VOL r 7- XX L OFFICEOiI OF COLIIMAILL President Judge—llon. William Elwell. Associate Judges— ! i lru !Purr ' voter K. llerbein. Proth'y and ( k of' I Nouns—Jesse Coleman. liegister and Recorder—John IL Freeze. f Allen Mann Commissioners— ; John F. Fowler, Montgomery Cole. Elberiff--Samool Snyder. Treasurer—John J. ( Daniel Snyder, Auditors— 1,. B Rupert, (John I'. Bannon ; "Cotumissioner'm falerk---Wm. Krickba Cow'HiNsioner'n Attorney—E. 11. Little. :Merv:lntik. A pprai:cr—l'npt. 1;eo. IV. Utt. rounty Surveyor—lmtau A. Dem Astrid Altron4:y-311ilton 31. 'frank Coroner--IVilliom J. Ikeler. l'uunty Superintendent-41w, C. Thirkloy, .lirsoot* F. dark. I Juhti Thoma.,, As “.*or— :j: 11 .1. S. Collector —Berijamin F. Hultman. Ew STOVE AND Ti` SHOP. MAIvSTRENT. (xIARLY Orrn: 4 l7ll MILLIAL'S sToltE.) la.otol:4o(2it';. --- Tllll ppderolipffell hpa jlokt hued up. and opened, hi. 10'0 sT4rfirc AN') T N )4114)1', who, fie i 4 prepart , ll 10 014140 up 1 . 0• W w AUK or ill knot tit hts lutr, 110.1 to pnir• 14 with 'mimic** And tlt p,tlh, npon the most non. sniuthir 1 , ,t111., He atoi I4ItV rst of yur louu piittmom nod styles, a Mtch he will sell upon letimt to nut ItUfellnB'lr A. Gave haw, m .. •!L rlia 4 mechanic, and de serving or th Wihik patrumme. J :ICUS Nllll-2. Montp.bitrg, Sid, 9,1-141.—1 y pLASTER FOR SALE The 1111414q$Iglle , 1 00 , 11 At Ing ill* a si Ow PENN IT R M soil wi4 oiry r In Mu public ONE lIUMMLIP lONS 1/0.41" Novia Scotia While Plaltter, PT , TOrt'd rettlY (of $l." to loottl it to flit puti.liss rts, rat any (tots hoot thy titrt ui stlttli tst. j„ s. tJ.NIXCu. Cataw jut', JJ ut La, Isl 7 Boor vm)sitoEsitop Ost.'.l P. fare rox, ip..peortmy iitOrm. tl ft 1,40 , 14 e. Oint It ie lioN prtwl 1014414Unittiitir Lai kill4id (.4 im BOOTS AND SHOES, w t h f , L 0 IrEsT . 11,;.414 Prins ; nt Own WM ire :tn.! votc tsrtt nud int+ wt slyki Mr. nitiMl. (10. I , it II ill iticoni.blit )ha had manv ypard * . IIOIW ncs wnb if rep illation for good work, iotog• .4 and honoro4le dcai 11115,/f1,100'41. 0* - Plata cl bli.inaisi un Satilli r*at rara..r of Mato and Imo oto'r J. K. ilittou'a Stn.Y. ilionniobilra, tie., In, laoa FORKS HOTEL, GEO. W. iltitGEß, Proprietor, 1311. Wtli It HoWU 110011 MS rivently ender gone mdirtit thattirvA 111 its ;eternal errrthweetf.lod, -nit its proprievir 1411114 former nd the trevelheit hehtir that his cmoimedatioe• for ule femiort of hie ttlie, , tm are semenl t 0 hr C+iolotry. 1114 lable t oti kilt Hn Could OM only With $10.44.1(141 I'o. lOU 1, 1111 uI he deltraciee or the n tivor etc. lit 14141 popular livVe 1110 .10 II 104',.%J, th tiry,* 11114114mA direct ft.rit 1 ,,,90,. . ”" melt , 114,1. and free 14 , all t,niaua uae otrtu IN s thaukiel lot a itherel wittohotte the find ill CtlifilllUM to sicserve it ON I V. ti r.• W. Al AUG r it. JUH Ma -tf. lACUINE AN!., REPAIR SIMP TIII nodortiono.l would moon reopertfolly no• ounce to the ptditte orionntle. that ho is pfklitlll,l psecnto all kind* of itAVIIINEft nt Jt)Kii ii lANPt.Etieo e(,.NDlt'i, in lhoomehurn, whore hs tawny,. be found featly to tit) alt f ende tor eir . int Wilful Throehitto btu. Mont., ono in Ahart, all tole of Footnote Vt. mole. A Lth 1, TV It I Nil A NI) YiNd UP or croorisii AND MACHINERY, no on short notice, in a good et mbooteeliko man r, upon the most rclomilithlo 1.4 me, lis Mug expottotter in the holtistreo so Airman In . *hop of LAMM 11. Mane of tine pima, for river prom. worr:lntr into in oayintt that he 11111 MO. inn 041 1 .ratatUtt to oil who MA) Mew hem with t work. GVIROE II ASSERT romoibuq, Nov Vila .ALLOY HOBE. ttg oialtotribPt buy tag purtti.tett %Ito "INII.II Uuute." in LOCK HAVEN P 1 * • pert, of E. W. 14 ,, tiy. Ear l ., would *ay to the lola of the lloape, log acquainenocva. 333 10, 11331(1111Y, Ihet ha ifot nap, In 4.{,441, a Noiel, h the ttwoodni mt, 4 and tOtllt4bi ti a lloek:E, humbly soli c it* their hotronole. J. it rr EVK Jade of the lio , ti , tott llwige, VII IL/A..101a. it il 4 Ven, Dec, la, 11`33i. NS L IZZAI4 ',l l k; T,1411,01 4N , 01414 antinitheeta thn ifi'llV4 ntetriat , bilre aril public graftratty, that 4hB ho' joat tectrve4 Iron, eastern alive hp( Spring and Stemmer MILLINERY GOODS, Wing of hU.utticies usually (nand in first etas. finery Moran. Her goods ere of the best quality tinwhe the moot hallo:owe nod eherspeoi filthy ket,.. .1;411/ 411111 41 1 / 1 111111V the In I , lr yourielvex. thoity should purchase risPW here honpeesiiniiii. Nllll , lPeterumo's mit"clt, of goods I.lohuotn 01:1t14 der, on the shortest notice, Cr err Ott Main otter4„34 below the ',tore or dekhall do IltUpert. homburg, May lcha—tr., IJW TOBACCO STORE. IL IL lit NS ;It Strut, hdore the " AttitTiettic t i &OGlVAtinUagis VA t c ho *wt., on hand, and Co voiolt,o to the bow Oolo(y trade. It IlittOdutphia Utotto+t) pric.t*, INE CRAM) PUG TOBACCO 4, WIC AND 'WORM CIGAR ntl komIA nt SMOK VW TOBACCO, jterarartotate end Briar Wood ripen s aadalt rgiainiaa to hie trade• otoot d t act dettierß in rime and thew, wood tin well to cry e hints roll, to 1,04011110 the Mier tor ovory unit le they of these euatory pedlar*. . tli,lnikkoolint. is, DRUGS, DRUUS. pirinaa at John R. 3ioyer•a prnß Prat• VIM and Marne( Streeta. A alma now' VIRE OD UGiSJ Ponta. CHla and Varni.timts alwayq on r•ttt as elavaper than at any awe, Mtg. Y LITT 01, A RANT ELD. • ••••tok compounded ut. Mare• I=l pfiteld 1 fr .41r , PFMOCRAT Vlottmoturg PrioLIMIED WEDNiitiDAY Ix nLoomsoulio, PA., BY IVILLIAIIISON 11. JACOBY. TIOMA.—..I on in admire. If not timid *Shin SIX mown Iss, sit rant. additional will be rinirdrill. No loner dittontinutid until all artratasod 1111: paid e•XCI.Ill at ttio opilon of the edltsr, tlor oqoart. PIO sr throe insertions $1 fin Every onlivelnent insertion kr+ Wan 13 30 lit. la. 3AII. Ono *pow. 1 V.llO I 3CO 1 440 1 o.oo' TWO 3.00 5,00 1 rug o,p) 'sheen " :lA I 7.00 1 0.30 I I", 00 pour 11 1 00, " , I o .' o 0.1 1 0 10,1 1 0 i 4.00 llnlf /-0111000. 10yo 11.00 1 14.001 1/ 1 00 o, t t , r.0ff.4111. 1 13 00 is On I WON 30.00 Cu.rutor•H tnil didlottilotrlitnes Waite. = t 41$1 , r advartiaemotto Its AO e led accordlos to *poem' cot.; 41. 1:11401 , 0* uotier , e, without advert igeinenti twenty. eel per lino. #4.Jyrltioemento payable in nthonee alt Othero due after the lirtrt wk. Cor.of Mn 3# dint firrlCE—ln Olt Itt;ll'rtl.tTrl4:.;*, I It is a thir autumnal day, ' The grutnel is strewn with yellow leaves ; .11101:114 'll9.lllti glean, bare and gray, The grain is bound in golden sheaves; Afar I hear the ...peekl e d geniis shrilly 'mid the stubble. dry, And miitikd boats from busy nails Within the barn near by. The hit e , t NAYS now are dead, Their petal.: r.eattered hir an I wide, The some!' berries, richly red, Betieek the hole on either side; A tiriniiiiy calm is hi the air-- A dreamy echo on the oa ; Ah, never was a tiny more fair Than thi-. which * blues Inc! I see the Qtneks of ripened corn The yellowed Ino-,,es On the roof, The diamond duty-dorms of the morn, That I , ring with gems the slider's roof; An tZiti , .: haze is bunging low About the outlitow of the hills, And eivoqing sea-fowl southward go From Inarshe4 flats and kill. For main years, the autumn brought A solemn satines to my soul— it ~ ,11,1,rel e'en toy lightest thought, And on my ftlyeA moments stole; 'Twas sod, yet sweet--a strange alloy 4 )1' boy , : and • - ornov interwined— r att' alba brings me only Inv, No shadow haunt:. my taind• And why b this? The dead leaves fall— The 14ossonts wither us of old : Anil winter e 111. 4 . with snowy pall. To wrap the earth so chill anti cold; Th e s el•roe strnnz athwart the sky, Millshunt their plaintive monotone-- And why s when leaves and blossoms die a4k in not—l tlin , t not tell; da I*" not all my 'mart &close rairy wore a magic. spell 111 P, when deenyed the roue; Tuo girt , dill holing summer bring— , Tiv,, symbols of unrading rpon any lingers glows a ring, l'pon uty lips—a kiss! Ono line day, early in winter, my Ito-band received a stonmen's to Burke's settlement to unite a couple in the bonds of wedlock.— It was specially requested that his wife should accompany him—that we should be expected to remain all night and participate in the festivities. ft was twenty miles to the settlement, and we reached the log helve of Mr. Burke, the father of the ex. peetant bride, about noon. A dozen tow. haired Litt'': children were at the door await in:s. our arrival. They telegraphed the news inq n !y. ! here's the preacher anti his woman ! '1 Imuy're nothing but folks ! i m p's got a man's hat on, and a turkey wing on the hunt of it ; and his nose is exactly like dad's- s.rooked min cow,horn sqnueh,!' Ala- for Mr. Morrison's aquiline nose, of whl,, be was ,a little vain. 'Sam !' called shill female vela,, from the interior of the cabin. Too and grab the old rooster, and ; tit clap him in the pot. Sal, you quit that on ,„ ri and swoop the floor. Kick that corn dodger tap:?r the bed I Bill, you wipe the taller out of time cheer for the minister's wife and ire spry about it. Further remarks were cut short by our entrance. Mrs. Burke, in short calico gown, blue petticoat and bare feet, came forward wi ll) . leg h,,r eyme, on her apron. flow d'ye do, Elder? Ilow d'yo do, inarm ? Must excuse my head ; hain't had a chance to comb it since 13.1 week. Work must be done you know. Powerful sharp air, hain't it ? Shoo there ? drive the turkey out of the bread trough. Sa!, take the lady's things. Set right up to the tiro, marm. Hands oold ? l i Well. just run cut in Bills hair, we keep it long on purpose. Bill presented his shaggy head, but 1 de eliucil with an involuntary shudder. 'Land if' she ain't actilly shiveriu, Ilere mann, take this corn dodger into your lap—its as good as n soap stone.' A drundfull squall announced the execution of the rooster, and shortly afterward he was pouncing about in a four quart pot, hung over the fire. Sal returned to the churn, but the extra ordinary-visitors must have made her care les, for she upset the concern ; butter and buttermilk went swimming ever time floor.— 'Grab the ladle, Bill erica Dirs. Btwke, `and dip it up, Take keer thar and -don't put that snarl of hair into it. Strange how some iimlks will be so nasty. Dick, keep your feet out of that buttermilk ; it won't be tit for the pigs when the butter's gather ed. Drive that ben out quick, she'd picked up a pound of butter already. There, Sal, do try to be a little koorful. If you an go ing to be spliced to-morrow, you needn't go rn ttod Liver OD, at Ainye►'► Drug tan at Mom.* reSsi I, .141„ R. 131400 TIII. iuvrEs or Aovkrrisl,M. LUMP CONATIT111! A Obt! ARC IV. n. JACOrtY. motnsburgt, Conimbi County, As AUTUMN JOY. RV cEoROP. ARNOLD AN ILLINOIS WEDDING. IIY A MINIMICS war. ISBURG, OLUMBIA eruy about it,' I advise you to ,dry up I' it:marked the bride elect, thumling away at =the chum, By this time I got warm, dinner was ready, You may be sure I did not hurt myself by overeating. Night came on early, and after a social ehaton the events of the morrow, I 'signified my readiness to retire. Sal lighted a pitch pine knot, and began to climb a ladder in one corner of the room. I hesitated. 'Coma on,' she cried, 'don't he afraid. Ham, Bill, and Dick, and all the rest of ye, duck yer heads while the Elder's wife goes up. Look out for Moose boards, mann, and mind or you'll smash your brains out agin that beam, Take care for the hole where the chimney comes thro.' The warning came too late, I caught my foot in the end of aboard, stumbled and fell head:ong through, what I supposed to be an interminable space, but it was only the room I had just left, where I was saved from de struction by Bill, who caught me in hie arms and set me on my feet, remarking 'what made yereome down that way ? We ginerally use the ladder.' I was duly commiserated, and at last got to bed. The les.s said about that the better. Dick and Bill and four others slept in the same room with us and made the air vocal With their snoring. 1 full asleep and dreamed that I was being tired from a Columbiad, and was awakened b 3 Mr. Morrison, who intimmed use that it was morning. The marriage was to take place before breakfast, and Sally was already clad in her bridal robes when I de scended the ladder. She was magnificent in a green calico gown, over crinoline full four inches longer than the rest of her ap parel. She had on a white apron with red strings—blue stockings—a yellow neck rib -bon and white gloves. Her reddish hair , was fastened in a pug behind, and well adorned with the tail Heathers of the defunct rooster before mentioned. When it was an• nounced that Lem. Lord, the groom, was coming, Sally dived behind a coverlet, which had been hung aerussone corner or the room to conceal sundry pots and refused to come forth. Lens lifted one corner the curtain and peeped in, but quickly , retreated with a stew pan following close behind him and a , few sharp words from Sally, advising him to mind his own business. 10 1 .JO . On voon Lll.lb 11311 Lein was dressed hi blue with bright but tons. The entire suit had been made for his grandfather on a similar occassion. II is hair was well greased with tallow, and his huge feet was encased in sheepskin pumps. Very soon the company began to gather and in half an hour the room was full to over flowing. 'Now Elder,' said the groom, 'drive ahead ! I want it don up short. lam able to pay for the job, do your best. Conic Burke trot out your gal. Sally refused to be trotted. She would be married where she was or else, not be married at all. We argued the case with her and coaxed ber, but she was as Gra] as the rock of I ibrallter. It was at length concluded to let her have her own way. Mr. Morrison stood up. The happy couple joined hands through a rent in the coverlet, and the ceremony proceed ed. Just as 31r. Morrison was asking Lem uel 'will you have this woman,' etc., down came the coverlet enveloping the bride, groom and pastor, and filling the house with dust. Dick had been up in the loft and cut the string that held thecoverlet. Mr. Mor rison crowded out, looking decidedly sheep ish. Sally was obliged to be married open ly. To the momentous question, Lemuel responded: 'To be sure, what chic did I come here for ?' Sally said : 'Yeas, if' you must know.' Salute your bride,' said Mr. Morrison, when the ceremony was over. 'I in ready to do anything reasonable, El der,' said Lein., 'but skin me it' I know how to do that. Jest show me how, and I'll do it if it kills me.' My husband drew Lack nervously, but Sally advanced, threw her arms around his neck, and gave him a kiss that made the very windows clatter. `ll. vum if I don't do ditto l' said Lem, and hastily taking a huge bite of a piece of maple sugar, which he drew from his pocket, he made a dash at me, smashed my collar, broke my watch pliant tore my hair deism, and succeeded in planting a kiss upon my nose, greatly to the delight of the company. Then he turned to my husband : 'Now, Elder, what's the damage for this ere job ? Don't be afeard to speak.' 'Whatever you please,' said Mr. Morrison. Lemuel produced a piece of fur from his pocket. 'Thar, Elder,' said he, 'that's a muskrat skin. Out on the shed you will find two heads of cabbage. You are welcome to the whole of' it. My hus band bowed his thanks and the young folks went to dancing. Mrs. Burke went to getting breakfast, and at my earnest- request,_ •Mr. Morrison got out our horse and buggy and we started home. I never could have lived through another meal in that house. I have since heard that Mr. Lord said if he had seen the Elder's wife before she was married, Sully might have went to the Dickens. Alas! 'it might have ken.' On Saturday evening of lust week, when the congregation of ono of the up town churches were leaving the house, it commenced raining. The lady said to the gentleman who accompanied her and her :sister, "why, it rains—send and get an um brella.% "Why, my dear," said the gen tleman, "you are neither sugar nor salt, and rain will nut hurt you." "No," said the lady, "but we are heave It is needless to say he sent fur an umbrella. gir Why do birds feel depressed early in a summer morning ? Because their little bills are all over due. Queen Victoria and Mr. Brown. London is the center of England. The Queen is the center of London. Her prem. coca is the light of the aristocracy—her ab. soneo their sorrow. lier going out and coining in—her down sitting and uprising— when and whore she walks or rides—how she dresses—to whom she speaks—who at tends her—aro carefully noted and greedily read. After thirty years of a model domes tic life, with her domestic fume traveling rotted the globe, and herself the idol of the British public, an American is astonished to find the London atmosphere full of scandal; the name of the highest lady in the land connected with one of her lowest subjects; the names of the "Queen and Mr. Brown" on the lips of all classes, from the rag-pick er in the streets to the peer in the realm. The Queen is seldom seen in London. She flits buck and forth front Windsor Castle only to meet the duties of State. She sel dom sleeps at Buckingham Palace, her own town residence. She likes the retreat at Windsor, and lives near the room where the Prince Consort breathed his last. The solitude of the Isle of Wight is a favorite with her, for she can ride twenty miles in her own dominion without being seen. Among the Highlands at Balmoral she lays oT the Queen and plays the woman. Driv ing around in a low wheeled carriage to which is attached a runt of a pony, she vis its the sick, the infirm, and the poor. Her carriage is loaded with comforts which she distributes with her own band. Her com ing to any house is a benediction. All this the Londoners dislike. They pay for the pomp and the show of royalty, and they want it. They give the Queen live thousand dollars a day in gold. They furnish the palace, her state carriages and her hundred horses, the plate for royal banquets, and also pay for the entertainment of all royal guests. Her refusal to join in the gayetiesof life—the closing of the palaces and her re fusal to play the Queen deeply offend the. Londoners. It harms trade, they say, and the sufferings of the poor for the want of employment are laid at the Queen's door. Her ministers have pleaded with her to meet the public demand. Punch has lam pooned her with his must effective sarcasm. A less worthy retirement is now attribute.] to the Queen than grief for the Prince Con sort. In print and in speech she is neensci of being in love with Mr. Brown• It is openly said that she has transferred her sr- feetion for the Prince Consort to this gentle• I man. MIIO PI MR. BROWN ? Mr. Brown is the Queen's confidential ser vant. Her majesty found hint at Balmoral. On visit to that castle after she became a wid ow she found a servant silent,sad and obsequi ous, very attentive, very efficient, a man who seldom spoke a word. On inquiry she found that the man had been a servaot long in the employ of Prince Albert. Ile en joyed the confidence of the Prince. Ilis mounting fur his late master was the talk of the castle. The Queen took him at once into her employ, and it is said into her af fection. Being a Highlander, he came into the presence of Her Majesty in full custome, that is, with hare legs, to the great scandal of the full dressed lackeys of the palace. From step to step Brown went up till he has become the prime minister of the Queen's household. All her orders go through him. llis body-guard are High landers also, and the old fend between the Scotch and the English is revived in the Queen's presence. All sorts of stories were started and are still in circulation. At one time it was repotted that she would marry Brown if she had to abdicate. The Queen is known to he a spiritualist, upon which it is said that she believes the spirit of Prince Albert to be in this man. All i 'possible in fluences have been brought to bear to re move him from the Queen's service. She is well aware of the scandal connecting her name with Brown's, but she will not yield one jot. To the impassioned expostulation of her ministers she replied byan imperious wave of her hand, which induced the minis ters to back out and depart,. lIJW BROWN LOOKS Wherever you will find the Queen there you will find Brown. He is a shrewd &etchum, who knows that there is no power behind the throne that can touch him. He is a coarse, common-looking sort of a fellow with iron•grey hair. He is about fifty years of age, nervous and wiry, with quite a stoop in his gait; coarse, hard fea tures, which make him look like a collier or ditcher dressed up, and quite uncomfortable in his nice clothes. He is about as unat tractive-looking a person as any day-laborer about our warves. He is nervous, buisy, uteddleion4 4 but be attends strictly to his duties. ITo seems to know nothing, and certainly seems to care nothing for the de testation in which he is held by the servants of the Queen, and the nation at large. TUE QUEEN AND DROWN ON CANTAB. The opening of the Royal Academy at London for the season is a great event. The aristocracy attend the opening. An extra charge is wade the first day, and all London goes because there is a jaw. At the open ing in May last a genuine sensation was pro duced. Ono picture excited the attention of all viaitura- Crowds hung around it through the whole day. This piotgre occupied one side of In apartment. If' was celled the "Widowed queen." It was a superb life. dee likeness of Victoria. The scene is laid at Osborne. She is repreacntod in a close' fitting habit, sad robed wholly in black, as usual, her widow's cap being hidden under her bat. She is mounted on an elegant DNFSDAY I OCT. 9, 1867. black horse, and is represented as reading a despatch, while a atter fallen from her hand lies on the mound. In the Aground, at the head of her horse, mantle the noted Babwn, as complete a likeness as was ever drawn of mortal man. He is represented in his Highland costume. He was put in the prominent position that be occupies, it is said, by order of the Queen. I was present when the Academy wax opened and this picture first exhibited. The room in which it hangs wan crowded with the nobil ity and the elite or London. It was known that a grand likeness of the Queen was to be the lending feature of the Exhibition. All were on tip -too to behold this great work of art. But no ono knew that Mr. Brown was to be exhibited alho. When the cur tain was rolled up there was an insensible howl of indignation. Sonic ladies actually covered their faces. ''lt's Brown I it's Brown I whet a shame I" was heard all round. Threats were made to cut Brown's head out of the canvas, and it will be done if the people have a chance. Crowds Fur rounded the picture all the time, as people will look at a disagreeable object, and this picture is highly offensive to the Queen's subjects. TILE; REALIVACT3 ABOUT MR. BROWN The Queen can have no society. No sub jeet can speak to her without her permission. She is as isolated as the statue of Nelson on the top of the column at Trafalgar Square. On the death of the Prince who had done all the business of the State, she found her self alone with the kingdom and an im mense household to take care of. She could get nothing done. Her orders had to rdn through a dozen or twenty hands. The royal servants have a routine out of which they will not go even for the Queen. It takes about twenty to do one man's work. The servant who opens one door will not open the next. The one who brings a pitch er of water will not fill the glass. The Queen timid in Brown a prompt, able and attentive servant. She gave hint full charge of her domestic arrangements. 11' she wishes to rid° or walk, have a carriage or have a railroad train, her orders go through Brown. He is attentive and obsequious, but is an excellent business man. One of the Queen's characteristics is promptness. She exacts this of her servants, and Brown meets this exactly. lie attends the Queen in all her journeys. Ile presides over that portion of Wilelsor Castle appropriated as the Queen's residence• Into it nom of the royal servants enter without his permission. Ile has more influence over the Queen than any living man in the Kingdom, and he will hold his position as long as the Queen holds hers. But he is thoroughly detested by all the household. Little he cares for that. BROWN AT TUE RAILWAY STATION. The coining and going of the Queen from Windsor is heralded in the court papers. All London goes to see the arrival or de parture. She has a special train to her self. A right royal train it is. It consists of three coaches, an engine elegantly adorn ed, and a pilot engine runs before. Nothing is allowed on the track while the royal train is running tn or out. Twenty minutes be fore the train leaves London nothing is al lowed to start from Windsor. Nothing leaves London till the signals is given that the Queen has reached the royal station at her cantle. It costs the Queen 5509 for the round trip, which she pays out of her own pocket, every time the train runs from Windsor to London and hack. Over this train Mr. Brown exercises supreme control. In the presence of hundreds of people who gather in and about the station to witness the royal sight, Brown enters the middle coach to be occupied by his royal mistress, and examines everything, to see if it is all right. He stands on the crimson carpet stretching from the outer door to the Queen's coach. Ho looks steadily into the eyes of the crowd, who aro kept back by the rail ing and by the police, and does so with the look of a servant of the lower class, yet with as shrewd and "canny" a look as any Scotchman who over crossed the border. His quick ear catches the sound of the ad vancing cortege. The Queen's train starts at halt' after five. It is twenty-seven minutes after five and Her Majesty has not appear ed. Said the officer who stood beside me on the crimson carpet, in answer to my question, "Is not the Queen late?" "Do you see that clock? It is now twenty nine minutes past • five. In half a minute those doors will open, the Queedwill enter, take her seat, the whistle will sound and the train he in motion half after precisely." Sore enough, at the exact moment mentioned the doors were thrown open and the Queen, beaded by Brown, entered. A short, thick-set, German-looking woman she was, dressed wholly in black, followed by her younger children and the ladies of her household. She walked with a sharp, imperious tread, looking neither to the right nor to the left. Brown handed her into the coach. The doors went to with a slam. Brown gave the signal and disappeared= in one of the apartments. The train moved on the exact minute, amid fainteheers to the Queen, and loud execrationiiin "Brown." OW Red nous aro like light•hoaeee to warn voyagers on the aea of lite of the emit of Malaga, Jamaica, Banta Crtis and Hol land. Jr A notorious toper used to mourn about not haying a regular pair of eyes—one being black and the other light basal. "It is lucky for you," replied his friend, "for if your eyes had been watcher, your non would brio lot than) on Aro long op." Death o Iri#tdeh •, Richard Oreenwell, residing at Seaford, gel., committed suicide at that place on Thursday, by throwing himself into the riv or. Oreenwell was known as one of tho men implicated in the forcible entrance into the jail of that place, and the taking there from ono James Wilson, a negro who WAR arrested, imprisoned and awaiting trial for the murder of a girl, and hanging him in the roar of the jail yard. After he was hnng, shot and throat cut, Oreenwell, who was a butcher, cut and carved him as though he were beef, and then roasted and burnt the pieces to ashes. He reserved the right band of the negro and carried it home with hint. Hut what a change has taken place. Since then the fearful judgment of the Almight; seems to have visited him on all occasions. About a year after this transaction ho lost his wife by the most agonizing of deaths— that of burning. Since the death of his wife Greenwell lost his right hand by the cars passing over it. On several occasions be came near losing his life by being thrown from his carriage, two or three times being taken up as dead. Finally, on Thursday, he remarked to smile person that "Hod Al mighty would not kill him, and lie would go and drown himself," which he did. Ile was an Englishmen by birth, and was said to have been a desperate character be- Ibre imigruting to this country. He was an intbiel— did not believe in God or in n future existence. He would stand up with an open bible in his hand and curse the God that made him, contending that Wind chance formed the world and fixed the planets in their spheres. indeed, has been his end, and fearful be the responsibility that meet: hint in that unknown future. MEN WANTED.—The great want of this age is men; men who are not for sale; men who are honest, sound from center to cir cumference, true to the heart's core ; me 3 who will condemn wrong in friend or foe, in themselves as well as others; men who will stand for the right if the heavens totter and the earth reels; men who can tell the truth, and look the world and the devil right in the eye; men who neither brag uor run ; men that neither flag nor flinch ; men who have courage without wrestling for it, and joy without shouting to bring it; men iu whom the current of everlasting life. runs still and strong ; men too large for sectarian and too strong for sectarian bonds; men who do not snivel nor cry, nor cause their voices to be heard in the street, but who will not fail nor bo discounted till judg• mem be set upon the earth ; men who know their message and tell it; men who know their duty and do it; men who know their place and fill it; men who will not lie; men who are not too lazy to work, nnr too pround to be poor ; mei! who are willing to eat what they have earned, and wear what they have paid for.— locastigator. A MARRIAM: or CoNVENIENcE.—The Poughkeepsie Eagle tells a story about a clergyman in that city who was recently aroused from his slumbers, a few moments before midnight, by a vigorous tapping at the front window of his residence. Raising t h e window sash, he inquired who was there. A gruff voice replied in the broken dialect of a Yorkshireman, that ho wanted the do minie to come down to his house and marry a couple. The dominie wondered that ho should be called on such business, at such a late hour of the night, and asked for an ex planation. The Yorkshireman replied that "a young couple had just arrived at his boarding-house and wanted to stay all night, saying that they were going to be married in the morning. That was all well enough but the York shireman didn't have only one spare bed, and he didn't wish to turn the strangers out of doors and didn't wish to lose the price of their lodgings, he concluded that they had hatter be married that night rather than take any risk. The good natured dominio proceeded to the house, and in the pronnee of the household made the lovers one. At the conclusion of the ceremony the York ehiremen stepped up to the reverend gen tleman and placed a five dollar greenback in his hand, said : "There, dominie, if she makes a good wife for her husband ut the end of the year I'll give you five dollars more." The dominie returned to his par sonage, and the newly married couple were allowed the "spare room." READ AN HOUR A DAY.—Thera was lad, who, at fourteen, was apprenticed to a snap-boiler. One of his resolutions was to read an hour a day, or at that rate, and he had an old silver watch, left him by his un• cle, which he timed his reading by. Be stayed seven years with his master, and said when he was twenty one he knew as much as the yonng squire did. Now let us see how much time ho had to read in, seven years, at the rate of an hour each day. It would be 2,555 hours, which at the rate of eight reading hours per day, would be equal to three hundred and ten days ; equal to forty-five weeks', equal to twelve months, nearly a year's reading. The time spent in treasuring up useful knowledge would pile up a very large store. lam sure it is worth trying for. Try what you can. Begin now. in after years you will look beck upon the task as the most pleasant and profitable you ever pertbrmed, "You and your site should become one," said a friendly adviser to a henpecked hus band. "Become one ?" ezelninied the die omelets husband: "why we are ten now." "Bow so ?" "Why ohe's 1 and I'm 10 9." Ell IMARONRY ON TILE BATTLE FIELD. —lt id published to the inirld,..upon the Very re spectable authority of Prof. Lawson, that, in the deadliest of the fight at IllnentiVista, near where McKee, Clay, Vaughn, and Wilfiv 1h11, , a young Kentuckian of the 3rd Infantry was struggling with unyielding and noddy biome to protect the honor of his flag and the bright renown of his, gallant State; When upon a vigorous atild overwhel ming attack of the enemy, he found all the brave hearts that eopported him hernodowit by the sabres of the Mexicans, and himself cant to the, earth, dangerously wounded, while a hundred bright lanceigleamed above him. In this Impelese situation, when all his comrades ha i l fallen, and the chances of the fight had entirely deserted his cause, ho felt juatilied, by hie lore of life, to appeal to a sign that is never made to a true Masai without a response. The sign was scarcely made before the bravest Mexican of them' all leaped from his saddle, took him to hie emprace, and in a glorious effort to save his fidlen brother, was himself felled to the earth by his distardly and ferocious tiounto - who were ignorant of that holy tie which thus bound those two kindred spirit, together in the dread collision of arms and winged their gallant souls from the gory field of death to t h e green fields of Paradise above. Looked in each other's arms, they both yielded up their lives, and thus gave to the world one mere imperishable example of the force of tfinte links that unite the hearts of Masons in prosperity, in adversity and in death. A in PAlLURE. — "Budeigh," of tho Boston ,kurnal, says : The representativo of a large New England hone closed hi.; counting-room an allowed his paper to go to. protest last week. The sudden death at' th e senior member of the h ur , e, whodrop ped down deed while he wastalking, brought thing.; to a standstill. The house was found to be bankrupt, and a large amount Of trust money was swept away. Drinking, gamb ling and dissipation in New York scattere4 the forek Some of the shrewdest New England men have gone droll with the con cern. One well-known New England law yer, reputed to be worth $300,000, is invol ved in this calamity to the full extent of him property and word. Whiews and or phan; hare lost their all. It seems strange th a t r e e kle;.; young men, whoec hAits are well known here. horn no prudent man in New York would trust With $l,lOO shoulii be put in charge of millions. It is equally , strange that shrewd legal gentlemen, who can take such excellent camefother peoples; property, should so loosely take care of their own, and will, as is often the case al low reckless young men to have unlimited tkc of their name, and to run a way with all that they have. Yet such events are of daily oceurrenee. tor When the father of Rebekah aaked her if she would go with the servant of Isom., she replied, at once, will 0l", Had she been a daughter of the nineteenth century, she would have answered, "Oh, pshow ! go with him ? Why, Mr. Immo must be siek ? I;o with him? Ore:mule, I wont? And theri—sho would Laic gone with Lim. GtvINO THE DEVIL HIS DUE.--There'is a point in the following inneedote ; A pas tor was making a call upon an old lady, who, made it an habitual rule never to speak ill of another, and had observed it so closely that she always justified those whom she had heard evil spoken of. Before the old lady made her appearance in the parlor, her several children were speaking of this pecu liarity of their mother, end one of them' playfully added : "Mother has such a habit of speaking well of everybody, that I believe, if Satan himself were the subject of conver sation, mother would find out some virtue or good quality even in him." Of course this remark elicited some smiling and merle went at the originality of the idea, in the midst of which the old ladyentered the room s and on being told what bad jnst been said, she immediately and involuntarily replieed "Well my children, I wish we all had Satan" dostry and perscrerenee. PRETTY Goon.—We heard of a pretty good joke which occurred recently not a thousand miles away from this town. A wag of the ineorigiblo school—a replier cuss in fact—was sitting in a company of gentle men, one of whom was a lawyer of no mean , reputation. She war, talking to another individual, but talking for the ear of the lawyer, aforesaid, stated that he desired the service of a good lawyer, that he had an int por tent case, out of which, if successful, as he could not fail to be, it the case was prop erly managed, a good thing could be realised for himself and a good fee made to the law yer. At this point the Legal gen tleuien in quip tion put in: "What's that you say—in need of a law yer—good case—paying fee? The lee is In profession—state your CABO." "My case is undoubtedly an excellent oat, and I am willing to pay most liberal con tingent fee—l can't afford any fee certain. I will give you one half of the amount if yet mseneed— which is five hundred dollars. Dn you undertake?" "II do—state yowl ease." "I warn you to borrow 64 hundred dot. !sterol me—and will divide IL" Bait wag, with a peaderous boot in prow pronimity for eat-tail. air Why are ladies' drama about the west like s mend xesetire Boom time is s /Wiwi" the* s N 39 . O.