TERZS OF ADVERTISING Ouo Stwaro one insertion For each ,su. glil• u 4 Itls,r t.Oll For %In AdrertineuTtaß, Lognl-Notiers Profea•lo.,al Cards wit hou c _paper, _ 'bttnary :vc , t 11T In utile Inn rob Ling r mnrt 401 pH Vote lIICONI 4 t. In Cala! , per 101.1 l'ltiN i L ',G.—Uut Job rrlnting llltru It, the. arzent u•e 1 ,noat. o , mFlvto o-Lll.llshinont In thr :lona y. Four good l're,as, and a general variety of material nulled fin plain and Fancy work 01 every :Ind, en ado 4 is 1., do Job Printing at the she. test 901 CO, sad on 'al !non reasonable torsos. Persons is want of 1 .',1115, Blanks or anything In the iltiblibig toll; find 16 .0 theta interest to give us a call. awn' aleormaitin. U. S. GOVERNMENT Presirleo t—ANnar.w JouNsoN, Vice Pre..ll,lent S. 14),TE:ft, Secretary of State—Wm. lI.SF.WARD, Secretory of Interior-IA, 11,1,1,ti, socretory of treasury—floc:a McCuttoolf, Secretary o I War—l DwIN M. STANTON, ROCretiry of Navy— 0 foreN WELLER, Poet Muter Oeuernl—W:e DENNISON, 'toro.ly Onneral—.l , OO , Sett.tl. hie( .jostles ~ f the etaleF- 4 /.1.9 , 14 P. CILOR 11 :!1 - r.lrE ON , EltN NI ENT. - le of ro Ii ('Unix, Voyor li eneral— I 01: v . , Moth MAI? - V.t.t)r tie V t3nnel . ..l^ Eiti:l , l II \ °net.). -1, 111, , i3.. D ‘11 ,, 011F. : 1 14 ,1 t of 'Cho 'llpl k , r11 , . 0,10 coUNTY OFFICERS i• ./ Graham. Cnklin. llim. I u inch Stuart .ki tornny NV. Pnitlmtior.try— 'lork an I Itor Col nitiGi kogißter—(7oo tv. North, !Ugh iihnritt --John 1,,r01, Grinnty it . 1•11N111 , , -- i`oriiner —1)1,1.1 `,ll itlt County limn: 'I ny, l'hysielan to Jail—Dr. W. A'. Plaisitthirt to Pito:- Iloute--10.. 11. 11. !hilt BOROUGH OFFICER:i Chief 11111 gcs,--.1.001 C . ,1111111 ,`)/. 1111:0111.31111,01 n Counvil- ~ 1 ;11—./. IV. D. iICVNi 11 Z. is le, 11,•., st, I, 11 , 41 . 11111,11. 11 11 .F.l-- H .11.1111 11,9 . 11 51111,, 1 h1,111131111111, 11,1, , 1121] 0.1% 1 ttlllll,l Inn C.. 1 ", aid... Enleci Or; ttril Cont , t2tl.ll, att 51.0,1 1,1,1% 51. i 11,,t 15 11 \ K. :Awn!. r .1‘ 1 eiteetr I, t. Hart 11',.1..!;.• 1. I ipe,ll, tett 1‘ h 11 tl, eau ,t Feet Cote r. Patrick 11 1 .thipttet .11e• t,• the too-1. tip 'enl , e. Da, ii er.n \ll.•hatil iinitutub I.teltt erg— le, Meek, Lru i.l fleet EE ('II('IU' ll{ 111,11 tl. —t C l' 11 . .14 (“I st•r, 60,11) 31 II ~• , , p ck, 1 1 11. „rnr I l're , h)(.•rlan ur.ll, 51111 11,1 Sr. .104 -II't•01, I( r, 13 , 1w' 1:1, , 1 . . II It'll t• I I .•irw ~ A 5 1. anti 7 •r. I ' \I 11 I. !I W1'14,1, ,, ,et1) Ilot tilt t, 1 •/ I IMIIIMEMII lIIINII i • k tr. I k .t 11l 11 , -11.1 .11,1 t t ,ii•,1111.1110r , , MEM MINIEME=II Ch.ir.sh .t.“l h ••I oil II , It•st ti ' . 111.o•I \ dt. 3,1.. - 111. t qt,v &Hi Ii11:11 . P:11" s 3 I =II =III il • t 1.1 ,•.- I I t• t rot', ik..l 1,4,1 EMI IcKINSON U(JLLEUF R8vli••r1) D o , h 1 a sod r o 7,11 • 11f . .3. ‘V lilt . .‘ tlsoo, A. 31 Oi Nt1(1/10 • i.!111 . r . I I Cal .&tor o the Mt,elllll Rev M1111,,e I. hoewell, A M., • ;; :tea I.3mgo:htee. iloolU lIIIIuI.I 11, .`l. 11., Plefe efr of Nlet,lteteet .1,/hn K Sttlynx.n, A. )1., Profrnsor or the Latin and F.,4n01, Languages. Ilan .Lours ii iirdiatu, LL. D. Professor of Law. Rev lloury C. ('hest nu, A 11 Principal of the ,ellO,ll. As,l,talit, in the , ;rantsuar Srltool IMII:IMINI THE MAU) INSI'ITUTE I los - Tho or loos and Vert men ..1 St. John • Choi eh l'airlisle This Rev. . (lyre, U U. , Itio tor And T,...tiror. Siiieiia• I', \lois Dozikernk v. 11,1 roctnr in Latititiogos. 110,1 et, 111,1rurini lu , Ititheinal ter Jot! Covitt Must , Niro 11. )1 ‘11 , “ Telwilel lug and I . ltillting,. Phi Lector. , on Elorution Oloi Psyehol• Uk kiit ) 1)1 [LECTORS Proiident. Jailtes damilton, [l. s.xtoo, U. Wooduald, Ilenry ilumerieh, rry „% W. Eby, 'Cro.ts t., r, .lobo eshongor. 011 010 I , ololldllY each )11,nth at h 1 0 00ek A. . at F.:due:at" 11311. CORI'ffitATIONS CVRI.ISLE 11011 i It. )1 !lender- Harsh,. "Voile., 1,. A. I.lllltll and W. A Cox: )lexaongor, JIIO. i; 11 de.111,0 ; 1/Iroutrox, It U. tl.miorson. Cie•hiont I: C. NVoo.iward, John D. (tor ..tac, (Oho SI knot., jr., Alan. Inn-ler, Henry Saxton, Woo,tl,rn, J. J, 1,441 tn, N Itl. 11, 31ullin. NAT' ,VkL 11.NIS..—Vrosidant. 3amuel Ilepburn rdor. Jos. C (Toiler, Teller, Ahoor C. Brindle, Mos ger, Jesse Brown Wrn. ICer, John Dunlap, hided ll'oods, John 0. Dunlap, snag Brenneman, John .;terrett, Dirvgtors. egnagaLtsn VaLt.e.v Ruldtn I, COMVASY.—erekildttllt, Frrdori,•R Secret., and Treasurer, Edward litddle . . :Saw, intondent. O. N. Lull. l'ass,nge t rains three [Awes a day. Carlisle AeconlLTlO at.loll I , ,, , ,lAVArd,lnsven Carlisle 6 55 A, M., arriving at Car H o b o 520 I' tl . Throu4ll trains Eastward, 10.1 u A, N. and 2 42, I', M IV es,ward at 9.27, and '2.55 I' NI. tlkshins. II Aa /OM W, ER Doll Prolaitient, Lon .ol rod : l're.tsurs,r, A L. spon• ler ; Super Into.. en, t],orge \ : Dirort,rd, P. Watts, Wm. M. Itentennt FL 01. Riddle. Ilonry Saxton. 1(.1'. Woodward, .1. 11. Patton, V...arMLer and D. 8,12.ru1t. SOCIETIES Cumberland dtv Lodge No. 197, A. V. M. meets 01 ',Jargon 11411 on the 2..,d and 411 Tuesdayn 01 ovary month. St John's Lodtro N 0.2110 A. Y M. Moots 311 Thurs 1.1.1 y 01.37.1) Inouf 12, at Mario]. 11011. t%trlislo Lodge No 01 I. II of 11 F Meets Mon i. 103 00.011,4 nt 'l rout's buildlu Le torn I.ud l c 30. t. 3. I. I) ol (1 T. Mhots over) ursd, y nvetdog lu I.beem's 11011, 3d story. FIRE COMPANIES ❑u ion Fire CoMpotly wm organized in 1780. lloat.. in Imuther between' Nit and Hanover. Übe numberland Flee Cow par v was Instituted Feb illuse in liodfurd, between Main ano Pent (rat. _ ailnd Wlll B'l Cmnnany wax iniditutud in March, 1855. Ilrune In Polnirot. near Hanover 4.lmpiro ((hots awl I,ollllr Company WllB 111fIti ll• tad 10 1839 ilou-r In Pitt, null, Main. it4yEs off PUSTAGE Postage on till lattors of ono half ounce weight or under. 3 canto pro paid. Poetak. on ,ho ii I{IIAI l> aithln the County, free Within the State 13 coots per annum TO any part ni the United Sltitea, 20 cents Postage on all , rail ale it papers. 2 canto per ounce. Advertised letter, to he chore:ad with cost or ativortlelng MRS. R. A. SMITH'S Photographs, Ambrotypes, ivorytypes Beautiful Albunns! Beauliful Franies ! Albums for (Adios and Getitiottion, lou.ms f r MifSl9l, nod for Childron, Pookot Albums for Soldiers and Civilians! Oholeotit Allimns! ['ropiest Albums! Cheapest Albums! FOR CHIkTMAS GIFTS I Fref/ and new fret •w York and I'h Iladolpkla Marketn. 114 you want satisfactory Pictures and 'polite attention call at Dirs. It. A. Smith's Photo. graphic Gallery, South East Verner of Ilanover Strout and Market Square, opposite the Court House and Poet Oflice, Carlisle, Pa. , Mrs, It. A. Smith well known no Mrs. It A. Reynolds, and so well known as n Daguerrean Artist, gives per sonal attention to Ladles and Gentlemen visiting her Gallery, and having the best of Artists and polite at tendants can safely promise that In no other Gallery ran those who favor her with q call got pictures auk.. ,for to hers, not even In Now York or Philadelphia, or , meet with mon , kind and prompt attention. , Ambrotypes inserted in Rings, Lockets, Breast Pins, kc. Perfect copies of haguerrotypes and Ambrotypos made of deceased friends. Where 'copies ate defaced, II•e-like pictures may still be had. either for frames or for cards. All negatives preserved one year and orders by mall or otherwisepromptly attended to. DocemOri 23, 1811--tf, DR. 4911. H. COOK, • • LIOMOEOPATERC PHYSICIA.,- StrgOdit and Accouchour (-111Fing..- et. his, residence .. in Pitt streit naniiiseithe,ple.thodist Church. Ply' Il had, , -, ;; • -• • , • • • ••• '- • • ME= $t 00 25 OU 1 02 7 tO VOL. 65 REMEM & WEAKLE7, Edititits & Proprietors LINES WIITTTIIN IN tIIITFF , AFTER THE TIATIITNO 110I3It I hint :11ittil .1:1111. Alatil.ln, Saitiarv'm a. , ; In l iar bathing o .1,11 !lab And g,11114: boa disgt,tl,ll. TRAMP, TRAMP, TRAMP Ili the la I ,it. Thipkipa, atealloa,liatr, of att. 'al bright and happy IPano a,. far a tuat. .Itid thy fill i 4 Spit, 0(1111 that I rim Ja, Th.otp,ll I try I,l.llPar nit v.1 ( . 1 111,11, and la• gt 9 hnwp. Uamp. Ili, hop. n rn 0,111, .ul, rlii).l.ll, 014 y cal coin, 111.• .11111 y ling tin' 111 ilp.• nor t,\N brit, ell 1.1111 In IL. Lot 11 , . !row rtowl, 1C Ill! tilt it At•r , r.t 1 hmEtre ‘vite• Ilwy .W 1•10 I, Oil a 11111111 111 1111.11 or 111,.r0 11111 10 1,0.0 l• ICa. hrll 1/10i1' 1.1,1 1,1 I.:lrk I=l 1.. r Aiid I.light h.. pow, ht , ,,r, .inmst gay .1- 1.% ring 1,11. ololfll. rids on. e IZEI 1' Li . 4 1 ,, I. I ECTO GAREE CF OTTER 111=3 •fiti: rush ref tr,nli,, not quite so deep poi tl itiy ye.irs since as now, but 11 ,trott u and swift, the gn will of (wo tunes. though the Clyde was yet imded by man and horse where ships 11 , .W ride at a shoe. was liurryirng• jostling, trampliniz onward in Jamaica street and fiuchantin street and :heii busy thorough fires; but within our quarter were the stillness and dimntss, the cold, lofty, classic repose of the noble college to which a professor's house was in immediate vi cinity. MIIi31111=11111!! The room, large, low-roofed, with small, peaked window..., had not been built in modern times. The furniture was al most in keeping : roomy settees. broad, plain ribbed back chairs, with faded wa ed covers. the task of lingers crumbled into dust, heav3 bookcases loaded with proportionately ponderous or curiously quaint volumes, and mirrors, with their frames like coffins, covered with black velvet and relieved by gilding. The only fresh and fragrant thing it: the roout—ay, or in the house, where toaster and mistress and servants were Old and withered, with chilled blood and subdued steps—was a young girl seated on a window -seat, her hands lightly cross ed, watching the white clouds in the July sky, white, though ii , ,thitT. else in U as gow is so, and the air heavy with per petual swoke and vapor. That girl, too broad brewed and large eyed for were youthful beauty, but with such `an arch, delicate, girlish mouth and chin as betokened her a frank, unsophis ticat6d, werry child. aner all, was Leslie Bower, the young daughteiland only child of an erudite and venerated prof, ssur. As Le•lie had no brot! ere and no sis ters, in a sense she had nith,r father nor mot h er , fir professor Bower was the son. husband, and lather of his be I:3, and lie had so mighty a family of these, ancient and modern, that he htid very little time or attention to spare for ties of the flesh He was a mild, absent, engrossed old wan, flashing into energy and genius in his own field of learning, but in the world of ordinary humanity a body without a soul Professor Bower married late in life, well or ill, a timid, shrinking, dn'fittlish wife, who, removed from all early ties, ntU never mingling in Glasgow society, lapsed into a stillness as profound as his Own. Dr. Bower took little notice of I is child ; he had, what with duties and studies, no leisure : ho read in h.s slip pored morning gown, he read at meals, he read by his evening lamp . ; protiably, if 'Airs. Bower would confess it, he kept a volume under his pillow No wonder ho was a blear-eyed, poking, muttering old man, much more interested in, Han nibal than in.. Buonaparte, regarding Leslie like the 'house, the yearly income; the rector, the students, the janitors, as ono of many abstract, rams, with which he troubled, himself as little as. possible. Mrs. Bower eared for Leslie's health and comfort with scrupulous, nervous ex actness, but she was incapable of-'any. other-demonstration -of regard . ; she was shy and egotistical as poor Louis XVI, and peAaps it would have demanded as "tragio,a domestic revolution to' hayt! stirred . her , up to lively, tenderness: Letilio might htivr been an d'abions ae'Marie Antoinette , - • 1,-,0". N.\ , v.,41 Z9icfglinL I= Clara .inna .Isar Danghtrr a the rit h De Bloat, Whet Is Ivorth a half a million O n thy st3lr bow many do•nt' t have thee proildly waitDte Swun•liho in thy rrlttoline ; peeked in he•ev bright with jewek. Vain:tido then wert. 1 wef.n. Clara I.tirta .lane Matilda, I'lo admired thy attlinrii hair In a Avaterfall half tumbling thy dresses rich and ram I have laved thee for thy raiment : A lel the wily you fitting it round :teemed lii ithow yeti didn't care a— Cent. it it trailed ell the gromet. .f") 5k.11U1U.11 IM1111111•112111111 1211API KR II 11111= (( ', ,111,101 /.) of the amount of love entertained for her by her nearest kin, but curiously, though affectionate and passionate enough to have been the pure and innocent child of some fiery Jacobin, she had not vex ed herself about - this mystery. One sees every day lush purple and rose-colored plants growing in unaccountable shade ; true, their associates aro pale and droop ing, and the growth of the hardier is treacherous, and may distil poison, but the evil principle is gradual, and after con ditions have been confirmed and matured. The stronger portion of Leslie's nature which required abundant and invigorat ing food, was slow of development ; the lighter side flourished in the silent, dull house, where nothing else courted the sunbeam. In her childhood and girlhood, ',colic, had gone our, mstivol 7 ancl al though always somewhat marked and in dividual in character, she had companions, friends, sufrivient sympathy and inter course for an independent, buoyant na ture at the most phistic period of its ex istence. The stage of life was but lately left behind : Leslie had not long learnt that now she was removed from classes and masters, and must. in a groat measure confine her acquaintances to those who returned her visits'at her father's house ; and as v'sitors but mamma and papa about, anti did not suit their habits, she must resign her little world, and be almost as quiet and solitary as her elders Leslie had ju-t begun to sigh a little for the old thronged, bustling elass-romns, which she had lightly eiteem d. and was active by bits and stalls in numerous self-totitpt cJ ot.euptions hieh could lit former o w , ow .f ht• 2 , 11, ttntl fill up the u.:11), In lior time and i10w.21)•,, shy %v;‘,4i t in lu rl r.. rr J a n !twit I' [nu a linen L,rril l wi h (ir-r in a rho wd)s 'I had her newer paitirilig 1 . , \ V 1.1'.111';11 fhoWPI'S he r iii peer girl— enil,r,.ide.y pit ce-. ;,nd the last greedily devtittred. n t a,.ia her nnoller. 1)0(•:11L , e.. ;11[11, , n , :11 their h ut ehulcl WaS 13,0‘ver . :, l uiut. ntolodical p'atis were perfect ❑nil she gently declined all interlerence with her daily round. Neither did Leslie work fur her father, because the professor would as soon have employed her canary bird. She was thoughtful and pains-taking for the poor. hucause, though accustomed to a species of alms-giving, she heard nothing. saw nothing, of nearer or higher association with her , leighbors l'et there was ea pmdly enough in that heart and brain for good or fin• evil. So Leslie sat there, pausing in her sewing, and gazing idly at the sky, with a gill's quick pensiveness and thick coniiig fancies. " flow blue it was yonder: What glorious clouds'. Yet the world below was rather stupid and tiresome, and it was hard to say what people toiled so arduously fin• There'were other lands and other people; should site ever see them' Surely; for she was quite young. She wished they could go in summer down the water, out of this din and dust. to some coast village or lonely loch be tweet] lofty purple mountains, such as she had seen when with Mrs Elliot; papa might spare a few weeks, as poor people did; they had no holidays, and it was so liot and close, and always the same But she supposed she must be contented, and go away to cool and compose herself in the crypt of' their own cathedral. How grand it was ; how solemn, the aisles and arches on every side, like forest trees; and then the monuments! What stories she invented for them, and St. Mungo's Well. St. Mungo, austere, yet benefi cent ; with bare feet cowled head, scar red back. and hardest of all, swept and garnished heart, with his fruitful bles sing, Let Glasgow flourish.' W hat would St. Mungo think now of the city of the tree, the fish and the hell?' This hour, venerable, beautiful feat, of art was to the imlfrisoiied Glasgow girl as St. Paul's to such ,another isolated, imaginative nature. There was a knock at the street.door, a very decided application of the queer• twisted knocker. Leslie roused herself; nut a beggar's tap that ; none of the janitors; and this was not Dr. Murdoch or Dr. Ware's houir ; the' girl was accu rate in taps and lbotsteps. Some one was shown in ; a man's voice was heard greeting " Dr Bower" before the study door was closed. Leslie started up with pleased surprise," ieetor Garret of Utter ! he will come up stairs to see us; he will tell us how the country is-look ing; he will bring us news from Fern dean," and for the next hour she sat in happy, patient expectation. Mrs Bower, a lair, faded, grave wo man, 'Came into the room, and 'sat down with her needlework in the other window. "Mamma," exclaimed Leslie, " do you know that Hector Garret of 'Otter' is down stairs with papa?" ffM=Cii He never failsto 'ask for Us; don't you, think we'll see him by and byr i,,do not know; it depends upon his. engagements!' • wonder what brings , him to Gins 'gow.just now ;• ho must find it so much .131ofe -agreeable at' holue,y with' a little . .4. ...... .. 1 - t...\ . li j , .. r,.., , . A.,,. ~,. , ;', 1 q „.\.........__ K,________ ~1 \ ''. '• Leslie, I don't think you have any thing to do with that." " No, certainly; Hector (arret and I are two very different persons." " Leslie!" '• Well, mamma " " I wish you would not, say Hector Garret, it does na-ltaAnd proper in a girl like you. ' " I suppose it does not. He ninq have been a grown-up man when I . was a child. I have caught the habit from papa, but 1 have not the least inelinntion to use the name to his face... 1 should think not, Leslie;" and the conversation dropped. Presently the stranger entered delib erately ; a tall. fair, handsome man of eight-and-thirty or, forty, with one of ino:e coin. Itirelletmal, ntcet. , , in which there is a chill harmony, and which are types of a calm temperament or an extinct volcano Perhaps it was that cast of countenance which recom mended hint to the blowers ; yet Leslie was dark, bright and variable. The visitor brought a gift in his hand baskel of flowers and summer fruit. of which Leslie eagerly relieved hint, while she struggled in vaiu to look ho ire• ly obliged, and not irrationatcly elated '• So kind of you to trouble yourself Snell a beautiful flower—Wl d roses and hawthorn—l like so much to have thew, though they wither very soon. I (hare say (hey ,rem where ()it (Burns was bee,oniiig ruinous ;Ind had picked up the line: sffinewhere A ccl flit WI,: I'l'lo-, cat, they .11,t from Ferndean • 'I lie bearer nodded and rnii 011 I knew in.-titiet," and I.e-1;c ui earin ; .2. then, like a tenitoei cliiid. lier pie ry rips "110,e eld r , ,ws n emdi sde 01 the -111111111 . 1 . line; u art! jaelklaWS wmt t ymt ha, L. L...unie N., thank wni NVllat a inctio,r. )011 11:1Vc, 11i,S Ijower Verii,leari is Illy Highland hill When papa i, very stitr i helple..s from hettmatistm lie talks of it sometimes. It is so long ago; lie was so different then' Mr Garret and Mrs Bower exeban; 4 - ed a few civil words on his,.journey. the spring wrath r, the st•at. of the war, soon exhausted, as two taciturn people who force their speedo , then he be came Leslie's property. sat down be , ide her. watched her arranging her tiliwers. helped her a little. and spoke now and then in answer to her questions. and that was sufficient. !lector Garret was particularly struck this evening with the incongruity of Leslie's presence in the Protl , ssor's dry, silent, scholastic hme—her monotonous, shaded existence, her want of natural associations, her separation from fitting companionship. Ile pondered upon her future ; lie was well aei f nainted with her prospects; he knew much better than she did that the money with which his father had bought up the. mortgages on Fernilean. and finally the estate itself, was drained and scattered lung ago, and that the miserable 'annuity upon Which the Professor rested peacefully as a pro vision for his widow and child, died with the former. It was hard of credence that a man should be so regardless of his own but philosophy, Epicurean in its tendency, though it was but a stu dent's self' indulgence—the echo of the mystic, sublime discourses of the Greek porches. the faint but sacred trace of march of vast armies, and the fall of na tions, caused Leslie to dwindle into a mete speck in the creation Of course she would he provided for somehow ; marry, or make her own livelihood. So: crates did not plagite himself' much about the fate of Xantippe,: Seneca wrote from his exile to console his. mother, but the epistles were fir the benefit of the world at large, and destined to de end to fu ture generations of barbarians, , What a frank, single-hearted young girl she scented to Hector Garret--in telligent, capable of comprehending him in a _degree, amusing him with her smiles and suggestions ; pretty, too, as one of those wild roses or pinks that she prized so highly, though she wore a sober green, flowered silk dress—should like to see her in a white gown. Ile supposed that was not a convenient town wear. Pope had unmasked women, but he could not help thinking that a fresh, simple, kind young girl would be rather a pleasant object of daily encounter. She wonld grow older, of course. • That was a pity; but still she would be progressing into an unsophisticated, cordial, contented woman, whom servants would obey most heartily—to Whom. children Would cling. Even men had a gush of tenderness for theSe smiling, unobtrusive, humble moth ers; and best so in the strain and burden of this life. . Leslie know nothing of these inedita tions. • She , onlyunderstood Hector Gar-. rot as a considorate.friend4istinguished. Personally, and gifted mentally—for her father set' great' stoic: upon ,hirn,—.but, unlike the gruff or 'eager savants to whom she was :accustomed, :coudaScending to 'her,yoxith andignorance, With a courtesy the: nea ' r'est 'high-breeding had' ever c 1 L ir — 7 - 1 ; A. Carlisle, Pa., Friday, September 1, 1865 met. She was p jad to see Hector Gar ret, even if he did ,not bring a br3ath of the country with him She parted from him with 1 sense of loss—a passing sad ness that hung upon her finr an hour or two, like the vapor on the river, which misses th 3 green boughs and waving woods, and sighs sluggishly past wharves and warehouses. It was n Still greater surprise to Leslie when I>eaor Garret Caine again the next evening. Ile had never been with them on two it'l.teessive days She had judged him back in Ayrshire, although he had not distinctly referred to his speedy re turn. Btt he was here. and Leslie 011 (cl-tallied 'lin' as usual. "Shouhl not you like tosee Ferndean?" imtuired Hector Garret. Powi, speak or tt," eaninmeo him. soberly; " u N%.mtid Lc ror happiness for this world." Why, what sort of a dismal fluor.-flu you think the world r •' Too good a place for you and Ine, - LEslie answered evasively, and with a touch of fun. •• But this is the very season for Fern. dp.in and Otter. when the pasture is gay as a . garden, and you all have boating. every day- in the creeks, wore sheltered than the woorland lochs " The tears came into Leslie's eyes I think it is unkind of you. )11..1:ta ro, t, tempt me with such pictures," die answered, half pettishly.• •• I mean t, he kind." he resimnded, quickl I may err, but 1 min take 'Trim(' in my int en f inns. You may see Ferndean and Otter. if you can consent ;,) gt) .I,UI uLiie a, a inaMs frientl and wife." ,rarted and the 1,1”.)(1 1•11,1)(1 .)err 11 , .r thee •• I 1,( 1)61 plu 1111'111 1 I .1., nm, n it. 1.0-lie as the 1,0-4 directl) t,. nu. r, me: 11)ml 11 . .1,1 OW will never regret it ‘' Leslie renihied very noieli. She afterlvard- Olaf 11e pinched that :lie \vas awake. but iwt quite (iverctilne. "I was never addre,.se(l so before T In not,l‘now what to say. You are very good, but I an) not tit Ili IMO IT 11111 ed her—not with vows and protestations, but resolutely ttn_l con vincingly. 1 mu the best judge I,f your fitness. --you 1111181 j udge fir yourself also I am certain of your father's and mother's ae, l uic•-cetice. so 1 do not Intuition therm lint do art hurry ; take time, 'consult your own heart; consider the whole mat ter I still not press for your decision. I will wait (lays. weeks. I will gu down to Otter in the mean time, if' you prefer it. nut if' you tlo say yes. remember, dear Leslie. you confer upon the the greatest boon that a woman can bestow on a Mall, 1111t1 I think l on capable of appreciating it." Ile spoke with singular impartiality, but without re-assurin . , :, his hearer. Les lie looked helplessly up to him. excited and distressed. lle smiled a little, and ,ighed a brief sigh. Why Don't You Learn a Trade P This question was propounded, in our hearing a few days since, to ayoung man who had been for several months unsuc cessfully seeking e ployment as a clerk or salesman in one of our leading houses Complaining of his ill luck, one of his friends who knew he had Mechanical tal ent, and doubted whether he could make himself useful either as a clerk or sales man, put (be interrogatory to hitin whroh we have [laced as the caption of this article. The reply was, that a trade was not so respectable as a mercantile occu pation rider this delusive idea, our stores are crowdod with young men who have no capacity for business, and who, because of they 14nei(!ii respectability of doing nothing, waste away their minority upon their salaries which cannot possi bly liquidate their expenditures. Late, too late ill life, they disco ter their error, and before they reach the age of thirty, many of them look with envy upon the thrifty mechanic whom in the days of their boyhood they wire accustomed to deride. The false views of respeotibility which prevail in the soiilistant fashionable society of the present day, have ruined thousands of young men, and will ruin thousands more. OUR MISTAKES ABOUT EACIII 'OTHER,. .Not one man in ten thousand sees those with whom he associates as they really are. If the prayer of Burns were grant ed, and we •could all see ourselves as others see us, our self estimates would in 'all probability be much more orro nooms_thoo they_now arc.. The . truth is that we regard.eaob other through a va riety' of lenses, no ono of, which is eon, rect. - Passion .and•perjudiee, love 'and hate, benevolence and envys-spcietaeledur eyes; and utterly . prevenk : us frowtAserv -ing-accurately. 1%..4037 %VIM*. wetdeetn. 'the porcelain of human clay are. men fo dirt and a still greater number :of those'; the put down in our " black boolcu," are 'r no farther off ?rem heaven, aad z :perahance a little'nearer.thanthc censors ,:„ ",Tho pride, and pomp, and circumstance OF glorious war" at length aro done; The rebels have ceased their Devil's dance— " Otitelio's occupation's gone." I twirl my thumbs nnd mope about— /011.41 als4l mustered out. T Joined the eerviee with' the thought I'd quit it with a warrior'e name— For tube 7 atrimgled, litiffered, fought. All burning with flame. My dreanw fitrrie are o'er doubt, For now. plan! I'm nnydered Farewell the bars! farewell the stars! The sparkling leaveH, the eagles too! I love you all, ye girt. of Mare, And bid ,you now a sad adieu— I'm bound for home Or , quickest route— I'm unaltered out I'm mustered out No lour ci for ine the grand array, The drill, review, the drum parade— The fever of the ntaihrnitig, fray— The eontest fierce of ball and blade, The earloine'm ring, the trooper's pined The talc, rho song, thejoeund roar Will puss 110 more Tue camp•tlre, roam( Play,l out iv "untr,"'aa( no tiler,, Shall "Comods , lary'n" dt aught nhound Why could'nt General Lip hold out? Confound It 1111-Pm untutored nut. NO blittil! WM, Lnl tort " fight the relit; I'll much itrofOri sw - set lila said she'd he my wife. But now fprbids nip think of her. Whono'or 1 /Teak Ay 8 1 01.1118 to pout, My hope/ an• 'mustered out Cory O'Lanus on Family Affairs he lirooklin Roy/c has a correspon dent who knows a.thing or two. Hear him : It is a good thing for a man to pay at tention to his family. Provided he has one. :qiitrted wen generally , have. So have I. It is the natural consequence of getting nutirird. Flow everything.ebie, are wore Hain tlo•y used to be.—Shoes and clutlics cast. a sight now a-days, arid vlittdivn have un etly good al petites. 3111,e have Boys will to 1,0)-s. y can't help it They were both en. It is their des tin) to it ar Hier trousers, and wear out nc pair:, of bouts per month; keeping their nia constantly employed like a be: ateged garrison repairing breeches, and their unfortunate pa paying out currency under strung conviction that. there is noth ing like, -leather”—tu wear out. I tried copper-toed toots on my heir. The copper wore well, and 1 have an idea that copper boots would be a good' idea, but I couldn't find a metallic shoemaker to carry it, out. Mrs. 01. also became attached to cop per, and thought it would be an improve ment and save sewing if boys' pantaloons %Tee, like ships and tea.kettlts, copper bottomed. The suggestion was A No. I, b•tt we haven't tried it yet. Copper so ran in tuy head at the time that OTake called we a copperhead. This was the origin of the term. Mrs O'L. is a managing woman. She makes trousers for our son, Alexander Themistocles, out of mine, when I've done with them lie can get through three pair to my one, ordinarily, and I am obliged to wear out toy clothes faster than 1 used to keep him supplied. I once suggested that it might be with in the resources of art and industry to make him a pair out of new material. Mrs. 01..taid positively that it couldn't be doom It would ruin us. She con cluded it was cheaper to out is) a pair I had paid twelve dollars for. I subsequently found upon inquiry that new cloth fur that purpose could have been bought for about two dollars. I ventured to tell Mrs. 01 , expect ing a triumph of tm,le foresight over fe male lack of judgment. ,She gave we a look of scorn as she wanted to know if I had asked the price of "trimmings." Trimmings were too much for me. I have becu afraid of trimmings ever MIMI In addition to clothes, the scion of our house runs up other expenses. But, what is the expense compared with the joy a father feels, when after a day's laborious exorcise at the office, wrestling with a steel pen, he returns to his domes tic retreat, art is met at the oteffiy.,;,ll smiling cherubim, who, in tones that gu to his fund parent's Wart, and makes. hitt. forget his troubles, with, "Hullo, pa, give we a penny." Your hand immediately goes to the seat of your affections—your pocket— and draws forth the coveted coin, which is promptly invested in molasses candy. —About the hardest ease over heard of was a murderer named Stone, exeunt. ed many years since in Exeter. Just before the rope was placedarpund his neck, lie requested the sheriff to give him a mug of ale. The request being promptly attended to, ho took the cup, and commenced blowing the, froth from the ale. "'What,aro you doing that for?" nervously asked , the sheriff. " Because," returned the perfect wretch, " I don't think froth is.healthy.'t His Limn Bow.—" My,dearest says a humorous writer, " was the .most polite man in the world. He Wag mak ing a ,voyage on .the Danube, and the boat sunk. My uncle was just on 'the point or drowning. He got . ,, his head above the water , for onee, took off ,his hat, and said, LadieS and gentlemen, will you please, excuse me ?';and down .ha went." (It TERMS:—S2,OO in Advance, or $2,50 within the year "I'M MUSTERED OUT. " I= Singular Freak of a Lunatic Has any one noticed the rninature fort at the top of 131ackwell's Island to the north of the Lunatic Asylum ? It is the work of an insane man, who spent half of his life upon it. He lost his mind in Mexico, where high privates were in de• wand, and just escaped being Mr. Arm. strong, ,Mr. Parrott, or Whitworth by go. ing crazy. Gunnery was what ailed him —and fortifications. As he was found to be quite hopeless and obedient to his tnanonania, they gave him entrenchment tools and told him to fortify the, Island. He took the geographical bearings with the accuracy of a West Pointer, and con cluded that if any attack would be made it would come from the Sound. So he devised a sea prinst hat(ery with bomb proor, proached by a ayao wan suiceq and gates, and mounting heavy ordnance. There never was a more patient worker for humanity or patriotism than this poor addle head. Nobody else being insane upon the same point he could get no as sistance. All the other monomaniacs had oil on the brain, or poetry, or capital pun ishment, or negro suffrage, and were quite as devoted and zealous as he upon their several So the old soldier, with a long sigh and a brave heart, took up his single shovel and commenced to build tits., whole" fort by Liinself. Ile wheeled barrow after barrow of earth into the sea, toging from morning till night, until at lust he ruiseu a narrow causeway from the nthinlaial to a rock at the end of a lung sand bar ‘litii pebbles and stones flow the river, he walled this causeway until it becalm or a year's work ; year after year poser over his gray hails, but he kept un leg, wheenog. lhe g eat coy, or the greater island needed protection, and li, 'ivas !Lathing the tigis. S o Ire neat ui like t h e Olen who threw up the Chicle, Awl redoubts, and fur fear that lie wtglt be late to his -task lie left his bed in d,k. Asylum altogether and built hiw,-elf hut close by his place of labor. Here he slept and dwe.t, ur company only of assuring conscience; and at last when his path was done, he set to work at his fort 'I he result of all these years is before us. His battery is sodded green, with parapet, beam, ditch, magazine, revel [Lents, Abatis; and mounts t‘lock am, Quaker guns, upon carriages of capital construction ; looking up from the Sound toward Hell Gate, like teal arbiters of do minion. The lunatic is worn and fail ing, but he is not satisfied. His fort is done, but not La whole duty. So he has projected a water battery and sea-wall around the entire Island and means to bring to bear upon it all the knowledge Vauban and Todleben. When the island is impregnable he will wrap his mantle about him and die at his battery. For the truth of all this story let any one passing up the East river look upon the Island tip, and see an old man ditch ing and building, and the little fort close by him bristling with pop guns. FASHION CRITICISMS The Bath Courier gets oil the following: "We are about to say a few words which we beg our lady readers not to read. It is not intended for them all "Twenty years ago!" There's music in these words. Twenty years ago we saw sights that would look queer now. Pos sibly it may have been an illusion, inci• dent to tangled vision. Our good moth• ers and grandmothers,used to fold togeth. er the corners of a bandanna handker• chief; and placing it on there heads, tie the other two corners under the chin.— It made a warm, substantial covering for the head, at an expense of about eigliteen pence. The same fashion prevails to day unly there's a slight difference. We saw yesterday a little three cornered 'love" of a something, that protected the lady's head neither from rain, heat nor cold. It wasxhartning, only cost eighteen d!ollai•s. A wad of somebody else's bair depending from the rear, by a small- pike pole with a bombshell at either end. Modesty re• Marked that she hod named this modern bomb proof a "water fall." TWQ weeks ago on Sunday we rode out of church on a splendid silk robe, drawn by a lady full six feet distant.-- We tried our best to avoid the neeessity. A but she insisted—it was all the s'ylo! Mentally; we replied : Where's the use of street ears?" Twenty years ago it was understood to be fashionable to wear short night gowns from 10 P. M. to 6 A. M, or therea bouts. Transpose P. M. and A. M., leaving the figures where . -they are, and you get the remainder of the day. "Loose sacks" are beautiful. BEAUTY ,IN WOMEN.—A beautiful face and figure are the two things in a woman that first attract the attention of a man. The second is a fine taste, both in dress and habits, and the third is isom , mOti sense. What a man dislikes in a lady is untidiness, slovenly babitslifidliffec-, tation. 'There is a mediumibetween.pru dery,and which a man appreciates almost by instinct. 'Place a man of genial disposition, with a disen gaged heart, in the society-of a woman of beauty, sense and spirit- - notoe ul,ueb of tbe. • latter—.ouut the ehaneee arc' items,- falling desperately,:inlova; The poor wretch cannot avoid it, and in his frantic) efforts to escape he falls:upon . his., knees- - at - her - feet a nravows Fho tnitib t and majesty of her beauty. All that you will have to do in,,the 'matter will be to treat the poorTellow as-kindly es you can, make no efforts to please him. Let nature have her own wise way, and de pend upon it, you will be fondly pressed to the warm boom of some generous- hearted fellow. NO. 35. SIGNS AND TOKENS. A long article having the aboize head ing, is going the rounds of the press, and has been for some tittle. Puck, thinking the old ones arc played out, has manu factured some new ones; he being a su- : pertietural being, is of course ft ly-coin , .- petent to do so. T 1 (;rifliron. To take down the gridi ron from the nail where it is hanging, with the left hand, is a sign that there will be a boil in the kitchen. The ,Biwa•. If a mirror is broken, it is a sign that a good-looking lass will be missed in that house. A Funeral. To meet a funeral pro cession is a sign of death. Pocket ]3nol• To loose a pocket-book containing greenbacks is unlucky. No/is. If a woman cuts her nails every Monday, it is lucky— for her Emit band. /roosters. u you hear a rooster crow when you are in bed, and the clock strikes a few times at the same instant, it is a sign of mo(u)rning. Aii /tehing /;or. If you have an itch ing ear, tickle your nose and you will have an itching there, and ill luck will be averted. S,M. To spill salt accidentally into a stew while it is on the fire, is a proof that the fatally will meet with its altera tions (salterrations ) A Cat. When a cat prepares to wash its face it is a sign that, one in the house will shortly receive a licking. Warts. To have sixteen warts on the left hand is unlucky ; to have the same number On the right hand is a sign 3ou ire unfortunare -Spirits. If a married wan while his %vcre in in the ro,an, takes up a bottle of htu ib iN a eigii„ hat she willsh irdy bu uut of spirits and chat her huO)and n tine t . It a uric 4.3,rd bull In flux at uQtnok rai,er'S it denotes it a tnisbit tune will happen to hi- ealvcs. Brid4. I f ou get Olt lioNeb:,el; on 11onday belorc ti u sun i up, it is a sign iliat you will liavo a Iwud in a bridal. Lm Av. To st ruke a green-eyed eat with a white spot on Ipo. no , e is lucky, and heavy paws will be the consequence. Morrio . qe. if you are in a house and hear a baby cry, it is a sign of marriage— )r it it isn't. it ought to be. 1e , ,1 Mir. If a red.haired man falls it love with a girl who dislikes hair of hat color, he will very likely dye before he is married The above signs and portents may be strictly relied upon ; they have never been known to full. A till B-COMNIITTEE of a school board, not a thousand miles Born the city of Lynn, were examining a class in a pri mary school. One of the committee, to sharpen up their wits, propounded the fol lowing question: "If I had a mince pie, and should give two-twelfths to John, two twelfths to Isaac, two-twelfths to Harry, and would keep half the pie myself, what would there be left ?" There was a pro found study among the scholars, but final ly one lad held up his hand as a s i gn al that lie was ready to answer. "Well, air, what would there be left? Speak up, loud, so that all can hear," said the committee man. -The plate'." shouted the hopeful fellow. The committee-man turned red in the face, while the other members roar ed aloud. The boy was excused from an swering any more questions. A Boy's LAWSUIT.—Under a great tree close to the village, two boys found a walnut. "It belongs to me." said Ig natius, "for I was the first to see it." "No, it. belongs to me," cried Bernard, "for was the first to pick it up." And so they began to quarrel in e truest, "1 will set tle the dispute," said an older boy, who had just then come up. lle placed him self between the two boys, broke the nut in two and said : "The ono piece of shell belongs to him who first saw the nut; the other piece of shell belongs to him who picked it up ; but the kernel I keep fur judging the case. And this," hesaid, as he sat down and laughed, "is the COM won end of most lawsuits." WAKINI3 GRANDMA watt A Kiss.— sweet little incident is related bin wri ter. She says : "I asked a little boy last evening, 'llavo you called your grandma to tea ?' 'Yes, • When I - went to call her -be was asleep, and I didn't know how to wake her I didn't wish to holier at grandma, nor to shake her; so I kissed her cheek, and that woke her softly. Then I ran into the ball, and said, prBttY loud, Grandma, tea is ready. And she never know what woke her." - Too MUCH MOTHER —Artemus Ward gets off the following good paragraph: Our ballad writers put too much mother in their melodies. ; Thus, vehave 'Dear Mother, I've Come Home to Die'—and 'Mother:Dear; 0 Pray for Me'--'Write a .Letter to My Mother, eto. The other night we heard an athletic Ethiopian minstrel dismally bleat, Mother Kissed Me in My Dreams,'.•just as though the would do it until he washed• the cork -froin ;his face. mother is a-good-thing: Without mothers, in fact / life.iionld be unpleasant. But why sing the . maternal parentik Merits-, so perPthentlyc and in such phaky' yens° ,Why . nOt vary, the thm and' ocenSionallY Produce a father or ; two r - ; If we Must :eentin:aa*.. sing' AbOtit'ouf pareistii; let us by_ glt'.means_ ,4 give Ote'elit man a chttnee:."''''''' FRIVOLITIES