r - g - - . Fite (r)rtt Csbotrrtr. ‘ \ I , ri 'Lint...tit JQURNAL. B Y . B. F. SLOAN. .ntorribers, If paid !a admoot , ..iii be 'tent to one address fur sa, sad r..r tenter clubs. • -ow , f.ttllng to pay wfthiu thy year, the rt'-,onttnuott asni the account wade out et • ' :!. ON u AIiWERTISDIG : , , •t• II tiro or Iran make a apliire."llos 1 1 ; a.r. ~k, $26 lbw square 3 tridents 133 do .. 1 30,5 01,3 " 6 " 643 . „., - 1 2,5 03P " 9 " II 21. ..-,• . roar, changeable at pismire, $lO. , ...41 tbs. IC 6 6606 1 has U; 9 mouths, ...oarei—one year, $6O; 6 mouths. ttt ..,! the Buslaeae Directory at 113 pee „.. .„red lor a Card, one six, and under . 1 T. • ..1.e.! 11..tierea, 10 *intik line bat tIO „, •.• mwHrd among the Special Notices • • ~there requiring frequent Asses • et II Le allowed two equates, paper, additional epee*, the charges will ' su.l the deertisernenbetnuet be strictly . . bommita +(thy adrertber. Pay -1,1% ortimements required in advance.— , s. ir 11 , 11 be presented tialf-tearly. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. ...Ellllll l, 1.,.. , ~ •A ot litroir sSo WINO! SAS LIQUORS, , F ench itramhea, (Ana, lra6, Cha ~., 14.. t,a, Idaiam Sherry, Poridarad , lla ~. \t •IrP • i.. , manufacturer of getilled Rble ,,,, 1;.. rtwli, Ms.liotigaltll, ke , Reel! HORS% 011 , CO.. I,i.LMVIII 1 , 11.11..NNS IN IiKOVNILINV •ND ' l. -•r t IU Illirek. I" 4.. 1111. E. I. " ill ANA 11001 E MANI . PACTt kilt .1% 4 `: I:lll.lrruethr• Cris, 0‘ IN Tr tUt SYLLOX AT LAW, Erie t.ar the Park, in the American .! g , " I.in:thog, occupied bE F. k ~ t,. mitt at• toun.l in his diSesp, and attrt.J.•.l to it KENDit: & co., 4114.1.1, LK OM RIR/ 11, ORneZIA, and , • loar, : 4 11.1t, 5..0411. Wood and o .t No t N right's Block, HT ICIINDIG N. A TTI,t,NIO AT LAW, At LOMA, ,Vz, .. pnaupt kttoottou to the I..catiog of 1.0u..1 -. • tL, po.tuttn• Taxes to tbo Stobra of VW ", ...II t It NII onlont for tbs. part-bow v, Imp _ . 11..%. . stir . rrrrrrrr to 7 ' R. Make., WTI KICk and Nl,nh e ale and Retail healer in u and l'wri , •lie qtrit• Gornia, Artinenil Flowers, 1.)4,e, , ,autl Y unions/dr Millinery, Paragon fr.,nting l'a I ' arrular attention t I'ETTi USTI Ss llt6rc on Chestnut Pa. • 1,, I ti,a -1.3 s ._. . _ 11. tt • N liorkli Watches, Finr Jell/ - r, -; 3r.., ' Looking I:lasuorft, lull L. r. en, I. low) l'otratvort Itutlatikg, II • I . reat 1111 . . A. .1 1 / I tl/VC. .11.1.6.4 LK At Itlef•lL DICAI.RII.S In Flltle,) , .•• 11111 Inga„ 011 ClotlA.., • V.. %. I) 11 1 2 :\ V() RT. .11 . I.• VI in Trost's! , . 11.11..nr'• Clotisiosit Storr ku 11. . I LIIR •• ,i — rs.vp,r AT LAW— Odor 4,11 GNI rtn.t., ..,'• t I I II onr., Ent, I a. lt, / , 401 . 1.. Memesart Sturtatr.) k .1 :IST, Corner of Stat. and , . , earoll 4. N. h.', Re. V !I 1.1111 S. I. 1,1 , 111 K• r...•%11 A lit , Coll?.111.11[.L.,• AT r ro.nnia of H.4l.ollllllrelei 111..4 t tti the •'!t• . 1 /11VC1/ / !CO/N. 1 , 1•••••YIA AT LAW. --OERcr in Hum•n ; • ...Ali. Ittnwn'a Hotrl , entrant.• no thr , r ,I„ N,,tnry Yu! lie had Counals , , the wvrral : 4 List.., , sisd Territories. D.% Htrrtirlireo3l. - k .114:11.1.. 1 I , x•ro.t, 1 , 1111.... in Roten- j iallaaas 1.1 11.8 Park, Kn... . ' t. Ire Twig or 101 ritani—tAlne to New . . rt.e 'trt.ei awl the l'ablle `Square, , t1.1t.104 al 111ONETT, lI'•LKPAIY IYI.I RST• 11. Dtllloll , lo If ard• I 'to, k..ry, alammars sod Sao:Mori, Ilas. ii UM ..r Fifth and ALM Allots, Erie. P. • ICA.. K. A. MKMIKTT I• 1 {INK Fr.V d: $ll C\NIIIPC, ( Sae...wars t.. bewail , 4 direasiey.) an.l A Trsprwan flarrlwart and \'4llx, 4urda, irm*, Irott and Std,L, No. - Ir% VII %'iL- LVTLit. in the room recently terapiell be - F .ai AO a Law °Moe, and over the Store of hl the Reed Home and Brown's Hotel. 41c CI)" . I , ItALARII as GoLn, Silver, Bank Noting, I. 15 4 .11, &c. Sight rmettsaire no thednin . • I y male ft ..No 9 Fiord user , F rt.. t t ItoOP. K (11.. 11.1. k ktl w.l ildanufseturern of amt., • •!.,1 ti • o. 1•, i'• .eh it , w the ihop runaway occupied ) gi\ll4; . . lli LI.IR lilt:mercies, Provisions, Xro ,k, i ~ s'.ll, tlrsiti, Flour, ?rants, Nitta, Giant, ......, rails, Wood-rat Willow and Stone Wars, ~. :o.h Trion low No. 4Wri!Ors Block, • - .• 1., 4 .00es shove if. Post ottleriEriniPli•___ I I F 6. it urfi aux, or_ ......._ DIRWTIATS, (Mt, to Floist,',.' B lB•••• . ' ...th rod* of Public S.,uarr, comer', occup " " •.1 %I •• All work warrant"! Kt% 0. Ftifitlit, „.” ka.l r KWIC IL% sod dealer* to •• Lap*, Si.ret V Fn. , * t ~01, , k,,-Nn. Boonell Klock, t, t rip, I. filt‘ 1 EIHN at CO., twr.ilio and Coranitharkon l(ershanta, •-, ) lour, Fish, and syrnt for a daily lino of I ski- :+tratmera, Public Hoek. I 11 Ut.H, dc CM 11 a,r Y k►KM of Atrnain ) Apilaeit,Bollris. irlen' tam I Impl.m. ilrn•A Can, 11.. It11(111.140 1 ;" az•nioa•atal DRUM and Avant Wflann'. Svaring Machine* arN , DIM ov►t • Storr, Wool Pic. traa,Pe.. Ear Rana. =ME P"ltGt: 11. ('I"I9.ICIt. AT-Tonsil' AT I.Aw, Girard, Erie County, and utistr Waimea* atroruiled to with am! Wei At,b _ I WIN %WEENY. Jo - OrTit I OP TUX PRAM OXSOV in axattf , op- , stair., P.rio, Pl. - - - , t 1 4.111c1 tk CLARK. _ WUOLWAALX OXACXXX. wad Doolorno ID • ~•• find Imported Winos aid Liquor.. also &rpm leroot, nth, Oil, and Aoronki for lodide Budge • co. I 130r0.11 Block, State stroot 6rte, Pa. CATOUXT, U. J. CLAIM. MIN W. AIMS*. . _ M 4 XT - PACITRXII,, Whnlmulr and R•tidi • .n all Maui' of Palmy. Drawing Roomy Noeltiog and lain mg Choirs, No.* Noy atoll* Rloai, RvN, Pa )%IIR S KELSEY, a I.llltml F, Fonts arret)boo• al Who lr I }tetall, at No. 13, t iolamll's Block Malt. street, )11.1). t LOW. VI mirr•erroixas At Wholemale .nd Retail • •Vrti and etistprn ramp, of prowtorquality,the ••• mot host owe re ow. Skop on Twelfth drat t r a ne.inri for ranytng water far family, bra el ..1 . rp.e.a (or hale eboap. M Iff. L. Law. )R. ELLIOTT. exisiorvy Nur?wt..— 4 0. m smith Park Rent, I l•gigh east nf Frw Rank Minding. - • lnly 10 , IMSI4 ' Enitt:h: J. 111/terfiN. I 01 , ,* A 1100 ira and Onasswlemon Merl:haat. k, ).a)or in Ceml, 'AAR, rioh, Pinar and %11 - IrElt 4 It i•Louta• witot.surtuta sad RAO &shwa im Groadmitim, •t -lit'. Wotwl and Willow ware ike., Erie, Pen*. 1111 !STOl{3Ol. tr► A .;sisoot.st, J 01,10.1., astl Rotail ' ••• • , •••rs Aferriptina 01 VOllYiffil and Itomostie • ' ••1.10 es. Oil cloths, ke. 13, Stabs 4 1SSI, !,,,, Kris. Ps. I 1.1.1 in T 144) 1t, K .... NT0N.,_ 11 f re fro Ave. 11, , r40,re5, ;rower, kr.,socorstely sod r , wn trißee on 1142114, OVIIT Jai. a. ••• , 1, ..r.wery 81019 KJ* Pa. I t. DownliNG. .krrnnnnr £? LA w ..see inns! OV I "r . irc molly roerreit Comte or FT InColtaty, r .1,10 a n d IllithlroFoltoofioo 4r.alManinnionne• • "" "Ober Lemle, ee oo kfloriwy nr Kaeotruta. . I •••• in Fro Orr ftlork,enrorr of etoto teed Mils • PA . DOI Arroyemsr ♦T I.AW.— lllM routovol .n a som of Matv Str..A.oo th• oußhaitto of taw • it tF t %I. 111.1:410. Ott 4:11,..w,mp. ummitod. and BIS p V. • i,.• •It•othoo ototo•twolv to the teolitahleat tet 4 It. Eye sad gar. Is, L6elli.-.41.1r. B. F. SLOAN. EDITOR & PROVIIETOR. VOLUME 30. M OIMALItg PURLS* i Arroanzr AT Lan.—ollon ores ilarr t a Tin Shop, between lirtnnea &dal and Nod Sanas, Pa • 0 COTT It RANKIN. 0 DIALZSII Ull all kinds of Coal, Salt, Makin, Flour, flak ika., ha. Pablle Dock, tele, Pa. 51. a. scum, a. X. IX. ..-- ..._ JC. 19111.1)101, a Wiol6lllllailMad RetaLl dealer ia all hada id Ingtish, Gauen and Annriaan ilkirdwars, Aavlb, lees, iron,*alb, eacal. ka. ndary aami 11.. , ins Belting and Packing Sa irreack 4 =a ,t • Road Hanna, Ma. Pa. Administrator', Notice, WIII3,REAFI Letters of Administration having boon Kauad to.tbo onnotribot, on the ..tats of Jobs Plttpattien, deed. MI of Ohio, thane ore alt Foram tottobtint to said .stab will mato home lets parson; matt Moot Laving ohms oftsnont the moo HI mood Huns pnijonty sathoMEWL*. BOW ntiested for Asttleinont. ES, Sept. IS, 1111611.—stir itlk Crook sap., Adns'r. Wrion!vr-S•4 I PVIA FRONTING TRY, PUBLIC SQARR, BRIE, PA. P. ELLIOTT, Proprietor. T HIS LARGE AN D ELEGANT }}WE Has been thoroughly repaired and return 434, and is non o e for the reception of mut& by the Day, Week or Month on re eonatdo terms, the Proprietor pledging Arrartif that no effort shall 6e wanting to give entire sabsfarbon. larr Meats Parties, Dinner Parties, or Managers of Polak Balls will Lint the scoosnsoodations at this Bones supinierte any other in the city and the charges ss rea sonable. cr-Geod o; Mobil ottaabod whine to from rim coustry will always Lod attentive trootlem to Mho ammo of their trams. May 8, 11119.tf48 PIANO FORTE ' MELO DEON MANUFACTORY SAVE TWENTY PER CUT WILLIAM WILLING F„„ ) , I:: .-- TITE experience of needy years, awl tfle. Idea that t could make PIANOS AND MELODEONS In Kele eheateer than I e4ll buy them Awe/there. became. mat la elmaaer, lendar theaper. ONO b cheaper, Iron the Yams, Indneed me to employ competent and complete, etipertOmeett workitten, who carried on a l'utmo Manufactory them: Delve* for five year*, and wbo sold me their 'title• Mock ommmory to maim iurb imdconmets, sod I am now propannl to fors.l.h my usanmnom fri.....1. Pianos and Melodeons N sarerior Ton• !had finish, and ir 111 1717411.11.1F1L AILATIP "IrJEL1131:111C For soy tree!' of Ono. to giro PLKT It MATIMYAI7TItO t. Ity reputation a a thudeloui and burdoess wan soot: be lost if these lustrifusentm ./11.11111 not prove And i smut. tha public, that meadow is spared to brirur about the drained result, rig : rrotincling a be sod substantial Mots, whirl. will give geed aalbsfactlion, nod Islay la MSS layer titan any Mass I limier of. TERMS VERY EASY PRICES VERY REASoNAIII,E! WIN PATRONIZE ;:t 'roar Own Citizens at Home OIihRRS at WIIOLESAL I.: or RETAIL le:rented promptly and fairly. 117 - Produeo, orders on S tores, old lastzunienio, Lon! tier, arid any thing rice- 1 ea xetl .gala or roe Ink vey 1.• immi..4ll he Worn in exchange for Piano Partin, it oio• donna, Daiiiinioni and any thing ono 1 Lava in my More. PIANOS TO LET ! TUNING DONE WELL ! NEW MUSIC EVERT WEEK ! NONE RUT THE REST ARTICLES ON HAND Chickering & Salem Pao Fortes. ALIV•YR VI NAND. I.lsvo you ever heard at is poor Cl:ticketing Piano ? - m• know whirs It Is and I will Plleballe WY *JUANA To EDITORS.—You all remeralwr neer Mr Home Paten of New York, has maiie Inv ail radioing in your papers. The underatimeal will do • little totter, it v on will favor him with a mil, and will funlieh you with any Piano you order or cleelfw. eke we your order. WM. WILLI Nil Cie, JUDO 18, 1850 —2 Ai dg m b -1 3- Or Chicago siddrot And Intermediate Ports ! ON E OF THE PEOPLE'S LINE OF Propellers will leave this Port for Chose. awl lateratedlate Porta o a WSJ/MX(4OA Y DA V' tf earl week, wad sad weather permitting. 113 Ir For freight or pomace apply to U. J. NORTON, Rrie, Jame 4, Public Dock WCINMR:Y. _ _ Air RS. CURTIS km reterned from New .0j York, and Is now receiving ber Stork of lIIIMERY AND FANCY GOODS Conaistink of a l Silk, Satin and Straw Bonnets,t Riad Drivers, Caps Plower; Ribbons, xactias„ Cheadle* Velvet Ribbons, COMM. Laces, be.. be. Also, Conseil. , Hoop 81tirta, Hosiery, Zephyr Hoods,, Knitting Yarn and materials for Embroidery, Laos Vella, Kid Gloves, loupe riot quality, be., be., an of which will hi sold as Ibw we am be nosiest Stmewhore. itr - • 111R.LINEES supplied with all goods to &Sr line a. Wholessila, Mt& M. COMA. Wis., Oct. 1, 1654.-17. =I B URNING FLUID—As discovered by Prat tireeeough, that ma( set erploar. pale by the cooly aatherteed oval in Me. x. 20. Ina. CARTER k Rb. ALWAYS READY. Colt's mod other sosioabsetar• of Plato]; 11or male Teta i tz, at AUVDti, 12. Pine", Building. -4 _____ - • th, - SHIN° QIIING • rim guINOLJEK Licarg ky 103,0 W WARR* CANTER MAL p ot , 3, ma) Btimo GROCERIES, &a., SELLING CHEAP iOR READY c iAY BIECHICA KENDIU No. 2, Writ/M.'s Block, Erie, Pa., orris A? W1101.1111.8L11011 MITAIL SUGARS of all DESCRIPTIONS, AT LOW PRICES GREEN, BLACK AND IMPERIAL !TEAS OW INWWILIGNIP OKA DNS ROASTED, RIO COFFEE SYRUP AND MOLASSIDA, 1117 ALL GRAIRES RICE, SOAP, STARCH, CANDLES, RALSII*IS BAKING POWDERS, PRUNES, FRUIT, NUTS. &c., WPM PENH, imprimis LAUD. BOON DOURO APPT.IO II , WOOD alai WILLOW WARN. NA I IA A MIMI LAM% Together with it huge aneeirtreeitt of all Mid, of ROOPS kept in Draw" Stem which we art to ern at the lowest market pries. CALL AND SU DS DICCICKAN, ICKNDIII A CO., April NI, MR Na. 2, Wright% Stock. WHO WANTS A SAFE. The sabecedber bee orw lame sre HERiiricrs SAFE, which be will A a gree, e cheep kw Cloth or swami piper.COTT. RAN Aril* 1111164.-eut 11. MANY PERSONS BUFFER iiitenmely with Wieseleme. Pies is the TAM Tan y a &ad Jew Amt. the! witht be relieved al•ect hiontately by the application or U. Mania of Swart Weeed. both own pie/want cod oak thew owy of the kan-Klikee wed Elot-thepo who. Jest try It. - Aar SOL CAETEE i SRO Eiji HORTETTER'S BITTERS for sale by thP Areats. Mg. 1f CMOS*. it& . _ I N I )100, First quality, wholt.aalr and r(-- tan, at the sew Dreg Atone • Aug• U. Mk CARTI22I. k RRO •_ Qll (518 USI N ESS AND FACTiikla can besarrisd es ptoltably of tisinataston. gee mbar dumbest •liisSig Leak. Tn./ BY BUYING, or 103i11eM7'.4%.. 13=1 TOR ORMAN& UNRIVALED GROUND, JAVA mod MILACIKKRICL YORK, mum*. BA (141”1, INITTII R. = Mill== pa and thlut I gnxune l ' o. cr Gunn DisorrOntrzont.4 1 thougbt bow 111100 ; I thought the word Shone forth with joy fo r n..: 1 didn't finnan In linter yonn Ito lbtly I should ow But on It prOired. I sang t her hand— a natty thought N toor}-- r i But oh I aloe I her miaow come-- "Her mother wouldn't lot ha r stir Why is toe like a mina' bast. ? Because it is AA ilternal transport. NEw Pitoritts.—A thorn in the bush is worth two in t e hand. 21111-. A man is fnost properly said to be "ripe for anything" when be is is little ThO custom of wearing the hair :in a l+ng pigtail is defined in California m MANs War *V— Stow Fun.—To 'tote' a shot gun arciund for half ktiay, and shoot nothing, or perhaps Ifte. sar It has bee well said of the home of the scolding wi e. that "It's a bad house where, the hen grows louder than the eock.'t Z A sailor looking very serious in a Methodist church, was asked by the min ister if lie felt any change. "Nary red," said Jack. Mitti. The more women look in their gl ►sass, the less they look to their houses. —4.llvA ! And how iN it when a man looks too often in a g1a.4.0 Alga A elerainan in Lynn, lima., waa recently detected in stealing hooka from a Boston hook store. Ito owned up and ro turn4sl all ha hail to len . A moral dchat-ing society "out west" s onxagwl in a discussion on the following (nest ion : ••1f a husband deserts his wife. chid, the most abandoned, the 1121411 or L. woman ?" Iffer That was a:smart boy who owned that ho liked everything that waa good, with the exeepticin of a good whipping.— The Atone lat. liked a good rainy day--too rainy to uo selitail, and just about rainy enough gt a fishing. Boston Poet says that the late draw of l'eiho night to serve am a eadtion to lolin Lull, how he again underiakeato n to prei,.49,44) the private atrairs of John linanotn. Des),„ Dr. South inays •"I'he tale-hearer and the hearer shoultl lie hanged up to gether—the hirtner by the tongue, anti the hitter by the ear. Sal - A gentleman in Alabama was Iyin n b 4 i 1 tine morning, when a friend stepped n, and mid, "I'. breakfast is coming on." •L4t It come," replial P.. with a look of lefinnee, "I'm not afraid of it." gfty- • • 1/.1 k 4., what kiwi of potatom am I °At. you an. planting?" in' once, to be sure. Be the houly poliker I an' does yer honor think I would b afther i 4, tin' biled ones r' stir- A Mitt.oN•enota.r FINICRAL.—In De troit the other day, a party of mourner: were following a corpse to the grave. In die wagon in which they were seated, was a. large water melon. from which each ear: IA and ate with a gusto. and strewing the road on each wide with the rinds. gon, Wha -t range creatures girls inv.— ( , kth , r one of them good wages to work for you, and ten chances to one if ths obi wrs man ran spare any '.1)...r girls: but just, pro pose niatrimony, and see if they don't jump at the elianei , of working 3 life-time for their Virtual , and clothes. Ike came home frO . m gehool very much agitated because he eould not, un cleamtand the principles of Allegation. its (I.)vrti In Ureenleaf. ••'There dear," said bir. Partiagton, "don't -fret about it, you must tell the toucher that you ain't no alligator. lind I know relinquish you." he fact wu greatly comforted. p e g` The lion. Hciiatio Seymour, in his speech in Minnesota, said that, in "the (Id colony day-, and the earlier days ort 3 t ( e republic, the N'ect , England States devoted titemsalcs exclusively to making "rnm— pure rum." which they took to the Afric' en coast am! traded for slaves. Hence is sup posed to originate the practice of calling t hose benighted A fricaus "rum customers." PS_ In one of his "Preachings upon Plpular Proverbs," Timothy Titoomb stays "The trurh is, that the great sisterhood and broth , erhood.of sin groan under the un eharitablejusigements of those who, but for circumstances interposed by other power than their own, would have been among their number." ' Rather bold, that, Timo thy, but true. M.. Corney did a bit of natural history the other day : "What did Mr. Jones mean by saying you were a 'funny dog,' pa ?" risked rorney's little girl. 'What is a fun ny dog," "My dear," said Corney gravely, "a funny dog is always provided with a waggish tale and it is somewhat singular," he con tinued, knocking the ashes out of his pipe, "that cutting his tale short always affects his choler." Der" gentleman who has for towards the refused to contribute anything to the support of.'stateil preaching or the Gospel," remit tly surprised his friends by oontribu ting to the rturhase of a new bell for a new churrh NliilCP. On being asked the reason for GIL, exercise of liberality, he replied that lie never put his money where hecould not beer it riagt AND Wt. I t is said of the Marquis of Townsend, hat when young and enaged in'battle, ho w a drummer at his - side killed by a nnon hall, which scattered his) brains in every direction. A imperioroltieerobserv ing him, supposed he was intimidated at lie tutd addressed him in a manner cheer his spirits. "Oh," said they ung Marquis with calmness but severity, am pealed to, make out how any Mall th such a quattity of brains came to be tire!" 4 .1 .50 r Ely t.Perker, Chief of the Six Na its, is an engineer in the employ of the ' • end tiovernment at Galena, 111. The Itnbuque Herald of the lab lest, says : "('apt. Parker started this morning fdr Ilea. York. He goes on to Buffalo to ma' annual visit to the t 4i,T,_Nations. Ire N. .s i every year, diveaniaduedf of the hai i lireents of,civilisation,. bi pots on the pelt df the Red Man, and as their Chief, IisUOI their complaints, adjusts their grlevan: , and harmonises theirdiverseopiniatts. .t. Parker looks about lusitend-Italf In. ; he is portly, asif fed upon turtle uk, has a dark but pleasant eye, long r. thug) t hair, the copper complexion, highly fte ' ned with white, and goneratly fides • present any appearance stsprestive 'of J • hawks or scalping knives.' IE E, PA., SATURDAY MO ==l =Ts WEE ' Petit& \ AUTUMN DT istatinvi I. irsierivex. The sepkvre are immytag th4ii tie mod% A etaySew a silver ; They're pathos the Warta theilegedea dada. Aad biro►k as they Jewry thou. Therm ploctriby the roses trees` Maar a bw. Bet, eh 1 iset • whit es» that' Par the Ikewets that mile with a smowees ma, ded live hat a manger dey. They've rated the rebiles breast, lad broken a whits dove's They've whispered a word to amenslas And Iltalr dame over the ON ho t oh, ho I for Use an abed, Laughing eo clearly, It Wanes the white sag overt And blowy* the white ks IY- Hurrah, hurrah for the autnniti wind, That ratters the fruit I. abeirere— The maim are dud and the Illy as fled, But the fillit It litter that irrin. Beneacra, Oeinber, fitOsturt. Chula II DM 1M 111 !RUH. A LITTLE GYPSY. The civilized world is now very busy with the name of the monarch who rules France. If curses were swords, with power to wing themselves upon the swiflibot haste which fills the whole atmosphere of the earth against this man, and spend their fury on him, his body would not, contain pores enough, were they ten times multiplied. to offer a sheath for each angry blade point ed at him. Though it is true men hate and fear, yet they secretly -admire and envy Napoleon 111. They will hate 'him less now, though their dames' is loudest, be t-same illStfild of another brilliant RUCAMMIS like that following the sup If rat, he has, in the second game whieb he attempted, made a surprising failurei t attul, worse than all, a failure when he might, hare made the grandest triumph. Ity this late war, men will now be able to measure , the calibre of the hitherto inscrutible ruler. Ile has lost prestige as the unerring statesnum whose foresight was infalfible. Re rushed head long like any weakOrdinsi7 mortal, into a most perilous positlion, where the results involved were of the most solemn an d mo . mentous to a suffering peepte, and where the responsibilities .o atelarioutily assumed wore of a eleircter;and magnitude to have numle even the wisest hero'pause ere tak ing them to himself. Rut once having proclaimed himself a champion, having girded on the sword in thti eyes of doubt ing nat ions--once having entered] upon the game, it required an iron will, an unflinch ing and steady adherence to his avowed purpose, to win the after - respect or confi dence of mankind. The dangers to beep. prehended in this enterprise were no secret to Louis Napoleon or to the world; and it was no wonder that the latter watched with ttle an eager and terrible in - t the combat which the French aware bad boldly and haughtily accepted —' the tinidst of his synAkathign and thi on Ins side, ibe ' sudden' over that he had not.wd not maculated t) great movement—i made a grrat mistake, and must retreat.— This revealed the culpable' weakness—the jfauy in the early plans of the self-consti tuted leader, and will never be forgotten, no matter what shape Italian affairs may assume. Rut heavens! what mad glee has not, this failure caused ? Talk of man's sympathies for "down-trodden Italy !" Pshaw ! There is not one of the many million haters of Louis Napoleon who is not supremely happy at the failure of his effort to redeem that unhappy country.— They were begiaing to fear his success, his great courage and his magnanimity, and were beginning to accord him their tardy admiration but the news of his last sud den action has put an end to all this, and has caused more intense joy throughout the world than Italy's freedom over could. Napoleon is a blunderer! This is their grand discovery, and, in the eyes of men, to be a blunderer is a greater crime in a statesman than to be a villain. But I am not goinl to write a political article, as my headin will show ; yet it is impossible to !peak of Napoleon 111. with out glancing at the facts of his last great engagement before the world, upon the probable results of which the attention of all nations of mankind is now fixed with such all absorbing interest. My little chapter upon the " conqueror of Lombardy," is of a theme and an hour far removed, from the Emperor of France. and the noise raised by the thunders of his mighty armies, in battle. Far, far away from " the pomp and circumstance" of awful war, or the glitter of imperial courts, my story follows a pale, slender, melan choly youth, an exile and a wanderer upon the earth, having few friends and many foes—his family traduced and despised, And scattered to the winds—toppled from their high thrones into , the dust, and wan dering. from place to place, unnoticed and well nigh forgotten. Weak in health and delicate in frame, this youth was remarka ble for nothing save a restlessness and moody thoughtfulness, unsatisfied ever, and always looking into the dreamy, dark and uncertain future. Dark, indeed, was its aspect for him 1 The glory of his uncle had departed—his star had set in the deep est gloom; and man judged him as he was, and talked of what he bad as, rather than what be bad, achieved. A dishonor attach ed to the name of Bonaparte., and the brand of illegitimacy had already been fixed upon the brow of the sorrowful wanderer, Charles Louia Napoleon. Parting from his mother, the gay Ditch es de St. Leu, in one ;of the quiet little villages of Switzerlara, after some little time there, the young man crossed the ocean, and we find him, in the year 18—. a gutsier the well known New York mer chant. A,h can n B—. While a resident in this city, be was noted for his quiet., die tent, and extremely high-bred , demeanor. Ifis marked courtesy to all wortien. young and old. with whom he came in contact, and his sternly keeping aloof from the com pany and oompanionship of the gar young men of society who pestered him with their *lncitation', and who were eager to shower attentions, dinners, suppers, Ac., to the "young prince.'! The young prince ! the grandson of the ugly crooked little lawyer of theft:de town of Ajaoeio, in the mountains of-Corsica— where his grandmother, Lestitiik_erepared her own and bee husband's 'Wafts every day, and where, as she often boasted after wards, she-washed the linen for her large 4mily, and spread it in the sun long before the fair dames of Paris lifted their sleepy This from their soft white pillows. llehrear er there Is nothing ignoble in the tart that !the grandmother of A prim*, eat a g o o d And frugal housekeeper of humble me ana !but the young scions of American aristoc racy would have found it so if they bad only kept their eyes on that side of the house ar-Itonapartr. But they did not.— • 'They forgot all about Madam %gawk; OBSERVER. G, OCTOBER 219, 1859. peeling onions far rashest*, and milking the solitary cow which she owned in the Cor sican isle, and looked upon the young Louis as if he sprang into life from' the Tuileries, as Minerva - did from the brain of Jupiter, without ancestors. He was "a royal shoot of a kingly house," and though he txm stantly treated his worshippers in a man ner which plainly told them that his tank was as a shield to keep off the vulgar, still did they crowd their company and their invitations upon the unfor tunate youth until he fairly cut all general society,and confined his visits to one or two higly favored houses, where quiet elegance and cultured minds prom ised a few hours of genial intercourse. One of these hour* was situated in State street, directly oPpcnite the - Battery, and commanding a fine View of the bay--a de lightful and then fashionable locality of the wealthy of New 'fork. And the young prince's favorite •. lug ramble, while a visitor to this mansain, was a broad flagged walk, extending from Battery place along the water to the end of the Battery—the promenade, at that time of the creme oe la creme of the metropolis. But the thought ful Louis was never seen there amid the crowd. Ills walks were solitary, and in the early morning, when there was nothing to disturb his dreams but the singing of the birds and the murmuring of the waves.— There on the rude wooden bench under the trees, or leaning on the stone columns which supported the railing overlooking the Hudson, would the young man tarry hour upon hour pondering, perhaps, the probabilities of the future, and the mighty changes which time aught bring forth, or sinking despondingly into the shadows of the past, and measuring the coming years through their painful experiences. Mr could not exactly call himself the only vis itor to the Battery in the cool mornings, for he had noticed, on his first stroll through the place, a little girl of perhaps thirteen years, sitting on the end of one of the benches, with two small wicker baskets be side her on the ground, while out of one she picked and sorted slips of mint, tied them up in neat little bunches, and ar ranged them in the other basket, as if for sale. He looked carelessly at the wee maiden as he passed her the first time, and she raised her eyes and smiled at him,— Ire afterwards said when relating the meet ing with the mint girl in the saloons ot Lon don, for the amusement of a " ladye faire," that in his whole life, before and after, he never was so thrilled by a single look from a pair of eyes. The girl was fantastically dressed in a thin, light blue gypsy repo, having a hood, which was negligently drawn half over her head. The face was not beautiful, but the eyes and mouth were' wonderfully lovely, and her bright eager look and familiar smile at the young pe nce. lie described their expression as teeing the devil 1111 d the angel blended and it was extremely difficult to tell which preponder stet. lie used to find her every morning in the same spot but passed her no more. Sometimes when be returned from his walk , at the extreme end of the ground, she was gone. Once or twice he noticed that she stood up from her work and looked after him among the trees, and one morning on entering, the Battery later than usual, he missed the little blue cloak, and felt a trifle lonely. lie was bending over the •ils, gazing into tJr I,ter. when he felt a and, on , bold tndom pearl in the stray thought... ..,cod he had laid the book upon one of the benches of the Battery, and forgotton it, and the little maiden had foundit. He immedi ately became acquainted with the child— found that she was sent out to sell the lit tle bunches he had seen her arranging, awl finally be gave her, that morning, money enough to cover the whole value, twice told, of her little basket. Every morning the little mint seller watched and waited for the, approach of her generous friend, who snmetimei suf fered her to seat herself near him and chat while she tied up her sweet selling mer chandise. And doubtless the grave Louis found more amusement in the prattle of this queer little damsel than in the remarks upon the weather of the more pretentious and fashionable young misses whom he was wont to meet. His matutioal rambles had quite a charm for him, and he never failed to sit a few moments beside the little girl. who would sometimes ask him to lend her his pocket knife to cut the cord with which she tied her leaves together, if she hap pened to forget her own. One morning he found her crying bitterly, and the only reason she could give was, that her step mother was going to remove across the river and instead of selling her mint she i would ve to go tending chickens. The i tta. youn gentleman consoled the child as well as h could, and he made her another present of bright silver pieces, as a motive to dry her tears, but all to no avail ; she cried and cried, and when he left her to pursue his walk, she cried the more. Half en hour afterwards, while he stood at the end of the Battery, watching a distant ship corning -up the bay. the little girl came di rectly in front of him, and holding up her tearful face, silently invited a kiss. What was the young Prince tilde ? He confessed afterwards that he was embarrassed. Bet the little one came closer to him, and still proffered the really tempting rubies.— Hastily glancing around him to see that no one was near, be bent his head and suffer ed her to kiss him. Like the memorable kiss which Sydney Smith tells about, as haunting him in his sleeping and waking hours, the embrace of thito strange child could never, he said, be forgotten by him. Unwillingly he remained away from his morning italics for a week afrerwarde, but returnedagain, hoping to find his childish admirers in a state of quiescent satisfaction; but eke was not in her old place, nor did _he ever find her, ht the few rambles which his short stay in New York permitted him to take. • Some time afterwards, the wandering and well. nigh penances Louis Napoleon offered himself in marriage to an English beauty, whoandling disdainfully at his pre sumption, refused him, and to whom he made answer in the words, so often after wards made the =ldea of derision: "Mad am, you have east away a throne." Anti in speaking of this haughty Bitty one even ing to the oountem of Bleomington, he con fessed that the mum of his Ihrst admiration for this particular beauty was her striking resemblance toia fait leg.irl whom he had once met in thoparks of New York, and relating bie strange parting with the child, he mid: t Though yeti's havepassed, I remembewthalt wild fatiercreataresinvio cent kiss as.freabitos if she gave it to me yesterday, a nd I think 1 shalt not forget It as long as I livet."— , Nre Pork &today risme. gsli. Plain mss thinkhandsome wemen want passion, and plain wqMen think young men want Aftenesig. think all.rsadeics devoid of testa, * -dull readers thialit,witts , writers deepido bril liancy. Olt,* and, vulgar minds wrin ways pay grealer respect to smith I than worth; for weiiilth,' though a - far lee effi cient source of power than worth, • 14 a far more intelligible one. 10;Nonnuis is so Jeep but that's, stud low-place may be found in him. $1,50 PER ANNUM IN ADVANCE. "Monte" on the Missouri Rieer• ilr JACK SCIUIIIIII.II. In the spring of '56 1 was one among the foolish thousands whe "turned np"' in filt. Louis, the gateway of thei West, en route for Kansas. How or why a ever conceived the notion of going there * has nothing to do with what I am about to relate ; and it is only neoessary to say that on one of the odd evening sfor which the aforesaid spring was remarkable, I was seated in the cabin of the steamboat "Excelsior," just leaving the levee at St. Louis, for Leavenworth. . The lamps had been lighted, and the motley crowd of passengers were huddled together in groups, discussing all manner of questions, from theology to "euchre" in clusive, while the bar-keeper was kept busy in banding out "sperits.' Any one who dies traveled math through the western country, and espetially upon Missouri river steamboats, is aware of the fact that nearly every one which navigates that river, numbers among its passengers a class of persons known as "professional gamblers," and as I bad become pretty thorougly acquainted with the operations of these gentlemen, I was not at all sur prised, when one of my fellow passengers, the very one who would have been singled out of all that number, for a minister, seat ed himself at a card-table, and began to leisurely shuffle a pack of cards, which he had drawn from his pocket. He looked so sanctimonious, so inno cent, that a casual observer would never have suspected him of engaging in any calling less holy than the ministry. He was a young man, rather tall, and wore a suit of plain black:with a white neck-tie, which any minister might have envied, but beneath all this innocent exterior, the close observer would have detected a per fect specimen of the witty, professional gambler. A crowd soon gathered around the gam bler, and in want of better employment, I walked toward the table - to observe the cf feet his enticement would have upon those who were looking on. lie selectect.three cards from thepack, and began to explain to the crowd the mysteries of "three card monto." "Now," said he in illustration, "I have here three cards, the ace of hearts, the king of hearts, and the duce of hearts. Now I will throw them over each thus—thus—and you can not tell me which is the ace," throwing the cards upon the table face down. Several of theicompany at once said they could point out the ace, for he had thrown the cards very slowly, and all had watched him elosel v. "No you can't," he replied. "When you turn it up, you will find that you are mi . taken." "That is it," said one, pointing to one of the cards, the one which the spectator* were confident was the ace. "No, it is this one," returned the gam bler, pointing to another. "But turn the card and convince yourselves." The card was turned, and, sure enough, it was the ace. The gambler seemed to be very much astonished, and turned the other two cards up, explaining to them that here must certainly be another ace. But no, the king and duce were all right, and he was compelled to admit that he was wrong. Again he took the cards, and throwing them slowly, as previously, with the face down, he asked tik spectators which was the ace this time, apparently feeling confl 4i; Liam : he could not again make a mile , 7-"rr -- all or whom weo.A.ei ittain tea with gainliling trick. now geotnell tp lie more interested in the gAine, .1114 I Conte of them eould scarce ly restrain front smiling at the unfuccess ful attempt of the 'l . ireeny" who handled, e cards. ,__ -et, wn him This time Italia dozen pointed simulta neously to the card which they were con fiilent was the ace, bin the gambler. with un air of certainty, assured them that they were mistaken, and pointed, himself, to another card, which he knew was the ale. The passengers again turned the, and, and as they expected. were again right, the gambler now appeared to be very much as tonished, he could'ut account for a at all. he was certain that lie hand perlormed the trick before, and could give no reason why he couldn't do it now. The crowd now seemed very much pleas ed at the gambler's discomfiture, and cast very knowing looks at each other, while he . seemed completely dumb-founded, and made a motion as if about putting the cards back in his pocket, but then again, with a determined air, be threw them again up on the table as before, remarking that he would try it once more and if he didn't succeed he would never make a fool of himself again. The passengers quickly pointed out the card as before as confidently as if they saw it lying lace up but the gambler seemed to be more confident than ever that they did not point to the right card, and as they insisted. he appeared to get angry, and told them he was certain, he had done the same thing too often to be mistaken, and finally told them he would bet them all the mon ey he had, that he was right. Several of the party cyst quick glances toward each other as much as to say, "here is a chap who has more money than brains, and we had just hotter clean him out." "There," said the gambler excitedly, drawing a small leather bag from his pock et, which was now filled with gold twenties. "I'll just bet you any amount that this is the ace," at the same time pointing to the card as "I'll bet you fifty dollars," said one of the passengers, an honest looking man, and one who bad evidently raven but little of the gambling world. I had been watching this man for some time. At first he appeared indifierent with regent to the gambler's do ings, but he gradually became more inter ested, and now seemed at the highest pitch of excitement. "No sir," returned the gambler, to the fifty dollar offer, "I want either to make or lose something worth while; if you want to bet three hundred dollars, I have no °Wee . • ns, but, I wouldn't think of taking any t ing smaller. If you don't, wish to take t at, I will put the cards in my pocket," king with an air of the utmost indif ference. - go a hundred," exclaimed the man betbre mentioned, apparently very much excited, "that's all the money I've got." "And go another hundred," came from another passenger and Boon the three hundred was upon the table by the aide of the gambler. said the gambler, you bet that this card (pointing to the one in which the company seemed confident) is the ace of hearts," "Yea. yes," come from a dawn. "Well turn it for yourselves." It was turned in a twinkling, and w> s. not the ace, but the king ! The party seemed petrified with astonishment, appar-. ently dumb-founded, for they tbonght they could not possibly be mistaken, while the garohler 000lly.put the money in his pocket.; The man who had staked the drat bun.; tired, all the money he had in he - World,: seeinedAlrnest distmeted. Ile tursed his kiolishnese, and lamented the loss of his nuittay in words which sewned to tench eve" , heart in the potty --every heart but the gambler's. • Again the earl.- were thronweven mor • *nay than befia.e. and it seemed impneei• ble that the company could he whitaketi. - - - Bad the be iii;hir motored hmre en tirely cooled off, although every one felt mnfident, just se he had dont) beer& As the g•unbler watibout to replace the cards in his pocket, eo one seemidd him ed to bet, a young man, of not more than nineteen or twenty, and trifildreland,fwho had been looking on with a great deal of interest, - said yout7l t fi ft y dollars Aar is the ace of bait* pointing to the one nearest to him, the same wadi Om rest of the pan e isers -thought was thilea,". -"Couldn'fthink of:MU% so snag" be;. •"Then 11l make it a Isuin eXchtfm ed the yog me in an Mitinor. "WeU I will depart inynapeem. ed intention of Inking no 4b his, or der to give •ott a chance. the mad." The you; man turn the card nerr ously, and id was the the one upon which he bet. The gambler seemed vlUy,r‘tuch discom fited at this turn of &Mrs and seemed entirely unable to aecaunt for it. Again the cards were thrown--anotharl•;:k , • hundred dollars were bet, and the ganibi r - lost as before, while the young man . overjoyed at his good fortune. It = 1 ! . . • ident that the gambler would lose all tbe money he had—that his winning the Tad three hundred was by accident, and that, • there was a good opportunity for winning some money ; so thought the majority of the crowd around the table. NUMBER 21. At this ,tuncture, an oldish man, well dressed, with a heavy gold watch chain, and massive ring, who had been watching the game with marked earnestness for some time, proposed to stake five hundred dol lars on the next throw. The gambler, Sot withstanding the losses he had sustained, seemed confident in his own abilities, and readily assented to the proposition. But there was one serious drawback to the old gentleman's betting—he had only a hun dred dollars. "Gentlemen," said he to those around him, "can't we make up the five hun dred among us, and," he added in a whis per, which the m . bier couldn't hear, -1 will break that p. I will work a pretext which he will not notice, and we're shure to win." Having thus spoken, he stepped up to the table again, and said, picking up the card. "I want to see that there is no hocus pocus about this card," at the same time giving one-of the corners a slight turn, which the gambler did not observe. When the passengers saw this, there was not much difficulty in raising the other four hundred. The young man who had lion before, bet one hundred, and the bal ance was made up among the party, all of whom felt as confident of the result as it the money had been in their pockets. The curds were again thrown, and the ace was watched with apparently greater ease than before, while the turned corner removed all -possibility of doubt. "Who will you choose to turn the card for you." asked the gamble of theoompany. The old gentleman, was the unanimous choice, ate with a perceptible tremor he turned the card which the company knew to he the nor, and—iii was the dare I The look of surprise, mingled with dis pair which overspread those faces was real ly painful to beheld. It wasso unexpected. sounlooked for, that they seemed hardly to realize that their money, in many eases all their money, was in the gambler's pock- The old, • teal almost _ "le logs of while almost ,y mg that. the old man and also the yrketne one had dt,appearetl—"That the old gen tleman who proposed the live hundred dollar bet, and the young man who won the two hundred dollars were the Monte players accomplices." "And—" "That their whole conduct was feigned, and they have not lost a cent." "And yet you countenance these nein dler4 'knowing them to be such." "They are our best customers," be te-. plied significantly. turned away, anufascendcd to the hur ricaane deck, having become uncomforta bly warm below, and discovered a man leaning against the wheel-house, evidently in deep meditation. He was the person who had lost the hundred dollars in the first bet with the gambler. I spoke to him in rather a cheerful manner, and after a few observations he said:— "Ah sir, you are not aware of the an guish which the loss of that money causes me. To some men it would be but a trifle —a loss which might be sustained every day without being felt; but withme, sir— with me, it is a far different matter. That money was the savings of several years of toil. It was earned and saved by myself and wife, with a large family, in the hope we might purchase a home in the far West. It was a small amount for such a purpose, but we felt that it might be made to secure us a home, no matter how humble. But it is gone now, and with it my little remain ing hope and energy. I have not a dollar left with which to get back again to my , family. and even if I had, I could not bear to tell them that I had spent their little savings at the gaining table." . I felt a tear trickling down my cheek. awl walked away deeply regretting my own inability to afford him any relief. The next morning at the breakfast ta ble, 1 looked for my friend of 'the previous evening, but he was not to be seen. - No one had observed him 4etting off at spy of the stopping place during the night, and his absence remained a mystery during the rest of the trip. A few days afterwards, I was sitting in the reading room of the Planters House. in Leavenworth, engaged in the perusal of St. bouis paper, when my eye fell upon a paragraph under the howling of "Drown - ed." The article stated that the body of a. drowned man had been found in the river a short distance above the city, and then proceeded to describe his dress and ap pearance, which exactly coincided with that of the penem before mentioned. The article added, in conelusion,—"There was no money found on his person, which fact gives rise to the suspicion that-he had been robbed,, and drowned to prevent the de tection of the robbers." "Yes, he had "been robbed, but it was at the gaming table." II A mit 's Faaar.--Harper's Ferry Isone of the first towns in deflisson county, Vir• ginia, and romantically situated at the con fluence of the Potomac and Shenandoah rivers, under the Blue Ridge. It to Just the spot which Thomas Jefferson deemed above all description, unless what could be painted as "the most stupendous scene in all creation." It was once known by the name of Shenandoah Falls, mid Ifirresent designation was taken Brom the fiunousier ry which there;crosses the Potonssc. The little town encircles a hill, and has the rep utation of being a vemprosperous place.— The United States Aory employs usually about toree hundred person. Mid the A rie nal gives work and federal pay to -several t ' he M Now*y. MUM, stand .of aruu are regularly in charge of the Arsenal custo7 diens, and seine 10,000 muskets are flout out by the 'Armory m&-haiiii* every yo4r. 111 1 4._ An talilor in Tong say; that-he will i s h„ r t, pat .lows intemponowo.— trihibli! 11 will br no labor for him to imt 4t or any -card been It up tlkge again w not Jerk. we off at
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