Carlisle herald. (Carlisle, Pa.) 1845-1881, August 26, 1857, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    •
. , • . • ..., __ _ _ ... ...... ,
,_ ._. ,_ _ . _ -_,_-__ .... ___ . • ~. . ..
. • .
-•• • • .
• • . . " , .... . . . . . .. . . . . . . . .
, . . . .
.
. ' . 1 , • ,- - ~...
. .. .
. .
• •
' .. . ' : 1' -• • .
" ..- .....„ .
, . ,
fr•
'
ffg - 4 % .:, - - ''.- , Y .. V . - ,P: . .11 • ' -. ....."••• , : t. , ' ' , .-4 ,, ,1 • • -- -7.-_: - . ,' ,I: .., ,;•-. ---• ,-': ~ •,.' -. • ' ..,...., -... •-•' - .
_. ~. ~.,.
4 !.81. , .7Y-,. : .'. ,-,..T. , - i , , ,7 ...',. -, . , .' --- ..tx , . , - 1. • - • -: - ;. - .; , _„ ...._ ,
.... .. A
= . •
. m .. -.;.. ' . , -
~.4
;; ,, r,,:,,,,_• .
~,
~,,
, ;„;7:.
.. 1
~
~ ,
~.=
f• ,
.: • , ;• , .
~ ; . . , 2. , 4. ;.., ~, `.+• 1 , - . .:,:—.!. 0 .-•••.•".,5i. , , " 1 "s l: -.“' ''' ",
"'' .. : . . ..• ~*-- . 1 : - „Ele . l - 1 ~,,, • .. - 1.4_ , ... ; ;0: „„ i- ".i."1 ,, ,q _,-,:-,-., , ;,.• -,. ~;.; • - __, , ' ',. :4'i -
. —. .... • . . - . ..• --..- . • - • ..... • --_-. _.. • 1 ... —-- -,-, = .L , N=.- •
• ..- - W : ' 111 - 11 - ' ~...- _-.-,__'.'"'" •• . • ...„, --, ,: .. 7 - ' , -r - - -- ' ,, ,?..Et. •• "-
' L . .._- - -.. =- :' ' ..- .' ''...--."4 .., '- . - , i. ' i . ~
-..77,1. ,...'. L' : , .L. , ...7 7 .11-,.. , f. - - • , - ,:j .f." . ..-i ,
_,..1.,.... -
' • -----7- '. " ' ' • ~`'•'=---='' '.: . ' -4-- F- ' ;i.".- -, . ' - -- = = - 7 - „„ , ;:, . . ,•.,
.-,.
, L,.._,,,_
• '.- ---, " 1 :71 - - ' . -- . .k.1.-- 7 ..;.- • • -=='' - - . .=---;=-•-: . { 7..2.7. - f---.. -..' ' S.= -'•! ,-- •7.:77; _...'...:.-_,..,e-NAfg , '"'lf:-.---.---..-i.,;.-'---..-1-, - ..--' ~
' '''J -. ...'•7 - (.., %. } , 4 . - - -„.7 ..,._. . ...,-7-7-,,_„: ~-.,, .. ~,,_:„..,,_.,„„., 7- ~ ._,...., , ' 7 -.7 - ?; - _ , -••.: ' •
. 471 ,
-,. •'. , :z •, ' • .1:00c ,•.. r ._ . •• _---•-_,,‘ . T ...1.4 11 , 4 , 0 _ .__ : ______ 7 __ . - .
~,: „ ,„_,,,,,_,4 .. , 7 k gs - - - . •.• : „•,•...,-....t_-_± - _-•_,
..:.;•_,..
,_..L_______
..
. -
.„-=.-- ,-.• --.7„:... k - 7-, :•. :- : ,•• •_L E - ••-d.„. • ...-, •, :0\ orn -._ _ . •
_..._
• .- : • ...)- •-•• . .-. : . - .... . • 1 - -:,--,..
- ' - -- .-- - • - -- - x iz,--- f ___,..„ : „- - ---7 4 ,.. -- 17 ..,,-.... ..-...-7 -- "a - :L=q - ::- , t...4,.-7,. ...". - .. , ;•.: -- - - -.. ,- -.2-" , .. ..,;.•-,''
4..: 44 .,,Zr . *: :• ,-_ -'_..;.,_-1.., . .f_.L'-.,-•-=.' ' ..-_--,--, • - -..,_....-.-
' _ .__ -- .... - - • • •
=
. . .
.• . •-•
-...
~. .. , . , - ... . . - .
. . . ~. . , .
. . .
E
VOL. INTL
EDITED AND PU131.1 E
FOR . TIIE,, PROF . RIEIt
DTI' iVILId A k,pl7-POICT
TERMS OP PUBLICATION
• . Ohl cradle ninon thy kryle, momma „
Tho CAMABLE pubilshed weehly 1111 a- jargo
And sing tau the holy.Xtrain,
sheet Ontalnlin; twontj , 11141 ii colUitins, and furidt•heu
' to subtrerlidirs at Al.fitt .If paid strli•tly In advance ; That sooth'd too last,'as you fondlYprest •
43..75 I( paid within the year; or ts 2 In all rases whim . My glowli4 amok tn'yourXoft white heitst,
payment is delayed until aft,,r the eiplratlo 1 of the Fort pawn : Benno when Laluinbeind last
year. Nix subiictiptionH receivettfor3 lens. parlod than
• . • six months, add none discontinued until arroarages -,That fain ; would soR again. • • •. .
aro paid, unless•at the option of iho publisher. -Papers .
sent-to.aubserlhees. lirlut;_opt of Cumberland county And mile ati you then did
_. must - ho paid for' In advance, or the pliyutent assumed • _
eOn FORM respTifiXiblo Chet~ diAilfPOPl • .._ •
ty. Theito:tollits will 'he 'rigid ly •,Pdhered to In all Then, fix op cue thy glist ; ning-eyo, .•
'cases. ' . - I And goon. and pavo, 4311 tho tour be dry
•
A D VE WtISEIK,N, NTS,
Advertisements will be charged $l.OO per srMare of
twelve tines ,
Insertions, and '25 cents for verb
sub Sequent inserllon.. All advertisements. of less time
twelve lines comlderod ne.si square.
• Advertisentehislimet befilre Marriages and deuthe
S rents periline o,r first insertion. and 4 cents per Ilne
forsubseinuent. LonertlonA, Conninuinkitions on sub.
errs on Heated or lodiviiinal interest will be 'eliarged
6 coots per Into, The Proprietor •vrill not be respousl
bla in dame re,, ca , orroili ill ailierfisemonts,
uotli , es or An, tinges not eueedlortiiie llnes r wlil'be
Inserted Widlutif
JOB PRINTING
The Carlisle Herald JUR PRINTING OFFICE is . tho
largest nod Ili , in cemniete est ablisliment in the Font; ty.
Three• goal Presses. and a general at material
■uiL i Mr main end Fltnev cork of ovary kind ;ath,
us to do Jot. Printing at tint shortest notion and a, the
most. reasonable tnikls.. Persons An want of Bills,
Blanks Or nAythinglu the Jobbing line, mill find it to
their interest to give us a mil, Every variutfor Blanks
ionstantil; on hand.
.41enc - rafAuttl Coca aiirormation
'U. S. OOVLItNMIINT
--PITS Id OP - BUCIiA ri A N•
Vice PreSlthrnt--.IOIIN C. ItItECKMIDOE,
Secretary of 6trae—Uen. LLWI9 CASs.
Semi-:try of interlor—JACOß THOMPSON.
Secretairy of Treasury—flow•=LL COM
- ..Secretory of Wer.-.-Joum ii. ELOTO.
Secretary of Nevp—liAAo Tof emir. _
- _Yost Master Goneral—A. V.9lnotyN. .` • •
Attornoy 0.0r111—AI1.:REMI II S. SLACK.
ChlefJustlee of the - thifte4 States-11,, 11. TANLi,...
S'rITET - GIOVERNMEN
•
00Yernor—JAMEN POLLOZ:6.
-
Bocretnry ultitate--Aziunii 0. CURTIN.
11urveyor Goninul—JAUOLl Jai
Auditor liotieral—Joiiii Rowe. • .
Treasurer--illiistor S.
•
Judges ot thu iri,upreind Cuurt —H. Lewis, .1. DI- ARM.
ISTEONO, IY. R. Lowitui C. KNOX.
COUNTY OFFICERS
. .
' Wee!dent Judge , —lion. James It. Graham.
..!kee....clete Judges—Ron. Mi cha e l Vpeklim RIIIIIIO
-.-. .
District. Attorney Wm. .7. 'Shearer, • •
Prethonutary Daniel K. Noell, -- - ..
— Recorder 6c,—John M. Gregg.- .
Register—William-140 . o. --• ,
the, Finder—Jacob Bowmen: Deputy, J. Hemming
er.
•
County Tronsuiii - Ailim SoOsonutu., _ _.„ ••
Coroner 311101311 McClellan. •
County (..onunissloners—George M. Graham, Wllliarn
31.1,toudorsofi, Androw . Kerr. Clork Counnission , .oll.,
leheill _
Diroctors of tho Pooleorga Brindle, John C.
Brown, Samna! Trltt..Superlutondont of Poor Mous,
—Joisoph Lobnch.
80R611,111 OFFICERS
Chief Burgess— Robeii irviiiejr.
.Assistant nurgess—george Ilundri.
.Towt, Coumil—J. 11. Pariter (I'resideut), Job. G ut
sitall, Jamgn4allio;ary.P afl lie Ge.rtin4r, tizunuel 21Arr.
tin, Peter .lonyer, 62nnu'el Retool, .1. D. lltabtri,JtaMi
Clinic to ('`,tiliir,4l7:=Airtif."ll7 - Iraittil: — " -
Constables—John Iliatt" Colustablo; Robert
IfcCartno,), %Vara Countable., . •
cllUllclllsS,
"7Virst Presbyterian Church, Northwest angle of Con
try Square. Roy. Conway P. Wing l'aslor.—zorvices
ever; Sunday Morning at 11 o'clock, A. M., and 7 o'clock
P. M. -
Sacoud Presbyterian Church, corner of Son th auoi•er
and Poul rut st, °ctn. Rev. Mr galls, Pastor. services
commonce at I lo'dock, A. M., and 7 o'clock C. Al.
. St. John's L. (Prot. T.l,lncopal) northeunt angle of
. .
Centro Square. Ito v..i.tcon ii. Mumr, Rector, 6urvices
at 11 o'clock A: M., and .5 - o'clock, P. M.
_E ,
inalsklutberanurell, nodford_but.een Blain
and &ruiner n 1...
attOist.S. Rev. Jacob,Fry, Painia. San let's
at 11 old oil: A. M., and 7 o'clock P. M. •
' ''German lteforolcd Chun*, Loutlier, liatwoon Ilan;
over and PM ntleets. 11ev, A.. 11. Kromer, Pastor.—
Services at o'clock A. 1,1,..aud U%o'clock V. M..
Methudint . E. ~ 11:urch, (Mat charge) coTher of Main and
_Pitt ) . .4 1. me ts.. t‘lininbers,..e.atte.r._PerYikelll4l,
. aril
' 11 o'clock A. M. it M.
Methodist 1.. Church tsecOnd charge.) Hey. Thomas
Daugherty, Pastor. Services In College Chapel, at 11
o'cick A. 31. and 4 - o'clock, M.
. Roman Catholic Chureli, Pomfret near Ella street.
ltev. James Itamtt..Pastor. Services on the 2nd Sun
day tol coils month.
(Jarman Lutheran Church corner of Pomfret and
Beam d streets. her. 1. V. Naschold, Vaster. Service
'at 1tt3,,, A. .11.
4,1 ti hen clot urea in the above are necessary the
prunet' pstlitollb use requested Di u' thy Us.
111C1iiNSUN COLLEGE
Ilev Clewles Celli., President and Professor 0
• - •
,
. . . . . .
hov. h moan AL. Johnson. Profeasor of Philosophy
mkt huglinh Literature.
Jame:, N, :klariMull..M. lessor of Am:lent Languages.
11ev. Gals H. TULuy, l'reesaor of Slathematica.
Witham C. G IL ma, I rolosor of Natural. B.Jonee and
'orator GI 'i.e M tit quru.
. Aiosuoder Echelli, I rotegsor of Hebrew and Moduli.
Languu b m .
batnuoi L. Gillman ' PrMelpl? of tha Grammar School.
James a', Alm bhult..aasialaut in AM Grammar School.
BOAI:D OF kllOOl, DIRECTORS
Andrew - lilair - Preshleut, 11. :- .ixtoO, I'. Quigley, E.
--tl'. hLy,—TrenxumrJo~n Sphtu; bluseenger. - 151047,,1i
thu lxt Monday of each Mouth at 8 o'clock A. M. at lid•
tication Hull..
aORPORATIONS
CARLISLE Derosir BANR.—ProEiden', Richard Parker,
# W.Seeteut; Clerks, J. V, !Lasko, N. C. Ales
saintau,C.,AV: Rood, Directors, Richard s'artior.John Zug
Hugh Sttuturt, Thomas I xton, U. C. t 1 tag-Ward. Itobort
!doom,. John Sand°;son, a Jury Logan. NUMMI Duerr
CDMMILLAND VALLEY ILAILIIROAD COAIDAN Y.—Yroximiat,
Prod°. iek Watts, Sorretaty and Treasurer, Edward:W.
Diddle; Superintendent. 0. N. Lull. Pussunger train'
twice a day. Fistward 'Gay log Carlisle at 5.3.1 o'clock
` A. Al. and 6,10 o'clock P. Af. Two trains every. day
Westward, leaving Carlisle at 1:0,110 o'clock A, Al., aim
2.20 P. Ali
CARLISLE 11A§ AND WiersitCosteadv.—Prcsidont, prod.
aria Watts; Secretary, Lemuel Todd; Treasurer, Win.
Al. Baotou; Directors, F. Watts, hiehard.Parkor r Lawn.
or Todd, ‘‘ Al. Bootenr-br. W. W. lado; Franklin ,
Gardner, llonry Glass and D. Al;
CUM/MUDD VALLEY lissit.—Prsidont, John S. titer
sett; Cashier, IL A. Sturgeon; Taller, Jos. U. ItolTur.—
Directors, John.S. Morcott, Gm. Her, Atelobuir Drone.
man, Itiohard Woods, John C. Dunlap, rebt. C. Matfett,
H. A. Sturgeon, and Captain John Dunlap. ",
SOCIETIES.'
Ocuut,erlaud star Lodge 'No. , 1111; A. Y. M.' meets' at
Marlon Hall on thu 2ud and ith Tuesdays of ovary
St. Johns hodda'No 200 A. Y, M. Meats T/otist
day of each raouth, at Harlon IlalL . -
Carnal. lAidge No 01 1. 0. of U. F. . Moeda Monday - .
stoning, ht•Trouta building. , ' -
UNION. TIME. LOMPANY,
onomuzsp
•
• •
, ) 'PRESENT cintridgits.L
PdestdafT—EJooßNMAN.' ••' .
.' "Vacs I'ares.—BAIIULL , WICTZEtiegu;• •
•Sccurrany-:-41,5.X. If. •
'. •
_.'Teunuara-I'I4TSICAONYES.'•• :.• •
'Meet ,tluy first Saturday, to Blarcb,Juun, SeStambor,
sadpeceth!ler. r ,
=M2MI
• ,
'Postage on all letters of Oriel - lilt Mince Urlght or tai l
der; a tante 'per paid, asap; to CpWcpila or Oregon k
which. 1010 copes prevent,' ;,'-,' . • :, ;,- . e. •
Postage ou. the ...lterailli'—witliln„ Or initial , free,
Within•theptate 13.centa per year. Toasty pint of lite
'hatted titan. %a relit& •.. rootage on all trebelert pane,*
under ii ounceii• in •wcight,. J. cent pre.paiti or We refits
Unpaid;? Adrelifsed lefties. to.be cliarged.hitli thensost
of advertising. - ,—,- ..; t i.e-: ',...:,,,,,,,. e;••• ,' ~. J :, i
14'4,G 013,4!15, 'I)U
• • -'.'
ityd,
'ruin: . ' .
• , . ' • ":
.A 2U9 .oi*- 7( ;:.."2: ** " . ".
• .
rt r .
heirroc - nuFgantlydAilg nu s g
Till sun lull mu fnst asleep:
For 1 drenned n honvenly dream, mammal
While aluraboring on thy 1.116 e,
And I liv'd Inn Infid whore forme drvlrie '
Tu kingdoms of glory Oterrially shine, 4 ;_; , , , .;
And the wilrld give, If the world worn mien,
Again that Rand to Beo.
I fancied we ramie,' in a 400 d, 111111111:1121,
And wo rested, no under , n bough; • '
Thou near tee a Initterliy flaunted In pride,
And I rimed It away through the forest wide,
And the night none on, and Iloet-ray guide,
And I know pup whet to'do. '
My heart grew'slck with fear, mamma, '
And I homily wept for thee; •
lint a White roh'd maiden appeared in the air
And she flung back the Curls of her golden hair', 7—
And - she kissed me softly ore I was arritie,
Bnying, Come, pretty babe, with me I"
My tears and foare she mamma,
And eke led me far away;
We entered the door of the dark ,dark tomb
We passed through tha long, long vault of gipom,
Then opened our eyes on the land of bloom, -
Andw sky of endless
And berranly forms were thorn, mamma,
And lovely cherubs bright;
They emil'd whettl,hey ertu-tno, but Tye!. !liened,
And wonderinginround ;no 1 - gaz'd and gnz'd;
-And'eunge'Theard, and eufitiylienerblei'd= --- .
All glorious In the land of light. ' '
nut noon came a shilling throng, mamma;
Of white-wingldhaben to me;
Their eyes look'd love, and thOir swot:4olns smil'd,
Aild they marred to meet will an carth-born child
And tf.ey gloried that - Lfrom the earth was nailed, .
Hen; love,hlost shalt thou be."
Then I rui.ed with the hrayeoly tiro mamma,
NVitit cherub and seraphim fair; •
And I saw as I roate'd the regions of peAre,_
ThnsPirits whirh.camu &OM this world of distress,
And there wat , ,,tha Joy no tonguo'eau express, •
For they knew.no sorrow there. •
I1o•yr ti mind teflon sister Jane, mamma,
. Lay dead a short time agono-7 ,
OW you geed MI the tail, but lovely winch,
With ii full flood of woe you could not check; .
Mid lour heart wan no surn) you,winhod It would break"
Hut it fora , and you, aye, col b'd zm I.
Ifut;6l.l! had you horn with me, mamma;
•
In the roalmv of unknown care,
And coon, what I saw, you ne'ar had cried,
Though they Undo!! pretty Jane In tho grave when
she diul ;
For shining with the blest; anti ailoru'd like a bride,:.
Sweet sister Jstio wax there! .
Dn on mind of thnt_ollt o.l.s!_menbipamma,_
Who came late to our door,
And the night was dark, and the tempest loud,
And his heart was weak, but his soul was proud,
Arid his'ragged old mantle serv'd fur his shroud,
Ere the midnight Watch was o'er i
Ansk,tbink what a weight of woo, mamma,
14fIle heavy each long.drawn sigh,
As the good 014 man sat on papa's old chair,
While the rain drlp'd down from his thin grey hair,
And fast as ihe . bg tears of speechless care'
hail down from his glasitteoye—
• Ala think what a hoaveuward look, mamma,
-- Flashedihrougllfeash - trombllng
AB he told how he went to the baron's stronghold,
Saying, "Ch I lot me In, for tho night Ss so cold;"
I
But the rich man cried, "go sleep in the wold,
I For wo shield uo beggars hero."
Weill he was In glory too, mamma,
As happy as Me blest can be;
Ho needed no aims lu the mansions of light, '
For he at will; the patriarchs, cloth'd In white
And thee was not a seraph had a crown more Might,
• Nor a costlier-robe than he.
r Now slug, for I fain would 'sleep, mamma,
And dream as I dreru'd before;
For sound was my slumber, and sweet my Test, •
While my spirit in tho kingdom of life was a guest,
And the heart that has throbb'd in the climes of the
blest;
Can fore this world no more.
A BATCII.O/ SEA PUNEI. 7 ' Talking of oon
uuudrums,' soya old HUrricane, airetobing
himself all over Social Hall nod Bending out
one of thoSe mislay puffs of Havana smoke
which bad given him his same ' ono stay of
you tell me when tv ship may be said to be in
love 1'
anti jell,l.cep,. l epappgd.eut
tie., qt'e when she wants to'be•mnnned.
Just ntiraeti It,' quoth ()Id Hurricano,• • by
a toile. • Try again. Who quake „prat ?,
do, t eoondly,' 'answered Lemolic Il'a
11,11 she wants a mate.'
Not oorreet l " r i eplied - ifurrioane. 'The
question iu Still open.' . 7
•
When sho'S a eliirof rent (aighe)
urodestly propounded Mr: StuOothly:
'When . she's tender to a man-of-war, said the
Colonel, regarding the reflection of his face in
his boot'.
Everything but ot.rrent,' responded Burr
ottee.-
• When she's - Struck back,by a heavy swell,
Suggested Starlight. ' ;
• Not. as M r ' replied
. Harriea e. • cote°
hutry'along.'
IVhen she Makes much of a fast tailor ? ' cried
Smaelquipae.,.. . ,
Here there : l4e a 'rent 'groan and Smooth'
pipie'irea titre - am out of the window.--Wette
peout , weefeetet:otl, old Hurricane 'propelled'
: you might have said; `,when atm imp ttie
niud,' or 'when she rims tiown after * otosaki:'
or •whoa ahe's ,afker a ooneort,'. •or,..emnigOing
of thotoort. But It wouhlu't have been right s
real tqtaah!ta tos
•
etory ie . told of n: grave divine
hut,loog ein"O`e; who awoke from
a , ,
99.1ofertble loop in hie ohair, and diet' Oveied
hie ottih!ble Wlproste in the.performatioe of an
'neY l o' which Otif.'s(lerey oncelowle..ooliargo
pl h;tj 1A . 11 , 6. to •ihu Stato--in other worde;•
uiehdi„K bid pwitrtl4o6, si love :
it fOts', .hteheelthnxi effeoie& Wm' he
'
rye,hubru;ufia eori tar S" t'
wee 1/1114t- 1 11.11. ouvor nhy rsecnshlowaO,
Whilo the 4usberldmeo'Bieev..
jeolfirik6Ai't(iti't*Sl' •
~43. t.
TM.; '
TIIu'INFANT'B DREAM
•
CARLISLE;_ ,WEDIV,EBAtiI, _Atta-"tinil to,
THRILLING ROMANCE ;LIMB
Some of our • rendera . may : remember that :•
some years ago when Mario, the Italian opera
.inger•wan t his2coun try, - he papers contain
nil allusions to amisterioue lady, who: alWaya , •
occupied an Opera box alone,, when Merio'.wno
rn sing .; following him.from city 'to city., ne
he made his tour throughout the Slates,
even to Havanna. She ,wait said' to he no
Englialt_loldy of wealth tint! rank,
_and_pretty c iutd : influenced-by a romaotie pas
Moo for Mario, that ehe could,not control..
___But,the-hints-in-Tegard-toLthelady,-wero.so-.
vague;.thet many persons disbelieved thiiin nl
togCther, while others thought' it aruse,to exy
eau, an interest in the' eri;ra. Iler recent
death at Parie t , by att ..: accident haS.revived
the subject, and put tia in possession of • many
new. and interesting facts connected with this
chapter of RomMice.•Thrifollowini, is a trans- .
lotion from a French paper:—Ed.47eiald. 7.
.Death 'of Miss. **'*.
Believed to Se the famotte Coittte, of Norio
Memory
The habitUnl frequenterr(at tho Theatre Ita
lian; at Paris„will no doubt remember an Ett
glieh girl, still young and pretty, whose regu
lar featureit, expressi4countenance. and phy
siognomy full of melancholy and tenderness;
Would all have been taken,att extremely charm
ing, had it not been for the extraordinary. and
deadly paleness which distinguished her: Her .
paleness vias - ,:iti facti-of -Bubb's& strange-cher-,
acter,lhat this lady might have , been taken
forthe heroine of acme legend, 'or even foithe
corpse of a departed bride: This'young lady,
possessed with immense riches'', and always'
dressed with exquisite
~taste and. eleganke,
_generatly_occupied. the-same-box-at-the-operar'
and - tint alone a! ‘ ways in the same place, on a
front teat ,, in tle4 bbles,'ln the tier of boxeS
just underneath , the Emperor's loge. This fa-.
dy has just met, with her death ,at Paris, in
consequence of a horrible accident, which, we
regicide say, bas become Of eery - finquent oa r
cnicence withindhe pastlftriv years. The fol
lowing aro the circumstances of this melan
choly affair:—
The lady, in question had, some ,veare ago,
conceived 414olerit pnesibn,for Mario, the te
nor singer. Her love; though purelyn.'pletoit ;
to love . , was-not the,latcpaueionate nor peree-
Tering. It originated, as followl
,'Ono night,
site 1311 W in a dream, a Intudsome.:yetng man;
'who appeared before her. As hive only at
leeks those who - are amorous and dinVosed to .
Miso * 4 **; an 0 matter of course, and in
obedience to the *Wee of her conscience,
fell immediately in love with this image of
'Alai site had dreamed. On awakening next
morning, the image of the handsome young
I wan whom she had seen in her dream; was in
; eesaantly before her eyes. .•
SIM pontemplate&witli ecstacy the imngina.
ry-figtirehe - couVereed - With - it-iiitiddrit'oPri?:-
ing eier mouth to• give utterance to wordi,
she addressed to Weffusions 'of idieutinovt elo
quence, vhich were stamped with
.marks of
wit and dietioguished by sentiment, flowing
from an ardent imagination and a sensitive
heart She, in feet en completely gave reali
ty to -this vision of a drearndhat she Wits fully
pereuatitiddhat what ehe eaw was a sort of
heavenly advertisement to her, and that ehe
idemical being whom she 'bad seen 'in lier
ilream_really_exiateddind vrould some-time-or—
other be t and by her. .So, indeed, it turned
out; for one day / at London, 'at the Opera
House, ittuondthe perfortners, she discovered ,
the tenor ninger, thesery person whim_
as a visionary image, she bad seen in her
dream. It was
.himeelf, and no mistake.
It was beyond all doubt the handsome youth
she loved, and whom ebe.y eair every
night in her dreamy. At eight of Lim her
heart was violently agitated ; here was the
very man with whomshe was already in love
befOre T ahe hadaeos him. But when she heard
him sing, her feelings were raised to the
highest pitch: She was literally intoxicated
by the vibration of his voice, with which her
soul entertained the strongest sympathy, and
it seemed to her that ihey ascended up from
the deepest receescs of his soul, lending a
charm to the musk which it was itoposaible to,
describe. From that day forth her fate was '
decided. • She' was eenalble however, that the
love she bad coneeived waehopelies, and that
it would,,tm necessary for her to keep it 'a lie
oret, wholly confined within her own hreast;
orltlisif** -44 -underwent--
an entire change. • Before, am had been re
markable for great simplicity in her .manner
of living; but now the determined •to live en
tirely alone. But she did not live buried in a •
solitary retreat ; en. the contrary, she saw'
ciiinpany andviiited the - Opera. From the .
time wii'en, elm first resolved to lire" alone, she
became of extraordinary paleness. 'lt seemed
Heir all her blood bud left the surface and
flowed hack to the heart, in Crderthat it might
beat wore vehemently for Mario. • -
From the day that Miss ' **** saw.. Mario
for the first time in ler lifeviaben she meg. s •
nixed in•fiini:the being she had seen 'in her
dreains,Jiitsalwilys lived by herifelf,'and alone.-
She has neisceioken a single Word to Mario;
ist,whmieieint any time he bet out fok any
other country,; she would set taft'for the slime
place too On •one occasion, 'Mario went to
St.. Petersburg ; whon he arrived there,,-the
first pereori•he saw inlhe dress' circle;
front Of the stage; was Mies ****.'
went to Madrid; ho found Miss *it**. at. W. 1.:"
•rid.• . When he went - to:America, 'Midi 4***
ahettered-a;ship , ead followed hlm,toAmeriee„
end'elte alwaya arrived' theta in . tinie• te' lie'
present lit the fmat performanee'in
ria appeared: , Whether it4tie at Lea . (leire 7 r* , '
at Paris, oritheraverit might, be t 'that Maria
ehogjiheie clhe -
, young Ttiglieh girl might
neep,ohve-fretit tioi; or in the dress
.
She.haiiievir spoken a•word ta-Marl9;
Idaria•knoira her: haa had 's
sort of vrasg r -'"
oetteptiwer aad.ikotioii, upon him.', he spark
whioli.darted fortb.free3 her tell::viermly'uliork
him. lie' Welll 'notlir 164'10th liar; It'is' trim;
t;ut ho felt ai nireot; ' doff ' iuflueace operating
upon•liite; .Ithieh iniitnnted ,frein her.. - The'
piercing look of the veiled 'eyes of 'lLe' pale
enoie'd ;prociileed tt • etrolig;inipivieliin:;'
upon hid=feeliuse and simietrOes'eveh 410110
Ag's,ieh'fide:gi* . ir O td
slog fu ouch o eliylo URA() t flut
t -,
.il 71. f 111 . ' L
It was °nee'told to tress oix,
itielq;a'r'oiatid ,
(two, per-'
Sans' ;nipposed to: haye been 'ensmotod each
'other;) had 'an' lritet:view. which` lasted.. s two
hours. crieti: the Ditte,hess, "An
interview of two ba4ro;tig'f,.lnever can
hove itpoesible for any 'womakte .remain two
w e ong.hourb alone, in pr te / ooyeeree ,
tion .with,theeams,mani anleetilkloy,inith keep'
es'ying,td.iMe - Miather,thetuinittltiagover and
have bei a. ails to, believiiiitiaaio4 at a die
taritle,,this magneiid concentration of the heart
npo•iine itithi#ilsret
ed theatre? We beg leave-W4M it.,
Xie day, when, the oeletrattd'' singer. took.
hist benefit at the Theatre great
and festiyol.tiay with Ittiee• 3l4 *. . When the
time come to go to the theatre, she: dressed
herself alone in 'net , orn-rooin; there she wa•
quite ready .end_ on , the point of starting
ForZitq puiposii, however, of seeing better
how also looked, and to judge of the eifeci of
her toilet, she. placed the canillsat.ick .with the .
lighted candle in; it, on P chair iu front if.•the
till hmking•glass a so se to ese herself thnrongli
ly in the pis. Ae She turned herinfit.round and
round, first to see lieracif on'ono side then on
the otherdier - fa bowing : gown ,Of "light thin"
muslin swept by the oandle--,it milyjust mere-
ly'tduched it—and in the twinkling, of an eye
' filist!'t**was involopc,l'in flatnes. Bite' did
not; hoWever; lose her, presenco l of mind. Any
• strong passion: filling the_mind„Aomnintlicates
great solfcommend and,nerve, - togathepwitli
. great courageousness, in everything that'does
not belong to that great passiod . .
So it was with.Mieti****., She immediately
Ibsen , herself upon her bed; whinh ; woe in Abe
. room, with_thalntentiont.of„wraPping4terielf„
Op in the "qounterpone•of the bed, and in this
manned:smother the il , itncs. : .Sttkit utifortu-'
!lately happened flint the chambermaid lied
arid three muslin dresses on the fispof ilie bed
whioh ha just heen liroisght.: home I,y the'
matiluarti - liker ThOfireiu COnss_quedce spread
with wonderful :rapiditi fr,oin her dress to
these dresses, and 'the martiiuntitenrealtire
wits soon enolos,ed in the millet of'a vorittible
fiercely •burning furnace, She serititue'd loudly
for help, but before any ono could come to her
asnistauce, it wan already too:lat. ----: •
' Though Miss*:***suffered the most cruel
torture in consequence of this terrible casu
alty, yet in' the dreadful 'condition l,
; 'tit 'wit le
she was,'she obstinately anti CoUrageously re
fused 'all medical desistance. She' klldW.tll.at .
she was lost, and-that there' woCo i no'hopeit'Of
ber life, and she was,' their:fort', unwilling
to iidmit of itedionl efforts end attention Which
could tend to no other result than that of'pro- •
lunging her misers. A few dage after the
fatal even , sits died, pressing to..hsr• lips as
r
she breathed htirlast,:a letter tEle.- 4 ;' . -., rose
colored paper.. .. .-. • , . , :;-", • ' .'
'
was att
'll leer fron, ltisrikWho rote ' to
her fur once only. fie had nave/ written to.
her before. It was not a love letter,. but one
conceived in terms of the highest respect, ex
pressing hie gratitude to . Iter , for the marks of
approbation and applatise which she had pub
licly exhibited at hia•performitnee, and thank
ing.her at , the. seine time for the bouquet
which one everti,litg_shq. bad thrown towards
hits, on-an occasion when he . appe , ired . in a
'new character.
- Such - wits the - mournful teraffnation
romance, so full of melancholy and of poetry
It might have terminated less horribly ; but
Mins*,**was doomed to die; her romance
the ch2racter of romiwee. Ittcharison'ind
Bernard de St. Pierre were solicited by baud
some women, from all parte of the world;to lot
CI arrisva Halowl and Paul and Virginia live.
They would not terminate 'their romances
otherwise, for they knew that the most ! beauti
ful Hewers are always carried away .by the
winds, after they have suffered from the air,or
from the sun.or from thy attacks of insects.—
Translated for the New York Herald from the
Journal du Havre, June ' .
A MINISITZR NONPLUSSID.—The Ref. Mai
then-U ilkes ins once passing through one of
the crowded etrems.of London,.when he heard .
a sermon, who found great difficulty in get
tiug his vehicle along, owitirto fbe numerous
obstructions he met with, oursing{and swede
big at a tremendous rate". He quietly went
.up Acilthe offend et . „and-tapplog E btin : gently -on
_
the said to him:
Ah! for that curilug and swearing, of
which - you have been guilty, I will appear a
witness againet you on that great day,! , :djudg.. ,
ment I"
"06, yes," eati4 the carman- to bin clerical
rebuter, " the biggest rogue. always turns
State's eridence.P . • '
The inioloter, in relating thiaaneodoto to hie
friends, owned that this auswerso completely
nonplussed' him, that he we. obliged' to walk
off without allying a word in reply.
Sgt.. Have you "got a eieter t
and cheridilww• with a. holy friendship.—Ez:-
V=
`lf you havn't got Any Oeter of..joer eiro,
take . eonae other fellerVeieter; ;and It:lre her.
The effect le juetie good, uoinetimes hetter.—
N. : , . •
no sin,Agaias,ou! mother tongue
to use:wordo not to. be found in the diotion;,
arise, provided , nesoileary, 'arid 'ilia
not utafflutaotOred Varbaropely. Every word
moat bova•badli'6ginn'ingl'and if our t fathere
bad no brientlia gietni we should biiva bad .
no, lauguege:
. . , _
Agir - TPhildsop4ers's,y,4shat , the
'eysikinakes thellearlog more soots.. A wag.
iuggester that this idOtints for so molly cloud
• • •
hearts In oloatir'bonda .
/sn'hipnineaa irar tpth'ikantt:abinniotiantfer:•
ttgrrira tar stranger liiike than comnionArya:
.'o 7 l l (sP4i.7—Pie , Deir -01 :174 1, 4vertjefot has. dis•
Aquit 44:31bipictlie.larep,ettite. tire
a nuisa.nee; the bird looks like'ireareierlrigeow
oiii. - yartque, : neir,welitirjbeerhif Nem bdt
theßo,heAl inico , el4 , l l,ikti*Ar,,Pv4e(; - de eine 1,0?.
one met. -
XlO6l.
DIUDOLD GRANDMOTHER.
".Blessed be' the 'children who have tin . old.
.
fitebioned.- grand Mather 'Aa they'llepe for
length'of daye:let them - love and honor • her,
for,. we can tell them they will never find an
other.
There Is a large old kitchen somewhere in
the : l:last; tind Su old-fashioned 6re-placethere
-41, with, its smooth old jambe of stoni--smooth
. • •
with. many knives that htid • been' sharpened
th - Si . C. — There ,are and , :if
irons, with' rings in the top, whereql 'Fnitny
temples of 'flame ii.4.4en, buillied, with '
Pp crow
spine at d turrets of °Amon. ' There Je a
broad, worn hearth, by feet 'that have been.
blifn awd bleeding by themay, or been, made
beautiftil," and walked upon iloors - of tease
lated gold.. There' are tongs in` . the corner,
wherewith we grasped 'a coal, and' " blowing
for a little life," lighted our filet candle; there
is a.shovel, wherewith were, drawn forth the
glowing embers in which we saw our first 'fan
cies and dreamed our first dreams the ahoy- .
'el with which we stirred the eleepy loge till
the Sparks rushed up the chimney as if ti forge
werein bleat, below e and wished we had so
many lambs, so many marbles, or, so many'
soMeihings thai we coveted ;' and so it waewe
wished our'first wishes.
There le a chair—a low; ruehAottom chair ;
there is a little wheel .in the corner, a big
wheel in ihe garret; a loom in 'the - chamber:
There are chests full of linen and yarni and
.quilts of rare pittterns,-tandeamplera in frames,
And everywhere and always the dear old
wrinkled face.nf her .whose firm, elastic step
mocks the- feeble saunter , of her children's
children—the old-fashioiled grandmother of
twenty..years ago. She, the very providence
elf,,the oaltofineetead—she who loved us *ll_
end said aie iiished there rite more of us • to
lave ? and took allthe school in the,Hollotr for
grand children .beside. A
,great, expansive
heart was hers, beneath that wooledgown, or
thn more stately bombazine, or that solo heir
loom,
of silken texture. - - . 4 '
We - ean • see her to day--those mild _bin
eyes, with more of beauty in Unlit than tine'
'could touch or dt: • ath db more than hide—
;hone eyes that field both smiles and -tears
withitt•the faiotcst.oall of every ono pf ne, and
soft reproof, that seemed not piteisiOn but re-.
regret. A. White:tress has escaped from be
neath her snovri • ca‘p; else has `just restored •
wandering )amb, to its mother ; she lengthened
the tether of a vine that was straying over a
window, 'as ehe eitn?e•in, and , plucked ",a four
leafed ploVer.for Ellen: She eite • down• by the •
little wheel--r 4 treas. is running through bar
Mtge.!' from the. distaff's disheveied;. head,
when skeins!l voice cries "Grandma" from the
old red cradle, and ".orandnia!" TUmmy
shouts from th.e.tep..of the stairs.' Gently she
lite go•the ta i jvid, forp.n. TEi?
as beautiful as her c4rity,_ankehe Lonelie st
the iiiiie Wd — barliiii a moms i ll the•yonng '
voysger lain a dream again, Al then crutiata'
1 1 Tommy's unavailing attempe to harness the •
cat The tick pt the clock rune faint andlow
and site opens the mysterious door, and • pre
seeds to wind it up. We are-all on tiptoe,
anti we beg in a bresith to be lifted up, one by ..
one. and look for the bill;tlreth time upon .the'
tin case+ of the weights, and the' poor, lonely
pendulum, •vihieh goes to and fro by its dittle
dim v. indow, and never oomes • out in the
- world - -; - and-our petitions are ; ginntedi-and- we
al; touch with afinger the wonderful weights),
and the music of the little wheel is resumed.
of thio
Iss Mary to be married, or Jane" to be
wr,pped - in o islifoUdr — So meekly did she
fold the white hdirdifilf the one upon' her still
bosom, that then) seemed to be a prayer in
themrthere; and so sweetly did she wreathe,
the white rose in the hair of the other, that
one would not have wondered had more roses
budded for company. • !,
How 5a stood between us and apprehended
harm 1 How the rudeet of Us noftened be
neath.the gentle pressure of her faded and
tremulous handl From her cnpaoioue pocket
that hand naa ever withdrawn closed, only to
be opened in our own, with the nuts she hiul
gathered; the oherriee — shn • had plucked, the
little egg elm had found,, he. "turn-over" she
had bahO'd,the trinket she had purehased for
ue alibi) produotof her spinning, the. bless
ing she had etored for . un—the offspring oilier
heart.
What treasure of story fell from those old
.liptH,imfygocffairielAsinleviVotthalcildAlmes.
when she was a girl Cand we woudSred if ever
—but they she oould'ut hehandsomeitir clear:
er—but that she .ever , was
then,lthen we begged her toeing! • "Simi us'
one of the old songs you used to sing mailer,
grandma." •
Children, I can't sing," she always said ;
and mother need to lay 'her . knitting, softly"
down; and the kitten *stoppedplaying With .
the yarn upon the floor, and the Clock ticked
lower in the corner, and the fire died dein to
A glow, like an old heart, that ie neithet chill
"ed'nor'dead.,t-and grandmother sang. To be
*sure, it "Wouldu't'do for the
,parlor and The
concert.rootnnow-adayei but then it was the .
old kitchen and the old7faeltiOned grendmOth
er; 'and theold.halled, in , the deiti ; .
Etna 'We can hardly see to wilte - for theMeree.,,
riot them; though it 'is a Band's' bieedib; to
the sunset. ' . . '
• Well , ebe Bang. Her yoke :was : foible and,,
warering, like, a fountain pet reedy tof,
- but - then - how;Bweet..toned. - Wett - ;:;and, -
came , deeper and stronger:, but it r eouldt4
'gm* !Teeter,. {that +Nei of grief" it wan to
, sit there around the fire, all of I).N except June;
,thaeitteped a prayer to her hoscon, - .aad her,
:the4hti ria - eaw, when the hall dour . wee • •
-.<opened a moment by the wind; but then 'we:
were not afraid; for wien'iTt her old emit@ phe
.:wieo".l-Zto eft there rtioe . ndihe fire - 'an(f.
, over' the woes of the " Babes in the op a;
who ley demi alde by.elde fa. the gmet solen9.K .
ahatiovielind 11.4 ittitingeiy glad we felt when
the robiti-redbriniet'tciered them with ioavair.,
andlaa't of all; wheiShti 'angels - took them lies
of the night, Way
,everieettilic . ,.: ;
We may - t hink whit ; • bit'
the adui_and the "atOiy heard: roirtd the hi tch.
'ea'tire colored the 'ilinughti
`realm Iwatry our ' heart?, *titutteier'..“
4414011114Thi7iOaFIO: . :tioii:faitiQPitbit
.7af;latairtalfalSillielgttialtiltllpikflfitli VOW'
we call life, radiate from the God swept circle
of the hearthstone;,
Then she singe an old iullaby . she sang to
mother-her mother sang to her ; but she dine
not sing it through, and falters ere-itie done.
She rests her head upon her hands, and it ie .
silent in theold . kitchen.' Something glitters
'clown betriOetirheilingere and the firelight,
and it loan like rain in th'e soft - sunebine. The
old grandmother is thinking, when she first
leardihcreoneand 7 eflhelirelee — tlficefnrit7
when a light-haired and light-hearted girl, she
hang around that mother's chair, nor saw the
Outdone,. of days••to. 'come... •0I the days
thatare.nomore l What spell cad we weave
to bring them back again? What wordei eau
we un,eay,• what 4eeds. undo,' to Bet, back, just
this onoe, the . aneient clock of time? •
.So all our littlelianda were'forever clinging
to her.germenta, and staying her ae if from
dying, for long ago ahe had, dpiie living for
horstilf, and lived alone in us. But the old
liitohen. Trento a presence today, and the rash
bottomed chair in tenantless. •
How she used to welcome tie when we were
grown,. and came hack ince more to the home.
steed.
We thought we were men .and women, but
vre . ivere children there: 'The old-fashioned
I grandmother wee blind in the eyos; but she
saw with her heart, as she ,always _did. We
threw our long shadows through the open door,_
and she felt• them is' they fell over her form,
and looked _dimly tip-and saw. tall-abspes
In the door-way, • and she days; "Edward I
know, andlueY's voice I can hear, but.w.hose
is that other? It must be Jane's"—for she
had aliriotit*rgotten the folded bands. "Oh,
no, not Jane;``•for she—let me nee—she is wait
ing far me, Isn't she?" and thp _old grand,
mother wandered and wept.
. .
"Iti is soother daughter, grandinethlar, that
Edward has brought," nye some one, " for
your bleeping."
"Hatt she blue - eyes, my-son 1 Put', het'
in mine;:fer seMs ley fated -born,• the
my'old age, Shall.l sing you a Song
.children !t' -Her hand is in'her • pocket o
old; she is idly fumbling for a toy, a welcome
gift to,the' children that have come again.
One of no,men:t t e•we Xhought : ire:Are, is
weeping . ; she hears tht;',l4f-auPpressed sob ;
eh° soya, ae - she extends her feeble band,
..1-ISie, My poor child; rest upomyotkr_giand. '
Mother's shoulder; shd will Ottawa you' from
all_ harm. Coine r children, sit ground - the fire
again. Shall I sing yqu a song, or. toll' you. a
'story! Stir tilt+ fire, for it is 'Mid; the nights
. •
are growing Golden"- ' ~
The clook in the corner etruok nine, the.bed
timkof thopo old days. The.song of life was
indeed euug, the story told ;, it was bed-time
.at lout. Good night to thee,' grandmother.
The old fiebionid waadmother waa,um *ore,
tali :her feie;ier. - .But set up
a tali - kin the nildit of the " memory, in the
midst of the heart, and write on it only this:
BACIRED TO THE HEHORT
CETI
OLD-FASHIONED GRANDMOTHER;
God blear her forever.
BEAU BEAptEEILL.
In the palmy days 'ofiGeorge, Prince of
Wales, there was a club celebrated for its fnsh•
ions'imd exclusiveness, numbering among its
members - the Phinee, Brummel, Eiheridanoto.;
indebdi - 6,11 were men of the first water in fash
ion, politics or literature. • .
.•
vatancy__oecurring,___Lord,Deloraine,-- the
famoue. duellist, applied for admission. Sue.
peering that his quarrelsome propensities might
militate against him, he called upon every
membeion th 6 morning before the ballot, and
very plainly intimated that he should consider
the rejection as a personal insult, and demand
satisfaotionTrom every one severally, except
thttPrinctrof Wales, whose position as heir to
the throne protected him.
On the night in question. Lord Deloraine
went to the chibotent up his card,and request
ed to know if the balloting was over,and wheth
er he had been elected. Mho had been black
balled, an answer was sent that ho had not
been, there heing, unfortunately, a blackball
in the b'ox. He sent, the waiter up again to
say that, as it must be a mistake, h e wished
to see the chairman of the 'club. ' t Ttin'Trltiai)
was - about rising to comply with-this'entragti
ouerequest...when Brummel volunteered
salisfy-.4lie- incensed duellist:' Tolllbg"tho''
waiter to Bhoid Lord Dejoraine to a ... private
room, he advanced in lift blondest Manner and
Bald :
MY dear Delpraiee;it'itruly 'unfortunate:‘
but you - are blackballed." --
The other replied F . . •
'Quito a 'mistake! You
S had better try again,
No use!' returned the fop; for there Wee
not a white ball in the ballot ; but, pray, wait.
Allow me to ring.' . , •
'yollien the waiter appeared, Brummel
. :Cbarlee, bring me a pistol
,aitd noffee for
two •
lord, , Deloraine stared is , •
wbedthe waiter brought the artiole?, Beau
Drumm)l said i .
•I beg r:Mr:pardon,'tharloe, but . i have for
jetten dioe:box".' • ' • •
• During - this interial.Dretnniefttilked. abo4
the:Yeailter,ihn Crops and : the' moat irltolOult
things; Lord Doloraine gasiUg ai hinx;Uith
ierers'expresalon of entintenateki.
When the ireitietriomilltilti - dliti - 'itiid - the
box, Brun:met smiled at '
'irent
den'rknoei *filotibtde if bill be: ti It
one.et.us,wilt ring. l l.7- ' '..* -
The' waiter bowl&At & Sitited: • •
Drumniekithafialin
lic it'fied'we
have inisluitityyrewill proceed to
'So 1 sal blackballed l'. hieted ihe' duellist;
between hid teeth'. - ' '••V !' •
Most certainly. lioer my dear lardC all I
•
am,the.ehaNieoged perky,. ; elerge _ t4A y righe of
Here ,be a ,pl/1401—hero
i4r9 l lf . .fvr
, yite egagl ,, P, [you fall
Other' eepeote w e :ate
lit i !Avi. l ,llAr A 9 lIAAOt
11l l'Aietrietii, I
,7T.ha rtliffned iiiirchierie hie 1410'1nd' iefi'
^AO'iibpu.,t q ViAll49 11 1 .49. 1 ,1,44 ilie:al4l/4
LON Duldilutu n4th
ireitt'fitistilenlY uut - WO*. : ,
Peparimtut.
LOLA OSONTAC'P
. This somewhit oelebesitednwitinittiAMilleft
the stage .for a. time,, and beeeximiePubiltilse-
She lectured recently at Ifamitton,:-,pineds
West, on ! , FestQi Beety"an,Miliccietliohetted
her says lief movements were
extreme, end:the trey she handletitilik'itee
a lesson - to theleciiiiiii - pietifinC:ivY•l': , ',. -
We extract the toltowini reporC , ettfm.tee•
tore.
In speaking of beautiful_ women, it„ seems
Madam Lola introduces en olegant sto ry.
When Nituribad given valor 'to ineit,' *lna
nese to the bare. horns to cattle,. -
ling to the, various creatdres 'mittens
she' was:unmindful of woman, Mail her tepid) ,
was well nigh.axhausted. Then 'suddenly re
flecting' she' 'atoned .for her aegleat ;by _2,he
gift of beauty, which indeed rendered women
superior to all others. Lola ittritatess 'this
story-to ArlostO, but Its'parentage Atuterebn
Must chain. Lola asked where 'beauty ?
"Where," she said, "Isbell we look. for . ithim ,
source of power!" Often, perhaps; e f entrie-i*
sometimes in the soft shadow ,ec
drooping eyelid, or, again,beneath the tresses
of o little fantastic , curl. “Aliti I" added - elle,
most imireesively, "Alas ? I em ailleiltedio
think what smell things will often Move the
etrongesrand bravest Of men 1 MatirtiOs
in my life, in the company ofkings-and:isoblee.
have I been forced with sadness to Fenced on
the words of the sublime Milton, in .Which he '
speaks of woman .as--. .
"Pair no doubt atid worth) , well 9 `•
Thy cherishing, thy honor, and thy
ghp-sayection."
Other parts of Lola,e.are thus outlined' by
. .
. . ...
the Editor of the Hamilton Spectator :.
,
..L6la considered' the English, Irish„ 'and
Sootoh•women to - be_the handsomest. • 6riea*,
jug of beauties, ebe gave the palm to' the'well
knowi Dutoheee
_of Southerlaud; who moved a.
natural,quimm,and wee tho paravin :atoong
the beautiful arietooraoy of Englaq...
. ,
"Lady Bleseington was a marvellonsheant?
kings and nobler were at bet :feet.. In Italy
they called her-La . Diva—the goddess. She
was voluptuoue with a neck -that eat on It*
shoulders like the most charming Greek mOder
She had a wonderfullyboaetltypiand,,ei4-art
eye that,when it mailed, captivated all hear*:
She *aim fat morelitelloOtuai style ofbeatft
than even.thiiiiitchees of Sitibeiland..' .
"Tilt pree6nt Duteheas of Wellingibn,viitezi
Lola aaw:her,.the litarobionese citnotiro;l:irad
an admirably beautiful Weintni,trithlittleintei4.
Met or animation., .She was a Bee ; pleen,,:nt
Mulptnre, and as,cold es a pimie
"The most beautiful fetidly in England was
the greet Sheiidanfamily. There 15;01,4
monk, both, known to bereillf, - Itiei
were considered &if
day. There were three daughters—tbellen.
Mrs Norton, well known on this aide of tlin
Atlantic, through her poetry and
,her mlsfor-„
tunes; Lady Blackwood and Lady Seymour;-'..:4
the latter of whom was the Queen of BeantjAe
the.famonsEglinton tournament.. 'Theme**
called the three graces of England. : !
"Whin Lola , last saw Eugenie she (Eugenie) :
was certainly one of the most vivacious, *Sir
and sprightly. women in Paris. • All the
traits of her in this 'ennui greatly eziggera
ted her size, for Eugenie was really a •tnialf
woman. liefoiri; her marriage with theErnini...
ror, and when she wad the hello 'of ;Madrid,
slie-evineed-..a high .admiration- for-GottstAtlV
the pianist, who, by`the way; had Oirtia'cit, •
unwittingly, half a .million hearts.'from
United States. Eugenie caused him toi)'one i .
oei4ed into the most aristocratic
_families of:
Madrid.
.
Lola then passed,on to eketoh the reticent
charaoteristice of tho beauties of vaefone emu
tries, and took 'ocinaelou to hit Lord Brougham,
(although we fancy we have heard the conceit.
before.) The Coastantinopolitan ladies„ with
whom, corpulency was
„bpsuty, elai
'said, have elicited from tit polished : 8441
the E.:Omit : ion, "what uantity.”, ..• .
Lola deoried all cosmetics. - - Bite 'renew.
mended three thi4. 7 temperance t: impales
and cleanliness, as preservatives' of I titiautY.
The batli,she said,which was universal eieryo
irhere:bniin 'Britain and America, ivai'`the'.
beat "wash" that could be desired, iilthough,
indeed it was mentioned that tinoture . of
soinevpreoipated - by `watercwas - USed by • tltti . ,;
beauties of Charles II's" reign,
brought blood to the • endue. 'Bran_litight'l
be ativintageouely used in conneollintWiilith4 2 -
bath A well ouliivited mind wits4hit which - t
gavenot only eloquence to the topgueibutluitri, ,
to the eye,verroilliou to the cheek, and . lightcd.
up the Whole.person as thongh tit! very, body
thonght. Lola morali zed Much and well t. and
when in this vein drew forth the
applause."
PEACH RECIZIPTII
As the Peach season le atlited Wit it - 011A
the following reoeiPts forproparing :an& pta-"
serving the fruit: They 164'6404,n thiirinfiltiy
t!'stqdlid-Voilonneed goad: •
PiA9uP'lll!"qvl!.B.--Peit.oheo.
whole, ehould bo gathered before lull7,tApeA t
pare . tind cook teedel'in a little .water.
ciuttriers;:ntaoli the pits of ' peishiai,
and 'add to 'theta. Let the scvitip sin:nter i ttetkii : ?
quite thiek-hetore adding latoilie ^ frititi
when cold cover tighaanct keelitrtistromAtillatd:
4nl
i
?..igig.lf!“l4,oEllgt-' Taks:nuy kind attiiit
I rge, peaches that. aretrtcycie :rlitt, AipttptE t t
I. 6 -,d,wil TrAl.i'li, jar& 00 h , plfm_Art , ..V:
a roa.Al ß! es ltt : cabk;aptya7 them OA" 111 4 1
liar: 'Tp eicri gillia Cr; eiriegir 4133,,itiir)k-,i
or riateti,' s:poiltkersiigeri` ° tablk r eicaktfalpir:.`;
silt and' whela ' Oinaliliii ti Viiiii '''le' c iii44+` fire a"
fl
ult.boillorbpe,, beltigatiratutibitlitiliilleiV l l
•gi r
'carers teeth` well, ateklitlthesktatailii*a
cool place a week or-tett davit-- then-4 film 'olT •
tlfalttpiiir itad boll ti ietbratliflaitirblith44
are,rady.ta be:iet:arta,r tin diaitortegiattllded
Aflorf• 'VIII :.' n", ,r; r?'. ';A: :t7. 't;-;1117,1 kid
I Pl'fr..jel l, Pit 94".%§..04m,R4e tivitttuniiiPttitt*
whenverylip! l*Mb. Q X, arida Akinit!Milllael
bligl - oFreiev43 Aibirt ? ii rurid.qc vivuelta
a OnViii-jill6,'licailiolitldcirlikt.ge'lrailtide„.„,
't ;int; lieWigifillil. , l44,lr?l; fellWl 4 ,_ ."'W6l._____,,,rwt
.4 Inc ;.':: - ..ii... I"LiztUA-9 , :a jiluVaitti
rskige aTOP
wi:l
r
.z",..6
PM
INS
O -5i
MU