Carlisle herald. (Carlisle, Pa.) 1845-1881, January 10, 1868, Image 1

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    RATES - OF . :.,AOYERT,ISINGt :,
' sl6'o'
. .
O • . .
no !Square snob:main . % • . -
Vattiaehunbsognon't insertion;
Per Niereautilo Advertliernonts,: • • . •
LogeklNOtkes, ,
Professional °sills withont paPer;' • • ,
Obituary Nullities and Oommunlea
tions rointitig to friatlet of prIL
veto interests alone, 10 canto per-..
••••.,
300 PRINTING.—One 301; 'Printing 'Office le the
neateeF and moat' complete' rtiittablishment in the
"minty. 'Four good Presses, and a general variety of,
material suited for:plain and .Fanny work of every
kind, 'ertables n ite to do_Job—Printing at the ehorfief
notice, and on the most' reasonable terms. FOreone
In want of Bills, Wanks; or anything in the Jobbing.'
I I ne, will find. it to their Interest to give no a call.'
_PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
. .
DAM-- KELLkiti -Atornepat-Pasr
A; Carlisle, Pa.
,01TIca NV ith fr. M. Penrose EN.
•
Rhoom's'llall,
sopt27 67-6 ml.
I=
WEAELEY &SADLER.
ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Offioo No
lA_ South Hanotor street
C. P. mninion. , WM, B. PARKER
HUNERICH & PARKER. ..
( A TTORNEYS AT LAW. Office on
. 7tlaln, St., in Marlon Hall, Carlisle, Pa.
,
U. M. BELTZROOVER7
ATTORNEY AT LAW,, and Real
Esilite - Agent, 4 sluTherdstmln; West Virginia.
417. Prompt attention given to all business in Jeffer
son County and the Counties adjoining It.
.January 19, 1800.-1 S".
E. BELTZIIOOVER, Attorney
F:at. Law. Wee In South Itanovhr street;opposlte
Santa's dry gond storo Carl!sterns:
September 0, 1801. •
JAMES A. DUNBAR, Attorney at
Low, Carlisle, , Po. 0111c * o In No. 7, RheonTs - IT all
July 1,48114-Iy.
. .
J. B . ZEIGLER Attorney at Law
Saint Paul Minnesota. Communisations from
o East proPorly responded to.
D. ADAIR, Attorney. At Law,
J• Carlisle, Co. °Moo tylth A. B. Sherpa, Esq., No.
17, South flatterer St ot.
May 17-17.
JOSEPH RITNER, Jr., Attorney at
V Law and Survoyiw, MOchanlesburg, Pa. Office on
Rail Road Street', two doors north - of the Bank.
Mllusiness promptly at torded to.
July 1.1864.
TNO. C: GRAHAM, Attorney at Law,
(tp Carlisle, Office formerly occupied by Judge
Graham, South Ilatiover street.
•
September 8, 18 r. •
.
if v MitLER Attorney at Law:
ey -, Oflicol4., ' phiioiVit - UPlliThig iminbalatoly "op
posit.° tho Co 4,t, ilouso„• '; ,'
2.9n0v 67.1y'-" •
1 A W•CAAD.-L-CIIARLES , E.. MA
_LAGLAUGlll,l4qAttornpy,nrlmi., Office the
room formerly oraipled by JudVo'Greham.
• July 1, Isp—ii,/
lIERINIA:N .Attaties at Law,
• Carlisle, fa., No. 9 ... ltheenea
July 1, 18134-Iy.
SSAMUE L
ITTIMMTIN, .Tir; Attorney
t - L. , - Office - with Hon. Samna! lientarn,'lllain
Bt. Carlisle l'a, '
. July 1086.4.
ILLIAM -K-ENNEMY, Attorney
T y at, Lair, N 0.7 South :ir,i'Riit.-.Trailtarlh-Carlirlo,-
Aprlll9, 1867-ly
W 111: - BUTLER, - Attotney 'tit Law
-y y and United States Claim -- Agent, Carlisle,
Cumberland County, Pa.
PO.lOllll, Bounties, Back Pay &c. promptly collect.
ed. Applications by mall will receive Immediate at
tention, and the proper blanks forwar..led.
No fco required until the claim is settled.
Feb:l4th, 1861—tf.-
TAR. GEORGE S. SEA
RIGHT, Dontlbl, floarihe- Bala
. ore Collage of Dental Surgery.
va_Oilleo at the residence of his mother East
Geuther street, three doors below Bedford.
July 10864.
CIF,O. OP. NEIDIGH, D. D. S.-
- W4 -- Littsi — Deffilrafor of OFnrative Dentistry of the
• ) iiA7; to o l i l , Mor urg C or olloge of
4 4fikr - Mee at-his r Y eStdense
uposlte Marion Mil, West Main street,
July t, 1t354. _
DR. lIARTZELL, Allopathic Physi
cian and Accnuch Our, having permanently 10.
cated Iq Leesburg, Cumberland county. Pa., respect.
fully-oftors his proffiesional soil. Ices to the public:—
Special attention given to diseases of women and chil
dren.
REFERENCES.
JOIIiiV G. CLIOE. M. D. Waynesboro,
Dr. SAMUECtii: LANE, Chambersburg.
lion. ED. McNlEßSON,.Gettysburg,
ISAAC SNIVELY, M. D. Waynesboro.
S. D. FROUTZ, Waynesboro.
N. B. Always found in his osier ',viten not otherwise
professionally engaged. Juno '2.l—tf.
TS AND CAPS.
......
HATS AN!' CAPS,sp)
Do you 200111 a nice Hat or Cap ?
If so, don't fall to call on
J . G . CALLIO,
No. 20, Woot 'Nolo Btroot,
....NlXoteekaltho soart.tholineat assortment of
HATS AND CAPS,
ever brought to Carlisle. No takes great pleasure in
Inviting his old friends and Customers, and all now
ones to his, splendid stock just recolved from Now
York and Phtlndalpbin, consisting in part of too
SILK AND DASSIMERE 'HATS,
, •
Besides an endless tarloty. of Hata and Caps of tho
latest style, all of which ho will soll at tho Lowest
Cash Prices. Also, his own manufacture of Hats al.
ways on hand, - and
Hata .Manufactured to Order.
Ho has tho hest arrangement for coloring Hats and
all kinds of Woolen Goods, :Ovorcoats, Ac., at t to
shortest notico (as ho colors ova ry y week) and on tie
most roattonablo terms. Also, A fins lot of ChOin
orands of
'
TO m r.cco AND CIGARS
•
Always on han I. Ho desires to call the attention of
persons who ver "' CO,UgTRY FURS
To sell, as he pays the highest cash prices for the
came, . .
Give him a call, at the above number, his old stand,
as ho feels cenfident of giving entire satisfaction.
prioiq Stye
RATS AND CAPE.
Tho Butweriber hats just opened, at No. 'l - 6 . `Norr4
\upnovar St., a few door 6 North of tho Owlish, Deposit
Bank, ono or tho largest and_hest stock , of, HATS .&.,
CAPS over °flood In
1311 k Hats, Casidineres of alt styles and qualities,
SUIT Rams different cetera, and ovary dcrecrlptlOn of
Batt-Hats now mado. Tao Dunkard and old fashioned
brook, kept constantly on band and made to order;
t all warranted to give satisfaction. A full assortment.
>of Emmy NAT., Men's boy's and chlldron's fancy. -
I have also added to my stock, Notions of dlgoroul
Mode, consisting -',of Ladles and Gent's Stockings,
Neck-Tles, Gloves, Pencils, Thread, Sowing Silks, Sus.
ponders, Umbrellas, Ac., Primo Began and Tobacco,
always on hand. •
• Give mo a call Mid examine my stock, as / feel_con
-fident-ol pleasing— ' besides-saving-you - Money.
JOHN A. KELLER, Agt.
NO. 15 North Hanover St.
almy67
41.tSCELLAIVEOUS.
JAMES -E. CALDWELL & CO.,
1.
•
.
Entire Iniportntion,
ARE NOW BEADY
OHRISTM•Aa GOODS
YOE THE 'PRESENT SEASON, to which they moot
seSpecthtily !Invite the attention of •thoso visit ing
Sbiladelphio, suggeatlng an early call, boron) the
choicest articles • aro seleotodi and the hurry 'of
' 'Dikter bosinese•Trevonts that careful, attention
they deals° extended to all their visitors. Tho stock
of .. • .
'pap:NIES, DTAMIONDB,JER7tLItY,SILVItWAiIE i
PLATED GOODS, OLOOKS, BRONZES, ,
• , - • and. EUEOPEAN NOVELTIES '
this Oreviiry-' description, Offered thin season ..by this
• Ilium; exceeds In richneto), variety and , beauty, the
elforta'orbily prtiv,loun yea?. An examiuntleu of our
' geode cannot hut prove ,interesting - .to hellion from
, the country, who are monk cordially InVited , to *kit
oar establlnlunent,All ortiore by lotto's', or inquiries
:,• ;- soma:ling soptiff,nil prices, will rpeolve careful Mid'
Arompt 'attention: ' Goinle carefully. packet:l nud for.
, PRIOLI3,I.,(IIINATLV '.ItIQUIJORD.:TO
THE ,TESIES
'::caADTEI3 E 'oAtfrivELL, 8 cio•
, •
,W 'tha
.Ter o Pler.o, v 1 4( 1 si nll
TPFP
''; v.:410 822 Oheattu3
1801; - ' lePet em,i)
. '
2,6 00
4 00
7 00
~ :l ' ,
=I
VOL. 68.
RHEEM . ,& DUNBAR, Editors and Proprietors
ILMINIC F0R.1.868.
. 4
4 4i -4 '7g
."0
- g g
MIZE=
JANUARY
FEBRUARY
EIII
MARCH
APRIL.
CM
Prffi2
ME
AUGUST
SEPTEMBER
OCTOBER
25 26 27 28 29 30 31
NOVEMBER. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
9 10 11 12 13' 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22, _ 23.24. 257267:27. _2B
29 30
DECEMBER. - 1
REM
From tho Lady's Friend for January
A RAILROAD INCIDENT.
" What a sweet theet"4
"-Where?"
l'That young girl just ontoringTho depot
- with a guitar-cnse miler arms." 4
" Ah, yes, rather pretty, but she might
carry the guitar from hero to s Jericho before
I should relieve her by taking charge of it."
" How so? You are usually very polite
to Indies. I have soon you carrying ono
child and lending another for ladies twice
tho ago of this one."
..4
" That may -be, but you have never yet
seen me holding a guitar.ease, have you?"
"No, can't say as I have; and if hereby
hangs a tale, let es have it, as we must sit
here a full hour before our train leave."'
"'Well, so be it; hero then is my c.4.11e-
Hence." '
" Some years ago I was i employed as an
agent or runner,' for a firm in New York
and husiness_called - nfe out West very often,
wherej was unknown except to a very few
business men. One stormy night, lato in the
fall, I sat waiting for the cars in a dismal
little depot in the great Prairie State, and
I was becoining very impatient indeed, as I
wished to be in Chicago e \ arly..tAio neat day.
I had read all the..flamingadverNN ‘ ents on
the dingy Walls of rival routes, patettt med
icines, and lhair-dyes, and as a last resource
had begun tddecipbeteundry names of some
root' tired mortals, who, like myself, had
•
once waited-hero, and had traced their names
or those of their friMids, upon the doors and
window-casing; and a feW apt 'quotation's
tool: my fancy.:` chalk, high up on
the doer, was scrawled:"
Homo, it oot home: •
" Below this iri pencil was—
' Tie lona , iyhere o'or tho heart le."
"And next, traced2with tt pin -
licare le not here: . •
~ I had just`fallen asleep, trying to think
up something smart to add to depot litera
ture, when the rumbling of the approaching
train aroused Me, and I had only time to
stumble out in ho darkness, clutch at the
cold, wet, iron r, iling, - reach the platform
by the help of the brakeman, when we wore
. Off, and I had not yet entered' the cars. n
When I did do, I thought my chances rather
- sliin for a seat; 'iced know how cross the
passengers ,feel abciut midnight and after;
they have settled themselves for the night
by this hour, and ionic' upon now-corners as
intruders: ''
Heads wore - bobbing about, some
nestled lovingly on the broad shoitlders of
— es - e - oty, some leaning agriiif - lis ho — car-win
'doors, while their foot stuck out in all di
, i rectibrie, makincr., the passage-way rather s
hard road to travel, Two lone females bad
each appropriated a double scat apiece, and
I did not dare encroach on their premises.
One woman, with three wakeful yOung chil
dren all crowded into a Single 33eat, - did
. ' moire - up; - as if willing to give me room, if
,- possible:.' The poor, you know, are alwayi3
generous. Two -men just across tho aisle
grinned as I, paused near their double-anti,
but did not °Mo. to makO room. :
lagt, near the back door; I found a
coat containing only 'an overcoat; [care*
bag and umlirolla; thesolphieed in the racy
overhead, and placing/my own valise' lie
tvieOn myfeet, I took my seat, Protty well
content with my success. ) '1 4. 1
The, train...thundered on, and One - dim
lamp heemoo more and more inlay, for was
sinking: into a • dreamy state, -when again
the train valued for a moment, amamo was
shoUtod,. ilia doorialnmrnod, npd - again , wo
worn .going &Ont. - . than` when
. .
looked up,.and bohold`stanVing, yith her
hank bra:Ood against the closbd.door, a young
woman 'long ;box in hor arm:. . A'
wandering. minstrel, thought .I;".- hope oho
; may:find ::.,,,, .. ,
"Not . a rand : moved ) and tkotirl look9dl
12 3 4
5 --.G----7 8- 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17' 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 26
26 27 28 29 30 31
2 3 4 5' 6 7 8
9 104 11 12 13 14 15
16 'l7 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
1 2 3 4 5 6 - 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14 -
15 16 17 18 19,4) 1 21
22' . 23 24 25 26 _ 28
29 30 31
.1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 - 20 ; -- 21 -22 23 24 , 25;
26 27128 29 30
'1 2
3456 7 8 9
10 11.12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21 22 23
24 - 25 26 27 28 29 30
1 ,2' 3 4 5 6
7 8/ 9 10 11. 12 13
14 15..'16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 - ,24 25 026 27
28 29 30•
1.. 4
5 6 7 8 9,10; 11
-12 1.3 14 15 16 17' 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 -:2;-&-
26 27 28 29 30 ,, 31
2 3 4 5 6_ 7 8
--9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 47 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30 31
1 2 3 . 4 5
6 7 8 • 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 -- 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30
1 2 3
1 5 6 7 8 9' 10
11 - 12 13 14 - 15 - 'lO 17
18 19 20 21 22 .23 24
23 4 o
14-12
13 14 15 1G 1718 19
20 21 22 2 - 25 26 -
- 2728 29=301
' ..
, .
-.: 1 ( -, - L • (:2_ L\ ` - -: - • 'CC
' kl • !
41 . 49 ' -- ; i
~. : -' 4 411 . ----.
, 1 1
••• - • .. 1 . t -CIF r pi
ei .'-
,:',,.c_ -2_ , : - .: L-, , ~__. . , , •
I
helplessly round! at the sleeping
TWlliTifide awake now, but: ae !i ii k , rtgers.
, as the sleepers..' I 'was in hopes thew) 10 ,
tor would enter and find the.iady a mo•
comfortable seat thap I . could offer % hut:it
would not - do:to lot: her stand, thM:e.
clutching at the seats to steady myself—for
.with Alm motion of the ears and want'o
sleep I felt rather shaky—l approached the
young lady And offered to carry her box,
andlond her to my seat. The box she would
not yield to mo,..but gave mo her little glov
ed hand, and together we. tottered along
nearly the whole length of. the car. Of
course I gave her the inside seat; and,
placing myself beside her, I again offered to
relieve her off her guitar-case. Nit no,'slie
again refused to give it up into my-hands,.
but soon she stooped down and very care
fully placed it under the seat, juSt back, of
our feet, saying, as she rose up—' Will it
inconvenience iiou there "
" 'l' , Totnt all,s I answered. And now I
felt in hopes thitt I might while away the.
odious -having-a-social-chat-with
tit-w
my new companion.
", She, however,- seemed in no mood for
conversation, but drawing her veil oviir Tier
Mee, she loaned as far from me as possible
against the, window, and was soon . fast
asleep."' I had now no resting place for my
sleepy head,: but nearly broke my_back,try—
lag to keep stiff,: lest my bend might tasr
chance bob against my unsocial neighbor. •
"I we had paused at two stations,
when just as they were slacking-it - 1i for the
third, the conductor came in, and looked
.sharply :Wench seat, then, approaching me, ,
This lady is wanted her'
T stepped mitt° lather pass, a'hd they hur
ried to the dOor ; it closed with it great
crash ; and by Ow timej. had settled myself
in my old quartiftWthe_ train was again go
ing at full speed. And now I wished to
makeup for lost time, and sleep.as much as
possible, for I know we would reach, Chi- ,
cngo. a little before daylight, where my
mother and sister were awaiting my arrival
at the Tremont House. I had been absent
from home three months, and my mother
WaS hecorning anxious libouT — her truant
boy. Sao written to apprise me of her
coming • 'est, and hoped to have me for her
escort on her return trip. I Ives quite
mother's boy,' and not entirely weaned from
horne,tics-at that time. So I leaned back in
'my corn er;und Ivasalmost - asleep; when my
foot struck against sometiling bard, and on
:looking down, discovered 'that guitar-case
. My wandering
• 'wafter-all, I thought ;,but I was thimtoo
• •
sleepy to let the t loughrtlisttirb-melong.T,
drew my feet up on the seat and sunk into
dream-land, and did not wake until the
changed motion of time cars and constant li
clang, clang of the bell, told me we were
entering the city.
"Opening my heavy oyes, I }('as amused,
in spite of my cramped and aching limbs,
'to see my fellowsulreFers trying - to - bling
themselves to life again. The banded necks
were straightened, and the broad-shoulders
that haribeen suoh willing pillows for pretty
heads during the long ride, now shook them
selves thoroughly, and became as hard and
moire as if no loving bead had., over used
them ; and busy little hands were at work
adjusting the pretty heads, putting them in
order, tying on hats and bonnets. Anxious
mothers were shaking up.their sluggards.
Whimpering children were searching for
lost treasures under seats. Men were clutch
ing at canes, umbrellas, valises, &c..
" Everybody WAS wide awake notv, and
eager to get out—l- was so nenr - We door
tliticirdid not take me long to make my es
cape. I think I was the first ono to reach
the platform ; and, valise in hand„-I<was
rushing into the depot, as wo had" to pass
through iFtO "reach the rows of omnibusses
on the other side, when I was annoyed by a
hand laid upon my shoulder—indeed, almost
clutching it, and-a Voice in mY , car, saying :
‘Not so fast, thy fine fellow; if You please !'
" I did not feel the insult at. the moment;
1 (oily - tire:Wed an - yrdelay, as I wished to got
to my hotel, find a barber, and make myself
presentable before breakfast-time,
.When I
should meet my 'mother and sister. So I
only said I can't stop now, sir ;lam in
.haste.'
" 4 So I see ; but you must wait to answer
ft fow questions, nevertheless,' said tho man,
still bolding on Mine.
"At this I became angry; and tried to
shake him off; but it was in vain ; and ho
led, or rather dragged me into a small room
in the dap - 017'st calling to a man behind
us to follow closely. It VS still quite dark
out of doors, and the room we, entered twig
but dimly lighted. I could just make out
that the man who followed us carried it lung
box under his arm.
" Now,' said my tormentor, tanswer me
truly—why did you hasten away so fast and
leave that box un4er your scat.?'
" box I' I exclaimed; . I left no box.
This is nll I had with m . in the car,' hold
ing up a small valise. •-
"The man looked palo, and seemdd terri
bly. excited as he spoke, never taking his
hand from my shoulder, as ho mid 'You
must toll the truth ;, I can soon call a police
man, but - I - dOMit_wisb to create a row if I
.can „Delp it. lam acting as conductor Just
now—only camp on board at , BluoJitland,
where, the regular conductor wished to stop
this morning.. ,I walked through the cars
wink' k toolt i his place, and noticed' you
sleeping in a neat'alOnd, your ticicCt in your
hitt-band ; so, Idid not disturb ycku ; but I
watched you leaving in baste, had 081 turn
ed over:the:Seat you had loft, I found this
box, as the brakeman, who was with me, can!
testify; ho has it now; wh o yodld yoll• leaye
it there?'
„ .
"1 burst out laughing at this, and said.:.
What fuss is this you aro trying to:dtaico.
A ladrwho sat with mo a part of the night,
did leavo her gilitar-case, I think,'
!This is no s guitar•caso,':he said, sternly';
' wo peop at it; : you can do : tho sante.' l
ho spoke, the. brakocoan advanced,
: and by that dimaight i did take a poop, as'
ho unfastened the hooks,,oponed the long,
old-fashioned guitar-case, and ilisplaystltho'
forsii of "a:murdered infant, not u-year old,
with a gliastiv_gash across its whilst:throat,.
and Urge, drops of blood on, its
,I staggered
,to n coat aml., covered my face,
as ho al6sed th 4 lid, not d4ing to look again,
and .i,,alinqst
_pitied Op wretched:, rnothor
NYho dad thus, 4194 O. Marilliti hot guilt upon
~.. ~}
IMO
°aril*, Pa., Frill4y,_,January 1.9, 1868
No - iiiiider the cOnduefor - loolced - pitld;
and' the' rough 'brakeman - trembled I Such
:eights are not seen over day: • ~.
Well, what' are' •yvo to de •about it?"
the conductor.'You see 'I cannot lot
I en7r - E...„,..e° w'ith"-this on your bands;' shall
most helpt4ceman'at. once?' hoadked, al
. ".(Lot ' •'
' and let me thtint niompt,' I reptie(l;,_
You'do.•not• believefzry . citlr forbearanhe.
see; but 1 - afto kno_7 that can
=sow
explained. '
".Pat that - box do;' eh.-•
ductor, and cover it with that' ruLt2,Ftni
corner—it is too horrible!'' • ••• • • ''' ,.4 1. 1 •°
"With bowed.hend ',tried to think whiff
course to pui'sue;„l had a() few acquaintances
in Chicago, and `onlY one male friend, and
he lived away - out on the north side; but I
must send for him at once. I must meet
my mother that morning, an'a this dreadful
thing must not corn° to her cars, Sd
urged ilio:conductor to :find a messenger
MrnmediateiYlo - ge for my friend, and to
make no noise aboUit„.i P promised ,to re
main where I,Nras very quietly,if he would
only trust me. • '
know he pitied me, but it was his duty
to see that I did not play, hint false, and le
proposed calling a policeman, not eiplainin'g
anything, merely telling him to see tonic that
1 did hot leave that room. The dreadful box
was concealed under a blanket. As the kind
conductor-wont -out -at the dpor, the mint
'with a star • et?tered, and' leaning.up against
the wall, Iff - jk.ept his sharp eyes. fixed upon,
nie. Sire\ brakeman his place by my
It& ne'entlry must-have passed be
fore dayltOit took the. place ,of the. dingy
lamp in that dismal room. . I felt like going
mad when I thought of. my anxious mother
and sister, wlio by the bony s ,j C .t.x . pet ing
me at the Tremont What if my friend should
be out of town ? and if he came, what could
lie say or do? sow was this dreadful affair
1 to end? Not it word was spoken ; the lamp
went
out, the gray morning came in; a train
itaft,..another., came in, yet: within this room
itll win silent. I could not 'hei r costing my_
eyes on the' gray_ blanket in_the..corner, and
(lien I fancied the 4 3 .olihptahn. b —egan to take
an inter r est in it also; and Hooked in another
direction. The Sun camp cittt;; , making_us all
.look more wretched by its bright 'rays. 'Still
our niessenger did not come. -
'Another train'of cars' - now' cama-thrtn
derilig up to the depot. Voices were - heard
in the: ladies room adjoining us, and one fe
- mate"- - - voice r raised-td-a-high • pitch; -cfrught
'illy.!7=ear; Want - to - flnd - the con
ductor df 'the - night' :press-on the It. 1:
_train !"
" Why thisg'aVe e comfOrt, 1 cannot tell
for surely it was•nat'ii'i'amiliar voice, but 1
started to my foci, and.was. making for the
door s when the policeman stopped me. 1
had-forgotten-that--I-was-n-prisoncrl-hov.
miserable I felt it now. What disgrace !
Oh i my poor mother ! I really did begin to
`llkillikrirmurderer. At Oa§ niTifildirriamin
from the outside opened the door, when an
excited fbmale rushed in, and seeing me, she
screamed." • 'There ho is I that is the very
man !'
, And I felt as if I was condemned and
g \
hung nt oned, but taking court e nt kist'to
look up, I too sersanuid,' It is shoLseize
her I This is the very woman Ltol 1 yon of!,
• " By this time all the passangers and em
ployees of the lust train'crowded into the
small room, hearii,g---Ble loud words uttered
in nn excited tone, while others peeped in
through the-dirty windows.
of thiwung woman, and.she
had me fast by my coat-tail. 1 wanted to
shako her, and she was trying hard to shako
me, while roars of laughter filled the room
you see they did not know it was a. case of
murder ! I did not feel like laughing, I can
tell you, and I dreaded to announce the
dreadful guilt of this fair young girl. -Rut
was she not denouncing :no? •
• " I gave ono anxious look at the crowd of
.faces, and there, at the nearest window stood
the conductor, and my much 'wished for
friend. They could not get - in, the crowd
was so excited. But give - me woman for
making herself heard, my lady .would have
her say, and 'thus she spoke: ' What have
you done with the box I left-under bur scat?
Oh, tell mo it is safe? to(1 cannot lend. the
conductor who was on the train
e when I 'left
it I"
."Poor soul! how I folt for her ;-- yet I
must tell thelnith jso I pointed to the bun.
dle'in the far coriier,[now nearly hid by the
crowd. She In ad e one diw.fo.r. caught
it up in her arms's° eagerly that I. feared the
lid might open and her dreadful secret be
told at'once.
-- 513ut - she appearhd only arisiOus for its
safety, and so soon us she could find room to
do so, shobpened the guitar•casr„ and dis=
played that curious throng, the—waxen
image of a murdaed infanti • "
I do not think ono half of that ;goodlio
company' over understood - wlmt 'all the fuss
had been about, and it took conSiderablo ex
phination to Make nig fully understand.it, so
deeply interested lASI had been in the bloody
affair. . .. •
...The Arst,thing I did clearly undorstand
was, that my city friend mid the good con
ductor wore grinning through thu now open
window, and beckoning mo to come out te
them. Was I'frce? Could Igo? Had it all
boon a horrid theme, from which the bright
sun-beams had. kindly aroused :mo We
did got, togotter at last, as ! tho crowd-die
pursed, and the now smiling, young woman
told us of, the grAt fright she , had had.
old Ivor nothing of my,own,fright) for I aid
not wish tho ridiculous story to/spread, And
it Was kept pretty quiet at that time.
" I ant older now, and can laugh •oyer it
widtho""bdst of 2thom;: but it vas n sorry
joke on me that dreary morning.
- ,
appeared' that the young \ rl 'Nina
quite Mt.artist . in . hor ray, and had made
of rm( this very natnral . flgueo of Murdered,
dr4llnt for a travelling museum that was't'e,
leaVo Chicago in a few days oil;obciat; to oz-:
liiblt tlioi'r' wonders in the 'rand AlstriO:
along tholake shore.
sha vas. proud_of this, larbtut..pieco of .
work, and. had startod ,with, it, paoltaclioaro-:
fully in liar old guitar-J:o4,i a tend ing to.t4ca .
it.on—to ,, Ohiongo - tb . - scuno - nightlThitlib
moiling station tyliOto she had friends ra
siding, thosonduotor..handed hor-i Rao ask
jag hat , to•stop out a .moment , to; spbalt to a
tripod,. bho 9xpp,ptkpg to
sumo horAwat in, u- few, pionlpt4,•l?Or
,aho'
V' i' ~.;,
';Y:: - :r.:;'0',F. , ..:J , ;7). - . - i
,-'' •'L
---I!
was not up lid tinibTfo - tjts she-talked the cars_
started; -and she ivai
' . .5h6.161d she' was nearly, frantic (so
was II.)-, when she:thought of. her preeious
Wax figare, - atrthe took:the 'first train com
itig to tho_City, freight train-though it was,
and no'ono boulthdesCribe her diAress, (what •
write' •mitio at not :finding the conductot'
~who had landed, her,,inand qut of the tars:
c" She expressed her great delight at rt,,tc r •_
.oghizing moin the depot, (was I not egnally
rejoiced to nicet her) and_ her great joy ',ltty
• finding het -treasure safe, • etc., etc.' •She
went on her way rejoicing, and I cOttldori
ly sincerely - wish-that the awful baby-might
be' dropped overboard, ih the lake. , lam
up I hadits.- desire to behold it more. .
th Nt, how very differently it appeared in
have in iL sunlight low we. over
But wo,tv~r it for-a Lonafidc. dead baby?
were very dim if asleep, and the Limps
we first beheld it.
"Well to eat
only 'add that rtlidNa‘tory short 'I will
eali fas t-n -th -
• Troriio - rit it Li my mo tidP•F
_ _d not explain at that time A
id .s ister, and
late. . was so
"But I had a little party in my
that- night, where my friend - and the sytii`
pathizing conductor drank my' health in
sparkling Catawba, nail promised: to keep
my secret until I could better hear its being
told. They urged me to Sollow up my ae
quidntance with the young artist, butl-had
enough. other, and-from that day to this
never will show any polite attention to any
lady with a guitar-case. What might/it
net contain 7 •
lIIISCELLANEOV,q.
From the Tolbdo mode]
NASEY'•
Nasty,pronotaircs in fawr of A.-John
>, son. • '
(Posi OtTIS, CONFEDRIT N - Ronats,
Witch is in the . Stait uv Kentucky,)_
No-‘,,,25, 1807.
Lost week I received from Postmaster
'Renal] the follerin biTef note:
WAsulkoTon, Nov. 10.
Sir: The tenor uv eflis act does not sheeld
ycie from removal. 'Wood it not be well for
yoo to deeldre ysor preference !or . the Presi
deney7 It is my opinion that President
Johnson cood be indoost to accept the nonni
-natibn-______
NIZATiV, •P
To P. V. N shy, _ r.lf,;XolVcderil X
- Rands.
Tlgis ,note, keverin a.*:thretit., mit me late
perspirashun. Why, bless the President's
cheerful sole, uv course I kin express my
preference for the Presidency. - Certainly
kin. I bleeve in' A. Johnson.
rust and only' choice, .and will by fo,r-lificen
months to 'come, without fail.
.T.ofinnot say
'-veryinuelvfo - rlffin, litt-libuse Ins com
petitors, and, that, possibli amounts to tho
soma thing: , The Ssille'tin is ttnOte_T shall
"s — o - iiirtO the 'Pr;esiddianririTdEiliiiiiiii — liiS
• .
organ : •
•
En. NASIINEL INTELIGENCER :
1.:j10 ' question wish now agitates the mind
us ( KentuckyLmoro ; perhaps, than anything
else, : is who sher be the nominee uv the
next Nnshnel IDimeeratic Convention?
There are many gentlemen spoken uv in
connecshun with the place, and their claims
I- peipose breefly to consider, from a Ken
tucky stand-pint.
The first.is Gen,--Geo.-B, -McClellan whose
body hez been-recently raised fur the pur- 5
1 - ise.r Gen. McClellan is not,l don't thinl i c„ ..
'objectionable to the Southern-people. They
hey a 'lateral and normal objection to any
ono who drawd the sword agin em in the
late onpleasontniss, but they do not bleeve
that Gen. G. B. did this. At least of he (lid
it, it was only - ligurative. His services to
thif Confederacy in buryin the tens uv
thans
nnds uv Federal Soljers afore Richmond, the
strategy ti his lootenantsin Eying-AbAfands
.
uv Pope and Burnside,, and keepin them
from hurtin us and finally: his runoinNyilii
Pendleton again Linicin, all bind him to the
Southern heart. Any. one ;who ,coed hey
rutyaginLinkitf in 1804,_they.cons.idormfteit
hey bin trop to the South. He is UNaoth
inest man to the Su'llp. people which t ever
wore bloo. Bailee n't miser.- In the first
P
p horo isn't time between this and the)
4ext. election for him to 'make up his _mind
Nyliether hoNvill accept the nomination or
not; and secondly of he did decide' in time
be lacks prestige. He hes bee defeated
wunst hoz George, and it wont do to take up
.. he is'out of the
UM
Ne'xt ho tho 'carilet is Pendleton. ,Get.
T. PcndlOton, I say unhesitatibglY, .Won't
do. Ho Won't: answer. There is No grata
a distance atween hini 'and gm tunsees'nv his
party He uses' good English, and wears
clean shirt collars, and no sieli limn kin hey .
the eontidene6 find` eitearii iiv the 66,4
Dimocilhtie states. Thes4iings, yoo may
aver, are small and inconseinenshel, but I
deny it. Ther-is a nitteral atlinity,;hetwerA.
Di'Mobracy and dirty collars: Didst never
observe when Pendleton .addrest the frees
'Men uv Injiuny,how cold And stunlike,witT.
tbasaujience,ez.bis finis* periods fell nip
on their cars? Didst never bear Henry Clay
- Dean,' whose shirts are, worn Ora cOnsecu
tiro months, and whoso:stockins are 'never
changed? bidst never
em ? It ain't that there's eny, difference in
wilt they say—:-its'in the : shirt Cedar.
Ilc
sides Pendlonin hez none' the qualities
nedessary fiticeereful candidacy. Ho wok
bor'd tollable_well off, and hadret nnry
struggle in hie yooth. He didn't 'drive - on
thenanal and study Algolwa•on the back of
a kickiminule, and gat icnoelct: of by•ti
fano Paptin for nagleckWidduty; ho min's%
born4if hig.cahin in thalamic woods, -110- ;
ther did ha' studylraminar • by the Ate a
pine lcnct, • Auk hold in one-"hand
ana the beolc in the other. ' Ha didn't learn
Sheen - 1 : 411(in his, boyhood's dose, when the
death til•shis hither, Which . wtq,lainonthd by
nil whdknew, bhp, drove thin family into
huinble poverty. Neither did ha, while up-I
•pri tin) shoe boa*, feel within-him the only— !
of a ti(?),)16 dinbishen,,iiint-risin rush with l
npron..on, to
,ii.;l6v (nlis and dounind teb . a"l l
reeee'ved.oz a, student. ,Nyno : ov these:
1 . He I
rich, but rospeqinble pin:enc.°,
who and - started
in lifoni . ,entnfo'rtidde.qz, ever it young 'man
V;11Z : ‘.ll"s, Plano . to,
thnE
. ??9”, , 1110 ton : won't do. .
same_ objections §mOup!
- .
• §y,
. k v\:- ~,' , N- L.- ~ • _ l';', • ."-,-,'
. ,p•-- , 21 ~- -, , _ ..4 ~ -.,
. _
no objeOlishenalm,thelicz-dun-hia
party servis. Twuz him who 'linden speech
• to our Irish follow-citizens who wuz engaged
in assertin they sooperiority over the Afrikin
Orphan AsyluMs; - in No 6 York,lri" - 1t1e.3; by
burnin riv em and heatin out the braias'nv.
Z.
the orphans, and no maMdurintho war wuz
a firmer friend uv oar Houthern brethren
-than-he t but-he's abother-Pendleton. Such
a man Might apse for ..Vice-President, -
never for end of the ticket.
g.
•
111 CV,ltlnt AO be thob.'nv. Bookatinn
el:indent stand the pressure irci this ofils.seek
ers a week at his age, and rich ur our South
ern Dimeltratic- Statesmen ez aro flt, - -for the
place aro either•im exile far away, Or are pro
hibited
.froni accoptin the Os we would be
• glad to give ern, by the laws uv n oneon
stoalinel (,ongris for partielpaslin in •the
late unpleasantnis.
Vallandy4uM remains to 09, but-M3 aint
avaleuble. The fact Vallandygum hoz
outlived his day. Hod he bin actemited by
a-desire-to-beneflt-biaparty-Iho-Nyoulcr hovi
.purposely irritated the guard which arreste , d,
him to .tlfe extent that they' wood herlier-
Tanted his boivei and died onAhe spot;
with aproprit last words for ull to put on the
anners and rich. Theirlfe wood Itev- bin
'so to us, Then cooirieher piked to his
dean - „
1 and in sepulltreltones exclaimed,
''But -he sOltlshly'refoozed to die,
mid took
srktcble good care to Preserve
himself intact, '
- returned - to plague us.
A live politikil
`”): is a most inconven
ient piece of : fornytocir. Martyrs is much
,
like thegruntin swine—ur
death, and then-they are only
z , ose -
only after
..
presell t
.
pies?.
However ir,
sweet they limy while
.I , r6'sli, they won't do to salt dew)). The L..,•„ y
ill , his wrongs did all very well-for *two o,
three campaigns, but the people
lied
(muff iv/ it. It sours - on their stumicks. Iq ts '
got to bo to the DemoeraCy wet hash is to
boarders. It obstrades itself. - NVhen there
is a Senator to elect, up ernes this martyr
and busts in among the wires like a bull ,ia
a china shop, demandin it ez the price u
his :sulfrins for
_the coz. very well
when-martymhemsunthin i to recommend
him besides his martyrdom, otherwise he
becomes a noosance ur the fast mag,nitude
wish., calls for speedy and etTeetooal
ment,
. Wieh, then, steel We hey for pur Presi
dent" There is ono Man, apart whom the
minds .uv the DimocrisyUSi thr esaintiy,
center: allood, Wlio write "P:
M." after my name - ; say, to A.l qohlison.
Tri_Tlrour rock — MOollr cheefesl trust,
~ and
in liim oiilf lice we refuge . Iteons clear
to me...that lie lice all the qualitieq for 'suc
cessful candidacy. Ile woe born ay poor I
arencel - irra - peor-year-mul-in-a-very-ppor-
State,His father died when ho. wit:4_ so
young.thet, ho didn't remember him for
suthin like fifty years after, and Ile wiz
lef%i poor orfunto make his way - alone iii
the--world.. - Ho - referred to this - interUstin
-fact In-his--inaugurtd-speeeiron-the--4th-uw
4805. lle made uv himself a tailor
And actually worked on the beard, 'for a
liv.in, and read hiitry_whilu a >vorl:in
in
dustlcsly at his trade. For the benefit uv
the people I Wood state a fact that may nut
be genemily known, that Ile, from this
honorable beginning hoz swung around the
entirovirkle uv oflishel honor, holdin, at
different limes, every office in the gift -ny
the people, from .I.ldermarr-nv -his native
village up to the Presidency., Ef I remem
ber, he incidentally referred.to -these facts
in a speech ho madowanst.
There are othei raucous-for givin hjmn tho
dominnshen, uv Wichl,o4o are the, most_
prominent : .
elf he isn't nominated and el ‘ ectid,
Sdward,_WeCd, Raymond, Randall, and
Secretin:y Welles will.to wtinst go back to
the Republikin party.
2. .1.1,'9 hoz lhe alfeesimn uv nearly every
91s -bolder in the — YoonitediStates, and wet'
_a , tite_Aheyiwood_anake.l.a_retain__their
posithets.
His Dimocricy is entirely satisfactory
to ,, zne. lie temporarily, abberatod, but
when he returned ho wiz fiercer than over.
• • perod 1 5 long ivay uit_thiLnagiUntain_
uv Ablibben,jt,is troo, but when he fell, he
only suilk deeper in tho mire uv Democrisy.
Ve needYiever fear Co - trust skitm
a me •
44, Llo•les a., incurable hatred uv the
_.When they woodent. receove
Lim corjclly on his various Wors t he swore
oternel hostility , to eel. -• Ilene° we kiia de
j-jend -upon his bein trio to us,
G. 4 . ?:a ittrther.guarantee uv faithfulnis,
.I.:niniT ) ,saitheti I hey it front the best au
thority•tht,it he takes only whisky 'sticate,
Lavin given over all them'dornoralizin fancy
bevuragea , wic s ji sos4,ooaol.ink-witiivehe-s•Avnirr•
the blinds uvinikity and the gall nv bitter-
There are other reasons, but. tiles° are
sufficient. Let us put onto the • tiel of With .
him Nenry "Clay Dean, Mid tha - arrange-
Monts complete. Wo hdv the North repro.
sented;•tind the intollociooal and
nunanlel
lecto wings uv the Diniocrisy— I love
Deam'Erhe stands afore an aujerico in all
his greasineSs, I fool that thorn
him wich wO must admire. I close this ar
ticle with 4aggestin the follorin
' • ',. ' For?Presidont, ' ._
AND/100 JOHNSON;.
(The pride uv the Pordinaaiors.)
~.,..Ror Vico President,
.. .
_HENRY CLAY.2,DIIIAN. •• ' ~
~,,'• ~. '. Respectfully, • • 1
'', • •' A Kentucky Postnonstor.,
i,l -got s!ign thus so that. in case any
p or inan succeeds; the iintliorship kin be
,(
onfBd.. -4. ,•` ' ' : . .
PET.IkOLF.UNI V, NASItY, P. M.
. - i . - , : (Wick ia.postrimater.)r
,
i FoomNa Anon ,IN vita DARK,—A
`iraveldi mice arrived at. fi village 'inn ticOr
.a hard day's travel, but the. Landlord_ said
they ware enti`rely full, and that it' was tit-.
'terly impossibletb acemmnodate him; that
his wife had to sleep on the soap and hunself
on the fleorbrit'he would see' what his Wife
ceglii do for'him. • The good woman on be
'reapplied to, said-there web rooth he
mightmecupy, provided he would agre%to
one condition, viz: to enter thermour late in
the dark, and leave it, early. in' theinoi ring;
toprevent scandal, aS the room was double
ibriaded and oceupied hy'a 'lady..- This' ho
agreed, to. About LW& 'clloi - !k iii "Elio moan ,
j leg ari,rlWful noise *as heard,ta -thU house,
rand our. friend, the traveler; 4ns ,
rtmnblinglieels - OverifirairdoWn7Stkii -
The landlord,. on ritriVing at Alim,'spot;
inquired What the matter awns. .
The
,pltv.dor ejeoe!etei es : soon- as_
• could speak: . •,. , • .
-- hthat women's dead I"'
• !'.l . hewer thitt,!? said thelendlord,
bow the d--1.41 you find it out??
kII 10 . 1:1•• I • • - lay" -a
A-Weddilig Night7Shiit
It wasnit hardly' the 'fair thing the IMys
did to ,;Tlie ThonipSOn: the' night lie was
married, but the temptation' was • too - . irre
sistible. 'They coul i dn't have helped if to
have/saved their tell yoir I ow it
W 59.,
Aect was about the most fancy dressed.
iluck in - the - tu w Pfirticullir
'n perfect - Miss Nancy in mafineVs, always
putting on
_nirs, and More dainty -rind
modest that a girl. Welloyhen 'hie wed
ding .night learnt: Ilo y was dressed triink
empty,, and ,his penal especially fitted him
as if . they - haft : been monbfs and his legs
candles, and rite into them. Tight was no
name for them. Their set . was - iinmen.se,
and lie was proud as half a dozen peacocks.
"Aren't the y nice, boys?" he asked or the
.
two who 'wero v to betrobinsmen nini see
that he threw 'himself away in the - most op
prOved fashion,•
"Sturiiiingl Gorgeous V' replied Tom Tien
n ANever: s yth n g qu al, t o tun .
3‘it, I say, Joe, nern't they just the least
'bitftight? It strikes the that you will huge
, sorto--diffleulty n_l?ending—wont you?"
'.l'shntr, no I They.nre- as easy no nn old
glove. See!" ••
•
Td.prove the matter he bent down so as
to touch his patent leathers, when crack!
crack!' followo like the twin reports, of a
revolver. :
"Thunder!" exclaimed To - e es lie clasped
his hands behind and found a rent in
`the cassimere from stem 10 stern. "Thun
der! the pants have burst and what shall I
do?" ‘,
."I should rather think they liitid,"---iiii
swered Torn, getting 'purple in the face as
ho endeavored to control his laughter.
I, ‘)-1111 . t-theVe-is-no time to get another pair.
It only wants half an hour Co the standing-up
time, ~,t ip we IMAM got alone to go. Carriage
'''" ~
,ting ti,,
"hat shtai I do ?=what shall I do ?"
! , I'll tot
you „ hilt, Joe, if mine would'llt
_ k
you you 5h0 . !, , ,i bk,,, - them Mut" weleofise,
1
but they are_aboi,.•,. - ,-, i f r ,,, too hig __,., troola
set,like a shirt on IL 1,0,1 n idle. I see no
Thvayjimt to have them mended,- - ' -
. ' l Who can I get to do it, Toni ?' .
"Well, I am somethlng of a tailor, ,„ (. 1
con -- fix them, so they .won't slow_ Hold o.
minute, and get a needle and thread."
' "Can you R yiny Heaven bless you I"
"Off with yeti'. 'ecart.,"" commanded Tom,
as berePnie:bti,Ck:
“Noi, Iny yourself on the'bed and I
fix yonThl
.shorVorder.!'
„.. The command was •obeyed-l i he._..pants:
- mended -the coat-tails were.carefUllypinned
over SEf;as to condenl. the "distress for rent',
and Itll i went morry,a4 a marVage hell, un
til Joe - folicr . ired - his Idu - s - tildeft;ftile CO -Tn -
Frigitio couch.
~ -_-
II Vlore WR3 only a dim lighTi. ertlve-room
butit - e - rdibied-Cf.oc,_as he glanced bashfully
mound, tO BCC the sWeetst - lfitce.- in _-the
'world,.the - ro - sr - thecks and ripe lips, the
-lovely-and lovingblde=MsSTKiidlire"Fol
curls just peeping 'from .out the -snowy
sheets, and ho hastened to . disrofm himself.
Off came i..mat, vest, faneynktie and collar
boots and socks in a hurry: but somehow
the pants stuck. The more he tried r thA
more they wouldn't come, attil he Ing,l2;ell
vainly for half an jiOur.
"Thunder r' watered Joe.
"What is the matter dear ?" came is t
softest of accents from the bed, where
'spmebody was wondering if he ever was
gloing-ttre . ome to her arms..
It was n andreent- of desperation. Joe
s entirely' overcome by tlßN , dtuation,
and forgetting his neoutrar baskft&ltess
blOCed out :
- 4-Ihiqy, that' caused ..Toia_llennstt has
sewed)ny pants, 'lVawers, shirt itad under
shirt all together ," _
"ft is too bad: — 'Waif it moment, dear.'
A Mire stockingless foot first peeped out
then n ruffled night-dress,_ the lamp was
lighted`ttliair of scissors found' nuil,Joe,r6,_
eased, Although Joe denies it, Tom Ben
net, swears_that'his shirt \sus of the shor . tes,
ppsEible lesgthyreaseirti-ng,a posteriori !' :
A CHANCE FOR GAP
MAKERS.
. . . .
Widow' llaria Spoor,
..13illiugsville
has recently sent the following epistle to \
the silent partner of-one of our prominelp
.physicians: ''You was pitted out to inn
the other day - as the man What-inakcs , grave
stones. , I want a, stone for my late , anrJ,-
Hezekiah Spoor; I want large' stoneNs
ho was•a very-large-mom-say. 2 feet wit e
and Wfeet high. His age -was 09 year's . , 9
months and 17 days; had he HI/0
o'clock in the morning, but as he died at 12,•
I think you had butter: put it jdawn 11' dayS, •
to bd . iiiirtigular—git
His disease was billions colic, and Was sick
only 2 days and 2 nights.-' I want you to
put it all in,csriiatilly the disease_he died
with eAVas.,- ost. w . .'siekt• — TheTriirsr
dap ha .wasafraid Iso wound die, and' the
next he' was afraid he wouldn't but he dial;
yes he is dead, and I-never shall forget the
expressi[Othat lit up his countenance in
his latter moi l i nts. I understood that you
sometimes - ca •v i images on gra'estones
and likenesses. \ ow, if yogi can do so, I
wish you would chisel Out h picture of my
Hezekiith (hits Hon Halt I mean, for ho
did'hot took)ilce another Ilenekinh that. I
met yesterday.) I will try 'and-- describe
his looks. He was really. a
- Frm, had whiskers which was red, wshort.
neck and very large bead and foot-but,.•
don't suppose you could chiseL i eut foot
in•the picture, but,youjnight get . his . hand
in. Itti Leda large mouth and tAiio large
gray eyes. His eyes- were very
and Fwant yen to get this peculiarity-' on,
thdiravestone,,,,l will trY _and describe"
this peculiarity. One eye,you.Wallt,
rihttt.you, lied the other 'you want turned
as though itrwas,looking. up the
dope
all the tithe. New -I
want -Oita 'by
_next Week, as I snow Of - marrying;
another Hozekitili the weel ' after; and I
wont the lg raveStone up before for fear this,
other would think, itivas,designed
for him. :.1 don't suppose yeireoula plot ire
himliaving , tlielillious colic, ailuid,,fou
waircto pay pia . part in sonic of the clothes
ho had on ,whou ; tie with
'eohcillnd-tho::re'st-d-will-ptty•-you- atelier
its" soon ma got married, will, bo =in
about Y iveekS, oink tliosigl,nnli vole')
by Fiittii•ii mOl what will bo the prien'etthe.
draidatonci.ivitli: the picture, Withhitiflai l l
hag the, billiouA
of 1:861. - :
. The'funeral records every yearbav r o'
something-like attequilibriumin the'
ber of:noted'iiiixneg ; :l'hbse of the year saist
conhen - y.:.iny:;teliicep3iljp.. : uropo and
tlif;"country:. •Tlie'dcatba at' forne include
•Gov. Andrew; of.)faastiehugetts;';Qbarlce
...
Antilop, .D; A. D. Bache,. Lt. .
ISE
Brigadier. Gomm], Bailey; , Judge Bartlett,
af..l.s . T . .ewilamtishire;.;Captainzßankbead ; U.
S. ; Charles,. Jliowri, 'iArtoinua V - L ard,"
ex-Gov. Campbell, of Tennessee; HoM' B
P. Chambers; of Maryland; S. Saha-
ltOr; CMO. E. ;
: Red. It
q..Phrise, of Ph Tadelp in Brigadier Oen.
Curtis, U: S. A- ; the briginal
nelc,,Downiae-L-Presiton
Cal lege; 1i0n.4. P. Do
• pOriiitcndtnt, Cen.sui;,'Con. •'Dodge;
Samuel Downing; Pie hist pe'nslorMr . of; the
Ilcvolutioii T e Moro '13 , ,10ght,; -- Abby'
NO. 2,
Jacob Fry;
hon. 21f 1 . P. Geiftry ; of KAAttekyi
Gilmore,"llainpshieti;;..MaS,. get'. i "
- ChdrfeS - Griffiri: 17: S:ATI3.
fattier 4,1;11 . 11: W. S. Howe,
Jr.; GO. • Wasli. - H tin t, of New Yoi•k;
Gave lolicsoii; of Tennessee; Ilon
jah sisal), of Pe.; nayl vania; G. W.Kci,dit'll;t.
Chief Jm-tits Lumpkin; uf„Goorgia;_ .
J. A; MeDougal - ,T of Galiforiiim:-ItaM
Magraw, atone time Treasiiree ofl!fi.nnSyl
vania;- Gen. T. - F. - M'eaglier, of - Man- •
tana; Isaac Neviton, Commissional.' df 'Ag • -•
rieultitie; Rear Admiral Pearson, V, a -N.;
ex-Governor Porter,af,Tehns,ylyaniaMdj
Gen.. Sterling .Prien;
_Cf-Kruttiely; 'Rear AdMiralßingtold,
N.; General and, Goe'einor 'Roane, 'of Ar
-kansas;--Rev—Til.--Rouissilon,..Vicar_GeneraL
of Louisiana ; Bishop Rutledge, :of Florida ;
L. M. Sargent, author; Mrs. Catharine
Sedgwiek ; Bishop Soule, of Tennessee;
Commodop. lvartwoitt; S: NT;-Right;
Rev. John Timon ; Captain R. Townsend,
C. S. N. ; Jules Velcro, father-ih-law of
General. Beauregard; Professor Vethalre,
of Pennsylvania; Col. Wainwright, U. S.
A. ; Omit. W..Wallcer;l3. S. N.; Justice
Wayne, of the Suprema Court;
IVjllis;liiVa_M—roodttitf W
; liOnorable .
Wright,- of New Jessup and Rev. H. Har
baugh.-
The most prominent foreign names are.
those of' Allison the historian, Cardinal Al
tiarii Victor ! Cousin', Coin. de Figaniere,
Augustin di Ytukide,- -Michael s Farraday,
Ingres 'tlre'pliinter, - Priiice Mournvieff, Dr.
Livingstone (if ho is dead ex-Queen '
Amelia of Naples, -Maximilian-of -AusEila
and Mexico, the Milcad6 of Japan, Gen.
Miramon, ex-King Otho• el Greece, Peoreo
the Neapolitan statesman, Alexander Smith,
Drs • KelpestumiL_Veron,___Ge'n___Vidaurri, _
the Earl of Reese, and Aniline Pallid, Min
istarik-Finance in France...
An Inexplicable Mystery
Within the Walls of the Tiastile; during
Louis XIV.,
_was enaeted .
.ill"l l,, xtble mystery, which has
liliFsfer.i ; to, this _ clityi"vo-11)c.;,\ : 14:t,liO::; ; „
Iron Mask, " , Ayheir. 'Award - of,' lie, was
t rdi n c!.l. I ii_the_mai:guer e -in the
‘s Tempved--by----
De Sain,t Mars; who wai. his 1 Avnto gover
nor, and answerable, ft istiel eyed, for his
safety with his, own. life; k 4 \he Bustile, .
ivb- tie died on2.‘4 - IVeinber I.ooa, 1703, -
and was-buried-on the ,20th, ccinttery
the name of Machina.
No man, except the frovernor_, so
_far_as. _is__
known, ever saw his face -or hoard Lis
--- voice; two persons, to whom be had eon
icycir written svorde - , -- in -one case marked
upon a linen shirt, in the other engraved
on a silver plate, died without apparent
cause, immediately afterward. During his
conveya'nce from the Marguerite Isles, Do
Saint Mars dined at the Same table and
slept in the iMine-ehamber with him, with
pistols oven at Mind ready to destroy him in
case of an attempt on his part to reveal him
lelf. - In the Bastilc he seas - waited on, at
table and toilet, , by the governor, wino took
charge or and destroyed all the linen he
once used: ' - litrlvas never seen but with a
mask-of black velvet, fastened behind his j
heatl, with steel springs, and when .he went.
td hear mass, tlr. In valldes, who .4were in
charge of him, with muskets • and lighted
matches, were instructed to 6c on him in
stantly in case of his I speaking or showing -
his face. A hundred conjectures have - been
risked as to who this mysterioUS porsai was
who was treated with such respect, yet with
such jea'tltls rigo-whose life was held Sa-',
,:arellm„omist-cii It-i-tigefF T -yet, mad 41-1 - in 0-scene--
? ... 54.11: - -tant mystery. Tlmabsenee of any
person of sullicient note- from-the 'stage-of
history to account for such precautions alone
,baffiesrall ittquiry. The general impression
.)tectims-to---bc--tha t-he-was-im-eld el. —b ro th cr-of—,—
- N.
'lt:ds XIV., the frail :of an adulterous in
trigue-between Annomf Austria. and the
Duke of Buckingham, 'or some ;3111c , r un
known lover, who, being born iii wea oak,
_cOuld not hava.bcanqispossessed:of his' laim
t - the throne had Ins oxistonco b ,
r amitted..
TONE
JCPREACIIN;II CAUGHT.—Onto twpJniil
is tors. t Qgos pel wore eon4ing together
on, extempiinnieiiiis pi-enching.. • •
:'olo - diving :`wnsiug
. nrurrn, "you nre ruining yourself. by 'writ
ing your sermons end rending them off.
Your congregntiOn•can not liecome interest-
ed SU, you r preuelti unai 1-yoMwera-cni
mponCt9 'wench— uneXpectedly, i L ink.ss you
could get hold of on 'old sermon,,.yoti would
ho completely confused,"
. •
The young diviiMused all his eloquence,
-but-in vain;-to convince tho old gentleman
that the written senion expressed hisqwn
* thoughts and feelings, and if called)le could r—
preach extethporaneously.
• 'As we. are el'-the .the - sanie - faith;" said ••*
le young minister, - "suppose 'YOu-
. *try me
seat. Sabbaths morning. On ariending the
ulpit you can hand me if' teat: from any
pelt ofthe Bible and -I-Vil convinee 'You
__,
that I can preach without looking „at„the
text before I stand up!, Likewise T. • must
be allowed the same piivilego with'yMMand *
sea who Will4nake the best of it." • ~
ThO idea seolmatto doll - ght,tho old genjle
.Man,itild it iiins immediately
The on `mounting the"
pulpit,. his senior brother bilided hfm orally)
of paper,•on •ivlllely was writterit,‘...itaid:. tho
ass opeaqd. his Mouth . ank spalie,' . " from,
. .
Avhich" .ho preaclierli clorlou .sermon
, .
chaining the attention 'of: 1)4 drilkliC . ad
liyaress and aharailag old': lria - pd,;..,.With
hie eloquence: • '
,
In the tiftorpoon tho3-oupg Uric lia •
After nrand- 1 OokAit
"Am .1., not , tl'rino ass t"!' ll'aniYng::
frypnoni.R; lin ran his . fingor ,6, tliroui,ol,'.4is
.Irgir, strikight.oninglls col4Ti7)sl(iiiilirisfil9set
liko tlto last. trumpot, and resealouci:
I 'wt . no-Sss in'which .
a 4.§adly, silonarrotgned.-., xading4a
•' 'r'i"
thlid;tnno t othin, ass?'
loOlteil-ovoi, the:01114,0 - a' his olidr 4nd.ri
aolei\li v 910014 t ' 4 l eltirik 6rdairill.
all