or Roo a ntura. ♦ itawil IrmtSSW. S&VSD Ziatrkl: PENNYALIS RNSD. I WIZ YOUR WASTB ?APES. BLVE YOUR WALEITZ'PAPER TOO VALUABLY, TO alt TOO VALUABLE TO BB ESTROTID. THE ?APES MAUS 'INTO IT. TRE Urn Walt WANTS IT. PRINTER NEEDS IT. PRINTER. NEEDS IT. ?Oil CAN OXCORR FOR IT TRAM 'WOW FOR -Will:. TIM *JO. YOkl CAN GET MOUE MR IT THAN 'TM MOUE Ent BAGS TWO UAW AGO. II WILL BE PAID SR WILL BE PAID iT THE, OBEIRVIII OPIUM AT Till °SNOW= OPTIC'S OR ALL THAT YOU CAS EKING. it ALL-THAT YOU Cl,ll BRING. r . • OBSERV ER R _ A.k.„ VOLUME 85 Ia Tine of War. Mao ars whits fawn in earth'anany sheet, Aid sigas of trouble meet ns everywhere ; nillUitionif pulse bath an unsteady War, ?or scones of battle fout-ltitinninier-air. A thrill gosa through the oity'rbusy life, /tad then—u when a strong man stints his - breath— A. stilleess comes ; and sub ose in his place Waits for the news of triumph, loss, and death, "The " Extras" fall like rain upon a drought, And startled people crowd sround.the board Whereon the nation's sum of loss or gain ' rude and hurried characters itecorod. Perhaps it Is a glorious triumph's ilea's— An earnest of our Future', recompease; Perhaps it. is a story of defeat, Which smiteth like a fatal pestilitice. But whether Failure darken's all the land, Or whether Victory sets:its blood ablaze. An awful cry, a mighty thtob of pain, flhall scare the - ;sweetno'se from these sum mer days , 4 God ! , how thislland grows rich ittloyal blood ! Poured out Upon it to its uttassi - lerrgi i h, The incense of a people's sacrifice— The wrested offeriug.of a people's_sirength! It is the costliest land beneath the sun! 'Ths priceless; purahaseless! And not a rood But bath its title written clear and signed -In some elain hero's consecrated blood. Aid not a sower that gems its mellowing soil But thriveth well beneath the holy dew Of tears, that sue a nation's straining heart, When the Lord of battles smites it through and through. LOVE IN THE BREAKERS. A STORY OF CAPE MAY. I do not like fashionable watering places, either on the seaboard or inland. Yet fate, or my restless, wandering spirit, has more than once led me in " the sea son " *to Saratoga, Newport., Cape May, and the now desolate 4tri, deserted and onee famous " Whits Stilthurs" of Vir ginia. Those who know 'OlOlO as I run— know that I am hafpiest when shut out 1 from the world, its frivolities, its diasipa lions, and its hypocrisies. I wander in the wilderness of my own mountain home, watching -the wild deer in its gambols, the trout sporting in the, crystal waters, or the eagle piercing the clouds, far, far' above the lofty mountain tops: -' But to my story. It was many Summers ago when " the spirit moved me" to take a flying eisit to 'Cape Kay. It was in the height 'of the season-when I reached the Cape, gOing by steauteir from Philadelphia. Evety hotel was otowded ; the company'was as various as oompanles at watering places generally are—belle* looking for mates, beaux on the same scent, any quantity of fortune htinters, and a few, very iew reasonable men and women in that vast crowd. The fair ea was not represented, as I thought, by any "killing beauties." I, wandered in at three or four of the evening " hops," and Made tip'my mind that 1 bad seen as much beauty at a Mexican fandango, and more t in a dance; on the green of tin An dalusian village, 'and not less at back woodi dance, where one fiddle formed the band; anda Viaginia reel the " dancing card." I sew nothing in the fact to driv4 away my natural melancholy, and made up my mind to take one good swim in the surf of old Atlantic, arid then on the next day, to start once more for,my backwood home among the glorious old Adirondacks. So when I took my bathing suit from may trunk, and when the sun began to droop toward the pines in the weer, 1 sauntered down to the beach where bun deeds were already sporting in the surf— I the shrill laughter and petty screams of the lair ones tusking a fine contrast with the heavy roar of the surf. , • For a few moments I hesitated to enter the surf, being more pleasantly engaged in scannirk the scene before me. barley never had/ a fineri chance for sketching from lifeNthan he would have had there. A Hogsrth would have been only too happy for the carticaturean opportunities afforded him, For instance; a fat, beef eating citizen, carrying at least two hun dred weight of mortality in his own per son, went into the water . with a wife on his arm whose lean and lank figure, taller than his own, was too thin to cast a eha dew on the white sand of the shelly beach. And via VOW:, a very fat lady and a man as lean as Bomeoet apothecary would be seen—the one waddling, duck fashion, the other " tottering ". toward it like a starved sand-snipe. • " Not &handsome woman in the water!" I muttered, as I gazed over and among the 1 crowd. But at that moment, as if to rebuke me for, my lack of gallantry, a vision passed me—she seemed to be too beautiful to be anything but a vision—which made my spirit retract the thought .of an instant ; for the lady was beautiful=-gloriously beautiful. Ono glance of her eyes—great, black, bewildering eyes—fell upon me as' she passed, and I felt that I had blushed; from my bead to my feet. 'She glided—' did not seem to walk—so close tome that her snow-white bathing ' robe actually touched me, and the contact threw - alt electric glow through me in an instant, Nall, ,her figure could, even in that uri-, gainly garb, be seen to be perfect—he 'complexion almost too fait' for the 'ravel of jetty hair which hung about her white brow and neck ; and, to crown all, a look of melancholy upon her perfect features; that made my but too susceptible heart whet° be her sympathetic confident, her comforter, if only . such a thing 'could be. With bitterness in my heart against the happy man who could be privileged to watt upon such an angel, I turned to see what heathen was attending the goddess of my heart's sudden adoration. There was no masculine present—no one so near as myself. She entered 'the water alone; not timidly or with a shrink"- ing step, but like a calmly prowl Diana, I when no prying Acteon was near. Involuntarily I followed, though at a reepectful distance. I watched her every motion,. as she advanced farther into the foamy " yeast& waters." Moving otithactil more than half her queenly form was immersed in the briny waves, she stood, and gently bowed her male the.great breakers it. they rolled IX snowy wraiths updn itbr. 01r, how I wished that , I was bee—Jitst'one or those breakers! Would . 1 not clasp that queenly form in my chaste embrace. and ,bear it Away to soma /one isle of beauty" to tie mine, mine forever ? Yes, I would ! But a hoarse about from the men, and a cry of 'warning, and a thousand screstna from rosy lips turned suddenly white, re called me from the wild dream which was taking possession of me. My queenly vision had gone fartlier out than the rest ; so had I. when a roller of thrice the usual length' earn* tumbling in upon us. In a moment ate . was bidden from my view •, the next second I was under' a hundred tont of water, or so it seemed. Half strangled; I buffeted my way to the top of the water, only to find that the uondertair' ? bad swept me outside' of surf, befond' the outermost breaker, and that the tide was beefing 'me seaward. I thought not of my own danger. Where was she? At tbst4instant I saw her--a 'leek of despair upon her beautifutfaos— witisla afew feet of vie, just sioldoi; Cos 11 TWO.DOLLA.RS AND- A•HALF PEE YEAR, IF PAID IN ADVANCE; $3,00 IF NOT PAID UNTIL TER END OF THE TRAIL she evidently could not swim, as she made no effort to do so. Heaven ! what strength came tolli then •- Never did " strong swimmer ,n his agnny " strike out more boldly Otani I did then arid there. In an instant I was by her side, my hand supporting her arid my v?ice uttering these-words : • " Lady. do not despair. I will save you or die with you!" Oh. how her look went through' Me. Words never could express gratitude. Wave after wave heat over me, but I lifted her!. bright, beautiful head above them all. "ff your, strength will last a few min utes, we are saved 1" she said, in tones that were melody condensed, :waled, an alytically. modulated, (excuse my rhap soiliel-4 cannot , help them). " For they are launching surf boats,"she added. llad not thought of that, or,cared for it, or looked for it. I only loolOd in her too beautiful face. "They will soon be here. Do not let your strength give way," she said again. I How I wished they'd sink, capsize, do anything but come there and share with me the felicity of saying her. But they came. A great lobster-fisted i hand was stretched out, and it rudely I grasped her round, peerless arm, and she 'was lifted into the boat. I would have sunk myself—for with her went all my strength=lond not another pair of lobster looking hands lifted me also from the I water, and tossed me, es carelessly as if I had been a half.drownecl dog, into the hot / tom of the boat. I believed was so weak as to faint ; for I knew nothing more until I found my self on a bench on the beach, surrounded by hundreds of men and women who were drowning the noise of the surf with their cheers. One man was pouring, brandy down my throat to revive me. I pushed his hand away and looked around for her. There she stood, pale, but, oh, so beau tiful yet, and looking gratitude enough out of those large black eyes to pay for death a hundred times over. ' " Do come up to the Ocean House, Room and Parlor No.. 16," she said, is her musical voice, " just as soon as you are able. I cannot thank you enough for sav ing my life ; but my dear husband, who is confined to his room with an attack of the gout, will do all that man can do to prove his gratitude to the pmgerver of his wife's life." " Oh; vrlutt a Sall was there, my country men!" Her husband l—a man with the 'gout linked to such a living angel ! I don't know what I said or did just then. I believe I asked somebody to blow my brains out. They took me to my room. I did not leave it that• night. The next day I did leave it, and left Cape May also, for ever. I dare not again look at the angelic wife of the man who had the gout. But I started citi at once for my bachelor home in the wild Adirondack's; for only in their deep solitudes could I find the peace which had ,been so fearfully disturbed by " love in the breakers!" It is in j(ist such a retreat as Hood's army has lately accomplished that a com pact and powerful body of cavalry, like that of Forest's, is able to render its best service, in protecting the rear. To this able cavalry leader, Hood is indebted on ,this occasion, for every man and every box of cartridges he bas succeeded in getting across the Tennessee. Hovering continually in the rear and upon the flanks, the cavalry select such places as are eligible for defense, generally a slight ridge, and, if possible,just in the edge of a piece of woods and there make a stand, and throw up hasty batnieades. These are-usually constructed of Ordinary rail fences, by tearing down those lines that run parallel to the road, and leaving rails upon lines, that cross it, with the up per points townie lam enemy. Dtrevity iu the road or close by the side of it, is late. allY planted a piece of artillery, raking a column that may presume to approach. Behind these slight defences three out of four of the men are posted, while the fourth holds the horses at a safe distance to the rear. The enemy ()Omount, make the same dispOsition of their horses, and advance more or lees rapidly to the as sault. When the party on -the defensive have as their object simply to gain time, they resist as long as they can do so and yet regain their horses and escape with safety. Sometimes the pursuers make a head long charge, if the works are slight,-meunt ed, and capture a part of the enemy's men before they can mount. On the part of the pawed party, this is called " sacri ficing the skirmish line." and frequently it is their only resort to keep the pursuers in check a sufficient length of time. The skirmishers know the risk they run, and accept it understandingly. An opposing battery or section is always ready to wheel into position and engage the attention of the retreating guns rand these, too, fre quently delay a few minutes too long, or are overwhelmed in a sudden onset. and captured. • When a body of infantry is about to evacuate A fortified position, the ill-starred cavalry has again to perform the last sot in the drama. With as little commotion and noise as possible they advance dismotint ed, and relieve the infantry skirmish-line, which quietly drops back to the main line, and the whole body moves off to the rear. As soon as they have attained a sufficient distance to ensure their escape, the trn9p ers begin to crawl stealthily back toward 'iheir - hOrtses; which they mount and riiie away as ' rapidly as they may. These vari ous movements often catch the quick eyes and ears of the enemy, and, suspecting the design,' they charge on the unfortunate cavalrymen and take them as they run.— Corresporvicride Cincinnati Commercial. QUI= CASE. Abu , BAD Fta.---llndoubt• edly in wars such as we haye now on hand many more such cases ca the following occur than we hear of. The Altoena Tri &isle of the Bth says : It appears that with one of the compa nies organized in this plane, (for the nine month's service,) in the manner of 1802, went Itz man who left a wife and small family. 0a the bloody field of Antietam be fell, was buried, and his wife after wards had his body disinterred ; brought home and re-interred in the soldier's lot in the cemetery.: A year afterwards she married again, and In due time a—child was born, the fruit of the second marriage. ,When the call for 50,0001, troops was being filled up, last fall, the segiond husband en listed and is now in the army. A short time since, the first husband returned, alive and well, having been taken prison er at Antietam, instead of being killed. He had been held by the rebels until the late exchange al" Savannah, ttf course, the parties are in a bad fix ; but all will agree that the soldier who was once killed, twice buried, starved two years in rebel prisons, and yet came home alive. id nee tainly entitled to bit wife " Truth is stranger than fiction " The query-is, who was buried in the cemetery I Na'to JensPy opt of ihfbt, and Oahe, JIL balance tine I:41.4141ln i,lia-United States of $910,037. Her railrola monopoly pays the expenses of her State Governmeniand hot wen n! not burdened with ./000ttaxso. El i!!1=111 11l ERIE, PA., THURSDA S .Y AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 2, 1865 How Cavalry Cover a Mint. party Tbessupd Negrilei la Waathestair. By the following extract from the pro ceeding, of a meeting held en the lflth inst., in Wiufhington, it will be seen how much the condition of the negro has been ameliorated by the aid of his philatithopio Abolition friends. Such things, under the ; shadow of the Federal Capitol, tray serve to indicate the state to which the unhappy : " freedmen " have been reduced in other. parts of the country. The National InkQi yoaeer mere than confirm! the statements made by the chairman of the meeting. Rev. William Cheening : Mr. Manning read a report setting firth tise startling and moat heart-sickening condition of these wretched outcasts under the shadow of :the National Capitol. In June last the census showed at least 30,000 colored population in this District, nearly all in the confines of this city. There are now not less than 40000. There are at least 900 families of these poor people in the city. A few of theist have been able to build shanties, paying for the misera ble ground on which to place them $25 and $3O a year. Not more than twenty five of tbeAti families pay for their hovels less than $6 per month and not more than fifty pay lee* than $5 monthly rent. The following cases are reported as those which met the visitors in every direction : An old svotcuiti on Eleventh street was found with the melting snow dripping through her hovel upon her pallet of rags. She was sick ; had buried two children ; no fire; fuel, or food, and no means to get any ; was hungry ; had begged a match to light in the night, so that the night might not seem FO long.. In another hovel near by was a mother and a babe Withoutidress. No fire, and twenty-four hours without food. A girl nine years old' witsbing'rags gathered from the mud to sell. ' A few squares 'away, Sally Clayton, daughter, and two grandchildren.,..,,i The daughter had an undressed infant, nefacod nor fuel, and in a perishing condition. AR old man, many years a preacher while in slavery, sleeps in a hovel on a board, with a stick of wood for a pillowl" no food nor fuel; "no shirt. Ws collar bone has been broken, and he cannot work. . In a s h an ty on the island were six chil dren huddled in rags together like a flock of sheep. The mother ; Mrs. Jackson, is recently dead. No food nor fuel. On 04pitol frill, in a space in a stable smaller than two stalls, are two families—. an old man. a cripple. and a girl twelve years old, with the consumption ; a your& child dying of starvation ; a sick mother less boy, and another old man ; a plank bed for the old people, and broken boards with. rags on: their, for the children ; a widow fifty years old, their only support ; rent $l2 ; no fire nor food. On Sixteenth street, a. woman ninety years old, in a stable ; nO light, no food, no fuel. When the report had been read, Mr. Channing requested Mrs. Griffin, the agent of the association, who has been laboring among those pitiable human beings some months, to express her views on the mat ter. They 'need everything. They fled from slavery, taking nothing but a few raga on their backs. Food, fuel, clothing were all equally needed, and the report stated likewise The women needed clothing. They can not get employment. People spurn them from their doors, refusing entrance to creatures half covered with filthy rags.. She spoke of the women as brave and de termined. They had come here in deco Winn. and in the face of every form of dis couragetnent had done the most of them well and many of them nobly. Their des. t ttt nr •• sea pionutlivemy gtinert. ing. A dozen and more-persona are crowd ed into a single small room. More than four-fifths of the families have no fuel. Fifty of the families are to be turned into the street-immediately for nonpayment of ren t. A man and four children *have already been thus turned out of doors, and another family, mother and three chill. dren, all barefooted. Almost t yery fami ly has a sick person . The New York Express prints, the &bare extract, and adds : , We might quote at greater length from these proceedings. We might comment upon the condition of these negroes now, and before the wir. We might state that the negroes here described are but a type of the elm all over that portion of the Southern country visited by our armies, and especially in Louisiana, on the Missis sippi end elsewhere. We might point to over 80,000 negroes destroyed in and near New paeans since th• war begun—but we forbear.—Philadelphia Aye. LINCOLN ' S RZi'LT TO a DIPLOMAT.—Lin coin is equal to any occasion, no matter how momentous. His intercourse with PO representatives of foreign nations has ittused the growth of a degree of respect for Americans hitherto unknown. Wit ness the following from the Boston Chris. eta's TVatehprn and Rettertor : About two years ago, when the Prince of Wales was soon to marry the Princess Alexandria, Queen Victoria sent a letter to each of the .Sovereigns, informing theta of her eon's betrothal, and among the rest to President Lincoln. Lord—Lyons. her Ambassador at Washington, and, who is unmarried, requested an audience of Mr. Lincoln, that he might present this im portant document in person. At the time appointed he was received at the 'White House, in company with Mr. Seward. ' "May it please your excellency," said Lord Lyons, " I hold in my hand an au tograph letter from my royal mistress, Queen Victoria, which I have been com manded to present to, your excl;illency. In it she informs you that her son, his Royal Highness, the Prince of Wales, is about to contract a matrimonial alliance with her Royal Highness, the Princess Alexandra, of Denmark." -t . After continuing in this strain for a few minutes, Lord Lyons tenderel :Abe letter to the President and awaited his' reply. It wa s s ho r t, simple and expressive, and con sisted of these worts " Lord Lyons, go f hr.it and do likewise." BLAcsvrcxas Hagan id has the following story, purporting to be original with Mr. Lincoln. It appears that before Virginia seceded ,committee of gentlemen waited upon him to see if something could not be done to avoid.the impending catastrophe: It was just after the taking of Fort Sum ter, and LinColn'a having called out 75,000 men to coerce the South. " But what would-you have me dot" said Mr. Linroln. "Mr, President," replied one- of the deputation, "I would beg you to lend me your finger and thumb' for five minutes," meaning. of course. that he wi4hed to write something that should allay the prevailing excitement. ,But ' Mr, Lin coln did-pot chore* to understand turn. •' My finger and thumb!" he repeated—" my finger and thumb I What would you do . with them 1" " Blow your acme?" The deputation retire,in disgust, and Virginia A H II Writtis forth. Otsinrer.3 The Old Straw Bed. The old straw bed--Its tlok sad rug, - In whiob har aweer-erawled e hog; It is of thee, old bed. I slag - For often la my wandering Titre' life's dull walks hare I been led, To muse spore—she old straw bed. tlo it Ns had some strange, wild &tains; On it Pre passed thro' by-gene Mosses ; .0e it rye tossed from side t 4 side, Like storm toned skip epos the tide ; For tike a furnace was my head, While dreaming on the Old straw bed. • Yet, still this bed I shall revere ; Pile when the night was dark and &rear, And I nould not before ma see, Old bed thontst prayed a friend to me And offered to me o hit repose, Wherein I might forget my woes. And whoa thou wort made up sIl tight, Ere Wilt and I would say "good night," Another . 1 bumper " we would take For "mild !sag sloe" and friendship's mike ; Then with wild fancies in my head, I'd ley me on the old straw bid. IWO it Prim Mat Monk. ; Rev. Mr. - Adams, of Philadelphia, in bis recent thanksgiving discourse, speaking of an early morning. call upon Mr. Lin, coin, made the following interesting statement: Morning came, and 1 bas ierrig my toilet, and found myself at a quiker to Rye in the waiting room of the President. I asked the usher if 41 could see Mr. Lincoln. Re said I 'could not. "But I have as engagement, to meet him this morning." "At what hour ?" "At five o'clock." "Well, sir, he ,will see you it five." I then walked to and'fro for a few minutes, and !rearing a voice as if in grave conversation, I asked the servant, "Who is talking in the next room?" "It is the; President, sir." "Is anybody with him?" "No, sir. he is raiding the Bible." "Is that his habit so ear ly in the morn ing?" "Yea; sir;lie spends every morn ing from tour o'clock to five Jn reading the Scriptures and_praving." To tiv Editor of ihs Bnftin Courier: The above extract. which f clip from an even ing .pApe * r, "puts me in minis or a story." A. few years since n somewhat distin guished pugilist resided: in this city, who had the mil( irtune of always being in debt. To relieve himself trona• his difficul ties, he got up a subscription among his pupils for a gymnasium, which in due time was erected, and at first proved quite successful, but after a while the interest in it began to fling, and the pupils were becoming fewer and fewer. In order to recuperate, and fill nis school once more, he called on several clergymen, and told them of the wonderful benefits that would accrue to their physical condition, if they took regular gymnastic exercises, and .vited them to call and see his gymna sauna, on a certain day, at nine o'clock in the morning. The clergymen went so cordingly, and on entering found our pu gilistic friend seated at s desk, at the up per end of the 611, habited in the tight costume of a gymnast, with a large Bible before him, reading aloud, and one or two pupils (who happened to be present, and lied been leLinto the joke) standing in a reverent 'attitude. After finishing the ...k.ptima u ;,,cured,she book. and looking up, appeared,' for the first" time to be aware of the presence of the clergy whom he had inAitea.. Re apologised to them; stating that it was . his ntiversal custom to read,; t chapter in the Bible every moruing before the commencement of gymnastic exercises. We need not tell the result ; the clergymen were charmed, and at once entered their names as pu pils, preached the neoessity of physical exercise, recommending the . gymnasium* to all t heir i friends, which soon gave !the professor, once more, a school full of pu pils. This was : said to have been the first time old Jack ---- ever opened the Bible. PascoctocerisrY2—A Michigan lawyer tells the following story : - Several years ago I was practicing law in one of the man. beautiful towns in Wisconsin. One very warm day, while sealed in ay olßce at work, f was interrupted by the entrance of a boy, the son of one of my elienta,who bad walked into town six miles, in a bia sing sun. for the purpose of 'procuring &- Bible. He had been told, be said, that there was a place where they gave them away to people who bad no money. He said he had no aseey, and was very anx ious to get one of the books, and asked me to gd with him to the place where they were kept. Anxious to encourage him in his early piety, I left the brief on, which I was, and went with him ever to the stand of a Presbyterian deacon, who had the much coveted books in charge. I introduced him to the deaoon;telling him the circumstances.- He preised the boy very highly; was delighted to see's, young man so early Reeking after the truth, etc., etc.; and presented him with -the best bound Bible in his collection. Hubby put it in his pocket, 'and was starting off, when the deacon acid, "Now, my son, that you 'possess what you desdred, I sup• pose you feel happy I" "Well I do, old hoes; for between you and I, I know where I can trade it for 4 plaguey good fiddle I" Church-goers in ,New York are axes died about an eccentricity perpetrated by the venerable pastor of the asiebrated "Brick Church." It appears that the so• Clef) , called a popular young preacher to act as associate pastor, and at the same time slightly curtailed the senior pastor's salarY. Whereupon the latter gentleman promptly put an advertisement in the Tana offering for sale his library and household furniture, "in lots to snit pur chasers." to meet, as he intimated, `,ls pressing exigency." Considering that the old gentleman has the reputation, of being worth more than'a hundred tbourand dol lars, and his youthful and beautiful wife is twice as wealthy, there was Odle a bob hery kicked up at 40;1 ;otiose, and the society is lOsndaiiiri by this imputation of having impoverittwi their taidiful old sitepheld. i NUMBER 362 Mazuts was Yoirtnra hiss.-1. The world estimates men by their snooem in life, and by general (sonata, moues ii evidinoe of superiority. Now, under soy eirotunstanook •s. moo a rorpotudbility you out avoid °oasis too* -with your duty to yourself and Ohm. 3. Base all your actions, upoa a prinni. pie of right ; preserve year of ehantatar, and in doing this, never rookott. tha cost. 4. Remember that *Alf-interest is more likely to warp your judgment thanall other clirotunstanoes,oonsbined ; therefore look well to your duty, when your inter est is ooncierned., 5. Never auks mousy at the expense of your reputation. 6. Be neither Wish nor niggardly ;• of the two, avoid the latter. A Ibsen into s universally despised, but public, favor is , a steppingstone to preferment; therefore, srenerous'feelings should be cultivated. 7. Sty hut littisp:—think much, and do more. 8. Let your expenses be snob as to leave, s balsnoe in your pocket. - Read; money is a friend in need: ' 9. Seep. clear of the law ; for even if you gain your case, you are geoaratly a. loser. . 10. ♦void borrowing and lending. 11. Winu4rinking and smoking cigars are bad habits; they impair the mind and lead to a waste of time. 2 . 'Never relate your vnialortunee, and never grieve oVer what ,yott . einnot help or cannot prevent. "Wentraittwo Ja,stie. "—ln the place known as the "upper eri i .: o" or my county there resides a Sohn:R---. This title he.has gained irOm the fact that he always talks (even in common conversa tion) like a major general on parade, or, to use the common expression, "like ea if he was raised in - a mill." This gentleman. who, , by the way, is "one of them," m