Terms of Publication Th2 Somerset Herald Is puMUbed every lne.Ly Hornh t " r annum, paid a advance otherwise ei wiU tavarlalJly.be chanced. arrearage ar paid P- Pemar. agbxlng to aotily M wke. sat-crlber. K J ' SalwerUre-ovingfro- f", Somerwt Printing Company. JOHN L SOCLL, BuiM ataoaawr. .4 TTORNEYSA T-LA IP. ir .KMtf F-SCHELL, ATTORNEY AT LAW and ssounij a n rmwi g w, .f- -t iimc. la Mammas Bloea. jaw. 1 - - Somerset, fauea. r M. rcWTLETitwaiia, .? 1 11 w a- ucua rexccitully olieltod atw nu J w - - ' ' I AW NoTk:E.-AleAadr II. Ouflrota ha -7. . v 1-muNKV AT I. A .L"wtuVu., to in Airouipumas aad noewfcj- lir J. a M. L. HAEK, ATTOKKEia ai or.il atd eu':ouiing eouuUe. AU bustncas .a trususd to the iue prvm,iu, - 77 ..'iu w ITOIIIKT iTI.AW.SIIM J,,., X . W A Mi ...... nKt, i-a., wui promptly attend to ail buidueas eutrusie to una. mwij Ae. otnee in atuwM duuiub . " 7. V. '., . .. . r iDV I. V A 1 lirUjLiAi ii. ....... SuoieTm fa Vrwi tM: . .' . -.Zr tn i-r. la numeral aua t. a ijoioiog owinuH. v.i Uuuh Hum. ' . L. . .. . 7.. . iimv UMVV ATLiV. SoiD.ret, "a iU alum to all bu.ln n t; with proui.HK,. aad BU.141. om r o. UUL.E ' ATTOKNE AT LAW, Somewct, Pa. rmfewrtooal KH" "l't,"1 to my oar. alien JeJ towiU proiopuieMaiia BJelit. " uTcomcrm. ""- KUFKClTHkCCFPEU ATTOKISEYSAT Law. All buioe. euuuteJ u ineir aare wiu (m iiweOllr awl HnKlull aluxi.leJ to. tiJrua i Ml Alata t;ru airort, H'i"lt "', Maminutb ttluck. TOHX H. SCOTT, ATTUXEY ATLAW. tMmer.iel Pa. up iialri in Baer-. ""lt- A II lalues entnmwl k ti. care alu.udJ to wim lroiiipiiMia aua nuellljr, FAMKS L l'UOII, AttOKNET AT LAW, Sunwrwt, Pa. Ottlea. Mammoth Bl. k,p talr. HDtrauc Alam t.T. U CullocU.'UA U"",''!f tau MlUo.1, Ulle. cxauiluol. and all lel '"' e.-a'ituiljJ t)ltta pnioipuitaa aod dduli. julyl s UKVKYIXG, Wriiiog Peedu, Vc, l.ia! uoiW.i.iuli-""'!"11 ernu. at Cain-beer A :o.'a Store. C. F. WALKER. AaKM. PHYSICIANS. DR. J. K. MILLER baa parminently located in Merlin tor th. praetloa ul hl pnnlon. time oppn.it. Charlu Kriuinger'i .tore, apr. xt, '1H-IC lR. H. BKUBAKER tender! nit profeaalonal A KFIKniVllwciuMW tJ liy. 4 tn In reaiUenca, one door weat ol Ue Mar- OCL I1VHH. I Alt. K. Hi. i."Ji " " , r - - 1 Medk-lue, and tonO.ra hia protewlooal aerrt- c. 10 in. riuwo. w dpiw oiuntrjr. Illhrt at tb. old place, a few dooraeaat ol the (Had. House. j-vi! ivrsi VY CUNNINGHAM. I Jiormerlyof lvanTllle, will ttn the ilumie.lirln.andtoBdir ! pr'lewlia ' ' . ... .i iiv.nvilluid urrouad- WTltPfl WllIBVlUiiiiv.i... inx country. 'eM " g S. GOOD, PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, Mf ERSCT, PA. M-Urrioc In MammotB Block 4 M ,R. A. G. MILLER, after twelve I . . . a a a. A. 1 1 L k.ai now pcrmKamiUy tocatod at 8oinert M tin i lc to Ue citlaen ol Somenet aad k-luliy. ornoe In bU lru: Store, opixalte the Waruet House, where he can be eoueulled at all Umee nlww pnlwltmally .aK.Ked. ao-Mgot call, promptly auawered. dec. ia, Jl ly. Dr. W. F. FUSDESBEUG Ijle Kei dent Surgen, New Tort Eye ami far Infirinary, Has located permanently, in the City of CUMBERLAND, l&ryland far tie EZCLTJSI7E treatment cf all diseases of tie Eye and Ear, includ ing tiose of tie Nose and Threat. onto. Sw KweitB atrv tiltwl. Juut). DENTISTS.. DR. WM. COLLINS, DENTIST, Sotneraet, Pa. Uttloe tn Caiwlieer'. Blork, op alain, where be ean at all time, be found prepared to do all kind! ol work, lurb a Ulllng, mtulntinn, ei tracUna. Ac. Arttbcial teeth ol all kinda, and of the beat AuaierUUluHrted. Operation warranted. JOHN BILLS, DEKTIST. Offloe In Ooflruth A N0"i new balUtoir. Main Cruaa Rtreei. Someratt, Pa. DOTll WM. coXiLiisrs, DKXTI8T, I mce alwre ;aebeer k Frr.at'l etore. SomerHt, fa. lathe Urt ntlem year 1 bare atmiIt ra deced Abe rioM of artlnctol teeth In thin place. Tb. eonntaiit lAvcrraln; demand tir tactb baa In da tod wie to au eulara; my tacilule. that A oaa make xa eu of teeth at iawer prtww than yua can aet tbem la any other place tn tbl c.otry. 1 aia now uiakiu; a xwd aet ol teeth for aft. and If there abould be any pereua amoBK my iliowaand ol cuatomera In lUU or tb. adjoUrni waiuei that 1 bar. made teeth lor tbat U not Klrlna oud aat Utactlon. they ean eaU on me at any lime and get a new pet free of cbanra. marlA RTIHC'AL TEETH!! . I. C. YUTZY. - DEMIST DALK CITY, jo rut Co., Pa.. Artlttrlal Taeth, war anted to b of th very beet duality. Life-like and taadauwi, huened la th beat atyle. Partlculat aueaitug nakl to the pra crratloa of the aataral teeth. Tboa wtibln; to euoault m by letter, oaa do au by .not, ulna; lump Addrer a above. leU-TI HOTELS IIA220ND, SCJIELSET, PA., JOHN HILL, FmumuArroei. The nroprietor l wared to aewieoiAwxIate iraeat in Hie m-x wwminy" -.. j Tbe trmvUiiK mir And rnniiBnt ImM-rdun lur- i a. j . A.- .aaT taaata! AMkamMlB t klllii. Tb t will eontltiue bt lumlfbed iin lb bet tb inarket anuruft. Lrgm uu w"- IAMOND HOTEL. NTOYSTOWX PA. SAMUEL Cl'Sl Elt, Iroprior. Thl twaw'ar and well knowa boo 1 at all time a a it 'able aioiiplua place for tb traveling . Bulla. Taiie and Kooiu Brat-cUaa. Uood ata iD;. U. ikl leaf dally lur jobBUiwa and oni.rMt. narlL 1 he VOL. XXVI. NO. 10. BANKS, ETC. Cambria Co. Bank. M. W.KEIM&Co. Xo.2fi6 Main St., Johnntoirn. A General Banking Businees transacted. Interest Paid at 6 per cent, on Time Deposits. Loans negotiated. Drafts Bought and Sold. . Jany. J. J. 0.KIM3IEL &S0NS, Saecawora to Schell & Kimmel, SOMERSET, PA. Accounts of Merchants and oth er Business People Solicited. Drafts negotiable in all parts of the Coun try for sale. Honey 'oaned and Collections made. janu JOHNSTOWH SAVINGS BAffi, 120 CLINTON STREET, JOHNSTOWN. PA. Cbartered AJeptemher IS. M-t. lepolu recelT ol ol all raianaot leMtbaa one dollar, latereat I dut In the loontli.oljuneauu 1'eceiuoer.p.wu 1. 1. i . i.,t ... lis ii.i..n tlm.MinitHiUA. dlnx twice a year wlinoat irouMina; tbedepoal lor to call or even to preaent the deu.-lt book. Money loaned on renl estate. Preference, with liberal rate ami Umg time, airen to borrower! of 1 or line first mofiAraK'11 lunns worth lour or nMre time the amount ul loan deelrod. Uood reter enie perlect title, Au;., n-uired. .i ., ..... I .. . C.ri.M tunk male. N o lau on lersonal aecarity. - - ,..1 .i..,uit. .MjiuA.l ntir t! t .1-1 illli LI lliaOa appiICailOlia ll1 VWIU.ni, wyram ... rule, by-law and apecial law relailot to 111. Hill HDl W Mil WIIW. iw,.-... . TarBTUta. Jame .'.ooier, liarid Illbert. C B. Ellis, A.J. Hawe, F. w. Hay, John Lowman, ...-i. .. i..i .....I. II II T aiiirnii'. A. n. Anpsij, Wiuw "i"1 - - ....... r LewiiPlitt. H. A. Boiea-a, tXwrad Supe,Oeo. T. Swank, Jame McMiUen, JameaMorley and W. W. Waller. Daniel J. MorrelL, Preldent: Frank Dlliert, Treaaurer; Oyru Elder. iioUcitor. nova. -1 a'- WBOLIBALa AS DRAT AIL, J. II. 7.ini nicrnian. Kain Cross St, A 11. I U1H. HI 1 1 K I , ,i i.ih.i i....-..., tured by himxelf, of the cbolreit of tobacco. Theee dirai cannot heeicelled beany In tb. mar ket. One of the beat Mock of chewing- tobacco ever brought to Somerset. Price to autt th time. - J n . i ' - - m. n n fan. ABO. M1TO. labci ax. amu AiLBnts for Fire anil Iile Insiiraiice, JOHN HICKS & SON, SOMEIISET. PA,. And Real Estate Brokers. ESTABLISIIED.1850. Penon who deelr to ell, buy or exchanir prop erty, or for rent will find It to their advantage to reiciner tb decerlnUtaa thereof, a Bochanrel made anlem ndd or rented. Keal eUt biuluen ganerally Willi proaiitly attooded to. aiwl. J. R. IY1ECAHAN, BTJTCHEE, AND DEALER, "Wholesale and Retail, IN FIIKSH. MEATS! All kinds, each as BEEF, VOKK, MUTTON, VEAL, LAMB. SAUSAGE, Podding, Bolog ns, Miace Meat, arid LARD of oor own Rendering. MARKET DAYS May, Thursflay and SaturSay. Komentet, Pa a"Mct can b o1tinl any 1iajt ilm-ins flio W"wlt. April II. Cook & Beerits' FAMILY GROCERY Flour and Feed W would moat retjiect rally announce to our h-tendi aud the publ le irenerally. In the town and vicinity of So lue not, liiat w nav opened our N.wStor on MAIN CROSS STREE1 Aad la addition to full Una of tb beat CmarrrtlmBerleM. ttlMS, TobiaOCM, Cigr. Ac, We will endeavor, at all tloiea, in eepply JUr cua tomer with to BEST QUALITY OF FAMILY FLOUR, CORN-HEAL. OA TS. SHELLED CORN, OA TS & CO UN CHOP, BRAN, MIDDLINGS Aad everything pertaining to tb Feed Depart ABoatallue .... LOWIST POSSIBLE PRICES. FOlt , CASH ONLY. Alto, a wa Mleetod atock or Olaarwara; Stonewar.. Woodoawara, Bnukai I at kind, aad STATIONERY WaleA w will el! a cheap a tfcw cheapen. Plea call, txamla oor good of all lad, aaj b tatlatied from jtooa- own jadgmant. lioat forget where we Hay On MAIN OBOS8 6trwat,Soarwt,Pa. UeCs, Utj. MISCELLANEOUS, URLIKG, FGLLANSBEE & CO, Merchant Tajlors j . . Ami MnulV-f lire-ra ol Gent's. Youth's and Boys, Fasteiai Kolliiif asj ; teliiii Goofls X0. 42 riFTII AVENUE. PITTSBUltGlI. Dr. Harris' Cramp Cure. A certain, wife and apooly care for every acb.6 andpaln. It give inauint and permanent re lief, and way be ueU a a liniment If desired. Dr. Harris' Summer Cordial FOR CHILDREN TEETHINQ. And an nnfalltng remedy for Diarrhoea, Dys entery, Cholera Morbua. Vomiting, Sour Stom. ach. Siclc Headache. Indigestion, and all dia caaeaof the Btoninch and Bowel. fiend for Pamphlet containing valuable In formaUon. HARRIS EWUTO. TUu) tnstJit, PITTSBURGH. PA. C I' A T E ROOFS. Tbone who are now buiMinjr hcntes shoulJ know that ts It chcrtr In the Urn run Ut tnt im Slut Koofs tbMD tin r hiiiKl. Sl:ite will last forvver, nl nureKiir are ret.uirml. Slate given the j.ur et water Ir eUlerna. Slate i fire pnf. Every futi iMiuaeshtvuM have a Slate roof. Tbe unJvr. ltHMKl Is located in iiUmbcrlond, where be baa a good iaiily ul Peachbottom L Buckingham lor rooning the very beat arti.-le. He will under take to imt Slate Koofs on House, imlillc ami pri vate. ttre, Ac., either in town or country at the lowest pri'-ca. and to warrant thin, t'all and free him or aildres him at his Omce, No. lit) Baltimore Street, ttanioeriand, Aid. Orders may beleit with NOAH OASEBEEK, Agent, Somerset, Pa. V. U. Smrt.v AitI n. ISTt. E. H. WITH E0D3E, HEMP TONE & CO. 285 Bait. St., Baltimore, M. D., Would remeetrnlly awk the merchant of Somer tet ouuntjr, to iml Uiui tln-'ir urUerii ftr FANCY GOODS. ajrurine tbem aatlsraetlun Uitb a reyaiNlP rio an! quality of utMla. The merrhuitu viitina: HmitluMtre are urgently nvjueei! tucuii and Uvc me trelore mtkUiK jriurchaats. HIGHEST AWARDS! afflaS J. REYNOLDS & SO N, NOKTH W 12T COKN Ell THIRTEENTH AND FILBERT STS. PHILADELPHIA, MANUFACTURES OF PATENTED WroughHron Air Tight Heaters WITH SHAKING AND CLINKER-OKIND INQ ORATES FOB BURNING ANTHKA CITE OR BITUMINOUS COAL. CENTENNIAL WROUGHT-IRON HEATERS, FOR BITUMINOUS COAL. KE1STONE WROUGHT-IRON HEATERS, Cooking Ranges, Low-Down Crates, Etc. Descriptive Circulars tent free to any ail. Irons. EXAMINE EEFORESELECTINU. April , THE KANSAS PACIFIC HOMESTEAD Is published by the Land Department of the Kan sas Paelnc Hallway Company, to supply the large and Increasing demand for Information res)iectu)g KANSAS, and especially the m jaiilk-ont body of land granted by Congress In aid of the eonstruc Uim of It! road. Thli grant comprise OVER 5,090,000 ACRES OF LAN D, consisting of every odd section In each township, for a distance ol twenty miles on both lie of the road, or one-hall or tb land In a belt forty mile wide, extexdlng to Denver City, In C 1 orado, thni forming a continuation of the belt of country which, from the Atlantic eoaat Westward, is found to be. In climate, suit, and every prodae Uon of nature, the most favored. To aid In the settlement of thl !uperb domain with an Intelligent aad industrious people, I the object of the HOMESTEAD. It Is Intended to contain a fair and candid representation of fact nor will It ever give. Intentionally, any statement that will n it, noon Investigation, be fully sus tained. The Company obtain! its title to these land from the Government of tb United States. They are being offend at prices lower than any other land! ha th West, that will compare with thesa la oil, ellmate and general advantages. The term of pavawat, a will b found an a eare ful examination, an more irberal In all essential feature than have heretofore been offered by any railway company. - THE HOMESTEAD IS FOR ' F2EE CIRCULATION, And will be at nt gratis to anyoo upon a indica tion. All communications ia reference to the lands of the Company should be addressed to S. J. GILMORE, Land Commissioner, K. P. Ky SALINA, KANSAS. March T.U7T. WARDWELL So me EST A HI SOMERSET, PA.. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 15, 1S77. urii.nit siusai. William Uuil.l w engineer of the train which nn the luth 4 April plunged in Meadow linwk, on I tie line of the Montngton and Providence i K.niruad. It wa hi euiloiu, a often a he pari cl hi! liume, to whimlc an -'Airiwell" to hi wile. He waa l.iend. after Hie diaanler, ilead, wilb liia , hatt'l ou the throttle-valve of hi cnuie. . Two low whittle, qnalut and clear, I " j That wu th signal the engineer j That wan the Higmil tbnt Uuil.l, 'tis ai.l " IIav: to Ills wile at Providence, As Ibioiili tlierlceplng town, and llteuce ' Out In the nlghl, - On to the liKht, Iown last the lanns, lying white, be tped ! Aa a buflband! greeting, acaut, no donbt. Yet to the woman looking out, Watching ami walling, no acrcnade, Love-aong, or midnight roundelay ' S lid what the whistle seemed to lay t "To my tnut true, S, Lore, to you ! Workoig or wultiug, good night !" It nald. Brirk young flagmen, tourUl! fine, Old commuter along the line, Brakcmcn and porters glauced ahead. Smiled ae the signal, sharp, luter.se, Picn-ed thruuh the shadows of Providence, "Nothing ami Nothing : It Is Only Uttild calling his wife." they rahL, Suuiuir an l winter, the oU reihtln liautt o'er the lilllowsof rlH.-no.l grain. Pierced through the budding liouglis o'erhcatl. Ficw down the track whtn the red leave! bumed Like living con Is from the enaine spurned ; San aa It flew : "To our trust true, Flrvt or ail, duty ! Oood night:'' it taU. And then, enc niht. It was bear.l no more From Stnnliiiiton over Kliodc Islaml shore, I Ant then the folk In Providence atniled and said. As tli-y turned In their bed, tkTlie engineer 1 iLismit-e furotUu his midnight cheer. M ' tine only knew. , To his trust true, i Gu!M lay uuder lit! enaltie, i:eo.l. ' - Bukt Haktk. A.NXAIJt OP THE WAR. ON TIIK FIKI.D OV FUKDKKICKSIIl Uil. BY HON. 1. WATSON IK. WE. Every one rcrjicm'jt-rs tLe blaugb ler aim failure at Freih-ricksburg ; ibe gritf of it, lLo niomehtarj pai;g of dot-pair. Duro&idu was tbe man cf tbe 13th of December ; man be, do more gallant soldier ia all tbe army, no more patriotic citizen in nil tbe republic. Dut be attempted there tbe impossible, and as repulse grew toward disaster lost tbat equal mind which id necessary ia arduous af fairs. Let us remember, however, and at ooce, that it is easy to be wise after tbe event. The army of the Potomac felt, at the end of this calamitous day, tbut hope itself : was killed hope, whose presence was never before wanting to tbat array of tbe unconquerable will, and steadfast purpose, and courage to persevere; tbe fcecret of its Goal triumph. 1 bare undertaken to describe certain night-scenes oa that field famous for bloodshed. The battle is terrible ; but the sequel of it is horrible. The battle, the charging column, is grand, sublime. The field after tbe action and tbe re-action is '.he ppeeta ele which harrows up tbe soul. MARY E8 HILL. Marye's Hill was the focus of the strife. It rises in the rear cf Fred ericksburg, a stone's throw beyond the canal, which runs along tbe western border cf tbe city. Tbe arcei-t is not very abrupt. A brick bouse stands ou tbe hillside, whence you may overlook Fredericksburg, and oil tbe circumjacent country. Tbe Orange plank road ascends the hill on tbe rigbt-band tide c f tbe hoUce, tbe telegraph road oa tbe left. A sharp rise of ground at tbo foot of the heights afforded a cover for the formation of troops. Above Marye's Hill is au elevated plateau which commands it. Tbe hill is part of A long, bald ridge ou which tbe decliv ity leans, stretcbiug from Falmouth to Massoponax creek, six miles. Its cuiumit was tbaggy and rough, with tbe earthwoiks ot the Confederates, and was crowned with their artillery. Tbe stone wall ou Marye's Height was their "ct.ignc cf vantage," held by the brigades of Cobb and Ker shaw, cf .McLiws' IivUiou. Oa tbe s mi-circular crest abive, and stretch ing far ua either band wits Liog ftrtet's Corps, funning the left of tbe Confederate line. His advance po sition was ibe stone wall aud rills treiicf.es aluug tbe telegraph read abjve ibe house. The guns of tbe enemy commanded and swept the streets which led o:it to the heights. .Sometimes you mignt see a regiment marching down those streets in sin gle file, kecpiug close to the honsr", one file on the rigbt-band side, anoth er on the 'eft. iictwecu the canal uud the fool of tbe ridge was a levtl plj.'. cf flat, even ground, a few hun dred yards in wid h. This restricted space afforded fbal epportuuity tbeie was to form iu order of battle. A division mafsed on this narrow plain was a target for Lee's artillery, which cut fearful swuibsio tbe dense and compact ranks. Bebw and to 'be right of tbe bouse were feuces which impeded the advance of the cbargiug lines. Whatever division was n.-sigued the task of carrying Marje's Hill, debouched from tbe town, crossed the canal, traversed tbe narrow level, formed under cover of tbe rice of ground below tbe bonse. At the word, suddenly ascending this bank, they pressed forward up Ibe bill for the stone wall and the crest beyond. Bia.NSlDE's DEjI'EII ATK EFFORT. - From noon to dark Durnside con tinued to burl one division after another aguinst tbat vulcano like em inence, belching forth lire and smoke and iron bail. French's Division was tbe first to rush to tbe assault. When it emerged from cover end burst out on tbe open, in full view of tbe enemy, it was greeted with a frightful fiery reception from all bis batteries on ttie circling tummiL The ridge concentrated upju it tbe convergent fire of all its enginery of war. lou rtngbt see l.ir a mile tbe lanes made by the cannon balls in tbe ranks. You tuigbt see a bursting shell throw up iuto ibe air a cloud of earth and dost, mingled with tbe limbs of men. Tbe batteries in front of tbe devoted division thundered against it. To tbe right, to the left, cannon were answeriug to each otber ia A tremendous deafening battle cho rus, the burden of which was Welcome to these, maalmen about to die. The advancing column was tbe focus, the point of couceniratioo, of an aic almost a semi-circle of destruction. It iui ceDtre of attraction of all deadly missiles. lAt tbat moment that single dirisin was goiog op alone in battle inst the Southern Confederacy, and Ivas being prnnded to pieces. It coniinned to go up, nevertbele, towards tbe ntone wall, toward tbe crest above. With lips more firmly pressed together, tbe men closed up their rank aLd pushed forward. - The 'term of battle in creased its fury 5 upon tbem ; the crash of musketry iningled with tbe roar of ordnance! from - the peaks. Tbo stone wall and) the rifle-pits add ed tbeir terrible- treble to the deep bae of tbe bellowing Huge. Tbe rapid discbarge of small-arms poured a continuous rain of bullets in tbeir facep; tbey fell ' down by tens, . by bnndreds. When ,tbey bad gained a large portion of ; the distance, tbe storm developed foto a hurricane of rain. Tbe division was blown back, as if by the breata of bell's door sad denly opened, ihst'ered, dit ordered, pell-mell, down tbe declivities, amid the shouts and yells of tbe enemy, wbicb made the horrid din demoniac, Until iben the dirlcion seemed to be contending with tbe wrath of brute and material forces bent on its anni hilation. - This about recalled the buraan sgeticy in ill the turbulence and fury .f tbe scette. Tbe division of French fell backi tbat is to sar. one half fit U stiff nil a loss f near balf its m?mbers. Hancock immediately charged with five thousand men, veteran reg iments, led by tried commanders. They raw - what had happened; Uiey knew bst Would liefall tbem. They udvauced np the bill; tbe bravest were found dead within twtniy-five pece of tbe stone wall; it was slttughur, havoc, carnage. In Gfteen minutes they were thrown back with a loss of two thousand unprecedented severity of loss. Han cock and French, repulsed fr.m the t-toLe wall, would hot quit the bill altogether. Their divicions, lyiog down oa the earth, literally clung to tbe ground they bad won. ' These valiant men, who could not go for ward, would not go back. All the time tbe batteries ' on tbe heights raged and stormed at tbem. How ard s division came to their aid. Two divisions of tbo Ninth Corns on tbeir left attacked repeatedly in their snpport. AN IMPOSSIBLE TASK. It was theu that Curnside rode down from the Phillips House, oa tbe northern sido of tbe Uappabannock, and standing oa the bluff at tbe river, stariog at thoso formidable heights, exclaimed, "Tbat crest must te car ried to-night." Hooker remonstra ted, begged, obeyed.- In the army to bear is to obey. He prepared to charge with . Humphrey's . JUivision ; be brought up every available bat tery ia the city. "I proceed," he said, "against their barriers as I would against a fortification, and en deavored to breach a bole sufficiently large for a forlorn hope to enter." Ue continned tbe canaonadingon tbe sclec'ed spot until sunset. He made no in)'essioo upon tbe works, "no more iti.ii rn could make upjn tbe side of a ni-.uuiaia of rock." Hum phrey's Division formed ucder shel ter of the rise, iu column for assault. They were directed to make tbe at tack w ith empty muskets ; there was no time then to load and fire. Tbe o Dicers were pat ia front to lead. At the command they moved for ward with great impetuosity; they charged at a run, hurrahing. Tbe foremost of tbem advanced to within Gfteen or twenty yards of the stone wall. Hooker afterward said: "No campaign in the world ever saw a mare gallant advance than Hum phrey's men made there. Lint tbey were to do a work oo man could do." In a moment tbey were burled back with enormous loss, it was now just dark ; tbe attack was suspended. Three limes from noon to dark tbe canuon on tbe crest, the msuketry at tbe stone wall, bad prostrated divis ion nf:cr division on Marye's Hill. Acd uow the sun bad set ; twilight had stolen out of tbe west and spread her veil cfduk; tbe town, the flat, tbe bill, the ridge, Uy under tbe "cir cling canopy of night's extended shade." Darkness and gloom bad settled down upon tbe Phillips House, over ou the Stafford Heights, where Curuside would after a while hold his council of war. AM 'NlI THE WOUNDED. Tbe shattered regiments of Tyler's Brigade of Humphrey's Division were assembled under cover of ibe bank where tbey bad formed for tbe charge. A- colonel rode about through the crowd with tbe colors of bis regiment in bis band, waving tbem, inciting the soldiers by bis words to re-form for repelling a sor tie. But there was really little need fur that. Longstreet was content to lie behind his earthworks and stone walls, and with a few men and the covering Gre of numerous guns was able to (ling back with derision and scorn all tbe columns of assault tbat madness might throw against his impregnable position. Tbe brick bouse on ibe hill whs full of wounded men. la front of it lay the command er of a regiment, with snatlernd leg, white, still, with closed eyes. His riderlesi borse had already been mounted by tbe general of tbe divis ion; about him in rows, the wounded, tbe dying, and a few of the dead, of bis own and otber commands. Tbe fatal stone wall was in easy ma-ket range; iu a moment with one rush, the ecemy might surround tbe build ing. Beyond tbe house, and around it, and on all tbe slope below it, the ground was covered with corpses. A little distance below tbe bouse, a general officer sat on his borse the borse of tbe wounded colonel lying above. It was tbe third stted be had mounted ibat evening Tbe other two Uy dead. He was all aloof; no staff, not even an orderly. His face was toward the bouse aud tbe ridge. He pointed to ibe stone wall. "One minute more," be said, "and we would have been over it." He did not reflect that that would bave been but .he beginning of tbe work giveu biin to do. Ue praised and blamed, besought and even swore ; to be so near tbe goal, and then not reach it. When be saw a party of three or four descending tbe bill, be ordered tbem to stop, in order to renew -the attack. After a little tbey did what was right, quietly proceeded tn tbe foot of tbe bill and joined their regiment. AH tbe wbile stretcher-bearers were passing np and down. Descending tbey bore pitiable burdens. A wounded man npheld by one f-r two comrade, haltingly made his way l tbe hos pital, followed by anoiber and noih e. The colons I was conveyed by f.,ur men in the town, iu agony, on portion of a panel ol fence torn down in the progress of the charge. Tbe stretcher-bearers, not distinguishing between persons, bad - taken what soever one tbey first saw that needed tbeir assistance; moreover there was no time for selection. Ibe next minute all tbe wounded on the bill- fide might be in the hands cf tbe Confederates. A DARK XIOIIT. There was the darkness which be longs to night. The regiment bad re-formed arounu their respective standards. Tbey presented a short front compared with tbe long lines that bad gone up tbe i-teep, hurrah ing. Tbe Southerners were quiet and close behind tbeir works It seemed that they would not tally forth. Ttea from each regiment a lieutenant with a small party went np the ascent, and sought io the darkness what fate bad befallen the missing, and brought mccor to the wounded. Tbey went from man to man. as the? lay on the irrouud. Ia the c-brcuriiy it was bard to dislin guish the features of the slain. Tbey fell lur the letters and nombtrs on the caps. .The 'niters indicated tbe company, the numbers denoted tbe regiment. Whatsoever man of their regiment ibey discovered, him ibey bare off if wounded; if dead, tbey took tbe valuables found on his person, for bis friends, and left him to lie oa the eartb wbere be bad fallen, composiug bis limbs, turning his face to tbe sky. Ibey found snob all the way np; some not far from the stone wall, a greater num ber near tbo corners of the house, where the rain of bullets had been thickest At 9 o'clock at night the command was withdrawn from tbo front, and rested on tbeir arms in tbe streets of tbe town. Some sat on the curb stones, meditating, looking gloomily at the ground; others lay on tbe pave ment, trying to forget the events of the day in sleep. There was little said: deep dejection burdened the spirits of all. Tbe incidents of the battle were not rehearsed, except now and then. Always when any one spoke, it was of a slain comrade cf bis virtues or of tbe manner of his death; or of one missing, with many conjectures respecting him. Some of them, it waa said, bad premonitions, and went into the battle not expect ing to survive tbe day. Tbus tbey lay or sat. Tbe conversation was with bowed heads, and in a low man ner, ending ia a sigh. Tbe thoughts of all were in the homes cf tbe killed, seeing there the scenes and sorrow which a day or two afterward occur red. Then tbey reverted to tbe comrade of tbe morning, tbe lent-sbarer, lying stark and dead up on Marve's UiU or at its base. A brave lieutenant lay on the plank road, just where tbe brigade crossed foi the purpose of forming for tbe charge. A sharpshooter of the ene my bad made tbat spot bis last bed. Ii was December and cold. There was no camp fire, and there was neither tlaiki t nor overcoat. They bad been stored in a warehouse prep aratory to moving out to the attack. But no one mentioned the cold; it was not noticed. Steadily the woun ded were carried by to the hospital near the river. Some one now and then brought word of the condition of a friend. The hospitals were a harrowing sight; full, crowded; never theless patients were brought ia coa- s.antly. Down stairs, np stairs, ev ery room full. Surgeons, with their CDats off and sleeves rolled up above tbe elbows, sawed off limbs, adminis tered antithetic. Tbey took off a leg or an arm in a twinkling, after brief consultation. It seemed to be, in case of doubt off with bis limb. A colonel lay in tbe middle cf ibe main room on the Grct floor, white, unconscious. When the surgeon was asked wbut hope be turned bis band down, tben np, as much as to say it may .cbaoce to fall either way. But the sights in a field hospital after a battle are not to be minutely de scribed. Nine thousand was ibe tale of tbe wonnded nine thousand and not all told. A OnASTLY TICKET LINE. After midnight, perhaps it was 2 o'clock ia the morning, the brigade was agaia marched out of tbe town and, tiling in from the road, took op a position a short distance below the brick house. It waa the ground over wbicb the successive charges bad been made. The fog however, ob scured everything; not a star twink led above tbem; nothing could be discerned a few feet away. Tbe brick boose could not be seen, though they were close toil. Looking back toward tbe town lyiog oa the river. over ibe narrow plain which lay be low, one could not persuade one s self it was not a sheet of water, un ruffled io tbe dim landscape. Few lights, doubtless, were burning at tbat hour in the town. None could be seeo. You would not bave sup posed there waa a town there. A profound stillness prevailed, broken by no other sound than bv tbe cries of tbe wounded. On all the eminence above, where Longstreet's forces lay. tbere was tbe silence of death. W ub night, which bad brought onvietion of failure, the brazao throats of Burn side's guns had ceased to roar. It was as if furious lions bad gone with darkness to tbeir lairs. Now aud then an ambulance :iept along below, without seeming to make any noise. Tbe stretcher-bearers walked silently toward whatever spot a cry or groan of pain indicated an object of tbeir search. It may not have been so quiet as it seemed- Perhaps it was contrast with tbe thunder of can non, and shriek of shell, aud ra'.ile of musketry, and all the thousand voices of battle. When, on tbe return to Marje's Heights, the command first filed ia from ibe road, there appeared to be a thiu line of soldiers sleeping oa tbe ground to be occupied. Tbey seem ed to make a sort of row or rank. It was aa if a line of skirmishers had bal -.-.irr--"" 1 'toil anil lain ili.MSl :I.AV W7rs rMtrfilfM 1 9 motionless; tbeir sleep was profound. Not one of them aweke and g-1 up They weie uot relieved, either, when ibe others came. -Tbey seemed to bave no commander at least noue awoke). Had tbo fiatlgor-.i of the dav completely oVerprrel all i I lheni, 1 llii-er uud privates) kiikt They were Ui'umibI llio tleinV. millnil ealt of tiiui. Tbey were tbo advance liue of ibe L' n ion army. Was it thus they keoi their waicb, ou which the safety of the whole aroiy depended, pent op between the ridge and tbe river? Tbe enemy might come wiibin ten steps of iheni without be ing seen. Tbe fog was a veil. No one knew what lay or moved or crept a little distance off. The regiments were allowed to lie down, la djing so, tbe men male a denser rank witb those tbere before them. Still those others did no. waken, '.f you looked closely at the face of any one of them, in the mist and dimness, it was pallid, tbe eyes closed, tbe month open, the hair was disheveled; besides, the at titude was often painful. There were blood-marks, also. These men were all dead. Nevertheless, tbe ne-v comers laid down among tbem and rested. Tbe pall of night con cealed tbe foe now. Tbe sombre un certainty of fate enveloped the mor row. One was saved from the peril of the charge, but be found himself again on Marye's Il'll, uear tbe ene mv, face to face with ibe dead, sha ring their couch, almost ia tbeir em brace, iu the mist and ibe December night. Why not a. -cept them as bed fellow: Tbe ballet ibat laid low this one, if it had started diverging by ever so small an angle, would bave found tbe heart's blood of that other who gazed upon tbem. It was cbar.ee or Providence, which to-nur row might be less kind. So tbey lay down with the dead, all io line, and were lulled asleep by the monotony of tbe cries of tbe wounded scattered evervwhere. A WATCH WITH THE DYING. At ibis time three officers rode out from tbe ranks, down tbe bill, toward the town. Tbey sought to acquire a better knowledge of the locality. Tbey were feeling about in tbe fog for the toot of the bill, and tbe roads. After thev had gone a little distance, one of then) was stationed as a guide- mark, while tbe two others w;nt further, reconnoitering or exploring. He who was tbus left alone found himself amid strange and melancholy surroundings. Meditation sat npen his brow, but to fall into complete rev- ery was impossible. Tbe hour and the scene would intrude themselves upon bis thoughts cf what had befal len. The dead would not remain unno ticed. Tbe dying cried out into tbe darkness, and demanded succor of tbe world. Was tbere nothing in the universe to save? Tens of thousands within ear-shot, aod do footstep of friend or foe drew near during all the hours. Sometimes thev drew near aad passed by, which was aa aggra vation of the agoonv. Ibe subdued sound of wheels rolling slowly along and ever and anon slopping, the murmur of voice and cry of pain, told of tbe ambulance on its mission. It went off in another direction. Tbe cries weri borne through the haze to tbe officer as he sat solitary, waiting. Now a single lament, agaia voices intermingled and ts if in chorns; from every direction, in (root, behind, to right, to left, some near, some dis tant and faint. Some doubtless were faint tbat were not distant, the de parting breath of one about to ex pire. They expressed every degree and shade of suffering, of pain, of agony; a sigh, a groan, a piteous ap peal, a shriek, a succession of shrieks. a call of despair; a prayer to Uod, a demand for water, for the ambulance, a death-rattle, a horrid scream, a voice as of the body when tbj soul tore itself away, and abandoned it to the enemy, to the night, and to dis solution. The voices were various. This, tbe tongue of a German; tba' wail in tbe Celtic brogue cf a poor Irishman. Tbe accent of New Eng land was distinguishable ia the thin cry of that boy. From a different quarter came utterances iu tbe dialect of a far off Western State. Tbe ap peals of tbe Irisb were tbe most pa thetic. They put them iuto every form denunciation, remonstrance, a pitiful prayer, a peremptory demand. Tbe (iermao was more patient, less demonstrative, withdrawing into himself. One man raised bis body on bi- left arm, and extending bis right band npward, cried oat to the heavens and full back. Most of them lay moaning, with the Gtful move ment of unrest and pain. ROBBING THE DEAD. At this hour of the night, over at ibe Philips House, Buroside, overru ling bis council of war, bad decided, in desperati o, tj haul the Ninth Corps next day, himself at its bead, against that self-same eminence. Tbe officer sat on his borse looking out ia the spectre-making mist aod darkness. Notbiug stirred: not the sound of a gun was beard; a dread silence, which one momentarily ex pected to be broken by the rattle of fire-arms. AU at once he looked down. He saw something white, not far off, tbat moved and seemed to be a man. It was, in fact, a tbing in human form. Io tbe obscurity one could not discern what tbe man was doing. Tbe officers observed him attentively. lie stooped and rose again; then stooped and ban died aa object oa tbe ground. He moved awry, aud agaia bent down. Presently be returned,' and began ooce more his manipulations of the former object. The chills crept over one. Tbe darkness and the ljom and ibe contrasted stillness from tbe loud and fiightful uproar of the day except for ibe intermittent cries of the wounded and dyicg, groans in termingled with fearful shrieks and cries for water, aud this tbing, man or fiend, flitting about tbe Geld, now up, now down, .intent on bis purpose, seeing nothing else, bearing nothing, secmiugly fearing nothing, loving nothing, the bill all overstrewo with dead aod the debris of artillery and mutilated horses it was a ghastly. weird, wicked scene, sending a shudder through the frame. "Who goes there?" at leo&th tbe officer said, and rude forward. "A private," the man replied, and gave bii regiment and company. 1 1 WHOLE NO. vm. "What are you doiug here at ibis hour?" and so questioning he saw that the man was rinragrd ut puling on the el it bes of a ilei.d soldier a; bis feet. "I need cl.Mhes and sb e b ;;.!. "ami lii taking- ll ui Id.ni this 1 ni!r; le tit Md tl.i tn ai. uo-rr "' Yn llien! yml are r'll'iig Hi. nVad; r -li!iiiig them uf iln-ir watrht-s ami " uiouey. Begone!-' Aod the mau disappeared into ibe night liki an evil bird that bad tbwn away. Wbere ha had stood lav tin. .I--.) man, who bad fallen in the charge, stripped of bis opper clothing; robbed of his life by tbe enemy, robbed of his garments by a Comrade, alone ou tbe hillside, in the darkness waited for in some far off Northern home. THE WITHDRAWAL. The three officers returned to their posts. Toward morning the general commanding tbe brigade came out, and withdrawing bis troops a little distance to tbe rear, took ur a m position, less exposed than the furnier i:.. - .. nun. Aue captains were cautioned not to leave any cf iheir men un warned of the movement. Nevtr.bc. less a few of tbem were not riinin. guisbed from tbe dead, and were left w here ihpw lav An .,.-.)..,!., ... I - j j . . i. wiuvii :i- igeant, waking from the sound sleep luuuceu oy me istigues ol tbe day. opened his eyes and looked about him on all sides, with surprise and wouder. His company and regiment were gone The advance lite, if which tbey hod formed a part, had disappeared. Ue saw no living or moving thing. He started up and stood at gaxe. Wbicb way to What to do now? t?0? lie ponrluilonl lb ,at the revriment bad moved f.i.-thpr forward, and going Grst to the left r.nd tben op along a piece of fence be saw tbe hostile line a short distance before him. Falling down ha cni o - - . j . on hands and knees, descending the ?ti . - " u again until te reached the road. D officer, anxious when the with. drawal was ordered that no ote ould remain behind for want f no. tice, waited until the regiments baa moveu away, men passed along tbe line jost abandoned. He saw a man lying on his side, reposing on his el bow, his head supported on bis hand, bis left leg drawn up. You would have been certain he dozed or medi tated, so natural and restful his pos ture. Him he somewhat ruilolv touched, and tbus accosted; "Get p aod join your company. We ave moved to the rear " Thn r. dining figure moved not, made no response. The officer bent over him and looked closely he was a corpse. At length tbe dawn appeared tbe mist was dispelled With the com ing of morning, the command was again taken into the town. Phila delphia WeeUy Time. Tttw Ureal Railway Riot. The railway riot which last week began at Martinsburg, in West Vir ginia, and for the suppression of wnicn tbe governor mvoked and ob tained the aid of the President, in creased from that point until at the close of the week it had acquired frightful and horrible dimensions. I neiuer mis is due to a previously concerted plan among railroad em ployes or is the effect of sudden and unthinking passion, awakened by tbe first disturbance, we are not able to say; yet tbe rapid and widespread dinusion of tbe riotous temper, in volving the peace of society in sever al states, blockading railroads, de stroying property, suspending the in tercourse of travel and business on some of tbe great trunk lines of tbe country, and resulting ia desperate lighting and tbe loss or millions of property and scores of lives, is the fearful fact to which the last few days bear melancholy witness. To all sensible and law-loving persons the spectacle is simply one of horror. ibey look npoa tbe rioters not only as maniacs, drunk with ignorant pas sion, and in the end doing to them selves more harm than to anybody else, but also as criminals ibat re serve to be punished. It is au American principle, almost too familiar to need a statement, that every one bas tbe natural and legal right to fix bis own price for bis la bor, aud not to work unless be can get it, and peaceably to combine and co-operate with others for this pur pose, subject to tbe limitation that such combination and co-operation shall not bo a virtual conspiracy against tbe general good and safety of society. Nobody in this country disputes this right It is equally true tbat every employer, whether an individual or a corporation, has the same right to fix tbe rate of wages to be paid for labor. If tbe parties can not agree as to wages, then tbe onei may innocently refuse to work, and tbe otber may just as innocently re fuse to give employment to labor. bach simply does what be bas a legal right to do, whether it be wise or not; and with neither, when so doing, should civil society ioterfere. Tbere may be and almost always will be questions of equity, fair dealing, and good conscience as between the par ties; yet tbey are of such a character not to admit of legal cognizance or adjuttmentswithout infringing upon tbe freedom of contracts and produc ing more barm than good. Govern ment cannot wisely undertake tbe task of regulating tbe relations of capital aad labor, beyond tbe simple July ' 01 enforcing contracts bug laud for a long series cf years tried the experiment, and finally abandon ed h, as hopeless of good and pro ductive only of evil. These princi ples bave among the American peo ple tbe character of political axioms. When, however, laborers combine out only to discontinue work, and in ibis way to embarrass tbeir employ ers, and, if possible, force them to a compliance with their demands, but alto by threats and violence, as in tbe present case, to prevent others from working at wages which tbey declice, and to wreak tbeir vengeauce on tbeir j employers, tben the question ceases j to be one of allowable conflict be-. tween capital and labor, and instant- ly becomes an issue between law ami. anarcby. Laborers are tben crimi-! nals la fact Tbey are rioters and , public enemies, and worse than w'lllj beasts turned loose upon society.) They are entitled to no sympathy,! and for them no apology whatever j can be mader whatever may bave been iLeir grievance as the sellers of labor. Their resort is to the piinc i pie ol brute fjreo, without and against tbe authority of law; ,.!, st far as they are successful, MH-iety w diiorgauizsd and reduced to a state of chaoa. The passions of bell are mj chalotd, aod every min'a lir0 and properly are at ibe mercy of the mob. This being the state of thin?? then civil society at the time baa hat one duty to perform, and this duty is absolute and immediate. I; matt Is? done at once. Kberd. no mti r what may be their alleged grievances, should promptly reo-iv, ft waroiug by tbe constituted auibvrkies; and, unless tbey promp I bevd it and dis continue tbeir riotous proceedings, ihe remedy of hille' and hay. met should be applied to ihein, in no half way manner, witlimt liestuiitir, ami with an energy ami f.nf tbat will Im ( u lil felt This m ibe dirm t ami iinpt-raiivAt duty.- it is a err, ami "lli-ri -f,i ul thai s-iTlfi tim. The li'- riiu!ii iai ii in. v ti's ;s 'h.t th-v ) lire, t ini,e ri-,.' ; I, ii, . . ha nOiipi.- inn siir.-s ! f r, j,ri s-i hi r u.-h u-s d ti.itti ibry tet timlr-r fearful Aud dostriii'liv bdav. jSueu was the fact at MaUuNUorkf, ana Mia worse at IMtsburgb. If the disturbance there had been sitniiarlv (crushed, even at the price ot life, tbat probably would have been the end of the whole affair. Let it be welt un derstood thai society will shoot riot ers down, unbeeitauogly; let there be one or two distinct aid impressive examples to this effect; and those wbti furnish the material for riots will be quite snre to take counsel of their own fears. This is the only kind of logic tbat tbey clearly underatand. When the riot is suppressed, ami law and order are restored, then comes the important duty of punish ing the rioters, through the peaceful action of cjurts of justice at least, iu sufficient numbers to furnish an effective exaitiphi of the punitive power of law. Erery such comm lion, however loosely organized, is gouen up and kept np by certain per sons, w bo act as leaders. They are the c)taius of tbe riot, and, hem e. (are the penon upon whom especial ly law should with unsparing severi ty deal out its penal vengeance. It is not enough simply to put down a mob. Tbe safety of society demands punishment; and mle.JS this follows the restoration of public order, the work is only half done. As to the wages question between employes and railroad companies, we have ut this time nothing to say, fur ther than to express the hope that no company will make any compromise with rioters. Compromises are not ia order when men are jiyhtiny for higher wages or against a- reduction of wages. When, soaked with liquor, they shout "bread or blood" and proceed to "blood," then the time for negotiation is past The policy of conciliation is then bad policy. It mhke3 lawless violence successful and encourages its repetition. We honor labor and mean in every proper way to advocate its rights; bat when its representatives undertake to rule so ciety and regulate wages by violence, then we would not lit tea to them a moment or yield to them an inch. Tbat is not the time to appoint com mittees of conference, or to make any attempt to adja-it an economical ques tion, or to explain anything, or to hear any grievance. The one thing and tbe only tbing then in order is to put down the rioters and punish them, and in this way show them and everybody else that riots have absolutely no power to affect tbe question of wages. The sooner this is understood to be a fixed and irre versible fact the better for all the in terests of society, including those of Ir.bor. AVc York Indi'jfiidrtit. Iwtelliaewee f .'. The London Milk- Journal say?: "That cows have memory, language. signs, and means of enjoying pleas ant associations, combining for ag gressive purposes, bas been recogized, but scarcely to the extent the subject merits. Traveling in Italy many years ago, we visited some of the large dairy farms in tbe neighborhood of Ferrara. Interspersed among much of the low-lying, unhealthy land, re markable for the prevalence on it of very fatal forms of anthrax in tbe summer season, are fiae undulating pasture lands, and tbe fields are of great extent. We happened to stop at a farm bouse one fine autumn after noon when tbe cows were about to be milked. A herd of over one hundred was grazing homeward. The women took tbeir positions with stool close to tbe house, and as tbe cows ap proached, names were called out, which were, we at Grst thought, ad dressed to tbo milkmaids. Kosa, Flo red z, Giuela, Sposa, and many name?, which were noted by 03 at the time, were eallod out by the overseer or one of tbe womeu, and we were as tonished to see cow after cow cease feeding or chewing the cud aud make direct sometimes at a trot, tor the woman tbat usually milked ber. Tbe practice we found was not confined to one farm; all the eows on each farm knew tbeir respective names and took up their position ia tbe open field iust a readily at the individual members of some large herds in this country, turning from tbeir fields, take up tbeir places in the sheds." At the Cleveland baby show : 'That baby,' said a pctator, may look pretty at borne, but it is hardly np to the standard of a baby show. Don't you think so?' addressing a lady who stood uear. Excuse me from commeniing, sir, Raid tbe lady, 'as my opinion might be binse-J. I am its mother.' The man asked for Lis hat and took a recess. A wife thus writes to her abeent spouse: I am most sick, baby Is under the doctor's care, and James and the other children bave tbe measles. AU the women are wearing back eombw, and don't forget to write often, we all send love and our house almost got on Gre la-t night. Nothing undermines one's faith in a man's liberality to the church so much as to see bim stick his bands down deep into bis pockets as tbe eontribulioo-box is traveling bis way, look astonished, and then remark to bis neighbor : "I've got on my other pants." An American man, after dining at a London restaurant, paid his bill, and was about leaving, when the wai ter ruggested tbat ibe amount did not include the waiter. "Ab said tbe man, but I didn't eat th wait er !" A pMitiineot New Yok man. who bas stayed out every night until ruid-nio-sit Uir seven vears. now gets mad and wants a divorce because bis wife bas Commenced the same practice wiibin a few weeks. A Frenchman deSaes suspicion to be a eentiment which incites us to look for something which we do not wish to find.