ME liAT:Es:liF.Aiiiitaisulp. - Onslciarre.vrie loreitionP ' • Pora'iiati addltionol.losortlon , 14:11,es" Ella Advorttsomon llo-- lora Nottdis, Pr loorloont coJdo without taper, • Ooltoary ti0t.16158 sod .Commottca- , Moo relating to wawa of prl• tate Interests alone, 10 opttts Vol line . ----- JOB PRINTINCL—Onr Job Printing Office is the ' , ass and :most complete establishment in. the C miry Four good Presses, and a general variety, of tutorial suited tarp lain and fancy work °livery kin 1, ensties us to do Joh Printing at the shortest ett:p.m:id on the roost reasonable terms. • Persons I I irantorililis Blanks,or anything Anthe Jobbing If Ai , will god l ' t to their interest to give no a call PROFESSIONAL CAR.DS. ifD. ADAIR, Attikiney At Law, •C rlsle, Pe P. O Stffireet.. ce alth A. B. Sharpe, Eng., No. , South Unilever May 17 —IT. ---.. --7.—.7 1 OS EP EI.RITN ER, Jr., Attorney lit ty 'Law and hurveyor,-rdecharlicebura, Pa. Office on tell Road Stroot, two doors north of the Book. haji.Bueltkees promptly attended to. 11.1191.1864. • R. MILLER Attorney at .Law. .offieo'ln tlannon's building •Immodlo.aly op. °shuttle Court House. 21)nov 67 ly 4 ,0,.ELE EWAN, Attpx ney!it, tatc. Po., No. 9 itheem'g Nail. Ju 9 1.4864-I.v. . - TWIN :CORNM AN, . Attorney -at Office to - building attached to Froniclio Boone, oppoil.e the Courtpouee. lbreay 08 ly. eE. -13RATZHOOVER,. Attorney : e at b am Office in South Hanover street, oppo e Bents's dry goodatore Carlisle, Pa. • " September O. UM. JAMES A. DUNBA.R,Attorney Law Carllele, Pa. Office In No. 7, Rileern . a Nall July f, I.Bt34—ly' J. SHEARER. Attorney a W. l aw, . Ofllca,, Not th • fleet Corner of th Court Roue°. l2tob Oft•ty.. J. Td..WIf,ABI.Y WEAKLEY & SADLER. ATTO RN NYS AT LAW,. Office No. 16 South Llano vet. etroot - Carltslo P. norls 67. It =i HUMRICR. & PARKER.) TTORNEYS-AT lAW.—Office-on rj. Main :4.. In Marlon Carlislu, Ps. - T. S. PATEN'r AGENCY. - C. L t_)Lrebmao, 21 Mato Strout Cnrltulu, Pu.. nxe c tau. drn 016,-Pperlticationn uto.,nu4 procures putt eat- or Inventors 11 leb WILLIAM at. Lava No 7 South Jklarlcot Square, Car lisle. Pedna: - Alien 19,1567-17. _ • • f\ R. J. S. SPIN 'cm thic Phvaleinn OtTiro fn thu room tom erly_ecropird by Co!lJohn Lein , 45.,1an (holy. • . f) R. UI.OItGES. SE A y,ll.lOllT,•Den List, from the Ilot 611 111• 11 timora 'lolls:To of Dental Burgery col e finice at :he residence of his mother, East ',atter etrent, threo doore too Bedford i u ly. 1,1864. • 1 410 W: NEIDICII, D. D: S. —, L.,to Depionotintor of Operati.ve stistrypf the 01) , Paltimoru College 01 Dental Surgery. 11,1141)1r. •• his rent donee .presite.Marion hull, Wool n4rent, Cs. - Ilale, Pa. 181nly t, 64. - , • - Um L. SHRYOCK,-JUSTIOW O F - -111 11, TUE PEACE Oftlvo, No. 3, Irique'r. 7mn,) ly. N - ";.A V 11 R MEICCIIANT TAILOR In Kramer's 131111dIng.uesr Rheum's llall, Carlisle Pa., ha+ just returned-from the gsmern Ching With ha largest arid-most . c_O3.IPLETE ASSORtgENT OF . , .. , FALL AND WINTER GOODS,, n nosixtiog of-- Olothn, Caesimarei, - Gents' Furnishing Goods, .56c., ever brought to Oarlisle.• Hie"'faiitha comprise • IgNGLIBLI, FRANCII, and ' •AMERIOAN MANDFACTI 3 DER! of the finest texture and of all ehadee. Mr, Dorner being himself a practical cutter of lOng experience to prepared to win rant perfect tits, ac t prompt tiling or ordere. • Piece Goode by the yard, or cut to order Don't forget the pi e. 15May 64.tf. • - • - V R:RSII -- ARRIVAL Of att 'the Non Spring Styles of HATS AND CAPS. , The, Buttnerthew hoe Just opened, at No. 16 North Ilsoover St ,a few doors North of the Carlisle Deposit Dank, one of the largest and best stock of II AT:' , te , CAI'B ever offered In Carlisle. nate;CasSitneres of ' alrktryles anttonalitlei. Stiff Brian different colors, end every deseriptlon ol Soft lists now matle.The Dna kord and old fashioned brush. kept constantly on hand and made to order. all warranted to give matisfact A full assortment of STRAW [UPS. ‘ion's boy's and clithiren'q fancy. • I have also added to my stork. Notions of different 'kinds, consisting .61. Ladies /1,111 Gent's Sto3kings Neck-Tios.Penclis Bloves;Threml.SOlVillg Silks, Bus penders„Utahrellas, Ac., Prittie degars and Tobarc,,, always on hand. Give me a call and examine my stock, As teal con. Diktat of pleasing, oesides savin you money J 'UN A. BELLER. Agt. No. 16 North liannver St. . =EI AS FITTING & PLUMBING. be autvicrlbora h ivint ,permanently located in Carlisle, respectfully sellclra share of the - public pat. tronege. Their shop is situated on the public Square in the,rear of the Ist Presbyterian Church, • where they :an alwavo ho found. Doing experienced mecheoles.they-are-prepared_to execute all orders that they may be entrusted with Ina mu 'crier manner, and at rery-moder au prices HYDRAULIC RAMA WATER W HEELS, ',, HYDRANTS; LIFT & FORCE PUMPS, • DATHINGTUB,3, WASH BASINS aed.All other ern. les In the trade. PLUDDINO AND GAS AND STEAM FITTING promptiy•attended - to In the most approved style. •• /S- Country work promptly attended to. tar MI work guarant:end. Dou'l forget the pluco—botnediately in the roar ol h e Mat ,Presbyterlan CAMPS It LL A HENWOOD. • • juiv27 fl&Iv , riritirE FE R ARM'S BANIs.,op CAR: LISLE, PENNSYLVANIA, iteZaztlY, organized, hen been opened, for traneactlon o fa general banking butane., In the corner room Cl R. given's now building. On the North West corner or ...Ugh ntreekapd the Coutre Square. - The blreatorskope by, 'Moral and careful manage ment to make thin a popular Ideticutlon, and a daft, reppaltory, for all who may Inner she bank with their amounts— , ••, Deposits redolvod and paid back on &mend, inter ant all-wed do special 'hear, nry Notes' and Oozerrimeut Erode, bought and sold. Collections made on all accoesibla 'pinta In the e onarry. Dinconut day, 'Pueeday. .11anklo9 hours from 9 o'clock A. Al. to 3 O'clok P. Al. .1,0. c /l P . Cashier. MaseTOne. • R. Give aeldent, Wm.' 11. Miller, Thatede Paxton. mould ileikee, John,l9, Craighead, ,A../ Lien:ann., 97mar 68•Xf • , Abraham Witmer, •-• • THE . EAHLIH: 7 ,II4E 000.1.1 STOVE: &Adufactured at .P. GARDNIIN' Co's [foundry Ir and Medlin.) Shop, Carliele, CANT BE BEAT This , • la the testimony atecoroa,of fernlike In Cumberland, Perry and AdemalDountlee, Who are now using them. • Call And one them. • 4 4 IC „ • Ur ,t; tni d kin nendFilld - Torndlotry v. GARDNER. Co; -- Foundry Anil Machine Bliop, East Main Strout . . • • • STEAM 'BOiLEIt VAKING. e are preratMake Eiteam Hollers of all ekes and kande pr o m p t ll and oh the baleoet ternie. ' A Smohyßtacke and.all artlelna In thatidne. AEPAIIR• Iri4rOYMIIIAIIEI and Enslneh promptly attehdod to . In the beet snanifet. .o'. • . ; Y. GARDNER& OO. Notindyy,and Machine' fihnp, carllo o . • ~vor ICI F 4 ...._ AC; - WAYS r ON,LIA N ll) Floe Lot of; Dried deft, fleefiyendoee„fleaiT "ourldiire and glair( Aleo,'llline lot of Choice Teae;' Dried Frulte of all dereriptiontOrich *e: Ohiellas.' $7 10,3 4 kaPe. rf45ef,14 14 IPPYrtd Solcitor. - A;PA tiered and nopareGOW. gfirmap cherriekl, de 4 4lttc.-fall line of Grocarlea usually fceAt In ir drat quality Grocery ,atore. . OECI: 11.-MiffndOG:'. .'. .11f0b99,, _ .-.,,... . No. eth'Eaet Pomfret dtree't.' _ TATS ' ,CtULTIVATOR :.,,MILTIIOIJT AN .EQUAI , :. , • Tid tibt. - tgeiited‘ o 'give ' jai noomptry prpoLthaatteCttriatoll'a peter tl inTIVAe! T. v14 1 10.0. 1 1#1c9 1 . 1 m , xith.r. pe , w .lit um, 0.m007 .ev(stoppen tn9,,terx.beet farmers Onto odeoti l ooety,'`the okapis meebetiletn of the ~tn bine, and the little_ money thee cost. will. in the Ott Peon rewmemend therm 'But the little leiter - re , qutrial Itairartrltlttriltemrlbirdatiateltatk"thisy • aditaiicitlitsittlialaWragatianttat at' theft letting, 10.11,..149.6:01.11:14t1nifinte- averr , ,gool• fernier: that arc it t , tie 1.80 ImPlernen..PPW uoe' nOiletttrreta-tairebate pleetni toll ma. al k 4r 044 , at °Corinna , foundry rand' )Wahine Works. 9gawp' o ._tha Oompaay at SprlatCtlint, Ouma6rtaaa, opont,, UUTIIT.NBON 1C 00.' in b 4 BO • --2 4 ° 0 ' lid 7 00 V OL. 69 1111S - CEI,L A NE 0 II S. LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, UNITED STATES OF AME RIA, Chartered by Special Act . of Congreve, Approved, Cash Capital - - •`$ 1,000,000 nireCycn OF FICA DEEM FiRST•N ATION A L 11A 4 1s,Ilt BUILDING, PHILADELPHIA , Whore the general heftiness of the Conlon le trana. .11 rorru ouden,e. ~Ned onwinwtts , ahnuld addres Od OFFICERS. CITATTIn76I? 1(.--CIT/1111(.-.-Pr.41.1ent. JAY' COOK 1.1, Minimum riLlYllee and Esneuttre Committee. II KNICY in) Vlet-PtesldPnt. - 101EllSON W. P tiveretal y and Actuary. • . • Title 'to nArany •chTert the f )llnct• t‘ In to tit , It ic a L Snliau •3 d thy rli clot Iby sperla 3.. t of Coo.rro•q., Iql,l II ling n rut I up,Apit tl or $1 (no n°. It "ff., low '1,1111001%. , It f,ob.tips Ihrurr I nhornner than :thy other coin pole. fn thil X thou..V. Ittutu ritrthin In It tor ins. It I• a hhuh• compthrty terry I°l,lll y. I re phithlt, (r.i3 , t telllll..llt Th•—•• 2,•• of. o —ll y lon the poll ,ti t t s 11Yor1 put Ire l,nttn-thrfititahle. Pollttie• may t which pay thn intutretl, thoit fall Xlllolllll_ 011 d let or, all the premiums so th t tt tho insurpotte nosh , only the Interest on tilt' annual ptyments. l'olfeles may Ite t then that will ply to the insire it atterit Nth-tato onirr of yetitt, trinz 1110 tan a 11- ntm Income nt on u o-t b enth Int a o nnutot I.IIIMI 111 IMP p.)IIeY• -No taxl.m.r.stejs chanted tike limits 111011 1.4 Q qSI - 5 , 111310 4- . • It 11/FIlr , S, not to pay dlyidunds In polii y-holders, Lot at so lot kr. 0 v.,lt 111111 11101.111' min 0111 let Int 111,01- Ciroulal 0. P,mphloti , oo Inn "partici it given on application to Lila Branch Unice of the Compnnv• E IP, ChAltli kC. Philadelphia, . General Ageot fcr Pennsylvania end.Sewithein New Jersey, I Isep 68-13 MARQUART'ti CELEBRATED N I M__E „NJ. NOR MAN 'DR BEAST. - • • his Valuable Preparat , on - is - admirably adapted to the Care of all those Di,- eases /or which a Coyn.ter-Irritate or KVAlrlial, Th'inelly I,R required. REFERENCE. Abram klarquert. , bas shown roe the ra. ccOpt of which his Linlinent is crnommd. From my know edge of the Ingredients, I do not hesitate In certifying thal It will ha buntillehtl whore an external appliention.nf the kind to indlmo r od, - - A. STIMARS, M. D. V estings, Shlppensburg, Sept. 13, 186 S. fulliconversent with the rho.nical en inponents and medical effects of A. Marquart's Liniment. I cheerfully comend It to the who MI y nerd It. Jacksonvil m le. Pe. S se . N ECK Elt, Mr. A. Marquart :—Door Sir: I take nietAure In saying that I have. lye I yo r Liniment tsar chap. pod hands.and It cloned mien and made them feel soft 1 think it the hest I hare ever used, and would ebet4folly re e iitnueed it to the general public Neadon Township. 14, Nov. ^_t, 'SO_ I horol,y certify thec I hero 115111 i A. M tenusrt's Liniment for Seratches4Gpt Spsvin an I,o\ of my horses with the greatest success. and moult rec ommend it to oil that gee in need of anything of the kird: - C. MELLINGER., County Troveterur. Stouglistown, Pa.,'Nor. 18, ThaS. Mr. A. Marqnart :—Dear Sir Lm; used 111101 , t hall a Lord's of your Liniment on my horn, far a laid Collar Hill, ,rlll,ll w t•l'the m,at Ob41111:itil 80111 Of OW kind 1 MVI2II . 814 . : also no 1111 arm far !thou matlmul, and it Ilan Wren entire al tiAfao ion In both rase, I no.uld.rmt do without It for IPo tiara It ona and cheerlully memo men I It tu the public " MICIIASL Li (SAAR'. Jacksonville, Pa., Nov. 20, HMI. Altrquort, —Door Sir: I had a very revere attack nrtheutuottan I toy back, so that I court' erarcely stall, %WO) . stab vloy painful. Alt , r 11141E14 halt a hettle of yebir calebrat 14101• maul, I Wan entirely curet. This Is not o roam tovollation, but the pinlu truth. You C:111 woke any pre of Gila you please .7AC,06 LONG. clout Bottom, ~ Nov. 20,18135. 'dr, A Marquart i—hear have used your valuable Liniment Iu my family tOr MOM out polis and itehm, 0011 It ha, proved satl%factory In iovery ca-v. Ide thine, 04 an oxiernil MOM., IL stands Without a rIvAl. ,I would eheer fully rem/Lon...Lilt Lo i pabiic. hespectrull Y. 40111.13.1 i IV. 1'OL:11J1. .10 ksonville, N0v.21. 'M.N., • A. Marquart, Ssq. :—Dieir Sir: It itiferdx me pleiii.ure to certify to it l h tee uned your Liniment, 011 Lay m•rk. ill ti.. 1413 01 lery wilieil Va 1,11.111,1 1 xmiil lei 2111Lrly)1 , 1611.• After tom I foulei it or titruo applyations, and would rei•uinutelid it na p e i eavollant Llnloieur, :3111111tO. Walnut Bottom, Pa., Nov. 111, lona. ire AU.N.NTS WANTED! Addrrss A 51 kIIQUART, Walnut Bottom, Como. Co., Pa. For.ralo nt 11AVIiltrTleli. &. 11110. Drug Atom, Carllslo. Pi 'Wee 138.1. v. Wheeler and Wils3n antl Elliptic ,Loptc F STITCH .- • Sewing Maelanes. The Best Siinplst and 011 , ,apest. rpHESE machines are adapted to do AA an kinds or family sewing, , ‘rnraina eqnsily well upon milt Lirad'add 'Cotto'glinds: 'With SIM; Cotton and !Anon thromdA, 11l Ming a benutitul dml perfect stitch •ullku on both nition'of the article. sowod.' 2. 1, All michipps Pohl aro warranted. ' Call'and oxorillne at Ran ItUdli rola:p.l9W Oillre ; Carlisle, l'a. • • tday 24, 18674 f ., ' CA41141141.L. DR. W. D. HALL. DPS - ..NIA,RY S. HALL atikoAT ril Er Q Ph . and Medical Electrician's. Office and resid"nal, - . Senth" lionoyne 'Street,....Carliele, • Pont, AWAcute or ()braille dISONAOR successfully 'rented. Fulmer Annalitnn, Uniontod o, Pa. Cured of ileartinseaso r of two years standing, IQ Ilyn weeks. Had I,,tien'glvian up; to Mo. ' •• . • , • Miss Ohara illiBe4,,Jormaniown; Pa. - Liver Comi..l plaints•:of..Awo — yeara• - . standing.- -Oureti-Iti -two months. ; Benj. Reeser, Uniontown. PA,' Infleimition of the eyes, with 'loon of.the sight of nun of alatedn -years standing.. Cured In Vireo months., , • , Glorniantiorn, Pa.. Dyspepsi a. Of POO Yietis standing.' Ou: est in months. , " .f !T, Wood, iiitard• Ave, add Warnoe,k St.,. ' Philadelphia :, Cured Of General Johlllty of, ,threo Tearsstanding. . • .• Idles Moms Morrie, 1221 Girard Ave., l'hila• Pa. ra Dyypopsla odd Il ravel .of: pbrae . years g. cured in.nl wouka. • Prank Frier, 712 air sot, PhlladOpilla, Pa. '.,Whlta,Bscaltlag" aof nine years elaudiug. , 'enrol/ A un Mrd. .sogubto „D ng, rowni Delp . ro, 11b10. Womb dlitisanflB y :Ara %finding. - Craning at tittles' Igaduity, daihar her Moldy wore onnpellOd.twied, rjato an Anton° ~ Myliam. Coral In tivp . All eimsultation Oftlees .-' 11 !in!. liati. respoeflully rulers' to the, folios log ladles; reeldiui liro.•Jrid..slits9unelinur; id rd.' Win. d re.' Wm': Jackson, Mts. Vallee 'Mn.s Waury litlydereand :many. uthets,. '• I' L 96011111 VAS' remaved" i'stablf aliment to btu oPIMNDID , NIDIN) GROUND FLOOR • ; ..'" ir R.ALLEIty,, r• • • • ooStore, trhbrii: dlahy invitee nth' nubile to v.:endue the place and. , hig parancvnle antnifben , ,The avelt,lanora.v 04111 of , the proprrathr adantzkrtlet., sckt,b, n caval i er nut] entrance nalt-oky-ilgilt, on thd brit doer, 'are' n incleht'lntlueeniehte tor tali POMO au, pain:voice• thle ,etnabllehltvent. lilvv.pletnrue,nre.tiplevaially nunnarlivdeed ,tc, be valuer .to thu bent. mold J o I Ptalvielphia oiNo\v'tYork [ll2ll , far valfpeder'to any in tEte canautry: trleasttall, ' ,'• ,;—• : Mbtf CI.L. LOCI:01A N. • •„ri , -7 t.r ' l l 4 , • I. CIZED July 25 1568 PAID IN FULL. MIMED .1: . l• ; NEW ADVERTISEMEIV7:. . - PACIFIO Itm.LAOAD CO. CM Ce" Aral P.cific . Railroad FIRST MORTGAGE ..110NDS This great enterprise la epproaching with a rapidity that astonishes the world. Over /kneel (MOM hundred ',Wes have been built by two (2) powerful cempattitv.; the Union Pacific Railroad, - bekibbbig at Omaha. building west, and thts Cen ral Pacific Railroad beginning at Sacitamento and but Idiot; east, until tho two roads shall meet. Less than two hundred anti - fltty miles remain to Ise built. The greater part of the Interyal in now grad ed, and it is reasonably expected that the through connection between San Francisco. and Now York will be comple , ed p July 1. • As lien amount of Government aid given twoheb le dependent upon tho 'ongth of road each shall build, bn tb companik e,oprompted to giest - Offrrts to s.cure the conetruelow and control Of what, when rempl,ted roll' he one ,and the only grand Railroad Line, conneetiny,the Atlantic and Pacific oast. One Hundred and Ten Million Pollara (1110,000, 000) in money have already been expended by the two prwolful en mpaols engl_ged In tills rrreat en tererlre, and they will steiadtly enroplate the par• Lion yet to bo built. NVben rho United Stater (lov ernment found-it-teeessary to securo the construc tion nt the Pacific Rail read to derttlop and protect Its non Interest, It gave the companies nuthevlzed t build it euch , amploa,ald nhoulo render ,Its speed) rompletlon hevorida — doubt„ The Govern moot ti I me) ha briefly emmnedltp no follows: First. 'rho rlallt of way end ell ever. nary Untie' drslnno from public domain. Second. It makes n &nation of 12.101 acme of hind to the mile, which. when the road Is eomploled t will enema to tweuty-three niiulon (2a 000,010) AN PM . , and all or It nn itilrn nillee of r:tih•nnd. , - - Third It lonnplhe romp fifty million dnl 0(10*0), fore il , al it ttikon n i.oronti lion TheCisvernment hoe silently loaned the Union Fueifie Railroad twenti-four million dad fifty eight thooron 1 dollars (r24,05R,00 0 ; and to the CehLral Nellie Railroad seventeen million six hit. deed and fOrty-olglit thonwtrid{l7.l'4oloo), amount ing In nll to fiats one million seven hundred and six thousand dollarS (~ . ..706,601). The Companies art• permitted to Issue their own First ?dm-re:ace Bonds to the same amount as they (rent the &Red states, nad no more. The cempanles have Fuld to perainnent investors about ($40.000.000) forty million dollars of (ho 'First Moitgain Bonds. Tiro "eompanles already old ih (intlUdlng not earnings not divided, grants from dint. of California, arid ,nneramento city rind Prwneile,), unman", of ($95,000000) .twenty, live million dollars capital cinch: r , CI AT IN TFh ERE VET TO BE DON E ? In considering:olft q neethin It 11,110 -be rem, bored that all the remaining — iron inlet, the road Is contracted for, and the largest portion priid for nod riow dellver'ed on the line of the Union Peeßic Railroad and the Central Pacific Railroad, and that the grading Iv almost fl I.ll.bPd. WEAT RESOURCES lIAVE TM! COMPANIES TO FINISH TFI It ROAD! First. They will receive from the Govarnment as the road progresses ab .ut 09,010 000 additional. Second. They can I sue tit eir'own First lim tgage Bonds for alt6ut St foopoo additional. Third, The comnpnies yin, hold almost all the lend they have up to this time received from the Government; upon the completion or the mad they will hove received on all In,noo non acres. which at $l.OO p nr acre would he mirth $.14 000,000. In addltiouto the above the net earnings of the roads and additional capitol, if neeettry, could be called In to finish the road, WAY BUBTVESS-ACTUAL HARNINGS No ono has over expressed a doubt that as soon es the road Is completed Its through busintg:ltleill be abondentiv profitable. %esti earning: of the Union Pa. elfin Railroad , Ilompatty for • 010 mmdhx ending Jenuat'y Ist. 10sti wore upwards of $3.000,000 The earnings of Central Pacific Hallooed, for six months, end- Ing lot ISM), Were $l,7bOM got. Expenses $O5 000 golf Interest 450.000 1,000.000 Not profit of Control PooMe: ftnll - offer prYlng nil I ntoreot ni.Lasounson.forolunmthe $750,000.g01d _ Tao petsout gross enrologn of filo -Union and Control Poolfle Itsltroods nro Sl,_'oo,ooo monthly. UIS LARGE A BUSINESS IS IT SAFE TO 'PREDICT FOR TUE GREAT PACIFIC RAIL ROAD? We would give the following arts deilvocl from 911IppIng Elmo, lonuranco Componitm, RAllroitda mid puural luformu [lon : ,9111114 gulag from the Atlanlle around, Cnpo 11 , 10,100 entnelllps ronnertlng tit Panama o Ith Citlllornle. url,Ohlux,l , ll Osurlund Tudue , &nee, [turtle,. ute., etc. Here we have fwellundradand thirty thousand tons canted weetward end experience ham shown that the fart hie yearn tant - the returned passengers from California have been nearly an numerous as them, going. - . , IPIN.MANY P SSENORS ARE MERE. . _ . • We melts the foll o wi ng estimate : , 110 StuamAlps (toth nays) 70,01 en i pietual for '00) 200 yeesols ' 1 ,4,800 4stimutOd 0 Overland l; "L, ' . 100,0 0, " Number per annum' 174,000 • , prim (evrraging half the ,coot of the etesinshipa), . for' both. .peenirriore . end. tonnage gives the following - 74,01 , 0 pasifolVgorstt $lOO 4b9,000 tone, rateu at pl per euPle too!, • • . , , • nalealationt upon the aianie figures with out. allowing Mr the large luerearat or bushings , which can:vainly be lbolCial for, the., +Ultimate tht. ruuningexpeope at pug half and wit bpvo. a • net income of $10024,000; whioki; after piping the tomtit on the Fir.4')lOrtitege and the ad vatieuli made by . thd Goren:anent, ' Would 'lean° a net nuptial Jacinto of $0,000,000 ceder And above al oxporeem,and lotnrget. . - • !rho Rind , 3fortgago Bonds cl too Maori Paelga - Railroad Company and, tho Fire, Mortgage Booda. ,or the Central Poelfle Mall rcialtd. are both, princi pal and intornat; payable in th0 . ,04 is per cont. Intorost - In gold ooln, • arld'.l.4o; fro! thhty years, and thoycauttot ho paid boforo that tiTP,fth°. trci k or piret ),loitgage ii"onde of Alio u'inorr Parana Railroad for ealo'llth . sr First! Mort 'A/104161d diondir offtentral'- . PeoWe road at 103 and.riocrited ;10 , 4 , 4.0 . • i , DE HAVEN & 411,0,.; DenieyEriirieavernmeint ,, -Si3uri • rtiesi Noy; ; AO -TOMO ',Stietie t, F 20janO9 MOE o,ol' j,:tc I'. 0 . i ; • • !'• -1• y: /Al jiall tli IBM JUNE HOSES. _The nee°. lime come with the Bummer, 'and the - red and the blann'tair, A, tithe scent of their balmy breathing In bonding the drowsy air. Their liko leaves diet" lightly All through the I 'og June Imre, And light. Ike perfumed 81.14 , 41,11re', In the garden'e plumy Lamm. , Oh, wont aro tho wild whiltorolies Thut cling io the g rd n vas I. But 0 is toot ease nut the sunlight Is sweeter and dearer awing I Ono white rose, locked and hiddini • Ina dark, stlllgravo oway,, Tnatrbloblued on that gardoo terrace Ouu )ror ago to day. " When the a neon qw•gt and breezy, And the roses blu hod In the sun, And thou . piny Jetty Mode I Ilgotly Ou tho west wrodo..no by ono. • Thou, • wier the c o ol,l close arbor, We wet hod tile aumm r storm Gather and peen .',r heaven, And 'tspt light c ear and warm, And, under the awcot•grerct *Moller, I loaned on tlmt eh üb . or NI It. o ,he thund r rol od a.uvo us, An 1 the Dope la gun to, belt. And'lni pluck , d ono white rose' dripping th the r a it p.ta e fair. And his ha-id swept niy forehead. Ae hu woro:Ic L. my heir. Now aviln the •tune sun Phineth, Dot hot Suer'• tl wo s ar: gone Only ti t wit o roe•,. wlthorni, Ll n in he gr00010r1urn...,... In the warm rain downward pattering, I hay glv-n It many .ad oar, Shed`for t o ma and beduty . T,.ar died with the to o last year! And Oil) lota the went with, the ddoisoms As loiely nod frail-as tn. y, And is a ban tit ddd ehdd iniywhito roes, . And I , dead, IlSo'lliodlower to day I ironi be 11, Every. §turtltk.! " - A SAVAGE BEAUTY mfrWirS — tiroinrtif — rhttive - arEttstrirr rivers that I made the experience you are abouLto_ltear. There are reasons. which I must not disregard . , for pre serving this vagueness as_to4he Bui 1, would assure the reader.. with all . spriousness that..my story i. true,-and its moral sound.l ns artile. one expect - Aanonymous adventures— without date or address—to NT alike amusing. scandalous. and lalse,—but the two latter qualities my tale decid edly has not. Strictness nf fact iS:its nuitification, for the moral contained _therein can necessarilY be useful -only to a feW " Picture'to yourself a solitary canoe lying Moored in the midwaters of a great tropical river. - There are now houses and Levine on the'banks which, at the time 1 knew them, Were but ver- dant swamps, broken he're or there by tiny patch . of rice-ground, a cluster of little huts, or the tall dwelling of a chief. On the evening of which I speak,len,years .ago, not an European 'could have' been found within a, hun- died - mites of my canoe; The night fe suddenly down, dark and windy; the tide was at itg Vilest, and only the extreme tips of the 'mipas"—that ugly sister in the graceful family of palms =rose above the--flood.. llyCatioe.was• 'anchored above their fern-like .crowns, mid over it and under the stiff, riwk ward branches thrust therusehies.- The breeze moaned and whistled among them, rattling their harsh leaves to gether. There were as :yet neither stare nor_moon ; the:clouds-seemed to bang ainjost on the darbsurfnee of the wnter which stretched rippled and Bonehing on either side, till its eddies were los, in an abyss of vapor. Far off, above the invisible hank, a 'red light glowed throimh the ,mist, and the boatmen de clared that it burned in the house of a great war chief a mile away. There was nothing to see through the dull evening vapors, except thatdistant fire; nor to hear, except the rustling of the wind, the bending of the " nipa" boughs, and the eager but monotonous socking of the tide. My boatmen lighted their fire for. ward. soon it, began to blaze, übder the fostering of a dozen hands already numbed with cold. The red sparks leapt from swirl to swirl of the rivet timidly, brightened, took courage, flamed up, and irradiated a wide ex panse of troubled water. My native boatmen clustered round their stone hearth as closely as the narrow sides of my Canoe would suffer, them A brave and honest set they were as ever traveller loved, but most exceedingly ugly. As they crouched before the fire, forward, ;their picturesque costumes and mimltapen features outlined againg the blaze nod ruddy smoke, I pleased myself, lying on my Mattress, with recalling old German stories of gnomes and goblins, to which strange creatures my poor - Boatmen ,were curiously like. But rdon't know thar - in all my wan derings I ever,felt so utterly alone, so small a speck on - the„great break of natttre, as, thatiiikht. I watched the ,-reathing swathes. of mist stalking over 'tbe- water to my very side. I listened to. thelurgling oftihe tide, and its steady "lap" against the gunwale, and I thought of' times and faces in . pleasant Europe with it sort of despair Stiddenly, my meditalon was *- ken by a peaVing i• .1:1no," from the Mid-darkness. My boatswain answer ed thefunseen challenger, and 'held a short conversation with him in the dial - of, the interior r then, addressing me, thus announced visitors " The brave chief frOM the next reach, my lord, desires to present his slaVish war -" Tell the ',nave chicle& the next reach,"!: I answered, 4, that his sltiVe, and all his slave's ancestors in their coffins, rejoice at this: happy meeting' And-pass a candle if 'there happens to..be oneleft in the locker,!".; There Was one left ;in the locker,' Which lituck into a'hottle and,. fixed to the gunwale. In another moMentike sharp, nose of a canoe 'shot out of the }platy curtain into our red half ci ole. I was Used; to these visits fretrosavagethiefs - , and felt little interest. in; the strangers, Their,courteey entailed- a mertain dimi- Mutionmf-myinecions-storesuspeoially , i Pf.spirits; pncl tobacco, and an uncertain, sucriffemsf, other,,valnahles. , Not - .tbut, these Pakcd , fo9o§4pElinfzi PlF li •atele .1. Ad, they ii, , iioxdbly#AakliPpf;a§k: , point„ blank fpr,,nugh(Art.,,tppt : tily4r-fpppy t and it wnsort an,eaey, or. quittiO a *to flisap. ! 'point Oppa. Therefore, though ; pre.', :040d rtoitiye' ;current ,for tile, presents w . o4, , ttiii — Wortliy"ciitef was sure; ; iinder-any.Ciretinistatices; - tO send liniro-4iPppWs a4ti4 ilia o,Piiiferis•vittit over 'Mad, 80,000 tone 1-0,000 . 300)0 $17,4000,00 ---3aa,ao,oob I. ll ore were three the 41)icaching canoe. paddl94. and, the pat aft: — .,l did'not look: 'Mq„boatnien hnd 114003% iained pveT, 'no 'the thatch; 'called' Ka.' whlotplareteote n traveliei fieki" thin r'ceilnimpy . *We "date, t; rofieMind t i icuonntaWcee; 'bat' it had thcriffe'Cier 6y•itiaw: the• - taiectitdell'eloni4eide' lorgertrift; .hut the 'desep'•ehadoiipeant by- tho'4 l ka appearaitic&of , its occapantp. it‘ie9d myself iu the citni,Llifgided•i*ti.avhl4lll.lle : Oapi'ern voyager eeilioon abi ilires;'find'POO* ea a neat oration.a another moment c PAILATIBI.P3~IJA' ~ i .i~ . , ~.._.. . • , .. ... ~,.,, fr • •: , '' ' . - . . ~ i . : ~ „.... 1 si i - liiii;igtk;‘ , i'EN:WA.; . ;',V.ltii)Ait,l, ji)-i4E:,18,',..16 . . m . - . Altai! usculareldtrian. emerged from the • darkness,Jested ',his hand lightly on the gunwitle_of my boat, unit stepped in, with no Mare commotion' than is caused br walking: : aboard if three db*cker. "The Wye chief of the next e'en" oliserVed 'terrlierid:rivitain 'Mire: nionieuely,:and'l 'greeted the worthy old man with a smile and a shake of the hand. He sat down'at the farther Bide of the &Oat, silently, but in, great and visible contentment: ' I prepared to assail him:With' 't 6rtaire-sttitistical 'questions, sticif de,' i iiiMfire"rniiiiliese savages are neither porpleted' to hear - nor unable to' tresWer. "'How 'Many fighting men follow yen?" 1 was about to ask, when another hand, as placed ' upon the gunwale, another•figure came up suddenly from the 'dark river, and stepped with .ease::upon my rickety craft. "The wife, of - the brave chief who lives on the next teach," announ ced ' thekiatswain. who sat crouched beneath 'the kajongs. I smiled end Shook hands.-- . -The_wife took a' place beside her husband with L a familiar con fidence pleasant to see. " How many fighting—" I was interrupted again ! My left hand rested on the gunwale, - instinctively placed there 'when the "'brave chief's wife" hoarded,me, to counteract any ugly lurch which her unskilfulness might cause. On th's hand was suddenly placed another, be longing . evidently to a person outside my boat. So small and slender were lhose-fmgers-that-thus-elasPed-anine so' soft and dainty and delicate,-all the blood in my body tingled t , for I thought, surely 'Lis the hand of a mer maid l—a I-I:weir ! But no; a third 'visitor rose from the darkness—rose, resting its hand still'an oine—rose,and awed upright before me, framed in tlhe'' velvetyhOck,ness of . the night /It was the figure bf . a'young girl, sixteen ' years, of age at-moat, which thus stood uperiddefilrbefore me, sparkling and shining in the candle-light. She was I simply clad in a short petticoat of 'woolen stuff, Which didmot quite reach 'to the knee. II er arms and wrists were encirc'ed with many bracelets ot, gold and shell. and ornaments of braes ; it wash crime so to overload them, for ' their shape was worthy of a Hebe. Round and round her waist a chain of small gold rattles WBB twisted, *which tinkled faintly with each 'notion. Her graceful head had no Cnvering. except , such coils of fine black-hair its three MOM) women might with joy have shared among themselves. The hair was not parted', but. drawn back from 1 the .forehead, and tied in a smooth - knot, with a quantity of strongly-scent 'd flowers • the ends fell in a_ shower be hind, almost to her waist.- This fash ion, _which civilized_ ladies . are just adopting, is the common coiffure of the land I speak of.' The girl's -features were perfect - i - fretrt low, round forehead to dimpled chin ! And wholly Euro pean in character, save that no eyes of our zone could laugh with such velvet softness, nor plead with humility so it resistible. For this _young, savage's .face shown down upon me with dewy lips parted in a timid smile, and inno cent, saucy eyes, that said, plainly as words. "Am 'I not pretty ? You are a great lord. and almost more than man, but you cannot refuse me a place in your canoe I" And all the while she kept her little soft hand in mine, while I stared dimly upwards marvelling at her loveliness. "The daughter of the brave chief Who lives 'on the next ' reach !" gravely announced edy boat swain from under the kajongs. . " The daughter of the brave' chief • who lives on the next reach is welcome to her slave's resting place I" I Raid, ' with an affectation of mighty indiffer, ence. But the attempt failed, I sus pect, for my boatmen forward, who had, like all their race, a true Italian interest in the minutest kfaire de cmur, laughed gently as they sat besile their "fire, and stole a glance 'aft But the little beauty was too profoundly con pants of 'her own value, personal and political, to care one straw for the he:- pertinence of amere boatmen. She murmured a few words, in a voice Bret as the lips from which it issued, and received a merry answer from her fath er. Thell she looked down at me with a joyous ' smile c and, putting her foot ou the gunwale—Ah ! but I cannot leave that foot undeecribed Would I -were-tipoet - -gifted - with Theophile Oriutier's skill to celebrate the divinity of form ! His fervor I feel in recalling the vision of that fairy foof, but net a tone of that wondrous voice have I. What.wat3 it that enraptured me l—a foot 1 .--a member common to all ani ' male, and safficiently despised. I will give the measurement of it, as taken afterwards The girl was of or-. 1 dinary height, four feet ten or so ; her foot lay easily in my Wand,—thrit, is, Wail something ander seven inches long When I closed, my, grasp on that damn: . tieat• of prizes, my second finger and thumb; could meet within an Oath round the instep;-or, by the exercise nisome: Mile strength, could be made 4t) touch. But what is_measurement of . lime' 'and inches in a work of en premest art 1 Color and Shape 'and exquisitolife ' give the' charm. - . The liyettiest 'Of 'English feet, white'as milk, Cud' veined with sapphire, is. ttlk the Et: - tie ,dukiky limb, of an Eastern 'girl as tait-elabortt(e marble of Oanova's to the' sin'all; broizer `gem I hold within -my 'hand: ' That :child'a foot revealed' to the'aeute lieliOldeigeatiaete i,t ethics, on Which big books have been written, and' big arguments-' expended: , , He 'ketW' there expreasedthe suppleness of 'liar race, the' ace ' Mid "delie,key 'that 444-,- -o.t3rticut, the activity' .which, k iTith hare-like speed, distancee.our . tor, tthee-pace ;1 'and he , eats, besides; the hurritt4iiefvoue circulation,' and the .fraigilh3 o 'br etiidfute, But,.'intleed,: ,that little Foot, resting- still et:tiny : gun- ;Wit'lti; was, a bronze. of the best period' thused.fo-life., The skin was -smooth ;tind,lithitilted as Motal,,nii'd the tone, .4070 *here its natural eOlOr'W'alf'stib -41441: by_a tinge ofiteilina ? or *Merle, , .matohod that of Coriuthiau,brass: The ' I [l:l4tid , was tlwerthr tif , the' feet, • ' Such. :grikesful Ihios, .4 , attaelMe".'eti:piettily• "Y-kthillo l ` I • never,. IMpo.: to, /3,ln:lignin In '1 iiiiilleshiltlet*atalle'dasttu Arab'e, lean ,• and , smooth: like.; his ; , toes, ;not crushed' together, - - nee uoutled up, nor rested • 'out' of 'all,''tbrindesti•bp:' the Olta!011b - Cts,1;'nei,t4er spread ahroitil, 1 ,I kt ,41a4iegrii!e; )14 cacti etatthiegAight4: . ..,apartilithei. tremulous,. ilimpled,:as• ,a I*(ll4l4's •at each :joint; j'' The naile' :Wern dareftillr plilirdiedll:aiid riptlett'ati th6ed of,W;s4tidi i li',.(o'of,•lttit*Op . ', i t thfitC l .4e *Oil; to.oB:or*g4 All; a Okan„exqulsttofoiil h • .' •'... •• 1 1 ,811ei4SMea'OillibariP,IeuglitUi Mer=: 144 ,riti, l ig wit 4 ir,foher t , lite ' old' fake' talkea . 61 th' ki eli barbarous iol• .' ; A--..;2 f" . ,,.. 'A ' • . . ..•.;.', .•.. : ''..: ;11 . ;' , 1. •, '' ' ... ,r'' '' ~ • 1/ 4 . •;' :. ... •'' . :.' . ' .. • - ' ' r 7"% k, 0 • ' ' •. ' fl ~.• • ' , AI 1,, : ' .-•..', [i 1.," .• . C . -•-..;,. ..! ':" 0 1 1 , '.... .' i'', ' 7,-. , , :-.- '- ' , • ~ ,'i' , , 4 . .i-.- .: --: . - 7 -_(;--- i ''-...'i . '. . 7 ' .- . ' *' • '''' ~_ .-____)..,,,,-. _. .. , -.. • .---,,; --, - - - , . -:..,...... - ; itics,—how the neighboring . tribes were •threatening to renounce their allegi'an'ce t 4 ti. 'chief now aged. • Insidiouto•proo.: 'miaow) were made me to'abide awhile. for no visible object, at their village ; , bitt,not even the charms •of that lovely girl who sat, all silent and"submissive; by the. gunwale, could tempt-me te. permit. my name and 'color. to he used as a political.influence among these as tute, yet simple savages. Whether, the daughter had been brought aboard. 'With' hopes of swaying me, I do not know; but I. am inclined to think not ,She was the only child at home, and. the pet of this venerable chief. Be ' aies,, I 4oubt„ much wbether oven her Parents knew or guessed what atreasure ofbeanty themssessed in her. . The liveliness was not quite of the style most admired by these good folks The points.' have described to you are citmmon to-many, to almost all, of their Viamen, except the features. ' Doubt; less, had . I asked, the critical opinion of any dusky Don--Juan round about touching the merits of this ;=girl, lie 'would have answered, with that superb air we see =daily at the "circle,"—"Not bad. Her mouth is. too email,- and never stained red with betel Her teeth are white, which is a terrible blot. and reflects the gravest discredit. on. her parents. - Her hair is long, and her feet. are small. but Tregi's-daughter has londr tresses :arid tinier hands, While her teeth are black as burnt .co -curomet-etto-make--thenirantl-tity-ana ever yet saw her without a crimson stain like blood upon her chin ; .mais poiii• - ce . .quit s'appelle - un - e - ilet, mon cher!" . She did not speak ten words all night. but sat under the shadows Of the ktjongs and slyly watched me, smiling from time to time With such girlish grace as made my very heart stir. Now and then she laughed at, some unintel ligible witticism of her brave old father; .1 sweet, happy laugh that did one's ears good to hear In fact, I fell in love that night, and I know that if w f had not e met again, I should have—re turned to civilized life a victim hence forth to Byronic melancholy; feeling a desperate conviction that the only being I could eves love dwelt, aortic fif teen thousand miles off as the crow flies, in a p.alni:thatchol. house Ilesids an unknown river. - But met her again. My business on this. river of her father's took me almost to its .head waters and in ti month's time I began to drop down stream. again. Will you bear with me reefer, while I vent my soul in telling the delights of a canoe-voyage thiough the watery highways of a tropical for est ? Heaven grant that before many months I may again be floating on their deep , bosom !:All, - - - why.' can I not- paint these scenes,as vividly as they' press upon my ..memory-? I can not, for often have I tried, and never, with success. I would tell of the shift: at early • dawn, •while -yet the night• mists are curling on the water,- while yet the monkeys call musically to each other in the forest-trees I woulilde• scribe the eager bustle of my boat men getting ready for the day's labor. I would tellhow, with a wild cheer, they dip their paddles in the • chilly stream, and make the' tiny craft to fly from its halting `pine() of over night. - Ay, I would have my companion sit by me in fancy, underneath the matted.. awning which obstructs the 'glare of early daylrifle on his knees, and glass ready to his hand. For they have keen eyes, those boatmen of mine, and long ere your dull sight discovers the creature they point out with such -mute eagernes, it , ' will linie flitted through the trees.und disappeared. leaving naught' but a doubtful trail Game is thick in , these woods to him who has quick eyes and a steady hand, but - net one hoof or paw will he see who takes to the brilliant East the listless motions of Pall Mall Hist ! What does he,whisper with such still excitement, that brown "serang" squatte,d - on the bows , Steady be hind ! The eager paddlers cease their clanking stroke, hush the - broad jest and extemporized sang., They dip their paddles with such skill,' that velvet sinking into' il would make a splash as loud. Without,' a sound we glided above the water, steadily, as with a wish, onwards The "serang's" • ontstretched-harid--gnides-onr-eyes-to a black shadowed reach, where the water sleeps and rots, overdrowned with fleshy leaves and pallid,'unwhole some flouters, taking no color from the sun What is there? Too well 'Ave knoW our trusty hentaWain to fear false alarms from him. We strain O r in. eyes ; and at length, beneath the deepest shade, just where that dark-, leaved shrub drops . i;s pendulous tsinglis into the, stream Inside the fallen trunk; all clothed in ferns and orchids and many-colored fungi. that lies -rotting in the eddy,' we think to trace a shadowy outline•as of some monster crouched along the ground. Gently, silently, we drop dawn. The quick'-sighted *monkeys have fled:tbis; spot,. and far in the diatance we can hear their. clashing progress through the free-tops', The very birds are' Gradually,, &avidly, a' fulvons coat • defines‘ itself against the 'oily green leaves, 'There is on all nature a hush that may be fblt. Round and eager eyes, widely' 'distended now, ' half in fear min Winn threat, gleam irridescent in the dusky nook. We can see the flash of white teeth between dtpe,drawn backove, . canalmmit the "spitting" 'like Ott • angry, cites which welcomes us to this, solitude.. • the moment'!_ U1i:: riffe,•beth Together! With 'a -savage snarl ho, 'tiaras Lind showit,Mll•liis,epottell • ,N - o 'w,. ll ow ;And the 'ptintliPri . 2 7 , airily iiivaly , with his tail up raiaed;'and considerable coneelinpe d&, picted on his features ! This is your exclamation, doubtlese, the cruel facts of. memory should :not be Allowed to, Mingle with, the, hright picture of imagination. ',I have, :missed many easy shotsimstern.retility: :but in my simplest dream •I'd Kern l i to ibtroduca a riflenotwarranted to carry, • -twenty Miles, and true as death:•Thit If you will butte' it ao, we'll, leave ,the. Panther ;inllia wood :atidipurstte; our, our voynge,' • . ' T. ei ay, daygrowe on to .noontide Ashore •eve ry, living thing , boatel:night, ithe hhade and refitf," t herein. *liding over 'Whit' the - .Eitreafni hing the,,,rqedy:lbanka).-w.here' great ,treea , l overliatut!and. , ;aholter;ut :Aud'ecit'Oreea i 1'44 eitr , *64 oi . ier Us. and under, and around -- Unnaathd' , *eedet.,but,the , innrolieantifuL thoour 'sightfor the world's ignorance oftliesa Wile ;t‘ed 1 heir Oiittrof , ey. , ,ery. ehope Aga 'eitei7 We; Atli. on the MME surface of "black-waters" and warm, stagnant pools beside the riVer of eqch.calm spots now and then we catch a glimpse through some arch ,of, tufted reede, or., under. grAien-fringedT, bridge of a fidlen tree., No.man ''hath come 'since the making of tte to. see the beauty here: For beauty',' there is, in these little. ecditarypende, more exquisite than human' can imitate; Ah I but there. „Ire other denizens . than the,sweet flowers - 'and the pretty • "flyire" and the lionesi, loud-throated bulrfrogs, Great "snakes dwell here and twine themselves among these hideous, dwellers a. hrilliapt jew, pled colored ereaturefrom, the ,swift stream near by. He dashes roUndithe, , 'pond in high impatience and' disdain. 'raising hie shiny head and - seeking the outlet with wicked eyes that gleam like fire.- Sometimeti the horrid crea-, ituree; of the pool, the sickly looking, snakes and enormous worms . -ri:iyet more ghastly than the others irii t their . foul softness—grovi jealous ' of the gemmed intruder, and set tiir him with hooked teeth and whip-like tails and deadly poison. Then to. _one__ who stands by a terrible sight is' given. , Now on the• surfice, now in the still' depths below, the mercilesci fight goes' on. The hunted reptile darts • 'hither and thither, plunges head foremost down among the ,lily roots, springs into the air, twists through his * foes with exquleito actiyity' They the against one another; they bite and . strike in their vexation or in payment of - outstanding - feuds. - 'Though - efia enemy be time times . bis size, yet is this brilliant stranger 'armed with a subtler venibm, marathon a match __for any two of.themi; but. numbers pre vail, and unless he find in time, the grass-grown entrance to the pool, he commonly falls a victim to the out ned ugliness of the indwellers. Yet in general, one might stay long beside these still and flower-groWn waters without • dkeovering . a trace 'of the monsters they contain. Pretty sights are those most common itAheir banks In the dawn and at eventide a hun dred curious, graceful creatures come here to slake their thirst. Chattering monkeys slide down a creeper - and thus suspentied-in-mid-air, drink from their small hollow bands,—glanoing ever round,--above, • below,, with-eyes—of quick suspicion, pausing each instant chattering uninterruptedly to reassure tkeniselves. Birds of every. size and hue flutter to the shallows.' and drink gratefully.. lllg -herons and huge white cranes stalk about and chase the little bull-frogs in, their muddy nests. •Squirrels—froin - the 'small beauty :no larger than a mouse-to that vast fellow with - the crimson stripe along:his sides --hop about the, banks slicking the. buds, and roots of water-plants. Deer„ too, sometimes visit this. spot, - when., bunters or wild beastil have scared them ' from their faverite stream. Butterflies hover over it ; orchids trail their blos .. ROMP down 'almost to its Surface. There is more .beauty than horror here. 1 was wrong to put those snakes first in • the description. And then afternoon comes on, and evening. 'The alligators slide' down in their oily manner, from the sand• banks, as the declining sun begins to leavh the river. And then, thelf, - Whaf wondrous effects of golden light suc ceed How keen the blue shad ,we How mysteriously dim each long vista of the trees ! The sunshine seems al most to drip in liquifi geld from twig to twig, and leaf to leaf, as it breaks through some tiny gap in the overarch ing foliage. Redder that light growii, and redder; darker the shadows; the air more fall of life. A scream .breaks the forest stillness,—of what tortured': animal none can guess. Roused, by that signal, birds of prey that fly *by night Wheel suddenly out from their retreats and swing across the river; Night hawks shoot into the air, turn over, and sweep down along the watery surface, noiselessly as the, the moths' they seek ; save now and again a faint twitter shows their thanksgiving for a prey. Then a lit tle later, when the topmost boughs are blazing in red and all below ie dim and misty, the mosquitoes sally forth, the - bull-frogs wage and sound the key note ofitheir night long chorus. __LNr_e_flies,_by one and tviiedlit neroSs the grass, vanishing and -reappearing Presently, as it grows darker, they come forth in swarms, and hover round some tree that has attractions for their kind. It is beautiful' to watch the sudden flash oflight from the thous ands of t,l4se little insects, illumina ting the darkne - ss for an instant, --g o -' ing dtit and tlirohbittg forth again. 0,- .1 could dilate by the hour on the glory of the tropics ! There only does one see the .pride of life, and . the• true lust of the' eyes. ,lint my —reitders grow - litatient . , - ' It was perhaps ' a month,after the visit to my canoe.: - I was' desCending the'steennt, and had reached a'' , point spore fifty miles-above the'dwelling of ( rcb my savage, beauty. yr The.day s• at its hottest, but for ten mmutes w ltad been conscious of an mytaturfil n ise 'Which . swelled , throtigh the foiest like the noise of rd'eti cheeribg,' laiikhing, singing.—m. ,fact; like' the roar of a multitude. •NY e,Were •prepared for any ei7cot,„w hen the canoe, suddenly shoot-. ing roiind a. point, . came in. view - of o rt, very' large titivitiniiitio; evidently erarntrieti ' with !People, all 'hvidetitly drunk: — "This ' is, a' great! feast,, •• any. hird,', l ,,cxellimed my .servant..; It away, he\',P . lneX t 1Y1 0 1 3 t POF;talOy . it Was the .itohilen"giiillieriag I , 'ever assisted at. '4 eep 'to 'the - 'o ther! 'Sid ti 'of the '-river and 'slip,. past,:if:!possittle;" l'ordiertid:• But !: to. eticriPa.',4de* hopelessil Thei men,of,thl fos,ONo party wore illOceo. far too Ararat to feel sure; of ,their,,vis-, ion'at Lille distaifee; h i tit''a,titi4ii Of'girle stead • h , :y !the ' river-Sid o' laugh mg; dorii:+ ) pariug,notes,,overlooking'their coiffure and critiClaing,their !friends!. ',co:stun:tot just ai, do, ciyilied.belics, i 4 iike,c4.l ' ll' .PtlVO sirriple•Ohildreir Of. tit liii•Ohtliiid'A•no‘Orirringlit , i.h&'• Bab tr stream; tier 'fitly! dciis a 'tilt 'it p tilt- iffilexl' ,e'opt,- fkiwora andfbfinda.f ',Not -11,opivof '6l.ludinglhoseohright,pyes l, But,il9rt lege: aqua) , .1,911-I , snowo,warriei ~wrire, , ''ettiaitaiiie'd . ib;thOtr"aiil.fr!ein l(O,flie, 1 1, finil•lttilefetir th'iii &hi aPtiiilif thh disrEi'tir aadresarit'wliite,matvriA4Bpithilong Vh • 1: Arieti,:itrltite flow,p,alt,l:7 -,, ' ..1 ',,t;t.3 1 1 1 Jim , the ettcOvb priav i edel,afaittl ,ala -- 6 . 1 9 1 , 1 4°r AitYPATif Txiie.e. , ;•o l A4 :ifl 9 1 ' A° 3 :ll; } .. 3 TotiiiiirfiT' 1 ?Y ill e v,"!APP: „.1 B §' 'save es' 10. g veo gm. ' ~tecotit. ~I lidattii‘.. iiitilini6iiiitviiiiiiiiiiiikly "gai , thortfror4tti)vpit II 'ailtoie!..l , !fThe lids I B:cAttere4 , o B w 9 arovin.ioopieorumape... !tywoy in real or oteeted - paele t ,„paeag itnighini hysterically at a dititanoe. " ' NO: 25. , . . But the . greater number rushed'- • br, and' stood in 'a' cdmpact•body, hol d ing each, ether • tight' •••••VVliii • balled me• 7- -1 asked, gayly ; approaching-the .phalanx., Direful.cerifusign ,and dis. 2 may resulted. After,sowiewhat. of a struggle recesses of the crowd, a - rile;nder was • silently thrust out, while •the.others looked at me ; with - .speechless anguish. The victim thus, abandoned, •held her hands bfere her face t and all graceful :frame, scarcely concealed by clothing, •trenibledt so that t. could hear the rat tfing of her innumerable golden orna ments ; but•vidrether her emotion was of rear or mirth "'could not tell. In either case the situation might well embarrass ii shy man like me. Not •knoling what to do With. this Blender child, aid profoundly discomforted by a' score ,of dilated eyes• fixed on ,--me from the one side, while on.the other I could hear igy lioatmen laSughing to 'themselves,) boldly seized' her in my 'aims-, and 'Pulled 'apart her hands. It the heroine •of MY' fancy.! -She looked" at-me , with eyes brimful of ter ror-whether genuine, or, aSenmed as a likely weapon by the little flirt, l• Gave no idea. Do not think that the white race has a monopoly of arts •; • theye are few, tricks in social optics which Hindoos,, Malaya, and - Negroes, ,are not thoroughly alive to. ~ Whileconsidering what Ishouldsay or dO, the damsel broke from the,send ~.rau.at.tpplanstspeed-towgrd&the.licuise screaming with laughter. • At this ex ample, all the young girls dismissed :their terrified expression, and loudly joined the outburst I stood—it, is not -to be deniedin some confusion, feel ing, indeed; cut to the heart, as much by the indelicacy of' this option as, by the, proof it gave that Yu) favorable im pression had been made on my adored one's fancy: This perturriating of mind was not relieved by the frankness of my serang, who observed with the calmness befitting an undeniable state ment of facts, The girls make a fool - of your lordship !" I turned to regain my'canoe. and hurry from this scene, but a dozen, potent chiefs, with their gold-fringed head-handkerchiefs, all awry; their necklaces wrong side be fore, and their dress in an indescriba ble confusion came to entreat my pres • ence at the feast. To refuse was im possible, I followed them into the, house. All intelligent creatures drink, and most of them get drunk from time to - High reason, true merality;the best medical opinions. and the expe rience of every man,—in--vain coinbine to discourage the practice. Daily are we told. that the custom is extinct, never to come to life again in civilized communitieS.. Daily we_read,such-as er rid no man' dreams - of eon tradicting their", because every one knows the truth too well. People drank in all ageo,6 Cicess from time to time, and they will continue so to .do till the - But: ifany sight on this 'round earth could. causelhe British Parliament to. pass - Sir Wilfred . Lawson's Bill, and could persuade the English people to accept it,—tlyit sight was before me when I entered the house. Of this we . will say no More, in-charity to my, sav age but generous hosts. . - You will hssvo observed the young lady's shocking rudeness' to me at the water side. Nothing cremes in my mind a more abrupt revulsion than hoydenish conduct. • If the Venus do Medici in flesh laughed loud, or ma liciously, or in the wrong place, I should flee from her. I cite the Meclicean Venus, 'because, looking critically at that young person, I could believe her to he not too'well bVed. - Fancy Milos goddess mistaking ber "monde! " It cost me a severe mental struggle to ad- Mit excuses for this very doubtful con duct of my Hebe. To laugh loud; t 3 'laugh loud and run away from MC showed excessively bad taste. -But Was 'overcome in 'meeting her at thou threshold: Suoh soft penitence was expressed in her swimming eyes, such Graceful mutinerie about her mouth ! ad though to say, " Please forgive me ; if you won't, I know Pew to avenge myself !" I longed to clasp her in. my arms again, and vowed that she should not escape so easily next time. I walked up the long veranda of the. _ $ ; • s orted b her father and nu- merous chiefs.; as distinguished; r wee tOld,dlß I saw they were' drunk They sat me in the' place of honor, where the rock was. strongest, and the sun most fearful. Half a dazen uf the lead ing men held me: upright with, touch ing care, and I, so far as my limited supply of members went, reciprocated the service. There were . two brawny fellows who• Supported- me- under the arms. Bnth of . them I ,held hp, by hand , There, was another valorous -warrior who - ifishited that , a' prop .was_ needed forrmi . back; and nearly push ed me down,. face fbremmit, in his en , deavos , to. , sustain himself. Putting legs apart, And leaning forward, I supported him also, "How long is this to last 7" I asked the saving, who was treated in much 'similar manner by . Warriors of lees note. ...They're going, :to perform,Aome ; tomfoolery," replied the ,I%fuesulamo ; Nuiingly, for,,their .hitroinrriti4 entailed Apon Ina orthodox censcienCA nn infinite amount ofAuper progatori 'prayer. 'Meanwhile, my tawny belle had taken , a place oppo site to• mine, audAhere atoodOvatching . tue . .w~tl~ great • , • .. - . , tell i wbattly cereu39ny - was,' ‘Drifilting:yrile iie(cooppeecernent,_sing- Ineita tnid dourge,ited gettiok 'drab k its logical 'conelnaion.; )Ainohg• other atisurditiee 'etiquette required that a large,bourt of )tqUor, should ba placed: 'on my 11(10. insisted that y,es eel 'ehotild. be erpt4 i • frea"ecid but it angtlt•4lid utter cver- Ibrow,of bi.4l , ,liqui a, and bearer by a 'fliunirCn,ehief t:e ed petticoat I , The, young , lady had been muel • inter- Oita in this 'diseatit,3ion, and not h i eSitate ) to 'o6;ll6i:diem 'hi • Stiting 'li ti page her .opinfon cdf , those, efigaged:.! Wbat,doee ebe nay.l" aekekof my eera,no. ,; ~e.gaye nee ,a slapp‘traus,lo.-, i ttion her Words. The langanOe, d'dthilliible,;;•rraS 'bine means NY bat' ntie'ilkositro , ilhar 'p'ereEttle/ iNeirortheless ' t'oiind) thro A to lookrat ,•her,‘ and . nutrked the p,er,f,ekcklia orplolo repose p . . i rbieli she , leenTCagainet a pillar—her, tactdded atiiiir iamb 'dile' . 'tttacithet4.4litelt thatabbost ataterphe S'rouet be pardoned to such a creature:, )11, stepped aceoss,mind:,,loiling. on her lentis:l,4kifie4 rpnto,e,4 aho9blers. yc, "of refuel te'f,aptatem,-,7i ; pet Ardilialitr' 611 t. h 0211614 votasAilait,l Picture, 'My hdrified surprise, to: ftml.the pretty yellow-color of her skin "come off 'On , .;,. DV white sleeve ! "Whet the devil's. this'?" I asked of my Qric,'ilitylard!".he.anSwitfed;pronapt,' -• ' .trPhat was a great bloW ! With tneme the demotion by an effort. down into frierest 'expression I looked ly back to which beautiful lids, so! thietfirted. , Those , silk, were nrituistaliaringed with 'Whit the devil's this'? ..IgueiktY 3 Cd. nut, my irird," he calmly antsWifi°2.F ,Again I 'felt a shock I needed_a Certain moral courage - longer to contend. Yet I kept my !dace. ,Suddently the 'young girl broke-from my -arm.j.-and 'pursued. a- '; . stalwart slave, reeling down. the house'' with a bundle oftobacco, and a basket of maize leaves, him see overhauled, and from his load- snatched a handful of` either substance, -wrapped the to bacco in the dry leaf With a swift mo tion, thrust the one end of the cigare tte thus made into a blazing heath, and returned to me leisurely puffing at ..her prize. This • was the third blew ! Still I held fast to My . illusion, aitd entered into a conversation with the houri. She muttered alirw frightened words in answer to my remarks,: and stood with _.downcast eyes, the very image pf innocence and propriety. On a sudden a rush of warriors took place behind us, and One burly fellow most notably excited with strong - drinki" clasped my companion round the waist,- andOdashed down the long veranda with her. "Is that, her brother or her lover 1" I asked of my [spr a ng, ."Probably neither, my lord '!" hoan .oivered. I looked on this profanation With eyes indignant; 'add - disgust ex pressed in my 'features. .-She laughed the houri ! At the extreme . end'of the house, another' partner, 'drunk as the 'first, siezed hold of her, passed his braceleted arm -around her delicate Waist. and 'rushed' her up the veranda nce-more:--t3her-paused—trelide—tatr— breathless, her eyes dancing with glee! And yet these ruffians who had taken such' a - freedom On—themselves,- were nearly as drunk as a wan could, belto stand upright. - I was utterly overwbelmned. -I hastened from the house, leaped aboard any canoe, and • Banished down the stream.: I did not expect to see;.my dusky Ilebe any more, nor that moment, did I great ly wish to do so. But a month after, 'I found myself once more in her neighborhood, having . ascended the river again, aboard a na tive gunboat. - We bad with us a fine, tall warrior, who gave himself oaths sort to the 'brave chief' of whom I had spoken. On making inquiries, I found this fellow Wee half-brother to my dus ky liebe Arrived. at the nearest point to his father's house, I put my! _- self in a canoe with him and paddled up-the stream,- not wholly conscious of a certain thrill at the heart. We . reached the spot and landed. The , old chief sullied out With, Warriors and 'slaveg. It was somewhat touching to see that recognition of the long-lost heir, for the youth iu our charge had ' been captured by' pirates long -since • and reduced to slavery. But 1 looked still for the fairy form, which, in spite _6fllll,_bauuted my fancy, She 'came at length, bothidiog from the Jungle,' her long hair loosed, and, strcaining to the-groand, her eyes afire with -eager , ness and excitement. She threw her self into her brother's stalwart arms, nestled to his bosom,, and cried with girlish vehemence.' And 'when at, length the first emotion had subsided, she drew back a little, still encircled by a loving clasp, to view die stalely felloW who had been restored to her,, and then threw herself again upon hia breast, and—and- 7 _ "Kissed him. Of course !" you ex claim, my hearer. Not at all ! Deliberately and thoughtfully smelt, him all over ! It Was to much. Ttlo was I disenchan ted with -.lovely savages." It will not be necessary to point out the. more obvious moral ; but there is 4 o,ne which has lately been explained to me,— myself, the. hero of the story.. I had told it to a lady, much as I have told it to'you, reader. When --I had concluded, she remarked, with some emphasis, "Let me giv,d you a piece of advice, Mr. Peregriti. Zn telling this tale again give dates and localities frankly for fear of misconstruction And, further, I would recommend you not to cling_ overmuch to this life, be low, since, savage or civilized, the feminine nature shocks your taste. Perhaps among the real angels you may- find a non- masculine creature, lvho powders not, nor brightens her eyes, nor talks . slang, nor smokes, nor • loves either waltzing or scent. With mere earrlhy women of this day your search would be hopeless !" This was ther.moral a lad} A SinfOla r Couple. The circumstances which, more than anything else, obtained the dingy- old town of klexham a lasting place in my memory- was our tajeing lodging from , an extraordinary pair, an old man and woman, husband and wiie—who lived by themselves, without children' or ser vants, subsisting on the letting of their parlor and, two - bed 'rooms:- They were tall, thin, and erect, though each , _ seventy, years .of age. When,„wo knocked at. the door for • admittance they' answered together ; if we. rang the bell, tke" husband and wife hive iriabyrappeared side by side ; all our requests and demands were recioved by both and executed with the utmost ex- aetness. ,Tbe first night i .,arriving late. 03, , coach from Yowcasile, and merely re- - 'oaring a firo:ned teaovero puzzled to understand the ressen of tbis..double atteedanee and 1.• r•ernember my broth er "Miter irreverently wondered wheth-, ar we "Were always to by 'waited Upon by• Mese Siamese fwins.'? • On ringing " tho bell to 'retire for. the night •both appeared. as ttsualtite • wife.,parryiug •, tdC:hed mem • candle-stick,o' hue baud 'Sfithilieg r etthe door r rzitve diratioes about breakfast :the follow: •• • i t igmorning, -- whear;her - besband' front' • the floor quiekly„ answered for I'.Depend upon, iit, dumb" Whiiiaired• MY brother. — lint -Ibis urea not the Casa, 'though elei rarely MAC use of the faculty of speech. . L: ',They birth' attended .the to 'my bed- "•• room ! , Ntion the,ol,l !tuly„opOog me ;look . with' some surprise toward. her husband, . There's no Offence moanq littatidod'CoiniMgjtit'666OliOia- . kbr , ..litni stone . 1 4 00 r :Man .},4 l lYLiltk ,6 l) -(10 .9t 3 , 1 40P0t , .f demi he ffepteepeny;yeu.c•vcrywherc p itta, no use , m"l'aM, 'Yott'sPeakini, pale eae!t: hear; &cid Viihwa.liiiiirdoaf.yr, ,, petthitilM:.ol lief° Wilft 014."1 " Re4PI I PP2 4 .l e a, 4 1 1 A P,9 e et l atched t'.i.emt ena l witq wsatri s git;:: . *flesh •,' foe lie. 1114;ff, hit ' : 10 Mtc.'43vCiefterj ' 14ilustipprableeetigleir qh7,01,or.ygas 'l.lhpir.gyieltet .-datt,o+;#7, a 2 firliP7 4."-7132 • * Orirli•4 tr 8 . • • El MEM