SOAP 'AND CARBOLIC SALVE. ALEXANDRE KID OLUVE CLEANER, . . . EXULTS!! H.Llft, TOOTH NALL BRUIT Fl ES. Imported Dross and Chemicals. BVIWs aratToos; also Imported 'Perfumes of !MI sled .014 at the 'Tors lzonin prices. at .IA.ZILEIS E. innSEIFIN oft Co.•s Wald %TORN. Cromar,Pens Old itioht Shwa, (6),1 N. V%ara7oo'ill And IThlte 01%{u• SOW. liatka Camilla poop, mold by lb. MOO Or NOT ENGAGED "Not eagagen ? 1 ant so glad. MITI lon tall with me, then ? An oasis for me in this desert of crowd; Blest be the blindness of dancing men, And Laurtut for playing SP loud! A nit so you time with the Ardeely set? • ro Co. Wk with them az you ta/lt with we! Do those men ylat•o and wirer forget, •ell aaaaa again be In faucl free? 1 scarce remembered you, fair ea 700 tee. And you'll beam as bright ...Yen I ate don , Carcicze thoughts DCA vanished star Make a starless Milo so lone. . I may tate one dower before I go— One little bad to tell the giver? Oh, yes! it will d'e In a day, I know, Mat the memory, serer-lover!" A (watt sunny bray that was !stranger to GOROW NeY potty sad dwell on such words again. • 11511 (led. half sad to morrow. Wen. 10Veng bled, rarer plea—sesong oeu o.lesl he fair and 557, Nate of l i o nt a ge whop from a nattering tongue Only for Ire thing to (ST. i2hat valmo esmrs. mr 7 Certainly no— Have I sot kept the eery nek., two , And Skoald I have kept and remembered them For toy °Mt else bet.mou Oh,ept praise you for dancing In time, .Led Widen better than all the reel, But Deceit* It Is so, ltblek it no crime, To Ilk* von !or • partner beat. Will did Tau loon when 1 deuced with We Jolla With a look m brain as • storm or thunder. Ana sow pot your drawing - room manner. on And your brighten fsee, I wonder 7 Well, wnl yoe tote me to bare some lee 7 Dear, how [mph It Is on the stab. 7 rot '. not... Med to stay with any one • A minute or two In the all 7" A look Mit has .corned the tenderest guide, • A heart that has dreamed itself stern and Woof. 1. bent an the light of a r.yette Aud elialued by. .yren's song. No, there. IN, Knight. nneoininertil let — Rove r go lost, are you e.t.d. , toads. In the sotcsuare eel, by a clever. coquette. Italy for camc,hing to say / •TL a glorious prowess, In wroth, with • word To recent' the thrusting ted time the Prarad. Eves as ► teat by the breath is stiffed. A spray by the dew-drop bowed: And so the battle goes bravely through, And heart gets hardened as tongue Sows tree, And swells the blazon. ...guff/on Leff yen fibs/4 eioquef me." Tight on, brays foals enivel &krite— ria, am rosy lips, 'lid • stair/ Mime, J... . 7 fee life for Ilfe. • Weapons and lists the same: BOP. I wmatadeJain to hide Um Youth Mot . a dlieP — us the proverb is old' . elate daily the delicate miracles wronalit, Hearty lbe legend told, too will sorely own It an Idle treed, 'theism. gallant and faithless maid, That forgive, Ys victim to suffer and bleed, Tore,. vain boar's pride. Toe wit! curtly