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VOL. 62 TERMS OF PUBLICATION The Oa ai.isvr Ibmst.n Is published weekly on n hire Iheet containing twenty eight columns, and famished to subscribers at $1.50 If paid strictly In adv Ines If pAid within the year; or $d In all rases when Jyty Wont is delayed until after the expiration of the year. No sub,riptions received or n less period than 415 months, and none diseontinned until all arrearages are paid, unless at the option of the publisher. Papers soot to subscribers living out of Cumberland county must bo paid for in advance, or the p.Vinent assumed by some responsible person living In Cumberland coun ty. These terms will be rigidly adhered to In all cases. AD VERTISEME NTS, Advertisements will be rharzed .Sl.OO per square of twelve linos for three insertions. and .25 rents for earn . subsequent insertion. All advertisements of lens Char twelve lines considered a< a sonarr. Advertisements linntrted le.fore NTarrlazes and deaths rents per line fir first insertion. and 4 vents per line On' subsequent insertlen S. Conlin unlrations on soh limited or individual interest trill be vhlrzed n rvti t t, per line. The Proprietor will not he re.pond file In cl.itna l tres for errors in advertisements. 01,1W:try nritlesis Or Marriazes not uxeCeitieg (Ivo lims. will be userted wilhout charge. JOB PRINTING Tito .101 - i INTTNCI IWFTrI is t.llO rgest anti in wit. remplete est:o,ll,llllunit in the enmity. Fnnr trnniii Presses aunt is general variety nt' ,t,ite•l inn plain anti Panes snarls of eVeier kill.l ena'lles ns to In Jolii Printing at, the iiiinirteat, an.' iin Its ~),f it,,OTIC in want. .t - Bills 11l its nr o setllinq 111 thin` .1 , 1/tatitt Will fin.l it to Interest to nine ns n rail. Cfttsa Not'tql. THE LIFE-CLOCK Ti'paa ,, e lit' le alyt.lo I=l Th a be it ,t 3 kn I 1,-11,0i on Frol murrain 4 nntil 0 . in dad when the s , u 1 is wrapped in sleep, IMIIIIIIIIIEIIIIIIIII It tlekg, nml tickv th , • ni2,116 /3101111=1 If 011 that of art 15'111.'11 Ic oells the 111.1ee lieu.' Bat, art itv'er forat.t.t it?r tit.l c,,lttatived Tito elo•lc'stnat;it• Nor not in gold nor dcrlce d with gem., By wealth and pride pIISSI,SI'd ; Bat rich or poor, or high or low Each hears it io Ws breast. Wh, el lifV s d oer , stream, 'mid bedding flowers All still awl seßly gilds, Like the ,vavohlt's itch, with a gonth, boat It Warne of paining tides When threntenin , .; darkness gathers o ' . 'r, And hope's bri4hL visitms pike the so lion' sti ok,UI Ike un u lit mt onr It. beateth heavily Whon pa ion nerve; the ‘cirrior's arm Filr deeds of hale and wrng, Thqiigh in v - err,,t n6t Mt fearful gaunt!, Thu uel lis devil and string When eyes to eyes are gaffing soft, And tender words are spoken, Then fast and wild it rattles on, As if with love 'twore broken. Sueh k the elocck that measures life, Of flesh rind spirit blended; And thus twill run within the breast, Till that strange 1141, is ended. THE FATHERLAND IME• Where Is the true man's fatherland? Is it where he by chance is born? Datil not the yens:ling spit it scorn To null Mint 111410, to be ,pan tied? 0, yes! his flailed:And must be As the biue heaven wide and free: I, it a1,,n0 ‘N here freedom is W here (hid is liad and man IN man! both ho not viaith a bro'ador span, For tho soul's lava ,if home than this? o,'yes' his (slim lan I must ho As the blue heaven wide ted free! Where', a human heart dnth near Joy's myrtle wreath or sorrow's gyres, Where', a 11111,11 M spirit htrives After n Mt Ines , true and fair, Thsre in the true inqn's birth plaro grand, Ills is a a‘irld-ai , ', lathe land! IVheru'er n Fim dr ,lase doth Wlpro'or orle 111311 Ittly 1,4•1 p aribt Thank hi /Pi! thri,ht brother,— That spot of earth is thine and mine! There is the true HUM'S 6a th•plare grand, Ms is,, nen Id.wido fatlim land! t.'rnui the Atlantic 1,0 \"1.; AND SKATI,„S IN TWO PA ill's l' ll' I' ] CRAP l' Ett, ST+LATING AS A nsE ART Of all the plays that are played by this playful world; . on its play-days, there is no play like Skating. To prepare a board ror Clio moves of this game of games, a panel fo: the drawings this Fine Art, a sta,4e for th e i ati, hots and pirouettes of its graceful adepts. Zero, magical artificer, had been, for the lust twu nights, sliding at lull speed up and down the North river. We have heard of Midas, whose touch made gold, and of the virgin under whose feet sprang roses; but Zero's : heels and toes were armed with more precious influ ences. They left a diamond way, where they slid,—a hundred and fifty miles of diamond, half a mile wide and six inches thick. Diamond can only reflect sunlight; ice can contain it. Zero's product, liner even than diamond, was HO—at the rate of a tnillion to the square foot—with bubbles immeaAurably little, and yet every cue big enough to comprise the entire sun in small, but without alteration or abridge ment. When the sun rose, each of those wonderful cells was ready -to catch the tip of a sunbeam and house it in a - shininn—abode. Besides this, Zero had inlaid its work, all along the ,shore,, with exquisite mar. quetry of leaves, brown and evergreen, of , sprays and twigs, leaves and grasses. No parquet • any palace from Pon- Cainebleau to 'St. Petershurg, could show such delicate patterns, or 'could gleam so brightly, though ,polished with all the wax in Christendom. On this fine pavement, all the way from , Cohoes to Spuyten Duyvel, Jubilee• was gliding without friction, the Christm:A morning of these adventures. . Navigation was closed. Navigators 'had leisure. The sloops and• schooners were frozen in along the shore, and tugs and barges, were laid up in basins, the float ing palaces, were down, at New York, de- Adurizing their bar-rooms, regilding their. 'bridal chambers, Mid enlarging their spit, toon accomodations plow and aloft for next summer. All the population was out on the ice, skating, - slidimg, - sledding, slipping tumbling, to its heart's content. One person out of every Dunderbunk family was of course at home, roasting Christmas turkey. The rest were already at high jinks on Zero's Christmas present when Wade and the men came down from the meeting. Wade buckled on his new skates in a jiffy. He stamped to settle himself, and then flung off half a dozen circles on his right leg, half dozen with his left, and the same with either leg backwards. -The ice, traced with these white peri pheries, • showed .like a blackboard where a school had been chalking diagrams of Eue,id, to pointat with the "slow unyield ing finger" of dewonsh•dtion. . . "Hurrah . rules Wade., halting in front of the men, who, some on the Foun dry wharf, same on the deck of our first acquaintance at Dunderhunk, the tug, "I cnbuster," were putting on their skates or watching him. "Hurrah! the skates are peri'ection! Are you ready, Bill?" "Vcs," says Tarbox, whizzing off rings • as exact iiotto's alo,,graph. quit - , then," ‘Vade said, "we'll give Dundurbank n laugh as we iiritvlisvd,la,t They got under full iwadwuy, Wade backwards, Bill forwards, holding hands. 'When they wore near enough to the merry throng wit, in the stream, both (hotp, t! into a sitting po,ture, wi t h 11)!:! left, knoe bent, and each with his ri 2 ht su•etched alit. 1 . mile! to tho ice anti c'nnpaetly by the nth nails leg In thi = quoer inure tiny rushed through the laughin,z crowd. The:l all Pendorhunit formed a ring, agog for the grand show of SK ATI - NC/ AS A FINE ART The world loves to see Greta, Artists, and expects them to do blicir duty. It is hard to treat of this Fine Art by the Art of Fine Writing. Its eloq UCH I motions must, be seen. To skate Fine Art, you must have a Body and a Soul, each of the First ()rder, otherwise yod will never ~et out of coarse art and skating in one syllable So touch for yourself, the motive power. And your machinery,—your smooth bott.uned tuckers, the same shape stein and stern, this must he as perfect as the man it moves, and who moves it: - Now suppose you wish to skate so that the critics will say, "See I this athlete does his work as Church paints, as Dailey draws, as Palmer chisels, as Whittier strikes the lyre, and Longfellow the dul cimer; he is as terse as Emerson, as clever as Bohnes, as graceful as Curtis; he is as calm as Seward, as - keen as Phil lips, as stalwart as Beecher; he is Gari baldi, he is Kit Carson, he is Blondin ; ho is as couiplew as the steamboat Me tropolis, as Steers' yacht, as Singer's sewing-machine, as Colt's revolver, as the steamplough, as Civilization." You wish to he so ranked among the people and the things that lead the age;—consider the qualities you roust have, and while you consider, keep your eye on _Richard Wade, for he has them all in perfection. First—of your physical qualities. You must have lungs, not bellows; and....an active heart, not an assortment of sluggish auricles and ventricles. You must have legs, not shanks Their shape is uniin portant, except that they must not interfere at the knee. You must have muscles, not flabbiness ; sinews like wire, nerves like sunbeams; and a thin layer of flesh to cushion the gable•ends, wher,9 you will strike, if you tumble,—which, once fur all be it said, you must never do. You 'must be ad momentum and no iner tia You roust be one part grace, one force, one and the rest caoutehoue, Manilla hemp. and watelispring Your machine, your body, must be thoroughly obedient. It must go just so far and no farther. You have got to be as unerring as a planet holding its own, emphatically, heiween forces centripetal and centrifu gal. Your aplomb must he as absolute as the pounce of a Neon. So much for a few of the physical qualities necessary to be a great Artist in Skating. See 'Wade, how he shows them Now for the mural an intellectual. Pluck is the first; it always is the first (luality. Then enthusiasm Then pa tience. Then pertinacity. Then a fine ;esthetic faculty,—in short, good taste. Then an orderly and Submissive mind, that can consent to act in accordance with the laws of alt Circumstances, too, oust have eon reasonably favorable. Tho well-known skeptic, the King of tropical Bantam, could not skate, because he had never seen ice and doubted even the existence of solid water. Witilircing ton, after the battle of Chevy Chase, could not have skated, because he had no legs,— froVr fellow ! But granted the ice and the legs, then if you begin in the elastic days of youth, when cold does not sting, tumbles do not bruise, and duekings do not wet; if you have pluck and ardor enough,- to try eve-. rything ; if you work slowly ahead and stick to it; if , ytu have" good tasto and a lively invention ; if you are a man and not a lubber;—then, in fine, you .may become a Great Skater, just as with equal power and equal patns you may put your grip on goy kind of Greatness. —The-toelmolog-y-otskating.is_imperfeet. Facv of the grCat, feats, the, Big Things, have admitted names. If I attempted to , catalogue ' Wade's achievements, this chapter might become an unintelligible 'rhapsody. A sheet of paper and a pen point cannot supply the place of a sheet of ice and a skate.edge. Geometry must have its diagrams, Anatomy its corpus to carve. Skating also refuses to bo spir itulized into a Science; it remains an Art, and cannot be expressed in a form lila. • Skating has its Littlo Go, its Great Go, and its Baccalaureate, its M. A., its F. S. D. (Doctor of Frantic Skipping), its 'A. G. D. (Doctor of Airy Gliding), its .T. D. (Doctor of No Tumbles), and finally its higliest degree, U. P: (Unap.. proacbable Podographer). - Wade was U. P. There Niias hvdred of Dunderbunic, ors who had passed ,their Little Go and PRMER, - Iro2. TRW :WAD/altar -6111MIRto could skate forward and - baelowd ; A half-hundred, perhaps, were. through their Great Go; these could do outer :edge freely. A dozen had taken the Baccalaureate, and were proudly repeat ing, the pirouettes and spread-eagle of that degree. A few could cross their feet, on the edge, forward and backward, l andshift edge on the same foot, and so w,,erc. Magistri Arils. Wade U. P., added to these, an in definite list of combinations and fresh !contrivances. He spun spirals slow, and :spirals neck or nothing. He pivoted on one toe, with the other toe cutting rings, inner and outer edge, forward and back ward. Ile skated on one foot better than the M. A. s could on both. He ran on his toes; he slid on his heels ; he cut up shines like a sunbeam on a bender; he swung, light as if he could fly, if he pleased, like a wing -footed Mercury ; be glided as if will, not muscle, moved him ; he tore about in frenzies ; his pivotal leg stood tirm, his balance leg flapped like a .inteeful pinion; he turned somersets ; : he jumped, whirling backward as he went, over a platoon of boys laid flat on the ice;—the last boy whineed, and thought, he was atuputatcd ; hut Wade flew over, and the boy still holds together is well as suet bey:-; Besides this, lie could write his name with a flourish at the end, like the ruhri,a of a Spanish ,Ile could phodograph any let ter, and multitudes of-ingenious curli cues which might pass for the alphabets i of unknown tongues. lie could not! tumble. It. was Fine Art. Bill Tarbox sometimes pressed the &tampion hard. But Bill stopped just short of Fine Art, in High Artisauship. flow Dunderbunk cheered this won drous displ , y! llow delighted the whole population was to believ,q,„ they possessed the best skater on the North River [low they struggled to imitate ! how they tumbled, some on their backs, scone on their faces, some with dignity like the dying Cesar, sonic rebelliously like a cat thrown out of a garret, some limp as an ancient acrobat ! How they laughed at themselves a..d at each other ! "It's all in the nun' skates,'' says Wade, apologizing fur his unapproachablo power, and finish. "It's sulhin . in the man says Smith W heelwright. "Now chase me, everybody," said Wade. And, fur a quarter of an hour. he dodged the merry crowd, until ta last, breathless, lie let himself be touched by pretty Bell Purtott, rosiczt of all the Dunderbunk bevy of rosy maidens on the ice. "He rather beats Besting," says Capt. Isaac Ambuster to Smith Wheelwright. "It's so cold there that they can skate all the year round ; but he beats them, all the same." The Captain was sitting in a queer ittle bowl of a skiff on the deck of his ug, and rocking it like a cradle, as he alked. "Bosting's always bard to beat in any thing rejoined the ex-Chairman. "But if doiting is to be beat, here's the man to du it." And now, perhaps, gentle reader, you think I have said enough in behalf of a limited fraternity, the skaters. The next chapter, shall , take up the cause of the Lovers, a inure numerous body, and we will see whether True Love, which never 'nukes "smooth running," can help its proBress by a skate-blade. CII A II ER VI ''GO NOT, 11 .\ I'PY DAY, TILL THE MAIDEN YIELDS." Christ IllaS noon at Dunderbunk. Every skater was in galloping glee,—as the elec tric air, and the sparkling sun, and the glinting, ice had a right to expect that they all should be. Belle Purtett, skating sidiply and well, had never looked so pretty and graceful. So tlwught Lill Tarlaix. He hail not spoken to her, nor she to him, for inure than six months., The poor fellow was ashamed of himself and penitent for his past bad courses. And so, though he lonired to have his old flame recognize him again, and though he was bitterly jealous and miserably afraid he should lose her, he had kept away and consumed his heart like a true despairing lover. But to-day Bill was a lion, only second to Wade, the unapproachable lion-m-chief. Bill was reinstated in publio esteem, and had won back his standing in the Faun dry. He had to-day made a speech which Perry Purtett gave everybody to understand "none of Senator Bill Sew ard's could hold the tallow to." Getting up the.. meeting and presenting Wade with the skates was Bill's own scheme, and it had turned out an eminent success. Everything began to look. bright to him. His past life drifted out of his mind like the rowdy tales lie used to read in-the' Sunday newspapers. He had watched Bello Purtett all the morning, and saw that she distinguished nobody with her smiles, not oven coq du village, , Ringdove. Ho also observed that sho was furtively watching him. _ 111-and-by she sailed out of the crow 4 and weni — officlittle - wayto - p - ractiie: "Now," said he to himself "sail- in, Bill 'Tarbox I" Belle heard the sharp strokes of a powerful skater coming 'after her. - Her heart divined who this might be.•- She sped awal like the swift Camilla, and her modest drapery showed just - enough 'and "ne quid nimis!" of her'ankles. • Bill admired the grace and the ankles immensely. But his hopes sank a little at the flight,—for he thought she per ceived his chase and meant to drop him. Bill had not had a_classical education, and knew nothing of Galatea in the Eo loguo,,how she did not hide, until she saw her swain was looking fondly after - , "She wunts to getaway," ho thought.- "But _she shan't,---'-no, not if I bave to followlier to Albany." Be struck out ..inightily. Presently the swift Camilla let herself be overtaken. CARLISLE, PA., FRIDAY, MARCH 14, 1862. "Good- morning, Miss.-PUrtetVr(diiii.r. god air.) "Good morning, Mr. T*box." (Taken by surprise air.) "I've been admiring your skating," "Have you ?'' rejoins Belle, very cool and distant. "Have you been long on the ice?" he inquired hypocritically. • "I came on two hours ago with Mr. Ringdove and the girls,".'returned she, with a twinkle which said, "Take that, sir, for pretending you didnot see me." "You've seen Mr. Wade skate, then," Bill said, ignoring Ringdove. "Yes ; is'n't it splendid ?" Belle re plied kindling. "Tip- top." "But then he does everything Utter than anybody." "So he does ?" Bill said,—true to his friend, and yet beginning to•be jealous of this enthusiasm. It was not the first time he had been jealous of Wade; but he had quelled his fears like a good fel low. Belle perceived Bill's. jealousy, and could have cried for joy. Shehad known as little of her once lover's heart as he of her's. She Only knew that he stopped corning to see her when ho fell, arid had not renewed his visits now that he was risen again. If ;die bad riot been charm- ingly ruddy with the brick air and exer cise, she would have betrayed her pleas ure at Hill's jealousy wjrh a fine blush. The sense of recovered power Made her wish to use it again. She must tense him a little. So she continued, as they skated on in good rhythm-- "Mother and I wouldn't know what to do without Mr Wade: We like him so much,”—said ardently. What Bill feared was true, then, he thought. Wade, noble fellow, worthy to win any woman's heart, had fascinated Isis landlady's daughter. "I don't wonder you like him," said he. "Ile deserves it." Belle was touched by her old lover's forlorn tone. "'Fe does indeed," she said. "He has helped and taught, tts alhuto mtich. Ile has taken such good care of Perry. And then"—here she govei.-hots ; companiop little look and a little smile—"he speaks so kindly of you, Mr. Tarboi." Smile, look, and words.eleetrifled Bill: He pave such a spring on' his skates : that he shot far ahead of the lady. He brought himself hack with a sharp turn. "He has done kinder than he can speak," says Bill. '4le hat wade a man of me again, Miss 8e11e4 . 4 . " know it. If mistelf . "Yutt - very tap py to hear you able to say so of yourself." She spoke gravely. " Very happy"—about anything that concerned him */ Bill had to work off his overjoy at this by an exuberant flour ish. He whisked about Belle,—outer edge backwark. She stopped to admire. He finished by describing on the virgin ice, before her, the letters B. P., in his neatest style of podography easy letters ' to make, luckily. " Beautiful I'' exclaimed Belle. " What are those letters ? Oh ! B. P. ! What do they stand for ?" " Guess !" " I'm so dull," she said, loookingbright as a dituond " Let me think I 13. P. 'e British Poets, perhaps." " Try nearer home !" " What arc you likely to be thinking about that begins with B. P.?—Oh, 1 know! Boiler Plates !" She looked at him,—innocent as a lamb. Bill looked at her, delighted with her little coquetry. A woman without coquetry is insipid as a rose without scent, as Champagne,, without bubbles, or as coaled beef without mustard. " It's something I'm thinking of most of the time," says he ; " but I hope it's softer than Boiler Plates. B. P. stands for Miss Isabella Purtett." " Oh !" says Belle, and she skated on is sileace. " You came down with Alonza Ring dove ?" Bill asked, suddenly, aware of an other pang after a moment of peace. - " Ile Came with me and his sisters," she replied. Yes; poor Riugdove had dressed 'him self in his poor, black, put on his brightest patent-leather boots, with his new swan-necked skates newly strapped over them, and wore his new dove col ored overcoat with the long skirts, on purpose to be lovely in the eyes of Belle on this occasion. Alas, in vain I " Mr. Itingdove is a great friend of yours, isn't ho?" " If you ever came to see me now, you would kuow.who my friends are, Mr. Tar box." - " Would you be my friend again, if I came, Miss Belle !" " Again ? I have alwayS been so,— always, Biil." ~ more " Well., then, something than my friend,—now that I am trying Co be wor thy of more, Belle ?" " What more can I bo ?" she said, soft- ly. ca My wife." She curved to the right. He followed. To the left. He•was tolinsbaketroff. you promise me not to say waives instead of valves, Bill ?" she said, looking pretty and saucy as could be.— "I know, to say W lor fashinable in the iron business, but I don't like it," " What a thing woman is to dodge!" says Bill. " Suppose I told you-that mon brought_up inside of boiler's, hammering on the inside against twenty hammering like Wulcans on the Weide, get their ear sai dumbfgundered that they can't tell wliet.her they aro .saying, valves or waives, vice or virtme,---suppose I told., you that = what would yoursay, Belle ?" "Verhaps I'd say that you, pronounce virtatso well; and act it so sincerely, that dan't Thake any objection to your.other words., If you'd asked me to be your vile Bill,- I might }lave saiddidn'A,..under stand; but.wife I do under Stand; and I. say"— ° - , . • She nodded, and. tried to skit° off. Bill stuck close to her side. • =I "Is this-Erne Beller. he saidrainTio - § doubtfully. "True as truth ?" She put out her hand. He took it, and they skated on together,—hearts beat ing to the rythm of their movements. The uprpar,and merriment of the vil lage came only faintly to them. It seem ed as if all Nature was hushed to listen to their plighted troth, their words of love renewed, more earnest for long suppres sion. The beautiful ice spread before them, like their life to come, a pathway untouched by any sorrowful or weary foot step. . The blue sky was cloudless. The keen air stirred the pulses like the vapor of fro zen wine. The benignant mountains westward kindly surveyed the happy pair, and the Sun seemed created to warm and cheer them. "And you forgive me, Belle ?" said the -lover. "I feel as if I had only gone bad to make me know how much better going Tight is." "I always knew you would find it out. I never stopped hoping and praying for "That must have been what brought Mr. Wade hero." "Oh, I did hate him so, Bill, when I heard of something that happened be tween you and him ! I thought him a brute:and a tyrant. I never could get over it,-until he told mother that you were the best mftehinest he ever knew, and would sometime grow to be a great iuven tor.', "I'm, glad you hated . him. I suffared rattlesnakes and collapsed flues for fear you'd go and love him." "Aly affections were engaged," she said with simple seriousness. "Oh if I'd only thought so long ago ! How lovely you are !" exclaims Bill, in testacy. "And bow refined I And how good! God bless you!" He made up such a wishful mouth,—so wishful for one of the pleasurable uties of mouthes, that Belle blushed, laughed, and looked down, and as she did so saw that one of her straps was trailing. "Please fix_it, Bill," she said, stooping and kneeling. Bill also knelt, and his wishful moutß immediately took its chance. A manly smack, and a sweet little fem inine chirp sounded as their lips met. . "Bohm 1 twanging as gay as the first tap of a marriage -bell, a loud crack in the ice rang musically for leagues up and doWn the river. "Bravo !" it seemed to say. .."Well done, Bill Tarbox ! Try again" Which the happy fellow did, and the h py mai de c. perm i tte.d "Now," said Bill, ''let us go and hug Mr. Wade I" " What ! Both of us ?" Belle protes ted. 9lr Tarbox, lam ashamed of you!' CONCLUSION NEYT WEEK. LODGINGS FOR. BOOTS A short time ago, one of our citizens who loves his joke about as well as folks generally do, had occasion to visit one of the small towns in the interior of the State, and knowing he would have consid erable walking over muddy roads, he took with him a pair of long India rubber boots. He arrived at his destination about nine o'clock in the evening, and upon inquiry he found that the only tavern in the place was half a mile from the station. No con veyance was to be had, and the road was muddy in the extreme. Congratulating himself on having his long boots, he set off and found the mud so deep in some pla ces his boots were barely long enough. U reached the hotel at last, looking ractl , ?fr soiled about the feet. After supper nquired the charge for lodgings. "We usually charge," said the landlord, who also had some fun in his composition, "twenty-five cents; but if a man goes to bed with such boots as them on, (pointing to the customer's feet,) we charge him fif ty cents." 'A very good idea, I should think," re ' turned the traveler. After half an hour's conversation, the landlord showed him to his room, and they parted for the night, mutually pleas ed with each other. The next morning our friend arose late,,,and inquiring for the landlord, learned that he had gone from home to attend to some business.— After breakfast he handed a dollar to the landlord's wife, saying— " There . . is fifty cents for-my supper and breakfast, and fifty cents for my lodging." "Twenty-five cents is all we charge for lodging," said the landlady. "Yes," returned the stranger, "Uhder ordinary circumstances: but in his case fifty cquts is not too much." The stranger departed, and the lady was deep in conjecture as to what could be the circumstances which required a man to pay double price for lodging. When her husband returned— "Has that man who slept in the front room come down yet ?" he asked. "Yes," answered the wife, "and he has zone away. He paid fifty cents for his lodging, and said, under the circumstances it was right." The landlord rushed up stairs. His wife followed, to' learn - the — meaning---of.sint_ strange proceedings,Arid found lier hus band with the bed•clothes turned down, and her best bed looking more fit to plant potatoes in than it did for any human be ing. to sleep is. " You saw that man when he arrived here last night?" • ' "Yes." "You Saw his boots, didn't you?" %nyes.” "Well," said the landlord,•"the scamp slept in 'em. A few days after, the traveler, on his re turn home put up at:thelsame tavern.— Neither himself nor the landlord said any thing about the boots, which ,were in, the same condition as on the previous occa sion ; but the landlady looked daggers at him, and•eyed his boots with anxiety.— About_ten .hp would rd .tire. "And, by the way, landlord,_" said hp, with a merry twinklingin hii'eye, ""shat do you usually - elm* fordee4legr "We charge," answered ipif' with a moal.freplenclous emplasis, "twen ty-five cents 1" MR. RUSSELL'S LAST LETTER The letter of Mr. Russell in the Times of the 13th is of unusual interest, being graphic and sketchy, and with but few prophesies. We make a few extracts : PROBABILITIES'OF AN ADVANCE "As the condition of the roads and of the country in Virginia continues as bad as ever, it is likely that no movement of the army of the Potomac will take place until winter is over, unless the General is bold enough to trust to a bridge of frost, which may break when lie is in the middle of it, and leave him floundering in a sea of mud. * * * It is possible that the Military Committee may have been satisfied by the promise of action to come, -or it may be that the General does . really intend to throw the Confederates off their guard, and make_ kdash at them one of these fine frost I days. The thing could be done—just ddne, by moving the whole force off suddenly, making a forced march so as to arrive in front of the ene my's lines by daybreak, and by a con certed plan, under fire of the numerous field breaking his line in the centre or overwhelming it on either flank. Such marches as that from the camps on the line from the front of Alexandria round ,hy : tle Chain Bridge to the posi tion at Centreville havn often been made, and have ended in successful battles. To make such an effort now it would be ne cessary to have a hard frost and a certain ty of its duration for a day or tki, and there should be also some reasonable cer tainty of success in the attack. THE POTOMAC AND THE CH INIEA CON- TRA:,TED "The ride from Washinolon to Mun son's Hill has-places which bid fair to rival that famous dip in the hill on the Balaklava road between the Col and Kad ikoi. But how different the scene .be yond 1 the long line of trenches, the smoke wreaths of the cannon, the expanse of tents on the dark plateau, the white houses of the city, the lines of the fleet and the symmetrical masses of the guar dian forts. how great the contrast be tween that ill fed, army of our soldiers, meeting death and disease, with out a murmur •in the face of the enemy,. and the comforts of these troops who have not even to light I COMFORT OF TTIE AMERICAN TROOPS "The American soldier is lightly equipped ; his knapsack is by no means burdensome, he wears no cross belts ; instead of hide and canvass sandles, he has well made boot 9 and shoes of leather When sick he has medicine and medical attendance, and unless he is at some for lorn sickly post like that at Beaufort, where injudicious correspondents have revealed the existence of great sickness, and some neglect, and have thereby near ly subjected themselves to the kindness of an expulsion by General Sherman, he is well treated in illness, and has as fair chances as any invalid in the world for re covery. In addition to his rations it is suggested in Congress that he shall have "crackers, butter, and cheese !" Certainly it will not be from any want of all care and comfort that the Northern soldiers prove unsuccessful. At night enormous fires blaze in the camps, and the guards warm themselves by pyramids of blazing billets enongh for a . hundred yule fires. " In the other tents not thus provided the soldiers have shown ingenuity in making themselves comfortable. Thus, they con struct a fire-place by cutting a hole in the earth inside the tent, and thence pushing a small covered gallery outside, the dis tance of two or three yards. The shaft is then pierced, and a couple empty bar rels placed one above the other, and coat ed with clay, establish a draught, and serve as a chimney for the fire inside the tent The abundance of wood gives the soldiers means of flooring the tents, fit ting them with shelves, making bedsteads and chairs, and, above all, raising stock ades round the sides of the tents to keep out the wind. They are also clever in con structing stables of the branches of firs, pines and evergreens, and in making screens of the same materials round their camps and , tents, which sometimes affect artistic forms, and( expand into decora tions, triumphal afehes, wreaths with in scriptions offer theentrances to the streets of the camp, and the like. At Christmas they were particularly effective and pret tily arranged: Sutler's carts, very well got up, with the names of the regiments to which they belong painted on the pan els and oilskin covers, are grouped around the wooden sheds and stores, and vari ous unrecognized vehicles are loitering in the vicinity, surrounded by soldiers, who are intent on struggling with Brobdignag oysters, purchasing 'guns drops;' or invest ing in the doubtful solaces afforded by volumes of 'Common Prayer,"Sacred Po ems,' and similar tin volumes full of spir : itual fluids, which quite unfit the recipi ent for any exercises whatever, and which are intended to evade the strict watch which is kept over the sale of intoxicating _drinks. Yankee ingenuity has been tax ilifiriffisutleassfiillyi-to-deLeat-the - Pro= vost Marshal, 'Liniments,"Embrocations,' 'Cough Mixtures,' and patent medicines of the most stimulating character- crave been devised for the occasion, and a man may become .asJhappy as a. king,' and 'as Sick as a dog,' by taking a couple of bot tles of 'Prepared Bear's Grease, or 'The Patriot's Ursine.' Drunkenness is the great evil of the camps. Venus is not permitted to follow the, American Mars into the 'field, and it is rare indeed to see a woman-in the vicinity.", : Mr: Russell. eltiophere admits that , : the battle - of - Milt Spring was a decided sue case for the Federals,.and thinks an Order or merit 'ought to, be eatablished for our soldiers: A chap who was told that the best Miro for. palpifatiou; ofithe leark was ("lilt hugging and kissing the girls, said, "If that is the only remedy that. Mtn be_ propoSed, I, for ono, say, let'cr palpitates. 1 $1 60 per Minima in adViing $2 00 if not paid in advance 19' - Cstiren_ ii.xube ranee.• The -Frankfort- (Icy.)- Commonwealth of tlio 19th contains the following letter to the Rebels: M✓ Dear kebs—l n'ow take my pen' in hand for the, purpose of holding cow amnion with you through the silent me dium of per AA paper. I have just learn ed that the lines are now open as far as Fort Donelson, in Tennessee, and I avail myself with alacrity of the opportunity now presented of resuming our correspon dence. Y0u...: many friends in this section would like tb be informed on various top- . ics—for instance : I-Tow are you, anyhow ? How does " dying in the last ditch• af- - gree with your general health ? How is the 'Constitution" down your . way Do yeti think there is any Broverm moot ? How is "King hotting ?" Is Yancy well, and able to eat his oats? When will Buckner take his Christmas' dinner in Louisville ? Is Lloyd Tilghman still hanging Union' men in the First District? Is Floyd still "rifiz'ny , cannon and oth- - sr small arms ? How is Pillow's last " ditch," and when will he gratify his numerous fri nds by "dying" in the same '1 How is the "Southern Heart!' Are you still able to whip five to one ? What is your opinion of theffutch raoe7 Did the recognition of the S. Confeder acy by England and Prance benefit you' much ? IT'llere is the "Provisional Government' of Kentucky, and what is it kept in ? Where is the Louisville-Nashville-Bowl ing Green-Courier now published ? Say ? And lastly, what do you think of your selves, anyhow ? A prompt answer will relieve many anx ious hearts. Yours, in a born, A LINCOLN MAN' United States, Feb. 18th 1862. " RIDIN' ON A, RAILROAD KERR!'-' A most veracious chronicler relates, in the following fashion, the experience of a young lady from the rural districts who lately visited the city, accompanied by her peculiar swain, and took an appreciative view of .the elephant. Cietting into one of the city cars for a ride, the maiden took a seat, while the lover planted himself on the platform. The graceful vehicle had sped but a few short blocks, when the benificently young conductor insinuated himself into the popular chariot for the purpose of col lecting the expenses. Approaching tho rustic maiden, he said affably : " Your fare miss." The rosebud allowed a delicate pink to . manifest itself on her cheeks, and looked down in soft confusion. The justly pop ular conductor was rather astonished at this, and adventured to remark once more: "Your fare,-miss " This time the pilik deepened to carna tion, and the maiden fingered her parasol with pretty coquettishness. The conductor ' really didn't know what to make of this sort of thing, and began to look a little fool= ish; but as a small boy at the other end of the car began to show signs of a disposi tion to leave without paying for his ride, the official managed to say once more: "Item! miss, your fare." In a moment those lovely violet dyes were looking up in his face, through an aurora of blushes, and the rosy lip exclaim ed : "Well. they , do say I'm good looking at, hum ; but I don't see why you want to say it out so loud!" It was not a peal of thunder that shook the car just then. Oh, no. It was some thing that commenced in a general titter, and culminated in such a shattering guf faw as stentorian lungs alone are capable of. In the midst of the cachinatory tem pest, the '.levyer" came to the rescue of his Doxiana, and, when the "pint of the hull thing" was explained to him, his mouth expanded to proportions that might have made Barnum's hippopotamus die of jealousy on the spot. Thd pair descended from the car amid a salvo of mirth, and when last seen were purchasing artificial sweetmeats at a candy shop. THE SEVEN OLD AND THE SEVEN NEW.—The seven wonders of the world, were: Ist, the Egyptian pyramids. The largest of these is 604 feet square and 469 feet high, and its base covers acres of ground. 2, the Mausoleum, erec ted to Mausolus, king, of Carla, by his widow, Artemisia. It was 73 feet long and 35 high. 3d. the Temple of Diana, at Ephesus. This was 425 feet in length and 220 feet in breadth. 4th, the-Walls, and Hanging Gardens of Babylon. These walls are stated, by Herodo.tus, to have been 87 feet thick, 250 feet high and GO miles in length ; and the statement is deemed credible by modern antiquarians. sth, the Colossus of Rhodes. This was a brazen statue of Apollo, 105 feet in heigh t standing at the mouth of the harbor of Rhodes. 6th. the statue of Jupitei Olym pus, at Athens, which was made of ivory and gold, and..WaS wonderful - for - its betta ty-ratre-r than for its size: 7th, Pharos at Alexandria, in Egypt. A fire of wood was kept burning on its summit during the night, to guide ships to the harbor. Tho seven wonders of the world are: • The art of printing • Opiticai Instru ments; such as the Telescope and 'the Microscope ; Gunpowder; the steam En gine; Labor saving Machinery; the Electric Telegraph, and Photography. The ladies of Boston having' made some shirts for the soldiers . , from `four rto six in . ehes too short, soma wag perpetrated the following Like a man without a wife, Like a ship without a'sail, The most useless. thing in life, Is a shirt without—proper 4ngth.. Ile who•pats aside his religion ,becauflo ho,isgoing into soSiety is like one,t,Oting i .off' hs shoes becausa he is,about tO walk On' thorns. • NCI 11,