mi , : mmmmmmlmtmmmmmlmlmmmmlmmammlmmiim 0 25- 5 tie set CnnD IIsTTCIIIItfSOtf, Editor. irJl. E HUTCIIIIVSOX, Publisher. VOLUME 8. vrTllAAAJM. iviiiJiiLiLi, Attorney at Y Law, Ebensburg, Pa. " Oi 1 OCT foBS FENLON, Attorney at Law, .1 Ebensburg, Pa. Office opposite the Bank. jan24 G'ToRGE M. READE, Attorney at Law, Ebensburg, Pa. Office in Colonnade Row. jan24 FP. TIERNEY, Attorney at Law, Ebensburg, Cambria county, Pa. fgg" Office in Colonnade Row. jan24 JOHNSTON k SCANLAN, Attorneys J at Law, Ebensburg, Pa. jy- Office opposite the Court House. 1.1. JOHNSTON. jn24 J. K. 60AXtA.iT. 3MES C. EASLY, Attorney at Law, Carrolltown, Cambria county, Pa. tZT Architectural Drawings and Specifi- ti,;oaJ wade. f jan24 I"T"X"SHOE MAKER, Attorney at Law, Ebensburg, Pa. xiicular attention paid to collections, jay Office one door east of Lloyd & Co.'s Sinking House. jan24 S AMU EL SINGLETON, Attorney at Law, Ebensburg, Pa. Office on High i:ret. west of Foster's Hotel. Will practice in the Courts of Cambria and .jjoiuing counties. joy Attends also to the collection 01 ciaims f soldiers against the Government. jan24 &KORGE W. O ATM AN, Attorney at Law and Claim Agent, Ebensburg, .'tabria countj, I' a. Pensions, Back Pay and Bounty, and h'A Military vac4 to JJiidjieuts, Military Claims collected. Ileal estate d scld, and payment of lazes at- Book Accounts, Notes, Due Bills, Ac, collected. Deeds, Mortga- Aemuients, Letters of Attorney, Bonds, he, iiea:!r written, and all legal business f....,r.,i!v artonripd tr. Pentiona increased. r.nJ i'ljualized Bounty collected. jan24 I) DEVEREAUX, M. 1., Physician and Surgeon, Summit, Pa. fr" Office east of SIans;on House, on Uau- !. -H- Al. .1-1 -jad sircei. .Mgui tans prompuv Huruueu j, at hi3 office. maj23 pvENTISTRY. J Dk. D. W. Zeigt.eii, having opened an Vae in the rooms over It. R. Thomas' store, ;r his professional services to the citizens Ebensburg and vicinity. apl8-4ra irVEXTISTRY. VJ The undersigned, Graduate of the Bal- jore Collece of Dental Surgery, respectfully his professional services to the citizens Ebensburg. He has spared no means to -utouirhlv acquaint himself with every ini- Srov-.wvnl in his art. To many years of pcr ,vnal eicrience, lie has sought to add the parted experience of the highest authorities i'cntrtl Science. He simpiy asks that an portunity may be given for his work to tuk its own praise. HAMUEL BELFORD, D. D. S. References: Prof. C. A. Harris ; T. E. 3ond, ;' It. Handy; A. A. Blandy, P. II. Aus a, of the Baltimore College. tajT Will beat Ebensburg on the fourth jalay of each month, to stay one wjek. January 24, 1807. LOYD & CO., Banker JLi Ebexsbcrg, Pa. ftSTCloM. Silver, Government Loans and her Securities bought and 6old. Interest loe! oa Time Deposits. Collections made ivWccessijjIe points in the Lnited States, u avjcBtml riiiking Business transacted. muarvM, 1807. LLOYD & Co., Bankers- Altoona. Pa. Prills or. the rvrincinflt cities. and Jsilrer iGuld for sale. Collections made. Mon i received on deposit, payable on demand, iout interest, or upon time, with interest V:r rates. jau24 . LI.OVD, J'rtl't. JOHN LLOYD. CasLier. :RST NATIONAL BANK OF ALTOONA. GO VERNMENT A GEN CI", AND jIGXATED DEPOSITORY OF THE UNI TED STATES. a?" Corner Virginia and Annie sts., North J, Altoona, Pa. tzKD Capital $300,000 00 ''Capital Paid in 150,v00 00 -''easiness pertaining to Banking done on rable terms. ";trnal Revenue Stamps of all denomina ,'J !ways on hand. a purchasers of Stamp?, percentage, in .mPs, will be allowed, as follows : $50 to J9. 2 pr cent. !!or: tn $.mn n n- rnt an(i upwards, 4 per cent. Man24 '.EES J. LLnvn Succestor of R. S. Sunn, Dealer in invFJi? AXD MEDICINES, PAINTS, T vro .PAXcr ARTICLES, PURE ' bT. u BRANDIES-FOR MEDI - "LRI'OSES, PATENT MEDICINES, 4c. A ito : 'r Cap, and Note Papers, Pens, Pencils, Superior Ink, And other articles kept by Druggists generally. xe,an' prttcripliont eurtfully compounded. te on Main Street, opposite the Moun ouse, Ebensburg, Pa. jan24 SUARUETTS DYSERT, House, Sign, and Ornamental ramting, Grain. Mazing and Panrr .,,. ' Work done on short notice, and satis- t. BB.. "nieea- Shop in basement of -u, Joensburg, Pa. rmy9-Cm UlUEL SINGLETON, Notary Pub- lie, Ebensburg, Pa. on High street, west of Foster! Ho- jan24 KISING SUN STOVE POLISH. 4Mlitr IZ Jt7 l'"sui "Vng or labor, ?Uly . i -v vucnnurBP, LOIS nnriralled. Buy no other. rF GEO. HUNTLEY'S. s HOE STORE! SHOE STORE ! I The subscriber begs leave to inform the people of Ebensburg that he has just received from the East and has now opened out, at his store-room, the LARGEST asd BEST ASSORTMENT OF WOMEN'S AND CHILDREN'S BOOTS and SHOES OF ALL KINDS! ever brought to town. The stock was made expressly to order by the BEST SHOE MANUFACTORY IN PHILA., the subscriber having gone to the trouble and expense of visiting that city-especially to order it. The work is warranted not to rip if it rips, it will be REPAIRED FREE OF CHARGE A visit to his establishment will satisfy any one that he can not only sell a bsttb abti cls than all competitors, but that he can also sell CHEAPER THAN THE CHEAPEST 1 He also continues to manufactmre Boots and Shoes to order, on short notice and in the most workmanlike style. A VERY SUPERIOR LOT or REAL FRENCH CALF SKINS ON HAND I Stand one door east of Crawford's Hotel, High street, and immediately oppo site V. S. Barker's store. feb21 JOHN D. THOMAS. rpo THE LADIES OF EBENSBURG JL AND VICINITY. Having recently ar rived Irom the city with a handsome assort ment of SPRING AND SUMMER MILLINERY AND STRA W GOODS, of the latest stvles, comprising BONNETS, SILKS and VELVETS, fine FRENCH FLOW ERS, an assortment of RIBBONS, all widths and colors. Ladies' plain and fancy DRESS CAPS, Infants' silk and embroidered CAPS, together with Hoop Skirts, Corsets, Hosiery, Gloves, Ladies' and Gent's Fine Linen Hand kerchiefs, Ac, we invite the ladies of Ebens burg and surrounding districts, to call and examine our stock, in the store-room formerly occupied by E. Hughes, below the Mountain House. JCtsT We have a Fashionable Milliner of excellent taste, who will pay particular atten tion to bleaching, pressing ana altering Hats and Bonnets to the latest styles. Mas. J. DOYLE, mj9-3m Miss M. RUSH. s ADDLERY AND HARNESS ! The undersigned keeps constantly on hand and is still manufacturing all articles in his line, such s SADDLES. FINE SINGLE AND DOUBLE HARNESS, DRAFT HARNESS, BLIND BRIDLES, RIDING BRIDLES, CHECK LINES, HALTERS, WHIPS, BRICHBANDS, &c, Ac. All which he will dispose of at low prices for cash. His work is all warranted, and being expe rienced in the business, he uses only the best of leather. Thankful far past favors, he hopes by attention to business to merit a continuance of the patronage heretofore so liberally extended to him. jan24 Shop above the store of E. Hughes Co. Persons wishing good and substantia! Harness can be accommodated. HUGH A. M'COY. LOOK OUT FOR BARGAINS ! Being desirous of retiring from busi ness, I oder for sale the E BENS 11 UR G FO UND R Y, with all its appurtenances, Including all the real and personal property thereto belong ing, the Engine, Patterns, Flasks, 4c. Also, all the stock, manufactured and unmanufac tured, consisting of THRESHING MACHINES, COOKING STOVES, PARLOR STOVES, PLOWS, CASTINGS of various kinds. As I am determined to sell, purchasers may rely upon getting any or all the above named articles cheaper than they ran be bad anywhere else in Pennsylvania. The public are invited to call and judge for themselves. July 1, I867tf E. GLASS. EV CHEAP CASH STORE!! The subscriber would inform the eitisena of Ebensburg and vicinity that he keeps con stantly on hand everything in the GROCERY AND CONFECTIONERY line, such as Flour, Tea, Coffee, Sugar, all kinds of Crackers, Cheese, Smoking and Chewing Tobacco, Cigars, 4c. CANNED PEACHES AND TOMiTOES! Also, Buckskin and Woolen Gloves, Wool en Socks, Neck ties, 4c, all of which will be sold as cheap if not cheaper than elsewhere. A full attortment of Candiet i Cay Ice Cream every evening. jan24 R. R. THOMAS. ATES T ARRIVAL ! The subscriber has just received, at his store, on High street, Ebensburg, a large and salable stock of Flour, Bacon, Sugars, Molasses, Tea, Coffee, Table Salt, Barrel Salt, Spices, Cheese, Tobacco, Cigars, and everything in the Grocery, Notion and Confectionery line. Also, Boots and Shoes, Carbon and Lubri cating Oils, 4c, 4c. B?3- All which, will be sold very cheap for cash. jan24 G. G. OWENS. OAL! COAL! COAL! The subscriber is now carrying on the Colliery of Wm. Tiley, Sr , at Lily Station, on the Pennsylvania Railroad, Cambria coun ty, and will be glad to fill all orders, to any amount, of citizens of Ebensburg and vicin ity. Satisfaction as to quality of Coal guar antied in all cases. WM. TILEY, Jr. Hemlock P. O., Jan. 24, 1867. o. K. CURTAIN FIXTURE. Has no superior. in the world! Is pronounced faultless by wjho, UTe seen it, It is predicted it will suprseja ail Pthe? Curtain Fixtures now in use. 'J , T Fcr aaje by . Q. HUNTLEY, mx2 Ebensburg, Ta. " I WOULD RATHER BE RIGHT EBENSBURG, PA., THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1867. G01HG A STRHWBERRYIHG. It was a warm afternoon in July; and the Dexter girls Mary,' Josie, Fannj, and Sue were out upon the broad piazza to catch the laint breeze that lazily stirred the leaves of the lofty elm that stretched its protecting arms over the old farmhouse "How stupid we all are," yawned Fan ny, throwing dowu her book and desisting from the Attempt to capture a fly that persisted iu alighting: on her nose. "How I wish it would thunder ' or something would happen to wake us up." : "O, pood I there's cousin Kate coming across the Jots. JNow lor some tan. ; And dropping her work, away 'scam pered Josie down to the garden gate to meet her. Kate Wilde or wild Kate, as everybody called her and it must be confessed that she had well earned the title came along swinging her hat in her hand, as was her usual custom, her light, elastic step show ing that she was troubled with neither corns, concomitants nor tight shoes. She was a medium sized "girl, with a clear, bright complexion, brown eyes, and hair about the same color, and which to do her best, never would stay "done op," like the other girls', but defying the restraint of comb and net, persisted in resolving itself into' spiral curls around the neck and temples ; a style of coiffure not at all unbecoming to the 'bright, piquant face of its owner. - T" "Now, girls," she said, depositing her self upon the steps of the piazza and brushing back the moist hair from the temples, "don't all of you begin to exclaim how terribly hot it is; for one can see that bv just looking at you. I declare, if you don't look as fo many cabbage leaves ! As for me, it is just such weather as I like; it fairly makes me grow." And she looked as though It did, as she she -sat there with her glowing cheeks and sparkliog eyes, the very picture of health, fun and frolic. . "I've come to invite you to go a straw berrying with me as soon as it gets a little cooler. I know a place wheib they are as thick as they can hang, and as red and ripe as cherrie3." "Where ?" inquired a chorus of voices. "Down in Pebbly brook meadow, not a quarter of a mile from here. You know where it is Josie ; wo went berrying last summer." ' - "Yes, but you know Deacon Barnes owned it then. 'Squire Graves is so cross! He told Rob and the Harding boys that if he ever caught them in his grass again he'd set his dog on them." "Humph ! Perhaps he'll set his dog on me," with a t09s of her head. "I should really like to see him do it. Rut, pshaw ! be won i meddle with us guls. Not but that he is ugly enough to do most anything, but he'd be ashamed to. Say, girls, will you go 1 I shall, for one, for I don't mean that all those delicious ber ries shall go to waste for the want of some one to pick them." After a little more coaxing and persua- dinc. Kate carried the dav. as she gener ally did, and it was finally agreed that sbe was to meet them there immediately after tea. At the appointed time, Kate made her appearance, basket in hand, but bare headed, to the astonishment of the girls, who were waiting' for her on the porch. " here s your hat V was the immedi ate inquiry. "The last I saw of it, it was coiner over the dam," was the cool reply. "A puff of wina iook u on my nead as 1 was cros sing the bridge. , Hut 1 wasn t going clear home again, and I thought that I could borrow something here, or tie a handkerchief over my head." "I know what I'll do I" the exclaimed triumphantly, as she spied a pile of hats that Josie had been braiding; "I'll wear one of these. It will be just the thing !' "So will I ! so will I !" was the merry response. After following Katie's example, they arrayed themselves in the coarse straw hats very generally worn by men and boy daring the warm weather in their outdoor labor. Thus equipped, with many a laugh at the transformation it effected, especially in connection with their jackets profusely ornamented with buttons, they set out upon their expedition in high glee. 'Squire Graves, the owner of Pebbly brook meadow and the fertile lands ad joining, had been a resident of Greenville but a few months, during which time he had kept himself very secluded, turning a cold shoulder to the rather officious but well meant overtures of his neighbors "to be sociable," ae they called it. There was little known in regard to his antecedents, with the exception that he was a man of considerable means and unblemished char acter. On passing through the place, he had been attracted by the beautiful situa tion of a small farm for sale. He bought it, and tearing down the old farmhouse, built a commodious and tasteful mansion, where he lived in solitary state, with no one but his housekeeper and one serving man, rarely going into public, except to church. He was not generally liked. The men folks laughed at his amateur farming, and their wives were not a little indignant at his want of appreciation of the hospitality for wtieh they vera noted. At fox the THAW PRESIDENT, Hihht Ctxr. young-ladiea of GreenriUe, they were! UnanimouJ7 of 'the onimnn tKt h i I 'Tery handsome"wit!t th. eeftion ot "Try :,""c 7iareu ?b was a nor- ui ooaungcreaaare, .Trnn - ms .tierce whisker and ataTUg tUck eyes.!' s . tfquire trraves was by no means misan- tnropia in his natural disposition ; on the aj, u-3 uau a ueart more man uauaiiy i . - - .. generous in its impulses, .....muig,MW,( vt . . ucr w. owlBe 10 a re"1" lamiiy awicuon, wntcn,- tnougti it attached nei- ther disgrace- or blame to him, had oast nporary gwomiover ma xeeiings and made him shrink from society. ; He had dvhhu ui'uaui uv(u me uaii roaune Of his present life with the fixed determi- nation f never -leaving it; but alas-for the vanity of human resolutions, especially w '"vw nuvr tlcai kUC UiKUlU CiilVlUg of the heart for love and sympathy, he cy giuniuK weary ui ii. ado, j continued ivate, as soon as her mirth per as near the close of day the warm Julv I mitted her to aek. "and said m oay aoove mentioned ne sat upon the Yjerandah smoking, an unusually lonely i . .. . - leeling came over him, and the silence aroami mm seemeu almost oppressive. f mTTFI m. - . i . i never heard such a sweet laueh V . 'Squire Graves had seen Kate at church every Sunday since his arrival, and had been irresistibly attracted toward her; and that very morning, as he chanced to coby ber father's house, be had caught a glimpse of her bright eyes and rosy cheeks in the garden, into which he had been tempted to look by a gleeful laugh which proceed - cv jrum is. - - Then, as he dreamily watched the smoko curling above his head, he, fell to wonder- iog how such a face and figure would look opposite him every morning at the break- last table, and what a general translorma- tion they would effect in his lonely home, From this blissful dream he aroused nimseit with a halt sigh at the celibacy to which he had pledged himself. "ibem pesky bovs aro in the medderl again, 'Squire," said his man, Joe, thrust- ICff uis uruu uiiuuu cue uuur. "iuai 'ere grass will be so tied up that it can't oe mowed, no how you can hx it. 1 be boys of the neighborhood had been very annoying of late in their depredations upon his orchard and garden, in which he toox no little pride; ' and the announce ment of this fresh "raid" quite exhausted his remaining stock of patience. "lhey are? he exclaimed : "I ve tried what virtue there is in words : now 1 11 try something more potent. Go and un chain Rruno !" With the huge mastiff at his heels, which, fierce as it was, was perfectly under his master's control, 'Squire Graves reach- ed the brow of the hill which gave him a ed the brow ot the hill which gave him a view of the fair raiders. In a atoonin position, little could be discerned of them above the tall crass, save their heads. whose strange gear certainly gave them a verv masculine appearance In spite of his indignation, and desirous " - I Of frightening rather than of hnrhnc th I intruders, 'Squire Graves held back the o o - o eager dog until he had, by a loud halloo, warned them of his design. As soon as the girls saw the fierce ani mal, with open mouth, bearing down upon them, they let fall their pails and baskets and made for the fence, over which they tumbled in a manner less distinguished by grace than expedition, giving vent in the , jir r.1 eucn as can proceed on ly irom lemaie iuug, aim iuuou iu oiaio vi uuiuuai i ,-i Aa.A.A naAA a i health and vigor. I All . ft ..1 .1 .. I ah got aieiy over witn tne exception 01 ivate, who being the last to go, hit her I foot against a stone, and was momentarily I stunned bv the fall it occasioned. Ah 'Pnnir Oravaa catiphr m. ir!imT) of I the flrinsr fn. hi snirrv itnv rhno.rl to astonishment and dismav and henuinlr. I ly hastened to the spot to prevent any further mischief. "Rack, Rruno ! back, you brute !" he exclaimed as Kate rose to her feet and turned her flushed face towards him. Good Heavens I it was the divinity that - - J 1 had occupied his thoughts so much ot late. "I earnestly trust that that you have sustained no injury, Miss Wilde V he said, removing his hat respectfully as he spoke. "Not in the least, sir : though it is not owiog to any consideration on your part." "Very gentlemanly conduct, 1 must MT." nhA 9rtdri. nokinc with an indir. nant air first at her soiled dress, and then J ' ' o I .f th .c rn m.n kofrtr "I I besvour pardon." he stammered, "but the fact is. vuur dress so deceived me that I I took you to be boys - - . "Took us to be boys I" repeated Kate in astonishment. Then as her eye fell upon the hat at her feet, her anger evaporated in a clear, ringing laugh which did more than any thing else could have done to restore our . . --i : nero to nis usual ease and seu-pusaessiuu. In the meantime the rest of the girls W .,ii, k- .holer of r in an adjoining field. Missing Kate, two of the boldest of tbem volunteered to go and nrfin lnr As thev cams within sight of the field of their disaster, they were astonished to see 'Squire Graves po- litely assisting Kate over the fence, which act of gallantry she received with much apparent ccmplacsnoy and good humor. i - nai a sweec, oewitcning countenance "ihinjc i" said Josie with a significant that girl has," he soliloquized. "Kate look ; "I think that the perfect savaee has Wilde, I believe they call her. I think I been tamed verv suddenlv ! Whr kind . When Kate reached the grove she found hmr o.r,i; i .. . mishapTr S eir severa : - une had lost a net, another a shoe. .Ureases had been draggled through the mud and torn in various places, and their apparel, as a whole, was in a rather dilap- idated conditio. Th . . . . . ,L J iuu- i iinous opinion that 'Squire Graves was i "oruts ana perfect "savage. . xxi,g uieueu iu mese ana.ueznas in silence, though with eyes brimming with mtrth. At last, unable to longer contain herself, she burst forth : "'fcjquire Graves isn't to blame. What do you think girb. he thought we were i dojs i Here Kate sat down nnnn tha . laughed until the tears rolled down her cheeks, in which she was joined by the 1 fCOIi. "He sent humble apolosries to vou all " i. ... should be happy to have us pick strawber ries in his meadow whenever we felt dis- posed to do so.' What do you think of I that t ' very suddenly of a charm did you use. eh. Kate I At this Kate blushed, and for once was at a losa for an answer. So she chanced the subject by proposing that they all should start for home. What that blush meant it is impossible I to say. but this we know that there was 1 quite a marked chancre in 'Sauire Graves' 1 habits and manner : he commenced calline i upon nis neisnoors and soon became aa sociable as any one of them could desire : though it must be confessed that he called at Mr. WildcV more frequently than at any other place. And more than this. the very next thanksgiving eve there was a pleasant gathering at Mr. Wilde's during which a certain ceremony was performed, at the conclusion ot which wild Kate was I Kate Wilde no longer. Rut although she took a graver name, her husband avers (and certaiuly he ought to know) "that auo is iuo same merrv. nrovoainfr sreatnre that she was when she st9le, not only his strawberries, but the heart ot the owner." "My Gin" Criticism. Mr. Cyrns Elder's lately issued book of poems, "My U lit, like all other books of pretension, whether of poetry or prose, has provoked considerable criticism from the press. Subjoined will be found what is said about it by two leading New York journals. From the New York Round Table of July 13th : Gift By Cyru Elder. Xe - Tibialis & Co. 18G7. We ew York: - j ou. e wonaer if Mr. Cyrus Elder has has ever read a certain little poem of Tennyson's called flower. He eeems to have read pretty much everything else that Tenny "sa or iorgouea mis, we wui quote it A .1 ! . . tO mm "Once in a golden hour I cast to earth a seed. Up there came a flower: The people said, a treed. "Then it grew so tall It wore a crown of light, But thieves from o'er the wall Stole the seed by night. "Read my little fable; He that runs ma read. k ilost can raise the flowers now, For all have got the seed. ni BOme are pretty enough, And some are poor inaeed; And now aSftin tDe people CaU 11 tut a weed- "We very much fear that Mr. Elder has profited by the larceny about which the Laureate here makes so much ado, And we do not know that we can more exactly express our opinion of his verses, or versicles, as he would, perhaps, prefer to call them, with the same modesty which makes his volume a 'booklet,' than by re peating the first two lines of the last 3tanza quoted above. Some are pretty enough, and some are poor indeed ; . all give unmistakable evidence of their origin. Mr. Elder s flower bears a strong family likeness to the Laureate's, but the perfume of the latter is somehow lacking. His effusions resemble the poetry he so much admires as a counterfeit resembles the rbouiub i j ' i i i y l : . : i aemDies cnampague. J-em apparently not lor want ot study that he wins no nearer to his model; he has caught many he mannerisms, tne tricks ot pnrase and turns ox inougoi, wnicn so cnaracier ize the English poet ; it is only the essence that he fails, and that, all such imitators must necessarily fail, to reproduce. He has even gone so far as to borrow Tenny- - . c 1 Li 1- 1 .1 son s subjects, under tne utie in Memo rial we have the story of Tfie Sleeping Beautv in a poem which is otherwise chiefly noticeable as lending the weight ot Mr. .cider s autnonty 10 maiBomewnai eccentric preterite form of the verb 'glide' wherewith the late Artenias ward en 'I asked her should ricned me language. gla in the messy dance. And we gloae- baJ8 laer "the glad prince and his princess fair Together gioat ui cornaors aiong. They must have had a glowing time ot it. I . . rwi . ...... m m m - - - TSRMS:$3' pER ANNUM. 1 82.00 IN ADTASCE. NUMBER 29. And in other places our author shows a radical turn for bettering the lauguago. Antietam is tortured into four syllables thus: 'On Antietam's bloody plain," the measure being that of "Tennyson's In Jlfemoriam ; for another verse in the same metre we have : 1 "Our voyage liej to the north j 'harassed' becomes 'harassed' and 'si moom' is broken to harness with 'soon Nevertheless the book is not without merit. The verses are often graceful and flowing, with here and there an agreeable fancy that helps to hide the general dearth of thought. Perhaps we may venture to say that Mr. Elder has not yet done him self justice. He seems to be fully persua ded that he is a poet and to feel a certain scornful compassion for people who don't agree with him, and who, he says, 'look On him with unannointed eyes, And say, (He is as one of us, Ha differeth sot in any wise.',' This doesn't suit Mr. Elder ? he wants to be peculiar ; he zejoiees in a bort of intellectual strabismus ; 'he wears two eyes endowed with different eight;' he delights iu the belief that he is mad ; he tells us, moreover, that 'his poetic thoughts Unto his poems are ' " Like endless azure spaces, With here and there a star." We can testify to the spaces, but our astronomic powers aro not yet equal to the stars. Probably they are fixed stars whose light takes an age or two to reach us. " If Mr. Elder will trust our unannointed eyea andis not yet too mad to be above advice, we would counsel him to burn his Tenny son, to try to understand Browning before , he tries to abuse him, to study Walt Whitman and TT'brccsfer's Dictionary, and so learn to write books instead of booklets. We say this in all kindness and sincerity, and beg that Mr. Elder will not miscon ceive us. As we have said, his booklet is not without merit, no booklet so elegantly printed can be altogether, and it is besides entirely harmless and suitable for the domestio circle. We know of no booklet better adapted for presentation by very polite young roenlets to very sentimental young maidlets. We have read iu one of those veracious manuals of politeness that a gift to a lady should be of small value. Mr. Elder's gift, we are happy to say, meets every requirement of etiquette." From the New York Tribune of July" 2d: "My Gift, by Cyrus Elder, (N. Tib bals & Go.,) is the modest title ot a little volume of sweet and unpretending verse. chiefly devoted to themes of patriotism and the domestio sentiments. The author belongs to a class of writers who are en dowed in no small degree with the poetio temperament, and who feci a craving for poetic expression, but without sufficient power ot imagination to assure them or the certainty of their poetic vocation.- The consciousness of this is hinted at in the piece which opens the collection, and which gives it its name. Aware of the fatal gilt which reveal a world of glory to anointed eyes, the writer is in doubt whether he shall trust the heavenly vision, or guard his speech from betraying the secret to his fellow-men. Such minds. however, can find no rest but in sincere utteranco; they must 'wreak their thought upon expression,' and pass through an experience which will either keep them silent forever, or lead them to a higher plane which they now see dimly iu the distance. The blossoms may perish for ever from the earth, or ripen into mature and precious fruits. Of such uncertain, promise are the contents of this volume. Several of the poems are not without a tender delicacy and fragrance that recall the charms of a vernal orchard. But they lack the vigor of thought which their sentiment demands as a framework. Nor do they show a creative power im parting a warm vitality to pleasant fancies . and susceptible tastes. The author is evidently familiar with the favorite poets of the day, and gives a graceful echo of their noble songs ; but it needs more lusty sinews to bend the bow of Apollo with one's own hands." A Saratoga correspondent says that a burlesque advertisement was posted in the Union Hotel, announcing that ti in order to overcome a natural prejudice against the use of hash on the part of. boarders, the proprietor will, on Monday, place a two dollar and a half piece in a certain quantity of hash; on Tuesday,, one-half that amount in two pieces ; on Wednesday, one-third of that amount in three pieces ; and so on for a week." rA justice of the peace in Newark,' N. J., divorced a couple one day last week, and later in the day married each of the pair to a new mate ; so that the man has now two wives and the woman two husbands. The intelligent justioe supposed that as he had the power to marry, it followed that he also had the power to unmarry. Birth cards are now issued in Paris fashionable circles after the . following style : "Monsieur X has the honor to inform you of his birth, which event took place day before yesteiday. He and hia mother are as well as copld be expected under the circumstances." Question for actors : Can a man b said to work when he plays? i