FER Hicuotci to folitics, literature, Agriculture, Sciatic, iiloralitu, aua eneral intelligence. VOL.23. STROUBSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA. JANUARY 26. 1865. NO. 48, THE JiJiJD tuMished by Theodore Schocli. TBRM3 Two dollarsa year in advance-anil if no fixi before the end of the yeaJ, two dollars and filly kit. will be chargril. X pper discontinued until all arrearages are paid, except at the option of the Editor, i D"JUertisemeiit.s of one square of eight lines) or tw, on.or three insertions $1 60. Each additional morti.n, 50 cents. Longer ones in propoititn. JOB PRINTING, OF ALL KINDS, Brcute4 in the highest style of the Atl.and on the most tcaSonnblc terras. THE OLD AND THE NEW YEAR. The death of the Old Year has been a fa vorite theme with the poets, and very natu rally, too, for surely nothing- could be more suggestive. But who lias sang of it more musically than Tennyson, in the following Verses ? Ring out wild bells to the wild sky, The flying cloud, the frosty light; The year is dying in the night; Ring out wild bells, and let him die. Ring out the old, ring in the new, Ring happy bells across the snow ; The year is going let him go ; Ring out the false, ring in the true. Ring out the grief that snaps the mind, For these that here we see no more ; Ring out the feud of rich and poor, Ring in redress to all mankind. Ring out a slowly dying cauee, And ancient forms of party strife ; Ring in the nobler modes of l:fe, With sweeter manners, purer laws. Ring out the want, the care, the sin, The faithless coldness of the times ; Ring out, ring out my mournful rhymes, But ring the fuller minstrel in. Ring out false pride in place and blood, The civic slander and the spile Ring in the love of truth and rights Ring in the common love of good. Ring out old shapes of foul disease, Ring out the narrowing lust of gold; Ring out the thousand wars of old, Ring in the thousand years of peace. Ring in the valiant man and free, The larger heart, the kindlier hand ; Ring out the darkness of the land, Ring in the Christ that is to be. Good Night, sinks the setting sun, evenening shadows fall; Downward Soft the Light ib flying, Day is dying, Darkness stcalcth ovcr all. Good ui jht Autumn garnGrs in her siorcs Hastens on the lading year ; Leaves are dying, mds arc sighiug hipcring of the winter near. Good night ! Youth is vanished, manhood wanes, Age its forward fchnduWs throws; Day is uying, Years are flying, Life runs onward to its close. Good night! Long Dresses. 'We do not sec one lady iu ten walk- mg the streets," savs a venturesome co- temporary, without a constant Sdgetting with the long skirts of her dress. Some pin them up at regular spacs, giving them a very rumpled appearance ; others wear 'pages,' or an clastic cord just below the waist, pulling up the dress just as our graudmothers used to do when the' went to scrub the kitchen ; others frantically seize the side-breadths, holding them in frout, having thsappcrancc of a desperate determination of sitting down the first conrenieut opportunity. Some walk on, letting their dress hang, are suddenly brought upon the front breadth stumble, flouudcr, pull up, and try it again. Now all this could be avoided. Modesty and respect for the opiniou of mankind demand a reformatidn in this matter. If ladies would ouly put a quarter of a yard less ; in the length of their dresses, they would : &ve the amouut uic guuu vust, anu .is much public observaticu Home J ournal Who Take our Petroleum. Petroleum is shipped to almost every commerical porLin Europe. Great Bri tain is the largest consumer of the pro duct the export from New York thither during last year being 6,275,000 gallons. France is next in importance, her import from New York hariug been 4,625,000 gaHoaz,5 large increase upon the receipts of 1863. The fchipments to Antwerp hare also been large, amounting to 4,140, 000 gallons, against 2,662,000 gallons in J863. Bremen has imported nearly one million gallons ; Hamburg 1,176,000, and Rotterdam 433,090 gallons. The ship ments to Cronstadt indicate a large growth n the demand in Russia the export faring increased from 88,000 gallons in D363 to 4000 gallons in 186L The ex port to Genoa, Leghorn, Trieste, Lisbon nd Australia, are also oif considerable im portance. The Russian Government encourages aaaamage among its soldiers, provides the xoHjple with a house, supports them, rears their children, but .takes away all the boys at a tender age. a&d sends them to jailttarjr garisons there to be trained for tWaray. There are 300,000 of this kind of soldiers in the Russian army. AK UNMEANT REBUKE. Charles Nelson had reached his thirty fifch year, and at that age he found him self going down hill. He had once been one of the happiest mortals, and no bless ing was wanted to complete the sum of his hapiuess. He had one of the best wives, and his children were intelligent and I" o comely. He was a carpenter by trade, j and no man could command better wages, ana oe more sure or work. It any man attempted to build a house, Charles Nel sou must "boss" the job, and for miles a round people sought him to work for them. But a change had come over his ; life. A demon had met him on his way, i and he had turned back with the evil pint. . A new and experienced carpen j ter had been sent for by those who could no longer depend upon Aelson, aud he had settled in the village, and now took Nelson's place. On a back street, where the great trees threw their green branches over the way, stood a small cottage, which had been the pride of the inmates. Before it stretched a wide garden, but tall, rank grass grew up among the choking flowers, and the paling of the fence was brokeu in many j places. 1 lie house itself had once been j white, but it was dingy and dark. Bright ; green blinds had once adorued the win i dows, but uow these had been taken off I and sold. And the windows themselves bespoke poverty and neglect, for in many ! places tne glass were gone, and shingles, rags anu oiu nats nau tasen its place. and A single look at the house and iU accom paniments told the story. It was the drunkard's home. Within sat a woman yet in her early yenrs of life and thought. : she was still I hanusomc to luoic upon, but the bloom look ! had gone from her check, and the bright- ncss had faded from her eyes. Boor Ma- j ry Nelson ! Once she had been the hap I picst among the happy, but now none couui ie more miserable i jNcar her sat and tears, and the sisters wept long to two child ten, both giris, and both beauti- : gether. At length they arose and went ful in form and feature : but their garbs away, for thev saw niorc children coming. j were all patched and woru, and their feet were shoeless, ihe eldest was thirteen years of age, her sister a few years youn- ri i .i i . i er. JLiie momer was hearing them re- cite a grammar lesson, ibr she had resol ved that her children should never grow up in ignorance. They could not attend the cotnniou school, for thoughtless chil- dren sneered at them, and made them the j object of sport and ridicule; but iu this ! respect they did not suffer, for their moth-! er was well educated, and she devoted ; such time as she could spare for their in- ; struclfon. ! For more than two years Mary Nelson had earned all the money that had been j used in the house. People hired her to j wash, iron and sew for them, and besides j ; the money paid, they gave her many ar- j i tides of food and clothing. So she had , t lived on, aud the only joys that dwelt with her now were teaching her children and paying to God. t Suppcrtime came, and Charles Nelson ; would send and get him some porridge, i enme reeling home. He had worked the 1 The wife was startled by the tone iu which day before at helping to move a building, J this was spoken, for it sounded as iu days aud thus had earned money enough to gone by. j find himself in rum for several days. As j The porridge was made nice and nour he stumbled into the house the children ! ishing, and Charles ato it all. He went crouched close to their mother, and even ! to bed early, and early on the following . she shrank away, for sometimes her bus- J hand .t.is hpIv when thus intoxicated. i Oh ! how that man bad changed within -J3-. " two years! Once there was not a finer looking man iu the town. JIu frame he had been tall, stour, compact. Ind pcrfct- ly formed, while his face bore the very beau ideal of manly beauty. But all was changed now. His noble form was bent, ! his limbs shrunken and tremulous, and his face all bloated and disfigured. He was uot the man who had once been the fond husband and doting father. The loving wife had prayed, and wept, and implored, but all to no purpose ; the hus band was bound to the drinking compan ions of the bar-room, and he would not break the bands. That evening Mary Nelson ate no sup- per, for of all the food in the house, there was not more than euough for her bus- i band and children ; but when her husband had ghe weDfc Qufc aD(j icked ft ffl fa h k . her vital cnergi few ics I alive, xaai nigm me poor woman pray- ed long and earnestly, and her little ones prayed with her. r .i r ii m t v i On the following morning Charle3 N el- , . , , sou sought the barroom as soon as he rose , . , b , i r , j xi r but he was sick and iaint, and the liquor ,, . e ' .. . would not revive mm, for it would do i. th . - t..i ' stay on his stomach. He had drank ve-1 ry deeply the night before, and felt miser able. At length, however, he maged to keep down a fev glasses of hot sling, but the close atmosphere of the bar-room seemed to stifle him, and he went out. The poor man had sense enough to know that if he could sleep he should feel better, and he had just feeling enough to keep away from home ; so he wander ed not far from the village, and sank down by a stone well and was soon in a profound slumber. When he awoke the sun was shining down hot upon him, and raising himself to sitting posture, he gazed about bim. He was just on the point of rising, when his motion was arrested by the sound of voices near at hand. He looked through a chink in, the wall, and just up ! on the other side he saw his two children picking berries, while a little further off were two more girls, the children of tbe carpenter who had lately moved into the village. "Come Katie," said one of the latter girls to her companion, "let's go away from here, because if anybody should see us with those girls, they'd think we play - ed with 'em. Come." "But the berries, are so thick here " remonstrated the other. 'iNevcr mind we'll come out some lime when these ragged, drunkard's girls are not here." So the two favored ones went away, hand in hand, and Nelly and Nancy Nel son sat down upon the grass and cried, "Don't cry, Nancy," said the eldest, throwing her arms around her sister neck. "But you arc crying, Nelly." "Oh, I can't help it," sobbed the strick cn onc- j Nancy, gazing up into her sister's face. 1 ny ao tney uiame us r murmured "Oh, we are not to blame. We are good and kind, and 1 ovinjr, and we never hurt anybody. Oh, I wish somebody would love us ; 1 should be so happy." "And we are loved Nancy, think of our noble mother. Who love us as she does V "I know I kuow, Nelly: but that all. Whv don t nana love us as he used to do ? Don't you remember when he j used to kiss us. and made us so happy?, Uh, how 1 wish he could be so good to us once more. He is not " " sh, sissy ! don't say anything more. He may be good to us again ; if he knew how we loved him, I know he would. And then I believe God is good, and will help us sometime, for mother prays to lmn every day. Yes," answered Nancy, "I know she docs; and God must be our leather some time." "He is our Father now, sissy." "I know it, and he must be all we shall have by-and-by, for don't you remember that mother told us that she might leave us one of these days? dagger was upou her 1 She said a cold gger was upou her heart, and aud " oil I llnn'f V,. 'll ; The words were checked up with sobs i an . juu i, AiaiiV J uu ii As soon as the little ones were out of sight, Charles Nelson started to his feet, jous emotions that.had started up in her His hands were clenched, his eyes were i bosom, and she awoke not so-carly asusu fixed upon a vacant point with an eager jal. But she came out just as the tea-ket raze. "My God !" he gasped, "what a villain 1 1 am I Look at me now ! What a state j I am in, and what have I sacrificed to bring myself to it ! And they love me yet aud pray for me !" lie said no more, but for a few mo- mcnts he stood with his hands still clenched, and his eyes fixed. At length his gaze was turned upward, and his clasped hands were raised above his head. A moment he remained so, and thon his bauds dropped by his side,and he started homeward. When he reached his home he found his wife and children iu tears, but he af fected to notice it not. lie drew a shil ling from his pocket it was his last aud handing it to his wife, he asked her if she day he was up bad milk and He asked his wife if she ur euough to make him another bowl of porridge. "Yes. Charles," she said, "we have not touched it." "Alien, if you arc willing, I should like some more. The wife moved quickly about the work, and ere loug the food was prepared. J he husband ate it, anu he tcit better. He washed and dressed, and would have shaved had his hand been steady enough, lie left his home and went at once to a man who had just commenced to frame a house. "Mr. Manly," he said, addressing the mau alluded to, "I have drank the last rfii t . 11 drop of alcoholic beverage that ever pass- cs my lips. Ask no more questions, but ! believe me now while you see me true I Will you give me work ?" i -'Charles Aelson, are you in earnest .' asuea iUamy m surprise. "So much so, sir, that were death to : uru 'b"u """-i j- - bar-room upon ray left, I would go with tha grim messenger first. "Then here is my house lying about us . , .. , J. , , J f , .. 'in rough timber and boards. 1 place it . . , i tin ' all in your hands, aud shall look to you t , .J. ., nn -i t t to fiuish it. While I can trust you can I, , . . J A pf.i.fi firwith 9t vtrriir nnnri finri vnnnnr ? .i . rT mjr V snail see uie piau j. navu uiuwu. We will not tell you how the stout man wept, nor how his noble friend shed tears to see him thus ; but Charles Nelson took the plan, and having studied it awhile, he went out where the men were at work i b petting the timber together, and Mr. Manly introduced him as their master. T inf. Hnv hn wnrkfiri hut little, lor he was' not strong yet, but he arranged the tim-jMary Nelson among the happiest of the fvionds in this country to learn, by ad- search out a new home, which should be , aud gave directions for framing. . happy, aud her children chose their own yice brought by the last mail, that they your joint duty to beautify and miue de night he asked his employer if he dar- j associates now. j are gtj increasing in numbers and pros- lightful and happy, like this . Dropping ber At ed trust him with a dollar, "Why, you have earned three," return ed Manly. "And will you pay me three dollars a day ?" "If you are as faithful as you have been to-day, you will save me money at that." The poor man could not speak his thanks in words, but his looks spoke them for him and Manlv understood them. T-Tn ronpi'vod liio Thrpn dollars, and on his way home stopped and bought first a bas- ket; then three loaves of bread, a pound .of butter, some tea, sugar, and a piece of j beefsteak, and he had just one dollar and , seventy-five cents left.. With this load f lie went home. It was some time before he could compose himself to enter the house, bu at length he went in, and set the basket upon the table "Come, Mary," he said, brought something; home for " I bave supper. j Here, Nelly, you take the pail an over to Mr. Brown's and get two id ruu quarts s of milk." He handed the child a shilling as he spoke, and iu a half-bewildered state she - j took the money and hurried away. 1 I The wife started when she raised the Jspeab cover ot the basket, but she dared not She moved about like one in a and ever and annon she would cast I drea m. afurtive glance at her husband. He had not been drinking she knew it andyot and Mrs. Nelson s;it t.hr hihlf nnf Af- ter supper Charles arose and said to wife : his "I must go to Mr. Manly 's office to help him arrange some plans for his new house but I will be at home early." A pang shot through the wife's heart as she saw him turn away, but still she was far happier than she had been before for a long time. There was something in his manner that assured her aud gave her hope. Just as the clock struck nine, the well known foot-fall was heard, strong aud steady. The door opened, and Charles entered. His wife cast a quick, keen glance into his face, and she almost utter ed a cry of joy when she saw how he was ! changed for the better. He had been to the barber's aud hatter's. Yet nothing was said on the all important subject. Charles wished to retire early, and his wife went with him. In the morning the husband arose first and built the fire. Mary had not slept long after midnight, having been kent awake by the tumultu- tle and potatoes began to boil, and break fast was soou ready. After the meal was eaten, Charles arose, put on his hat, and then turning to his wife, he said : "What do you do to-day ?" 'I must wash for Mrs. Bixby." "Are you willing to obey me once more?" "Oh, yes." Then work for me to-day. Scud word over to Mrs. Bixby that you are not well euough to wash, for you are not-. Here is a dollar, and you do with it as you please. Buy something that will keep you busy for yourself and children. Mr. Nelson turned towards the door, and his hand was upon the latch. He hesitated, and turned back. ,Hc did not speak, but he opened his arms, and his wife sank upon his bosom. lie kissed her, and then gently placed her in a seat and left the house. When he went to his work that morning, he felt very well and happy. Mr. Manly was by to cheer him, and this he did by talking and acting as though Charles had never been uufortun atc at all. It was Saturday evening, -and Nelson had been almost a week without rum. He had earned fifteen dollars, ten of which he had now in his pocket. "Mary," he said, after the supper table had been cleared away, "hero are ten dol lars for you, and I want you to expend it in clothing for yourself and childcrn. I have earned fifteen dollars during the last five days. I am to build Squire Manly's great house, and he pays me three dollars a day. A good job, isn't it ?" Mary looked up, her lips moved, but ntrt w,,lrl m I cifi .i ,trrttfl Mm cfinrTr Iglcd a few moments and then burst into tears. Her husband took her by the arm and drew her upon his lap, and then press ed her to his bosom. "Mary," he whispered, while the tears ran down his cheeks, "you are uot deceiv ed. I am Charley Nelson once more, and will bo while I live. Not by any act of mine shall another cloud cross your brow." And then he told her the words ha had heard the previous Monday, while he lay behind the wall. "Never before," he said, "did I fully realize how low I had fallen, but the (scales dropped from my eyes then as though some oue had struck: them on with a sledge. My soul started up to a stand point from which all the tempests of earth cannot move it. Your prayers are an swered, my wife." Time passed on, and the cottage assum ed its garb of pure white, and its wholo windows aud green, blinds. The roses iu the garden smiled, aud iu every way did tne improvement worK Once again was . . ,n t? AnJast lennessec woman, a union refugee and widow, aged twenty-one ivears. arrived at l aim with eleven child- w , i -t i ren, which she had since ,her marriage at the age of fifteen. Triplets three times anu twins once, was mu wv tuto ouiu vital arithmetic was performed. A newly-married man down East says if he had an inch more happiness, he nnnlrl nnr. nopsiblv live. His wife IS 0- bliged to roll him on the floprandpat him to keep bim from beiDg too happy. j -.uuuuugii wouj, uiu ii u , teen C0mpani0ns were piaceu ;n an open uucrent Kinds, which were easily caught, Only wanted it. A hat could it mean r Had . boat with a small quantity of provisions and nothing seemed wanting to make could her nravers been nnswnd ? Oh hnw fr- ' r.i ,1 r r. . ... n TsTnrrnll- 11..,, .. i.- i- .t... i i t ' uuu rGSI1 water anu men leic to sunt lor a paitui&t:, n puupm um jvently she prayed then. themselves on the wide oceon. For up- llaPpiest on earth. They were certainly ain t ooon jNcllv returned with .the milk. 1 p ,i ,i j,... r, npnnli.ir nnnnln ;n ..imnef The Settlers of Pi ;cairn Island. From the Glasgow Herald The mutiny of the Bounty and the QottloT-c. nf Tlltnol.n Tl.. .,,1 ? - in real jfe which has exerofeed a ,. j cham ovcr mi,iong of readerJ The origin of the settlement was so strange, a doctor nor a lawyer on the island. and its subsequeut history so extraor- Ardent spirits were unknown ; all were dinary that few could read the history clua n fortune, in prospects, and posi without interest, and fewer still could t5ons, and they seemed to be altogether forget it afterward. It is pretty well free from the jealousies and heart burn known, we dare sav, that in the year la&s ad the cares and sorrows which 1787 the Bounty, under the command of Captain Wm. Bligh. left England for . - Otaheite, with the view of obtaining for was exceedingly beautiful and productive, the benefit of the West India islands a and the land which they cultivated ' sup" cargo of bread fruit and others plants, Plied them abundantly with potatoes and. with which the island abounded. j fner croPs- I'hey had cattle, sheep, and" While on the homeward voyajro the P'S3 by tIie hundred ; flocks of tnrEeVs crew mutinied, and, having taken poss3cs- 1 s;on 0f the ship, the captain and seven- S were expossed to all the dangers of the J I J J w 3 i . . ' . k. deep, and with provisions so insufficient ume t0 come, lor strangers, unless with that each man was ultimately reduced to th.e consent of the governor, are not per a fractiou of food per day. But the cour- mifcte ta take up their residence on" the' age arid resolution of Captain Bligh never failed under the terrible circumstances, and although reduced to skeletons, he had the satisfaction of landing the whole of his fellow passengers alive at the Isl- anu oi jumor, alter completing a voyage of nearly four thousand milns nnrnw the Pacific ocean. Meanwhile the mutineers headed by the lieutenant of the Bounty, Fletcher Christian, made sail for the Isl- and of Otaheite, where they landed in safety. Soon afterwards they again set sail for Darts unknown, accomnanied bv eighteen Otaheitans six men and twelve women aud for nearly eighteen years they were neither seen nor heard of by the rest of the world. They reached and took possession of Pitcairn Island, how ever, wliere, they were monarchs of all they surveyed, aud that was not much, for the islandwas a little more than three miles in circumference. In 1808 an American vessel touched at .Pitcairn island, and reported the d scov - ery or us inhabitants to the ijritisn goy - ernment; out tne wars oi iapoieon were; has, lor the past six months, been raging at the time, and the government (suffering the most iuteuse agony from had too much exciting work on hand to. pains in his breast. The most, learned think of the condition of a few half say-'physicians have attended him, but could age people located on a rocky islet in the 'afford him no relief, they failing to dia south seas. A great change, however. I cover the character of his diseaxe. A few had taken place amoug the islanders du-'davs sin en. wbilo Mr RnnL-; wo ring these . w en hfnnn vnifj All tlin ( All the Ota - s of the muti - heitan men, and all but one neers, hau cither mcu naturally or were murdered by each others hands. But a goodly number of children were boru ; these again married and multiplied, while the solitary remnaut of the mutineers, named Adams, became a goodly living old man, and was regarded by the whole com munity as a patriarch. He was quite illiterate when he landed, and yet he managed to teach himself and his asso ciates. He entered heart aud soul into the work and so well did he accomplish his task that several unimpeachable au thorities who visited the island d declared ver seen that "perhaps the world had nev so virtuous, amiable and religious a peo ple." They lived together, we were told, in nnrfflfih hnrmnnv and cnntntitninnt : thev were simnle and natural in their habits. and thev annoared to be altogether with - out guile; they were hospitable even bey j ri j - ond the limits of pruieuce, and they were patterns of conjugal and paternal affec tion. In course of time old Adams died, but the effects of his precept and example lived after him, aud the new generation which has arisen on the island continued as free from vice and as full of religious fcrror and good work as the old. But their numbers were rapidly mcrcastng Thoy began to find themselves in difficul ties for waut of space and fresh water, and when the population had increased to eighty-seven they were removed at their own request to Otaheite. Here, however, the' found the world a very different world indeed from that of Pit cairn island. They were very soou dis gusted with the levity and low morality of their relations and neighbors, and af ter a nine months' residence they charte- rcu a vessel anu returnea to incir uiu i quiet home. From 1881 to 1835 they continued to live and make the mo3t of J life on Pitcairn islaud. but the want of i sufficient space again presented difficulties Thomas Jones, were fond of dropping iu which could not be overcome. In these o Mr. Smith's parlor and spending an" circumstances they petitioned the British hour or two with his only daughter Mary, government for a grant of Norf6lk island, One eveniug. when Brown and Mary had which was about to bo made a peual set-j discussed almost every topic, in his tlement. In the following year the re- sweetest tones, struck ouC as follows: aucst was granted, and the little colony . "Do you think, Mary, you could leave were removed shortly alterwarus to uiim new home. The Pitcairn Islanders on Nolfolk island ever since ; aud it will no donbt be gratifying to their numerous uering sausiauiui ii .y ly. In 1862 they were "Sir John Young, Gov- nffic;allv by p lVh Wula wW vonnrt to thn uiuui j .....ww, r t c sjn.n.,crn i..-f uanr niihlieh. e( u the Sydney papers. Sir John found tiiem living in security and abundance uoeentjv 0iaa re2Ular attenders upon divine worship, "and free from alt those foul practices aud baneful superstitions which render the occupants of too many of the lovely islands iu the Pacific licen tous and uuhappy." They hud increased in number to two hundred and eighty when Sir John Young visited the islands and they had a magistrate of their own, elected by all men and women above ei"h- teon years of a-e hut crime was utterly iinfrnfm-n anicinr fllOfX Tl, I 1 gyman and a schoolmaster paid by the home government, but there was neither embitter lite in any other part of the it mi i - . world- Ihe lsIand on which they lived" Jna wua lowl swarmca their groves ; the sea aro""d the island teemed with fish of 1.1 ' mm . ana t,,ey are llKely to remain so for some lsiauu. xney are theretore lelt m com partive ignorance of the world and ife ways, and where ignorance, as in this ins tance, is bliss, it is surely folly to be wise j Here we find the dreams of the most i notable philanthropists fully realized, and apparently withstanding the effect of :ime s a community complete within itself, and blessed with comfort, contentment, and happiness, without titles or rank, "ches or poverty, crime, viciousness !of ( habits, luxury, greatness or grand eur.. I ln snorfc l"e Pitcairu islauders, in their new home in the South Seas, are deci dedly one of the most interesting portions of the human race "where life," in the words of a late writer, "flows pleasantly on, and whero the troubles and turmoil of the world are only heard as the echo' of far distant thunder." A Remarkable Case'. Mr Wm.L. Ho kius, or aa lie is more fa- ! miliary known Gen. Hopkins a well of South Baltimore. : known resident I J , w Ii inuu MUd 111 J Y ' Jr. t...t U:.. 1 1 l. . p.i. i ling about his chamber, he felt a pricking j sensation about his left thish. and upon. searching for the cause, he discovered the point of a pin sticking through the flesh. The pin was removed and fbtfrid to be corroded. Mr. Hopkins, upon removing the stranger, remembered that' about the time he was taken sick, he had swallowed a pin while eatiug a fish bait at the Laley House, ob: the line of- the ; Baltimore and Ohio railroad -"Bal. Clipper. Parade of Bounty Jumpers. An Iudianapolis paper gives the fol- j lwing descriptiou of a parade of bounty jumPer3 in that city a few days since": 'Ihcrc were about a hundred aud nfty in this squad of "regulars" handcuffed together by twos, with a long rope ruu- between each two through the entire 1 ie"Sc 01 l"e one end or wnicn was ! made. fast to :l huge negro's left haml, while in his right he carried a large bell. On his breast he wore a large priuted placard bearing the following inscription, "Agency for Bounty Jumpers." Ou the back of each of the others was a placard inscribed "Bounty Jumper." In this way they were marched through' the principal streets of the city, the old darky clanging his bell and the band bringiug tip tlta f rear playing the "Rogue's March." The line was strongly guarded by infantry. ' Among these "jumpers" was a mau for merly ou the police in that city, and an other whose wife had offered twenty-five thousand dollars iu gold to have her hus band released, but Colonel Warner couldn't see it, nor anything else but the "jumpers" going to the front. The city had beeu overrun with such fellows fur a long time, and Col. Warner was bound to break it up, and took th'is successful method of accomplishing it." A Very Great Rascal. Two young lawyers, Archy Brown and tamer anu muiner, una jueasaut uome, this with all its ease ana com torts, aua emt have remained grat6 to the far West with u young law Ilia... 1 I . yer, who nau out mile dcsiucs nis pro fession to depend , upou. ind with rVt'm ner neau soitiy on ui cmmiuu.simnuiM pered "I thiuk I could, Archy." "Well," said he. there s iom j,onc8, who s going . ,, to emigrate anu wauts to get a wife : Fir mention it to mm. , S250.000 worth of watoh'snrinjrs-mVfv be nroduced from a bar oJ'Iron oniririallv vaiue(j aj 35. - A reading room fn: Richmond, supplied with the northern paperschargas aripey day for admission- i