II TIERBTS OVADITVIRTISING. One Squardone insertion; 01 00 For each subsequent insertion, For ltla•cantilo Adverthientonts, Legal Notices ' Profosslonal Oatcis without paper, Obituary Notices nn . Oocumunioa dons rol ting to matte. sof pri vate Interests alone,. 10 cents per line lOg PIaNTING.—Our Job Printing Office le the ,r,rdst and most complete establishment in the lo an y. Four good Presses, and a general variety of material suited for plain and Fancy work of every '‘lnd, enables us to do Job Printing at the shortest 'lotion, and on the most reasonable terms. Portions in want of Bills, Blanks, or anything In the Jobbing lino, wilofind it to their interest to give us a call. • eivircitvat fdonution. U. S. GOVERNMENT Prosidont—ANDam JOHNSON, Vico Prosidont—L. S. PnlirEs., e rot it ry of State—Wm. lI.SEWARD, Secretary of Intorior—Jso. Mate; .iueretary of Treasury-111mm hlcCuttocri, - Secretary 0 (War—EDWIN M. STANTON, Secretary of Navy—GIDEON WELLES, Post Master 0 eneral—Wm. DENNIsoN. Attorney General—JAMES S. SPEED. Chief Justice of the United States—SALMON P. CHASE STATE GOVERNMENT. Govornor—ANDßEW G. Cunvm, ' Secretary of State—ELl SUPER, Surveyor General—JAMES tttlitor General—Lunn SLExttvn, Attorney Cloneral—Wm.lll. MElLetorrn. Adjutant General—A L. ItussELL, State Treaaurer—HENßY D. Moorte, OhlefJu , tle of the Supreme Court—GEo. W.WooD weao COUNTY OFFICERS. prosidont Judge—llon. James 11. Graham. Associate Judges—Hon. Michael Cocklin, Hon Hugh Stuart. District Attorney-3. W. D. Gillelen. Prothonotary—Samuel Shiroman. Clerk and Recorder—Ephraim Common, Register—Goo. W. North. high Sheriff—John Jacobs. County Treasurer—Henry S. Ritter. Coroner—David Smith. County Corumlssionerfi—lfenry Harris, John hi • ny, Mitchell McClellan, Superintendent of Poor House—Henry Snyder. Physician to Jail—Dr. W. W. Dale. Physician to Poor house—Di. W. W. Dale. BOROUG II OFFICERS Chief Burgess—John Campbell, • Assistant Burgess—William Cameron, Town Council—East Ward—J. W. D. Gillelen, An, drew B. Zeigler ' Ore. Wetzel, Chns. U. Hoffer, Barnet Hoffman, West Ward—A. K. itheem, John Hays, Rabt. 11. Black, St D. Hillman, Clerk, Jas. M.Masonhammer. Borough Treasurer, David Cornman. High Constable, Emanuel Swartz, Ward Constables, East Ward, Andrew Iffnetin, West Ward, James Wld• Ler. Assessor—William Noaker. =I Tax Collector—Andrew Kerr, Ward Collectors—Ea. Ward, Jacob Goodyear. West Ward, 11 It William Strout Commissioner, I'atrick Madden.. Justices of the Poneo—A. L. Sponsier, David Smith Abrm. Dehuff, Michael llolcomb. Lamp Llghterr,—Alex. ➢leek, Levi Albert. CHURCHES First Presbyterian Church, Northwest angle of Gen tro Square. Itqv. Conway P. Wing Pastor.—Services every Sunday Morning at 11 o'clock, A. M., and 7 o'clock P. M.. Second l'resbyterian Church, corner of South Han over and Pomfret streets, Rev. John C Pastor. Services commence at 11 o'clock, A. 71., and 7 o'clock P. M. St. John's Church, (l'rot. Episcopal) northeast angle of Centre Square. Rev. F J. Clare, Rector. Services at 11 o'clock A. M., and '7 o'clock, P. M. English Lutheran Church, Bedford, between Mal end Louth, streets. Rev. Stung Sprecker, Pastor. Sor 1100 S at 11 o'clock A. M., and 634 o'clock P. AL Berman Reformed Church. Loather, between Han. over and Pitt streets, Rev.,Satroal Philips, Pastor. 3orvices at 11 o'clock A. M., and 6 o'clock P. M. _ . Methodist E. Church (first charge) corner of Main and Pitt Streets. Rev. Thomas li. Sherlock, Pastor. Services at 11 o'clock A. 11., and 7 o'clock P. M. Methodist E. Church (second charge,) Rev. S. L Bowman, Pastor. Pervicesin Emory 11. E. Church at 1 o'clock A. M., and 3) P. M. Church of God Chapel, South West cor. of West St. and Chapel Alley. 11ev. 13. F. heck, Pastor. Services at 11 a, m., and 6 1 ,4 p.m. St. Patrick's Catholic Church, Pomfret near Eastat. her Pastor. Services every other forth. at 10 o'clock. Vespers at 3P. M. german Lutheran Church, corner of Pomfret and Bedford streets. Rev C. Fritz°, Pastor. 'Services at 1 o'clock P. M. s.When changes In the above are necessary the rover perrerfl are requested to notify us. DICKINSON COLLEGE Rey. Herm in 'Al.:Johnson, D. D., Presideni and Pro fessor of Mord Science and Biblical Literature. Samuel D. Hillman, A. M., Professor of Mathematics. - . . John K. St/qv:iu, A. 11., Professor of the Latin and ranch Languages. floe. James 11. Grs ham, LL. D., Professor of Law, nharles F. Mules, A. M., Professor of Natural Set s au a Curator of the Museum. Rev. James A. McCauley, A. M., Professor of the rook and Gernian Languages. • Rev. Bernard H. Nadal', D. D., Professor of Philoso phy and English Language. Rev. floury C. Cheston, A. M , Principal of the Grammar School. A. M. Trimmer, Principal of the Commercial Depart wont. C. Watson McKeehan, Assistant in Grammar School sucl Teacher of Poutnansbi&. i'FIE MARY INSTITUTE CORPORATION : Tho Itector s Wardens and Vestrymen of St. John's Church Carlisle. The Rev. F. J. Clem, D. D., Rector and Treasurer. Mrs. John li. Smoad, Principal. Miss A. E. Donkersloy, Instructor in Languages. MIRS L. L. 'Webster, Instructor in Mathematics and Vocal Music. !qrs. M. M. Ego, Teacher of Piano. Mims E. Graham, Teacher of Drawing and Painting Rev. S. Phllipe, Lecturer on Elocution and Psycho' ogy. BOARD OF SCHOOL DIRECTORS E. Comma n, President, James Hamilton, If. Sexton. R. O. Woodward, Henry Neweham, 0.P.1 - Emmerich. Bect'y., J. W. Eby, Treasurer, John Sphar, Messenger, Meet on the let Monday of each Month at 8 o'clock A. M., at Education Hall. CORPORATIONS CIIRLIBLE DEPOSIT BANE.—President, R. M. Render son; Cashier, J. P. Hassler, Tellers, L. A. Smith and W A. Cox; slessonger, Jno. Underwood; Directors, It. M Henderson, President, B.C. Woodward, John D. l4or gas, John Stuart, Ir., Abm. Boiler, henry Saxton. Oldies Woodburn, J. J. Logan, Win. B. Mullin. PIREEE NATI9NAL RANlE.—Presidant, Samuel Eepburn Cashier. Joe, C. Hoffer, Teller, Abner C. Brindle, Mes senger, Jesse Brown. Wm. Kor, John Dunlap, Eleh'd Woods, John C. Dunlap, Isaac Brenneman, John B. Sterrett, Semi. Hepburn, Directors. CUMBERLAND VALLEY RAILROAD COMPANY.—PEOBideEIL, Frederick Watts: Secretary and Treasurer, Edward M. Biddle: Superintendent, 0. N. Lull. Passenger trains three times a day. Carlisle Accommodation, Eastward, leaves Carlisle 5.60 A. M., arriving at Car lisle 5.20 I'. 11. Through trains Eastward, 10.10 A, M. and 2.42, P. M. Westward at 0.27, A. Id., and 2.55 P. M. CARLISLE OAS AND WATER COMANY.—PERSIdeIn, Lem uel Todd; Treasurer, A. L. Sponeler ; Superintended', George Wise: Directors, F. Watts, Wm. M. Beetemt H. M. Biddle, Henry Saxton, It. C. Woodward, J. W.' Patton, P. Gardner and D. S, Croft. 0 . _ SOCIETIES Cumberland Star Lodge No. 197, A. Y. DI. meets at Marlon 11E01 on the 2nd and 4th Tuesdays of ovory month. St. John's Lodge No. 260 A. Y. M. Meets 3d Thnrs day of each month, at Marion fall. Carlisle Lodge No. 01 I. 0. of 0: V. Meets Monday evening, at Trout's building. Letort,,,Lodso No. 03, 1. 0. of 0. T. Meets every Thursday evening In Itheem's llatl, ad - story. 0 FIRE COMPANIES, The Union Piro Company was organized In 1780. lions° In Louthor, between Pitt and Hanover. The Cumberland tare Company was instituted Fob. 18, 1.800, House in 'Seaford, between Main and Pom• feat. The Good Will pre Company was Inetituted in March, 1856. House in Pomfret, near Hanover. The Empire flook'and Ladder Company was Ins 'tu tee in 1,80. lionso,in rmynaar - Main., ' v, . RATES OF POSTAGE. Postage on all letters of one half ounce weight or under, cents prepaid. Postage on the IlllitALD within the County, tree. Within the Staten cents per annum. To any part of the United States, 26 cents Postage on all hurl. sient papers, 2 cents per ounce. Advertised letters to be charged with cost of advertising. MOS. R, A. smyrws • Photographs,Ambrotypos i lvdrytypea Beautiful Albums 1' Beautiful Prunes 1 Albums for Lading and dontlemem Albums,for Misses, and for 01.111.4r0n, ' Pocket Albums for Soldleis and Civilians! o,holcest Albums! Prottlest Albums! Cheapsst Albums! FOR CHRISTMAS GIFTS 1 Fresh and Now from Now Pork Imd Philadelphia • Alarketa. • I 7 you want satisfactory. Pictures ,and , polite attention call at' Afro. R. A. Smith's Photo-, graphic Gallery, South Eliot Corner of Hanover Street and Market Square, opposite the Court House and Pest Offtco, Carllollo, Pa. Mrs. R..A: Smith well knOwn no Mrs. It:A:fleynoldo, add 80 well known as a Dagudrrean .Artist, gives per sonal attention to Ladies and Gentlemen visiting her` Gallery :and baying:the best of Artists nud,polltel at. tendsr4.san . safely promise that in no other ilailel7 can those who favor her with a call get pictures supe rior to hots, not even in blow York or Philadelphia, or v meet withnsere kind arutproMpt attontioa.. ' ' Ambrotypea }neerted hI Itings, Ilockets,Droaat Pine, ,Itc. Perfect copies of Daguerrotypes and Ambrotypes made ordegamerenas. Where' copies are' 'defaced, lifediko picture my still N, had, either for frames or for cards.' All negatlies preeerviatono year and Orders by mail or otherwisepromptly attended to. ';; ' .Docember . 23, 1864—tf •'' -* tilt. wit: 11. , •-ctiolt, - '.• , . Er.omolloPATEric: , PHYSICIAN, -"surg'dolt alia .Accoz&chiir t - It ,, ,re -, at' his rreqiditilep' : in: Pitt , li t til ° 47 °!nl'.!3,he/idt!,,c,..4f.,P1tur.,0?.••••;,,,'„•':, 26 00 4 00 7 00 VOL. 65. PsittixsL THE OLD BACHELOR% NEW YEAR Oh, Om Spring bath less of brightness Every year, And the Snow a ghastlier whitonens Every year; Nor do Summer blossoms quicken, Nor done autumn fruitage thicken As it did—the season sicken Every year. It le growing cold and colder Every year, - And I feel that I am older Every year; And my limbs are lees elastic, And my fancy not so plastic— Yee, my habits grow monastic Every yelir. 'Tie becoming bleak and bleaker Every year, And my hopes aro waxing weaker Every year; Care I now for merry dancing, Or for eyes with passion glancing 7 Love in lens and lean entrancing Every year. Oh, the (lays that 2 have squandered Every year, And the friendships rudely sundered Every year; Of the ties that might here trailed me, Until time to death resigned me, My infirmities remind me Every pear Sad and sad to look before no Every year, With a heakier shadow o'er 11f3 V.very year; To behold each bloeeom faded, And to know we might have made It 6n immortal garland, Mal,lo Round the year. Ninny a spectral, beckoning finger, Year by year, Chides nio that so long I linger, Year by year; Every early comrade sleeping In the Churchyard, whither, weeping I—n lone unwept—ant creeping, Year by year. izulthrattins. THE MISSING GOLDSMITH The Northern Florence, as its inhabitants call, with some reason, the good city of Dres den, was rapidly recovering from its heavy share in the devastations of the French war. It had,got back its court, and, what was bet ter, its pictures and statues. Foreigners, with time and money to spend, wore crowding in to lounge in the galleries, to appear at ball and opera, to drink the mineral waters man ufactured in the Struve Garden, and to drive about the pastoral hills and valleys which cnviron that fairest city of the Elbe. The hearts of the hotel-keepers sang for joy, and their charges rose with the occasion. There was a mighty influx of all the dealers in use less and costly wares, and among thorn carne Jacob Grotzel. Jacob WAS a native of Bohemia, and arriv ed from Prague with no great stock of capi tal, hut he soon contrived to make business in Dresden. Its beauty and fashion found out that the choicest opals, with the rarest cuttings and settings, were to bo had in his shop. Lapidaries - knoW that ever - gem - has a way of its own to be cut in—that is, if it be cut to advantage—and of all gems the opal is the most capricious and determined. To bring out the rich but ever-changing hues of that beautiful stone, to make it catch the passing rays of light, and blend them with its native lustre; in short, to do the opal full justice requires a hand of no ordinary skill, and Jacob was allowed to possess it even by rival jewelers. His goldsmith's work was nearly equal to his opal-cutting. His prices were reasonable, and his credit-giving faith, when the security was good, was considera ble. Ladies, both of home and foreign growth, displayed his workmanship and proclaimed his merits, the court patronized him, and Jacob beCame a notable:mitn'amorig elers of Dresden. Some of them surmised that ho had dealings with the Bohemian jewelers, and got more and better opals then the mine-owners dreamed of in his frequent and quiet journeys to Prague. Others—but they were men of the old school—suspected that be had learned from the old Bohemian gnomes his marvellous art of cutting ; and there were those wife, being unwilling to give Jacob all the credit, averred that most of his workmanship, and half his success, was ow ing to his trusty man and cousin, also called Jacob Grotzel, but by way of distinguishing him from his principal, Poor Jacob. The cousins had commenced life together in a. mountain village of Bohemia, they were brothers' children, and said to be early play mates ; had served their apprenticeship with the sumo jeweler in-Prague; had been -true companions in work and travel through most of the-German towns, and finally settled as master and man at Dresden. When tho master and manship began, nobody could say. Besides bearing the same name, and being cousins-german, the two' Grotzela were as like, ea, 0 other : as twin brothers. Botk . Were spare, swarthrpoilemtans; long Slavonic face and cleric hair and eyes of their people, so notably distinguished, from the fair locks and broad visage of Saxony. Both were good workmen with precious stones and metals ; equally good, it was de clared by those who'knew them'best. Rich Jaeob•stood erect, and talked in a high key; Poor Jacoblada'stodping gait and a minnb-' ling tone, and therein lay all the difference that maneofild note between them. Yet the ono Jacob-vas master, and the other man, and they had heen so .fropc youth ,upward, perhaps franc, now, when the . dark hairo,onoboth heads were sprinklediwith gray, for.tlic . sinfple reason that , nature •had made,liiclt'Jaeob`ready and willing to_lead,' 'and PCbr Jacob to be aiwayii • in' want of ! a • The latter had, found a loader to.his mind in ltis eOnsin 7 .',rle plqr,i,dil in the rising fanie and i* 4l :ti:es pi: R104.449 . q , ' to,ferther ihem eu'reful,Norkand unmiettr, ied be,even.did , somothing, in the! trumpeting line, to; ,those ;who,. would:listen, , in the ; humblehoorrshops cOffee-houses •wi?ich,i ho , frogaeniital. . It .w.us: ongiiglijor toi see ;his eousini.s. ;wealth, Junior - Without the slightestexpeotatiOU of sharing therein, and after' the „manner, of ileailerk,in, s (moral Jacob theught',...it. was.enough : l 4. 9; 1 403,tti0.. l'ho poor 'cousin mas, entrustodi with till,the - ,seerets , of , ,the house,; ; no coffer; , . ,ne desiSI44 I I I )9PW , :tTPAQIII him.; :40 MP.) polaitted to conagottimmuttelicate Aeg(A . . .. , ,-,......0 ~.., tiations, touching accounts too long duo, Or jewels difficult of disposal ; ho was sent on the quiet journeys to Prague, when his chief found it inconvenient to go ; and he was de; puted to say and do everything which hap pened to be disagreeable or beneath Rich Jacob's dignity. But while the master of the concern, together with his wife and three daughters, appeared in great finery at public ball and theatre, frequented the Struve Gar den in holidays, or joined picnic parties to the vale of Plauon, Poor Jacob remained Sunday and week-day in the same suit of coarse Silesian cloth, well worn, and not particularly clean, toiled away in the soli tary workshop, slept in the back attic, and was allowed two grosehen a week to spend on beer and tobacco. Under these unique arrangements, the house of Grotzel continued to prosper, get ting ahead of all its contemporaries in the billiant trade, cordially hated by them, but thriving, nevertheless, till eithcr his evil ge nius, or the prompter of that pride which shall always have a fall, set Rich Jacob on a design of eclipsing his rivals, and astonish ing Dresden, by fabricating and exhibiting a matchless parure, composed of opals and die mom's, with suitable settings of the rarest and most elaborate gold-work. He had got possession, in his latter journeys to Prague, of certain surpassing gems ; and it was Ja cob's opinion that if properly worked up and exhibited, they would find a purchaser in the reigning king, as a royal wedding happened to be on the tapis. Poor Jacob admired and gloried iiithis scheme, as ho did in every design of his mighty cousin. They had been all successful hitherto andthetWo Jacobs being determined that this should not fail for skill, care, or expenditure, the one lent all his eneigios in the work, the other all his available capital, in due time the matchless parure was completed. It did eclipse all o:otzel's rivals, and astonish all Dresden, when fully displayed to the best advantage MILE O'Romy in the shop-window. Ladies came from far and 'near, and brought the chief of their male relations and the richest of their acquain- Lances to see it. , The whole court came in batches to admire its splendors. The royal carriage drove slowly past, indeed almost stopped at the window, and the Jacobs, Rich and Poor, lived in hourly expectation Of a command to repair with the treasure to the palace. Green and graflnon of the highest rank had asked its price, and the great Jew banker's wife made private inquiries touch ing the discount that would be allowed for cash. But the palace made no sign. The grafen and grafinen departed with looks of resignation to the Inevitable; though many a longing, lingering look the ladies cast be hind ; the Jew banker's wife went home, and never came back. In short, the parure could not be sold without heavy loss under three hundred thousand thalers (about fifty thousand pounds Eng 'money,) and no body seemed willing to have it at the price. , 4 It will ruin me if I can't sell it," said Rich Jacob in confidential talk with his cousin. " All my capital and. all my credit are lock ed up in that parurc, and how am I to go on without then/ 7_ . The Jow banker would ad- --r - - vance on it,' r dare say ; but how am Ito gel the precious thing out of his fine "If you could wait awhile some of the English milords or Russian princes who come here to drink the waters might buy it," said Poor Jacob. " So they might," said his superior, taking heart and hope, as he generally did - from the poor cousin's counsel. " But, Jacob, I would rather have the Russians than the English to deal with ; they know, better how to value real jewel-work, and never make such hard bargains." The fates appeared to have granted Rich Jacob's wish, as they sometimes do, little to men's advantage. On the following day there arrived in his shop a Russian lady, the Countess Mark6ff, who had recently come meftft.a ft ft, ~,;ay ft .o.ftata...ft i ftt r - s ft, ft nu• merous suite, and an extraordinary reputa tion for wealth and liberality. Madame Markoff was probably the only lady in the Saxon capital who had not seen the parure. Indisposition had confined her to her hotel, some people said, becaUse the court had. not received her with sufficient eclat. But the fame of the Grotzol glory had reached her ears, and, at the first sight Of it, Madame declared herself charmed and enchanted.— The two Jacobs expended their unique elo quence in assuring her that the parure was worthy of her magnificence, and would ac cord admirably with her style of beauty.— Madame Markolf was a large brown woman, with dark red hair, and a Tartar face. They i- Induced her to fit on the ornaments before their most flatteribg mirror, pronounced the effect perfect and irresistible and got a per to bring the jewels to her hotel, that . . they might be shown.to some confidential = friends she had - that same evening. Bich Jacob evaded himself of the said pormisilon. Ho found three 'Russians, who might ,intio: heen, lackeys or princes.4for.aught:ho.knewi in comp,anY; with 'her . 'ne 4 Cofibliidea - 114were the latter,-for their praise of his pal' ilr C was as high as jeweler's hcatt could wish. They thought the price, reasonable, and so did the countess. In short, she was willing-to--take the jewels, willing to pay the three hundred thousand thalersfor them ; it weidd not ho ?Hissed out of her family's fortune, end the parurc would • bo an heirloom. • But it was not possible for her to paY - aerauch mOrieion the spot.. ,S)* should likelier husinind th'seo her,pureliase .though,cortain ho would not objeettojf.. - , fie Nadi not . been-lately - appointed Military govoitihr nf r lloscoir, iliould'aidc:biiri''to' .come • BrOderi, for 'the . purpofrie; „hut . ,the. . „ rules:ofthe-servicadid not fillOw that. ; Could Jacob follow lier'and her suite to Moscowl , .She 4i - sit:day fortnisht,i'lit; the • : time; end: bring thoporufv with •hitd.„ -Her influence would insure him civility at the' passpoirt 'ofi- • Ilc4, and fresh iteise! at ,eifeijr.pest,;.:kausn. hhihe,i}d,io!ll4. -14041 figAvneht,..tile• jeWels, as soon ho had s eon. theni ; of:that she clid-not . entertain 'the - slightest Jactih's',eitlienSes: woldti 'all be bargain tindilte :Might, find .his, account opening-nlrado:with-thd Moschwidealoralh, pypliouti,stoimip.andllahteltitei ' 11 U4ht`449 0 1.? was n prudent tdatil:,en4)dill. not al,oncer. jump at. Madarri liluarkoff's .tro. posali, ..I.3ntjho , appeared:to 'do 3 ao, , l7lOwing. the f :the llee..d4tV r pr , !..i.,/iesi.,/}pify #9, 3.9**E3,90/0.; Wet!e. 491 1A..411§ t toi, garmll9.:(l9alt w olutx quiries were, however, necessary before corn- Knitting himself and his three hundred thou sand dialers' v:vrth. /3e wired for time to arrange some pressing affairs, and take the pattern of the parure, as he was sure of another being ordered directly by the Queen of Prussia. The countess was considerate, and in no haste. She suggested to Jacob, with a con descending smile, the propriety of satisfying himself regarding the real rank and resour nes of a foreign customer proposing to make such a purchase, and volunteered as her re ferences half the bankers and ambassadors of Europe. Jacob protested they were quite unnecessary ; he was sure her ladyship was all she appeared to be, and more ; but ho noted down their addresses just for form's sake, and went home with his opals and dia monds, determined to set his cousin to work on Madame Markoff s antecedents, for Jacob was too experienced a man and a jeweler to rely on the references people pleased to give him. To work went his cousin, and to work wont he. It was popularly said in Dresden tifitil the two could have sifted out the grain of wheat which the miser lost in the mine bushels of chaff They inquired, as Was their wont, quietly and carefully, far and near, but every inquiry received the same answer. Madame Markoff was all she represented herself to be, the wife of a Russian count and a field marshal, lately appointed a ili tary governor of Moscow, and owner of one of the best estates in Eastern Russia. There was no doubt, no uncertainty; Jacob had but to go and got paid for his parurc. He waited on the countess the day before her departure, concluded the bargain, received her written promise that the three hundred thousand thalers, together with his traveling expenses, should bo paid as soon as her hus band had seen the jewels, and a verbal ono of influence and help with the passport offi cers and postmasters. Jacob did not wish to travel with her ladyship; he thought his gems safer out of the reach of her very nu merous and remarkably idle suite ; so went home, made all preparation. ror his journey, engaged an honest feliow known to him as a sort of ..honibie courier—he had served him more tiihn once on the Prague .:..peditions—left his entire concern, as usual, to Poor Jacob's charge, took an affectionate leave of his family, and set forth in good hope and high spirits for Moscow. The telegraphic wires did not then stretch over tho continent; but in duo time the Grotzols got intelligence of Jacob's safe ar rival, jewels and all. Count Markotf, who had si;on the parure, was delighted with it, made no objections to the price, and had named the following day for the completion of the purchase. Jacob was to call at the governor's home at twelve o'clock precisely to receive his money, deliver a receipt for the same, together with Madame Markoff's written promise, and leave the glory of his shop to be admired by all Russia. The news was magnificent; Jacob's wife and dneghtors were thinking of festive ache. o, ~o oolob~nto his good luck and his welcome home ; his poor cousin was wondering whether or not another parure would be attempted ; but almost a month passed away, and the honest MIS couriercame_bacit alone and half distracted with search and inquiry after Jacob Grotzel. The courier's report was, that at the ap pointed hour he and his master had carried the jewels to the governor's house, which was situated in the square of the Kremlin. As became his humble station, he waited in the outer hall, while Jacob, conducted by a ser vant in splendid livery, passed to the gover nor's office. The door, which had closed be hind him, remained so for three hours, the courier waiting with true German ,patience. At the end of that time the splendid servant, as near as he could guess, inquired in good Saxon what was his business there. The ceurier explained that he was waiting for his master, and hoped the latter would not be couch longer detained ; but, to his amaze tnenti U., num w.. 6 oenw and thAt. fiSter had received his money, left the parure, and gone about his business two hours before. " Why and how • did he go and leave me here ?" were the first words of the astonished courier. The splendid servant did not know why, but how the jeweler had gone he could easily explain; It was, by a, side-door open ing from the passage which led to the gov ernor's office into a back street, by which, as he remarked, one could get anywhere. Unable to understand the drift of that movement, the courier hastened to the inn where Jacob and he had put up ; but no Ja. cob was there; nor had been since he had loft it for the governor's„,house. Still. More amazed, the courier baste9ed back to inqi i iiro more minutely into particulars. Tbo gover nor's peoplo e were very civil, gave him every information regarding the time and manlier 'of Jacob's, going. Count Miirkoff himself appeared to sympathize with the poor man's perplexity; and by way of assuring him that all'ivas right, was kind enough to show, the receipt for thren_bundred thousand.tha-. lors, besides traveling expenses, written out and duly signed in Jacob's .unmistakable hand. Thocount also mentioned that he had paid the money in bills of exchange on the Dresden bank; but, ho added, rny' bank, would. cash them ; mid after some inquiries' touching Jacob's • domestie and mereantih; concerns, his 'Excellency hinted,-though iii the mostldelicate Manner, .that the jeweler might have taken leave of his creditors, a 4 fuuiiiy hydisappearing thus.inaceounrably. This was all theinformation that could be Obtained .fir Moscow. The' :eOttrier had seniChed and 'ingnired'in every . !juarter . ,of ,the pity travels had,giVen;lii in a:general, acilualutfinco with northern T. , itongues, and, German.tis riot an tinlinOwn'ono of 11usaiq.i Dut nli his search . and _all his`ili inirieS'Were in vain; iolmay out-of the gov-1 ernbes, ,honse or .the. inn had seen or . heard of such a man and When fairly Worn out and desperate; the holiest ' courier had Made the; best ! of, 'his,:way ,baelt .to ~,Dr4ilep, to :ro aIQ lirElltrangeland .;U:oeful The. only 'c'con4lation ho had to givethegretzels was, ,that ,*tlie!pOlfee in n senreli for Incob. .have foulhands,anitilmoinniade away Nvith , for the • .sake of-hisr sitioney fib might hive concealed;ao.:.dtlgitised himself fOrithe purpose alrecidy,hinte. : At any rate the, count would haxe.him.; tracked. out; and Wrip. MUM family as'stron4dietile smallest dl i seoveo lip made. The family- would ; Vgge rested on that promise; hut poor Jan could not. 140 loileitioliconbortkt itziddt Carlisle, > Pa., Friday, January 19, 1866 their iefflelent guardianship, traveled back fo IdescoW with the honest courier, recom mended the search and inquiry, and never got one additional glimpse of his cousin's proceedings after he had signed the receipt and passed out of the side-door. Count Mar koff bestirred himself mightily in the mat ter : his countess also showed the most sym pathising consideration for the afflicted fam ily and friends of the missing man. The whore city was advertised ; particular and Personal descriptions wore circulated in brandy shops and market-places ; the police investigated; two or three bad characters were arrested on suspicion of knowing some thing about the disappearance, but they had to be released again, for nothing could be proved or found out. In short, Jacob Grotz el was lost to his family, his friends, and his dreditors. Such was the general conclusion, when the poor cousin, after exhausting time, money, and patience, returned to Dresden as wise as , he went. The story created a groat sensation in the Saxon capital, where the jeweler had flour ished and worked so famously ; and as Ger man society can split upon any subject, its inhabitants wore soon divided into equally balanced factions, one of which maintained that Jacob (3rotzel had been mad.' away with by Russian ruffians, and the other that he was living in unparalleled style as a Ger man nobleman at Astrakhan. The latter hypothesis gained ground from the fact that Grotzel's debts, when fairly reckoned up, as they were now, swallowed up his entire stock in trade, and also left some creditors lament ing. His wife and daughters gave up Ja - dob for dead when a year hacf passed alid there was no intelligence of him, and retired to their native Bohemia with broken prospects, End very small means saved from the wreck of the once flourishing concern. Their poor relations received them kindly, however ; for they themselves had been kind and liberal in their prosperous days. The widow and or, as they were considered, got wel come and platc among thorn, roturned to the humble labors of early times, before their flitting to Dresden, had good sense or good spirits enough not to fret too much over their extraordinary loss, and made settlements as good as could be expected. In process of time the three daughters got married to hon est and comfortable Bohemian . peasants. The mother lived with each alternately, and told the tale of her Jacob's wondrous work, wealth and disappearance, regularly every ChriStmas-evo to ha' assembled grandchil dren But the poor cousin could not return to Bohemia, could not rest in Dresden, nor any where else. He hitd virtually lost his bend with Rich Jacob. The lending cousin had directed end thought for him so long, and been so much his glory and -his guide from childhooo upwards, that poor Jacob felt like a dog without his master, and wandered from workshop to workshop, and from town to town, Unable lA, M) ta., a-. a b., va ta .. a thmught by most people to be going crazy. Ills craze was of the quiet sort, however. Poor Jacob had always been a taciturn man; and when the luckless search for his lost leader was done, he never spoke of him, ex cept when hard pressed by resolute question - ors, ant then PoM:'..racob would look steadily up and say, "Ile did not steal away, for he was no villain ; and he is not dead, or I should have seen him by this time." It was beyond the power of clergy or layman to reason Jacob out of that belief, and at length people did - not attempt it. He was crazy, but he was a good workman. Jewelers were willing to employ and anxious to retain him in all the towns he wandered through, and poor Jacob settled a while with some of them. But by and by, when something had been earned and saved, for his habits con- tinned careful and Bober as in his cousin's time, the wandering bent would come over him once more, and he would go in spite of persuasion and advanced wages. The years that Changed Dame Grotzers once fine daughters to peasant matrons, and brought grandohmax-.... the marvelous tale-telling on Christmas eve, had passed in this manner with poor Jacob. His stoup had grown considerable, and his black hair perfectly gray. His craze was not on the increase, and his workmanship stll good, when ho arrived at the town of Rotterdam for the third time in his contin ual travels round Gerinay and its borderlands. Thinking it too late to look .for work that afternoon, and there being still smile tinders in his pocket, Poor Jacdb stood on the quay listlessly watching the passengers going on board a steainer bound for London with i the outgoing tide!' Mc had not stood thus' Many minutes when he became aware that one Wile seemed" also a careless spectator of the bust ling hnd suddenly-turned -- his' eyes upon blur, and was surveying him from head to foot with mingled curiosity And recognition. Poor Jacob had never seen , the man before ; ho was . muolinbovohls'Own rank, as far as dress and appearance could testify, and Jacob guessed ho was an English man. They looked at each other for a min ute or - t - WO in mutual - astoidShmont, and 'then the stranger, as if determined to make matters out, stepped up to Jacob and fjoid in n•low tone, and in a'traveler!ii ,German; "You have made your escape, I see; how did you manage that?" never was in a madhouse yet, sir,"said Jacob, his memory retorting to the repeated Prophecies ,of masters with whohi 119 wou,lo. not sttt nuulbOuse! no ; but I:saw you• in the Lead mine of Siberia. -Is not your , name Jncob Gt'opzoll?", said thplhiglislunan. "That is my. name, and that was. my. 'cousin's Mune 'too," said- Jacob • standing, pbsitivoly,ereOt ns,a siadden light flashed on mind_v • "My,''long lOst_ cousin, sir, the gro l a • Jeweler of Dresden, :who made the wonderful paritre of opals•and dimonds that all thO went mad ;0,64 'and wont hirasolf•to *OsOcw - 4o,•Soll c c o l t-14n'rlcOil . ', ,butj never came baCk, nor was heard of more. i!! By Jove!, that's the story! • Come along wit'? •na,tollM - Gerninif dciffe'e-house•;" ,takpig -Poor' Jaebb• by tin; thd -"English man led: Min' sultigh t into. a' firiva to . rooni of the; said: isfellf•drdered• establishnient.•'• That,:e he 'told biro that in' his, travels; in the Mine eMmtry k)f:,Siberia , , lind . been'allOw ‘ ed to visit' a; lead tni ne:b elongi fig , •to government, and worked by convicts ,' Jibe ponied ;. ..thp?4,9y - OrYy4nia,'" ; sai4,l,bp, `amongst the condemned w ilia im Owned me a man exactly like you, who had been there eleven years. They gave him no other name but Number Ninety; it is a way they have in all the penal places of Russia. But the overseer said he called himself Jacob Grotzel, was a German, and had a wonde'r ful tale that he was guilty of no crime, but had been kidnapped in the house of the gov- ' ernor-of Moscow, after, selling a set of valu able jewels . , to his cohnte'eS. The money, for which he had given a receipt, was taken from him, and he was forwarded to Siberia the same day. The overseer did not know whe ther to believe his tale or not, it seemed so improbable, and every convict wishes to be thought innocent; but one thing weighed with him—whatever the Russiim authorities had done to frighten the German, he seemed in mortal terror of letting any one hear his story but the overseer alone." Poor Jacob directly entered into the par ticulars of his cousin's case, as far as he know them ; and after maturely considering end consulting over it, the Englishman advised him to apply to the Saxon ambassador at St. Petersburg, and also to the Saxon govern ment, himself undertaking to mention the fact to everybody of influence within his ac quaintance in England or the Continent. .Jacob left Rotterdam the same day for Dresden, besieged the authorities there, made the whole town acquainted with his discov ery, and had in it two factions once more'tili - the subject of his being sane or crazy. In the midst of the rising ferment, however, he got an intimation from the Foreign Office to tecp quiet, and his cousin's case should be inquired into. Jacob did keep quiet after his mannerl--but. he - hattnted the officials - night and day ; and, thanks to his persistence, the case was inquired into, and found to be cor rectly stated. Jacob Grotzel IVas in the lead mine of Siberia, had been there for nearly thirteen years, and was consigned to it by a warrant from Count Markoff, formerly mil itary governor of Moscow. The governor has gone to his account five years before the discovery. His countess was a resident in Paris, and had married a French nobleman, She wore the partere of opals and diamonds on all great festive occasions; and got un limited admiration for the same; but no pub lic blame could be attached to such high personages. .Jacob Grotzel was pardoned— for losing his money. lie got a small sum bestowed upon him, whether by the Russian government or the Markoff family, was never made clear. His cousin went to. Meet bin, at Moscow, and the two made great haste back to the Saxon frontier; there they got an intimation that their future settlement ought to be in Bohemia,- and Dresden must be avoided in the course of their journey, the Saxon court having Russian officials to please. To Bohemia, accordingly, the cous ins went. Rich Jacob, now poor enough, settled down with his ancient dame, and henceforth helped to finish the Christmas eve tale to their increasing grand-children. Poor Jacob lived with thorti Gays Ihn old people compieteu then Gays togayedif; death leaving little time between their sum , ionses. But in their native mountain vil go, those care to listen may still heat e peasants tell the strange story of "Tut: MISSiNG GOLDNUTII." HI - NTS TO YOUNG-SKATERS Nearly all young people of both sexes, who can spare time, have taken to skating as a diversion The passion for it pre vails now as extensively in the winter as the rage for base ball does in all other seasons. It is a graelul and fascinating amusetnent,and when moderately indulged in must be healthful and invigorating.— But it is rather too fascinating. When the young girl who has just learned to skate, or is yet learning, gets tho gleam ing steel blades under her feet, she rarely feels disposed to take them off until she is utterly tired out, or the shades of night overtake her on the ice. By giving way . to tnts desire' to oorirtnue- skating tong' after a proper and prudent enjoyment of the exercise has elapsed, a great deal of harm is done. The skates, if not care. ,fully strapped, soon check the healthy circulation of the blood. The feet are chilled by contact with the metal of the skates, which is in 'contact with the ice, and soon got benumecl. All this time, the body being in active motion, the circulation is quickened everywhere c .uc ept in the feet and ankles. This it will' be o,cert reversee,oue of the cardinal maxims. of health, viz ; to keep the febt, and - the- head- cool. "'Young, men and„.- young girls in vigorous health can stand this . for an hour or so without much harm, but.four,,three i Or : even two :hours, of the sport under such 'conditions is certainto do damage, sooner or later.. During the last skating season we heard ormore than ono case of death traced directly to such imprudence, and of quite a number of': oases of serious illness. There is another matter that these unwise young skaters shoulod be warnedAout., Used to their warm, palatable, and rogsbri • meals .at home, ,they go to ,the skating. &mid, let, the ,hour for meals go by, satisfy them selves with a `few. cold sweet mikes, or . freguniitly nothing,tit all,when the animal', forpes . need More. than usual, and , so. dot.• range the whole .digestivo system: This aggtavates the 'damage done by the pro.. hinged and unusual' exeioise. In every way,, this exeesSive indulgence , works 'mite." Patents, giiardians and ad per.. stins - nf - tria,ture—age. should_Aietefore im press it,Upc moderately oung per . soris to tok6 'it Sharp" some of oar ' dry goods clerks, very ! A lady entered a -retail store, on. Hanover .street, a shore time since, aud,.aniong other things, ask , , ed - 1 for: some; cambric of a hay 'Color. Wjf4P ,eolor 4a3,ll,ll4'.ma'rna inquired tqq3 ( youtt, • "WilYi Abe Oolor •of;.your: drawers there.'!. Frlttrittn I" con tinned •the clerk; Wear'no'draw -0811" ft, Waa_ Witir,•.Ooifaicial4)o•=efferi.. t hE O e- Al tki batrA§SO.. 14 4 9440 i 1.94 to, thq jny.oqilQ:gloitley tape and twietthat :she( alluded lo the painted fixtures behind , him,vith , hatdlon upon them. A Wish for Jeff. Davis. May booting owls, and whizzing bate, And howling dogs and spitting cats, And humble-bees, and stinging goats, And rattlesnakes, and Norway rats, Peed on his liver, gnaw his heels, And tickle every nerve that feels, Whilo little demons pinch hie nose, And weasels nibble at hie toes. May every cup once filled with blies, With fire and fury neeth and MPS, And all the joy of life's dread waste Provo Dead Sea apples; to his taste. May pallid fear sit on his walls, And Libby's ghosts tilt through hie halls . May nightmares rob him of his rest, Ins pillow ho a hornet's nest— And MI his softest feather bed With porcupines alive and dead. May "graybacks" ' be his constant core, And "hardtack" petrified his fare! May toothache make his "dander rio," And twinge hie nerves with "rhounntiz." May yellow-jackets build their nest Within the lining of his vest ; In short, may everything conspire To till his mouth with coals of ire ! And when earth's every stinging dart Has pierced the craven traitor's heart, Consign hint to Cimmerian ponds Anil bind him with Confederate bonds— Whore dead men's skulls with ghastly grins Remind the traitor of his sins, Anil scorpions scrawl and adders hiss rnrougnout roe Mem mire, arena abyss ; Where alligators cleave the spheres And crocodiles shod burning tears, And woodpiles full of "niggers" rise Like snide ghostViefiire his oyes— There'eiii the doomed wretch ever dwell, Beholding heaven, but feeling b-11! 6 —A CONVERTED Reset. MR. NASBY AND GENERAL MACSTINGER. . WA - sustqweerv,-1).-11., Nov: 18, - 1865. Since the November elections I hey bin spendin the heft uv my time in Wash ington. I find a melankoly pleasure in lingerin around the scene of' so many Demokrs tic triumphs. Ijere it wuz that Brooks, the heroic, bludgeoned Sumner; hero it wuz that Calhoun csr i Yancey and Breckenridge achieved their glory and renown- Besides, its the easiest place to dodge a board bill in the yoonited States. There's so many Congressmen here who resemble me, that I hey no difficulty in passin for one two-thirds uv the time. Yesterday I met, in the readin-room uv Willard's, Ginral Mac-Stinger, uv South Karliny. Ginral is here on the same buzness most uv the Southern men hey in this classic (city, that uv prokoorin a pardon, wich he had prokoored, and wuz gettin ready to go home and accept the nominashen for Congress in his (lees trick. The Ginral wuz gloomy. Things didn't soot him, he observed, and he wuz afeerd that the country wuz on the high road to rooin. He had bin absent in the south trcin 61 - 66‘s'lit'eff Th en oCi4i3y - h Hies wich wuz respected. On his return wat did he see? The power in the hands uv Radikals, Ablishnism in the majority everywhere, a extailor President—a state uv affairs disgustin in the extreme to the highly se n skive - Southern mi nd bed accepted a pardon only becoz he felt hisself constrained to put hisself in 2 position to go to Congress, that the coun try might be reskood from its impendin peril. Hp shood go to Congress, and then he shood ask the despots who now hey control, whether. 1 They spozed the south wood submit to hoomiliatin condishuntt? . 2 What Androo Johnson means by dictatin to the Convenshuns uv sovereign States ? " Why," sez he, "but a rely days ago this boor bed the ashoorance to write to the Cleorgy Convenshun that it must the, tortu—'.)lU6V : NOT as soom the confedrit war debt.' Is a tailor to say must not to shivelrus Georgy ? Good God !—where are we driftin ? For one, I never will be consilliated on them terms—never I never wuz used to that style uv talk in Diiuekratie Convenshuns. " Ez soon ez I take my seat in Con• gris," resoomed he, " I shell deliver a speech, with I writ the day after Lee surrendered, so ez to hey it ready, in wieh I shell take the follerini,iround, to Thai the . South hey buried the hetch- it, and hey diskiVered that they - 1,-.ye the TA() Yoouion above enytbing ennarth;Biit, • ," The North must meet us v.alf way, orl we won't he answerable for the cense 'a bash for 4etiNnieni, tsh6ii insist on the follerin condiahuns : " The Federal debt must be reepoodi ated, principal and intereßt; or of paid, i tho Sbnithern - war - debt must be paid like wise--eza peace offerin, The doctrine us, State ,Rites :must be made the soo preme law uv the land, that the South May withdraw whenever they feel their -13011703 dissatisfied :with Massachusetts. Uq coarse this i a oliVe'branoh. JOfterson 'Davis must be to wunet set at liberty and,Sannier hung, oz profit' that the North is really.consilliatory. On this pint ham inflexible, ; on ,the others immovable!' , An old man who :hod bin, listenin to our talk, indi'plured that thero wuz arallel to this heat fro bsishen. V'Whe're the(tinral. • f , The Jews, I.romember," replied, he; 5 13ftrrahae be_ , yeleased unto then.i, who wnz kthief, I believe, and the savior.bo ornoikdi but forgit lief, bow•it , wuz. ' ' , Qiiiial in 'giaooe'nrid ` i()S00ill ' Oa' shol , uv course -offer tile' North ,Stithdu in the w t ay, uv, compensation, .for t 1 troo theory-,:v i a Ropubli4ins Qovern - - merit , . compermisei:y On bur . part' Nye' :pledge onisolies td kith , 11114 add' give' s he North the benolitov ' Bo'long_as Massachusetts eondux herself akkoidin - to our ijees uv what ie But if this ekiiable adjustment is reject ed, all I hey to say then is,l shell resign, , and the GoVernment may sink without one effort from me to save' it:" I wuz about to give in my, experience when the old man, who wuz sittin near us, broke in again : "My name," sed he, "is Maginnis, and I live in Alabama. I want to Bay a word to the gentleman from Herlihy, and to the wun from Noo Gamey:" " How," retorted I, " do you know I'm from Noo Gersey, not heven spoken a word in your hoarin ?" "By a instinle I hey. Whenever I sea a Sutherner layin it down heavy to a ihdivijoull whose phisynogamy is ay sic% a cast that upon beholdi❑ it yoo instink tively feel to see that your pocket hankercher is safe, a face that wood be dangerous if it hed courage into it, I al luz know the latter to be a Northern Cop perhead. The Noo Gersey part I guess ed at, becoz, my frie❑d that State fur nished the lowest order uv copperheads. Pardon me of, I flatter yoo. But what I wanted to say wuz, that I spose suthin has happened:dooren the past 4 years wuz a original .secessionist. Sum years ago I had a hundred niggers and wuz doin well with em. But, unforchunitly my brother died and, left me ez much more land but no niggers. I wanted niggers enuff to work that land, spozed et cut off from the North, and the slave trade ,iTuz reopened, I coed git em cheper. Metz I secoshed. Sich men as Ginral MeSin ger told me that the North woodent fight, or I woodcut hey secesht, but I did it. I went out for wool and cum back shorn. I seseshod with 100 niggers to get 200, and alas I I find myself back into the gov ernment with nary a nigger. " But this is no excoose for talking bold noncents, yoo old ass," sed he, ad dressing Gineral MeStinger; "yoo talk uv wat yoo will do, and wat yoo wont— • Hevent yoo disikivered that yoo are whip ed ? Ilevent yoo found out that yoo are subjoogated ? Are yoo back into the yoonun uv yoor Own free will and akkord ? fievent yoo got a pardon in your pockit, which dockynient is all that saves your neck from stretch* hemp ? Why do yoo talk uv wat Southkarlyny will and wont do? Good Lord I I recollect about a year since Southkarlyny wonld never per mit her soil 2 bo pollutid by Yankee hire- NO, 3. Is, yet Sherman marched all over, it with a fue uv em, and scarcely a gun fired at ern. So, too, I recollect that the State which wuz agoin to whip the entire north, and wick wood, of overpowered, submit gracefully and with dignity, to annihilation, and slob, wuz the first to git down on her marrowbones, and beg peace like a dorg. yoo intend this talk for the purpose uv skarin the north: believe me when say that the - north aint so easy skared as it wuz. Ef it wuz in tended fp. home consunipsion, consider ale the people. No heard it before, and I'll ties It makes me puke. The fact is we arc whipped, and nev got tu do the st we kin. We are a goin tu pay the Federal debt, and aint gain tu pay the confederate debt. Davis will be hung, and serve hintrite. States rites is dead, and slavery Ifr abolished, and with it, shivelry.; and its my opinion the South is a d—d sight better off without eith er uv em I kin sware, now, after livin outside uv the shadder of the flag 4 years, that I love it I carry a small one in my coat pockit. I hey a middlin sized one waved by my youngest boy over the family when at prayers, and a whalin big one wavin over my house all the time. I hey diskevered that it is a good thing to live under, and when such kusses as yoo talk uv wat yoo will and wont do under it, I bile. Go home. yoo cusses, go home I Yoo, South, and Pullin off your coat, go to work thankin Johnson's merciful enuff to let yoo go home at all, instead uv hang in yoo up like a dorg, for tryin to bust a Guverument too good for yoo. Yoo, North, thankful that the men uv sense uv the North had the manhood to pre vent us from rooinin ourselves by makin srch as you our niggers. Avaunt." And the excited hir. Maginnis, who is evidently•subjooated, strode out uv our presence. His intcmprit talk cast aehill over our conlidencis, and we dident re soom with the case we covienced with, and in a few minutes welpuked. 1 didut like him: - Late Pastor uv the &lamb of New Dispensashun.—Ciiwiamrii. 'A higbwnythan'undortook to roh 31r. Jones. lie met Jones in a wood over in Jersey. He asked Jone s for his bocket book. Jones refused :n yield. Highwayman took Junes, by the neck and undertook te s choke Jones made fight and kept it up : fOr 'half an hour. At the expiration of that time JonOs caved in, and the highwayman eonimeticed rifling his pockets. The Obiltents amounted to just eighteen cents. c is : that all you've got?" • c•l'lvery,cont." " What:made you fight so loner- • "Didn't want to be exposed: Bad enough to haye only eighteen oents—a gveat deal worse to have anylrdy . koow it'. 4 squaw its Central Nialtigart.luid PIRP9OO on fori a inembor of ,ita•raee;whiell' too' in dpeed a gcnitiornan tO ask'', if it was no t a half-brood, whereupon she replied-- 4%0, no; not a drop of White hlnodaiiout ;Shalt* . 'Falls of. St. Anthony ctre:rapidly i undoidoin4'a change.' p,uit4 . 4.1141 0 f, 1869' recededabout -c I 8 they . 0 eet 0. t is 0 ; middle of l the,iiveq ittid Efir thoi thonext qpriili; It Isfin+ • that in`a low 3eiiFs they • • ..• PETital,EuAt. N MlEill3 riv Ilte - -