RAT„ES:QE, AD.Vgi3TI!Npi one fri'or unre. ono I sortion, el roe Neveao Mu mit ortleeinents , Legal Nonol ether, Prutesai d I.lol4l7itbutit trsper, , ,)ArilavyNotlees Jed COMMunica• tidos rolging 1 / 4 ,i'matte , Het vitt _ vatelateresterdene, le man?" , tine ' °jars Welirt .71°Inupri':,19,,bOR!Cjieligmennicell 114' Oen ity Mout koodt'reseeS,arld,a-kinrery variety, ofmaterl4lsultedtorid tin and Vertu Ivor el every ktn,r, unatles tve to cluJob rarittrer at the shortest hti k aokild or, the UlO4 reasenable terms. Vera - one to towant.qt Blanks,or anything In the Jobbing Ike, %rill And It to their interest to give us a call P.I?OELI:SSIOIVAL CA I? DS. • • • T. D,, A.DA. Attoxpey At Law, V. it z etka. v o s n t , r , i, o o p:la Slam e, Esq., • TOS MTN ER, Jr., Attorney at tit Law ItUa Sprveyor,.?deohnolosburg, Pa. Moo on flail itall Strout, two doors north of the Dank. . • 'etiA..llUslnos'a proinntly attended to. July 1.181.1,1. • R. MILLER Attorney at Law. J in•lfannoil's tiullding 1=130dt:001y op p oslte - the Court Brice. 2 , 3n0v 67-1 y 4. AWCA It D.-0 LI ARI,ES 111. 1)1 A (.1L.01.,A ty, Attoru'ry Law,olllee In thu vn,om formerly oreupled by Judge Graham. .\ July 1, 1804-Iy, - _ , n t , t , t n oj i n i,, e7 l at Law, July 1, 1.861-1,, TWIN (3010 TM A.N, ' Attorney at ty Law Office In building nitrated to Franklin ito,o,oppool , o tho Court COMP. Ibmy ISIS. G. M. BELTZHOOVER, 17 0 ". R N EV AT LAW, and Real Estate Ageut Shophordstown, West Virginia. Prompt attention alt.co to all business In Jeerer .nn Cnunty and the Counties altioining it. J tuuaryPill, 1866.-1 y. E 13111LTZLTOOVER, Attorney o at Law Med In South Ifanovar street.. oppo `.e Itentz'a dry good stare Carll,h!, Pa. Septamber JA3IES A. DUNiiAll, Attorney at Law, C a rjl.lr, orlle.tln Nu. 7, Ithvoul's hall July 1.,19t11—1y =ll WEIKLEY & SAD LE R. t S E -AT L W . Office LA_ No. losout LI lin, , t C.irlihlo In. ntyv 47. E=E! lIIIMRICH & PARKER. w 4 TTOR'SrEVS AT LAW. Office on M:Ii" St.. in Ntarl.n ItalL Onrilahi, P.. IT. S. P..-I.TENT ENCY C.. L itroot earl.klr, I' ttollert titt. Attpittatttilt,ltiowl wist: ruottitto ittltnltllelttatc tttlt.ittn. trtv.tr the t.ltt sottlmt, I too VIOL 14it7-11. ) I EU R. 0 1 ,, S. SEA.- - 1 -1....)?x , pr . / Pau in% Ii UHL frotolberlitl- ) 7 0 ,, r0 Cn.lingu of Dental Surgory. Irl r,ldi.n mf trig , tunther. ,uthoo , treot, thror 'mime F ` 11:',O. W. NEIDICTI, D. D. y;.-- g, jir Late Mmostratur , tf Oporntil , QT. ,, LniintrynfOn BalLintole C;ollegu el "Enktgf Deo tnl nttrnry.. larir„Pa , " his don. ;pposite Marlon Ilan, West 11s.:a.trent, lisle, Pa. ISlnly I, 64 ? U% -. (2 )ILE COYLE & 00 JOBB L R S °glory, loves, loory (0.0.10 and. Sto.tionoty All iere will receive prompt a!tendon. No. 11. youth Ilanover St _ M.Agents for the Color g . llel-10. Woollen )Mlle Pular 08.19. DR TITEO. ,NEFF, GB.A.DUATIL OF P ESN' A. C01.1.1:01f. OF D rd i, ST:Ito ERN' DENTIST, Respectfully Informs the a treene of Carlisle and vl sinity thit ns [seen , eqt `, ain Eitroot, 14coly oaenpied ICe hie Father. obeli: he Is juPtpAreillauttelld I bush... Asti -04141 teeth inserted on thda, Shyer. ri.ktinum CI, moderAtti. I.7aprll 69-1 y 0 N DORN Fl R MERCHANT TAILOR Kfanier'a Building. near (theoin's 11411. Carlisle Pa., ha• Jail. returuP I fr. 111,. Maßtern Chit. fl With ho idrVelt 3111 mast COMTLETIv. t. ,, ;()II'I`)TEN'T oF PALL AND WINTEIt GOODS, QoueNtlog n( Cloth , o,lll3llllwri Gents' Furnishing ' (}nods. over brought to Cornslo. cluths eompriae • , 1p101.11313, - El SOIL arid AItEItICAN MANUFACTUREItt of tilt. fluelt texture and of all glutdoe. Mr. U. , rour (loin; Illruttolf a proll , al cuta4'nf :Ona experle.... , .. N pry trrd to .war not perfor. ,r. prome, nuts, 01 •--I , l,l4.o_llAutls.bs_tho yhrtt, or cut to DAn't forgot dm ',lice. F Rgsn:ARRIV I AL Of (10 the New Spring Styles of ,•• HATS AND CAPS Ins just oponcdol.No. 111 — N - oitt, Ilanovur At , n Icn . door, NOelil of the Carlisle Deposit. !Donlr, inn nod host .stoclc of HATA k CANA oVt.,colits Csrlido: , S4ll .11,1", s, Ovo.lott.ro4 or rill ,tolo rind gel:tittles. :Stlll/13rlois'lltiocont cblAAo, nod story description of Art Iles now ruado,Thc Dank.n . d and,old . rnsilioned lamb, Kept constantly on llnnd and rnallo',,to orator. hit Wari . !lnfC . l to ;;Wc satlsNotfon. A roll nsSortment of STU. %17.11 A CSnNlint'i.ll,),v's arid ollildron , s fancy. I h ac ,,, ; Os. a hied strck, Notions of rlifforont kinds, consiAl 0 or I,,plies StrAlngs NoCk-"Cial:Puil6ll.3,'OidiAg, I'll rend, Slyfritt *o• . • pondilre, thatffintf.t,; . .ed. r ,; Pilmo lioltAr 4 and Tolisecu, always on hand: Kilopps :I call 'awl osstnlqe toy stools, to foal con• afloat of ptoilttnn oustdss . einTiol you tonnoi. i•MN LIELLEIL, AO. 310%11371 , No, I's North,llopovor St.. QASJPITTI.i:TG & : . . 49, j ouligerjhprs, l;tylrr 'permanently locotoill In Ca Melo, respectfully eoltelt a elutie of the publ IC pat-I tronago, Their shop leolttiated oh thd public N 4 mire In the rear of the lot.Preohyterlon Church, where .thoy 'an olufav e,be '; • 1, . I Being ex peihipc6S mocha nlev, th ny aro prepar'elt to execute all Ortterorthat Cloy mop bu ontnixted'illo, enberlor nroalmeiratud at v_ory innderito price% :HYDittarcia ; WATER AV 114P(43,' • -,'• •,' I r Avnitrorp; ' - •'• ,!"' LOT* rbrtoif pumps, ; • k BATHING TUIDI,MAB.II DARNS andiall.othor artl: 0163 , 1 n the trado..... I • • ; ' • PLOIBING AND riftS"AND,,StPA)I promptly atternlo4 'to hi ',the Moit npr'orotl Style. , 43Eleraountrt. , ,Worktpruniptl,tattoplcd' to. eiark.:itioranteed. , •. • I ' • Don't forget the plece—lrnmealatoly In tho.roor of ?..to,Vlrd Preoleyterlan, Church. . ' ' • 0/1541'1311.LT. IkIIHNWOOD. liET,AJOMpticr'mrCA It' • • fle Li"; fmtOvI,VA ' 1• • jtoqnoryr:oiganistid,,i,,,,itioei opened; 'foirirrintitdloo ofn konerallintialh . 4 baslocnni In the corner rooriof 3lvpa',B Att. , bundles, oh,the North Went corrrf ' I or Oro. Arc. 1. The' DlrnetMil'hnila and cardini roatimgeiri mont tononka thin a pupulardnetltutlon, awl a sale play Aayoether hank:7lth their "•D p t imioleod anaemia linelt be demand; iutar ant all.,wed oh canard deponits, Mold, Bilvori Trona 4 . r Nil 4 a t I V I9 2 Teru TT t iCl d lit Pu 4 rE r ' an'tryolMoonilatn 4‘n In the 'ro . lcoutt'4ny, ioadiyi , nouro from it o'clock A. N. to 3 o'clock ! • I , 491T4fti-ilkishier, . 1.,. .4 q .minepTou.g., , tilfgp; rreabiout;., , tt. Thommh'Peittdii, • I Trelkee, -,' • Joi:Ati VV. Orargbend; ,'! , 08 . , tr - ."., -; JON . S -H. - ITSE • ,E 1 tat, G - ; • PA., . Thwundoreignibilinving lb* ad Cho' . poublor and' • yell „known howto;' glitch - hug boon tborougbly yero , 7o R. 4 Mt{ vAtrimproyo,r add gr.•woll n 8 nux t n ely,ruiuttneitod tittoughoub• with elogabt nod. ;fstaltuitajl trunuclingtult thovappolOtutuntit of 4 00t , 0 14 .44 P0711104,1.404141,1fure 111414p4Dpfln ..9.lls . ll Pt)Vaiilil a 3Vrittfli; B6B. • 2 4 0 ' • Proprlstori m 26 OD , 1 lid I= =ME VOL. 69 11rkE4,1,ANEocis LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, WASHINGTON D. C Cbartored by Swebtl Act. of Cougrose, Approved, July 25 180 Cash Capital - 1,000,00,0 BRANCH IPFICE PHILADELPHIA FIRST ?iATIONLI3ANE BUILDING, Windt: the general I/nai1...3 of tho Comp my Is trans acted. and to it hieh all :terror:o eorra,Poadnocd Pilot la lai addres.ed. Jay Conk, Ph Inda E. A. Rolling; Weoh, C IT, /ark, l'hilado. IL. D. Cooke, Wdsh. E. Eatvhiy.l t 31T, Philad, \V. E. Chandler IVash 191 a. G lor.lllo d, l'hllada. John .1/ Dorreas. Wash U °orgy. E. Tylyr, l'hllada,' Cl war,l, DoUgy, N .1. Hinrklny Clark, Phllada, G. C. Eahnfltork. N.Y =I MEE C.ll, OLAIIIL. 111111ade'phin, l'resl4l.3lll. HENRI' 1). C. 11,K tV:i•-lilnzton. Vice-Prk.ethlent. J.\ V Conllll. 11x4culIre Cumtnittuo. 11M Eltqfr , : VC. P1 1 :111'. P1111:11ft., See'y nrrd Arewnry. K. $. '11'11::Elt, Wetshlp glom, Asl4le4ttrit_Ll,l.^_qtary. 1' It .1 , c4 M. 1). Modieal Dlruotor: J. Sll' MEIIOI, :1.4115t/fill. DiroetOr 15.VDICAL ADVISORY BOARD • Geue; nl ti. B. A. SS•eshi nirton P.. 1. II I% IT7, C;. i;;lMedlcal Deplrtment 8. N., k, ....Ilk , • t..qt P. !,LISS, D., Wushingto,. SOLICITORS AND A TTORNEYS q• 1.711' C 'GEORGE UAL'. I.INO, Philmdelphia, This Company, National a its character. °Rem by vetoer, at iti barge Capital, Low, 'fetes nt Premium neand New Tables the most di •i i ,,teri - oiertiiii or 'Mur iel.: life,yet presented to the. p ~ 1.11,. The rat, of premium, het g rod need, arz made as favorable to the Insurers as those of thii hest Mutual Companies, an: avoid all the complioitions and uncertainties of Notev, Dividends and the Lois. underatau dingo which the latter are se apt to cause thePolicpliel dorsi Several now and at traetive tables are now presented iwit di need only tole understood to prove acinipta• hie to the public, such as theINCWID-PRODIMINCI l'ol,loli and RETURN PltliillUNl. POI,IJY. In the torncr,ithe poliepholiterdiotunly-secures a-life. sumac , payable et death, but will revolve, if living, after a period of a few years, an annual income, equal to temper cent (10 per cent.)of the par of his policy, In the latter the Company agrimalo-rdDra-telhe assured -the total amount of money he her paid in, in addition to the amonnt,of his ' The attention et petacins contemplating lormring their lives or In reasio.r the amount of Insurance they itlreißly have, • is etelled`.to vatitagoviChil. the Nationai Life Insuiiinee a'‘.`-I.Vtiplrilats,isud full partieulars given on applicarM file 0111 re of the Company In Philadelphia, or to Its Utineral A gents. kU EN rs ARE; WANTED in every City end Town, and ape' tottleur front c mmetent parties for such ageneios,,oith salts ble endorsement, should be addressed TO 'FITE CU PA N Y'S OEN EIRA L .ktikiN FS ONLY, iv their respe .I.i on districts. W..;ir:o•rT Co Y E ENLItAI. A.NTS: E. IV, CLARK k CU . Phil Adolph la, Her l'ennbylvania and Southern Now Jersey, JAY Cool: N co . Washington, D. C. For Maryla n d, Diatriet, of Columbia and Weld, Virginia Ihrp cv ly. READING 13,AL1, ROAD WATER ARRANGEMENT. 11/ONDA Y, DECPIT., 14 1868. ___liit„EAT TRUNK. 1,1;4E411011 Tlll2 North and North West for PhilatlelfilniTlT — ndi - , - hooding; Pont svllle, Tamaqua, Ashland, Shamokin, Lebanon, Allentown, Easton, Ephrata, Lltlz, Lancaster, Co!. amble, to:, iStc. Ihirrisburg for New York as follows: At $.50, 6.50, 8.10. A. NI., 12.40. noon. 2.05 and 10 60 I'. 111., connecting, with alwllnr Trains on thy Penns) Rail Read, and arriving at New York at 11.0.1. A. 51., 12.20 Noon, 2 50, 7.00. 10 05 P. 31., and 6 . 15,A. NI., ri.spectrully Sleeping Cars arena, .panlott3.su, A. M.;and 10.30, P. M., - trains without ehangu. L...tvelfarrlehdre; f d Reading, Pottsville, Jraina. qua, Minorav .Ashiand, Shamokin, P1.,0 °rove. AllentoUrn and Phlladol phlitott. 8.10; A. IL, kind 2.00, vtot 4.10, P. M., stopping at Lebanon and Principal W.ty Stations. tin, 4.10, P.. 11. train umking cumin, lions for Philadelphia and Columbia , holy. For Pottsville. Sehtiylk ill Ilavoo and A aborts vin 3chuyl klll,and Suhioot,.tuna Iladrutd, leave liarrlsburg. P. 51. Returning: heat o New York at 9.00. A. II 112.00, Soon .05.10 and o.ool'. M.; ['hits...lel pe it et 0 11, A. 31. and 3.00 It. NI.; Sleeping • ears Ire min:ming the 5.00. a. ;,10, and 8.00 P. 11. ti4ins Jima Sew Yor4, a itiaiat elmoge. Way Parseniter leaVes Philadelphia 7.30, A. M., rooms. Ling with simNnr botio on Knit Poop s) lonnia It:inroad, voinriiiirt nom goading at 6.55 NI.. napping or all Statitilis, rare Pottsville atl :al, and i. 4 -4 .1. 11. and 2,45, P, . at 5.25 A. 51. A 01ilivoil 7110 A. Al 1231) P. 51., Tamaqua at a,tltl.,A. 51.41.20 I'. 51., for Leave Pottsville via 64141411011 Ulla Suialueliants Hall [lvid at 7.10 A. 51. for Ilarrlflourg, NI. fir Pine tl rove Awl 'CI emi.nt.... Vowtt rigii ACCOIIIIIIOI.I/ItiCII TrAIII: 1.0:11V03 Read' at LA, leaver rhilatlelphlP fit .1 NI. . . Pottstown Aettautnodatlon 'Crain: Leaven Potts toWn at 0.45. A. 31. returning- leaven 01111:No1phi/I at 4 01, P. 31, Columbia Rail Road Tralos leave Reading 7.00, A. aiRl 0.15, 0. 31,f0r-Epitrata,Litiy.,lauetuiter.., Coin AO. • Puri. iOnieli 10111 Hood Trains leave Perltionturi June lion at 0.15 A. \T. and 5.30 l', U. deturning : Leave rkippach at'S.lo A. AL, nod 12.45 P. M., conneetlt4, alto t4sullar tutlns an Reading; Rail head' lot nuudnyti reeve New York at 8.00, P: M. Philadelphia 8.00, A. M., and 3.15, 0. 31., the 8.00. A. M. Train running only to Reading; Pottiwille 10.00„ A. Al.. llarrlsharg 5,50 A. M. and 4.10 and 10.50, 0. 31,, and Reading at 1,50, rilo - 7:1 - 4 - A - . 31:1'or illakrls bitrgott.. 12,50 and 7,31, A. 31. fur New York and ttt 4.25 P. 11. for Philadelphia. Counnototlon, Mileage,Beason,Bohnoland sins, to and front all points ; at reduced rates. Baggage checked through; 100 pounds allu wed 'each n ger.' Cl. A, N 1 ,101,1.8, that 0 up't. :254, 0. • `}'INDO~V GLASS REIIO USH BENJAAILN 11.. SHOEMAKE .140 s. 205, 207; 209 & 211.' N. 4th St., 'Freak,liltrt English • Window Gloss. Frenoh,Ylpto Glass' o for, ,:WiriFlowA,, • - li'ronoh Looking Glass Pintos: Efamsadd Plato Gicise for 'Bicirlikhls • sr 1• • " • ' 'Floors., ..oolored , and Grua montal•Church Glass: .Flgtod ciiptlt3 for Lionserystorios, Every ply° ntiViblekoess. „ • , Clue, boo or Biagio Light. .Atitiik; or cut tb ;thy , IrregOliti• Shope, ' T L R,lv'E Tt,r g LIVERY -AND-SALE STABLE - ::_ Betweou Hanover and Balifora 13triNite, in seer of Oho Cormiut 'Rauh°. '" i CI ARli '1 L E ist A-. fitto4l up tjio Stablo w4l. NO'o , Corilegom , 716.;•1Oli.fitrdpilrixi to' furninh - first-tie rptura.oute at reapoooOto rap.. .:!artie., to,• a n d from aro 'Springs,. , • Whbellei 'ard MI6 A' and 'Elliptic., LOCK+ , STITCH: Machmesh . 14! The Best Simplest and Meg:mei. r.., 1,1“.n•,e, t,.. v/ific rrE madbind'aro itptecl ; tp Icludi 9 f , d'OAlfyfluping, ; yroxic . ing, :equally; ,7340 tql,w) 1311 k, paaa and Cottop goody. with 8111. 13acth andi'Llth,a tliroade, reakin'a WiLt.l and 4iorfiiat 61.1tah dllkd bdlbotl !Allaea of itho , artipla , 411 apichtnep WaStiinta, • i,t • 'O4ll and exatntha at )tall Road 7aralitaoh Officer, •' ?day. ,041P11E4. wALIJ ABLE Bobaltbli 44606.4 AO' imoolate.l lulder,thu.founp,uto), 1iip 14 90 14 0 UO4, too 9 4 ‘ 64 614611t0kutd . aud" - 1 4 , ,1 of Sher,k's hitter 'Tluotoro'of )1061 i'd"ilin 4 ,'',V 40 Pro 4 1,110p0 mu loaf u 6 olo.rpm.qd ,f0,1,01,4.4f41 ‘44 * ,5e4666. and'af• sohlykolmoil6„4.4 . 4 1 : 4 0 ,r"141"Y4 ay ,Struth-llatiotlit - itt66e, 'Quill 6, , o 114. t. 4, .o 45 iv; "p,.'; 4 Ildto 843-,ltak , . 111 M , . .. . . . :.?,;.,qtti1..a...... 0: ., .: , 4,4: \ .% ;. 1.)...:_. , ,:'.•. 1 .1:: 0...'1 " ,:;! "; Lj 1 1 1 , :".1 • ~,,,, „, , j: ~,,.., I , ii ,:',. -....., .-•!-! VI ::',4 , '' ' qt ':',`. '' ill 4, MIMES THE NATIO'N'AT. MEM DIERCTORS OFFICEItS Impor or of i IM M=ll EMMON fr,lllll I= ME I= /MEE A. L. sroxsr,Eirs,cotum-N. .-sbNsLEit AA i Real Estate Agent, .96 - teener, Conveyanibr yaw: and Claim. .Agent.. Ofgee Main Street Neer :en ti•e—S-mare,—., r_ J - 011tii.INT.-.--A Store. Room and cellui;or k West StTnat, ,halmeon Pomfret, mid and South Strbet, the itorough of Carlisle, nicely fitted up with,-Shelving, Drawrs and Coun ter, Well suited Tor a Grocery Stero,- , and In A good loention: Apply lo " . • • I,BPONSLER, Real taints! Agent. gnu 69. TTIGHLTPRoy.E FARM - - Ix IN ADAMS COUNTY•AT PRI Vitt - SALE. ' Situated on the Comm:age Creek 3 miles from Tlaneder on the high road, and on the Railroad leOlog from Demmer ,to:Littleslown, - adjoinine. what Ran formerly knoivu an the IClttamiller Mill property, coillulning . • 171 .Lirel3 of LimestoneT.and, cleared but about 30 Acres, which al.° covered width heavy White Oak Timber. The improvements are ostensive, and consist, via A LARGE . TWO STORY BRICK 111:ANSION HOUSE, 60 feet in length and 45 in breath, contalnlna a 11011 and Eleven Largo Rooms, all newly papered and psleted, pirtzvt running along the entire truer, and cellar under the a hole house, and' an excellent well of water near the kitchen dnor. The oul.buildings halonaing to the. above .consist of a lame Car. Inge House, Wood end real House, 'ling Pen,' Brick- Smoke' Musa, Poultry UMW, Wash [louse, all new except the latter. The 'garden Is large and highly cuhiveted, containing hot bede with glazed sash. The amends around the house ere adorned with shrubbery and • tud dm] pith many chalet, fruit and ornamental trees, adjoining a hlch is a flue.apple orchard, next A LARGIII - 13 4 ANK. BARN nearly new hO fra by 00 'with Wagon Shed and C,rn Cr lb attached. raid a never falling Well of Water In the liarn-yaM, afro • A NEW TENANT HOUSE, 30 by 34 .feet containing seven rooms, the out buildings` to seine convicting of a Wash House, Rake Oven, [leg I'on, fie., a Pump at the door a.. d ex,celleni garden. Thiv property presents superior tiventacec, the location being I.4igiblo and .the land pt the best inlily of limestone, It ell watered and the cattle twine noon. In water train every field. it crept portion of the land has been recently litnlyd, the fences to good vondiflou and Jill the corn ground prd part rfi the grits ground - ploughed for tile coal ing Spring. There is n tiriot 31111. illecksmltti Shy and MA.] 111 , 11F0 within a short-distance at toe buildings, The preperty hosing been recently put chased by 3 gentlemen from Bandnlnre 1010 after fitting It tip et gi Ott expe Me, to note desirous of returding to al r e city. oln Inc dtspoqe tofat an 3.31131113/g . lOlO Ado., and upon reygenable terms. Enquire tit., • A. 1,. SPONSLER, Real Estate Agent, Carlisle, Pa. 2fidee OS. VA 1,1.1 A 81.1., 'RR I VATE RE'SI ()ONCE Pt/It SALE.? slttn.tle on South Hanover street, Carlisle, now and occupied hr Mrs. Washtnood, late the property of Benedict Law. The lot fronts on fluo r's-pest.. 90 feet, and extends bark the slme . width ZIO 11., to an alley. The Improvements are a largo two. , tory FRAME fhiUSlt, with Verandah In front, •i"ollt.nliiing•lnoible Porter:, Hall, tChilinhei, Dining room and li Rebell on lower Boor add six Cbatobois and II . ti , -00on 00 tin •Sild story. Gas and water hero 'lntl, I ntroducoi. There is a largo Stable and Carlin.. IL.. at the loot of the lot. Tho lot 'is well studded with nrinaultinta. trcesand shrubboty, besides 1,010 of almost every description and Grapes of the out choice retention In abundance. Logone of A. L. SPONSLER, .__ • Laral Estate Agent. _ . _ 230 ct-GS " • VALUABLE.FARM in Perry Co; • AT PRIVATE SALK., Situate In CarreirttivitilibilVi=4 - milet,north - of Carlisle, 4 tulles north of Carpels Springs and 11 miles west of Duncannen; adjoining lands of J. Shearer, Nancy Cling and °there containing 126 ACRES; - now owhed by . Levi - Leeds, 90 acres •ol which ore deltic:S t in a high Maty of cultivation and under good fence and the residue covered with ibriVing timber. 'A riever-feilLg stream of water Iltejarnj.and plenty of limo within The Improvenients are two-story Log k IVeathid. boarded hiouse, Large Barn and Spring Rouse with - excellent water. School Route and Church at' a convenient distance. Apply t Z. L. SPONSLER, Real Estate Agent. • 230ct.08 HO I FOR AUSTIN & CO.'S 'GREAT ON 4 E DOLLAR SALE "We propose to fight It out on thin lino.' AGENTS ! AGENTS ! WANTED! Ladies and Oentlemon In every town and city - In the United States, to art an Agents for Austin Sr, Co.'s Great Ono Dollar Sale of lob and valuable goodn, comprising nothing but useful articles wanted in every family. Each and ovory article will be cold for Con Dollar. To any person --gutting- un either nf the—Clubs below, no will present a Watch, Drank Pattern, Mee of Sheeting, Aowiee Machine, 51001 Carpet, de., kr., free of extra cost. Our indurefnenta to Agents have always been nearly double those of any other house in the trade, and our largely in creasing business warrants 'us in continuing the Take. particular notice of Ihis:—Our Agents are not rentdretf to pay one dollar , for their preeenta Inq_reeelve the sown tot their;Fervieee in getting up Mut.. Please examine the following =I Any person sending us x Club of Ton, with $1 entitled to recylvo, for the ,nannis any on: rho Use hundred ortlelus'On nur Exchange I.lsts For a Club of. Thirty, with $3, the person will eutithal to one of the . follnul ht. articl es, viz: Meerschaum Pipe. 20 yards libetelied ot Brow Elepto,t .Sllver 7 plated t' Flve-botZle Revolt' lug oariey Dress Pattern, 1 &Aim exte quoilty Cotton Hour, Panay Colored Bed Spread lar6a nine Damaok Tablo Cover, 1 M0r0... A I huin—loti pirturoP, All-Wool 0113 , 1 m el on for pant and Vent, 1 pair hullos' Surgu Qo i Frew Boots but quOlity. Vdoton lino !Anon Towolu, 1 largo Mx, {Voluted Shawl. Ladles' long Uold•pintod Chaln Splen I,:nliev . Morocco Shopping ling with lock end key, Set ni Jewelry with, Sleeve Buttons to utch, l Violin and Bow,l doe. Shirt Boron:1s, 1 White Nfarseu , ev Quilt, 1 }Argent Black Walnut Workbox. or Writing Beak: Fore Club or Fifty, with 55.-1 pair All wool Blanketo, 43!, yards Ono Ca:4l4lller° for Pants and Veal.. 1 hlook or colarod Alpaca Dress P0W..., I oiold Sclrf Pln,l pale llonts' Calf Boots, 30 yorno Blowgn] or Brown Phontlng, 1 yda doulils width Cloth for Lodi.' Cloaks, 1 Fur Mull or yaids Print fist colors, 1 Pr] nuro Tidbit ram wi 1 plain poplin Dress Vattern, 1 elegant six but tie heavy plate 1 en , ,tor, 1 pair Gonts' White ehirts, genuine 3leorschaum Pipe In cure, 1 set or Lieu-Cult:tins. For n Ulu') of Ono hundred, with $lO.--1-li—Ce Ivor-o Kit, , ungrav,ed lea Pitcher, 60 yartlx Blench ed or Brown Sljoeting, I rl,ll NlE.rino or Thiu.t, Dress Pattern, I sot Of Ivory handled Koine and r. 41,1, I pair superior Wh.to Wool Blankets, 7, 1 4 •Clirds ali wsod tunoy Cossitooke for suit. elogani. Iterago Dress l'ottorn, 1 Ladies' or Gouts' Bilror Hunting-rano Watch, 1 Bacon's Six-barreled Re-' , vlohlir,Silver•pltiloi engraved Six-bottlo 'involving Cantor with cut glans bet this, toe Wool Cloth for laird& Cloak, 25 yards Carpeting, pair lino thinnuilt To`,ieolotho Niipkina,to watch.l heavy honeycomb Quilts, 1 Bartict hood portable Sewing; Machine: l Wool Long Shawl nice Yur Muff and app, 1 polr duals' French Colf lloottit 1. or a Club of Fivo 114pdrod, with $50.-24 yd. ext. IViiolen Carpeting ; 1 elegant linutingicaso Watch (Waltham. warranted one year,) elegant Chamber eat black walnut trimmings; 1 haircloth Spr •.` DCr Al Club of One Thousiod., wit $lOO.-30 yds ,Iliussols Carpets, I. Parlor blo t ,co plot% /oldies' or Cents' Hunting fluid Watcher. Chain, 1 cons plate set of rich Sable Hum For tursor or smaller Clubs we will lye a pre. , ant of proportionate value. or.ouetomefs maw at any time .make a from the Exchangt List, and i by sending One Dollar fir eacharticle; have the goods. forwarded to thorn, without first ordering, cheeks; blot in such cases no 'pramlizins will be glean. • • , :DIR,..ECTIONI3. • ' I s iSendlargo suuta i of money by Draft on New ,Fork. or Doeten, or by Bxpross. We will pay lizehapp , on all sums of 525 or more. BmalLeams thoUld be sent by registered letter or by postal money order. It'vrill he linpoisible to lose money sent In either .of the above ways. We will noV.ho reeponslblFer money lost unless sent as above directed. Bod at your lattori are properly:directed and: etamped as no letters, are„ forwarded unless prepaid. Write your andtess'i lull; Town,and County and' State, Agehta wanted in every Town and Village. : Address • • ' • AUSTIN & pr,c..1.06 Sikin,mcir ijtrOpt BOSTON MASS. ' _ oioa oeLat _VATENT .43LOTHE.8 RACK. T b ' - ,undorelkned .havlng•- perchosed, the ght to Otaduloature and 'sell' lirennomen's'neteill -Clotted Rack 'bit thls,cottnty, givoe notice chat UM' klubtlo s will be coiled 'neon oithor by himself or' bls ikont, atld brddrs•Oellolted for. the canto, It iaone of the„vory,bestliiiprovomenti ,of IMO, and abould'ho fonnd Id overy 'household, 'iirdoro will l o promptiy,filled. J, • . , 'This Improved clothes rack has many advance, dos, and, on aocothit of Ha eleipllclty and coneun- Junco pleat, rereelpiond iteolf to , Every Wm:silly in We 'award' bit. tile 4 incohironlaried MIII. anpoynneo SlCOlihnled by isothavltig oonvoulent ' arrangement on which to dry Clothing. •lency'•or--ftle ' ITeMbee , WIIL 4 obeli • not -lhoilt of Olothingbeing epoped, mit door, yet fond ilea not' provided wit.• a piopuely condi.= tedeletheil Rook, ',for Also to doors Mita .110, alturnotive. ;often to,ls It tho case whon Clotho. aro bin Ironed, that, Id want'Of a sultOble Clothes became which to, thoroughly dry., shop, cifilrs,,,pF, are celled , 'Toth roqiiisi I ha for lbat puipeolb 'thus discoMmod. • lnk ;the holy or ilio,honou lfa.acet,44ll• r equlred, 'to •say isMjilug• of the Inconveniehee othdrwisa., nee df thin Ittinroied•ltnelt thic.onnoyislices aro obviated. It Is adapted forMstAgletiaivreirillatiaillab' Una, and the ninnuor In which It 14 conotrqcted makbo - It uosfisl at all lithos.' Whoa', not roqUired Thu ',dry lbg,tilethilfg,ftbe arras 'MU feldibir for con., veuiance of room, di the saint. time-bringing Into: plume kb 'banshee .Of ibridlug f it •,Into 4P79YP" t .1 lot; • • • :.•:" e I HA:DIV 21.1!1'.ARE 8•40#., • , tho,pi.itiAni;bilit.lro cap, IkliiUtON leh t boyi tupf,,, ‘ y . l4 , 4lA.mpi.!i j o.s.; , loF n tli Ipinov i er Bireet. ".1 =MI=M=MWM EMT .....- . . . .. . . 7 .L1)-..inl.....\.' T „\" . ... ~ .- c .,:- . :,, ' : ei , --- ,T , 71# . 1 L ;.,,,": - : : - "„ c; , ,;... --,,, 1 • ~,,-, ‘ . 4 , : , ?•: ; . :: , {:. -.,.-. 5.. ......_ : , : , :. , ..., ,„ ,lil t \...... .., , .......... 1 =EI IBM EMI INME (1113 ire V°etrg• BEM THIIBIVOIIII.OO7TEIE DT TDIODOILD O'HARA. Tile =rasa sad roll las . boat - — This sold! sr's' lestAlstloo; No more on Ws, pfirado oball meet . Tho bsave and darin . g . fois. ' On rame's eimnal esiplAng ground whall ellent tents are spread, , And glorj gou'rd ' s wltli soleinnroTfta, , Tho bivouac of the dead, No answer albo foe's advance Now swells upon the wind; Notroublod thought at midnight hunt Of loved ones leftbehind - •No vision of the marrow n 'a Strifo The warrior's droam alarms; No braying born nonscreamlaglifo 'At dawn 6 hall coil to arms: ' Their shivered oworsto aro red with rust, • Their plumed beads ate bowed k Their haughty banner trailed In dust, Is now their martial ahroud. And plenteous funeral tears have washed The red stains from each brow, ,And their proud forins, in battle gashed, Aro frce - frrini 'anguish 1:10R: 'The neighing steed, the flashing blade, The inuturnt's stirring blast,' The charge the dreadful cannonade, Tho din and 'shout ire pail. No war's ce lid note nor glory's peal; Shall thrill'Wlth'fleree delight Those breasts that never niece shall feel The rapture of the dila. Root on, embalmed And sainted dead Dear de the bloody graio; No Impious footsteps hero stall tread no herbage bu your grave; Nor shall your glory be forgot While fame her record keeps, Or honor point the hallowed spot Where valor proudly sleeps. Your marble minetrel'a voiceless torso, In desthleas song shall tell, Whim many n vanquished ago bath flown, The story how ye fell. Nor wreck, nor chnngo, nor winter's blight, Nor limo's remorsoloss doom, Shell dint one ray of holy light That gilds yOur glorious tomb. iscettaneotts. STEPHEN ARCHER. Ity GEORGE MACDONALD STEPHEN ARCHER was . a stationer, bookseller, and newsinonger in one of the suburbs of London. The newspa pers pers hung.in a sort of rack at his door, as if for the 'convenience of the, public to help theinselves in passing. On his counter lay penny weeklies and books coming out in parts, amongst which the Family Herald was 'in force, and the LOndoii 'Journal not to be found. I had occasion once to try the extent of his stock, for I required-a good many copies of-one of-Shakespeare's-plays— at a penny, if I could find such. Ho shook his head, and told me he could not encourage the sale of ,such produc tions. This pleased me; for although it was of little consequence what he thought 'concerning' Shakespeare, it was of the utmost import-that he should prefer principle .to pence. So I loiter ed in the shop. looking for something to buy ; but there was nothing in the way of literature ; his whole stock, •as far as I could see, consisted of little religious volumes of gay binding and inferior print ; ho bad nothing even from the Halifax press. Ho was a: good looking fellow, about thirty, with dark eyes, overhanging brows that indicated thought, mouth of character, and no smile. I was intefosted in, him. I asked if he would mind getting the plays I wanted. He said he would rather_not.. 'bade, ldregmidmosniug. More than a year after, I saw him again. I had passed his shop many times, but this morning, I forget why, I went in I could hardly recall the former appearance of the man, so was it swallowed up iu a new expression. His face was alive; and his behavior courteous. A similar change had pas sed upon his stock. There was Punch and Fun amongst the papers, and ten penny Sbakespeares -on the counter, printed on straw-paper, with ugly wood cuts. The former class of publicdtiorts had not Vaniabed, but was mingled with cheap editions of some Worthy of being called books. " is see you have chaaged,your mind since I saw you last," I said. " You have the advantage, of me, sir i ". he _returned. " I did not knew yoke were a - customer." ""Not much of that," I replied; "only hi intention I wanted you to get me Borne penny Shakeapeares, and you would not take the orde”." "0 ! think .1 remember'," he an swered just_a trace of confusion;_ adding, with a smile, "I'm. married 'now.;"and 1 fancied I could read a sort of triumph over his former self. I'laughed, hf course,—the best ex= pm:orlon of sympathy at-.lrand,—and' after a - little talk left the shop,resoliredi to look In ugain'enon. ' Before a month' Was over I' had made the actarThrtturi of his wife, too; and between them learn ed bo much of their history as to be able to- give the following particulath c aom corning it.. . •• • , , ; Stephen -Archer was one of the daa-• cone, rather a..yrumg,,ope perhaps, of a dissenting .edtigregatimi:'," The' chapel: wats'orie of .the .oldest, in the, neighbor hood, quite, triumphant in ugliness,. but' possesses} of a history ,which, gave it .high ,rank, with those,whe frequented' it., The sacred oder, of the names of pastors. who had occupied . * ",pulpit lingered: about, itswrills,—, 7 names on. known beyond its precincts but. starry. in the eyes of those whose, world lay •withimits tabernacle. Beeplq general—, ly do Slot knew Whatl:l aol*(4'46mo of these'small coni)enticles'are in . the 'eau.: cation of the I citity . ,tar ,an 'outlet for the energieti of men of loWly , education and- position, who in contuse.; -tiOn ofl the ehurche's lof- the Establishment: would find, no emphey meat, they are of inestimable value; To. Stephen, Archer, .for instmice,, .whenuT firat; his clippel Was the side the - COmmen, werld , into the infinite. ; When , ha ent l eredj certainly ,d the sacred place overshadow his, spirjt, I ae,lf it had been. a, gorgeous cathedral;, house:borne' aloft upon the joine4ilnee I of its ,gothic arches. .The, Master is tr.uer .than mien , thing; an 'the p'.Ower flio:Nostince, as BroWning ha's' so: well" set Jortli in 'lliti - tiOhristiiias ie Wliero two Or three are gattereiT Mae:. 41tid iniitiinuch as Stelthee Wits:het tr man dtiningiiiatiori;'66 had . the' ireato'r beerof the iiiidefined'inati- , etiee '; ' ,>, bad . iiebh'eldef In establiehiug of small inisti'dn'ainonget the 'pcidriti' the 'neighbel?fibtid;'?ivlttr':thlJ?werking 'WhielPlie'beciiiiieil , the'oretiter 'part . Of his Attire time% - -I will mot -venttire•to negort thae.hie mindliVaet pure. fromllie _ambition of' - o,athitrink from:_thestiA. flOokartheliithrehaii:4,. toy, I will not even tlitilfit'tllit,h6lotever. nE`f CARLISLE, PENA, FRIPAY,' , FEBREARY:I7S, 186 W 9,, UL rcl;h I :,[ MME= B 61:k . 2t • ; . :4'11J.1 . ! arose, a , suggestioß of the , enemy that the pence of these rescued triludis' might iiiledate-theLburdert - bliorf - the - lidddiiH iuld''shoulders of thopoorl,rprosperdda catyatids of his church ;;-but L do. sar 1 That Stopheu was an . honestff,ntan iq thiii — nain, - 6 - 371 - 3 - 1 - feEdy - fe - grow - lionesteif and Wlio can d e ati " 'r Ono 'evening, as be wagitittirii tho tern of his " :NyindbwY his aftentlowline arrested :by a , ithbffling s •behiod, :him; Glancing round,,ke,eet,dewp the phu t ( - ter, and the next instant bo.xed a bpis ears, vificfisMrl awaY'laivling 'arid midi ly excavatingLhisdeyobhlls, .• „tt pale•faced woman, with ,:the largeSt black eyes he' had ever", seep,.expostul ated with him on the, proceeding. "0, sir !" she said, "he was n't troubling you." There ' was' a'touch of indignation in 'the 'tone. "Pm sorry I can return ,the com, pllment," sßid .Stepheu, rather Bally. "If I'd ha' known you liked to have your sliins'kicked, I might ha' let the youn - g rascal alone. ' But you see I did n'tknow it." " lie's ,my brother," said the young woman, conclusively. • - ° " The more shame to him," returned Stephen. - been your husband now, there might ha' been more harm than good in interferin', 'cause he'd, only gi!, , e, it to you they worse after ; but brothers! .Well, I'm sure it'a a pity I interfered.". ",I don't ilee the difference," she re• tolied; still with-offence. " I beg your pardon, then," said Stephen. "I -promise you I won't interfere next time."_ So saying, he turned; took up his shutter, and proceede'l to close up his shop. The young woman walked on. Stephen gave. an inward growl or two at the depravity of human nature, and set out to make his usual visits ; but before lid reached the place he had begun to doubt whether the old Adam had not overcome him in the matter of hexing the boy's ears ; and the follow ing interviews appeared•in conseoinenee less satisfactory than usual. Disap pointed with himself, ho could not be so hopeful about others.,.. • Ate he was descending a stair so nar row . that it was -only just possible for two people to pass, he met the same young woman ascending. - Glad of the opportunity, he stepped aside with his best manners, and said— " I am sorry 1- offended you ibis evening. I did- nit know the boy was Your brother." - " 0,- air !" she returned—for -to one in her position, Stephen 'Archer was a gentleman ; had he not a shop of his own?—" you did - ti't hurt him much ; only I'm ao anxious to save him." " To be surei". returned Stephen, "that is the one thing needful." " Yes, sir," she rejoined. hard, but boys will be boys." "There is but one way you know," said Stephen, following the words with a certain formula, which I will not re pest. . The girl stared. "I don't know about that," she said. " What I want is to keep him out of - prison Some times I think I sha' n't be able long. 0, sir ! if you be the gentleman that goes about here, could n't you help me ? I can't get anything for him to do, and I can't be at home to look of ter him." " What Le about all day, then r " The streets," she answered., " I don!t know as he's ever_done anything be ought n't to, but be came home once in a • fright, and breathless with run ning, that I thought he'd ha' fainted. If I only could get him into a place!" " Do you live here ?" he asked. "Yes, sir; I do." At the moment ratitlf-beiltilit sound below, accompanied by uncertain foot steps, announced the arrival of a drunk en bricklayer. . ‘ , iTherc's Joe Bradley," she said, in some alarm ; "Como into my room, sir, till he's'.gone up; there's no harm in him when lie's sober, but he ain't been sober for a.week _ Stephen obeyed"; and she, taking a key from her pocket and unlocking a door on the landing, led him into a room to which his back parlor was, a paradise.. She offered 'him the only chair in the room, and took her placer on the edge of the bed, which showed a clean though Much worn patchwork 'quilt. OharleY slept on the bed, and she on a Shakedown in the corner. The room - was not'untidr, though the _walls =lA:loon:were. not clean;, there wereno,t in It, articles enough to make,it untidy withal.. ' , H.. Where do You go on Sundays ?" 'naked Stephen. ' • Nowheres. I ain't got nobody,"' -elm-added, Witk.a . .stnyer " to take me 'noWheres:" - :-What do you doe. thcd I've:pleritY to donmeding of, Ohar-, -ley's tronsers:' You"see they 're , only shoddy,iand As:fast ad, I patch ' em ene' - place they.'re out in'antither." " But.'you roughtln.t.lb werk-Sun, , ' . I've Ifeard: tell bf.:..people as 'say, you 'otight n't td ;Work of. Sunday; but where's 'the differ/When-You've got' ' brother' to,- Idok • after ? got, , no.mother." `‘k BLiv 'yOu're': breaking' the , , 'fourth, , commandment; knoW'whOi 'people go. that'..do !that' Ydu belieVe' hell,, I suppose ' , .• "I alwaywthought that win a bad, ; ::.: • . ,; —,l "'TM be sure bI But its where you'll go if you break,theiSabbath,". (' " o,' sir i" she! 'bursting i6tcii tears; I don't care what comes of ine if .1 eould •oulY save 'that •bdy:rri'. "What do you mean by sdvingliini 4 "Keep him - out - of - prison, to be sui:e'.` I L; should let ..utind the. work& - myself,' l iCl 7 eould get,,him into, phice,lf„ l ,, • 14.11 ace was tier heaven, a prison her Sterihen ldoked at her' Moire' , titten. Aively:_l , No'_one Who:merely glanced at her , could ,help peeing her, uy,es„first,, and po, Orlp #1.19; A'pe,F,d,OdA pie% could, help ttiiiking her nice-looking at i all in' iiiiliiditY d editon'diegs •iihaVvi She' "wail only , the, tl penur3il and pinenhat kept. hearmii • heiug l „yoen , both with t ,im i atix f :lona mystery about 11PS, g loplE, 11110" that lid' an animal? hi; her 0 tie Ve 'b l'!;; the .! trou4le her ,ttiodth, i I , §tep4pa kaa. hee f 4 ? pit "ileuse ) not' to I press,the a 1 bath by , question; and ' tilliri father' had it 'width ak or; but giving limy. 16.•dri rik i i had, be an tfor,ka*,4l3 l 0119. ,eR,.14, 09044. 0 4 - 44 . 9 1 54.RtP14q 4 19n- I , 4' 'ik . M9q ie Fi - by sharing j?iihing,; 0 :keep the family 4114."'Illida LI - - Ao Iv seA. •t of/ 11:;j,!% d=::_ feW in'Onthi Aftei her father's death, her riotheidied: iertivinwhirth - to — the' boy. =with hor last.breath . shetimd commended.-44P ,to ; his ; sister, . Sara th r ad. brdught JIM? up -how, she hsrdiy knpw. $e lla~ beep - 4fOrithing - iirher: -2- 1 1 he mother lied given her was her only thought.; .'72hciAe , who, , start , witb;• the hlea _peolds with naught are, ilituoo,:,',Wh ar ose eyes are offended 'by rags, Ivlic;se es cannotdistinguish he- r tWeeli . 'VnigaritY. niid wickedattlAr, , whoith'inic firtit , ditty is eareforself; Must: be.; !moused, fro_ro_ believing that; Sara Coulter. passed tbreugh all, that; bad been deopeed for her, without los orjuritY. GO'd' is in' the hack slums ae certainly' asp perhaps to ,some eyes more evidently tham—in, Belgravia,. That which was the, i hurden of, her life—namely, the, care of her brother—was her sal vatiolt. Afier hearing her story, which be had to draw 'from her j , because she had no impulse to talk about herself, Stephen went home to turn the ,matter over, in • his mind. The next Sunday, after 'he 'l l 4 had his diriner ' be Went, out into the same rogion, • and • found himself at Sara's door, She was busy over.a garment of °barley's, who, was sitting on the bed with half a loaf in his hand. When he reCognized Stephen 'he jumped' doWn, and' would have rushed fora the room, but changing his mind, possibly because of the condition of his lower' limbs, he turned, and springing int - 9 the bed, scrambled under the counterpane, and drew it over his head. " I am sorry to 'see you Working on Sunday," Stephen Said, with an em phasis that referred to their previous conversation. . , " Lou would ,not have the boy go naked ?" she returned, with again a touch of indignation. She bad been thinking how easily a man of Stephen's social position could' get hini a pia& if -he-would.• Then recollecting her man ners, she added, "I should'get him bet ter clothes if be had a place. Wonld n't you like_ to get. a place, Marley "Yes'," said Charley, from under thy• counterpane, and began. to peep at the visitor. • • He was nut an ill-looking boy,—only roguish to a degree. His - eyes, ashlack as his sister's, but. only half as big, danced and twinkled with mischief' Archer would have taken him aft' to his ragged class, but even of rags he had not at the moment the Complement necessary for admittance. He left them, therefore, with a few commonplaces of religious phrase, falling utterly mean ingless. But he was not one to con fine his Ministrations to words : he was au honest . rnau. Before the next Sun day it-was clear to him that he could do nothing for the Anal of Sara, until he had takou the weight of her brother off it: . • . " I try When he'called•the next Sunday the same Vision precisely met his view. She might have been sitting there ever since, with thoSe wonderfully patched trous ers in her ,hands, and the boy beside her, gnavertig at his lump of bread. But many a long seam had passed through her fingers since then, for she worked at a clothes-shop all the week with the soliing-machine, whence arose the pos sibility of patching Charley's• clothes, for the overseer granted her a cutting or two now and then. After a little chat Stephen put the .question, ,l audit_ place_fitf Qbarley, will you go to Providence Chapel next Sunday 1" will go anywhere you please, Mr. Archer," she ansivered, looking up quickly,with a flushed thee She would have accompanied him td any casino:in London just as readily; -her sole thought wits to keep Charley out of prison Her father had been in prison once ; to keep her mother's child out of prison was the grand object of her life. "Well," lie resumed, with Nome hes itation, for he bad arrived at the reso lution through difficulties whose fogs yet lingered about him, " if he will he an honest, careful boy. I will take him myself." " Charley ! Charley !" cried Sara. utterly neglectful of the• source of the benefaction ; and. rising,,she went to The bed and lingged•hini. " Don't, S.,ra;' said 'I 'harley, petu- Imlay " I (100, want girls to squash' Me. Leave go, I say. y. 'my* my trouserS;and II take dare of my-self." \vteteh !" thpugbl ste phon:. Sara returned to her seat,' and her needle .went almost as fast as her sew- ing-maching.„ As glory had,.arisen,now,. aud,rOited on her pak,pheelr.-. 1 )and him 1f Btitvin't; arrihidd'df trabs ii guratinii, back from e ghostly to .. tho' human. His admiration extended,itsnli . , toiler, deft and slender, - fingera - ,, and; there brooded, map hie conscience, ih iiirmyl him t e, was actually Miring the t lireaking 'of the "S tbbtittt', Wheretipott.he'resm'c But nil the time. .he was about'amongst the rest .of, his pertple,ltitt thonglits kept wandering: hack to; the the deselate ynent i, the thanks„ Theewonian Be. 'fore leaving; hO'ivevti; he mid' flora that , ttlie, should bring her brother to the shop the next day. ;i The Awe with, which she ttutel.ed it wad 'not nlitiri d bY'Oliarley, Who Was •neViir ripeTorany thing' hit t' Had not Ate:piled been iinfiaenced , by a "aire.to do good, and' posai Illy by , another feeling too .ertibryonie, flq,:4eteptiou, would never have dreamed' of Making"; 'ttri` 'errand-UV 'of 'd' As nach, howitver,Aie, was ,installed; I.and frorn,tltat,moment. Ito anxiety, en : . ; beforo took' posseeaidti pte illion'e'hosena, HAI iralt,)neVtiia . f ; :tiase, fOly knew Whitt the' h6i.tiiight ; be labout%: , Wettlil have' parted with . hits tali first' ibr ighti ; tat& kth e , idea of the prison had passed - frotp,,, §ara's , li&lrtliito Ins, and - he ;saw. 'the bity'nWayfiNaini , itiß' first,' pltien•Would ,be to, aceeleratie hirrgitaVitatieir thither 11.0.44idlitn Attitrioko of 02 09 iVa-. pcti t ot:, , oy , Ig9yoti to, him., .opea - ed were, thocooplititilp brought to Oho OtiO . tittle tlie3!fotti6i IWas'ttli'o'yt 1 Was'ttli'o'yt down: dot I artin rand broughti idto tlt9 hrPaltl!W'r. ool #;,itqfile4 foeyd dopr-atepi" 6in:41.16631y hdvi hiieii Nun' for.J. •getfulness, for•Oliarloy!rildbliglit to, /1(1 . 4- g t fgrickoply,, d then Aa t i v t ,i till ee l ik cave, libwe,,er, td cave spri.ce bdiveou 6M' pamr. twasi iliot','.delivered , at all;tanalStleOlieri illauld i Tr. uiling Ong • tha.llllAo 1?144( 404 1 4,1rx,c11,p, etrqet,i„ YQ tiOlt for Ni l sake end Sara'sendurq:il and 'di mit even ifilkiieratldf.trObe4iekba% ''' ASO apirlt, palter- 'V t . :ll'O%OOU," rfl!!):1(f1;;{ , .,11 : 1, - ;,; , , is , :‘ , , :„. :,:•,,,;,,: .::: „.fet .i . ; • :.*:::", : y -:• ::1 ,, 0 , „.., ~.; . , , 1 1 i .. • - [ 4, [ 1.. ' • .. ~.;,.." N °,,, ' .. i lt: 1 :1 t ...:::•:•.,:•••• ; . in, '. : 1!•• - i; • I :1.! j• ;•:'• iii .•.•••• •-: •:' • 1 : r gets 4; :thei,Germans: 'Would Call it, than tx.degiurk • "; 1 - 7,Flrromitirne, - the-Sunday - after - Char= ley'e_appeintment, Archer, seated. in hits pew, searched all • the chapel' for. the' fulfilmedi 'of 'Sareae' :the' mgrktementintirlielY,-lietquadeneBn3fif.". Ihembuld, see her nowhere., Th,o ; hect }vas, tier promise was so. leasy,'that she.of bad scarcely thought after, . not suspecting that Stephen Taid gi v :kre.ol. o . its fulfilment, and, ilitlentli'notltriiiiving where the chapel writit,,,:She had !managed to bury a bit' .o.f„sottlethieg,, of the shoddy epecies,, ;and ,while Stephen was looking for her 'MAC' clia:peL Lille was Making a jacket E'er' 'Chat:W." Greatly disappointed, Liturchiolly, Ho believe, that she had , .not kept her word„ Stephen . went. in the afternoon to call' upon her., • Ho-found her working away as before, and' saving !line, by taking' her dinner while'she worked, for' a pike of bread lay on the table -by her el , bow, and - beside it a little brown sugar to make the .hread, go down.. The sight went to Stephen's heart, for he had just Made his dinner of baked mutton and potatoes, washed' down, .with his.balf-pint of stout. "Sara l" ho said . solemnly,, "you promised to,come;to mu chapel, and you have not kept your word." He never thought 'that, "Our chapel" was not the landmark of the region. • • "031 r. Archer,". she answered, "I didn't know as you cared. about it, But," she went on, rising and push ing her bread on one side' to •-make room for her work, "Pll put on my bonneldireotly." Then she checked herself, and-added, "0,, I beg pardon, sir—l'm so shabby ! You couldn't be seen With the likes of Me."' It touched Stephe,nchs' ivalry,—and something deeper than chivalry. He had + hadaur intention of walking with her. , - "There's no chapel in the afternoen,"_ be said; "but I'll come and fetch you in the evening.' • Thus it came about that Sara was seated„Jit Stephen's 'pew, next to ,Stephen himself, and Stephen felt a strange. pleasure unknown before, like that of' a shepherd who, ,having branght stray back- 'to the, fold, cares little that is wool its torn by the hushes, and it looks..a ragged and dis, Notable, sheep. It was only Sara's wool• that, might seem disreputable, for she Was rt,very good-lased sheep. He. found the hymns for her; and ' they shared the same book. He did not knoW then that Sara could not read-a word of them. - The. gathered people, the stillness, the gaslights, the solemn ascent of the 'minister into, the pulpit/ the hearty singing of the. congregation, doubtless had their effect upon Sara; for-shelled never been to a chapel and 'hardly to' any place .of assembly before. From all aniusements, the burden of Charley and her own retiring nature had kept her hack. But she could make . nothing of the sermon. She — torifeSsed afterwards that she did- not know she had any thing to do width. Like "the North ern Farmer," , the . took it all for the clergyman's' business, which she amongst the rest had to. see done. She did not even wonder why Stephen should have wanted to bring her there. She sat where other people sat, pretend ed to kneel when other people pretend ed to kneel, and stood up when other people stood up,—still brooding upon Charley's jacket'. But Archer's feelings were not those he had expected. He had brought her, intending her to be done good to;. hut before the sermon was over he wished .he had not brought 'her. Ire resi,fed the feelifig - for a long - time, but at length yielded to it entirely; the object of . his solicitude all the , while conscious only, of the lighted stillness and the new barrier between Charley and Newgate. The fact with regard to Stephen was that a certain . hard pa ncoecasioned by continual plunghingslo the same depth, and no deeper; in the soil of his mind, began this night to be brokenhp from with ' in, and that thaough the presence Of a young woman . who did not for herself put together , two words of the whole discourse. ' The pastor was preaching upon the saying of St. Paul, that be multi:wish himself, aCcursed from Christ .for his hrethreu.' Great pitrt of his sermon was an attempt to prove that he could not haVe meant what his words im plied. For the preacher's, mind was eo filled''Wiph theparamounf duty of Yti l living•his - own soul; that - the enthusi msm of the, Apostle was .simply in • credible.' Listening with that woman by'„Lia side, Stephen for. the, first-time grew doubtful of the wisdom of .his paat4: could he endure *that -- such slitinfd he the, first' doctrine Sara hoard from. his lipS. Thus was lie hl readY•and grandly repaid fin. his , kind-, pees; forthe - presence,of, a Woman who, Withont an,y conscions'.religion, was to . 1 1ierSelf'a law of love'. brought:l*n so' fir into; sympathy with the Mighty mot* of St. Paul, that,,,from that me inept the hlessing of doubt ,was, at workielie, undermining prison walls. • Ile walked horde with Sara, almost in'silenk; far 1M found' 'it IMPoe l iiible to iMpressirpon hei'tlione Parts'of the, , Berman withwhich lie had no fault, to' find, lest alra.shonlrL4otoat upon that one point, The arrows which,- Sara. 'etie,apa; hoWevir,' cad fiord her ig norance htivo -struck her.' only' with , their. feather endi f'. ~ .1 (~.. ,Things proceededin mueh' the same fashion for a, while. Charley, wont ii.) his sister's lodging,” tlitin'two "hinith "Lifter' leaving the-shop, but gavo , her no new ground of complaint., 2 - Every, Sunday ',eyeninig,§ara Wont, to the chapel, tak ing-Charhiy-WithheLlilien_she_centd. perStiticle gii• ' inik in obedience to' the'Stipititiorr wisb of Stephen,'. eat %in'his.pew.,i He did - not•go hrimo with' her apy,ipaere fora while; rlind ,indeed' ,yleitekher seldom,', anxious to avoid, scandal more especially as .he • "." t . 'Bat bilVtba kliarlet Was so: • far '6neti;'Saireft , elreek , bedan"io. generate littlacift thateeleatial , rosr red-Which is tli4: IiP, , IP• I *. t4c,.,wo9:llwalanN jr‘lOPtigli,tiftql OAP 4,44ktAriOled t49, II 9YPIVPIPAROI Fr 9) Skß.B 4 :qw roiun er in form 'too., "for, .she lived, rather better"iiibiiii4birYlligilieT-' self "ric - ratihtirttnifeteurrtwice A weak':, 11.0206,stie.loganytd!lie , in!bliihitlanioN iwiloy , Poo4 l 44totell,"4 l l.lig, 9 riY PrOS9 IO 4 - ut.What seemed at ' first _the 'rutii "erliiipee'diheiPaidd kneettilg, whe n"' -'' , retAliclid from hor , work, aheifoundrlitopliti* in r ' 1111111 EMU N- hbi toona:':irShe made .Lim the sub missive, grateful salutation; half. cony tesyiThall--bmvi-dith-which she always greeted him, and awaited- his will. "I hm very sorry 'to have to 101 l YO; that your. brother" '_ghe.tnrned_3vhite_aci.o.ihrond,..and or great black oyes grew, &eater and blacker as she stared Pt agonized ex pectancy, while _Stephen hesitated in search - of a better fertn of communica. tion. Finding none, he - blurted out the fact— • "—bas robbed me, and' inn away " . "Don't •sencl him to "prison, Mr. - Avant'!" shiieked Sara; and laid her . fielf on the floor at his feet, with a grovelling motion, as if striving with her mother earth for comfort. , There was, not a Ain't hf _actin this... Shebat never been to a theatre. The natural urging of life gave the truest shape to her entreaty. Her posture Was the result of the same feeling which made the nations of earth n l bring their eacri fices to the altar of a deity who, possibly beneolent in the main, had yet cense, to be inimical to them. From the prostrate living sacrifice arose the one prayer, "Don't Send - him to prison; don't send him to prison !" Stephen, gazed at her in bewildered admiration, half divine and'allhumatk. A certain consciousness of 'power had, I Confess, a part in his silence, but th,e only definite shape this conscionsne'ss took was of beneficence. Attributing his silence. to.unwillinguess, Sara., got half way from the ground,—that is, to her knees, and lifted a faCe of utter entreaty to the sight of Stephen. I will not say. words- fail me to describe the inteneit,.y of its prayer, for words fail me to describe the commonest phe- nomenon of nature; all I can say is, that it made Stephen's heart too large Tor its confining walls ' "Mr. Archer," she said, ina voice hollow with emo tion, 'Twill:do _anything_y_ou_like. will be your slave. Don't send Charley to prison The words were spoken - with a car ain strange ifignity-of-selfzahrregation It is not alone•the country people of Cumberland or of Scotland who in their highest moments are capable of poetic utterance. An indescribable thrill of conscious delight shot through the frame of Stephen as the woman': spoke the words; but the gentleman hi him tri umphed. I would have said the Christian,_ for whatever there was in Stephen of the gentel was there in virtue of Christian. only be' failed in, one-point; instead of saying at once .that he had no intention of_prosecuting. the boy, he pretended, I believe from the satanic' delight in power that possesses every of us, that he would turn it over in his mind. It miglirhave been-more dangerous, but it would have been more divine,, if he had lifted the kneeling woman to his. heart, and told her that not for the wealth of an imagination would he proceed against her brother. The di inity, however, was taking its course, both rough-hewing and shaping the ends of the two. Shmrose from the ground, sat on the oneAair with her Lace to the wall; and . wept helplessly, with the added sting, perhaps,'of a faint per sonal disappointment. Stephen failed to attract her notice and left the room. She started up when she heard the door close, and - Rely to open it, but was only in time to hear the outer door. She at down and cried again. Stephen had gone to find the boy' if he might,- and tiringhim to his alster. - . He ought to have said so, for to permit suffering for the sake of a joyful surprise is not good. Going home first, he Was , hardly seated jri his room, to turn over not the matter but the means, when the knock came , to the shop door, the sole entrance, and there was two .policemen bringing the deserter in a cab He had been run over in the very act of decamp ing with the contents ot, the till, had lain all but insensible at" the hospital while his broken leg was being set, but, as soon as he came to himself, bad gone into Such a fury of determination to return to his master, that the house surgeon saw that the only chance for the ungovernable creature Was to yield. Perhaps he had some dim idea of re storing the money ere his master should have discovered its, loss. As he Was vet y little, they made a conch for him in the cab and so sent him. , It would appear that the suffering and the faintness had given his con science a chance of being heard " The accident was to Charley what the sight of the mountain peek was to the boy Wordsworth. He was delirious when ho arrived, and instead of ShoW big any contrition towards his master only testified an extravagant joy at finding him again.' Stephen had : him taken into the.back room, and •laid upon his, own, bed. One of, the police then—=fetched the charwoman, and• when she,arrived, Stephen went: to find Sara. She was sitting almbst,,,as he had left her, With a dull, hopeless look. 'Tam sorry to ,84 Charley •has had an accident,", he said. She started up and clasped her hands. . " • ' • "He ie not in prisOn 1" she minted •in a husky, voice. "No; he is at my house. Come and Nee him. I don't think he is iu any danger, but his leg is broliep." • • A„, gleam of . joy crossed' Sara's countenance. , She did .not mind the 'broken leg,-for 'he was safe from her terror. - 'She put ',on,'her, 'bonnet; tied the strings •with , tremblipg hands and: Stopgap._ "You see, wants -to keep him out 'of prison too;" he 'said, -as . they . walked 'along the street. • But to Sara this hardly.donvoyed_, idea:T - 811e - walked—by'hisiiide-tn-- '"Charley Charley i" . cried, when Site. saw him white on 'the' bed rolling,bisqietid 'from side 'to; side. Charley:ordered her away with words' awful to hear, but Which. ,from- hint meant , po:morer than- words of ordinary *npdr the . mouth of the 'well ritirtured ' thin or woman.' She had i3polledAind indulged him his life, and now for theigrst time .'Shp;. was nothing tdhim, while the truipter w4Q, .had lectured, and restrainedhim- I was. csiar,y4iing. "When the stirgeon ;want: , ' ed o'4og° hia - dieehings ' would' to itch -, them till- his master. ;dame:. ,fiefo!tre 11e1Was able hip.„ l _; o 44lAr. Ntft,iKOPPocT s„P.A filerrldr-iiite -attaaumopt. • ,•131.1t, ado • Ole uttts 'oat/o,i; „ Magingyliand rocoU, tho'l.j her . •, j, 7 :f t BIE i • I . • I =1 =I NO. 6: and attthicfp' his ihop,;.and, the Ofo - ie la* ,zaue,V of b fitVOf ther4 Finding then 'V . :, lila' astonishilent that Sara: could not rend, he gave all his odds- moments to her instruction; and .her • - thiti(l, - tterng rest abOut Charley so 'long'ae'Shr, had him- inhed, her spirit had leienre tv think of other things. ' She learrica The,tesaon- • book was, of 'course r 'the New !Nita,' mentlAtud Stephen amp discovered. that -Sara's questions moving his-pity at first because of . the ignorance ,tl;cy, • .displayed, always left ~him-thinking about some point that Curie & to him before ; eo thatat length' he regarded Sara as a being of supe rior intelligence, waylaid and obstruct-, ed bThrfri - e - u - dly powera.upon her path towards the threshold of the kingdom, while she looked up to him ae to one supreme in knowledge as-in-goodness. But she never could . understand the pastor. This wodld have been a great trouble to Stephen, had not his vanity: been flattered-by her understanding of himself. He did not 'consider' that growing love had enlightened his eyes to see into her heart, and enabled him thus to tiSe an ' ordinary human lan guage for 'the embodiment 'of -coramon sense ideas ; whereas the.speech of the pastor contained such an admixture a the technicalities as to be Unintelligible ; to the neophyte. - ' Stephen was now , distressed to 'find. that whereas formerly he had received - everything without question'thal 'his minister spoke, he now in general 3f4nt . home in - a doubting, questioning mood, begotten of asking himself what . Sara would say. He feared at, first that the old Adam was beginning; to,get, the upper, band of him, and that Satan .. wad'laying snares for his soul. But when he found at the same time that .1.10 conscience was' growing more rnpulous concerning his business af fairs, hope "routed afresh. One day after Charley - fad been out for ti 9 first time, Sara, - with a little tremor of voice and manner, addressed Stephen thus : 'I shall take Charley home tumor-, row, if you please, Mr. Archer.' . _ 'You don't mean to say, Sara, you've been paying .for those lOgingS all Mil - time ?' halfasked, half-exclaimed Ste phen. 'Yes, Mr. Archer. We' must have somewhere to go to. It ain't easy to' get a room at .any moment, now them railways is ev,ery_wheres.' 'But 1 hope as how you're comfort able where you are, Sara 1' 'Yes Mr. Archer. • But what p.m I to do. .for.„ all your kindness' • 'You can pay me all in alump; if you like, Sara.- Only you don't owe me nothing.' • Her color come and went. She was not used to men She:. could II& tell .what he Would have her understand, and could not help trembling. - 'What do you mean, Mr. Archer ? she faltered out: 'I mean you can give me yourself, Sara, and that'll deal. all scores.' But Mr. Archer,—you've been a teaching - of 4rje good things,—You don't mean to'!inarryorne !' cried Sara, bursting into tears.• - 'Of Course I do, Sara. Don't cry about it. I won't:if you don't like.' This is how Stephen came tocbange his mind about his stack in trade. A Romance on the South Atlantic A Yankee Community on• a Lonely Island• From no article in the London Athenaeum. on the recent voyage of Prince Alfred in the.frigate Galatea; we extract the following account of a curioue.little community dwelling in midt-oceah. On quitting Rio the romance of the voyage began by a. call at Tristan . d'Acunha, the largest rock in a lonely group of islets in the great waters—a group which is said t'o be further away . from other settlements than any other in the world. Here is a prime fact for romance. One of the. three rocks ie called Inaccessible ) a second Night ingale. and the third Tristan. The nearest spot on which men live is St. Helena, and that dwarf islet is a trifle of 1,200 miles to the north. A little story, something'' like that of the Pine Islanders, like that of the Pictairn Is landers, lends charm to this lonely group. During the early days - of Napoleon's captivity in St. Helena, a few sappersand -guards were thrown upon Tiistan, who dug a . ditcb, raised a battery, threw - up log huts and cleared a patch of soil.' When they had been a year on their lonely , station, they were fetched away, no-one knew why. A corporal, named Glass, got leave to stay behind and keep the place for the British_crewn— Three Yankees had been there before, 'ono of whom, a men named Jonathan Lam- bert, had taken possession of the islet, not for the Great Republic, but for Jonathan Lambert who was declared by ,Jonathan, in a regular proclamation, to be sovereign owner and prince of the then lonely rocks. Jonathan being gone, Glass took up his sceptre, and persuaded two fellows to stay and: share—his empire. Happily, had a lyife, a Creole woman, and two children, so that human interest came into play at once. The little • party, after making Glass Governor of the Island, fell on the soil; part of, which • Lambert had cleared, and harvested vast numbers of potatoes. - Now find then a stray seamen joined the colony, and two women came among, them froni the distant :Cape. .Seven years .after Glass and his folks were. left alone, the colony had grown Into, twenty-two men, and three women. Glace told the aptain' of H. M. S. Vehtick; that "thkr only required a required a few more Women to -Make the place an- earthly paradise." ,Glass i§ now dead s and his little colony ex ists without either Governor or gov ernment.; the men growing potatoes :and making` shoes, and-"the-women strange to say, *caring The Prince went on Rhpre terktl visit- ed. the shanties 'of these envious people, . 6 whom, the, chaplain offered hisser vices in baptizing all the . youngsters , ml Marrying all'the' stray' eau - piles who might feel virtuously inclined' and read)%for the yoke. ; •The youngsters., • eame..up-ia-troopste .le_briptized.i .but • when the reverend • gentlemen, men- . tinned marriage; the'maidens Were coy . ' and the bacheldrs slow to appeat:. 'Per- haps 'they did not like marrying in the, k:i Prince's presence. ldr.. Miller gave, 4 4'• them two hours to consider his propols sition, and lingered in vain . ~.fie }fie •-. says, with ,much • professional' regret, there were seven girla bn the island old _'•', ,', enough to mairy, and • seven young •>;-:. Uteri ,all, bt.whom,• were "eligible,'. for •,•!•,1 the,`Sacrifico,•yet the, tyre hours slipitedfi•3' ,away without bringing'bringing'the-ye : wi mmik: ntid•blUshing' girls to • the' Whit.: o'p - ~.,?/ , ineh... the Prince' could not • , .':•'" kj. - : th e )3ritisn 1 uhaplaini, thougi ',6:`eif' . ‘ • with '..zeal 413,,, r ,bindt1 e ... rM ~.:!.'k, : if • • isiYAirT t illl4.q r s'AP l4. it l • o•• , ' , '",' ~, . • 1 11'; lin& fie,. rah, ol' ~,;',.;,-., • , „. Ibli•ditik!tUtti,'''iiit'V ,;:!::,.g .- ... ''s• ', f; ' freeltilifhlts,* ~ T J.,,, V 4,'''''. ,• • -..,.• , iidt.i.bi4.•:A.3o.of, tlit4V .'' ,- • . . ', .. itte4a;c 4 ike - i' 200 4 .. ~,, ~....,,H., ,, , .. , . 3 1, 1 " , . " • • - ' _._, El Ea I MI I ..6