Bloomsburg democrat. (Bloomsburg, Pa.) 1867-1869, July 17, 1867, Image 1

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C
al XXX 1
,
N or COLL:211014 CO.
Piesidatut J uage—lioui William 'Elwell.
:- I .l e I re) Derr,
Aaveiae t . ey"—
i Peter ii. Ilerbein.
hale)! and (ll'k of Courts—Jew it! t!oleman.
Register and Reeorde , r—J oho O. Freel,e.
( Allen Mann,
CounnisAnnerw— , John 1?. Fuwlor,
I )kout.gomery CI.
Eiheriff—Santuel Snyder.
Treasurer- -Jobe J. Stiles. .
Daniel Snyder,
When-- L. Holten,
Jab P. Hannon.
Commissioner's'elerk—Win. Kriekl.amm,
Commissioner's Attorney—E. H. Little.
Mercantile Appral,,,er—Chm. (leo, W. Utt,
County Surveyor—l.:me A. Dewitt.
Viatriet Attioney—Milton M. Trough.
Cortmer—William .1. I lv!hir:
County Superintendent—Chas. U. Barkley,
Ammo internal Revenue—R. M. Clark.
( John Thomas,
Assistant Assessor— B ' "en "'
J. H. Kehl.,
t J. S. W o .,:k
Collector—Benjamin E. Hartman.
N EW STOVE AND TIN SHOP.
ON MAIN STRUF:T. iItLY OPPOAITr:
AIILLERIS STOKE., til,°o2lllllllilA7., PA.
TUE undetsfsned haw jut tined up, sad °pew: 4
bis uew
STOVE AND TIN sllol',
to this place, where he is ',tweed le make op new
1 , 1: , WARP: or all Mods to bia Due, and do repair.
Ho with neatoese sod dispiteh, upon the mold ma
amiable terms, Heel*. keeps 'JO hand STOVE:4 of
sariettaltitterna and Otyleo, which he will sell upau
Isms tonal ourchasers.
Mite thou *All. He to a goo,' mechanic, and de
sewing at Iltt teibite Niroliage. .••
lAt:00
Bloombnrig, SW. 9, ienc—ty.
LASTER FOlt SALE.
The iifidersigiiiiii is about g Ppm
at be PENN runNAct, 31 1 u s. and will oir-f t 9
tun yu,f } a Q 1 } fUvlliir `: U 10:48 ILEttk
NOVI* Scotia White Plahter,
prepared ready for 1100 in gilanittie. rnit purdia4
tic nt any woo from W. nrat of Marell iwxt,
J. S. Mr.S.INCII.
ClilaWk“. 1"67.
BOUT AND Silo]: 8110 P
, : . OSCAR P GliaoA-,
Re9ocifollitinthrtot Ib* NlNia thttt he is now'pre
ward to Athalmture ith k•otlo et'
BOOTS AND SHOES,
I at the LOWWXT risst" , ? ,
td Awe antler awl ,T$ the v, , t We Hi
Ur. GrrMtt, Ohi
had in yehcit 1.1 soEG , 4alti rxp.vbart r. ~ • p
sdatlltil for scrodwoit,ti•
.
jag nn,arpaostMi.
i l k Nov* ct sub -I' or
Nam and knis rtre ,4 lo. r '
Bitv:woburs. tit •. 1 , 1.t1
- .
GEO. W. HUGER. Prerriet
fiburri Witili.lallutatt I, lel hag vaTattt uu:frt •
p , .1111 IllitiliNlthatlef to
to 1.1 tm•r I
iitpildit
fur al die Ipi•••.! . , .
abt. putt Ittrp, - ; Ji (Sala :.n v::; be I ...; .! • v
not litith $ll6-1.111:141 W. * h
the deltcartektr Ova 11113,m, Hi
texcept that popular beet knoll n ha . ..13(it,ara.',
put , hatted derma tram ta.;.arl our, r.•
Welt , pure, anti free. fr , to all tsutt•ouott , 4 or;tgs. Mat
thankful rup pOrmiGIGI• lathe t , ayl , uud
Nof Culitiattet ti Ardetv, 61010..
=
Juno 13. .180,—Lf.
StAciflP: .% \ . I) oliop
THK ttlikieteiPed troul4 moot texpei t tan y n •
ronrocu ‘,l the win tic poet:o:k. IPA hr it prei,nrr i
to elugula All kiwi* or tl t NEN V, no
tIUA4PLCS FOIJNOtt .I.i t%tr,,.,t,igtrg, by
can 417/44,01004: ready 14 do alt !And,. pwir
tee. 0... ~ 11. 70(rtehtirtr hoe. awl on .41,1 n ot
lointli of rigitlins Ut t ifsfif. o , A1.:40, "re tN I N.; A Nt)
CASTING' Vitt At:111N Lit ,
oone on lawn„ . .„„,.11110 1 11110. in goad uorkuhoulohu wan
nut. upon the MlNlNlNatlinunubly term*.
lioo leg elpOrl@llM in file buoin,su, na for,in in in
the oho gi of Lewin It. Mum; rt 01'14 glom, f oo oCCC
0110, yea's, watrunlo hits in t , tyt , tg tall. hi Om ;Ivo
enure si t tlyt i ct,on to ail who li/VOr n 111) With
their work.
Olanusaburg. Nov. SI. 1044.
IiMEI=I
substaihet having parchatad the ..ration
T. Route," in
LOCK !RAVEN, Pa.,
property at' E. W. Bogany. Wrtthirapto the
riendsof 11111.1101110 e, hl.lftEtpll/111:1 111, ., aa , i the pie/
IR! IterWilily. that he /I le Ithm &et) ,
WWI the accommodation* and v‘mr4is 6111
and humbly guilt it. their patronage.
t PNRII:K,
Late of the Maili.nn Pit tiadel Oita.
=
VM EE
S LIZZIE PTRMAN,
*um /immune' , in the le,hee el filettelebeee and
the pubiir geiwrilly, thin ehe hag jest :volved Item
the eltitt4lll aims hva
016 Wring and Sunamer
Stock at
MILLINERY 000DS,
COlllllllOOl4l of An gentle Of usually found in first etnioo
Milliottry blares. Ilex goods one of the hest quality
antiontotot the most Window, and Cheapest to the
mtrtket Volt and examine then* for
Nnhody 010104 putchnso dtkowhore botoro exam i n
ing Miart petprsoftwi t stock of goods Rotolo s uo h ,
tO nod*/ oklhe shortest Watt*. Ot "quit "4.
Mow on Mum strerfl. :141 itmfr below the store of
blendebbsll &
Bloomsburg. Mu
NEW TOBACCO STORE.
If. 11. IfUNSBEIVIEIt,
.4Vttin Street, below the "Ameeicoo
9111001161121Ua11t PAry
Where he kelps ha, laud. One tctriiiolcol td the home
and mut.) , trade, et l'hihidelphia Nit eg,
FIN ITT AND PUG TOBACCOS,
DOMEPTIC AND IMPORTED CIGAR till kinds 01
81110 K !NG- TOILI VITO,
Pilaffs, Meerschaum and Briar Woad r q .,, ood all
*Wiles pertainifla to his tools.
ErThost mall retail dealer,* in cigars and rhew•
ill tObAettAlt, would do well to ign N 111111 a ran, iii
mood ot sandlot; to the shies ter t•very nr U they
adetior Mucha stns of Melia country pedlars.
November ili,intiti,^4ll).
I ?
RUGS, DRUGS, DRUGS.
e e1 m004,,,,,, e t seen tt, Meyer'. Urea Stet
corner of Matt and Meritet stmts. A void aOB4-
went of
PIKE DRUGS,
Modistem Paints, Ws and Varnithor, always no
bard,tad will litt *old cheaper Unto at say other
Vag Stant to tows.
QUALITY op A RANTEhD.
p„,,,t,iin.,, tarrfent compounded et Moyer*
Duni Store.
Ayere and Japer Medicines gold at Moyet's Dreg
Store,
Wteltatt's Tar Conlielt Raker** end Liver on,
Sittosiewli Soatitime Syrup, turd at dleyere Wag
s
wat t r
p ot iftv retie patent Inedtdtti
at call at ,Moyer a
Unto otant. ." .
Wither at 01 inada. wholesale had &slot J.ll.
A type* Drag Mom file•tre.hurg, Pa
easy g, 11416.—af,
~.. •
3c(3:.41• .'3 , t . . •••••
ii f t 'f.
.?- ••
11 .
0 . . 71g. , :t.::: :31,..i . . - i'
0. •
',.';
4. ::•.. 1 . .
. ..
0 -
. . .
• , .3 7 -3 ...3-..... , 0 .3
.• • .„,ti: to ~.. ._, „,.
-...3 - !. 1.0 , 11 , ' m • - ,1 . et. 1,•" .
....4i . ... . i:.... , -
- .
; t' 4. i • A . ril," .' •.CO I 'I" -all -AA
• . .1,4 - Yon ~.t-t tcr.r.. :a4r.11 *col' A pf ',.,.;,-
' . - ..., •• • 1 nOm
Air 413-•er • . 4 .. , ~. , ••••3 ~,•3••••••3
..,.. •
BLObiSBURG, COLVVIBIA. CO., PA., W
Vioniottag ptmotrat.
IS PPIILISIIED EVERY WEDNESDAY IN
BIAKIMSBEINI, PA., By
WILLIAIMPION U. JACOBY.
I'utmo,—sl, 00 in itilvimeo. It no pow wlibin
SIN A'PINTOS, sti will be cliiirupd.
Cr' No wiper farearagom
are paid tai,pt at On ()plod' nr the editor,
. .
nee workee its or throe 111e0.11100.4.•••• 4.. ors 41 AO
Every eubeeprelit itkurtioo iellll With 1 . 1 . iiS
IS'Ali. is. ell. 3m. Gm. Ir.
. , .. .. . . ,
One fot
oro, I ;;,1,0 fI3OO I 4 00 t" , 00 I 1000
Two 0000400, 3,00 I 5,00 0,001 PM 14,00
Threw " 5.00 1"00 0,50 I
1",40 I 1 , ,00
it , ,, u r ' pin re., voi, t )..0 Jo t oo, 14,0nt no to)
flair CO,lllllO. I ISMS 11.00 i4UO 1 1 . . , oo 1 ',400
Oneroiwun, 110 ~0 1 ,.00 11400 t 30.00 t 50t4t
rxreoloe. anti A 0 o.oostratoe4 NOilter • ..... ..1.011
=
h , r ad vents , merits Inserted according la special
contra
himiteo* entices, withnnt advancement, twenty.
tate per
rfat4=4 , llt rigvertht.ment4 papal. In atit mien :di
others doe toner th. fret meattnn.
(1.7 - OFf ICE —la alive'n tHock, COL of Main dan
Iron Fiteri e.
Address, vv. N. jACCHIV
Otnoull.barg, Columbia County, eit
AN G N m i, tLO I DS.
W e th oug ht th e clouds in Ileum so fair
Were 'isles with cities filled
With spires and turrets gletenhetf tit , tre ;
Just like the ea.-th 4 in the air,
We °ilea
These islands in the realms of spot,
Sailed On through seas or blue,
Atel there I could distinetly
'rho angel fuer,
(;ll one I knew.
She Pit Ural thr , H,e,
Anti w9ro c , “wo of light.
Yrwe iow:i shlrs she sva l at noon,
A hew.phly halo 'Sound her AtJile t
er rolae WW e r e white.
Sho Wa: a phu ant b,
vault; , hal lvsm given,
to that htk,rui sph-re
1! tirtt eloull no w.ar,
irer n a tive heaven.
, her at the , leit ehihi, hot
NV•iteh Tine- Pre,
Until it , ;: entip t-p ri fl d,
41. r ilotn the dead
1011, /4 IL
NV lan sunlit vinuflA nre notteatg
1. often 1,,,v; to hear.
Th, (,;," :`'rote sky,
'NV hoi• • mirits
••,,,) sphere.
.110 v. ; 1 1 .1 , ! Itr11•lslt,111 #f,
thi. 114 .1
4.
, r 1 - (17:it c!. 1) , 11 ill 1 , 1-: , . • •
r.-,t::11+411 1,,•:1•••
• • ••••!,,,I .
lti .
: . • •
• • .
1.•••;. ..,e: IA; lat. a
; .1 i
'111'10'.; as I,! ' 11. , :1' :ttiy. I inteedi itely
turnim; back r, It• the e:r •un.s , a-e ,
t , / to for Nvho ea he W.l • t taveiing
TI e t•, F.:Cur:4li n.O .erect a !Imo! et of
e . n,li• :eat went to the plae. m
woir .le., 0,1,011 WP. all,l
1'4.1: in a. Li, n. ito.ing
to dn. the t trey - (110 1;.•,•t. 01
tits , r.;l I 7!! , a.nll . drawing him forth. sue
t—, d, , 1 in earrj int; him to town
Bat! , c a Lim often sit e d, and
says he is evi!...utly a man, and at the time
of his eapture apparently about twenty-tour
year (~r age.
The captured creature at first nily
the attempt to pest eioll..irop; upon
him, Lett after a while ceased to tear the
.nt. 110 is now kept by a nti !can
i n t h e I of Thal.j.‘ Vamp,re, some eight
lentd, 1 miles st Calcutta. NV lien first
taken be -s (:catkin" to cat anything hot
raw moat, a I heVer bean able to speak
or make any npprrodmation to a knowledge
of the alpha] 0 . It ' any one looks earnestly
or sharply at him. be expresses his annoy
ance by a half-tittre,.,l grunt, immediately
turning away and. settling, upon his haunch
es in a comer of the room. or li.• down.
ile eats his food off the ground, and al
though evidently human being, is in habits
a wolf, with the instimts of that beast.
This is certainly an anomalous fact in
natural history, although it is said that four
vas , s are known to have ocenrre I in
India, presenting the sante general facts.
littsa t't INDIAN MUTH
Speaking of the filth coming war on tl:e
plains, the Reese River Jleceille says:
The great leader of the Indians is Bed
(lend, car .Nlahpilitan, who is reprcsent cd as.
one of the Ithic-t Indian warriors of the
time. Ho is about thirty-five years of ag...
tall, handsome, athletic, and perlbct in b . •
horsemanship as in his a l
Ile has coalman lc 1 in 4 4. v 41.11 battles pre
viovs to the massacre of Colonel Fettermetf:t
noble command and has th y I bee n
whipped. Ile was at Laramie last spriott.
to the treaty making, enjoying the farce an I
treating it as such without disguise, yet ac
cepting the presents ofiered, but left
with the declaration that his country should
never be occupied by the whites, nor gar
r%Nned by them, nor should their roads
cross it, Then 1. ,. was at the head of but
4 , 10 warriors of the Ogaltdirli Sioux, but
his marshaling 8000 at Fort Philip Kearney
shows the influence he has over others, and
his determination to make hie threat good.
lle is an active, energetie and able warrior,
and he NNW conquers Red Cloud will do
mote than he who conquered Tecumseh, or
diaak Hawk, or Qsceola.
GEORGE ►►ABSRRT
Mir On Thad. Steven , goe:i for giving
ha merges to the Negroes. beeitim they,
MI *grecs, conquired their masters. This
is the way the services of white soldiers are
va►lueai by the Radical.,
T
RATES ADVERTNINfI.
lE.* Li M* MINSTIIIni A Obti Atlg
t t- Wolf.
TUE MAILTLIg OF BEAUTY.
"I pity Aergaret, she is so plain."
"Oertuinly, she is vary plain ; but, then,
she is so good!:
"Goodness Is very well in its way; but a
handsome face and a fine person will do
more for a girl than goodness," was the re
ply.
"In a worldly point of view, you mean?"
Tho first speaker did not answer this re
mark.
It suggested thoughts not wholly in agree
ment with the sentiments just uttered.
The subject of conversation was the
plunge tof three sisters. She was called
homely by almost every one ; yet it is but
fair to any that she was too often seen as a
foil to her handsome sisters, whose bright
eyes, regular features, rich complexion, and
free, graceful carriage, had won for them
the appellation of "the two beauties."
Parents are not always' wise and just.—
The fret of being a father or a mother does
not, as a matter of course, Eft a person
above his ot' her nattwal weakness and de
fects of character, or change materially the
old e.ditnate of men and things. The
mother of these girls was very fir from be
ing a wise woman, and quite as far frinn be
ing just towards her youngest child. The
beauty of the two elder sisters she sought
to increase by all the available arts of dress,
while he vary plainest and coarseness of at
tire which she deemed good enough fur
Margaret, made the latter seem lemdier
than she really was. Margaret, vet being
an ornamental appendage of the household,
was 1111010 hole her sisters sires.-
rd*and ,aw con.pany, she was at work, and
I often at work for them. 1 4 1 e: felt the unjust
; di.eritnination, and often cried overit, when
notate rtw her but neither rchelhttl war
eranrlaite 1.
"1 pity her, she is so plain." This was
ofttoi !aid by tlio.e who saw Margaret in
contrast with her sisters. Rut it almost
httl , l" 'O , l , that tin , — who had any tine
kno‘-` withr .rd hercharacter,
t. (
would It!. WIT— 'Tr . ,. :41" goo I.
dt 1 egnty in goody -% That was
her coutpetmtion. If the outer garment
was plain, the ;toter furor and tritesuhstatate
of her he'll , .• ) wetly and :wee he
-1 vend what tl••• 1 1 it pot, on in it, nowt
vied perfection. .A :,d otopen , ati , ql went
fart in r Still. Th. • •.l is in a Cr
to iIViT" , a fk.o, (d . in
la% to w•. 1 1.1 tin• int+) 3}t intwgs of {
r
i, her td‘tet.., liar , while she
wa. 1.614, in nil!. 1 ..th willing and
!Li! . xto•:• rel:.tiop. no • vater how
tl ober; •L'ir pride ,
and ;
lute,
The time came, tis year,=. nrograsal, when
it w:, no hingcr rasa, ` . .1 lay her, shy i , 3-
plain."
Nut that any saw Hi of beauty in her
rave, but it yra , nai longer pereeivd as
htunclt, She did not appear In company
fie,unly a her gay and brilliant
~ kter:, who away had around them a cir
cle or admit-erg, but when she appeared,
, h , x did not •it lene, a time, nor eq often
rOnt the jt , et of depreeiatin
sun.
Pomona who had kept aloft from her be
gan to feel an attraction that drew thent iti th
her side, end many wondered how it was
that they had beon so slow in di-not:orbit!
how groat;;; A to was in some things, super
ior to ht'r more showy sis-tcv.
There was a si he... , of tranquility about
Margaret, w felt lty every o ne wh o
ain.tet, it , d, 1 It t e ctic of her man
ner did not break up hat to right,
SNithlietth4 and f' , :rdings she responded with
a tercel of expre,,sion that v , Pei nothing
of in-iwerity. In ettlivert , ation, where the
stt4 . et
was agreeable. thought would light
up her countenance, and play over it in
manifold changes. It was singularly mobile
to the Wind — answering to emotion, never
eoncetding.
Time came when the two elder sisters
round themselves often less attractive in
company than the homely Margaret. Young
men whose favor they desired to win, were
not tinfteyteotly indifferent to all their arts
and blandishments, and yet, stranger still,
a, it appeared to them, so interested in
Margaret, as to Le eat taunt of attention to
ward her.
it is not always that truth comes to ears
most eotaterned in hearing it. Friends and
neighbors we ned talk about our personal
tleibts, peculiarities, and hindering faiths%
though we see them not, and go on 'blindly
indulging them to our lrss, and injury. Mar
garet's two elder sisters still thought them
,elees beautiful, wiuniie, graeeful beyond
all comparison with their Cinderelia, as
once they bad been vain and heartless
enough to call her. They did not recog
nize the fairy work that, with slower than
old fairy touches, yet with more enduring
magic, was transforming her daily. But
there were eyes that could see while theirs
were blind, and it happened that, through
the sense of hearing, they gained a knowl
edgrof what their sight had flailed to give.
The e', , b , st —her nanto was rordelia
0-Award the fallowing oonversation. It
was between two young men with whom she
had been lorM acquainted.
'•1 used to think her bettutiful," said oi u
of them.
"Cordell°, ?" Fuld the other. - Yes,"
wiw the reply.
"Se dill I," eontitined theother. "Three
or four years ago, when she rid her sister
first came out, with the girlish blown upon
them. I thought thew two of the leyeliot
emattres I had over seen; ..but somehow,
they have been fading ever since,"
"There's nothing in them," said the first
speaker.
'Not much,' was the reply.
"They dress elegantly, and have a world
of sprightly go, sip and small talk ; but as
to culture of the heart or intellect, I have
failed to direover the signs. 1 was quite
smitten with Curdulia at Jim—vete:4ly i n
love with her bright eyes and fair faee—
hut I got over it long 311',".
very well in these love matters ; but a sensible
man is apt to look a little way beneath the
surface, to see what kind of a fooodai
beauty is resting upon. tlirls of this clues
are well enough to dam•: and flirt with;
but for the graver purl, matrimony
none but knaves or fool. event them."
"There are plenty of knaves awl Picas
about," said the friend.
"Oh ye 4." riad the other, " as W:t nu the
wretched marriages that are constantly ta
king place.
There's a fellow dancing attendances on
Cordelia now, who is just weak ene0, , ,11 to
marry her at a showswife. Ile thinks her
41104111 y 1.
(o: Course, if the event roues ,41 . , thy ,e
will bo :amber n6440)14. ( 4 011 pk a44. , 1 to
the 1i t. Both will find thetutadv‘s
pointed:'
"By the way," maid the other speaker.
breaking in upon hi. friend's "what
do you think of the plainer tdit. , 3' 9"
ar,,, , aret ?
1 "I've ceased to call her plain," hct ; t
; "You would hardly call her heate:fd."
"1 don't lstetw," lie I-aid. "1 have seen
her wh•.ll call her hehntlf u l wot ,' ; d I o no
I error of lamortv. The gut is, :$l3: ":•T=wt
has puzeed toe at, tinto4. I grant pet th.tt
her features are not cut after a ela
model, nor is their what we sometintc it
-
it, her face. She hasn't the floe
eomplexion or the large liquid eyes of n.„
I older sister, and yet her countenance is t o
we far tnore attractive—it is PO full of aunti
1 and feeling. You forget as you talk with
her, the material lines alter ftee, of thou._ lit
I that transfigures it. Do you want a It`chtr
style than thl4 ?"
r,
'M.. • N• 1:: bum. 'y. Ti : .
that) when 1 ahnit4 vomilere4l a! her ',rd.:L.
taifi his cotal.:wik,n, rettim'.,
my t e-•; , , , r•-•••:•••ti ttfw, but
wore n I yr
11 1 to hu•As her. Tl,
her •!•:.n, • tlio.••.!..!1
tPri:4l. ;I. as, i lovc
1:11-;•,•• • •
the order 1 :0‘, I
;!u'iltil
long wont in
pridc." • :may 3
them awl it' thoy do a Lig up.
;),1 111. ; If t \WY.'
Chth ,,, iin! a V` ir
terQ. I -lioultin't th n n,.:raeat."
— Vol would take Margaret," said Lis
M. 40,
`•17e , ," was, the reply.
"Not regarding mere beauty as anything
when put, in rommst withexeclienctiof char
at:ter ?" added the first speaker.
"I am a lover of 'beauty," was the reply.
Whenever the beautiful is presented. I tied
myself' a constrtnr,l worshipper. At first
I saw beauty only in form and color : and
was inconstant danger of accepting gilt anti
bloom forenduring substanec. Twice I have
been on the of a marriage proposal,
favittatt .1 by mere external chartne.
1 shudtirr, sone times., when I think of
what I escaped in both instan-et..
"The beauty lay or. the surface. --
Gradually my niinti • te- uc instill,-
tell. 1 was able to >e l•
tween real beauty and it 1:11- ,hkot t.
So, I am still a worshipper ~ f beauty ; but
I recogrdie its higher ty i
"Then, in taking t, you would
still have regard to beauty
"Yee," he eentinn..,i, beauty
which fatiesitot, and has power to mo u lt!
evetta plain face into a likenose of itself."
Cornelia beard no wort). Thetigh con
cealed from view, Ehe recognized the speak
era' voices.
Hopes were dashed to hearth which had
been fluidly cherished. She perf , etly un
derstood some things which had oesqsionally
puzzled her. She knew not which it was
that certain young men of high, exc e llenc=e,
who p° eagerly ...ought her fit‘or for a time,
gradually withdrew themsolve4, and became
attentive to 10,4( :lie had considered less
attraetive irle. There was a ls , atity of
which had not devalued, a beauty
scarcely recognized at first, but growin , .! more
and noire apparent, and putting forth allure
ments beside which all that she could offer
As but as the pliter of tinsel,
"Your sister is I(ml:hut well to•niglit."
Conklin started from her painful reverie
at the voice of a matronly friend.
"Margaret, you mean?" was her subdu
ed reply.
But for the conversation jug heard, site
would not have thought of this sister.
"Yes, how much she has improved! 1.
hear it remarked on all sides. Yen must
take care or she will bear off the palm,"
The elder sister turned her rave away ro
that its expression might not he seen.
"She is so good, so true, su full of that
spontaneous grace that cotnesfrom order and
symmetry within. She must have a beau
tiful uthal.''
A year later, and martraret iram the bride
of a wan who had ono stood bewildered
and liireinat . cd in tl,ctilase of Cordelia's
--of one wrio had haat her, as many had
bald, "What a pity she is so plain !" And
he wr• a lover of bPauty in all its forty.
I Di 4..4 DAY, JULYI7 9 1867
The Maine Law.
The people of Maine have been tryin g
the virtues said Mho in a strict enforcement
of this well known statute. The constribei
lary having concluded their locitimatelaborl,
have recently been employed as billows, if
we may believe the Standard, published at
Augusta. it says :
We give the following as the result of
week's labor
A cow arrested for having "two horns."
A entered individual, lately deecased, tined
for being "on his bier."
A pair of boots seized for being "tight."
A tittle litig's kite rentented to have its
tl cut off Ihr having been on "high time
A clothing dealer "hauled up" for ad
vertising 'limit Bar gains."
A confectioner tried eur selling "grin-ger
snap.."
A horse ran away and smashed a wagon.
The horse was promptly unlisted, but it
being proved the "enueth" contained noth
ing intoxicating he way acquitted.
Several "rooktaits" found in the hencoop
of a prnninou citircn, wore confiscated.
The sttceets the police in this seizure
caused much "etowin , ." and it oil! doubt
thew on onto iiirrea -41 activity.
Au I t ti m t mew 11' 1 1,er:rio t , wan inched up
rur in , ttiltal a "punch" iu the head.
A worthy shoctnal et% FelZ o, l on 1-111,icinn
of being a "cobbler, - but proving th rc was
tio'"Aen y" connected with hitn, 'via* teictet
ed. condition this Anal he his "hut"
o titc t •o, fle way intbritted thidlikity future
derchctiou ttn.t?rl involve ,r his
"awl." The excitement "waxed ' iatense.
Complaint that a Land of }Av.!' Wits
fOllll4 .* COIIt,A ., at Idauns."
=MI
NA,,,Nny tcN PEN‘i..ll.v.,Ni.t.—ib,r,p , t,
in the Statt.m.t of ( h o it, W.
, :rand Ppun , :.l% Lula, 1:w 1564,
-oi-titry• h Aifil•my Of titt' erLietley
.tol rigor of tho .11.ttit Order, at, cannot
but be igtatit,,yity.:, u) all its tottolltorit. The
ic es tipt, i of Ita*,,tl wore 71. anti from
bc iutt4 011 rt, ortLit:; tho
total of the itn,:tt maids t tht. hrf~tat t„
$4:l, jou -It!. tifittol ',trig.. charity
fond annottits :.... - i0.. ,, •••••4
.7,1, have liven rt i‘ et! thrtrioz the: t ant
tot ci„i•tn, h• , l. than
td are in Unit. ;
loo'•• "1142. c Hitt , •to - , :t•et a :-;tt., .or
bla •4' .11.'1 IA ioh•t:;/ I.t Li.
tht) Cotl.it It h. 1 ,- .lhort, •r ;
fn.
fro°, to t4Lc tlu'y , The
growt.ii al t •
oder:at:l ,toll Co,. • ;.•!1.1,ty I ~• thy;
; 1, 1 1 I". 1, .
1.1 • ..2 I;l.t:ri I, h'',
r •/* " 0.. •
• . • • •. T • ! .1 r • :1
1.11,y.:4 I, ; a i
of ~~.~ , ~w;,il.a ti, charity - fun.'-
wPre 7.1. In I tL,.rc watt Itg
incinher, of
the I;vatt4 Lotiv debt of only '1,0;,,0, a nd
Lbarity fund: Ltnuunting to $::3,1;•0, Oar
ing the Masonic year of l •;:•.1 twenty n 4 A,
101dge warrants were i”tted. and nine new
lodge variant wore Ifi.Sued, and nineteen
new
Sisuracit PoLturm nun Ciniti
t;tutai. , --We le wit front lo tait~~hti I+J
that the Rev. V. 11. tiecen
ventiy urrequil tnr poi• ruing his wife in
Vet i• tow in jail in I
The e/iiol...;is the fitihoiing sk tch of
the follow'w operations t ter t %tin
wall swotime het winter. eallitel Unfelt' a
toinoter and a tni , en 14t1.: :!,A•
rant' foxits. and tondo him-.elf retnall;alde
ter lud-woutio. , l l otriotisau, During the
itpiieg campaign he took the p o u t :.. a t
temp for the denounced coy per.
heads in the most ultra style, and exalted
P. T. Barnum to the "seventh heavon.
it tabort. he set himself up as a sort ofchap.
lain to the — late political showman. After
election his fond hopes blasted, he set up a
nall store in West Cornwall. His wife,
who was feeble in health. died May 7, Ms
conduct of late hating excited suspicion,
th e body was disinterred by the authorities
and the stomach sent to le . w deuce for
ank -*e.• Greco in the no.antime had dis.
appenA .1, duel the nomination of the
stomach having strengthened the suspic
ions against him. Deputy Sheriff l'houney
Baldwin wa4 sent after him into New York
State, with a requisition from Govern o r
English. We unkr.3tood that Green bad
on his person, when arro.ted, a letter or
recommendation from P. T. Barnum. lit
says ho i now married to a woman living in
rtioa.—A; ke#l4cr.
A —FtEact;'llonst.-- The Danvill Times
stab—t th a t D r . Lee, of Halifax, Va., h a s a
her,. which exhibits the greatest and utast
astonishing aversion to Use colors. This
horse served in the army, and seems to
have acquired his distaste for this oiler
while in the military service, as he showed
no such dispotition ulterior to the war.
Ile will not allow any one' to approach him
in a blue et)at, or jacket—gets fractious and
wants to tt ar it off On one oceasion, while
crossing a ferry, a negro with a blue jacket
on, happened to get mar him, and he jump
ed at him with tiger-like ferocity, and
seizing the garment in his teeth, tore it clean
off. it is to lat.: , remarkable, that he is as
gentle as a Minh it' you approach him in
grey or any other color than blue. A horse
with such nuharttiouiting principles and
unreemotrtteted preelivities, is a dielloyal
horse, and deserves to he disfranohitod
but don't coathseate the brute's oats—Rfeh,
meld (VI.) Examiner.
rum OLD MA%'s DREAM.
Oh, fir ime hour of youthful joy !
(iriee letek my twentieth apring!
I'd rather lauh a hriaht-haired boy
Thum reign a gruy-haired king,
Ulf Kith the wrinkled spoils of ago ;
Away with Warning's crown;
Tear out ewi ylom.written pup,
And dash its trophies ti awn.
On moment, let, my lifo•blood stream
nom boyhood's rount of !lawn!
giv'e me one giddy, reeling dream
or life, all love and Ihme !
My Wetting angel heard the prayer,
Awl calmly smilitnz !%aid,
If blmt tmrh thy gilvered ha:r,
Inv hasty wish had sped.
°But is there nothing in my track
To hill the fondly .tity,
While the swift $en.1011 , 4 hurry lawk.
To find She wislied tor day Y"
Ah. tritest WWI of ITOTIOIO k !
Without thee what were life ''
One bliss I eannot leave behind .
take—nly preeinuA wife !
The angel took a oapphire ken,
And wrote in rainbow 410%
"The man would be a boy agam,
And be a husband, too !
"14 there another yet amid
Beftr+ thta eitattge a 'Team ?
ittlittitiber all tiwir pift4 haves
ith VA).
"Why, yes I would orp. Evor more,
.My roml pati , rnal joy—
I von! I not brar to IcBy.. them all.
take 11!;,= girls and boys.
The milinr angel dropped his pen
-Why, titi4 will never do ;
The man w , Jahl be a Lev again,
he aEn ;r, tiQ!
Aryl su I htturie lattihter woke
"I he ltuu-vhohl with its
vrute my ki,.•vain IA heti utortlittA !woks!.
To please the gray-hairol
ASTOUNDING DEVELOPMENTS!
LoztlPlundering at liarrlhbarg
,slrtna , er t_••• Mrs•trEat.twtt•t—
-' Tory ('s; KALltiti
I:0 1)04 %ND - 1111t,Ell W.VION
1.49:51.6 , t•L' ry 11l 1..0vt at
Ei to op. rionot too,
11:0.1,.i5t.t no. .1 oo• ;J.—Q . ll;m a Kula
, ,inat here thi , moron; by the
unexpected a ; •est of it alather of
gees and after sub , krdsuatta attaches of the
various state l)epart:stentq. It va n es that
for some tittle past, several heads of depart
ment-% iitcholing the State Librarian, had
mied a number ... or valuable boot; and
other tit.eam.atts belonging to the , State.
The attention of the Chief of P. :t•at was
to the matter. an I having rea u to
~ a man I .laves Rapp, doing
. -in. South street, Mr. Campbell,
lite Chi,•f I'ohcce. procured a search
v•arr••:•1 awl ‘isittsl llapp's premises this
pOrninty he fennel a nonther of the
, missing :6 stoned away. tpi, became
terrilk a Irnital and inwliert-,ei acme seve!!
or eight tn• ugart. and other empleyces at
the Capitol I:eliding who were at once ar
tested. The Storekeeper was held in on,
thousand dollars bail, to answer at court.
Two of the messengers were held in •r:i„,!ltt
hutalrt I dollars bail; the balatt , a• will have
a la: .n tu,trnittg. Titre. , wagon
1.. 1 1- of v.. poi . v... 1.• I fought foeta
tort pih cl up in the Mayor's
.itammt the ctrure , l property arc
rvo :A-0 e.• : •1-.of then Atttont•
• I.leneral' • re, •at 11 , 1 or+, of over taadv.-
huwirt a pa-v.
from all the- , R ••rt , the. cloth binding
had been t“rn OW hooks sold u wa-te
Paper. There was• al -o two hundred e.pies
.r thee I"nitt..l Stat, Statutes at Large,
piss...! at the last •••• •1 at of Congress. in
' el o o.l in packtnyt. addro,sed to the Gov
ernor. These were ~!hl for waste paper,
unopened. Large quantities of recent mum
, ,
Puts of the rowistatire format, together
with the index, were also captured together
with several United States tuaiii Sags, be•
longing to the Post 0111 , e, which had been
sent up to the Capitol for domunents and
stamped COVOnpes furnished the heads of
Department, It is supposed that this
I species of imposition upon the State has
been carried on for several years, and it has
only now been discovered by reason of the
boldness of the recent operations.
LAT ER.
•
Ilanutsm tut, June f
Po
lice Campbell has just returned from Carlisle,
and reports that he found at a paper mill,
near that place, nearly a ton of the Looks
an d documents stolen from the Capitol, in
I eluding about eight hundred and fifty
volumes of •• •ithotant General's last re
port. A number of C. S. Mail bags were
Irecovered. Four of the parties arrested
I upon the charge of stealing the property,
I have been bound over to appear at August
Isession& limit excitement and indignation
• exist b*e in regard, to the matter.
IZEZ=:iliEl
gar Oeergo t'runel, Train drives a nail
of truth in the following brief biographical
sketch of his own life: "When I started
out in lite, travel was my idols the 'world
doubted. Then I tried knowledge ; I got
nu praiee. Then bookai they ridiculed.
Then languages : they togered, Then pa.
trietiton they cheered first, then knocked
the down in Boeton, ebot me "Sit Dayton,
ha,voneted titia.,tltluvenp.art, arre4ed me in
t 4 t. Untie, an 4 ivied to n--..intite me in
Alton. Bat in spite of till . I have kept
iti t v Independence and, itelit idualitv. ask.
en Ws world what it Walitxd 4111 now
(looting my time to that, SIM plyout of
contempt for the opinion of wen. lie more
softening of the bram, but hirdellins of the
heart,"
I .
Unhappy Fate of Inaxlinjulan.
The execution of hiaximilhou by the au
therities of Mexico after the request of our
government for clemency, and the interces•
ion in his bohalrof several of the govern•
ments of Europe, will surprise the whole
civilized world. But for the refusal of our
government to countenance his usurpation
his throne would this day have been firmly
established in that country. The liberals
owed their vitality and strength to the mor•
al influence of the United States, ever ex
erted in their behalf, and their refusal to
accord the small boon of mercy toward a
mere instrument, used by France and Ms
trig, who* , free pardon would but have
made hint a monument of the high civilise
lion and humanity which do not punish fur
revenge, shows not only ingratitudge, but
that liberal, just prineiplos do not predom
inate in in their counsels.
This murder of %rah., must fill the
min of sorrow to overflowing, now forced
t o the lips of the imperial House of Aus ,
ria.
Carlotta, the wife of enii vietem, hope.
lwsly insane from the dangers she savraur
rounding her unhappy husband ;—a daugh
ter of the house, a litir young woman of
taotty, aol.identally burnt to death a few
and now a brother of the Bro
wer legrbariously shot in violation of the
to.us of a ettotilatiou and surrounder. A
nen.r afflieted flintily can seam be found on
earth. The Emperor HOW nan truly realize
that "uneasy re.t.: the head that wears the
croup." No solliget of Ida can be more
miserable, in all his pnlinhm4 dominions.
The Negroes South.
The fisting entertained by the negroes
to aids the whites at the South is values
tinnabli, ono of affection, and were they nit
malted to jealousy and hostility by the Iluni
eat! s Liiarwcsids, Ilrownlows and other
and itinerant *note's, the two
re. es would live amicably enough. A
143 nehlowg paper it sates that a gentleman
on hi way to visit the grave of a younger
broths', w=ho died in the 'onfederate service,
just as be reached the gattt of the cemetery
three fig.mer aarvantsof die family approach
ing the grate with floaters and avernagma in
their:Keeping Pitt of their view he watched
them until they re oohed the grav e , when
on , of them climbed over the iron railing,
ton k 314 evergreens front his
ewe:mimes and laid them tenderly on the
grave of his former young vnter. Scenes
like not uncommon in the South, but under
the influence of insidious agitation and ha
rangue, they are likely to give way to such
riots as have endangered the lives of citizens
in Ilichnunal.—llosfon Post.
r • An obi !handl farmer had a hand
tae datijitcr, natnedjilinnic,.who recently
j•mictl the methodist church. against which
the old farmer was somewhat prejudiced..—
The young minister under whose instrunen
tarty Misa 4‘; omits was converted, visiting
her frequently, excited his suspicon that all
was test 6 , 110. Neconlingly, be visited the
Aural) one Sunday niAt, and -vattal biro
anohse rre d, among the congregation.
Soon alter taking his seat the minister,
who wag preaching from Daniel, sth chapter
25tit verso, revalued in fond voice the words
o f hi s (oat, I'Metie mew, teted apharsits,''
mien which the old farmer sprung to his
feet, seiz.al the affrighted girl by the arm,
and hurrie I her out of the meeting house.
fl a yi ng reached the church yard, he gave
rent to his feeling= in the words ;
"I knows dear va • sometings wrong, and
now I isliwares to 'em."
Why, rather what do you mean," replied
the bewildered and innocent girl.
I#idn't shouted the old man, striking
his togetlwr. Abl stamping his foot,
`"didn't I
hear dc parson call otat to you,
"Natalc deide 4i, pars-on,"
- 13mErt LITE MIN NEVER. C.
K. 11ughec , of the Mitchell House, a few
weeks since received his commis:4lnd as Brig
teller Uenennl, to which pOSitiOn he was pro
moted at the close of the war for meritori
ous conduct. Cul. Hughes was a brace sol
dier, and his deportment engaged the re
spect of both officers and men when in the
service:. and all who know him will he pleas
ed to learn that this mark or distinction had
180011 bestowed upon 111111. --Lmente
EMII=I
wirThe mad, or Maine have renominated
Mambo &tin fur Governor. The convention
passed very resolutions, demanding
negro snffroge iu every State of the Union
through action regardless of
tilt: will of the people, and endorsing all the
revolutionary, tyrannical and hurthensome
legislation of the late and present Rump
Cowes..
An Irishman carrying a heavy bun
dle upon l►is shoulders, was riding t on the
front phial-in of a Ilosten horn ear , an d
SCA.73 asked why he did not set his load down
upon the platform /Is ;,►bets," was his
reply, "the horses Intro enough to do to
drag mei VII earl the bundle."
lir A young lady being engaged to he
married, and gettiag aide of the bargain,
applied to a friend to help her untie the
knot Wore it W 33 WO law. 'Oh, certain
ly," he replied, "it's very easy to untie it
when it'a only a baata,"
IMIP A tow of irikk worthilve donor,
worked leto horeeshm, is worth *lO 60
lb:At int 6 ttaidiet it it worth ttwerosd o
tato peohnift bloat*, it in worth SksBs.
made into Islhowt opriogs of watetww, tie
wart); $21,91vt,
NO. 20.