Juwn4Tiswp RATES N. 1 mo. 3 mos. 8 mos. ,1 vr. Lau • 1.76 4 3.60 6.03 10.00 300 3.60 • 360 10.06 16.00 4.00 6.00 8.00 16.00 =CO 8.00 15.0) 25.01 40.00 - 10.60 ' 2003 3101 60.110 11.00 3160 60.00 . ertoo • 21.03 MAXI 80.00 150.01 One Square, Two Squares Three Squares ink r at 3 4l9 Column ' air Column . One Column Professional Cards $l.OO per lino per year. Administrator's and Auditor's Notices, 63.00. • City Wilkes, 33 cents per line let insertion, 13 cents per Una ouch imbsaquent insertion. Ten lines agate constitute a square. WILLS IREDELL, PUBLIBUERB. ALLENTOWN, PA MR Goobis. 6 6 SUDDEN CHANGE." WILL LOW PRICES INFLUENCE YOU? OLD TIMES AGAIN • IMMENSE REDUCTION IN PRICES THE OLD 00,R Just opened Ali enormous STOCK OP! SPRING GOODS, W4t . 04 ea wnml for STYLE, VARIETY, AND L 0 IVNESB OF PRICE shall and cannot bo summed Par Competition deka with any other Establtelunent outside of tha larger cities.] SPACE WILL NOT PERMIT OP NAMINO ouch an Im mense etoek of good., but lot it enlace to may that wo have the most COMPLETE aesortrtiont of Ladles' Dreg. floods. Drees Bilks, Popllna, Shawle,Dalmorale, Muse Pendell lug bloods, Ladles' Cloaking Cloth, hien, Wear in Cloth, Caselmerom, &V, and everything that a kept In a FIRST CLASS DRY ()CODS STORE In endless variety. Ido not "QUOTE PRICES" an Immo houses do, but will guarantee ASTONISHING FIGURES. The difference In prices of godilo 10-dap, and a month ago, 1,1 really painful for them who have been caught with largo atocke on hand at high prim, bnt an that le not the cane with me, I shall an heretofore make the OLD COR NER THE GREAT PLACE OF INTEREST AND HEADQUARTERS (or tho masses to get Mots goods at tho LOWEST MARKET PRICES • I folly realize that no permanent success can be achieved unless the promises held out by advertisements are found to be fully sustained on a visit to the Moro. Nor can It be a large success without scrupulously reliable and fair dealing at all times and uniform courtesy to every custo mer, and the endeavor to make every buyer a constant dealer. All I ask is simply to decide by actual !Hal whether or not It is to your advantage to become a custo mer. Respectfully Yours, M. J. K.RAMER, OLD CORNER," OPPOSITE THE EAGLE HOTEL Aprlll4 GREAT REDUCTION OF PRICES WOOLEN GOODS. I= FANCY SPRING CASSIMERES, FLANNELS, JEANS, CARPETS, &C In communal of tde abundance and over stock of the above Goods lu tho City Markets, they cannot at present be disposed of except at a loss to the manufacturer and many Woolen Mills are either closed or working ou half time. Under those circumstances, wishing to keep his Mill running. • ' • HENRY GA BRIEL, IMEM ALLENTOWN WOOLEN MILL, IMO OP FIOrTLIJIEVENTIT.ST6KIMI Having u largo and Ono stock of tho best styles of Fancy Cassleneres forty... and o's ear, tot also vaiety of other Woolen Goods and Ca b rne y ts w suitable for a the r season and desired In every household, low concluded to RETAIL Er=l WHOLESALE PM( IES Mix cont . ° stuck of Woolou and other (tondo, no trill& uro several hundred pier. of ALL WOOL DOUBLE AND TWIST GUSSIMERES, FLANNELS, JEANS, 6.e., tat , , ne a n n t d o id P Uf all price, greatly reduced. .d INGRAIN, • LIST, RAG, AND OTHER CARPETS, As low on SO coats a rant BALMORAL SKIRTS, MEE WOOLEN CARPET YARN, all eolOrs. Best quality reduced to DO cents. BED COVERLETS, All kinds, White or Fancy, at greatly reduced prices. CASH BUYERS, or thoso having Wool to exchange, will certainly find It to their Interest. In examining the floods at his house or factory, whore ho has fitted up several rooms for @howled the same, and respectlully Invites the Public to call and judge for therneelren • . HENRY GABRIEL, ALLENTOWN WOOLEN MILL, South Itml of Seventh Street, Allentown, l'a April 11-2 m FOUR HUNDRED FARMS FOR BALE, ranging In price fromaB to Piper acre, accord to Improvements, location &c. Good soil. genial climate, and near market.. These farms are situated in Virginia and Maryland, some in the intmailata vicinity of Wash ington and others from 281o:10 mile. distant from the Cap ital. Addresa or call on J. D. GA NO WEDS 4.58 Massachu setts Avenue. near Sixth street, Washington, D. C. MACUNGIE SAVINGS BANK. The Macungie Savings Bank (nearly oppoalte the Allen town National Bank) receives money on Depealt In any sums. on Interest of 8 per cent. per annum. Deposits may be withdrawn partly or wholly at any during the year for which Interest will be allowed J. -- according to the time the same may have remained. ovemment Bonds are taken for which the highest pre miums and accrued Interest Will he allowed. Money loaned out at desirable rates at all times. ' TWISTERS 1 Patd's°2l,:a. 1.1%';.1.14114. John ti. Oog D John R. Bchal D►dol Clader Wm. D. t ro ll, D. Raub. Dutl►, . LICIITENWALNIEU, C►eLlar. Br.NJAMIN F OOEL.Pres/deal LINE CUSTOM MADE BOOTS AND EROES FOR GENTLEMEN. All the loading styles on hand or made to meunre Price. Axed LOW FIGURES on Illustrated Price Lt.t with instractionn for oelf-measuremont Bent on receipt of Po Ontenaddresc WU. F. BARTLETT. 39 South Math street, above Chestnut ' Philadelphia. atm 18-ly IT N. WATERMAN, • *Proprietor of WATERMAN'S COCKTAIL A2f D TON IC HITTERS, Wholesale ad Retail, No. 1100 Mattel St., Philadelphia. . The tonic properties of these Bitters have been certified to by some of our most eminent practising physicians, as the best tonic now in use, and the Cocktail Bitters is the universal favorite amongludges of a good gin or whisky eecttall, Vehigh VOL. XXIII. difotui. FOLLOW THE CROWD. THE RUSII TREMENDOUS! OUR STORE BLACK WITH CUSTOMERS! WE CARRY EVERYTHING.RY STORM! A CLEAKCUT THROUO Tus DRY GOODS TRADE! HIGH-PRICED MERCHANTHPANW•STEICKEN! SOME SAY WE WILL NOT STAY SOME SAY WE ARE LOSING MONEY NOT SO! WE INTEND TO STAY. NOT 1301 WE ARE MAKING MONEY. . HOW THEN CAN WE SELL 80 CHEAP I BECAUSE DRY GOODS ARE WAY DOWN BECAUSE OUR STOCK 18 ALL NEW BECAUSE WE CHARGE BUT LITTLE PROFIT BECAUSE OUR STORE IS ALWAYS CROWDED! WE ARE CRUSHING OUT 111011 PRICES! . WE SELL EVEN LOWER HERE THAN IN OUR NEW YORK STORES! GREATEST BARGAINS EVER OFFERED! DRY GOODS DOWN ONE-HALF IN ALLENTOWN! PEOPLE COMING IN FROM EVERY DIRECTION. EVERYBODY PLEASED WITH TILE NEW YORK STORE NO ONE COMPLAINS OF 111011 PRICES THERE. We aro ceiling Coats & Clark's cotton at 70, others charge 10e; French Woven Whalebone Corsets 000, others charge Si 50; Paper Muslims 124 e, others charge 160; Double width alpaca. 373, other charge 63; Fringed Towels 1256 e, others charge Zo; Splendid Table Diaper 50e, other, charge 80c Splendid Linen Napkin. $l6O per dos., others charge $3 00; Splendid yard wide Muslin 12;6e, others charge 180; 'Merrimack Prints 1236 e, othens charge 16e; Best Domain, Itic, othero charge 25c; Ladies' Cotton Dose 12J6e, others; charge 18e; Stair Carpet. 25c, others charge 45e; All Wool ingrains, yard wide, $5, other, charge 20; Hoop Skirls 63c, others charge $1 25; Irish Poplins $1 00 andlld 3718, other. charge $l6O and $223. Also, Trimmings, Laces, Hid and Silk Moves, Shooting,, Ticklnks, Denims, Cheeks, Caul mores, Ste., Se., &e., at equally low prices. Some merchants do not always sell as they advertise. WE DO. When you come bring this advertisement with yon, and If wo do nut soil as wo state, don't buy a cent's worth ans. FOSTER'S NEW YORK CITY STORE, Onrwalto German Reformed Church, ALLENTOWN. PA FIRE! FIRE I FIRE! HOI HAVE YOU HEARD THE NEWS! 0, NO! 0, NO! NOT SO! Tho Corner Store and others cant cell cheaper than SCHREIBER BROS XO. 10 EAST IfLUILTOY ST. AROUSE TO YOUR INTEREST, INSCRIBE ON YOUR HARM/ GOOD GOODS & CHEAP PRICES Let or hare Peace, in other words go to Schreiber Pro', for DRY. GOODS. Rear ye ! Take notice old and young, male and female, kb and Poor, high and low, bond and free all are sum oned to appear to render a good and vollb reaeon why hey should not pnrchame their FOREMN s. DO3IESTIC DRESS GOODS SCHREIBER BROS A failure to appear and auatver to a forfeit of ..10 to your pocket. Baits call your attention to our arotortment of ACK DRESS SILKS, all qualities, PLAN SILKS, all colora; IRISH POPLINS, FRENCH POPLINS, ALPACCAS, PLAIN AND STRIPED MORALES. SHAWikt! The vary Urgent nsnortment of shawls that we hay opened—all the now style, Ladies Sackings of all kinds, both plain and figured;at all price, Balmoral Slartn,tho cheapest over brought to Allentown. DOMESTIC 000DS, nch an bleached and unbleached sheeting muslin., bleached nut unbleached shooting tick ing, cotton and linen table diaper, gingliamn, checks and calicoes. as low as the lowest. Marsaillen quilts and cotton covers of all descriptions. Our Mock of Mourning floods in such endless variety that it would be Imponsiblo to enumerate. a rvsz - te r r.v7P ' .wo i r t :ot a d t .....T4m 21; % t ape; than any entablinnment in Allentown. Ladles of .Allen town and ,. adjoining col:tulle. you are paylng too mach for and go od Study your Interest, and makeup yonr minet, and go to Schreiber Bro'n for bargains In dry goods. We havo marked our goods down and propose to do a cash huskies, Oar motto In "A nlmble penny to better than a slow shilling." A call in all we ask—you will leave eatistled. Yourterespectfoll mar 177,'0l SCHREIBER BROTHERS. IMPORTANT TO BUYERS OF DRY GOODS THE " BEE HIVE," ' THE POPULAR DRY GOODS STORE, 920 CHESTNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA, For many year. conducted na tho PARIS CLOAK AND MANTILLA EMPORIUM" J. W. PROCTOR & CO., Will offer tho coming eeneon at POPULAR PRICES FOR CASH, en entirely Now Stook or FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC DRY GOODS neluding Spring and Summer Dress Goode, In the largest variety. Black and Colored Silks, Laces and Embroideries, Linens, White Goods, and Domestics, • Hosiery. Gloves of all kind., • . •• Mourning Dress Goods. • : CLOAKS. SACC:FE/3;dg c..in (hi. department An unrivalled aganti,taent, at prices train upward,. SHAWLS OF ALL KINDS, 4171:oa tu a d m o o h i l g a e i tl . t g R OVaa L aVpV&Inh= 1 ::g o l i :, t tlt ECONOMICAL PRICES. (7.6,r;;recsllTL:VlNitnplf,r:g:Ve%"Ln. dev lallo J. W. PROCTOR & CO., THE " BEE HIVE," NO. 920 CHESTNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA mar 21-3 m ASTONISHING INVESTMENT. • $1.500 IN GOLD. FOR $l. WHEN WILL WONDERS CEASE? . Not until the drawing of the 213 GRAND GIFT ENTERPRISE . OF THE , GOOD WILL STEAM ME COMPANY; Which will POSITIVELY comd Ow on MONDAY, MAY 2; 1869. Por ONE DOLLAR you can draw either a SPAN O See SEVEN OCTAVE PIANO , DDaOY. FARMING IMPLEMENTSk and numeron• other article.. Call and examine oar stock. which ta- large and varied. 001 co, Second National Bank BuildMg(Uamiment ) i I l n 'rt •Byorder !at ie lvias 4rNt.thalm n. ALLENTOWN, PA., WEDNESDAY MORNING, APRIL 28, 1869. MAGDIWN If any woman of no ue all, Harry woman of the street, Before the Lord should pause and fall, And with her long hair wipe hie feet— Ile whom with yearning hearts wo love, And fain would sea with human oyes Around our living pathway move, And underneath our daily skies— The Maker of the heavens and earth, • The Lord of life, the Lord of death, In whom the universe had birth, But breathing of our breath ono breath— If any woman of the street Should kneel, and with the lifted mesh Ot her long tresses wipe his feet, And with her kisses kiss their flesh— How round that woman would wo throng, How willingly would clasp her hands Fresh from that touch divine, and long To gather up the twice-blest strands I How eagerly with her would change Our Idle Innocence, nor heed Her shameful memories and strange Could we but also claim that deed! Harrlot Prescott Spofford, In Harper's Magazine Lippincott's Magazine for May has a continuation of "Beyond the Breakers," and the usual variety of tater estingproso and •erne, Charles 0. Leland alycaus another of his humorous poems, In which "the author assorts the vast Intellectual superiority of Germans to Americans." Dore's a liddlo fact In hlsdory •Ich few haft, condor- Dag do Deulaclierx are, &Jure, do ow aura of die land Und I brides irdneeelf unereakbarly tint I tweet !undo be known Do primordial (IMP dot Coluinpus trA/1 derivet from Co Iwo; 'For ash hie name was colon, It flalbly does chine Oat Ma elders are goboren been lu Co-lugno on der Rhein; Una Colonist polo a colony, It sehr bemarkbar lel DM Columbus In America cons der finder colouls. Ullllll4l CC/1111111 , uP a tore, in its wort de drunk to mark Dal a bidgocu found thmorered hiud a-vlytn from do urk Uud atlll widor—ht do mining, tuttout do leustext Muhl. A tufo vat. thy °for the velem nud bring do vorldt herout. Ash mein Soot uldt leacher, deer Kroutser, to me lid often shbeak ; De mythms of nails reheats Itself (vitch ye see In his SymGolik); So aloe do name America, If ye a Ilddie look Vas coon from do old King Emerich In do Deutsche Het dentich. Cud Id •oo from dot very Ilehlenbitch—ltow Voonderfool Id run!— Dot I eihdule de Smug of lllldelanod, or der Voter cud dor Sou." • Cad dliddrlpule II to Brenton., for n reaeon vital now lab plain, Dot din Sageu•Cyclux, foll.eudet;prlng am round to der Haus agate ! Deep laws of un-endly ourt‘thlltag IA so (rep nud broad uud tall Dot uopody bout a Deutseher have a het to versteh dem at all; Crud should I write mine dluks all mid, I tout bollefe, In deed, Dal I mlneself vouldt versteh do half of dlo here Droll• mann's lied. Ash the Hugel say of hie system, dal uuly nu. luaus know Vol der laurel It tumlt, mid he couldn't tell :and der Jean Paul Richter too, Who said, "Gott kOow. I 'maul mutnedlogx whoa foot* din butt I writ, Boot Gott only wino vot do loteli wenue now, for I have forgotten It.'' And all of din be-wiees, an blaiu us tho face. ou your nose, Dal der Doutseher hate efen more Intellect Adan ho himself nooposo, tad his liffereaco salt de over-again voorldt, anh I really do soospact, 1 ich dal oder vulk hav more soopose, stud lesser Intellect AoDETECTITE'S EXPERIENCE. A. low vine-clad cottage, with green creepers shading the doorway. A young girl peered front the tangled foliage out into the darkness ; the young face wore an anxious look, and the eves were sad with sorrow. Tile bright golden curls were tnrown Melt tun. a MAIO m nano was lifted to the ear as if to catch the first echo of a footstep. The light from the room flashed over the sunny tresses that shone in the glare like a golden crown. Suddenly the report of a pistol rent the air, and a man staggered and fell at her feet. The noise of the street had long died out. The busy city was sunk to rest the wild fever that had burned along its arteries had ceased ; in that secluded spot no sound was heard, save the pistol shot and the death rattle as the vic tim's pallid face was raised appealingly. "These were the facts as they were related to Mr. I— and myself," said Mr. F---, "an hour afterwards." The head of the dead man was pillowed on his daughter's lap, and to the stiffened lips she pressed her own repeatedly. But friends in terposed, and the man was carried into the house. "Have you an idea who did it ?" I asked of the young lady. She hesitated for a moment. Not even her overwhelming sorrow had power to suppress the blush that stained neck and face wall a burning glow. "I have none 1" she saldfalterlngly. I did not believe her. • Whoever the assassin was, she knew ;him. I was satisfied of this, although some reason, for which I could not then account, kept her silent. This was all the public learned from the daily papers. It was related in the Picayune as all, and for awhile it passed from men's thoughts. But you know what others. forget we remember. The detective's work is never done. The clue lost must be regained. But in this in stance the mystery seemed impenetrable. Still the belief that the girl knew by whom the shot was fired, kept her constantly in my mind. watched her incessantly. I searched out her history—learned of her loves—her courtships the secrets that young ladies guard so sacredly. I ascertained from them that she had been addressed by a young man or disso lute habits, and a wild, wayward character. She was an heiress in 'her own right, but her fortune depended on her marrying with her father's consent. I now settled in my own mind who was the murderer. But I had no proof. Since the night of the tragedy he had not come near her. But something assured me that an interview would yet take place. To this end I waited patiently. It was Mardi-Gras—the night of the carni val. The brilliantly lighted city was wild with excitement. The population was en mane. The sound of music—the sound of echoing feet—reached the street from many a palatial home and public building—a night of revelry. I stood in the centre of a room thronged with dancers, my eyes never straying from a blue domino. I had traced it here ; I know the lady who wore it ; I had seen the miliner who fashioned it ; had seen it fitted to the beautiful face. I had not lost sight of her from early dawn. She was standing underneath the clunideller when a man approached her dress ed as a harlequin. Instinct would have told mo who it was, had I not heard the sound of his voice—the simple word— 'w ary 1 ,, The grl trembled violently, but I heard the Vetol37 . — " Murderer I" "It was for love of you !" It was forlove of my money—go I I have not and will not hetrayyou. But I will never willingly look on your face again." , "You will desert me then r "Would you havo me marry the man who killed my parent 4" "Mary, what else could I do I" I did not wait for the reply. I had proof enough now. I whispered in his ear and he followed me from the room. " You are my prisoner !" "For what ?" ho required haughtily. "For murder !" I replied, looking at him steadily in the eye. Ho bore the look unflinch ingly for a moment and then , broke clown uttterly. " Mary has betrayed me !" he said. "Not so I but I heard your conversation I" " No matter, I will confess it," and he did.' It is useless to repeat the recital. It was such a wild, impetuous nature inured to crime would be likely to make. A great effort was made by his friends to save him, but in vain. The crime he perpetrated was too cruel—the deed, so heartless. Ho is in middle ago, but his hair is white, and his face is wrinkled with care—an old man, whom remorse has cheated of youth. The girl yet lives in the city un married. She has a strange heart, and a mind warped by affection. She refused to testify even at the Mal. ANEODOTES OF JAMES T. BRADY. THE BARER TRIAL The trial of Baker for the murder of Poole furnished a notable instance of Mr. Brady's in trepidity in behalf of a client. It was at the height of the " Know-Nothing" excitement, and Poole, after receiving the fatal bullet, having exclaimed, "I die an American," suc ceeded in causing himself to be regarded as a martyr to the cause. Lingering for days with —as the posttnorlem proved—a bullet deeply imbedded in his heart, the interest and excite ment became intense ; and on the day of his funeral, twenty thousand men walked in sol emn procession behind the comn of the mar tyred "rough." In such a state of public feel. ing Baker was put on trial for his life. At the opening of the charge by the judge, aroused by its tenor, Mr. Brady seized a pen and com menced writing rapidly, indignation showing itself in his set lips and frowning brow. Tho moment the judge had ceased he was on his feet and began : " You have charged the jury thus and thus. I protest against your so stat ing it." The judge said he would listen to the objections after the jury had retired. "No," exclaimed the indignant orator, "I choose that the jury shall hear the objections;" and, defying interference, he poured forth Impetuously forty-five separate and formal ob jections couching them all emphatically in words of personal protest to, the juclge. The force of . the judge's charge on that jury was pretty effectually broken. The indignation of the advocate at this time was real, not simula ted; and he, at least, of the. New York bar, dared to defy and to denounce injustice, even when clad in ermine. Of such were those brave, elder members of the legal profession, who in former days and other lands, kept alive the fires of civitliberty. . After two trials here he obtained a change of venue, and the trial was transferred to itNew burg. This gave rise o another incident, which Brady was fen( of telling, especially when lie wished to c • arm prejudice against the looks of any witness or client. The trial was to be held before Judge Charles A. Pea body, in the Supreme Court. The judge, lawyers, high sheriff, deputies, and prisoner all went up in the cars to Fishkill. The streets were crowded by thousands, eager to see the prisoner. As they passed to the boat to cross over to Newburg, the judge happened to take the arm of High Sheriff \Meta. Some one recognizing the sheriff, pointed out his com panion as the accused murderer, with "Don't you see his d—d bloodthirsty face I" fancying, as Brady would say, they saw all the linea ments of a brutal murderer, in the calm, bland features of his Honor. THE BUSTEED CABE Another instance of Lis intrepidity before a judge was in the Busteed case. The judge had threatened to convict him foccontempt. Bus teed had apologized ; and Brady also, with his matchless grace and courtesy, had ten dered Busteed's apology . ; but the judge, still said that he should send him to prison. " You will, will you ?" said Brady. "I say you will not !" . And, citing authority after authority against hid power to so, he dared him to thus stretch his prerogative. The judge thought best to excuse Mr. Busteed. The fertility of his mind and its rapidity of action, as shown . in drawing the objections in the Baker trial, were once illustrated on an occasion when, on a case being called, Mr. Brady answered that his side was ready. The opposite counsel also stated that he was ready, and appeared for the plaintiff. "No," said Brady, "I am for the plaintiff •" adding, " I think I must know which side 'I am on . ' However, he was, at last, convinced that he was mistaken. So, gathering up his papers, he requested his Hon or to excuse him for twenty minutes, as he saw lie was for the defendants instead of, as lie had erroneously supposed, for the plaintiffs, adding, "and, from my knowledge of the merits of the ease, I am heartily glad that I am to defend instead of prosecute !" He left the room, returned In twenty minutes, tried, and iron the cause. . . .NU QUICi.+ The Dom Luther R. Marsh in gives an In- ' stance of Mr. Brady's fertility an impor 1 taut case to which ho himself bad given ' thorough and, as he felt, exhaustive prepara- ' tion. He asked Mr. Brady to antist him on the trial, Brady having had nn previous knowledge of the case. "Go on and open your case fully, use all your points without regard to me,' said Brady. Mr. Marsh did so, and sat down, wondering what new mat ter Mr. Brady could find to say. To his as tonishment Brady rose and presented seven new and striking points. Of his quickness in the law of a case an in stance is given where a recent decision ad verse to his position was introduced. Taking the book in his hand he said it does not ap pear whether this case has been heard in the Court of Appeals, but whim it is it will be re versed for such and such reasons; which eventually proved to be the exact reasons given by the court for reversing the decision. Conceding all his. wonderful brilliancy and originality, Judge Daly states, however, that his greatness as- a lawyer lay in his sound judgment in the general management of a case. It is stated that in no • case involving constitutional questions have his arguments been reversed in the highest appellate court. Of his manner, Mr. Porter says, "who can ever forget Ihe peculiar mahner of his we have all felt and none can descdbe. It wits evan escent as the fragrance of the rose." From the time he entered the court-room his. by play with ,the jury comminced. •He made himself perfectly at home with them. It is said that be never lost a caw in which he was before a jury for more than a week ; by that time they saw everything with his eyes. He was counsel in fifty-two capital cases, in not one of which was he over unsuccessful, ex cept in that of Beall, who was tried by a court-martial at Fort Lafayette, on charge of being a "spy and guerilla." It is related that once having successfully defended a man charged with murder, as he was leaving the court the judge said, "Mr. Brady, the next case Is that of a man charged with murder ; he has no counsel, can you de fend hint?" " Certainly," said Brady, and instantly went on with the trial. The judge assigned him in the same way to two others charged with a similar crime ; so, that'in suc cession, he defended and cleared four capital cases, giving a „week's unrequited time to these four criminals. He was obliged to decline to follow this up in the case of the next man, charged with burglary, who, hav ing no counsel, desk/4 hint to be assigned to him. The case of a young man who was charged with murder in what was claimed an accident al fracas, attracted a good deal of interest. Ile was a Mason, and that society applied to Mr. Brady to defend him, tendering him twenty five hundred dollars as a fee ,• but for some cause he declined the case. Not long after, one afternoon, a neatly dressed, modest young girl came to the office and asked for Mr. Brady. Told to walk into Ids private office, she timidly approached his desk and saying : "Mr. Brady, they are going to hang my brother, and you can save him I. I've brought you this money, please don't let my brother die I" she burst into tears. It was a roll of $250 Which the poor girl bad begged In sums of five and ten dollars. The kind hearted man heard her story. "They shan't hang your brother, my child," said he • and, putting the roll of bills in an envelope, ;old her to take It to her mother and he would ask for it when ho wanted it. The boy was cleared. In Mr. Brady's parlor hangs an exquisite picture, by Durand, with a letter on the back asking h!m to accept it as a mark of appreciation for his generous kindness In defending this poor boy. Mr. Brady prized that pletune. —"A Great Ad vocate," In the °Wary for May. —" Papa," said a little boy, "ought the master to Hog me for what I did not do ?" " Certainly not, my boy," said the father. "Well," replied the little fellow, "he did to day when I didn't do my sum." A Boston paper is "In favor of women voting if they want to." A Western paper "would like to see the man who could make them vote if they didn't want to." —About the only person we ever heard of that was not spoiled by being lionized, was a Jew named Daniel. —When may young ladles he said to be economical? When they resort to tiglit-lacing to prevent waist-fit linen, A REMEDY FOR THE BORER At a late meeting of the New York Horti cultural Society the subject of a remedy for the fruit-tree borer was taken up, and Mr. R. H. Williams said, "A friend of mine has rid his trees of the borer by driving nails into them. The oxide of iron gets into the sap, and the borer don't fancy the taste of it." Our old friend, Dr. Trimble, denied this, saying, "There is no science at all in this statement." The Doctor is great on "science." Mr. Wil liams rejoined, " Science or ignorance it has the sanction of a thorough trial. Those trees in a large orchard that had nails in them were free of borers, those not thus treated all had borers in the trunk." Now, did Mr. Williams know this to be from hie own observation ? He says a friend told him. But:we want no second-hand state ments. If this should prove to be true be has made a great discovery and deserves the best thanks of the community. But we have no faith in the actuattrUth of the statement. We have experimented with spikes driven in trees, old iron placed in the branches, as well as buried at the roots, and the only effect the whole had was that the spikes damaged the trees permanently. Mr. W. may rely upon it, the iron remedy is worthless. 'But, in this same discusSion, up rose Mr. Carpenter, who spoke honest common-sense as follows : " A good way to prevent the rav ages of the borer is to lash a piece of strong paper or cloth smeared with grafting wax around the trunk close to the ground.' Mr. C. might have stopped at the word cloth and the object would be attained. lVe in traduced this method full twenty years ago. Some adopted it on our recommendntion,others shook their heads and regarded it as all moon shine; while others thought it too much trouble. The best way is to take pieces of old cloth or strong paper, allowing it to go an inch under ground and six inches 'above, and secure it firmly with cotton twine, and it will remain on until the following spring when it ought to be renewed. The bug which lays the egg does it in the mild sunny days of March. The eggs are deposited on the warm side of the stem from one to three inches from the ground. In a short time they are hatched by the sun and the minute worm crawls down the .tree until it -meets the ground, or a little below, where the bark is tender, nruLthere commen ces its labors of penetrating through the bark. Its work is gradtial and grows more difficult,. but its strength increases with its age, and it soon shelters itself in the solid wood of the tree, where before it comes forth the perfect bug, ready to take wing, it remains two years. Our bandage system not only prevents the deposit of the eggs, but also protects the place of entrance into the tree. The bug will lay nowhere else than at its chosen spot, and never upon the bandage. We repeat that we have tried this for twenty years, and in no single case where a tree was free from the borer when planted, has one ever been found in them. It is a literal imposibility to get there if any at tention it given to the bandaging.—Gerinan town Telegraph. CHURCH STREET, YOWL—The move ment of life in New York is so rapid, fashion . and trade sweep from one point to another with such impetuosity, that the romance of changed interest can be enjoyed in the same spot twice or thrice in a lifetime. The sorry streets of to-day will disappear within a dozen years, and the instant they are gone, or seem just at the moment of the final lapse, they have passed into the realm of romance. Here is Church Street, for instance. It is not very tong, and you turn into it from Ful ton or from Canal. So turned the Easy Chair, and there was the long, narrow vista, walled by lofty buildings, the spacious houses of trade, built yesterday, piled with dry-goods, bold with prosperous newness, but instantly sug gesting the street of palaces in Genoa. And a few rods off some old Knickerbocker is grave ly stalking down Broadway, who has not turned aside into Church Street for many a reScalbi7l,WmPungrel,pareiligintAt henna. SO it was a dozen years ago. Once also it was the Black Broadway. It was a kind of voluntary Ghetto of the colored people. Then again it was an offshoot of the Five Points. There were low ranges of dingy buildings. Dirty men and women slouched on the walk and lounged out of the windows, and their idle, ribald laughter echoed along the street that few carriages traversed. Dens of every kind were just around the corner. Slatternly women, emptied slops upon the pavement, and the stench was perpetual. Dirty little children screamed and played, and sickly babes squalled unheeded. It was a street fallen out of Hogarth ; the Street of worst repute in the city. And now it is a double range .of stately buildipg, symmetrical, massive. Horse-cars struggle on it with the light carts of the dry-goods dealers, with the slow, enormous teams that shake the ground. At every corner there is an inextricable snarl of wagons, and porters are heaving boxes, and young; clerks are directing, and huge windows are filled with huge pattern-cards, so that the narrow way is tapestried. " Look out ther6 cries a porter-compelling clerk to the Easy Chair, which smiles to reflect that only yes terday it was in Exchange Place, and Pearl Street, ,and elsewhere that the peremptory youth was ordering him to mind his eye. And if the employer who now sits in that spacious office opposite had known that his clerk was familiar with Church Street, ho would have warned him of the gates of destruction, and have admonished him that Church Street, though a narrow street, was a broad way. Here is one wall which survives from the pre historic days of thirty years ago—it is the rear wall of the old hospital, that blessed green spot in the midst of the city, which is to be green no more, but will be soon piled with more pal aces. And opposite this wall is a short street running from Church to West Broadway. A very few years ago this was ono of the worst * of city slums. At the corner of West Broad way a wooden building still remains—a sullen, sickly, defiant cur of a building, that sits and snarls impotent over the savagery departed. And there is one tall rookery still—a tenement- house, with a system of fire-escapes in front'; and the slattern slopping at the curb as in the ancient day ; and a cooper's shop, and a black smith's, and one, two, three—how many whisky shops? But they are all faint and feeble and submersed in the lofty buildings, and to-morrow all trace of them will be gone. And them who will remember the murder ? The mysterious, awful, romantic murder. The murder that tilled all the newspapers and fed speculation at all the corner groggeries and in all offices. The murder that was done into a romance, and of which the hero, that is the murderer, was acquitted after ono ofthe famous eloquent criminal appeals which are so effective because their power Is measured by human life. And this hero occasionally reappears in the newspapers even to this day. Somebody writes from a remote somewhere that on a steamer far away a mysterious man, after much mysterious conduct, imparts the awful truth that he is the hero. Does he sometimes re turn to this spot? Does he look at the site of the house where the deed was done? Does ho appear In the guise of a merchant, a jobber, a retailer from that remote southwestern some where, and higgle and chaffer In the noble warehouse on the very site of the wretched building where he murdered his mistress? Good Heavens I do you see that man of about those years, loOking about as if to find a sign or a number (as if lie didn't know the very place I as if it were not burne'd and cut Into his heart and conscience I) ? Do you think it could possibly be he, or is it, after all, only the honest Timothy Tape, the modest retailer from Skowhegan or Palmyra? The typhus fever used to rage here ; the cholera was fear ful. The Sanitary Report says that there were always cases of the worst diseases to be found here. The city missionaries also used to find their worst .cases here too ; and now—what cleanliness of collar, what modishness of coat I No more sin—what a consolatiOnl—Easy Chair in Harper's Magazine. —"I say, Pompey," said one freedman to another, " dig chile has tried lots oh gilt fares and tinge for a_prizo, but nebbcr could draw anything at all." "Nell, eteser, I'd 'vise you to try a hand cart • do chances aro a tons 'and to ono tint you could draw dat." —lt Is rumored that a Boston baker has in vented a new kind oT yeast, which makes bread so light that one' of his pound loaves does not weigh over twelve ounces. GASTRONOMY To FRY OYBYERB.—UBO the large.sized fat oysters, wipe them dry, and pass them through whipped egg and biscuit crumbs, and fry them in butter over a very clear fire. As soon as thOy are a light brown they aro done ; they must be turned in the pan to brown both sides, and served on a hot napkin garnished with parsley. They should be eaten with brown bread and butter, lemon juice, cayenne pep per, and raw celery, and sent to table the in stant they are cooked, as if allowed to stand they become hard and uneatable. Biscuit crumbs are in all cases better for use than bread crumbs, and more economical. The plain thick water-biscuits can be pounded to a flour, and kept in a tin always ready for use. WAVFLEB on Mu FINS.—For a family of five or six, take one pint sweet milk, a pinch of salt, four tablespoons of yeast; flour to thicken to a batter; when raised sufficiently add two table-spoons of butter. Bake in waffle irons. Same will do for muffins. If for im mediate use, use baking powder or cream of tartar and soda for raising. FAMY BISCUITS.—Rub two ounces of butter with half a pound of flour, add four ounces of sugar and a feW drops of almond flavoring, mix with the white of an egg, and a table spoonful of milk ; work well Into the paste two ounces of sweet almonds well pounded ; rub through a wire sicvo ; take up pieces the size of a sixpence, bake a few minutes on buttered paper, taking care to keep them quite a.palo color. LEMON GINGEIIIIIIEAD.—Grato the rinds of three lemons, mix the Juice with a glass of brandy.; mix the grated lemon-peel in one pound of flour, make a hole and pour in halt a pound of treacle, add half a pound of butter warmed, the brandy and lemon juice ; mix all together, with half nn ounce of ginger, and bake in thin cakes in a slow oven. JIBE OF VINEGAR IN COOKINO MEATS.—AII kinds of poultry and meats can be much quicker cooked by adding to the water in which they are boiled about one eighth part vinegar. By the use of this there will be a considerable saving of fuel ns well as - a shortening of time. Its action is very beneficial on old, tough meats, rendering them quite tender and easy to be, digested. Tainted meats and fowls will also lose their bad taste and odor if cooked in this way, and if no more vinegar is added than we have indicated there will be no taste of vinegar acquired. Ws:TAIL I,onsvini SAUCE.—Take a fresh hen lobster full of spawn, put the spawn and the red coral into a mortar, add to it half an ounce of cold clarified marrow, pound it quite smooth, and rub it through a hair sieve with a wooden spoon, pull the mert of UM lobster to pieces with forks, put it in a basin, and pour a small quantity of vinegar over it, just enough to give it sharpness, cut ono ounce of fresh butter Into little bits, put it into a sauce-pan Atli!' a des sert-spoonful of fine flour, mix the butter and flour together into a paste before you put it on the fire,•then stir in two table-spoonfuls of milk over the stove (with the water boiling round the double) ; when well mixed add six table-spoonfuls of lobster jelly, stir all the -same way, and when thoroughly blended and the consistence of cream put in the meat of the lobster, to which the vinegar was added, but previously drain it well from the vinegar by laying it on a cloth for a minute or two ; stir the lobster and the sauce together till the lob ster is hot, and then having at hand a small empty double sauce-pan, with boiling water, pour n small quantity of the lobster sauce Into the empty double, and mix-in the lobster paste made with marrow till thoroughly blended, then pour the whole back to the lobster, and after well stirring it Is ready. The lobster jelly is made from the shell of the lobster, which, having been previously broken small and stewed well in a very clean digester, and treated in the same way as bones, will (when cold) produce a jelly highly flavored with lob ster, which adds very much to the flavor of the sauce. The lobster paste made with the also for its taste, but its scarlet color will be destroyed by too long exposure to the heat it is, therefore, very desirable that it should be put In nt the very last and mixed as quickly as possible. GOOD Roam—One pint of now milk, one pound white sugar and two eggs beaten, stir these up with some flour into a sponge, add yeast and set to rise at night. When light next day add sufficient flour to make a soft dough and let it rise, then mould in pans, and when light, proceed to bake. Add a tablespoon of melted lard or'buttor to the sponge. To IlEmovr: GlitEAsm SPOTS.—Put on pow der of French chalk, and place a piece of blot ting paper over it; then pass a hot Iron over the blotting paper. The heat liquifies the grease, the chalk absorbs it, and the excess of grease is absorbed by the blotting paper. To PRESERVE: CRANDERILIEB.--If cmnberries are dried a short time In the sun and placed in bottles tilled with them, closed with sealing wax, the berries will keep in good condition for several years. FLOWER BEDS. To cultivate flowering plants to the best ad vantage, requires as much care in the selection and preparation of the soil as any other crop. No one would expect to grow a crop of cab bages in soil overrun by the roots of trees and shaded continuously by their dense foliage ; yet how often do we observe flowering plants placed in such circumstances, producing a few meagre flowers the early portion of the season, perhaps, and dwindling and dying as soon as a few dry sunny days occur. Most summer flowering plants blossom on the points of branches, and therefore to produce a continu ance of flower, there must be a continued healthy and vigorous growtli. It is true there arc some flowers adapted to shade, like the fuchsias, daisies, &c., and these should b se lected for such positions. Heliotropes and some of the geraniums do dwell where there is sun only a few hours a-day. Select an open exposure where the sun will have free Access to the plants, dig the ground very deep, and dress heavily with thoroughly decomposed manure, so that the roots may have some supporting resort when the surface mois ture falls. A small circular or ova) bed ten or twelve feet in-diameter, properly prepared and plant ed with flowers from pots, will produce a con tinued mass of flowers even in the driest sum mers. In arranging the plants, there Is much latitude for taste, and very striking combina tions may be secured. Rose beds aro much more beautiful and sat isfactory, when only a few well-known, hardy, and continued-blooming kinds are employed, than when planted Indiscriminately, with ro bust and tall-growing sorts crowding those of more delicate growth. In larger yards, where several beds can be made, there will be a bet ter opportunity for a display of this kind of cultivated taste. DUTIES of SOLDIERB.—A certain Confeder ate regiment that served during the war in the Western Department was commanded until after the battle of Murfreesboro by a colonel who was a foreigner by birth, but a soldier by choice and education. He never learned to Use good English, but ho had a short way of expressing himself in impetuous exclamations that was quite as. effective in conveying his condlusions as his practiced sword was in dis abling an adversary. This anecdote is attrib uted to him : Once, when some general officers were hesitating about snaking an important but desperate movement, on account of the loss of life it was likely to involve, lie, hap pening to be present, bawled out : What, kill soldier 1 What soldier made for? Soldier paid to be killed, py tam I" At the battle of Murfreesboro, when a cer tain brigade was ordered forward, on Wednes day, to assist in the attack on the Federal right, the regiment commanded by the foreign officer referred to met with such a furious re ception from "the boys of the West," as they prided In calling themselves, that it wavered, and was on the point of failing into 060:talon, when, it is said, ho instantly brought the men to a sense of their duties and responsibilities by dashing madly along the line, brandishing hie sabre over their heads, and shouting at the top of his. voice, "Go up tab, men I Go up tale I Py tam, do you want to Use always?" —Drawer, Harper's Magartne. WILLS & IREDELL, Man anb. .ffrincp 3foil thinterss, No. 47 EAST HAMILTON STREET, I=l LATEST STILES Stamped Checks, Cards, Circulars, Paper Book., Consil lotions and Dy-Laws, School Catalogues, Bill Heads Envelopes, Letter Heads Bills of Lading,. Way Dille, Tao and Shipping Cards, Posters of any size, etc., etc, Printed at Short Notice. ' NO. 17 A FREEDMAN'S HYMN. —A Southern friend who is curious in his observations as to ,the effect of freedom on the ordinary field and freedman, says that in no way doe9„Sambo "feel the oats" of liberty more than in his devotions • and in support of his assertion sends tho following, which he says is in many quar ters a favorite hymn in public religious ser vices : We's nearer to do Lord Dan do white folks, and day knows It ; Bee do glory gate unbarred ; Walk up, darkeye, past do guard ; Bet a dollar ho don't close It. Walk up, darkeys, froo de gate ; Hark I do colored angels holler, Go away, white folks I you's too late ; We's do lvltudn' color ; watt Till the trumpet sounds to foller. Hallelujah! t'anks an' pralL ; Long noon we've borne our crosses ; Now we's do sooperlor race ; We's gwlne to heaben afore do bosses I Drawer, In Harper's Magazine NEW PHASE ON LOVE.-411 most, nny, think in all lives, is some epoch which, look ing back upon, we can perceive has been the turning-point of our existence—a moment when the imagination first wakes up, the feel ings deepen, and vague, general impressions settle into principles nal convictions; when, inshort, our bias for good or ill-is permanent ly given. Wo may not recognize this at the time, but we do afterward, onyinglo ourselves, either with thankfulness or regret, "But for such and such a thing, or such and such a per son, I should not have been what I am," This crisis Ufa me, Winifred Wettm, when I was just entering my sixteenth year. It was not " in love,' as in most cases it is—and rightly, for love is, or ought to be, the strongest thing on earth ; but it was equiv alent to it, and upon me and the moulding of my character it had precisely the same effect. Nay, in a sense I did really fall in love, but it was a very harmless phase of the passion ; for I was a common-place damsel of sixteen, and the object of my Intense admiration—nny, my adoring affection—was an old lady of seventy. A young girl in love with an old woman I What a ridiculous form of the emotion or sen timent ! Not so ridiculous, my good friends, as nt first appears ; and by no means so un common as you suppose. I have known sev eral cases of it besides my own ; cases in which a great difference in years and character drew out, to a remarkable degree, that ideal wor ship and passionate devotedness which Is nt the root of all true love, first love especially. Laugh as you will, there is always a spice of nobleness in the boy who falls in love with his "grandmother ;" and I have often thought that one of the extenuating circumstances In the life of that selfish, pleasure-lovin", modern heathen, Goethe, was the fact that in his old age he was so ored by a "child." Nor does the character of the feeling alter ' when it is only a woman's toward a woman. I have loved a man, thank God, having found a man worth loving ; but he well knows that for a longtime he ranked second in my affec tions to a woman—to this woman, for whom my attachment had all the intensity of love it - self.—" A Brare Lady," by the author of. "John Halifax, Gentlenut», " in Harper's Magazine. LIFE LENGTUENED.-CUILIVEIC an agreeable temper ; many a man lies fallen dead In a fit of passion. Eut regularly, not over thrice a day, and nothing between meals. Go to bed at regular hours. Get up as soon as you wake of yourself, and do not sleep in the day time, at least not longer than ten min utes before noon. Work always by the day and not by the job. Stop working before you are very tired-- before you are "fagged out. Cultivate a generous and an accommodating temper. Never cross a bridge before you come to It. Tilit t ero eammae.bstlf.the troubles of life. . nor drink when you are - not thirsty. Let the appetite always come uninvited. Cool off in a place greatly Warmer than the one in which you have been exercising. This simple rule would prevent incurable sickness • and save millions of lives every year. Never resist a call of nature for a single mo ment. Never allow yourself to be chilled through and through ; it is this which destroys so many every. year, In a few days' sickness from pneumonia, called by sonic lung fever or in flammation of the lungs. . Whoever drinks no liquids at meals will add ~ e ars of pleasurable existence to his life. 01 cold or warm drinks, the former are most pernic , ous ; drinking at meals induces persons to eat more than they otherwise would, as auk one can verify by experiment, and it is ex cess In eating which devastates the land with sickness, suffering and death. After fifty years of age, if not a day laborer, and sedentary persons after forty, should . eat but twice a day—in the morning and about tour In the afternoon ; persons can soon ac custom themselves to a seven-hour interval between eating, and thus give the stomach rest : for every organ without ad' (plate rest will soon give out. Begin early in life to live under the benign Influence of the Christian religion, for it "has the promise of the life that now is, and of that which is to come."/ Taft's Journal of Health. THE EI , WLISII SPARROWS, AGAIN.—A wri ter in the .Evening Bulletin, who tells us he speaks from his own knowledge, says, that. the English Sparrows be found ae great a nuisance as the worms. He says that while they may destroy the worm that preys upon the shade trees of the city, "they will also de stroy other worms andlnsects which are friend ly to us and which arc parasites of other insects worse than these tree-worms." He says far ther, "The English sparrows are fearfully de structive of fruit, especially cherries and straw berries when ripe, and they even devour the buds ..of pear, apple, peach and cherry trees while In a tender state just before blossoming; In the early spring, insects being scarce, the sparrows are compelled to feed upon tender fruit and flower buds, and they have been known to strip whole orchards and gardens, not only of their fruit-buds, but even of the leaves and flower-buds." If his statements are corriEt, and he voucheS for it, we have got ourselves Into a pretty pickle by importing what the Scotch chairman of the Haddingtonshire Farmers' Club de nounced as " blackguards out and out I" It would be funny enough If in a few years the authorities were to offer three cents a head for their destruction. COULDN'T TELL TUE DIFFERENCE. — " My dear," said good, unsuspicious Mrs. Howard, "I think Mary is In a decline." "In a what ?" inquired the startled but un romantic husband. "A decline, my dear—in a decline.' You were far too stern with her in regard to that little affair with Mr. Young. Girls' hearts, my dear, are netlike those of great rough ays ; they are fragile things, my love, very fragile. Now, I have noticed that Mary acts very queerly; she eats nothing but peaches, or canned quinces, or something of that sort ; and-to-day, unobserved by her, I was watch ing her singular movement, a spasm of pain crossed her features, she stopped in her walk, and clutched her hand over the region of her heart, and sighed, my dear—sighed as if her heart was breaking,' said the lady. "Sighed, did she, and groaned ?. Umpli I Ain't you old enough yet to tell the difference between a breaking heart and a spell of the colic?" —Dr. Barton, being In company with Dr. Nash, who had' just printed two heavy folios on the antiquities of Worcestershire, remarked that the publication was deficient in several respects, adding, " Pray doctor, are you not a justice of the peace ?" am," replied Nash. Then,". said Barton, "I advise you to send your work to the house of correction." -Some say the best way for a man to train up a child in the way it should go, is to travel that way occasionally himself. . —An experienced old gentleman says that all that Is required for the enjoyment of love or sausages is confidence. lIPSTAIIIS, ALLENTOIVN. PA NEW DESIONS,