. • • - • . .. , . . . . , • ' .. '•• • • . . . —.-... .. . . • • . . • -. .. „ ;L,l ' ~,,, 7t- - - r ._,.----^,...., 4 -- -, ~--, .- . , _-_.. . , . ' ' -,1 'i . 2 ''. -,-', ”: •# ' ' -- 4. - . - '--,. 7 A,7 7, :. -- : ... ~._- . .. _.-, . . ... ~--, , Ak , : .1 . 4 . 1 . _ _ . 't , , 4 \ i....." 1 1 7? 14 , ...: ," 7 11..; ' A N ..--',. -::''. •. - __-_-----. - , - , '"f 4 . .-7,..,E• t, -,.-^-, ..., % -•---__,,_,' - 1 ' - ,-/ 'S: " -'! •,. =,e@ - _± - - 1 ' .• . . ',3:Fiq e 4 . ' . , ------ , 7 .' ' :---LT - 2-i k' ~., ' • • - •;•:7-1-'- -- --T,. --- 4 -- . •• ' . : • , . -,;•/<_:_-:-...., .: •-• ~, re" - • , . __ - - ,-. .t ' ~.... , ._ . • 35"11Md ). :. ' —.. . _-,_-,'.•_._=,,. -- ,i' - .o' - .7j7,7-1.- , ,• '• • ."--- - -:- - 7.-% •* ' , . ' t e - - &-W._l,-q '. , • i----.- . '• ' ' '.'' .. : ' ::_'_ . .' -- _,_,:y ~.,.. .;. ' .-''''''=",! •-• ~ . .._, ~ __ 7 -7,7- 2 -51 . ' • . Nr4 : o . . . --.. -__ '''-' '...- - , tT,4Bi , • .1 , - - - , F ' . ' :': -- if .-4,', . . ~; _ 4, , ,,,,,,,,t,,,,1-6"' . , ft -. - .-.1, . .ti. -'• '.. . f., . ~ : i-_-_,-.T . __ • - --- ,--2 ';'• ' - •:',7:'•s• -1 . I - - E•:• -- 1,7,•••, . :: • '• -, ---_,,-- ~- .• _-_---- ..;.'..VIRmIP-174. LUF.t 3 ' -- ^, , -•:.:.‘ ) . '' '' ,": ll- Ve-OrW l4 :/ H4l • '' '.: ' ' :. ' i . . - • ..-•:1LT?.:..,_ . f . ; --'4. , ',4') T, -- a•:' . --' • . • , . , . • •-•,._ ' ,•-•,;-- r . . .. . . - ' . .. . • . A. A. RIIEE3I, Proprietor. 'sVw. M. POR . TER, Editor. VOL. O TERMS OF PUBUCATINI The o,tat,p3LE Iltatum is published woday on a - large JIMA containing t‘venty eight columns, and iJrnished yn aulnieribara at 01.5.) it paid strictly in ads Allen $C is patAriVithlu the year; nit ;I'2 in all (.405 Wilt.o ray want is,4ulay ed until alter the expire Lien of Limo 10:tr• No sLibsert ['thins re.:01% ed fora lass 11,604 than iic months, and !loan ltiSe1,111,.1)1/1A/ ,1 tali all orrearoges rre paid, unless at L 11,14 I.p lien uiair publisher. Papers rent to subscribers oat of Unniberland county !Past bo paid f.,r in A dsillier or tin, p,ty went assumed t y %ULM, 11181)01ltlibIll person liVi gin 1i11.1111113E14.1.1d COW, 'Vnesu turves will be rigidly adher,d to In all Locus. AU Vljitl ` ISL➢iLNTw, I,lv.e.f.lsp noel., will he dill-gad 'i'l.oo par Near, oi , Volvo 1101 a, i rr throe i l lsort4ons and '25 eve!, per each C 111,101'11,0 . All e 15e0LiSeinet11., V 11450 alagl cunsida.rod,:...s A 1...0rt.is i e.ert,a 1 ta , f,ro •ch [t....:pe, lints fir 11,0, in:erlion. Kett .{ cents per line 1 sits. Cinnompialttions its stile ,t,,f it 11 toff Of l'l,ll Victual Into...St will he .•Ii trued a" , 1 ,, Ilia:, Vrnprtetor will not be re,ppea . . 9le In atm a..pos for errors in nalvertigenienis. o#l.ltnary pis not eseeeallug five linos. will I- , iqsorted rail hout charge. JOB PRINTING • r e ho arilolo Iforit JO) OPFLOB is tbo .itt.tost ono, in ist cOmpi,tel AIR< .3.lll.l4liment in ttwoonnty. Pour 4 , 1.1 Pros.eS nd a ge n Oral variety of otttt , ritt ) uito.l for plain and l'an.ir Work of every to to . rn:Jdcv I Jot, Printint at the shorte,t notice and no the .nost reasonable terms. Truants In want of siittilts or anything in the .lali , iing lip_, still tit,l it to heir iaterost to al re as a call. (Rural aitri Coca 51.iformatial U. 8. (WCERSNIENT Pro \II:IA II I:4 LINCOLN. Pion --II I 7'lllll. Ao,rotary l —IV 11. S. ov son. S eer ot„,,y of I otorior•---(1,i.t0 5511T0. Soorototry of 'l`roo.itry—zi.kos•ol P. CII.A.i.E• , 4 ...,t.01..try Of Nityr— , :l,,E., Wr.t.t.rs. S tot Nl:vitor vooral—)10 - .4Toomt.v 1 111.mtc. At Woolly lionorv.2—El/WAIII/ .1.L10r./oitloo of tio Il ttiool SLAtes—B.. B. TANF.7 STATE GOVERNMENT , Invornor—.lxDrim n. PrItTIN. •t qt.ary .)C sl.lrEtt.. - 11‘ tit w VII., E. 0,2,10+. t,ropy \I NI instil. U. Adjutant CJP•111,111-1 , .. NI. IlloLt.t. Tent t,iirOr )I , lr - rig. .1 mJ ors of tb • •-; ap,onie NI. . . I.OR . RTE It. \V. sit b. Jon N (GUSTY OFFICERS Presideutivd......--ll ,, n..:ames 11. a ralmal Ju,,.;.es—llou. Michael Coe1:1In, .3tu•trt. U Itt , ,rneY —.I. W. U. U lc Pr01.11 , ,n0t.010, In o.lly. Itr~nrdrr o..—Ju 11 it 1 0 1 Itegi3ter—V. . A.. lirrAly. igh Sheriff-112011110 , m Dept/I)", ----- u ty Tron,nrer—.lolati Gut:Altai. Cornaor-141vid Ralith n t, c,,."„0,,i,,,.tr5—.1:t111es I, Wr,r- - rior, laco. 'Clerk to Comm ls,ioners,.lttmes •trong. Dire,tor, Poer—Wto. 'Arm. C 'mll,ll. Supt•rinte,,D,llt. 'Jr boor II ouh , ,iuLry 11 vit[t;i:us bi• ,Ur Chief I:Ill - gess —John ..loio, Attrikta-uL i —A mI 1. 1 0•1 Town .1 .1:t ,nut 1,11, Vi•il V?. 11a le, .1. 11 1110, 11,1, tloy, .1,0 3 1 1 111 i hci 10. n. 10 , OL/ litttldt•, r 11, 1 .1, !.) • ‘t: ,, lthrirrtGr. G. 6Lar.l. W.rd • •...T 1), 110 1 .1 11011).),V, 1 / 1 “1...! \11 .• 11.1.01 1101 , C 1/11b, Alin) 11”1:111r. CIIURCHEti Firrt Prerbytorip a CP ....11. Nort,l.w.o.t 11 Tlrle of Ceo \llitg rYs , ver y 11 o eiu..k. A. M.. a0..1 i m cleric Soy , ' :0 It o : 4l,ytorlan ' hurrh, corner P1..1111311", nil l'o airet, . thr v t. .4 V 1 tivit , r4. 11..att , (•; 1. I' LtlLlirt.. l'!, molt. Ilydt Id Iwt , ‘ 1,11 Ni!,/ :..putltor 11,•‘ r,. ;tn., .t.-1/..ticlueis A. 11., I. Garman if 111 , 1 1, , 11. ,twill . ..ea Iran. v., anti It st thOCVICOS at. I.. , ',ittok A. NI .I'l.l " . 1 . ! , 11•1% I . 01 •; `lllll . lll. I 1 . 011,41') and A 10. ss. Ntr , it enat Of aIA 01 01-ntlpall 4 t .; • 'lt arell Ilerman M. 1,01110.0 , 0, 1'..1• 1 , 1 Sol litn.•ii) \I. 1.. 0111 I .1. 0 1 ay.! t: ~, • 1:1; ;_ l'atarret ye:or East. st Jain, ,lerVll2.l!S 1• , vry 1.41.1e1 all at 1 „v „ 1 at. 1. trta.ta niii .it alf trd ,Lre,•Ls. 1100. 0.. 0. ,tlo.l.,tzl'Ait. , .l . - 4• I 0 1 -, at t. V .and 615 ...dor: l .r. I'. iq ir Whin, ...II:tn.:I, in 1.11,i nL , .I - iptir persona are request VII 11 .1 1 Li DICKINsuN OILLEtiI. NI, .I.dinion, D. D., Prusident and .torlt W A. I. --- William C. k. NI., Pr.,lo4sor ol Natal,Al S.•innet. ...id Curator 01 the' :SI 12SOMI, W.n. h. II llv 11, A. 11., Profos, , n• of . Crook La, zuri4o and I.iii•raturo. 31..rtn.il 11, liilnnn n, A. M., PrMeseee 'Meth •inalivc.. .lutin X Staynian, A. of 1..11i.1 Lan. 4nage, tad hlteralui . o. A. I. Mullin, A. M., Principal of the Cr.:LI-11.318r BOARD OF SWIOOI. DIRECTORS COrlllllll,ll, I'm:Wont. 11. Fuston, P. Quigley, -Q Ilutnerle4„ SA:o'y. J. Hamilton, lc ,C. odOo d, J. W. Eby, Trutt,urer, John Spt or, M.•or,,,v,vr. feet on tho lot nontlay ore/tell Mouth at 6 o'clock hd• ncatiow. -o CORPORATIONS , • OARLICLE DePOSIT IIA\IA, I'rosidcttt, 11. hi. Iluod err , on, c,, r „hi er , W. uontein ; Asst.. Unntliur J. P. Puller,JAß. Kuney,; Clerk, 11 Plelaer; Messenger, .John Underwood; Plractore, It. AL Iletiderson. John Samuel Wherry, J.D. tiortuni, likiles Woodburn, Woodward, 80. floury Letv.li, Ilugh Stuart, tied James A utiort:Or• ' COill'ANY.—Prosident, 131JAILIERLA VALL4r RAIL Buy; Predcrick Wrifttl: Secretary nod Treasurer, Edward AL J 114,163; supdliffoaduyt, O. N. Lull. Passenger trains •swlee a day. Eastward leaving Carlisle tit 10,10 o'clock .4. M. and 2.41 oelock I'. AL Two trains every day .Westward, leaviug„.acrlisle at 0.27 o'clock A, AL, atm 3.30 P. 01. Cseteetc GAS &ND WATPLCOef•P,ANY.—PrePhIeTIL , , Lein • irtel Todd; Treasurer, A. L. Spiinsler ; Superlidendent, corgi, Wlce; Directors, F. ' Km. AL 'lectern, N. 1.11411 e, Henry Saxton, It. C.. IVoodward, Jelin D. Brettan, iv. qp..00,4r, and .I.ihn Campbell. VALLU .114. Na John B. Sler-: Cashier, 11. A. Sturgeon; Teller, Jos. C. lloffer.— 'pirectors.tlohn S. Steriett, Wm. liar, idelchotr Drone keen, Richard Woods, John C. Dunlap, Hold. C. Sterrett, 4,1. 4. *turgoort, and captain John Dunlap. SOCIETIES Cumberlam: Star Lodge No. 107, A. Y. M. meets at 4:arlerk tutu ou.tho 2ud sad 4th Tuesdays of ovary .I.lenth. • St. Johns Lodge No '2GO A. Y. M. Meets.Sd Thurs-, 4.ay of each month, at Marl" 4 7 1 4,11 . Carlisle Lodge No 01 1. 0, of 0. r. Moats Monday ,C,rouiug, at Trouts building. SIRE COMPANIES The thilon Fire Conins_ny won organized In MO. Trefilne.it, Carnal:n:l: Vico President. Samuel Wetzel; Secretary, .1. L. Hampton I Treasurer, P. Mon ,kor. Omni:any Aleuts the first Saturday in March, Juno, .....iontember, and Dectu,k,,.., , The Cumberland Pin) Guinn:7.ny waslnstitutedl:ehru :fay Is, 1809„ President, Thom teon • Secretary' gttitto (11.11410 y; Treasurer, .13. D. Quigley 'Lilo company the third Saturday or-4,1,1:11.y, April, July, :And Cintoher. . . . . The C.:md [lose Com;mily war:institute:lqt 1855, president; 11. 'A. St.urgooti; Vice. President, C. P. :liumrich: Seereary, William P. halbert; Treasurer, Josepll_,.w,__OAll,:y. cOmnany lnosts. the, second ..T.hursdaynf January, April, July, and October. , The Empiru Hook and Ladder Ceinpriny was Inseltut.` '41:11 in Mil President., Win. M. Ptirter: Vice Preqdent, ...obit O. "Amos; . Tr:lnsurer, John Campbell; Secretary, r johti,W. pompanY 4 1100 : 0 Pn the drat Fri., :,MaY Janua April, July d lYotober. • ry,. , - 11,/db'S OF ;POSTAGE. Vont:tip on atl lettertiOPnie;intlf ounce wo,ight or'un: ler; a Olitit pre . 0411,7'am:61A to 'Cali'fornia or Oregon, 'which is 10conts.proPaith • --- Voidalio no tliP County,-• free. "Within the tato 13'conts per year. Toatui part oPtho 'VtiitodSt4tos 40 Conte. ',,rostage on nil transient papers • 1 71 1 4er, 3 .4 1 1R weight,,l.era.prepaitl ,Or two cents +4h,tria...,ti.dvort. s isOci'letters, to tio.charged„with,the cost -advnetininix." - . : i ' O9,T,S AVD.S fIOES.Jus . t ie . 66i V ... ednL. • vOIGUIP.? Olio*, Crisi,? Store, now took otAadiefe; Allifismx' aud'O'hildian'ti ISivelocco plots. r,tviaa arvt Val tom cif the bust quality and lowest Rtic9a Carl.l4o Oct. 25,18U1,• • '-. . crtr g)cierg. 17D_ The following quaint specimen of Yankee poetic genius, is the, closing portion of a Pocin in the Atlantic Monthly, from the pen 0! JAM ES'IJONV FAL S Cll6llOll MASON AND Sid - nßia,: A YA,stilttq 1001,L It's an almighty good thing, and we only regret that its great length prevents front giving it entico.—ED. JONATIIXN TO JOHN, It don ' t seem hlrdly right., John, NVlten 1..11 itly it tudy wto full. T., :•tt tulip ISO tu a light, John,— Vuur co sin, ui, John Bull I 010 Unelo S., 80Z 1,0, guess Wt. I. ow it now," bez he, "'l'n; Itutt's intty iy all the law, Aocurding lu J Thut'd ill jUr you me I', Sod-Ain't so cool as ink, John It's likely you'd ha' wrote • An' stopped n .spell to think, Jong, _ Cut your throat? Ole Unele S see lie, guess sk tree ha' stoppe , l," see he, '•l'u ttiiud Lis p 8 an' q s, et Lint r eaZall De'd blonpied to 010 • lustid o' you an' we!" Ef [turned mad digs loose, John, Ou your front-parlor stairs, Would )1 jest Tueet your yieivS, 3 . 01iu; To wait Ittl . cue their heirs? Ole Upele S sc2 I, c, —1 guess, 1 on'y guess,' sez 'Thee, of un his toes fell, 'l' eieu‘it kiu 1 ii' rile J. 1.1, yuu uul the l" Who made the Jaw thet, hurts, John / %.,///,—deLo. "J. B." SY.‘J un liis shirt,, ;Jobe, Onte,s ray memory fails. Ole Linde S. Se/7. guess, (I'm good at thet,)" see he, s3iFt. fir t4;)bi4o - rcin't p:t - tto juice For grinders with J 13., Nu more than you or tee" When your rights Was our wrongs, John You duitt',L ,lot , for ft:ss,— Uritanny's tridout. prongs. John, Was good 'nougb low ror us. Ulu Uncle S. sei. he, —1 gt n •ss, Tho ug h I„hysie's good," hCZ dUCBll . .l.fuller,thut. he (tau swallqr siguod J. Put up by you au' me:" We own fte ocean, tu. John, you niusu't lake it hard. El' we can't chink with you, J011(3, It'sje,l your i.lvu 111,1 i to d (Ye Uncle S sex lie, "I guess, lif thet's tutz. '•l'ho tenciu' 8111 fr coot enouct: To bust tip friend B , Lt. wal ec yuu an' mu' \VII) tall: to `it' . file leg J,,'lin, Cri hotter, N, Len it Ml.:lilt Vail didn't enrol , fig. Jahn, ir :`,/, lien Ida! he I CFI' ••Wfien is it ' s number one Tho's to .1. IS , Ez ez. }'uu 1111' we." • • I g t lie I ,rll ' l . \!!111 . Ind!, l'~„~~~6 n ~,, i~~ li,;'n~ 11:t• I;tielk• ti • 1.• " hos j..-; ; Lul Ibet, sera.:.ll3v. .1. I; EL Wu.' eL y 'ht t Mt; IVe w. p eil %Volt I Welily iot. c,,,sa to every A eehool house all ' a ,I•eple Uncle E. n z h., • 1 g 11 IS 11 '' St . /. he, —Thk. clue,) !II ike It NIA I/ is ^0 3 ,Ez imich e.. 7. 3 01/ in . WO ,Our Iwieve 11,1" 111.!1. TILL. 3 we tell ate u❑ ro:Lv, 3t:L•11 ~1:' 11::• LLl:c L`j. :Le le, '•1 guess • Er! Nlll , ll t 1:11 . s.•Z lie • ono ilund,) fi.,nn here to Indy An' Chet ‘1.,11'1 suit J. 11 11'11 ell L ain't 't,wl;.(t. you Lin' tn !)" We know we ' ve gut a cause John, honest, Joel 00' We thought . 1 would win applause, John, Et nowheres Cleo, from you. , Ole 'Uncle 43. ser:he, '•1 guess, ills love of right," sez Ilangs by a rotten fibre o' oottou Thule's miter' in .J. 8., ez you an' me l" The South says "Poor folks down !".iio4, An' "Ail wen up say We,— White yuiler, block, au' brown John; Now which is your idee 2 Ole Uncle S. sec ho, "1 gum John preaches wul," sez he; ~ B ut,nernion ;hem an' come to du, Why there's the old J. A-erowdin' you an' me 1" Simll it.,be hive or.bate, John No it's you diet's to decide ; Ain't your bonds held by „Fate, aohn, Like all the world's beitidel? Ole Uncle S ecz guess, Wise men forgive," sez he, `lBut not forget ; an' some time yet. Thet,troth may strike J. 8., Ez well ez you an' me • GoiLmeans to make thisland, John, .Cleir:thru,,from sea to sea, Believe an' understand, John,. ..... The ieuth o' bein' free. Ole Uncle S. sec he, "1 guess,. God's price is high," sec he "But nothin' ern than wut lle•oelld' Wetirs thet May learn like you an' me l ' TWIG SOLD-, AN OLE,P.OLO' STORY. - CONCLUDED CTIAPTER 111 . . It was considerably after ten o'ckielt , when I entered' the ball-room. Like all London „hall-roottis,lt was crammed. A. savciut - ffeSlirrotilltislaboratory,notyersed in the terpsiehtiroan habits of our yOutli, might have. supposed and Might have been pardonecilt,r supposing tliat•le had - been *taken - into the interior of air .enormous rair ; pump,' • larger than any n Ow ri.:te f t expe r (Mee, 1 rchn whieb the Oxygen had heel] nearly ekhanisted, 'and which, ...eon sequou tfip . for''oXperiMent . ) fl 1)(1 " the, dear CtiMie 'phySicai: kneWledge, -Were and' galipiup r -nrevieuSly..to.their ifpproaebing dissolu ,- tionin that . void: Will latch 'difficulty; and after;Woad ing op. tti tots throe iiol§ t . hoslr enjoy it 1): E)IMM :TOM VaMIELT CIERGEO. I found 131atichC. . There she was, sitting saucy as ever, dispensing courteous scorn with well-bred impartiality. Still her card—l asked to be allowed , to loop. at it —had but tliKee blanks, two waltzes aPd a quadrille, singularly separated from pull other. She looked at me, and all Lut; shrugged her shoulders, as if she would say, Ow crux to ? As though she said it, I answered : • " That and that," pointing to the qua drille and and one of the waltzes. "Suppose you limit, put demand to one," kindly enough uttered—" The .o„rst one ?" " So it please Miss Chatterton." Captain U miter man L hated (I did not know him, of course) speing this pro ceeding, as4.ed fur the remaining waltz. " My card is full, Captain Gunter !" The Captain looked anything' but lull itary or heroic or; receipt of the Np.vi wand. But hundreds of tun who have led forlo'rn hopes and figured in gazettes, would have bluuls, away before her• gl,id iudi We were waltzing. Well, well ; let bellow mouthed pulpit orators inveigh, hammer-and-tongs, against the sedUctions of-the danee ; let the stiff choked stick lers for the physical dignity of Mall grow actually jocular (the dry old sticks !) about " ridiculous capers,'' " apish an tics," mil the like; but the seductions are more fascinating than the denuncia -"ions lerrible'; and the pliysial duitili tions under which we come into the world and those under which we leave it, arc not of so dignified and clevateil a charac ter that we need to be very particular as to the figure we cut in the interval. At any -rate, if 1-looped absurd-(and-1.- don't rare If I did,) neither the philosopher with the most starched wristbands that ever scarified hands, nor the 'loudest preacher that ever devoted whole gcncr &tions to the devil, could essert, as much of lilanehe. I k 110 W I would not 1e ag ly expose either the ascetic morality of the one or the dignified hearing of the other to the. chance of the yet Open waltz. She glided a ve. y ,Juno—nay, a Venus vivified. tihall I go into still absurder ,raptures ? To my intense amazement, found myself asking for this very waltz, on the score of v,•Lich my-enemy the cap tain has get so fearfully bitten ; but what was toy amaze at may askieg- for it, cent= pared to my amaze at her granting :it. She surely could not have kept them for ? imia4isible. I believe I looked at myself in tint ~lass. to see whether ',re ally had the old coat on or the new ono. W.?, danced agi,•in "lud'!!is ?" ; your and n. " No !" she answered, lookirnr at her card and aw,ly fr./111 IIW; " there is 0110 ` . .1m1 it is 'wilier cotp , elit, Oh, iljack could 111 , 1,'1 ‘V 11;11. ,NV.IS the poor tote I,va! , . a Stir in the QM r rn ; you think it, tvt Jack ? No, In); tt W:tS I iLo supyr 211-ass ehat C,•I ton wouid go ? Thank we, t•ht: would. A :tt Ll'll/T li(q. a :r1). ( )h, LOU I, , ibef, even if thy. iniister %v.,: !Hit i i iiite iu I ni. ante nn Ilte lit I Ihicotillitir, Alt I Sl2. ft,, u,niN rri //up/ ive are I.:•••itt.ed („i he be , t ; is hilt 0!I el/n\ I ' Mel pie, I 0 WHI ;11l 111111 ,, HI I. e;ISy To tli.yt q.:l 11 . 111 I Ir , II • mei hel el ) 11.1ve to put the yo•sti ii (I n rr t,G rence to the Nom., u!'('etn.:,ev..) to have a tooth taken out ur t ) make ;‘))) 11.-ar) a •pc;Tli, to Frittle themselves heron)) Lnd with potent drinks. Without their help the ipm,t.cl oquent !Mot—exp. - yin (Ted e (you sue. ton nut naturally modest), will discover, when he collies to deidare for how lung a time he has nured, &c., and straggled. lb:. (never mind the rest), that all his eloquence had deserted him Half a bottle ) (IC champagne will give him a marvellous hilt; a whole one will Make him irresisti• .ble..d had had a couple of bottles ; tai s so urged, did [ let my startling out of its cage. What it. said or sung shall no one know ; of this wily shall they be in. 'formed, that I danced the next. quadrille with Blanche, and—L.', pain ? puis another, smuggled into the card with eon• summate skill , autl the last galop Anil Blanche—wonderful -Blanc:Co—was that night short of 2. fan and of a heart; un less my heart be, deemed an. honest bar gain iu for hers. 1.4 windows in Pump Court )vere a ;my deer was open. I knock ed at the inner ; Jack admitted use ; he Wifff up and alone. Four oriilOck of- the morning and there he,was, the fire,buvo ing brightly and " Chitty on Contracts" and " Archbold's Criminal Pleading," open before him. Without a syllable te went hack to these, pushed one band th'roUgh his hair and With the other root. ed in the index or the " Contracts." "Are you mad . ?" I asked; " , speak, old - stupid 1"_. " don't make these damned fel lows smart for it ! • I'll have an action for breach of contract, in, regard,.to_time against thoseinfornal tailors, and prose cute that thievaing Jew in the Central Court, or I'll never - Wearbreeches again,l Ila-! here it is ; ease of Iteg.ing against— no—hangit ! that's another." I laughed aloud and.long, as 'though langhter was to•be my empOssloti-fckail tune hereafter: - "Don't stand grin‘ning there liken goillia-glirgaylecou drivelling idiot I hut comeand help me to find this-case. You're in the plot; you're' worse than they are; yoU're an accessoryafter the fact;: nay, let. See"ix-and: - lic turned to . Arch hold's Indext`-you're an accomplice, you're the priocouesver, eider 410 abettor oLthe . concern.l, And_ no:flung, •hoth ":Chitty ,and ,"Archheld" ut nie across thet00.0.7.713 - end .Mending-double, douhle, riot so much to avoid his. Weapons as .from the ed 'both " oxolui4od,,iptu,torin'g fy,Leetow-7.holit can ydti- .7 ,y0u 77 Ye:0-m--7:-.-proseetire m-- 7 :-.-proseetire in, the 7 --the .. CritMerion, 7 dial' 'Conit; when you—you.- - Auyen•toot S , • yenr--7-rer-rer-r,a—man . CARLISLE, PA., FRIDAY, . - i:Ei3II,UARY: 7, 'lB'6. - 11 -41-a-vent got my mangy.Have-n4 though ? He's chewing the bitter cud ofl quod at this moment.; he's safe for the! night." " Yon don't mean to say you've given' him into custody ?" Buti do. Hang it ! I was so save age after you'd gone that I turned out to the Strand, and into the Adef - phi, af,! ter idl—half price. to the pit. If I didn't . ' find myself within a couple seats of the.: tOie Clo'. lle had the the impudencel to recognise mile ; and I verily, believe would liave mitered into conversation with me, and explained his non-return in- the' morning." '' r (1 Well! Why, I waited paitently, oid impairently it' you like, till the close, for lowed my man out, and gave him int 6 custody " "On what charge ?" - " Obtaining gouts by false pretences_, be sure. And you'll have to to- come to How street to-morrow morning to give' evidence ') I N, , , - as in toe high spiritu to be mph low, by - any announcement, however oth erwise annoying 'or absurd ; so I content ed, myself with Fresh laughter, and the re mark that Jack had studied " Archbold" , to more purpose than I had, it' be could frame an indictment against the "One Clo'." herat he vas pleased to laugiii• not jocularly, but scornfully, as though he held my legal ingenuity in poor es , e teem. But what had I been doing? hoNi! had I been getting on ? .! I told 114.; with an air of assatroptiorQ,' as of properly rewarded merit, that wluir, , I had long fUeditated 1 had the night a,.;;;; eotoplished—that I -was engaged 11lani he rhatterton. Ile would not bnY neve it ; and yet, front his pecillltir 100 T he could not quite disbelieve it. I prof' duced the fan. I had stolen it, he said: it w a s h ere , he acknowledged—he kneit s it well enough—but I had st:Jlen it, .I had cheek ftc arty thing. 13 - it I was rei, ally in earnest was. I was really coil : gaged to her. Then 1. was the meanest., owst-ircachero;,:s, cowardly beggar on thy' earth then treading. I might laugh as touch as I liked; he would expose me, and the whole things Ito had buiaglwaie a pair of gloves; he had paid fur toy cab and I had taken the me m' advantage of his absence to seduce a git'l intki . consenC . iii otf;rry a brielless, penniless adveti:., Ile, would tell Ler :the whole .lory tho old clotbes, down to to o e vilest and umst. humiliating winuttto. Ay, ay; wi g ht l aug h .; no drubt they old beat efa. Jew had laughed, and w'.mj sli,uld In tratt-mort,d, :,o should be skinned. II a! thm,e tailors! So he rattleTl on ; and 1 laughed and laughed, owl went to bed, and k;..d a c0n1.....,5ed Mean; of a Vietiallt , : c, roulony, in which people were. Waiting for me to take part, and I could find nothing but a r shirt; and then of a wedding breakfast, at which all the champagne bottles were empty, all the fruit turned into fans, and all the wai ters into " nu, n, who began empttig the pies•and jellies into deep dimity I.urpheos ! such a night of it I was sitting in toy wig and t_ l own in (.„„,, Batley wdi i t b e cr e diied it must Le—for it is the t'act— hat It:J. A rthin . 2tolt had got hit. wan control:led at •B drar,-n an indictment On win,di the grmul jury hid ref ur.'etl a "true bill," in,d that the - U:c't CM' " teas Standing, in the dock charged with a twstletneanur. Jack had wanmi to s afe r LIA I lie prosecution I, r ief, b ut could not persuade the to accept it; and I had made my appearance in court only on .condition that he would not call no into the witness-box. No sootier was the indictment read to.the priconer, than be said he should much likellre assistance of counsel; that he timid not afford (the l;;- ing rascal) to employ air , ' attorney, but that be had one pound,three shillings and six pence, which, with his lordship B,per inis-3ion, he should like to hand across the dock to_rne! ills lordship was quite agreeable—was I? Jack stared and laughed. I grew confused, took the fee,' and asked for the dupositio:ls—amongst them my own given at Bow street. I was too flurried to take an objection against the indictment, which no doubt I could have torn into shreds;•audthefirstthing I became conscious of was that Jack, with shameless bad faith and horrible malice; was insisting,,through his counsel, upon my getting into Ow witness•box 1 -His lordship stared; the court roared; Jack ravelled in the fun. .the old Jew grinned from car to car. Jack's counsel Was a poor - animal, and got:neitheievidence nor game cLet,of.Me. .I.,resumed my position,' am itint, renewed merrlmerit,:as counsel for', the prisoner. Jack was himself in tub box: He gave his evidence. - There vas - riot .n.shadow of a case, not an atom (3(1 evidence to Jay before 'toe, jury? His lordship. of course saw this, but , brills() , now saw the real state_ things. He loved a joke; knew, ,moreover, that it was my.first brief, and so would notbmilk ,Jne of.my chanee by'stoppingthe ease.— I rose.. Jack was leaving time-box. Ono moment, Mr...\Arthingtoii. J,ust sho:w. the s eri tl mdu of ,the jury-v-those— liiitisers. Come, mite,- Mr. Arthington ! hold them up well--,-highbr,•higher—yOu needn'Cbe ashamed of your own, : clethe.ll Now,.upoti your., oath,....lll;,_.Arthlttgton, how do you . knoW those to he yogr • trim , stars? . Is it beebuse they are so much win*? 'I suppose ,you sit iri.;ceiirt.a good deal, and aril lielhaps,oftenor'OA.yom scat than your legs? Iray,,,,bre ; t ypl4,tu the habit of- selling ,your clothe,, ,111'thingtort?. . Are You , aware that ; there' . arti,nharitable•Societios in,,thimpAtrepolis. anti thousands of ra 'yak iOlo.wmalti thankful for even such , wormout , tavi ilrY,l•agSas those? '..How:long.May have, waifthem?. Do you thinkthere's ,apprentice . t 141; tewn-- mini() wear such things;'Mitottniora' , bny them my Van tei tied 'the roars of the eotirt evasticil 121111 -k:11.11'11,11. E up- -the -offending i-nexpressibles, --Qung k them straight n t my head, and_ rushed out of the box. Need I say that my client was acquit ted, that I have sold alLniy old clothes to him ever since, and that Jack has never been 4u9wn either to employ or to prose cute " Ole Ole' " from that day to this ? *•* * * I But Blanche ? Ab, yes I Blanche— woilderfe, dear Blanche I I must thil the rest of her story, must 1, ? " Ole de' " stories are well enough; but the "-old, old story," love and its belongings, is the best. Well, well, perhaps it, is; arnl•l don't mind telling mine. When Mr. Chattertun heard, as he soon -did hear, of the agreement which }t had pleased is daughter and we to cuter in to, he made some very impertinent 'and altogether irrelevant inquiries into the - state of my - what Mr. Carlyle has with much felinity called "pineal gland'?—viz. piirse; and not receiving a very clear statement upon the subject, he requested that I would discontinue my visits to Bayswater. In this he was obeyed.— Most girls, under such Circumstances, ei ther console themselves by iidiculing the man iyhom they wanted to marry and inaaryiim- somebody else whom they (lid not wan! to marry, or half kill themselves by tearful regrets. Blanche did neither My none she never all o w e d t o b e men tioned in her presence but with respect. Thin - eoffers; "adVantageons," as they arc called, she quietly refused; but for the rest was as cheerful, saucy, imperious, in fact just the same woudeiful Blanche, au ever. Unlike s , ,dne of my friends, she seemed to e 4!; eider that suicide, by any means -whatever,- is -artogether unjustifia ble, and that she had nu more right to kill herself by slow degrees than outright at, once no more by tears and woful sea tyrdows than by poi` iards or prussic acid. She would not Lu miserable—but, she would not marry. To me b:icfs did riot, and it seemed would nut collie; so 1 11:1I a scribbling— an old taste of maimeed to ex tract some remuneration from what Mr. Mills calls "our busy but indolent °nee or twice at bails I met I Blanche; each time we ventured on ULU dance, to the great horror of the wall flow ers,, and each time we gave each other to understand that our "faith was large in time." Just two years after the famous December bull, I met Mr. Chaticrtun, point blank, iu Oxfuld steel. lie was most gracious. Would I not dine with Liar ? Ile fiund resistance was thadc:ss; Malielle would hate none other than tee; Ge mm(t, _in; we in i, , 4 ht w e :Jincd at. sayswan-r; :ill that he had said of Blanche was true; tendea things were spoken over of2ain, pledges renewed. The next day I saw Chat terton's name in the Utl.(tlc Shame effected what sorrow had been unable to effect. Blanche shed her Met and last tears, and bade me leave her. I dried the tears, and married her; she sits read ing over there, as I write .. these conclud ing sentences. On,- nirnic(ge Was at first remarkabl, fur modesty than siihn dor; our have ours even yet becutne the ::tiperha civium pole , thorum du not live in lielgrave Square. a lie in dulgence (at first from necessity) td" an calgindl taste induced love of literory la bor; and I. have fought. oiy :,;:ual! with this dear old weapon ; my pen. Next lu Batoolie, 'tis the dearest thing have. Jack has had many brief", and has mai I..ed thirty thou,and irtunds and a led uu u. lie and the red nose sonietinn stretch their conjugal legs under our ma hogany—Jack coining, I. verily b, - dieve, for the si.ae of sitting within 'sight of thuse eyes which look so truthfully at me across the w' Ito damask, and which in Lis younger ; ;;Uys su distracted him, The ladies retire. Does Blanehe tell Jack's wife how Jack once parted with her at Torquay ? No, no; the woman whom I love would never indulge her •;.inity to the grief of arc; other, even of her own sex ; deeming, withal, one _honest man's heart, whilly sari, sufficient.,:oneuest of a hie, ThCcre she sits—heaven Lless - , her ! No! she stirs—she conies towards " What are . you writing?" " Read it, my dear. "fis the long promised ' Ole Cie' Story." GIVING TUE. DEVIL HIS DUE If that crooked old coon,— Beelzebub (bad luck to him .9 ever gets frightened, it must be at a meeting of the colored Methodists ; otherwise be can stand more racket. than the majority of gentlemen could put up. with. There is a place 'of worship - in South Sixth street —the Bethelthey call it—where the “old sarpiot" is used up completely, three titnes every Sunday, andoinetimes on several nights during the week likewise. If the antique worku were not of the polypus species, so, that he can be cut up in every style_ without being killed off, he would have been reduced to a grease spot long 'ago, et the headquarters of -the' colored church militant. But thesly old_ uscal knows hoiv to take care of himself.. While. the' good people are shouting him down 'to the consistence of baker's, dough inside of the chapel, he has several of his young imps ii.anging about the door, to kick ,up a diversiun.m his favor. On Wednesday ther . o-t'fas,an '!exereise meeting" at • the sacred,. establishment just spokert.of,nod: the qixereise'; :Was of a particularly yiolent nature.-ha 44„ef' worship, With the 7.aolored MethediatS, brings all-.their- limbs in motion, ,and. is decide.dly: beuefleial - to the health of their bediesou - addition to . the salutary , effect on' • their; souls; OH Nick have slid in' .iii his, )loots on`-,that.`~occws'itil~' _ house shook Aizthe; tue,we c gitkr, 4 - even-the fair seillonriebed: their delicate una:hooks.in cte . fituico iof hini - and all emiSSarid.S. •.; . • • 01?i3 of -these.ciniygnries, however--ito iltip pot ttioto feettitLa . 1141, 1 iii ,J ob llucklcs by dome, with a foini atic . l p)vsiognoiny',strioil,y of the imbeee pattern,raised-the diabolical standard in the vestibule of ' the sacred temple. To speak in plainer terms, this Bob Duckles made an unhallowed. noise at the door,, unlike those noises hich are known to!- operate to Old Harry's disconi.fiture. Mr. Joseph Boon, a "eullidherson"'of ae knoWledged wisdom andi(o7liictrs';eckiiitcler stsplinfi (one of the . .."`deaeions.* the efinFeh,) left off lighting witk - ,piabolus senior, and made a ehary inlhe rear of his young representative, • This Deacon Boon hied en a pair of boots of portentous magnitude, which bad often bruised the tul Of:tile old. devil and were now employed td ; (l;ruise the stern of the, young one. - Thejrst: application sent Duckles farthcr the celestial regions than he is likely to , go again in a hurry; describing-a curvyl in his descent, he landed outside of the ecrbstnce. Duckles crawled back -and intimated to Deacon Boon that it would not be advisable i() "try dat again" to which Beon responded with his other trotter, and Deckles shot acroS's the street like a bolt from. a .C1'0..6401V. Ile's a persevering fellow, that Bob Duckles—su lie Calla) up to the notch again, and received a still More sensible percussion faun the sanctimonious and well-shud foot of Mr, Boone. The mark was fairly hit; there's no mistake in the devout energy of Air. I,3ooti's big toe. This time Bob was projected, quite across the street, tilibis head brought up against a 13111 p post. However be came' back agaiu, rubbing his !toddle with one hand and his rear with the other, and repeated his cdd defiance - you try dat again, doe Boon." Four dines the ex periment was repeated, and Bob 6onii - niz back after the fourth trial, was about to utter the same defiant - words, but changed his mitt! afid gruutbled out, "kVell, re,:kon lot's about (muff satisfied Br. Boon, if you is." By this.timm the devotional order of Boon had Livapurated, and lie ritu,rucd into the, church, But poor Ducklea hued net ati.oi he end of' his troubles. - When be wits released front ecclesiastical band-, the secular authority took hold of hits. A fat police officer apprehended hlut .fir injury done by his skull bone to the lamp post Ile was hound , ver in $2OO to bkt of better Lelia iur while the good nig:.2.mi arc tutu:6 to ;:liuut down hir's daddy's kingdom. Too I IA i; NT I: Li Ca stir —Not long ago, a party of I'll,;il; geolicatco at t'azenuvia, :‘t ew Vt.o k, vita, Up an (Jl,l 111‘11Nli canoe from the Lofton Of Uts,te LCIla lake, tool [ rat loir prided thenisid i es on the discovery liif the 3•l:_iir;.ll.);k i Matt,__ ,A,. c 0 “ I klry_ IPA/. Itusttover, tiheist a Lliattee to make a see - tiLltioll by the affair, foithwith manufae i timid and versified a tremendous - Indian legend to eciount for finditm: the canoe. In exaggerated hexameters, through the columns of the local Taper, lm told how a "big injun" of the Quentlagos had m ice stolen a tawcy ',aide front the hostile Mo• Ita-41t tribe, and had been pursued by a hand of the latter to the shore cf . Lido!: Owaghena, where ICF, leaped with his tawny bride into a canoe, end was rowed by hia Onondago braves to a place of safety. In commemoration of the safety of their chieftain, the ()moult:pis tank the canoe in the lake, and invoked a curse upon whoever should dare to raise it again, unle.,s the offender immediately , restored it to its place of confinement, with ceremonies in imitation of the even.t. eau..icd• by its ;:inliung. If this was nos, don e Lho g lamm of the Diitoodagos were to haunt the irreverent raiser id' the canoe, land finally scalp him. This powerful piece of - poirk try" so lit igliteuo the Igents who had raised the canoe tQt they at once wade preparations for reduring it with the precieriLed cutemonies. Oil the day aypointed a number of . persomi in In- Idian costume assembled on the hanks of Ithe lake--a very beautiful young lady personating the Mohawk bride, and a Istrapping youth the Onendage Imidegrooni 'ibe pt it gut into the canoe and were roved by the Onondagos to the opposite shore A speech wiis made by a distin guished brave, the canoe was once more sunk ip. the beautiful lake, and after a great war dance, the fictitious savages re tired to their twines. I:he " poick" who ~.. caused all this commotion is said to "put on great about it," and wears longer hair land dirtier collars than ever: no ebn siders it a triumph of the muse, and per .hapti it is. BI!OWN SAVED 'DEE CAPITAL.— The Washington correspondent of The, Boston Jotirnal tollsrthe following singular story cf the way in which Jelin Brown's lawless raid into Virginia became the remote cause of the salvation of trio 'Federal capits r o.: '4When the marines dashed up to Ike door ofthe engine house, where Virginia chivalry quartered, they sei t zedr,CADDV.3o/3l3rown but a quantity of powder within ,the building, .which he hod brought from Pennsylvania.-- Affor liropu and his party were secured, the . powder was placed in one of the brick build ings, where it remained till April last. 'When the United Slates troops found that the Vir ginia forces ware preparing to make descent upon t'ic . ferry for.the ,purpoee of onytoring the arms, they looked about for ammunition.' They did not dare to.visit the magazine, for there were sharp eyes which watched every movement,-and an' attempt to take powder _from there would precipitate an attack. Then, it was that John 13rown:a powder was VDIDII. WO. It was in small packages, and where it could be taken and distributed unbeknown to any outsiders: It was,placed in the different buildings,, the trains were laid, And just an time Virginiami.thonikirt,the prize was thelrii, they foutid.that the denies were ,ithead of thera.- 1 It was desilped that )113 several thousand stand of arms there afored tlhould be distrib• Wad in .Baltimore, where,' as, yen know, the outisroalt iannidiately ,occurred, and that thence u.dessetik.wCuld bo tkifde'-upon ington:. .5,0.3011.1 Brown's.powder. saved the ' 1 94 1 . All o.l' thia klll appear: lam lar9Fm''' ea, witi'auffafactoriiittflendi..iit ;tI report ';4sf , thaoeintriittee. appointed to-int , estigato the , Harper's terry a A N in Alban liiivertiies a pa,tent kdop oggqifroni ent tiieni while froili is it, in.o.ty good.-way. as, bne'grimt cixtian tag° oPer most kind :of ineollanica---hisg.oodo ) lilebover arn tifviia.' 30 per anninn in advancat 00 if net paid in advance I" $2 El-ASK-EA . -OP CHIPS: Fire works—Rum and candles. 'To stir up the fire.—Try the Polka! Southern-Ipso Dixit.—Tipsey Dixie ! Soldier's "Dad Cold."—Cowardig'. `, , L11.180 of. many turn coats.—tad hat i l)ts ! The proper angle for a fishing-rod --In.: clined to book ! Wby, are esbbage seeds planted.—Fof Germination t f,,a • Difficulties and strong men, like strap find razor, are made for each other. Not-ico of Removal.—King Frost,' first wintry breath Why did Dcsdemona wed Otheila ? Per the love olionour L . Street sweepers when hard at work; are said to be in dustrious. The best way to keep the Climb Belles —At arms' !' A THorier's Amusement.— go seek"—fur more. A due-hill puts an additional pair of Wings to the back of Time. The ‘. Music of the Belles" is caused by the rattling of their tongues ! The branAl of culture most .populai• with the F. F. V.'s —Haughtyculture. It is very foolish fur people to put themselves to the trouble to be tared Motto for Pickle Meretiant.--"Th6 Onion, it, iiiusi, arid shall be preserved !" \V lieu is a flock of sheep like our cli mate ? ‘VIPIn it is euniposi:ci of all wetli• burs. If a man cannot argue without swear ing and cnt..in:j., his discussions aro too MEM Somb d' the Southern rebels have been. nemp let us hope that hemp wilt uo tidy vui,e tbem. Almost every young lady is spirited enotyll to have her flatlet's house used a t•IluLlal! Why does a loy put a straw in a ino kis-;es barrel'.'—lle pits a suck,..r in, 0 :[et cut the saccharine, "I will (alto a bite, too," ae.., the wolf when lie ,:tie across a roan catinj; lii dinner in ( ;mid p'aeo for "a sober second thought, The 11'0,:tutu Asylum at Biuolautton. Why is a druid,ar I not a Idose character ? Because if he's tight he can't be look. (3eud.neLs tlo.s not Inure certainly make ihan baNiiness makes them ono 1. Cincinnati Pork. Merchants. —Whole sale cut throats for the fore -quarters of pig-d.ocin I A woman without any dissituulation at all has a grace the less, and a sigh the Mote. A woman should bare no male friends but those who are the friends cf her bus- ME Why is a cannon just .fired like whipped sehuol-hoy ? Because it is multi at the I)receh. The Philadelphitt luquutr, of i he'-'4th inst , gives the following as having oecuri cd at the Musical Pubd Hall, fa that city on the evening previous, and we I;'_ve it not o=ly on account of its novelty, but to show Mutt means are resorted to in thiii business ago of the world to advertise: A most ingenious device was res toyed to last evening for drawing an audience to whiclf ha rooms Gallery at the •• Handsomest Women In America," and •• Baby Show" were insig 7 nWicaut. In the Amusement columns of l'ep papers, for some days, back, the eye has been atirneied by the novel announcements of Who is to be married on Thuri•day night at the Musical isnml non ? " Who is to per form the ceremony at Musical Fund Hell c 4 Thursday night. F' The wedding cards are issued for Thursday night.'"rhese were looked upon as a mere advertising expedients of the Concert Troupe, called the ,• Old Folits,7 until yesterdliy morning. the Weal colums el the Inquirer and atinounced that Mr. Henry E Holloway and Miss Hattie A. Annablo, of the Troupe, known respectively as " Cousin Reuben" and aranuy edooSm," were acturt4 to be married upon the stage by the Rev. Charles Wadsworth, D. D., of the Presbyteri an Church, Arch street, in this city. The result was asompact crowd of rieritlY, 3000 puttees in the hall, .Serrie4 in the seats, ' choking tit) aisles and standing in compact masses where there vt td n foot of space. ,The songs of the olden time, sung in rho quaint costumes of their day, passed off to the saris faction ol all, and, at the cicvse i the perfor mers retired to the waiting room', to present lyl•eturn again for the cereinony. The bl....dfi; groom 'sue dressed in a very long brown coat, redish waistcoat,, Hessian limits, : WO crow,ticd hat,.and long hatr,of the- period -4 1190, and the bride as nit Ohl woman of the same time, in a eitort-Waisted lawn colored silk, with a very high, broad cap. IZetht had well berm) their_ parts (hiring the Mincett; and the b'ride, whets handed to the piano, infiised a large amount of tomedy in her. walk and the use of her Stick, -As she appeared with Father Gulick, the chief oft4e troupe, lAr.•Wadsworth entered by aii• - tifrp• - •& • site dour, and when the company • were ranged in a row, with the bride and iorttitnet; in the centre, he made a short address to the`-' audience, stating that these two vergons ware! idiout to perform the most soleuin act of I, r heifs.:,:: lives, and olio which would influence 44011.:.: being, both in this world and the after old-costume, and now costumes wenloz:: be crumbled into duit. A short prayer fol lowcd, and the marriage Cook place with great solemnity,, the ladies, as: astral, gazing cegerly, with very 'serious Vats: 1111(li - - ' once genera* shamed much inipreesed, and wheo t aft•orilie• irrevoeable words; were pro nounced, an individual presenting the aspect efa dissatisfied Benedict .said—:-"dono ur(lt with:no response frotn -Omni around., 'At the conclusion, the inalienee were Mid: r 'ted down stairs, where, in hornet? style they_ were regaled with•muss of' eider and &nigh wood:76lsles, ttS , ,in the old t•tishioned•lartn'henSes of fernier , • The psrlormers also.entered the' supper , • and as the stood to receive the celupii r -•. ,Dy, many,' rehearty, slittlie:Of the' haiideougra.:? tuhttery word, were given, thtttrt,i";l3llnu•tiefi' y,r a tO youno.,-Ahe grm op.abo4 Kisrcebr tlao.l;r?de ' . ta PI NO k "Hide and