TKHni OF APT-BHT1IWJ. Tba following ara tbs rates for sdvertWcftn the Abibioab- Those baring advertising to do will And it convenient for referent i URIU-TWO DOLLARS er'.anaata. laietf o r Mt paid wlthla the year. . i No paper AtoeoaUnuesl ;(l nnUlslt arrearage! ara paid. , . , "';,,.,!. Thesa term will ba striotly adhered to hereafter. , , - If anbeoribnnet;leetor refuse to lake thalr saws ' pepenfrnmUit ones to which they are directed, they are reepetsribls until they have settled to bills Bd . : entered them doa tinned. - Postinsattcr will pleas Mt M eat Agent, Ml . frank letters containing eubseriptlon money. . Thay art permitted to do this aader tlio Fort Otne Law ff . - ,; ! c: JOB FBI NT IN O. ' Wo hav oonrtacted with oar establishment a wall It. I 3 t. 1 1m. I tin. I Am I 1 v. ivi ,ua f I ,oo j,ei4,i0 s,on s io.no M 1,00 ,60 p,0 r.ool ii.oe 6.00 6.00 li.Offl so w 10,00 WOO 10,00) t,0 Si,m 90,99 116,00 J,00 Tan linet of this tiaod typo (minion) make eoe square.. Auditors', AdoinUtralon' and Kieefltors' Notloea 3,00. ObituariM (.io.pt tho amial announaamanl whleh li free,) to ba paid for at advertising ratal Local Notices, Booi.tr Resolutions, As , 19 oonio par lino. Advertisements for Rellciom. Charitable and Edu eational objaeta, one-half tba above rates. Tranalent advertisements will ba publUhad antll ordered to be discontinued, and ebarged accordingly. PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY MORNING, BY II. B. MASSER & CO., SUNBURY, NORTHUMBERLAND COUNTY, PENN'A : teleoted JOB OFFICE, whisk will enable u to execute, la the aaatatt . style, at try variety of ( Printing -r NEW SERIES, VOL. 3, NO. 34. SATURDAY MORNING, JUNE 8, 1867. OLD SERIES, VOL. 27, NO. 34. ,.. !..). l-r. n i ME1I0M .so. 1 Sqnara, " column, t " vmrut mtffi- iii-tptwp-nr-y BUSINESS CARDS. . J. BBUKBB. t. . EASB, Attorney- amd t'onnaellori at In r, Chesnut Btreet, wait of he N. 0. and P. B. Rail, road Depot, in the building lately oooapied by F. Laaartu, Eq., BTT-M-3XJPIY, 3?3NNA.. Colleotlonl and all Profwrlonal barinaM prorapUy attended to in Northumberland and adjoining Conn tite. P' Jlttorucy and Court aellor at Law. CSoe en aouth ride of Market itreet, Ira doon Eait ofthiN.C. Railroad, STJJKTBTT-E-0EA.. tTllI attend promptly to all profoaiional bniineai ntrntted to hii care, the collection of elaimt in Slorthamberland and the adjoining oountief. Banbury, April H, mt. EDWIN A- EVANS, ATTORNEY AT X.A.W. Market Square, near the Court Ilooje, BUNBURY, Northumberland County, Pa, ColleotioDi promptly attended to in thii and adjoin log Ceuntiea. April 13,1867. J. Re HIIiBUSH 8UBVEY0E AND CONVEYANCE AND wv v - JUSTICE OF THE PEACE. Jlahonoy, Northumberland County, Penn'a Office in Jeekeon towmhip. Engagement! oan be made by l.ttor, Jireotod to the abore addreai. All businen entruated to hit oare, will ba promptly attended to. April 22, 1868. ly Wm. M. ROCKErBLLBR. LuOTD T. ROBBBACB. ROCKEFELLER & ROHRBACH. U.IIUR', PU..-VVa.. OFFICE the tame that baa been heretofore occu pied by Wm. M. Rockefeller, Em., nearly op posite the residence of Judge Jordan. 6unbury, July 1, 1864. ly JOBOBlllLL, 6IM0B P. WotYBRTO. HILL Sc WOLVEBTOW. attorney and Counselors at Law. 8UNBUBY, DP .A.. w1 rlLL attend to the collection of all kindi of elaiui, inoluding Back ray, Bounty and f an ion!. api. i, oo. ATTORNEY AT XiA-W, North Bide of Public Square, adjoining reeidenoe of Geo. Hill, Eeq., SUNBURY, PENN'A. Colleotioni and all Profesrional bunlneai promptly attended to in the Couru of Northumberland and adjoining Countiei. buobury, Sept. IS, 1869. ' JNO. KAY CLEMENT, Business in thia and adjoining countiei carefully and promptly atttended to. Office in Market Street, Third door weat of 6mith A ttenther'i Stove and Tinware 'Store, II. II. . IlIABNIilt, Attorney at Iair, BL'NBURY, PA. Collectiona attended to in the eountiea of Nor thumberland, Union, Snyder, Montour, Columbia and Lycoming. BBFBRBKCBB. lion. Jobn M. Reed, Philadelphia, A. Q. Cattail A Co., " Hon. Wm. A. Porter, " Morton McMichael, Eaq., " E. Ketcham A Co., 284 Pearl Street, New Tork. John W. Ashniead, Attorney at Law, " Matthewa A Cox, Attorneya at Law, " Sunbury, Moroh 2i), 1862. " JACOB SHIPMAN, FIBB AND LIFE INSURANCE AGENT, SUNBURY, PENN'A. BtrRBSBMTS Farmera Mutual Fire Inauranoe Co., Tork Pa., Cumberland Valley Mutual Protoction Co., .aw York Mutual Life, Oirard Lifeof Phil'a. A Hart ord Conn. General Accident!. unbury, April 7, ly. Il. C. 1. LII.VLEY, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON NORTHUMBERLAND, PA. DR. LUMLEY hai opened an offioa in Northum berland, and ofieri hi. lervicei to the people of that place and the adjoining townsLipi. Office next door to Mr. Sootl'i Shoe Store, where he ean found at all houri. Jiorthumberland Auguit It, 1865. JEREMIAH SNYDER, Attorney Connaellor at iMyr. SI.MIIHY, 1A. CTDI'trlt t Attorney for niorthum bet-land County. Sunbury, March 31, 1866 ly . L. IBAIBOLTt, 0. B. WOLVBBTOB, C. T. IBIIBOLTI COAL ! COAL ! . COAL ! THE aubecriben reapeotfully inform theoitiaena of Sunbury and vicinity, that they have opened a COAL YARD at J. Haaa A Co 'a Lower Wharf, Nnnbary, Ia. where they are prepared to lupply all kinds of Sha Oiokin Coal, at oheap ratea. Familial and other! promptly lupplied. Country custom respectfully aelicited. SEASUOLTZ A CO. Sunbury, Jan. 12, 1867. WlMilhW. ho E0)0)M9 Bricklayer and Builder, Market Street, 4 doors Eaat of Third 8t J3 TJ 1ST B XT I 5T , iiaisr3jA.. N. II. All Jobbing: promptly at tend to. Sunbury, June 2,1866. COAL! COAL!! COAL!!! OBANT Oe BROTHER, Ablnpeti A Wholesale V ltetall lealers la WII1TG fc KMI AS II COAl in arery variety. RoU A genu, weatward, of tho Celebrated Henry Clay CoJ. Lowbb Wainr, Subidbt, Pa. Sunbury, Jan. U, 1869. WUOLESALB AND RETAIL DEALER la arary variety of ANTHRACITE COAL, Upper Wharf, BTJNBUBY. Ponn'o, iOrdanaoUoitad and nllad with promptaaii and despatch. SunburT. May 12, I8&6 . y BOTOTT FOB SOLDIERS- I HAVE made arrangement! la Waahlngton City, fur the prompt aoileotion of Bounty under tho late Aot of Congreei. I hare alio rewired the pro per blank! U prepare the claim!, ooiaiera anuuea to thu Bounty abould apply immadiaUly, aa It ia aa. Umated that it will nxjuue inraa yean wi euju mu tna oiaimi. . . . All aoldien who onlUtad for three yean and why hare not rewired mora thaa 100 boanty are entitled to the oenefita of thii Aet, as well aa aoldien i who hare euliated for three years and dlaohargad after a aarrioe of two yaara, by reaaoa of wouada raoeired, 4-ee.e aontr-Ud ia SSuStcu: Hnbury, August II, IS. Dr. CHAS. ARTHUR, IDomcropatljt'c musician. Oradoate of tho Uomowpathio Medioal Coltegs of , , Fennayiranta. Orrics, Market Square opposite the Court Uouas, SDNBURY, PA. . ' Office Hoari 7 to ft morning ; 1 to afternoon ; T to erening. May 18. JACOB O. BECK, MERCHANT TAILOR, And Dealer la CLOTHS, CA8SIMERE8, VESTING, Ac. Favrn street, sonth of Weaver's Hotel, BTJ NUB StTT, March 31, 186S. W. J. WOLVERTON, ATrOBilEY AT LAW, Hut end of Pleasant 's Building, Up Stain, SUNBURY, PE.NN ' A. All profesaionat buelneaa ia thia and adjoining scan tier promptly attended to. Sunbury, November 17, 1866.-Iy IB-WHAM hotse," ELEVENTH A MARKET SIS., PEILADEL'A. fTWIS new and elegant Houae la now open for the JL reception of gueata. It baa been fitted up in a manner equal to any in the eountry. The location being central makea it a very desirable stopping place, both for Merchant! and parties viiiting the oity. The parlon are spaoloua, and elegantly Turn lined. The tablea will be supplied with all the deli eaciea the market will afford, and it ii the intention of the Proprietor to keep ia every reapeot a Firat Claaa Hotel. Terma$3 00 per day. CURLI9 DAVIS, Proprietor. February 2, 1867. 6m DR. J. 8- ANGLE, CI RADUATE of Jeff.raon Medical College, with T fire vean nractloe. offera hia vrofeaaional aer- vicea to the oititsna of Sunbury and vicinity will attend all call! promptly. OFFICE Market Street, opposite Wearer' Hotel - Orrica Hours 1 from 8 to 10 A. M. " 2 to F. M. Sunbury, April 27, 1867. AMBROTYPE AND PHOTOGRAPH GALLERY. Corner Market A Fawn Street, SUNBURY, Pa. 8. BYEBLY, Proprietor, Photograph, Ambrotypes and Melainotypea taken la the beet style of the art. apl. 7, ly 33. C. QOBIN, Attorney and Counsellor at IntT, BOONVILLE, COOPER CO , MISSOURI. WILL pay taxes on lands in any part of tba State. Buy and aell real Estate, and all other matters entruated to him will raseivs prompt atten tion. July 8, 186S.-oetl, '64. DOTTIEST HOUSE, J. H. I1AL.L, Proprietor, Corner Sunbury and JioeJe Btrteti, SIIAMOKIN, PENN'A. T HIS HOUSE ia now open for the reception of guests, and being new, spacious ana attractive, haa all the facilities aod advantages of a FIRST CLASS HOTEL. The aleeping apartmenta are airy and comfortable, and the furniture entiiely new. The Bar and Table will be aupplied with the beat in the market. The patronage of the publio is rolicited. April 13, 1867. Mount Carmel Hotel. MT. CAEMEL, Northumberland Co., Pa., TIIOS. BUKKET, Proprietor. Thia large comnrodions Hotel ia located near the depot! of the Sbamokin Valley and the Quakake A New York Railroads. Trains arrive and depart dnilr. Thii house is located in the centre of the Coal Re gion and affords the best accommodations to travelers and permanent customers. jay s. THE following persona are entitled to receive an increase of Bounty under the Aot of Congresa passed July 1866, to equalise Bounties. lat All aoldiera who enlisted after tbe ltn day or Anril. 1861. lor S veara. and served their time of enlistment end have been honorably dlaohargad, and have received or are entitled to reeeive a Bounty oi 100, ara entitled aa additional Bounty of 100. 2d All such aoldien who enlisted for S yean, and have been honorably discharged on account of wounda reoeived in the line of duty, are antitled to an additional Bounty of glOO. 3d The Widow. Minor Children, or Parents of auch soldiers who died in the servioe of wounds or disease, are entitled to aa additional Bounty of s)100. Bv annlioation to 8. P. WOLVERTON. Em , of Bdkbobt, Pennsylvania, who is an authorised Claim Agent, all auoh olaima can be apeedily oolleoted. eunbury, August , iboo. it CLEANSE THE BLOOD. WITH corrupt, or taint ad Blood, you ara lick all over, it may bunt out In Pimples, or Sores, or in some active disease, or it may merely keep you list jleaa, depressed and good tor noiumg. But you can not have good health while your blood is impure. AXBB'B babssparills Jpurges out these impurities it expels disease and restores health and stimulates tne organs or lite Into vigorous aouon. ilenoe It ra pidly oures a variety of complaints whioh are caused by impurity of the blood, suoh is Scrofula, or King'! Evil, Tumors, fleers, Sores, Eruptions, Pimples, Blotches, Boils, St. Anthony's Fire, Rose or Erysi pelas, Tetter or Salt Khsum, Scald Head,. King Worm, Caooar or Cancerous Tumon, Sore Eyes, Fe male Disease, auoh a Retention, Irregularity, Sup pression, Whites, Sterility, also Syphilis or Venereal liiseasea, Liver Complaint!, and Heart Diseases. Try Aria's Sarsapahilla, and see for yourself the surprising active with which it eleases the blood and oures these disorders. During late yean the publio have been misled by large bottles, pretending to give a quart of Extract of barsaparilla for ooeaollar. Most of these have been fraud! upon tho alek, for they nut only oontaio little, if any , Sanparilla, bat often BO ourative in- Kedient whatever. Hence, bitter dissppointment a followed tbe use of the various extracts of Sana parilla which flood tbe market, antil the name itself has become synonymous with imposition and cheat. Still we call thia compound, "Saraaparills," and in tend to supply auch a remedy as sbstl rescue tho name from tho low! of obloquy which rests upon it. Ws think we have ground for believing it has virtues which are irresistible by the elsss of dinsssas it is in. tended to sure We esn aasura the sick, that ws offer them the beat alterative we know kow U cro- duce, and wo have reason to believe, it is by far tbe most effectual purifier of the blood yet discovered. Area's Cherry Paotoral is so universally known to surpaas every other madiotne tot ins euro oi Uougbs, Colds. Influenia, Hoansneaa. Croup, Bronchitis. In- oipient Consumption, snd for the r.lief of Consump tive Patients ia advanced stages of the disease, that, It Is useless hsrs to recount the evldenoe ol lis virtues. Tbe world khowa them. Prepared br Da. J. 0. Araa A Co . Lowell. Mass. and sold by ail Druggist! and dealer la medisina everywnere. . April 20, 1867. 2a Uonatlew Collected. Q.W.HAUPT, Attorney st Lsw. buobury, Pa often nil professional ssrvioas for the oolleotioci of bounties due to soiaien anaer we late cquaiisau Ast naased bv Cona-rass. As aa authorised ola agsnt h will promptly oollsot all Bounties, Psnsiens aad Gratuities da to aoldien of the late war, or the wareribll. Sunbury, Aagust II, ISM. ... PIAJ0 FOH BAIJB. H AKDBOlfS, Boe-sened, aaw, and prisa lew. iaqairs at this Of ea. P 0 E T I C A L, THB WORLD FROM THB SIDEWALK. Dave yon ever stood In the erowded itreet, In the glare of the fitful lamp, Aad marked tbe tread of the million foot In their quaintly muaical tramp? As the surging throng moved to and fro, 'Tia a pleasant sight, I ween, To mark tho figures that ooma and go In the ever changing scene. Where the sinner trends with the publloaa proud, And the priest In hia gloomy cowl, And Divea wslka in the motley crowd, With Laiarua check by jowl ; And the daughter of toil, with her fresh, young heart, Aa pure aa her spotless name, Keeps atep with the women that make their mart In the haunts of rin and ahams. How gaily ateps the oountry lass In the midst of the city's ills, Aa freshly pure aa the dasied grasa That grows on her native hills ; And the beggar, too, with hia hungry eye, Aud his awl, wan faoe and crutch, Gives a blessing the same to tbe passer by, An' he give, him nothing or muob. When night haa beaten the world's tattoo, And, in dusky armor delight, Ia treading with eoholesa footsteps, through Tbe gloom ol the silent night, How many of these shall be dnintly fed, And will sink to slumbers sweet ; Tet many shall go to a sleepless bed, And never acruin to eat! Ah, me! when the houn go joyfully by, How little we atop to heed Our brothers' and sinters' despairing cry, In their woe and their bitter need ! Tet, such a world as the angela sought, Tbia world of oun we'd oall, If tbe brotherly love that tbe Father taught Were felt by each for all. Yet a few snort yean and thii motley throng Will all have passed away, And the rich and the poor, and the old and young, Will be undistinguished olay; And lipa that laugh and lips that moan Will in ailenoe alike be sealed, And some will be under a etately stone, And some In the Potter'a Field. But tbe sun will be shining just a! bright, And so will the silvery moon, And just such a crowd will be here at night, And just such a crowd at noon ; And tbe men will be wicked and women will sin, As ever since Adam'a fall. With the same old world to labor in, And the same God over all. MISCELLANEOUS. JOII.X II. fi;ItA'lT. A M011KIKO WITH HIS COLLEGE CIIUM. From the New York Tribune. Philadelphia, May 18. Convalescent after acbronic attach of Centrifugalism, that rheumatism of tbe bones tbat compels one to uo somewhere, for tbe sake of tbe go rather than of tbe tomeuhere, I had got hack the other day, fat and scant of brent b, and was regaling mvRctf with a walk on Cbesnut street. Suddenly I passed a round-bellied young man with eye glasses over bis nose. It was plain to me that I bad gone to school with him, though who be was I was indif ferent about remenilerinj. During my pu pilage at the Philadelphia High School about 1000 youths had entered and departed from it ; and while, apart from my own class, I knew not a dozen of them by name, I bad hardly forgot a tingle face. So I swung my hat promptly : "Uood day, sir I Uiad to meet you again." The other hat came off in response, and I walked a full -block, forgetting, meantime, all about the person, when I beard a quick root behind me, telt a tap .on the arm, and tbe cye-glassea bud got around to my front again. "1 beg pardon," satci tne young man, "out you went to the High School, lour name is ? Exactly I I have long wanted to see you.. You know Weicbmanui" "Certainly 1 that is, not altogether." "Lewis Weichiuann I" "Lewis t" . "Tbe boarder at Mrs. Surratt's." I felt newsy and centrifugal at once again, and diew him to one side. In three min utes I had him promised to come to my bouse the next morning. Out ot bis laoe and voice and the new in terest in him, I summoned, meantime, the whole memory of the man again, lie bud been in the next class behind me, and his round, chubby, red-tipped checks reappeard as wheu he climbed into bis bench in the lecture-room, and bummed, with tbe rest of tbe boys, disapproval of some dry volumi nous orator, or peeped at his lesson and got "noted'' for it during the reading of the morning Scripture. An ordinary fat boy I considered him, whose definition of school was a place to get fun out of; and be was of mixed religious origin, his father being Protestant and bis mother Roman Catholic, lie went to the High School three years, and left it in 1859. Next morning after meeting him was Sun day, and into mv room the junior school mate was ushered at 10 o'clock. When be put by his hot, gloves, and cane, I saw him crown up to be a young fellow of twetity- t'our, brown hair, with dimples and tints all over bim, a moustache tbat will never come to much, a nose with a good deal of bridge to it, clear light eyes that do not strain by their near sinbteduesa, and tbat bodily pre maturity which makes bim "waddle" some what in gnit, aod was expressed by Surratt in the nick-name of "Fatty." His address was singularly intelligent and pleasant, and be has more than average in dependence of opinion. I compared bim, for tbe first few minutes, to Snodgrass, the juqior boarder at Mrs. Cunningham's where Dr. Iiuruell was hoarded the young leiiow who waltzed with Augusta and played the banjo in his cell, sublimely indifferent to the great tragedy be lived so close to ; in half an hour 1 found that Weicbmaon wss alto gether a graver man, sobered, practicalizerf, even religiously affected by tbe part he bad unwittingly played in the direot conspiracy of our times. "I believe, sir," ha exclaimed, in the pitch of tbe narrative, "tbat I was provi dentially thrown in the way of those people tbat I was an instrument- prepared to convict tUrn. Look I it was I that intro duced St. Maurie to John Surratt two year before tbe asassination; bow did I know that one was to be tbe man who should chase the other found the world and bring bim home I Look again I on Good Friday an arder cune from Mr. Stanton to tbe de partment in which I was clerk, giving only tbe Catholic employees holiday for the after noon, lint for tbat holiday I should never have driven Mr. Surratt out to Surratteville four hours before the murder, and it was that drive tbat banged her." I asked him to go back to the beginning of himself, and tell me all that had not been evidence on the trial whatever inferential, and domestic, and characteristic bad marked his acquaintance with tbe Surratt; fori bad been collecting data upon the great rrima. and had been d re sent in all it scenes, rash after thai temnjemcratioBS ; the thea tre, the Surratt House.the Maryland swamps, the route of Booth escaping, the barn whare he died, tbe scaffold. I admonished Weicb tbat as John Surratt was shortly to be tried, I might print this conversation, and here I set it down in running order, and it makes, unless I am over-sanguine, the straightest story ef the conspiracy against the Govern ment's preservers, yet rolated : WKlCrtMAKN's HAlWATTVR. In 1859, he began, I left the High School, where you had known me, and In Fehrtiory of the same year I entered St. Charles1 Col lege at Kllicott's Mills, near Baltimore. A considerable number of students were pre sent, and the Principal was the Rev. Father Jenkins. About six months after my ad mission Surratt came there to study for the diocese of Florida. He attracted no atten tion, either by his talents or prowess, being one of the most sober and obedient scholars, and winning the commendation of all the professors by his tractable bearing. He was then a fresh-faced fellow of sixteen, straight and thin, with a good, broad forehend, and deeply sunken eyes. We were not allowed' to sleep with one another, the monaatic sys tem being enforced, and, although I talked often with 8nrrott, I recall nothing now that showed him to have any depth of character, nor pointed ever so remotely to this crime. When the war broke out the whole school was, with few exceptions, favorable to the success of the Rebellion. The teachers seemed to have little enthusiasm for the liberty of opinion, the secular education, and the republican civilization of tbe North, and most of the students either came from slave States, or meditated ministering in them. We were kept ignorant of Union victories ; the newspapers were prohibited ; and when I emerged I found mvself as mis informed as if I had been in jail. Surratt, with the rest, sang secession songs very fre quently, and he left school the same day that I did, in July, 1802. Ho bad previously satis6ed himself that the priesthood was not Ins vocation, and at leaving was so much affected that he wept. Tbe President held bis hands over him, and said : "John, you have been a good boy. Do not feel disappointed. You will always be remembered here." Indeed, Sur ratt belonged to a Students' Society, called the Society of tho Angels, very pious in its nature, and I was altogether too wild to be admitted to it. Surratt had often spoken to me of his home in Maryland, and some months after I left the school he wrote me a letter, inviting me to visit him. Meantime I accepted a tutorship at Borromeo College, Maryland, and. after four months, went to visit a friend at Ellangowan, familiarly called Little Texas, a small limekiln town on tbe Northern Central Railway, and here I helped him teach a small Catholic school for a few weeks. In the meantime Surratt, between whom and myself several letters had passed, wrote to me to ask for a teacher's position in Borromeo College ; his father had died, and his family were involved. I failed to get bim an appointment , but when, soon afterward, I chansed to teach in St. Mat thew's College, Washington City, Surratt called upon me, and we personally renewed our acquaintance. He spoke enthusiastically of his home, and invited me down to see it w henever I chose. I observed that be was still a persiste nt Rebel, but I bad seen so many ot bis class in Washington, that I took no personal offense at what he said, having already made myself obnoxious by political arguments. Meantime the life of the country tavern, and the entire change in his ambitions, had given Surratt a brusquer and more worldly manner. IIo talked variously of teaching, farming, or entering the Rebel service. His mind was unsettled. I saw him several times at school nnd in town. It was on a Friday afternoon in March, rainy and dreary, when at last I went down to Surrattsville with John. He came for me in a buggy, and the road was so rutty and miry that we were four hours on the way. On coming in sight of the house I was mis erably disappointed. The tbeme of so much panegyric was a solitary frame tavern at a cross road, a few sheds and barns around it and a hitching stall, and a peach orchard reaching behind. The furm consisted of 800 wires, and it was afterwards let, with the tavern, for fOOO a year. A small porch stood in the middle, on which opened a'hall reaching qnite through the house. At the foot of this hall, to the left, was the bar room and Post Office, with a door opening upon one of the cross-roads, and to the right were the parlor and dining room. Altogether there were eight rooms comfortably furnished. Mr. Surratt received me pleasantly. And we had a good warm supper, after which I went awhile to the bar room, where there were some of the Rebel farmers of the neighborhood, come to get their letters, to lounge, and to play cards. John kept tbe bar, and we had a game with two Jewish persons who had carpet-bags with them. Tbese carpetbags Mrs. Surratt came in and removed. Their owners left before daylight next morning, and one oi'them named Jacobs was arrested crossing tbe Potomac with $50,000 upon him. Mrs. Surratt was proud, and counted her beads a great deal. She was a convert, and not an original Catholic, and her husband was a Protestant till his death, which hap pened of apoplexy in August, 1863. There were three or four negroes abont the place ; it was a dull, cross-roads' existence, but pleasant for a day or two te a stranger. Next morning, at day-light, we were awakened by very beautiful music. It was a brass band, come out from the Washington Navy Yard, to serenade the Democratic county officers just elected. , Among the hangers-on was a seedy, frowsy, monkey-faced boy, whom Surratt introduced to me as Mr. Herold. Ho came in wiib the rest, took a drink, and went further up tbe road with them. I left tbe house on Monday, pleated with my viait, and we (topped at a drug store by the Navy Yard, Surratt and I, to get a cigar. The boy, Herold, was olerk there. Surratt told me on the way that his brother, Isaac Surratt, an engineer, had left bis borne on tbe 7th of March, 1801, at the news of Lincoln's inauguration, and gone to Texas, where be had been ever since in tbe Confederate servioe. I got to consider Surratt an intimate friend after thia visit, and he bad good points of cuaracier; uut uiaianiaieu mem luecoumry kept me from knowing of more than the directer concern of our friendship; while meantime tbe war -went' on more bitterly, and his home was probably a convenient and constant resort of secret spiel and trader. But in Easter, 1868, w agreed to visit an old school friend at El lionet ' Mill, and front there I took; Surratt to Ellangowan to tee my friend, the . school taar.her ' Ttpfnra wa atartad a nrieat aakad me to deliver a newspaper to . St Maorie, whom I found to be my friend' assistant, aod lowborn J introduced John Surratt. He was a French Canadian, black-eyed and black-haired, aged about thirty, very fasci nating in his manners and accomplishments, a linguist and adventurer. He was teaching for bis board and spending money only, be ing entirely needy, and he amused himself by giving concerts in the village, where he was in love with a virtuous aud beautiful young lady. When I left Ellangowan St. Maurie asked me to get him a teacher's place in Washing, ton, and soon after he came to ray room there, saying that be bad left his place, dis gusted with its littleness, and was without a meal, a bed, or a penny. I got bim a po sition in Gonzaga College, and when he came to sec me once or twice I found bim so unprincipled tbat I wrote to tbe lady he ad dressed at Ellangowan, bidding her beware. He would tell me in a breath that he had fled from Canada to avoid the consequences of a most heartless seduction, and at the same time put his new sweetheart's bouquet under his pillow. His stories of himself were that be bad been a member of tbe Canadian Parliament, a Federal prisoner of state, etc. But, at any rate, be decamped from the College after a month, leaving me to pay his board, and enlisted for the boun ty in a Delaware regiment, deserted, fell into Castle Thunder as an object of general sus picion, was released by reason of playing informer upon bis comrades, escaped by a blockade-runner to England, returned to Canada, and bearing of tbe 135.000 reward for Surratt, pursued him to Rome; enlisted with him, and gave him up just too late for the reward, which had been already with drawn. I was now weary of teaching for insuffi cient pay, and sought a Government clerk ship, which I obtained in the office of the Commissary of Prisons in January, 1804. In September of tbe same year tbe Surratts moved to Washington to keep a boarding house and get John something to do, and to help them along I moved in almost iuime-, diately. John was engaged by Adams Ex press Company, and with the exception of the arrival of a blockade-runner or two,' little happened until a few days before Christmas of 1864-5, when by auothcr of those providences or coincidences to which I have referred, I was walking in the street with Surratt when Jobn Wilkes Booth was introduced to him by their common friend, Dr. Mutld. After this the manner and nature of Sur ratt changed. He became, grade by grade, a loiterer and a spendthrift, subject at times to fits of despondence ; and I have no doubt that Booth was his absolute master, de bauching him with his horses and loans of money, and by bis stronger worldliaess and magnetism controlling him altogether. I used to wonder what affinity such unlike men could have; but bitter as the secession ists of Washington were, oo idea of conspi racy, particularly against personages so bigb, ever occurred to me. And it was only in tbe head of a monomaniac actor, used to rehearse Brutus, that so desperate a crime could bare been conceived ; his means were just considerable enough to purchase such poor instruments as John Surratt; and his own character was so impracticable that no body ever fathoned his plot. In Mrs. Sur ratt's house he was altogether the most tal ented visitor. The mistress of it culled bim "Her Pet," in his absence. During all these days tbe plot was ripen ing : dirty fellows like Atzerott, boys like Herold, and searching-eyed, mysterious per sons like Payne, began to visit the bouse. I felt that in my friendship with Jobn, never very well founded, I was supplanted. Jobn Surratt began to be a bird of passage, riding to and fro from Montreal to Rich mond. I was only puzzled by tbese things, but never alarmed, and set him down as a mere "sponger" or parasite upon Booth, who was never free with me, and on whom I looked aa a man of accomplishments and genius that liked the company of bis in feriors. Iu all this there were interludes of drunkenness, as when three or four of the subsequent assassins burst into my room, saying that they were ruined men and that all was lost. Thia was afterwards demon strated to be Booth's failure to capture the President at the Soldier's Home. And this brings me to the crisis of the narrative ; the interest of the bouse was gone, its peacefuluesa and charm, I was thinking to myself on Good Friday, as I re turned from my office to Mrs. Surratt's, re leased for a holiday on account of my re ligious belief, that perhaps I bad better seek board otherwheres. At that moment, as if some providence had satisfied me with these aimless companionships so long that I might observe their complicity and convict them, if not defeat them, Mrs. Surratt asked me to spend the afternoon in taking her to drive. As we started out, I saw Booth in tbe parlor, leaning on the mantel, paler than usual I have since seemed to recollect, hi hand to bis moustache, his eyes upon the floor. We talked pleasantly on the way, aud once Mrs. Surratt stopped to ask about the pickets in the fields, and when they were to be removed at nightfall. She died for that ride. I, who had made her son's acquaintance so unwittingly, and slept under ber roof so long without unkind ness given or received, do not shrink to say that I have never been sorry that I accom panied her. Aud when she dipti I felt sad dened but not self-accusing ; for if there ia a doubt that she wfs & principal in tbe mur der, there it no doubt, to my mind, that she knew enough to prevent it, to save the President, tho Secretary of State, Booth, and, perhaps, her own son. That night I was weary, and read myself to sleep. At 8 o'clock in the morning, called from my bed by loud hands upon the door, I beard the challenge of "Officers of tbe Government. Open at once." "What is it all for, gentlemen I" I said. "The President aud the Secretary of State are dead 1 We want Booth and Sunatt to surrender if they are here." I do not remember what I exclaimed ; tbe officer say it was : "My GodI I see it all." Then at daylight I hastened to read tbe particular "A tall man in a white coat stabbed Mr. Seward" that must he Paynel - 1 hurried to tbe police station at once. Directly I wa off with the detectives on tbe road to Surrattsville again. We caught ahorse. "To whom did you hire it t" we say to the livery man. "To a monkey-faced chap named Erail, I think." Tbat most be Herold. Away we go to the widow Harold's, pavid ba been away quite two day. "Let os see your album." 11 is picture is secured. I knew where Surratt bad photographs taken ; w obtain a dozen copies. Then I am carried before Mr. Stanton. He looka at u savagely for baviog been one of hi clerk aad keeping such company. I am rdered to Old Capitol HilL Front, tbe jail- yard I see Mr. Surratt at tbe window. . She klssea ber band. A man ootneaaytome with a message on ber behalf: "You are to say nothing of anybody ef the female gender when asked." It is too late, if I could have had such a wish. Tbe past is too vividly illumined by this fresh crime to be forgot ten. This is the story of a school friendship and boarding-bouse acquaintanceship. lie closed and shook my hand. I wondered if there were boys in other gener ation with the experience of this boy in ours. o. a. t. A Ship of Itoaih Flossie late a Port or the Shctlstnd lalastdt). Since the time when the Ancient Mariner told the terrible tale of the curseladcn ship with her crew of ghastly corpses, no more thrilling story of the sea has been related than that of tbe whale ship Diana, that re cently drifted into one of the Shetland It- lands. A year ago she left the Shetland on a whaling voyage to tbe Artie region, havintr on board fifty men. From tbat time noth ing more wss beard of her. Tbe friends of tboso on board became alarmed. Money was raised and premiums offered to the firat Vessel that would bring tidings of the mis sing ship, but all to no avail. Hope was al- . a. . I 1 a uiuBfr lunauonea. On tbe 2d of Aoril the neonle nearPnnn'a Voe, in one of the Shetland Isles, were start led at seeing a ghastly wreck of a ship sail ing into the harbor. Battered and ice-crushed sails and cordage cut away, boats aod spars cut up for fuel in the trrible Artio winter, her decks covered with dead and dying, the long lost Diana sailed in like a ship from Deadmans Land. Fifty men sail ed out of Lerwick in her on a bright May morning last year. All of the fi'lv came back on her on tbe 3d of April, this year; tbe same but now different. Ten men of whom the captain was one. lay stiffened corpses on the deck; thirty-five tay neipirasiy sick, ana some dying ; two retained sufficient strength to creen aloft. aud the other three crawled freely about the deck. Tbe ship was boarded by the island ers, and, as they climbed over the bulworks, tne man at tne wneei tainting trom excite ment, one of the sick died as he lay, hie deathbeing announced by the fellow oc cupant of his berth feebly moaning, "Take away mis neaa man." un tbe bridge of the vessel lay the body of the captain, as it had laid for four months, with nine of his dead shipmates by bis side, ail decently laid out by those who soon expected to share their fate. Tbe survivors could not bear to link the bodies of their comrade into the tea, but kept them so that when the last man died the fated ship that bad been their citmmon home should be their common tomb. The surgeon of the ship worked faithfully to the last, but cold, hunger, scurvy and dysentery were too much for him. Tbe brave old Captain was the first victim, and died bless ing bis men. Then the others full, one by one, until tbe ship was tenanted only by the dead and dying. One night more at tea would have left tbe Diana a floating coffin. Not one of the fifty would have lived to tell tbe ghastly tale. . Bromide of Potassium for Hydro phobia. The Indianapolis Journal contains an account of Miss Selvia Eller, of Beck's Station, Hamilton county, Indiana, who was bitten by a rabid dog about two months ago. The wound was a very slight one, and giving uo alarm, was, unfortunately, allowed to heal without being subjected to treatment, one was attacked by hydrop hobia. Opiates proved of little use. Final ly the physician administered bromide of potassium, increasing the quantity to about two ounces per day. For three days there was no change perceptible, tbe disease then abated its violence, and the patient has since recovered. On Friday night last, six car loads of oil took fire on a train which was coming down the mountain near Kittanning Point, on the Pennsylvania railroad, and about two hun dred barrels burned up. The flame illumin ated tbe whole valley between the Allegheny and Brush Mountains, and formed one of tbe most beautiful sights imaginable. Great wrath has been excited among the old bachelors of Jersey City by tbe publica tion of their names in a New York paper. HUM O ROUS. Tho i'ore Shoes). Colonel F., a very irritable and impatient man, bad occasion once, while passing on horseback through a small town in the West, to patronize a Dutch blacksmith. "Are you the smith!" he asked of a stout, black-bearded, smoke begrimed old man, who came out of tbe shop to look at the horse's defective shoes. "Yes, I be der smidt," replied roein herr, striving bis long pipe with his left hand, as he lifted one of the horse's feet with bis right hand. "You wish to have de new shoes put ont" "No, sir," replied the Colonel, in his quick way. "Set the shoes of his fore feet, that's all." "I set de shoes on de four feet yah I now onderstan. I will have him in one hour sboed." Tbe Colonel wont away and returned at the appointed time, and found the blacksmith ttill at work on hie horse. He was very wroth when be saw tbe state of affairs, but he went away again with tbe promise tbat in 'von half hour the shoes wold be set. After dinner, in no very mild nuuior, he made bit appearance again at tbe shop, and asked what was to pay. "Four shillings," was the reply. "Four shillings 1 what an imposititiou I" exclaimed the fiery Colonel. "I never paid over sbi ling for setting a shoe in my life. "Very well," nodded mein herr. "Von shilling for the von shoe I aet de four sheet dat ish four shillings-nichts," "Nick I tbe old Nick 1" roared tbe excited traveler. "Who told yon to set more than two shoes?" "By doonder, you tell me yourself," said the smith. "II 'Tis a falsehood 1" answered tbe traveler: "iu a liea-" "Mein Got I You aay, de shoes on de four feet!" "So I did." said the traveler ; "the two shoe on tbe fore feet." "Got in Uimmel I two shoes on the four feet I Von hat oo dree beadt so much." "You eternal f-lool I" exclaimed the colonel, who ttuttered when ba wa ex cited "I taid set the fore boe on those two f feet, you b-blundering Dutchman." "You Yankee goose t monkey, you tarn jack aet, fool." Tbe colonel replied, stuttering worse than ever. The smith struck his fist and jabbered Dutch, his knowledge of English being exhausted; and they had it back and forth until a mutual friend came up and explained the matter. Tbe colonel paid the charge, langbiog at the mistake, while herr smoked fiercely, cursing copiously that which made four feet two feet and two feet four feet, any way but the right wy dpn ntr tad blitzes ! An Irish hostler wa tent to the stable to bnngoutatraveler' hore, but not know Ing which of the two horses in the stable belonged to the traveler, and wishing to avoid tbe appearance of ignorance in his business he saddled both animals, and brought them to tbe door. Tbe traveler pointed out his own horse, "That' my nag." "Certainly, yer honor, I know tbat very well," taid Pat, but I didn't know which wa the other gentleman'." - Ah Ordihart Licknsk. A neat little girl, apparently about nineteen, says the Frederick Uerald, a few days ago entered the clerk's office, and removing her bonnet, inquired if Dr. Bradely was in. The doctor, who wa present, promptly and politely re sponded in the affirmative. "Are you,"says the lady, "tbe gentleman we are to bave for Governorr "Why, madam," said the doctor, with modest confusion, "there has been some talk on that subject." "Then you are the very gentleman I want. Have yon any licenses to dispose of?" "Yes, madam ; will you have a retailer's or an ordinarv licenser' "An ordinary will do, doctor ; 1 am only going to marry a little Dutchman." Sarcastic-Tbe following hit at the ore- pailing style of bonnets is exceedingly sar castic, and we shall wonder if the style sur- ! I. vives it : "A picture In the late number of rukeh represents a fashionable and affectionate couple, tbe husband searching vigorously in his vest pocket. The young wife in quires : 'Have you lost your watch love t' " "And he replies : 'No, darling, 'twa a new bonnet I had-for you somewhere.' " An eagle, which had been captured in the wilds of Vermont and taken to Boston, waa set free by some patriotic individuals in that place, recently, and, amid tbe cheers of a large crowd, he sailed away, lighting first upon the "Cradle of Liberty." Why is a young man's arm like the Gospel f Because it makes glad the waist (waste; places. A poet has nndcrtaken to immortalize a recent flat-boat calamity on Oil Creek. The following melancholy stanza tells the whole story : "She heaved and sot, anrl sot and heaved, And high her rudder flung ; And every time she heaved and aot, A worser leak she sprung." Madam, your boy can't .pass for lydf fare he's too large," said the conductor of a railway train, which had long been detain ed on tbe road by the snow. 'He niay be too large now," replied the matron, "but he waa small enough when we started." Tbe conductor gave in. "Who is the first boy mentioned in tho Bible?" Chap 1. To which might be added, "Who is the first girl mentioned in the Bible?" Jtnny tit. An editor out West bas married a girl named Church. He says he has enjoyed more happiness since he joined the church than he ever did in his life before. Young limb of the law lately married to his wife: My dear, here is to-night's paper: I am tired, if there is any news, please read it. Wife An exchange paper says: "The girls in some parts of Pennsylvania are so hard up for husbands that they sometimes take up with printers and lawyers. (From the American Agriculturist KUCiriilS, Ac. Websteiis Cake. Take 1 cup butter, Cup molasses, J cup sugar, 3 cups flour, 1 gill eweet milk, 1 teaspoon salcratus, S eggs, add currants and citron, aud spice, clove and nutmeg. Silver Cake. Take the whites of tiz eggs, two and one-half cups of flour, one and one half cups of sugar, hall cup of but ter, two-thirds of a cup of cream or sweet milk, half teaspoonful of cream of tartar, and a little toda. Corn Cakk. Three cups of corn meal, one cup of wheat, two teaspoonful of sugar, two teaspoonfuls of cream of tarter, one tea spoouful of salt. Mix well together ; while dry, add one teaspoonful of soda, dissolved in warm water. Mix the whole to a thin batter with milk or water, and bake in a quick oven. t Tapioca Puddiso. Four tablespoonfula of tapioca, 1 quart milk, 4 eggs (leaving out tbe whites of two for icing) ; sweeten to taste and flavor with vanilla. Souk the tapioca over night in a UttU water, boil the milk and pour over tbe tapioca; when it ia lukewarm, add the sugar and eggs, well beaten. Bake about one hour ; ice it when cool. BitowN Bread. 8 small pints of corn meal, 8 small pints of bran flour, 1 pint of molasses, 1 tea spoonful of salt, 1 tea spoon ful of salcratus, 1 quart of milk, pour into three quart bucket with tight fittng lid, which has been well greased, and set it into a pot of boiling water, and boil four hours. Ginoek SHAra.-tOne cup of molasses, one of sugar, one of shortening, one egg, one tablespoonful of ginger, one of vinegar, one teaspoonful of saleratus. Molassks Cookies. One cup of molasses, one of sugar, one of shortening, one egg, one teaspoonful of sa'.eratus. Lemon Butter for Tarts. One pound pulverized whith sugar, whites of six e'ga and yolks of two, three lemons, including grated rind and juice. Cook twenty minute over a low Are, stirring all tbe while. Tomato Vinegar. No great skill is re quired to make tbe article. Express the juice, and put in any clean vessel exposed to tbe air iu a warm place and it will toon become vinegar. It will make a stronger viuegar if molasses is added to the juice. To Preserve Fur. Wrap them in pa per of several thicknesse or in cotten cloth, early in tbe spring, before the moth miller begins to fly. It is only necessary to to se cure them that no - moth can get access to them. A tight box, with paper pasted on where the lid cover it, U equally effective. To Remove Tea Stains from Table Cloth. Lay the cloth in an earthen crock, or procelain kettle, and cover with clean, cold, soft water. Put the kettle on the back of tbe stove, where it will heat slowly to a scald. After an boar or more lift out you cloth and wash with soap ia the usual manner. Best Kino of Cuccmbbrs fob Pickiahg. Ws have never been able to detect any difference in tba flavor of cucumber after they were pickled. They are mainly a sponge to hold vinegar, and tba beat kind ia the most fruitful. The White Spine ia good enough, but in tbeckle districts they raise their own eed, .nd improve toeta by selecting U.' fruit of th third or fourth blet0P;, ,rom tb. loot.