Zht Exit tobiirtter. )c.\ I. \N I) POLITICAL JOURNAL _ B Y B. P. eLcl6ll.llr. . ... Li 11.1clin : AVIONAtels Loa , 041. obtuse* la ro, - ttre roihre •,1 11.... NW , . nll4ltOr m a it lu) Pubscriber ta 'dab Os year, the ~,wr Oi r, diem/00110mi alPf italeniat made out at . • otr• of rz rorr rat, au/ apart °Seer of Ta.Rll4 OF ADVERTISING: gr . Mena Immo, ksavaalte a aquarili, Aqoars, 000 $ 76ror par n moth. " uo " 6 00 threw " 126 " 9 r i" 11 76 •••••••' t ar 0.. square &oast, elAtigeebid et plemeltredslo; , lemurs moaning, $6, 6 minitha, $11; 9 ancintie. I I but, I year, IPS th. column, or 10 aquarea—orbe year, SOD; 3 w ok,. j, 3 months, $lB •• Cards learned to the Business Direeto97 at $ ,em t allowed We Card, over sittpliod .. • 1 • .bh. :Tech& and I , :ditemist - Nodose, le mats a fins; bell ai , %.Ivertiai oval win b. imertedemosi ilediene ~,r hos than one dollar. • - $ it...chaste and mines seqsielngllren•ssd.ili,Miges ., t Ucir .1% ea tim.lats *Ulla all. Iteroltelline, pup!, , f o r ph. rot addattensl • It themes will o peoportioo, and the de Mist be lark* o h lo the legitimate tmiliMer efebtradvertiser. Pay t for transient advertisements sequbed to advanas.— le f o ryearlJwdtfseligttj rig persatilledlell-yem ly • BUSINESS DIRECTORY. E il. COLE, Hoot tSntnaa, HLIUM BOOK iLumrsusa, titory ofp t inderimmthre Block, Iris. Pa. - EDWIN U. WILPION, AMMAN! AliCutxuatioit 41,2 LAW. Erie 1 . 4. Moe on Stale tinillein 0111101. Put. is Lova, .tor) of 11.• ocasiood%M . ,nninudolter. He will always be loud hit 1414 aii t,usanem pa actualij ottoodod to. BECKMAN, *ARNOW btuoutisaut arm Iters,u. Utspouts„ sod .ososn ,o pork Ptah. SAM WordtWirsed sod N at.% Nails and Maas, at No. 2 Wright's Btoek, trie,ra. K itisoitaxsetif. WIT thacutox, mu imam/. flat% W. WALKER, r) ATTOIXTT AT LAW, bi—eatora, N ill give prompt atteatlon to the Media( tor Labe .manta and the payment arisen 1n the States of Mir and Iowa; will also MI all orders for the parttime ..f It leaouri Swatop Lead, te. EMME3EMIE!!I rani racemes sad Whoancals and Retail limier ia Foreign and Domestic Etre, emoda, Artificial Ylowema Hebboaa, Mika, Lace*, and Faahlonable llJllaerY, oa frinitist tk. Past,ltric, ra.elarcular to corder* ‘2 . W TON PETTIS, tiJJ ATTOMT AT LAN.- -Oak. on Libeeinat .trvet, Meadville, Pa. F.+. Y 6. 1869.—1yE9. iv M. A USTIN• . Shama la Cloaks, Watches, Moo Jew ...,„Silver Spoons, Mar& Ware, Looking illsaina, Oilt 11041dince, Cetkey and Amy Goods, Mamba Sandhog, —.rib lade West Park near Yhoseh st HA V UM ift JOISMA W MOLCIAIX R 1 TAI 3 / 4 DiALKINS to an. atapilo Dry Goods, Carp*. SaiMao6;o.l Clothes, I nrewn'e Meek, Sea. Pa. s 4. DA VICALPOIIIT. 17701111nr itl. ()nutria io . olc, over Neubarger it Hansen Clothiag Store. Ka lil, ea on State Strait. WM. A. LIALBMAITIi. AITAIMIIICT AT Law--)ice on 6th street, near ly oppnoit• the Court Ileums, Erie, a. --- r M. SINCLAIR, .( SOICCIMPI le Steam 4 Sinclair,) 41110 RITA IL lilllCooll/11, Corset. of Atste lord 7th pia, broier to Paints., Oila,Dys-Stolh, Causpbetko urutag F 1.0. Brogues, Le. L3241.VT • AXDCoOSITALLOIN Al LAW.— , olliee.reqOrtal to Torber r.na itoilenairelea ..rserStakte Street and the Publk SqU/In., Pik. Ps -1 IZ )IU D Ai n To il klltlll 111 IT N LAW N Os.' it. YAWN, 131oek, opposite tiros Ws Hotel, retrit.o .0 the tart. Erie, io. rife I. W. Hutchinson is :Votary Pit sad Con:wits ..., of fkvsis kc., for the several States and tenitipnei. =I 117 MAGI I• 1•• ' I 1 • Doretirr, Oaks la Rows- 'pas •• . • R look, north skive! the hot, F.rk. Pl. WI. . HOLill• Lig Ma 1tAai1.1.4.1., in all kithip .h. G.Trnan aad American Hardware, Anvil., Viers, . Steel, iq &Wier: and Carriag* Tramminga, t, A 1,. tit as French Buret, otpnalie ibr 11..ner, grip lit I )Ut.KUM dr 11.1SNNZ'rr, uOI.IMALJI .>aa Rims • , r k..ry. GL aware am* dooki.llgory, lima. 11 awl of Fifth mud Mat* strootai CAN Pa. I Iw in litnigisah, . liatihrate tiery.Nada, nnvilivil i kaa, Iron and Stool, No. .1 Kew' ;louse. Szile,"i 1 ' , IRS LYTLE. • TA [Loa, in the room recenUy “ccupied t. 7 1114 . • sill, Esq. as a Lay Mee, and over the Atore ut A. t• -ph v between, the Reed Howie and Won n'a Hotel. NINFOIRD A: CO., OVAL/BNA IN ,Jou., MOTT, Rank Note.„ 4,f Depuutt, ke. Sight exchange. 4 , e tho pna iri conortantly for rale. OftiorNo 9 R..-4 Boum .4quare, Krio. T %MEP% eltelak & (70., 91 lictLimins• nmd Ilanorrettiren, or ana t., Bboda, Praeb et ,111thr libop formerly occop led r r H ugo JOON.. dt BA NY A RD* DIAL/KS Is Gower-lee, Prterteions, Pre- Pork, Flab, Neat, Girain, noire, Fruits, Nuts, Moen Itrooma, Palls, Wooden, Willow sod stone Vi are, A.. Terms Cash. Pliers low. No. 4WriFht'. Moen, ,te Street, 4 doors above Use Post MAN., KOK Phi I ICH 4: itAT111111:141, .••• A Dcyrurts, (Men w Bootrn 8 1•••• /q.t.*, north aide of !oldie Syr , icielf" DOI 4uarr, M awn is Co. Alt work wuraoteti. G R A v do PAILOAR, It uoctula GikscLies, and .Male s in N eot Nita GoOdi, Powder, Shot, rave, Safety Fur, f“tween, ciors, Ptah, oil, Ate., fte., No , 1. tk.hmen Bina, t,t, .tret,keie, Po. I, :itp Y. P. Y. VAYILA/L. - --- ilifiN lIKAIIN az CO., el FINtIV•ItIllINI mut Conitainnon Merchants, ...alert in Coal, Floor, letab, and agent for a dally line of 1 pp., Win fineaseent, Panne Pwek, Kele, Pa I 1 U DELL, ILA Will. is ON, MAWIMACTOIXIIa kale cam, 18 0 4 fora. lil Gearing, Agriculta rul impleuwta , Nat Irna.l Can, ay., Kan, Pa. V. K. RIIODMM NI I ‘94 Num MAK we, mad Avail , o, •% heeler lc WilsoP's Sewing llacesine.L. Ramie over in's Jewelry Stormy West York, trie,l%. Anne to Order. „A. ----- - - -. / BOMBE H. CUTLER.. k 7 A TrOlUtir or La w, Maud. Erie Cony, collections sod other brudneia attended to with' vr,.mptoree and dlikpateh. r OfiN MWERNY. el Aim= n► TIM riArli t OffiCe LP Llaitty's ttuildih g , upietaira. RAP. Psi d' I trafysr & CLANK. Illyesienas 41110C1MR, sod tlealars la onsele mill Imported Wks, and Liquora, Mao Serum, Tobacco, Fruit, Irish, nil, sod appeal Yor Dortate Dotal° Alt NO. T Despoil Sleek, ROO* street RAP, A. r Mil% W. £YRk,. .0 liAarvaorermint, Whakeate and SAW In ail kinds Pasty, Prawtog Roar, greldiag mai n °bah% No. it lejsltone,B64, gaie, 4.1 R. CHURCHILL. WASPAOTOTIIt k Dealer In Doubk Rice ' 7 mike,. In the ROW HOMO on hen& at• B 4 RR & KirtigErip PINALIIIIII hi &sots anetto&l stßliol•- ..e. And Ratak, at No. 111, Ciaweirs sleet Rtilbo stew', ) 14 mAsir W. rmystma & Wbelleade and RPM 1..., in WWI aad Obtana Maps./ imperi=try, Rad bad sow is leash ftnp ea Ansi IR* Pa. • co- AqweNet -Ibr earryfu v itati, An Ones Iy. Aim 6r purpore for sake I V 1 ULM, Y.LIAM. I )It, 0. L. 11.11.LIOTT, Ihrolllotltl matt Port Row , to' &Gala .Ir,t Mark out of Vie Bonk bandinin F.ru.. July 10, lAA WILMS J. 910/01'11111. J roaWMUICtu sod Commission Illevennatat, l'u bile I ooek Rrir, &sign in Goo*, %tit, Wink ribur 8 • 4 I'lastxr r ONEPII SIinCAAWIPAS. el WsoUrnai and Seidl ditaler kn arecotim. ...op, Map Chandlery, Wood and Winnow ware lin, Stole Street, Rs* Peen. 1 4 131P1 OTOILIM. J WM. A. *Mimeos" Jothor, 11,4•11 inAndripliftsd Pooolgo sad INlsrelSe ib m. 7 - t• 0I 111641* to. No. *bee ...rnt r of YiNi, *IL FL 11"""" .7!""",.. -Deeds. "'"" t and Aultsairsa. Imam, &a, aoesesb.ty ea r..io ily draws. 'Mee as Suaseb, atrart, eras Jas. 8. , t...rmtt, Omani Star, irif. D0W61111461. ATTOILWET AT LAW AIM JR/THIC W ill practice is the warn! Courts of Ws Coss% give pro•uptiusi faithful attautioa.toal bribielesa to his Wm* olther aa as attorney at Ilashithilf. re. oak, la Massifs Way earapr of Stabs sad PIM • .rl. . Pa. _ _ _ W 01J10114. _ P • AreceuteT 1T LATIL-080e . teleektiel "err 64s i:di air west orgtate Star! , oil the sertioaa &raw I irk, rsir 1.1.1KN1 A. CIIAIU. doariew 07 m PIIACS--0.41/ Is Orr ~ .roer Wrench Sinai and the Public Spumy ids I AND MUNI". Da. Gitiowst.o. Nailed *Z3O Mat* &root. R. T. hIP allot:moo ►rclu.R.l) to tbo trostmoot of the 4:%e •od Ear tet, IV, Isse.--37./y. I==iZl B. F. SLOAN, EDITOR /4 PROPRIZTOR VOLt7ME , 29. NNW C 3 oDe! NEW GOODS!! TIMOR AND AMIRIOAN MILLINERY. MRS. K. A. MORGAN, 10. 0411•11uardtrous Now Tait with t= 1 41• 1 101 OW, *WA. wwwttowet at RE: 'Mat Orbs et Straw Goode, BONNETS, RIBBONS, FLOWERS, Re., &c or tlitls the IN ray wii•tls lo sold or at Oemeatior Misers sol is rit e t (l i rizeiti prism. sato" • Al she bar emir sr esseetossts to tossivo Goods ore* two mobs. abs often pecollor te ,lattlreis to ibee• Atrialr ass'' , in ciao their peureboses at bar estsious•sioset. lbs. Y. &sires to infirm the Public teat ed, by a New and ••••ttlok process. to mood* CAW/ tilopolitan, Clap, sod Lechers, Imbed moonier It°viers solicited, sad estia6etio ',Amato!. vs Come of Mote and Li glith S a treets. Rite Pa. April IS, 11110.-4litt. PURE BRANDIES,--Just received %burgh tita Customs Boma atill_kA_aadl for sale by Apsl 10. CANT= k GRCM3EIMIS I &a t. SELL:INa CFI E 0 FOR READY PAY issex4.6ll, ILYPIDIO & 00.. K, 2, Wright's Block, Erie, Ps., OPTILX at WHOLIS•LI OR swam SUGARS of on DESCRIPTIONS, AT LOW PRICES GREEN, BLACK AND IMPERIAL TEAS OF DI IFFUliter GIRA DNS i ROASTED AND RIO COFFEE STROPS r►ND MOLASSES, OF ALL GRADIS RICE, SOAP, STARCH, CANDLES, RAISINS BARING POWDERS, PRUNES, FRUIT, NUTS, ic., WHITE ViBa, BOIVER. LAND. DMZ D A !TWIN, WOOD amil WILLOW WARD, NAILN AND GLAND, Together with a large assortment of all kinds of 000DS kept in a Dreamy S lots , which we ellbr to sell at the lowed market Wu,. CALL AND SEE US ! BACK AN, KENDIO It CO., Aprtl 16, 1860. Nu.'L, Wright's Block WHO WANTS A SAFE. That subscriber has use large BIM HEREINITS SAFE, which h. Wil l "P . " =„ T fbr Cash or approved_psper. W. L. Erie. April 11, FLOUR St PEED STORE REMOVED H i RAM SLOCUM, late of tho firm of trimatbers & Slocum, who wan loos is Boatty's Iloek, Wu" this: method 'Mouser to the public, **ha has removed h s tere to Sato Street, one door worth of G. W. Goodrich's Variety Wee, when he will be bappy to woe all his W customers O custome sod all who sir in want of *Mato in kw Use; He keeps the dUlerent brande. of Iris County Tipar, among which an those of John Robiasea and J. W. MeLsos,sinlvereally scknowledred to be the WM made. Those in waat cit &abates artiste Flour will Ilnd these brawls to be all they can &able AU blade of stain sad (red kept constantly on band. A lilts, April 2, Mfr.—all mum 'Locum. take Parti 1 -litlar Notice. AT HALF PRICE. _ MUSIC A T W ILLI Nii'S MUSIC STORE! PARK HALL. Ho ! every one in want of the latest ant most popular VOCAL AND INSTRUMENTAL SHEET MUSIC, delaretwa by myself with grew; on fro= the various Pah ihrhiag Frono.s, Loth Rut mad West . aousiathi g of Songs, Duette, Quartette antl Ualszes, Polkas, gallops, Ilusurkas, Marches Anil Fancy Dances; aesapieu by Hate 11111110100 00 ttialllo ran Whir for We Islay and = sr es of nitwit. as soon as pabliaited4od at es priors, whereby the pu, chaser 00014 the el egise of transportation hy Mail or lizpresa. Call and see Catalogue. Instruction Books for all Mumical Instruments. tale, March 12. 11169.--40 C ASH BASIS 4#454 THE I'EVERSIONED OFFERS FOR SALE * general stock of CHOICE DRY GOODS, PURCHASED FOR CASH AT A SAVYNO OF 10 TO lb PER CENT Over Credit Prices. THE NEWEST STYLES OF DRESS GOODS, !MEETINGS, CLOTHS, &C., AT WHOLESALE AND RETAIL Na 5, Nioluqw Row, March 19--41. The Middle aged, Attention! IIitoOKBEWS w t[‘:tlß RESTORATIVE AND IXVIG MAIM ttogssirt L wYywlssatimilyst basd row a= mare se* ti alio aad topi thl {al aa he rs.- 1 111 = 4 10doete mad S=Ota t ernalar 001 l the *Odessa. go' bow. Ivo tbsisilieft vardobiegins V th i e t = "iteOstber's Haig lhotranattre sod Issigander. X ll shetared sod sehl, wham& rod Mall % It. V. NAYS SIC irtaildeteteost et. last. . Pr te Wow all Whirs say)* addressed aad ',dare wet eahl by CANTU •MTHEI ) SetajPh. add IV DrOatitio idargall.Y. dipirtt MlL—it ;1 - --c.llO 0)74:41 CALIGHY BROTHERS, an area a Omni 'sad_ trotion Stan lissityt 1111se North SON off Po Wait re" ohm , imam , GROCERIES, AND rativasioats or ALL ILI NOM, AND• or • I , MAW QUALITII% • MUT NB .1111UMIN, WOODEN aIiTILLOWIMIA tar Cork asd tlie MON% ..t4 prise plirl e Orr au si cosetu _Predate. CA MINT It. C. CAIMINET. Mir, April tiro. MI LOUR! FISH! LILT AI(P IrATTR-LING, esemlrs4 eft fat WA by G. J. NO Ibis, April 111611.-41 L 11a. THE ERIE di,. 1 1 1= e l ri the GROUND, JAVA COD FISH wed INLICILINNX.L PORK, HN*, ILtCON,A FROM CASH DEALERS FINE CJIEPETINOS, WM. BELL, JIL p,:foli 4 IDNAL AND WAAL. IT JOBS Q. SAIL AN ,BY Some years ago whets 1 was young, And Mrs. Jones was Miss Delaney; When Wedlook's canopy was young With curtains hem the loom of biley ; I used to paint bit'y future life With most poetical precision.— My special wonder of a wife ; My happy days; my nights Elysian. I SIM 111 lady rather small, (A Jr so was my strict abhorrence.) With fuzed hair contrived to fall In cake's= ringlets, a-ia Lawrence; A blonde complexion; eyes that drew Prom Auntie clouds their azure brightneam The footle Venus; arras whose htte Was perfect in its milky whiteness ! I saw a party quite select— There might have been a baker's dozen: A parson of the ruling beet; A bride's-amid, and • city cousin A fun* speech to me and mine, (Its meaning I could scarce discover I A taste of cake, a sip of wine : Some kissing—and the Beene was over ! I saw a baby—one--no more; A cherub pictured, tether faintly, Besides.. a pallid dame who wore A countenance eatremily saintly. I sow—but nothing could I hear, Except the softest prattle, may be— The merest breath upon the ear— • So quiet was that blessed baby. I see a woman, rather tall And yet, I own, a comely lady ; Complexion—such as I must call (To be sleety:a little shady, , A band not handsome, yet confessed A generous one for lore or pity; A nimble foot, and, neatly dressed In No. 6, extremely pretty! I .ee a group of boys and girls Asseufhled round the knee paternal; With ruddy cheeks-sad tangled curls, And toanners not at all supernal. And onp has reached a manly size ; And tine aspires to woman's stature; And one is quite a recent prise, And all abound in human nature The boys are hard to keep in train ; The girls are often very trying; And baby—unlike the cherubim— Seems very fond of steady crying!— And yet the precious little one, Ills mother's dear. despotic master, la wOrth a thousand babies done In Varian a. Alabaster! - " ‘.l Anti oft the stately dame and I, When laughing o'er our early dreaming, And marking as the years by, llow idle was our youthful scheming— CotAas the wiser Power that knew. How care each earthly joy enhances, And gives ns blessings rich and true, And better far than all our fancies! Orivittal cllikttcho. I=l SOME THINGS SEEN ON THE CARS. Night Express , * East 41h! said Ito Pant, is not thin glorious" flow matters have changed with us eine. we worked together in that other land on the—let me see —I think it was the Lake sbpee road. Rail road Companies are all honest here. No secret agents are required to note the doings of each other—my occupation is gone. We have a uniform gunge all over hitt glegious land—per petual summer here—no standing out all the weary hours of the long. long night. on a bleak embankment, with broken wheels and axles, in the Minding snow and chilly winds from the lake. We have no stops to make for supper, and then headlong speed to regain lost tinur but we have a car with a table always Bet and loaded (our tables do not groan in this country ) with all that can please the eye and delight the taste, and then we have -screider" that was sot made in New Jersey, and cigars that never were neat Conneaut. We have a double track all over this new counta7; no wooden bridges; our passage is noiseless and Ant as the wind. Cattle and horses, it there are any here, are not allowed to ream at large, and we cross on roads at grade. We have eoliches of incomparable convenienee and splendor, and we -Paul and Nioodemes--reeeive five thou sal a year. lam appointed by the Sapeeht loudest of the road to accompany Paul, in order to remonstrate with the delighted pas sager against the impropriety, of piling their fare twice over to Paul. All this is very plum and, but there came to our ears a noise•i ..As if some one gently rapping, rapping at my chamber door— some visiter," I Muttered, 'tapping. tap ping at my chamber door." i Only this and nothing move.'" I 'posed my eyes and discovered Paul gild ing the pa. Tto rapping of the alight match less bad roused me—my dream had vanished. 1 Irma again the secret ageut—it wee ore o'clock audio halt an boar we would tab's the "Night 'Express East." Paul ()posed the deer OF she watchmen who tame is sad s.M, “liege flume some bad sews far you ; there has toss a ter rible atoideat. Tom 6--, the Coadaceor ou the &oral, bas been killed as his owe train." ?sal sad I Unwed sad looked at oath- other a misses without speaking; but the boast was busy with its memories. But ~.tardy trs had lean: him In all the buoy/may of WS aad hope, mod nom, could it be possible, he hod pealed through the dark valy. life had kwirda him well tor many years, and all list jay pablo and pearess .had a hems in hie tomtit. Mat had he waited fa tb* &Pei it Milo far is the nigh, after si lettg amid titer sokride from Byname, for Sal sad lite op peer** easmaseadnosse *While it d tliittu aats to tsar sama and them with trisadiy peep of the heed mad a *Meng "r i tat pitting. he mould tars lds.wraryloot. to the Hotel. A tear to yam esesesey, poor Tess, swA may Ond deal pally with the loved Ones yeu have left to !Apt Veit hard Ifs lea' ahem. Nei tamed Li, me lied repeat ed, "Be ye also ready for is seek an hour as f 01 fatiaL 11:011A.L. gran the whistlestadod item th e West, and we walked en thelibilerza with full hearts to take the "Night toms Best-" * * * '., Have you never batted those little hurried tomb:renew betweeb littbducters on leavingamd ;taking a train. Cantor front the _west re ports hurriedly, and bitys, heavy train to-night, hard crowd, taco Medias of Tallow's mostly Arent. null but *Sew who says he has no money, I pulled hitt4the him—he has plenty of sop. There is ', ling of cripple. ` idea end dumb, I k e . rere ant two Cinelm .Mati plot-pockets , . . —we watched them close. They won't: ~", o operate before teach ing Dunkirk. Thel 1 , sounds; and off we go. First. we eater ' I . - . Baggage. man sits in chair mg his mmarschmm.— limprewet Meese:heir' Nu a bed of mailbags with blanket spread'ul ids safe Ow a pillow.— ffoute Agent with 1 mall from Cincin nati to New York . -heavily on kis mail bags, which are that long ho:. Bag gagman bands unit pointsto box ander Route Agent and Says "corpse," We put into class oar, ti witiking ahead carrytng Islip. e Ind an Irish wiman wildly weeping. Billauzwee to our interroga tory, what is thenut a --she answers, ..011: my babT, my baby, ' " We hold the lamp dose and place our , nd close upon its cold thee and discover to It is indeed dead. She ti t had laid it down on a vacant seat, and because it rested qttletly she did not disturb it, until taking it . .. her horror, she discov ered it win dead. , -• she became somewhat compostectre .. :' .er history which is, in • a measure, that of ; _ .y others we have met since the money . '.. of 1867. Her husband was • mechanic, work failing in Newark, N. J., (their home)' I ey went to Chicago in hope of bettering . . condition. Here mat ter* were still w. Vainly . seeking for la bier, tad their , . well nigh exhausted, the husband returned • ' /mark and left the wife stet in Chicago , mews sufficient to purchase a ineend . • ticket to Jersey City and follow, When - infant was suidently old to hear the. , .. "of travel. tithe had Rot a shilling. We . .. to bury her child de costly at Buffalo tend her on to her hus band, but she el • 6it convulsively, and an nounced her del ' i s tion to carry the dead infant to her bus in Newark. We saw her safe aboard the, ornellmille train at Buf falo, and providsd'ilffir with sufficient means to procure food anger arrival at home. The other occupants e car gazed on the woman with a sort of talitb wonder or stolid indiffer ence, and although there were several women. end some of her owl nation in that car, whom we besought t y, yet not one of them per;dl went to offer a of consolation to this af filleted mother. ! i ; We peas into:the est coach and our ears arc saluted with those ell. known sounds which indiestethe : witoopingeough. Paul, lookin soWyl - ' ”Nicodemas, whooping conk mumps. measles., kc.!" I answer yea. A queer fellow eittinkat my el bow says, in a melo-dramatic stye, "'Tis well," and raising Lis finger points to lbe chil dren who are laboring under the aforesaid dis eases. Here is a well known countenance. pointed out to us years ago by a policeman as that of a pink-pocket. That moustache and heard at his Is false. A countryman is sitting in a sett with him. When Paul takes his tick et, lie calls out loud and clear, 'Passengers are warned against a pick-pocket now in this car." Pick pocket gets up in a few momenta and remarking to his neighbor that lie does not deem it safe to remain with such company in this coach. moves into the second clan car. Nest we find a German in a deep sleep ender the inflame@ of plentifid potations of "lager." After much effort we succeed in waking him. Ile does not seem to understand anything about ur request'for a ticket, but informs us that be is going to Erie. When we succeed in making him comprehend the fact that we have passed Erie. and that the train will not stop until we reach Westfield, and that lie cannot get a ghats of lager within a mile of the depot at West field, our German jumps up and down, heats his head with his hand, and says. "Yeokup. doo heest von tam fool." There is rather a pretty face in.that double seat. It has been seen on this line of travel fur years. It is • sort of shuttlecock between the battledores of New York and Cincinnati, and comes and goes al most with the regularity of the Poute agents. The owner of that pretty face has Bn:crested an innocent looking young man by her "winning ways." He pays her fare to Buffalo, and their acquaintance and friendshipis cemented. She Is one of the multitude of her class that travel up and down this great thoroughfare capturing such noodles as that—one of those "whose pathway leads down to death," and unless some vision of the good and pure of that home which he has left far sway rises between them, she and her companions will lodides downward in that horrible course which persisted in blights and kills the body, and damns the soul. It is not pleasant to weave ,threads of this color in my rough web, but they -are so very numerous I could not BM to notice them. Very small boy traveling shine with a card, sewed oa his cap, containing the following, written in a plain band, "Conductors please inform this boy of the changes of cars and dicing stations. He goes to No. street, Providence. R. L, and is ticketed through." In questioning 'ski boy we , found the card a superfluity, he 'knowing all about the route, the changes, Ike., much better this the majority of passenger. He knew that kin ticket carried him over the 'las foot reed," acid that he changed ears at Nadi*. and all that sort of thing. In einiversaties we firsed him wail posted sad feat. The reasoner this precocity was very, evillest when he is %road as that be had bees visiting-a year in Cideago. Sitting with him in the seat was. a Alai( lady with a guitar ease beside her, lam ems of the thin blue order, very sharp elbows, emit cm her neck, hair audio& of coarse, black ribbon around her neck, pencil, locket, and pima of Atlantic cable attached to it, end all presided over by ateeesiagissolooMagliste, "bleb was almost buried iw a copy at the New Tqrk Ledger. She was bowled floe uSiikcsem." Jima loving couple occupy a seat together. Masi persons would suppose that they sustain , 0011110 near relative to each other. May be they 4—but it is a little odd that the mar's ticket was purchased is Chicago, sad the To losa's in Lewisville. Nut iield—the old story —Lady had pocket picked at INAumboa, lest. mosey, tickets and ell. The ether Ceemberter informed as of this testier.. All right--pase ea: Another woman. "What's the .fare to l)tudkink ?" one dollar forty. She hands . outs counterfeit V. which of course we decline— then a broken bank bill of Milne denomination. =EI 138ERVER. Y le s 1859, EMI She affected much surprise. Rer husband eould'ut have known it was bad, &c. I knew her husband—there are many such as he. She was going to Binghamton and would doubtless make the entire trip there and return without the cost of a dime. The Conductor would'nt put a women off the ears, upecially with a lit de child, eh. no! Man hands us a paper which read. "Pus the Editor of the Nimbi* Kansas Kepublicanoverthe North Missouri R. R. &a." Paul informs him that we cannot recognise the peas. Aftet considerable talk be indignantly demands the amount of the fare to Westfield and pays C 4 and shortly afterwards enquires of a brakestuan the name of that Conductor— looks daggers at us as we pawl and re-pass through the train—will not cull said Conduc tor -gentlemanly and courteous" in the next issue—but will pronounce the whole tribe of them as "impertinent--stuck up," &e., Sud denly remeMbers that he has received no check. Seeing me pass and supposing me to be a part of the institution, he demands a check. _ in- Rau him dtat Kam not the Conductor, I am Nieodemtut-Lbut that he °does not need a check, for he stops at the first i warstation. Rising to his fleet be says eseitedly—(lest makes no difference-4e has traveled, he has, and wants to know whist he will have to show if fare is again demanded. Fellow sitting • few seats behind says "Show yourself for an Ass jut u you havq done all the way from St. Louis." Editor tut* around fiercely and seems to re cognize the:, speaker--aits down, grumbles to himself sorkething about the ingratitude of railroads—the press warming them into life and then they (the roads) viper like &c. &c. Fel low behind! replies, "Not much warning re ceived from; you. Last year you were taking daguerreotypes, and this year you are ped dling sewing machines through 'Missouri and trying to pass as an Editor when you ain't anything but • correspondent for a yankee abolition paper in Kansas."' Editor dried up, tit and took seat in next coach. Ft 17 B'TI 0 8, NO_ IX- By Wynkyo de Worde. Up the road eastward, Wynkyn could look out of his attic window and see the house of Ezekiel P. It was built of hewed logs, two-stories, and while children played on the white fish floor, martins wen- chat tering under the gables. Ezekiel P. was one of humanity's best mould. The brown ness of his face served as a back-ground for a smile that would take any man's heart at forty rods, and a rich round eye which no mean man could front. lie rarely read anything, took no newspaper. could scarce ly write his own name, and yet he was in telligent, a well informed politician, trim posted on what the "great men" were do ing, and was not unlike many an old Ro man in the days of Cieero, living in his villa five miles from town, and learning, min nil ear: anti not nis eyes atone. a maw need not necessarily subscribe to a cord of newspapers, seven magazines, and buy twenty-nine books a bear, Is-sides the Pa tent-office reports received from the man he voted for, in order to be intelligent on most matters--not if lie has neighbors to talk with, and ears to hear. Query—which is the worst oft he who knows not lieu' to read, or he who knows not whai to read ? We venture to say that the best literature and intelligence in our periodicals is the last read. . A few read the important news, and the many gather their information by ear. There a ere well-informed men before there wait a press used to publish truth, and abused to flood the land with 'trash. There were then l.ig-settled men like Ezekiel P whose ward was as good as a mortgage, who never gave a note, never took a receipt, and if a well-paid man claimed his debt, again, lie wan made to feel his receipt on his conscience, when it shriveled under his glare of an honest pair of eyes. Jost opposite F:zekiel's door was the school-house, and one of the great high ways to the west lay between. Many a traveler stopped under the oak to drink of his well, and the lip‘ of every school-child had touched the gourd that hung on the curb. Many a snow-ball had been flung from his brawny arm as a challenge for the schcxli-boys to bring out the halls Which they had soaked in the brook the night before, and left to harden in the frost. He sent 'them on the little fellows as soft as soda-biscuits, but toward the hale wood choppers he made them whiz as if his grip had put with them a few oondenaed flashes of lightning. His theory was that there should be a military department connect ed with the school, and an abler Professor never trained men for the Mexican cam paign. In the summer that brawny arm flung many an apple over into- the parade ground as an invitation to beseige his pick et-tepee, for the capture of . Junings and Wine.liaps. , When his cider-mill was drip ping it was huh to go to school, and in an apple-paring time his delight was to make a "bee" to which all the girls and boys swarmed with knives to peel, and teeth to taste., file& a genius spreads &charm over the "snare Au* of a neighborhood. At thardrasgiving the poor families had each a turkey *saddle of venison, and on Christ unisprety-bodY's children had a ride in his long sleigh-bits, where apples were hidden in thehay, and his long whip-lash cracked over tit* heads as the children sung "hur rsh," 'to the gallop of four fat steeds. If the 'winter morning was below ' zero, he built the sie'hool-fire at day-light, and when the littht brooit ran high by the melting of mews, end , washed - away the bridge, he took off his boots and carried the little urchins; seven by the half-dozen. When, frail' !OP° floc'dknattlestl traveler he learn ed i think joke, he railed a whoop which went booming with merriment to all ears within half a mile. it was easy to tell when Its , had an Impulse of wit, for it, touched his whole being from foot to hey,, and liegamtifed the air; shrugged his shouldlgs, rtt:his fight tnot out like war riot] red to march ,. pinched his arm. rubbed his right ribs, and beganio be stun sing. Esolzial P. had a dant and easy method of Amiss with enraged ' - A lit tle gaglihnutzt (slue : Ida garden early amtp*orning it* • r a bay over some imagined insult. He had nursed his wrath a little by a gialsVof "'arf-an-arf" by the $1,50 PER ANNUM IN ADVANCE. way, and it was fomenting briskly. He swore by Windsor Castle, and by Welling ton, whose soldier he said he had"been. He shook his hickory fist as if fresh from Water loo. Ho was down on Hamericans. He hated all "Aonion" eaters. Ezekiel kept on hoeing his onions. The children gath ered, nnbrushed and gaping. Brindle came from his kennel and . growled. Hu man nature is naturally weak before break- fast, but a gak - of coffee from the kitchen kept the wit of Ezekiel sharp. He got three hot biscuits, pnt them into the - pockets Of the miniature .Johnny Bull, and while there was something said about Mute 'andles and 'iglo court, he picked him up and threw him, as smoothly as possible, over the fence on a coterie of unshorn sheep who tipped him into a warm nest of nettles! and the loud whoop which rose again, caused the little man whose head was jammed- into his hat to think of Potawatamies. CAN'T AFFORD IT. "Can't afford it, Maria." "But you might if you would only think so, Walter," pleaded the young, wife. "I can't do it," the husband retorted, very emphatically. "It would oast ten or twelyarshillings at the very lowest, to put up such a rite, and the old bars will an swer every purpose." "No, they wont, Walter. The neigh bors' children very often leave the bars down, and then stray cattle come into the gar4en. We may lose more than the price of agate in one hour, if a cow should hap pen to get in when I am away." "I should like to know who leaves the bars dOwn," said Walter, very threatening ly. '"The same children might leave a gate open." "But we can have a gate made to close of its own accord, with a weight or a spring," suggested the wife. "John Niles has had a gate put up in his yard." But I ain't John Niles, my dear," Wal ter wished his wife to remember. "But his family is as large as yours, and his wages are not so high." . "Never. mind about that. I tell you I can't afford it—at any rate, not. at. present. And with this Walter started off for his work. Waiter Gray was a young man, about thirty; an industrious mechanic; had been married some eight years, and had an in teresting family. He meant to provide well for those who depended upon him, and in a measure he did so. But there were many little comforts which at times they really needed, and which in the end might have proved a source of saving.— And more too ; it might have added to his own happiness had he felt able to grant these little requests. But he couldn't af t ford it ; at least so he thought, and wheth er he thought so with sound judgment the sequel will prove. The gate which his wife had been so anxious to have put up, was needed at the entrance of the garden back of the house, where there were only a pair of short bars. The children often came through there, Wi l er at illin4ftiegewM rnWwayTisl which those bars were apt to be left down, and_it was only by extreme watchfulness on her part that the garden was preserved. She had spoke several times to her hus band about it, but he felt that he couldn't af f ord it. She must keep her eyes upon the spot, and see that the bars were kept shut. Only a few dayi after this, Mrs. Gray asked her husband if he was going to hire a pew in the church for the followmg year, and he told her that he did not think he should. "But you can hire half of one. We can have half of Mr. Niles' pew for a guinea." , ; ,"I can't afford it," was Walter's reply. "I should get no great good from the ser vices any way." "Don't say so, husband. You certainly Wouldn't wish to live, and bringitp your children, where there was no religious in- . tluence. If you reap the benefits of good Christian institutions, you ought certainly to reel willing to help support them." "So I would be willing if I could afford it : but 1 can't." Mrs. Gray looked very serious, and seem ed to hesitate, as though there were a sub ject upon her mind which she felt delicate about broaching. "Walter," she said at last, tremulously, hut still resolutely, "you have two pounds a week ?" -Yes" "And bow much does it take of that to feed us!" "I don't kOw. I'm sure. I only know that it take' all to feed and clothe us, and pay up the interest on the house." "I haven't had a new dress since last autumn ; and I was reckoning up yester day bow much we had spent ibr the child ren, and found it to be only three pounds for the last tea months, I have worked over some of cousin John's clothes for Charles, and Lucinda jumps into Mary's dreolea as the latter outgrows them." "That's all very well," replied Walter, a little te.tily. "I understand my own business, and know just what I can afford, and what I cee't. While I have the pay ments to make on my house I must econ omize—l must enerosomize," he repeated, very decidedly. d o, "And I would have you economize," re turned the wife ; "but do not forget that all is not economy which many call so. I think it might be a source of great -saving to put a gate up at the baclre "Stop I" interrupted Waltee, with it ner vous motion. "You've said titough &bogie this. I know my means." "Let me say one word," urged Maria.— There was an earnestness in her tonewhich caused her husband to stopand listen. "If you will .give me a guinea a week, I will agree to furnish all the provisions for the household, and clothe myself and chil dren. I will do this for one year. That will leave you seventy pounds with which to clothe youpelf and make rim payment on the house. On the house you have only to pay '-twenty pounds, !int interest for two years, which will leave you twenty gine pounds for your /clothes, and--otAer Walter was upon the point of denying this result of the 6180, but he seer, upon a moment's reflection that from his wife's statement the deduction was correct, so he denied the statement. "You cannot furnish the food and clothe yourselfnnd children for the sum you have namecisi ° he said. .upon, Maria sat down and made wn a few facts to him that had been dden within the mysteries of her own keeping. She was notions . in prov ing to him that, during the pest year, the items of expenditurewithin said lits bad not averaged a guinea per week. - Mater said "Pooh !" and then he add6l "Non sens" and then be left the haw. • a.e must be some mistake," he said to himself, after he had got away from the how ; and! he really believed there was a mistake. * , * "Bares i ts of sod* Bill? Come, Tom —base s 19 "Don't care if I do," said Tom and Bill. “liavejeome. Ned r And Ned said "Yet." So the clerk pre- pared four Omega tinda, fee * *hit& Walter °Ta l Peld. " o es have a of 'Bowen up' for the cystens," said B tier the day's work was done.. • 4 The game wig and Walter lost. so he paid fives "nit fir dd. fOos oys t t l e e rzr . "(1 "MAhort than good. "Hare a oigyri . W . • ',naked Tom. Walter rr s tarn paid for four One mining they i git t , after work, and Ned romp that should "toss up" to see who should pODY • *using : "Come. ohn l Jolm-rwo who h in oome to r e mid, addressing stood by. h "No—think notrwass IvreplY. "You'd better. Its i. only - for the grog— fcw live, ifou come " y "I can't." "It's no use to ask him," spoke Walter, in a rather sarcastic One. "Ile don't spend his money in that way." John's hoe embed, and his lips trembled; but he restrained the biting words which ere struggling upon his tongue, and turned and left. • NUMBER 51. "He's a mean felkrw," cried Torn, loud enough for Mei to hear. "light ae the bark of * tree," added Walter. John Niles him(' the remarks, but ho did not come beck. The four remainling men 'noosed up," and the lot fell .upon Walter and Tom.— Then'theY "to4aod 14 44_," and it fell upon Walter,who paid finis &Misty for the grog. Walter started ihr home gamut nine o'clock, and on the way he was'overtairen by Niles. "Walter," said the latter, •in a kind lout, earnest tone. "ITim! to speak with you. You have wrongedtne this evening, and I wish you to me. For the opin ions of Bill Smith or Ned Francis, I care not, but I do not wish you tosetlbunder stand me. We live, too near toget her, and I would not loose your good 'on." "Well—go ahead, f' returned alter, who was sensible of the Awe that his companion was one of the best lad kindest. neighbors in the'world. "You said I was 'bean." "No, no ; it was not I who said that I" "Well ! you said I was.lightas the bark of a tree !" Walter could not ;deny this, so John pro needed : "I refused to join' you in your little game for three reasons, piths: one of which should have been Audit:tient to deter me ; first, I had resolved not to engage in any such games of bawd ; second, I did not want any grog ; ettd third, I could not have afforded to pay for five extra suppers if the lot had fallenmpon me." "Couldn't have aftbrded it ?" repeated Walter, with a slight tinge of unbelief in his tone. "No," returned theother. could not. I used to be always ready for any such game, and 1 thought it would be mean to refuse ; but I have learned Isetter. Let me tell you how I! first came to see the folly of being afraid to spend my money for nothing. Shall I tell you r' "Certainly," retarded Walter, who al ready began to see stnnedthsg, - "Well," pursued: Niles, "one noon, as I was going away from home, my wife sakes! me for five shillings. Bhe wanted to buy some cloth with it; I asked her if she could not get along without it. I had only fifteen shillings with me, and I hated to let one of them go. She Raid she really needed the cloth, but if I hadn't got the money to spare, she could wait. I know she was disappointed, but I thought she could get along, And I went away. That evening I went into the saloon, and we had a fine social time. It cost me just seven-and-sixpence. I paid the money willingly—without even a thought of ob jection—and then went home. When I entered the hall, heard my wife trying to pacify our eldest child. The little thing ...e.pooted a new draw, which had been promised_ her, and felt badly because she had not got it." bed7n — her a v a l p d pUtliatf ul ti fA tild staS b i got the money now ; but he'll have some by-and-by, and then you shall have a pretty dress. Poor papa leak to work hard. " "The words smote me to the heart. I could not afford five shillings to dress my little child, but I would afford any amount for the useless entertainment of others.— The crown which ray needy wife could not get when she asked for it, I paid away, al most twice-told, for nothing. But it taught me a lesson. I opened my eyes, and I have kept them open. On the very next morn ing I afforded my wife the crown, but I could not afford any more for the beer man. I had not dreamed how much I was wasting ; but when I stopped up that leak. and allowed my fluids to Bow into their proper channel, I soon found that I could afford every reasonable - comfort my wife and children needed. to I stick to the principle which hie proved so beneficial to myself and family. Ah ! what's that ? There's an animal in your garden. Walter." They had reached the prden fence,. and by the dim starlight, Walter could see a horned beast trampling among his sweet corn. The bars had been either left down. or hooked down, and a stray cow had got in. They drove her out. and then Niles went home. Walter saw that the beast had done considerable damage. but he was not angry, for he had something of more importance to think of. He went and sat down beneath an apple-tree and pon dered. "Bless me. if hehasn't put the ease down about square !" he said to himself, at the end of some minutes of meditation. "Let me see," he pursued : "There* five shil lings for spirits—f Our-and-two-pence for ale —fourend-two-penee for soda. And that's within the last three days. Tidrteenimd four pence 1 Is it !possible ? /Over twenty fiveuntis a yawl And yet Ican't`ufford pounds ten &filings for a Otte, nor a guinea that my fainily mayrecerre religions instruction for a year ! diiiik yos had better halt over a set ' • And Walter Goy did tarn over a new leaf. On the very next day he did two things, thereby ^astonishing two parties.— He had a newlpite made' ter the entrance to the garden, and thereby astonished his wife I andlie refuted • to "toss up" for the ale, an 4 thereby aidonished a crowd of ex pectant thirsty ones. Fora month be pur sued this course, end by the expiration of that time he could fUlly appreciate the oew blesaings thatiwureciawnms . upon him. Hediscoveredthat he could affor d every thing which the oomibrt of his fam il y de manded. and in striving ate result, he had only te relinquish th ngs which he really could not , afford. It was a won der to him how be could have been so foolish. When at the end of the year he had and his note; and had twenty lett, be felt at tiria that there thug = mistake ; but whiewiteNeut over th eir 'Household exp enditure lith him, and showed him that ell they had needed had been bought end paid ibr, he Narked bow it was. lie saw that for years he bad been wasting his substance, and depriving him self and loved open of the comforts needed—not intentionally, but the strange mise that leads thousands in the same But he did so no more. Sometimes, even now, Walter Gray says, "Gre't a it and he says it very em too. Bill it la net when his wife or ask ,r anufact and-joy, nor yet when they needy poor ask for help and charity—for be can well afford atl thild —but it is when tie wild speenlator or the loose compassioni ask kiss to mpp in some game of bawd which may rob him self and family of their substance,. Then he says—and he , repeats it, if need be— " Cins't qford it P' • air 'a, , A littisq lt opoit sad a dog, an. his goseresity Ail M *od tisituno ask ing lust to see w be would say," to give them ate or Loth pets. Osidor he tow a gentleman he hive hie colt—reserving the deg =eh ti e surprise of his mother. . 1 11rhy, Jacky, why didn't yea give him the dog?" "Say neat* my nothin, mother; when he goes to get the colt I'll set the dog on him" f. & . •