EMI inilil ENE J. IL NVIUKLEY:I J. 11. WALLACE. CA BDS• --- 'A,DDISON ..KRCIIIT_E T , 532 Street, Philadelphia, Pa. PLANS, DESIGNS, PERSPF:CTIVE VI W 3. SPECIFICATIONS, Atilt' WORRING DRAWINGS, For' Cottages, Farm Maass. Vlllso, Court Howe', HAN, Church., Sellout Room, FRENCH ROOFS. 2:1)so7oly W. A. ATWOOD. ISAAC W. RANCH, ATWOOD, BANCK & CO., COMMISSION MIIRCIIANTS, 1% bolosalo dealers in nil kinds of PICKLED .kND BALI' No. 210 North WiIIOTOS, AINv.. Race street, PHILADELPHIA CHAPMAN AKES FINK •,110 TAIALIt Al' II S At 21 West Main Street, NEFF'S BUILDINP 6Jan7a.'w DENTISTRY ! DIL. J. IL ZINN, No. 68 Edst iffitin. street, to tow doors vast or Ilardnor's Machine shop,) • , , Carlisle, Penn's, s',ll pot. in torch from - S v to i,20 prr ;,t,(7 as the may require. All work otw.vott.d. MEM D R. GEORGE SEARIGIVr, - DENTIST, hum the Baltimore College of Dental Surgery., 011 ice at the reeltlunee of his [outlier, Earl Lootho stiet, I boo Boors below Ileilltatl. IlDeno D R. 1. Y. REED, 1•11Y•IAAN 11, lot rated w Cu,Hula 011 ire next 41. or to I , ' Paola Ittungulle 11 null I,t.uther oat Pullouts Irons a thota.,re pleusoiu the 105,10015 D R. J S. BENDER, IIONIIIIOPATIIIe PHYSICIAN. When lo Hs. room . bonwrly ovrttpied by Col. John bhii.llB DR. EDWARD SCHILLING, V,f111,./ I) ul 1/1,101..11 litthill.l.lll,t.ei,:etol or 1.r.7.1tv.er. 10 111611111 til” V 1117,1 1, 01 Atod thitt I 5. lati pt•rninnontly lu mt,cl w Its. plimeo. • _CIFILLCE _N(:), 21i nAsT PONIFIIET srlutET :mob sußyocK, .wsTicE 01 1 Tun PEACE 031 co, Nu. 3 I rvinu'eyßow 13ELTZ1100'VE 12 , -ArronNEY AT LAW. 10199. in South linnovor strevt, 099.110 I.utv.'s dry g..cls 10.69 • DENTIST. Irate Demonstrator of Operative Dentistry of the ltnl thnort. College of Dental 'Surgery: Ofnee at his resi dence, oppusit%Mariun Hall, \Vast Naln,st reel, Car lisle, Pa. I=il3 HULL, - A. 4011 N A.-ASV/41:Kr- V. \S. II git , IAG I H. T_TOLL, WHITEMN & CO:, 11 wgoLEsA LI: DEALERS IN MANUFACTURED. TOBACCO, N. E. Cor: - ,Tltirsl and. Iflarlcet streets, WIAL . B. PARKER C. P. TIUMItICII & PARKER,. 0.0 on-siza-teOfiVowifiltv,„,,,,,,_4... 14 -- A - VERSTIGK . -BROTHERS, ° DIICUF, PERFUMIIe.Y. FANCY (;0,01,C. AND PATENT MEDICINES I= iv - 01y H . IJYTON & AIcCONNELL, FURNITURE IVAItI4tUONI No: SO9 Market Street, N milt ,tclt, PIIILADELN,IIA Parlor, Dining Room, and Chainbur U it NITuR 1.; , thet taxi xtyl. “..41 111,11111fJOUIP: A'. FEATIIEII BEDS AI)N . .IATTRE , 'SES '1411417U ISAAC K. STAUI'FER IV A 1 Gil AS and JETELItY, ,18.,„pl ()Wm SECOND STREET, ear ,or of Quarry, Au alleortutunt of {Valeta, .lowelry, Hiker and Plated Ware runetantly on hand. ol Watches and a lewetry promptly atlendlal to. . A 7 5 , 1 4 . 6 .0 IY JAMES IL GRAHAM, Afr u NEY AT t, Aw, No. 14 South Hanover 'street, CARF,ISLE, PA .10.1 go I.llllllalll', .4ti11,71) yOIIN CORNAIAN, ATTUILNEY AT LAW. • cn:llun In buil .ng Mt...100t tho Frauktlu MAO, op pumite Ow Court Rouen. T OSEPH RITNER, Arroway AT LAW AND SURVEYOR, , Mrchantegburg, Ps. Office on ItnUrond eltrpot, too .1,004 north of the Bank. prosoptly - al6qa - R tO, T R. MILLER, ' ' , , cy • ATTORNEY Al' LAW. • .01Hco, Nu.lB South Ihmuver taTerl. opporßo . Coylris tituru.. . 10,RRO ... C. HERMAN, • ilk ArroitriitY , AT LAW, CarUlan, Nn. No. 9 lihnom n 113111. " H. SHAIMI T A.RGER, • • J OF TILL I'll , llllod, 11"vntileiv•sborti 10w1,1,111. • Cumberlnnd County, Pots Wit, All buslitexs, ..ntrrotell to him er 111 remlru promp• !alma I' • ltiot t7o SHIRK & BRO =EI • . wlicilr.lo 1101110r3. in . Country Produ,.. ronpuitfully xollelted. Itrot Korerotitm gluon No. 16:35 la:tricot greet, • I= MEI QPANGLER 5.,. WILSON, • IJ CAIIPANTIMS AND STAIR Bulvisite. , • . .cororr North ttod Pitt ittreets,, ,2 c . • t, CARLISLE, PA W ITCHES '4,)icic CHARLES M. ROGERS, T. 56, South Hanover St., Carliala, Pa Ke;TX ronstmilly on hand a full . . , i;:1 , 10141111011. 0 NS ATCI(IO3, CLOCKS', JEIVELnY, At the lowest CABII pricer. Paillentsr uttention pu to tha t rep tiring Pf IVutehes, Clocks mid Je,xult,x,7 N. It.— , IIIINT 31‘:131Cpownintly en Lund. - lino61).:Im • . J. M. whionx,x. N. zr. SkELLI2., WDA.KLEY: SAMIDR; ATTORNEYS AT LAW. 0111 co, 22 South Itanoyer stroot, u 024 too Goa Will Ilogo Rotted, 10,060 TATILLum ICENNEDYi VV ATTORNEY AT LAW.. Offico in Volunteer building, Carlinla.., NXT J-; SHEARER, K" V T • ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office lu northoast corner of tile Court Homo. lffirelffi " " ATTQRNYIY:ANDCOUNpILLOR AT LAIY, trifthlitroot bolo - w - CheEitttiii; Car. Library, PLEILAIMLYRIA. . . , , . . . . . .. .• - ...- , , . . • . , . . ... Y- . • . ..._.. , . , ' • er ~..... • • 1 : _ . 1 . 0 - 1 st •,. L -.- ''l 'A .: 4 . . •• , • " • . ; . . ; . -,I 9 : .', , ,' , 1 - 3 t'i - /:'...1 , :117 ICT i .ti - , - , ° Ali •.'s I '', - ' . - . .. • • '•l. r ; • , • - ..„t ,•••., •. ; .. ,;,-:..:. , • .. , ' 7.' --•- 1- 1- -t ' ~ , . . 0 • i• , 1 : 07.1 - 4•••• ..„ • ~. ;di. .1 - :. • - :-: 1 '`'.° :, ,°-... ; • • -.. -,1 .„ •,. - • ~ _ . . : . ,• • • ~_, •+• • . -• • • , -...• • - " • . . . . • - .R• . ' . L D • . ~A . , . . ~. ... . . . , .. . . . ~. .., . . . , . . . . . NATIONAL HOTEL CARLISLE PA . •Tha—undersiened having Mime end entirely're. fitted and furnished td betel. is prepared to furnish good accommodations td all who dem•re to make it Chair home. A shire of }hg piVronage of the WT. Mending 'country lrevelliu3 public solielted Items large and comfortable: Table aiways Pup. plied with the heat T' "BENTZHOUSE," (Ifornier/y 1 7orntan „House.) • No. 17 . AND 19 EAST MAIN ST., Tho undersigned haylug purchased and nntirelv .fittod, ana furniahod anew throughout with flint , ago furniture, this woll•known and old establinhed otel. solicits lb 0 custom of the community and . . . travelling public. He Is well prepared to fornivb tirat-einss accommodations to all whu desire to matte a Hotel their Home. or pl.toinnt t•'mnnrar'y abed,. The custom from the surtoandiag country is re spm•uully solicited. 1 1'nu teoux nod attentive tier. v ants are engaged at this popular 'hotel, .. • ... - GEO. Z :BENTZ. Pc,orpet R. H. A . first class L:ivery Ie i•onnt Cted .11.1) the II ot.l tliouutuagerokut . of Mr. JO,B. L. Z^.4ItNEIL MO. 10apri1 09 ly TRAVELERS' GUM E. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD SUM 1•313 TIM 1 , 3 TA 13 . • Eight Trains (Daily) to and from Phila delphia and_ Pittsburg,' and Two Trains Daily to and front Erie (Sundays excepted), (I N and after Sdnday, May•l, V 137'0, Pas eng, Trainsof tho lb.untllvattis 30iip and 111111 11.14 Ocpart fi Ifitrrisburg and Al . I/ /It I'uiladrlp ra ant Pittsburg a Ottawa: 2 le--Philadelphia lixpress 11,..a llsirisliorg daily (exe lit )littels3) at 2 10 a. at.. and urrit es at Ili ft at 6 50 n. in. 5 2,--/lint I.lnalrnie Ilarrediarg hill (except Meant)) at 5 2 1n...111., and ills Ire. la. Wes villa a 9 35 a to. 71111 rte. tea.. Alt stlit hilly (except Sitielsy) at 300 p. ni. and arrhes at Ilarrisherg o I , lp. in. 11 12—Vieille Express leaves Flan latter,: dally dxrept 9 'inila39 ut 11 10 p et., and relives at Oh nit at 2 p. nu. 10 45 lei inttail lit pro , . leaves Ilan isberg daily at 10 45 I, 111 , and tllrlyits at' West I'lltlatletpltla st 3 111 a. at 250 600 born 1 1 :xertetllentrx it Isburgi 0.115 (saeopt Miiitilnyl at 2 50 p.m., itt.d ars It es et West Ittlalittplon tit 7 00 p in. Ilarrister g AcColll.ll.ltiaii,lll 11.1,4 Iltoreai dtlly (Sunday excepted, at 7 10 id ni., sell arrives arliart rise erg at 1 as p. tn. 55-111trrwtotrg teeittilatl n leaves Ilsrrix-• iverr nro-sttep,ter3—dutl--nrrir it at 0 50 p in. 0 —l,O et aster 'redo, via Nleunt Joy, 'saves iterislatra .1101 y (except -Iteilay) at B au a. in, tv - iti arrives at 12'55 p. w. BEM 4 15--Elio Fait 1,111. 1 r Erie, Iron,, daiiy vxrept Sunday; at 4 12 p. m , urrivhu al Brio at 10 a. in 11 1 —eincin nal f 118prusii lea, as Harrlio urg daily (except Sunday') et 12 10 a. ,as rivra at A itioinat at 4 5l a tin. it ad ai tiara at irlttoburu tat 0 2.0 a. tn. 2, 40—Piltalaird pro,/ A , iori a hat risburg. daily Oixi opt Sunday) at 0 411 1.1. 111., IlrriVf`g Altunna at d 11l 111 . , take/ arrival ut l'ltt,burg t is p. 4 10—riteillo Hyp , roaa liatodo Ilarriaburg dailu sf 4 10 I m.. mayor at Altai nit at S Tit, in. it, ,takes breakfabt and arrived at Pittaburr nt 1 50 p. — Fast 1100 Ito, rldlairg'dally (one , pt - asudsy-) itt 4 Id V. 111., army. at Altoona at 8 12 p. to , taken iiiipper and 314 ilvds at Pitt , urg nl lS 12 it at. iiall 1r.., Harrisburg dilly(ecropt Sun day) at 1 12 p - id., arrive,. al Altoona at 7 15 p. at., takr , xi., per and nrr ve. at Piltal . lll g at 1 :al a m. Way Pa.sen2or train 11,11 . 1,13 H11.1.1111.111,;', 50 pi yilinday) lit 7 45 a. An., itralvtia at Alt. ono at 20 5.0 y. nail lit Pitt laird at. 10 30 p. m. SAMUEL 'A. 111. I Eli, Supt 111,11 Ir Dlv. Pry nu: . Hartjalotirg 2511130, 18;0. =I ' DEADING R \IL ROAD. ; - '1; • summEit AKRANdEmEN - T. Monday, Apra IS, 'lB7O liTlecrTlTUNlC — T , TN7rrattt -- ttarsc , Tur - m - a North West for Phlladeipb.a, New T.•rk. Reading, Pott ovine, Tannntit. Aabland, Sham,*ln, Lebanon, Allentown, Easton, Ephrata, lAtle, Lancaster, On. robin, &c., se. 'rrnlkß loner flarrlKburg for N. York an follow.: 5.35 x.lO A.ll , I con, and 205 P. SI ronuect. . . . , log with similar tralan 010.ylva01A tl Ail Road. and arrithik at New York at 13.15 noun, 3AO. 0.50 ttnil 1000 P 8.. rePperli•ely. aleeplog Caro accom pany the 5 01. , oil. 12.3 a nom ,traina wit horit change. 11,1nrii1021 Ica vu Now York at a.. 00, a at, 11.00 noun. and 5.00 I' 0., Philadelphia at 815 1. 33 . nod 0.110 1. 31. Sh•opin g corn accompany the 0.00 8. . 0.1 0.00 r [valor hoot New Vora. 13411001 n e1 , out, liarrialtar3 Per Itlindittgi, Pottsville, Inlinai qua. 11ittetiv Ile. Aala laud, slutinonlit, Pi. a Grove. Allentown mud P.hiladelphin, at 0.10 A. 3(., 05 nod 4.10. r. siiippino at Lebanon and pr, lclpal any .4/111011S: the 4.10 P U ttatii ..004,01.11.g . 100 PlidadAlpl.lol, And (101,utublA duly. Flo, novo. and auburn, •38 Stibuyikillitind Susquehanna llnliro id, lenve Harris buro at 34'1 P. 31. Way Paenonger leaven nt 7 30 0, At., Corint;ct.lTA .1111 vididar train 00 Foal Penn. nylvattia recuroirur from [Wading at 6.36 P. 14..ntitpping at nil Ration/L. loinvePottnrille nt 610 and 1.1.0 A 31., rod 245 P, lierittlon at 9 30.,. /1.. Shautoltht at 6.40, and 10, 10.3..114'A111111110 trt. 7,06 A. .3i , and 11.30 . noon, Ts. madam nt 0,33. A Al .11 , 111 2.30 P x , for Philniltd9loB sod Now York. 1.01100 ilotteville via Schuylkill au dflusquehanna Roll Itond al a 15 A. II for ilinirlaburg r and 11.30 A2m. for flue rorr and 'riots). nt. . . Reading areeininodaLit n 'Credo, !wives Pottsville L h. 42 A 2.1 . pn6xnx itUtilin.' itt 7.30 A id., nrl iving it Philadelphia al. 10.20 A. n IL-turning, irarer Iphir al 5.1 h P Al . pasxinr Itterlln • nt 8.1.0 al, arriving ah Phttsville at 9.01 r I•oltatotru AC,0(11111.9,1031011_ AMON, corn at 0.2,1 ,a 31 returnltig 00 P. N. . . Oulu°lbla Itall , Road Train,. leave 14.10113g - 1a 7.15 A. 51., and 6.16 P M. for Ephrata, ',1115,. JAhra stet Columbia. .te. . • . Perkloutele hall Rond Tr:lll.ll,vp Perk Junc o:l tit 9.110 A M, 00 11 I,d 6.:30 P. urn- 196 15,v,1r chwookevillo o 1 e." 5 A 11 . 12.45 13 , alol 4.15 r m„ Con lot. ring a th nhu dui trains on Rending dell Road. Colubrool:dale Railroad truly, lease Putt •town At 40 A at., ono 6 20 P. 11.10 Ur. 16g. leave Olt. I' ant at ri oan 11:25 A. a.. ,connestlog with similar Intim on htrollog Rail It , ad. cherter Valley Railroad [rains lento Bridgeport a' 8.30 A a.. and 2.05 and 5.02 P. 11., returning, Janie Dooningtown at 6.20 A. 34., 12.45 not,ll, Bt., Clonnenilig With rimilar trains on lloadomr Rail Read. vlu r•ltudnyx lAnt vu New •York_ at 5.18.1 P. a. 00.0. At. and 3.15 r. v. (111 C 0.04 A. salts, only J.n Iteirlinn•) 1.1,0 Pol.lr villa al N.Oll A a.. (larrishurg at 5 81, A. Illand 410 P. m., and Reading at, 7.15 0.11 And 10U5 r. a. for rleburg. at 1.23 A. AI . lie NomYorA,anM'at 9,49 A. And 4.25 Pa. furrPhil.alelphla, • Canim tt Bunion, 801100 Aid Eneur. Niou Tickets, lo and from all poluts.at re lured tutor Ilaggagu checked through; lOU pound' , allowed tooth Passenger. EMI O. A. N 'CULLS, , lon up't Reading, Pa.,.Aprll 18, 1870. tJ BERLANI) V,ALI.;EY R. R ~ QP HOURS. ' - SUMMLIt ARRANGEMENT. On and ;alt' Monday, Mny 2. 1870, Poesongnr Truing will rot, dully, nn follows,(Hinlays epTilttni): EWE= ACCOMMODATION TRAIN leaves llarrisborg tl:On A. NI, Meclutulrsburg 8:35,C...114°9:1 t, Nowvllln 9;47, Sitlppelislonrg Clialuberaburg 10,44, (Deem. castle 11:10, arriving at Hagerstown 11:49, A. M MAU, Ti AIN. leaVea`Hasrlsborp. 1::15..p 11 ~‘lO ulintilemblirg Carlisle Nrwvillo 3: , 5, Ship! plunibui.g- ;H9. Cluinilanitinirg 4:20, Greencastle 4:50, .nrrblu r at hr:s, p M. EXPRESS. 1:1tAIN loaves Harrisburg; 4:15 r Mechanicsburg 4:17, Carlisle 9(17, Nowville 9:90, Blilp . punalnirg 6:17, .rrivlii.‘ at I ljami.ursbu 4 g 0:45, r M. A ii XED"rItAIN loaves Chttlaborslatrg SM. A 1,1 aril:l4lo4lu 1 1 :16. arriving at Ilageraown 10;00. A X. AN..O .1 N MAY • , A COOSISIODATIO9 TRAIN leaven Chan& rnburg 5100 A a, Siiippensburg saO. Ness villa C:Ou, Carllnle 0:83. Mechanicsburg 7:1.2 arriving at 7hirrinburg , 7:30,A M. • MAIL - TRAIN I .avers 117go,stawn 7:00 A u, (insult ensile 7:35, Chambetsburg 0:10, Shlnpetinluirg 8,40, Ntiwsillo 0:10, Carlille 0.40, Mechanicsburg 10.22 arriving nt litiriinburglo:ss, A. et.. ' • ' • EXITEBS TRAIN, leavna Ilogora:own 12:00 t. 4, CI runt:matte Chninlieralinri I:05. fillippcon:4l , g Is37,Nuwvilla 2:10. Carlini:: 2:60, filechanicobnig striving nt Ilnr,l2Gurg 8:80,n x., , • A MIXED TEAM lc:avem Hagerstown 3:06 r Cirennenatio 4:12, arriving nt Cloonbara burg 6:05. p Xr?" Making aloe co:lnactions at liar. intinrg r with train. to and Dom Philndtdpkin, York, Waal:Dig • tit, llaltimoro, Dittabdrg,lnnd'nll points Writ .! 0. N. LULL. 8051. Buporlotendont'd 011140, Chainleg: April 30, 1870. SP i.ISVdCLES; do. 1 1P''URE LIQUOR', TVIIVLo,g tfc ,NPwA4Qtr,O4 N. E..p/F Patii?yeT Ityd'Pomfrot fltradff • a taw doors south of lionteo wtord.)' • 1011009 tur'e Rye Wllleky, Beet COmmon Whisky, Pam Holland (Be, Ginger prainly, , Port Wino, Blierry Wino, Jarpnleti Rum, Ohampdgne. MIBIILER'B BITTHItiI• ,INHOPR'O , and HLABB'S ' .141:70 tarrhitii, =I HOTELS. N. W. WOODS, Prorfutur. FA-TII till) NV STW-A-41): W EST W Ali D ! • ? - hASTWARD ! i !-; . . • e • BEYOND I'IIESUNBET,I • - • •DY BEV.. B. r 4 'SAMPLEd Sltedowe o'er the Yale aro crooning, ...; • „ • And the son 'Moho to h's reit; '• • • Twtliglit ihaweiler Curtitne 't'oftly,! " Golden clouds hang In the west.. . r , Rushed the nolto of buoy labor,. - Toll Lee sought Its wcltqdroat;:•' , • Whitspetinitreeo nod murmuring ntroontioto: , Sweetly'ooothe .each troublvd breent. . • Valens :looting, and I'm drawing Near tbor i nnoot of mY.'llfer; Soon will and my weary Journey, Soon will ceaso all, toll andatrito Sbadow.Vor my patltarntedllng. " Xjartlily visions fade away; :Valeta, roll and oiikai,aia telling . Of on oodlum, orient day. Wei.,the nitetymonntaine biodenn 13ni i'vo,Walteyi long to 000 Soft its night do* &lie on meadowe, life kind bidding, "Cente to Ma Lot the porpio light (levelling, Stealing gontly up the sky, Beefs me on Its wings to meet him, le tilln death i "fit riweet to ilia: Jesum call, UM, Ond Cm going ll'hore the shadow. never come Now the thoart tel behind me, And I Lester!' to my home— To my Lome beyond. the menaet, Far beyond the day's decline, Where the glory is un'adlog, Where.the.golden portal.; abide THE AZTECS. EARLY IaSTORY. OF MEXICO Prescott, in his "Conquest of Mexico," has given us a most fascinating account of these people, and of their ancient em pire in the West. The degree of civili zation they had acquired seems Scarcely less' marvelous to the historical student now than to the Spanish invader in the sixteenth century. It has furidshed fruitful field for donjecture, and sur rounded their history with ,a peculiar interest. • This Aztec race was found in Mexico when it was first 'discovered by the Spaniards. Of their previous history but little is known, and that little bothWague and unsatisfactory, gleaned. partly from - oral traditions and pArtly from " picture - writing" - (hieroglypirics) ----- Theyure - sup posed to have emigrated from the'north to the Valley of Mexico, and to have, acquired many of their arth and-customs FrOin the Toltecs, a race who preceded them in the possession of the country. Tradition assorts that, having halted on the borders of the lake of Tezcuco, they beheld an eagle With a serpent in his talons, and. his wings outspread to the 'rising sun, perched upon the stem of a prickly pear, that grew front' the crevice of a rock. This circumstance they hailed as a_favorable..omen, "inOicating,the site of their future city. .-Nor were they dis couraged by the filet that the rock was surrounded by low marshes, half buried in water.. They erected' their dwellings of reeds and .inslics. upon piles sunk in the shallows, and' thus wars the founda- Owls of Mexico laid, the " Venice of the West." , Its ancient name was Tonoch titlam-but-it,was-afterwards.called..Mex, ice, in 11911 or of ihoir mar.god; From this small beginning they rap u_strpngtkand resources, ~ until, atthe time of the Spanishinva- . sion, their dominions extended from the Atlantic to the Pacific, and southwardly far into the remote corners of Guatemala and Nicaraug,a. • Substantial edifices of stone and lime' replaced titer first rude tenements, and upon the toyal hill of Chapultepec arose the palace of their monarchs, surrounded by vast gardens filled with fragrant shrubs and flowers Prescott describes, in glowing language, this beautiful Valley of Mexico when it first met European eyes. "Like a vision," he, says, "it broke on the eyes of the Spanish conquerors, with the picturesque assemblage of wa ter, woodland, and its cultivated plains, shining , cities, anti shadowy hills. Stretching far away at their feet were - seen noble forests of oak, sycamore and cedar, and beyond yellow fields of maize and the towering maguey, intermingled with orchards and blooming gardens ; for flowers, in such denihnd for their religious festivals, were even more abun dant, in this populous valley than in otfit;riiirta'firrctiMitilid - . --- Itt — the — centre • of the . greatbashr wore beheld the lakes, occupying then a much larger portion of its surface than at present, their borders thickly studded with toWns and hamlets, and in the midst, like some finnan em press, with her corona of pearls, the fair City of Mexico, With her white tow ors and pyrainid temples, reposing, as it' were, on the bosom of the waters, the far famed Venice of the Aztecs.' In the distance beyond the blue waters of the lake, and nearly screened ,by inter yening foliage, was seem a.shining speck, the rival capital of Tezcuco, and, still farther on, the dark 'belt of porphyry girdled the valley around like a rich set ting which nature hail devised for the fairest'of her jewels." No wonder the Spaniards wM•e struck with awe and admiration by the .evidence of a civilization in this new world, so closely resinabag that of the old Nor was this amasbinent loSsened whem,in their progress' toward the capital, they passed through , ho towns and citie. ad joining, and beheld the general aspect of -wealth and' prosperity that prevailed. The, Aztec 'Empire way at the zenith - of its glory. But alas! the - spoiler had' cane, the white man had enterod.this. terrestrial paradise..„..7al::#ll - gbt, -- Mtin: - tekumn, on 'the throne of his Tndiam ancestors, tremble with apprehension. ; ' At that time the City of MeXico was ' - supposed to contain,. at thelorintst esti mate, three thuhdred, thousand inbabb. tants._ Its well , constructed - Streets, in tersected by numerous canals, its temples and 'palaces, its,,totraced::gardens," and 'gloaming fountains—all betrayed' the 'existence of a race far advanced in civili zation, beyond any that' had hitherto been found in - America. And yet, what a idatheoMe blot stained that national .... ---- escutcheon; Their - altars were red with the blood:of human beinFs,; sacrificed in ; mad superstition tolho'sauguMary,idols they, wprshipped.,,,, Worse than Idle; the body , of the • *intim • afterwards' dressed, andservednp in banquet. - True, 'they Itere'ililinni,tO this 'oahriiliS'l repa4 Uy tho commands _of their religion, 'ruthor ; thnn the hightail of their But its effects not,, on that Recount,. the lose faifil. Tho shadorr'ef: superstition rested upon their haute and %homes, wrapping in its soinbre'Volii4 . Peasant and emperor alike ; the whole nation:grcnitiad'innientlf ;that' *cora bf tyrantly-i blind fanatiohiM:. • ' to ref/biting 'Wake ivitli an rdegroolof CARLISLE; PENN'A. - , THURSDAY, MAY 19, IS7O. zatioo Yet this. Aitce race was.yOsed in agricultural and mechanical pursuits, Understood mathematics and astronomy,. and even displayed a cortaip amount of social refinement. ' Tho Spaniards were ;amazed. at their akill 'irmvorking metals, and Ptescatt u states, that some of their 'vasessilver wore ; so large that a man could hot encircle them with -his . arms. They were hot . acquaint9d, however, in the u§o of iron, but its place was sup plied with an- al4 of tin and copper; -and tools made from this subetAnce, with the aid of - siliciolfrdta;'W - mld cut the - hard substances,' e/en - ,amethysts and emeralds. A. dark, transparent mineral, „called obsidian, furnished them with the 'material for swords, knives, and razors, and was also formed into tools, with Which they wrought the stones and ala ,basters employed in theirarchitecture. Soul*tired images wore• so Mnnerous that they aro said to compose the entire foundations of WO chthedral'in the great square of Mexico. • • A most remarkable curiosity was dis interred in 1700, the great, calendar stone, whose original weight is supposed to 'have been. , nearly fifty tons. It was 'transported by tate AzteeS over many leagues 'eagues of broken country, intersected by canals and water courses ; and, when we remember that they liad no animals of draught, such a feat evinced an unu sual degree of mechanical skill. Its in scriptions prove conclusively that this nation had the means of accurately de termining the hours of the clay, and the periods of the' solstices and of the equi noxes. Their mathematical and astro nomical knowledge was truly wonderful. They fixed the length of the tropical year with a precision unknown 'to the philos ophers of antiquity,sand many of their festivals were adjusted by the Movements of the heavenly bodies. . Their literature wasembodieffin hiero glyphical paintings, somewhat similar to those of the Egyptians, but far infe rior in.execution. By this means their laws,' their tribute their_retigionk rituals and traditions,' and even their political annals, were recorded. Some of tire symbols 'they used were highly amusing; for instance, "a man sitting on the ground" denoted- an earthquake. ThO manuscripts usually presented a grotesque appearance, covered over as they were with caricatut•es of the human figure, for the Aztecs wore - as 'ignorant of the perspective as the Chinese. .It was almo4 impossible for theunitiatt# to interpret their meaning, -as.the-leaS change in, the form or liosition of a tigurC - • - Of their agriculture we have not spoken, but it was an occupation held in the highest esteem. With 'the exception of theik-Soldiors-and. powerful-nobles, all of the inhabitants including those of the cities, cultivated the soil. Its dryness was obviated by numerous canals, and She Jpstruction_2l the woods that -ered-the country-was - forbidden - mrthat account.' The city of Mexico,- with its environs, where every-available spot was co-Cered-With-giry-arid—lninidant vag,etriii tion; presented a bearitiful appearance. The Spaniards were particularly de lighted by the floating gardens, "fairy island of flowers," that rose and fell with the goirtle undulations of the billows. Prescott thus describes their forratcon : " These gardens hail their origin in the detached masses of earth, which, loosening from the shores,, were still laid together by the fibrous roots with which they were penetrated. The Aztecs, in their pOverty of land, availed themselves of the hint thus afforded by nature. They constructed rafts of reeds, rushes, and other fibrous materials, which, - tightly knit together, formed a sufficient basis for the ,sediment that they drew up front the bottom of the lake. Gradually, islands were formed. two or three hun dred feet in length, and three or four feet in depth, with a rich stimulated soil, on which the economical Indian raised friji vegetables and flowers for the markets of Tenochtitlan. Someti'mes they were even firm enough to allow the growth of small trees, and to Anshan a hut for the, residence of the person thal hatl, charge of it, who, with a long pole,: resting on the sides pr the bottom of the shallow, basin, could change the positiOrY of htis little territory at Pleasure, which, with Itsfreight pf vegetable stores was seen moving like some enchanted i,land over the water." In their' domestic intercourse the Az tecs displayed an athmint'of kindly feel ing hardly to he expected from the cruel nature of their religion. PolygaMy was permitted, although seldom'• practiced; except by the higher' classes. • The Obli gations of 'marriage were as binding upon the parties as in any ChiiStiakeou'utry. Both Sdie'S • participated in their social festivities, which were often conducted on a. scalp of :Oriental magnificence. gold and silver vases,' spoons, and drink; hug cups, ornamented their walls, htet mingled with 's profusion of flowers. Nor were thou deficient in culinary skill'. Costly viands were elaborately'preparOd, aucl even confection s c and pastry.' Prdm : immtamong theirtnoats was the turkey, which was. Originally, found. inn kosice, and not O in Enuipe,,. name would, imply:. The repast • was - followed by , datioing to the, sound , of several Metre monts,.their MoiromontS being aceortipa, nied with: . pleasing, yet melancholy, chants. _the entertainment was.: con cluded by a distribution of costly:lms , • . outs among the, guests. In reflecting upon the Aztoo character,. wo are struck by its strangd inconsistini- 1 Mos : Wi th, a passionate loVo' for 'flowers was united a thirst for carnage truly helical; withthe ,arts and customs of,n, civilized poople, . the ..dobasing practices.' ;of a savage: ' :the only' eXplanatiOn to be found inthatroligiouS Saporstition which so blunts the nioul fucrilties ne to reoo l3, ' 'MTh to, What )V'oftlil 'Othersviso 'pe'vieWed with horror. - • . . :' ' As to the, origin, of, their eivilizatio'n," 'many theories. have • been formed and ably, discussed: The . mat 'plansiblo trace, fountainhead back ,to, Asia:; whhe others claim for it an 'Egyptian, and eveMa liebroWerigin. ; hut ;in Nyhatever light we view it," this AzteMrace is "cor tainly..onm oir'the Most remarkable of ;Whom history hno kepi's; re'ep r rd, 'and, in !spite pi'. theit' biooily !religion, invested witli•'a: !nom men' attraetion; • fi:(im the desPeratO liereisM'wlol!,'whiol) . ,the'y de fended their country, and 'the humilio , 'tiMilithat - afterWariliVreSbed their proud sPitits ' —,' • - 1 , '417 TVS BASTILE. - BigtitY:-One years-ago the ,Bastile -Was' destrtlYedby the people of Paris; -and its horrors laid opeirto the sunlight. • It had then-been standing nearly four hundred" years; though it bad been enlarged by frequent additions in the meantime. The Basal° was, a citadel or fortress, °reeled to defend the principal -gate of Paris, and the palace of. Charles the Fifth. It atterWards became a prison, where criminals of rank were confined, as well as innocent persons who were merely suspected of being enemies to the State. Strange to say, 'the very architect who planned the building, and who ex erted all his powers to make it the strong est fortress of his century, was the first State prisoner received into its horrid vaults. For years ho -lay in a damp' dun- , geon, where the sunlight never entered ; but he escaped at last, during 'a public insurrection, when tho Bastile was forced open by. he people, There were eight towers to'tho building. They were one hundred and,.twenty-nine feet . high, and had very hoayy double iron doors. Th 9. walls were twelve feet thick at •the-topi arid-nearly forty feet thick at the base ; All the towers contained cells, an4;tho windows of these were merely - slits:near the top, opening through the solid ma sonry, and guarded by three heavy iron 'gratings. There were five different kinds of, cells, but the dungeons in the vaults, under the towers, Were the most dreadful of all. They were dark, and swarmed with toads, spiders, and hungry rats. The floor, a' mass of slime .and mud, sentnp the most c'listrMisingi,. odors ; rough iron both' fa4Vire ' d`to the wall, and coveted with a few iron planks, was the only furniture ; and the entrance vas by two iron doors, each , inny„ 'IOUkS, bolts. The other cells were not muclibTittATVT some , ware, eight-sided, or octagon in shape ; some were small, and so arched that the prisoner could stand only in theoniddle ; some_haddloors_thet were rouuded_in all directions toward the centre;; and all were wretched and gloomy, suffocating in summer, and told in winter. The. Governor of .the Bastile had full control ol;Vi: its management., _Under him were a major, an assistant major, - a lieutenant and two hundred soldiers, whose muskets were always kept louded The jailors and turnkeys, the roughest and most barbarous men that could be found, were tools in the hands of their superiors ° . They cleaned the : rooms, :brought the prisoners their, food,' at- Tcinienheniin — a766, wore spies of the Governor, gild carried out his wishes. Each wore a huge bunch of keys in his girdle. Each cell had five keys. 41 prisoner would -genernlliarrive at the Bastile in a coach, surrounded by dragoons. Then they would lead _him into a room to - be ecaiched, and take from him every loose article he carried— papem, knives, or Whatar - ertini37 might bc—befure conducting ]lint 'to bis ect]. Three or four heavy.lituns arrN .opencrd,,hnis - pusherl•ini-the""tioors "9l ittt behind him, and the prisoner is buried in his dungeon, perhaps forever. If be should be tortured, or put to death there, no human being, .outside the prison, would ever know his fate: At first -- tho,prisoners wore suffered to have neither books, or writing materials, but afterwards these-were allowed them There were two meals a day of the most wretched kind, yet even 'for those the Prisoners were charged high prices. 'Woo to the poor wretch who ma le any , complaint He would have to suffer heavy punishment for the offence, and, perhaps, oven be cut off from his few minutes' daily walk in the courts, and Passages' of the Bastile. These walks were always closely' witched, and the guard had orders to tiro at once, on any Who were - seen making the faintest at tempt to .cscapo. one day a mysterious prisoner ap peared, whose name was kept a profound secret. To this 'day it never has been found out who -he was, or why he • was - put there. No man, except the Gover nor,-so-far-as is known ever saw his face, or heard his voice. lie always wore a mask of black, velvet, fastened at , the back of his head with steel springs. *No one ytai r ted upon him but the Governor, who attended when he ate, and when he dressed. When his linen was changed it was destroyed by the Governor as soon as it was taken off.. lie never removed , his mask for an instant,'and when he went to hear mass, which was-heard in the prison, 'the ,armed men avho wore present, were instructed 'to kill hint in stantly, in case of his speaking, or shoW ing.his face: For years - he remained in -the taiitilei;itiul altritySlore_ the „mask.- He died in the pri'son, and was buried at St.,PauPs. llti was evidently a person of high rank, 'probahly av,i-elative of the royal faniily, but - the mystCry - has never been solved. He was always attended by the Governor and major alone, was Areated 'with great consideration; died „very stuldenly,-(ind after his death, all his furniturO,paperS, etc., were burned, -and'his money and jewels molted down. When the Bastilo was destroyed by the infuriated mob in the French Revolution, it was hoped .',hat somothihg would be ,flisecivered in regard to this Man Silti7 -Iron Mask,..as he was called. • lint no. Not even the carefully kept - records . of :the prison which were discovered threw any light upon the mystery. lle was. merely mentio n ed as an unknown pries ones; but the fact is set down'that Ile was obliged, always,' to wear a mask of black velvet. • ,When the l3astilo was thrown open 'tunt ransacked onthat terrible June day, only seven prisonera wore found' in' its cells and dungeons. Ono, the Count do Solage,lad bean there, 'a close caPtive,' Over sine ei ho was n, little boy of eleven. Another, `named Tavernier; had passed 'tllty years in the_:Bastile, and when ho fou the doors of the prison open, and his follow-creatures, crowding. 'ln, eager to welcome IM was like ono making' ‘froM a thirty years',sloop. His mind was' dulled; 4,lMsuni3hino frightened and be wildered him ; he' sciircely knew what freedom meant. ' • • • .Thoy 'found records there of. one poor old man named'Lobat, ivliO had boon ar rested 'whim twenty-six , years old, and. !lad died in : ono of its vaulte r at theage 'of ninety. . , ~Dreadful &Sods wore done during the French Revolution;; hut ono bright spot' in:its *OW. is•tir ,. dostruotion of the' Anstßo. "No more shalt brolton•hoarted prisoners languish in its gloomy towers.. The place :whereAt stood so long is now ono, of the gayest and brightest in the city of Paris, and the famous cruel col umn marks the spot where the ernel old walls fell 'down. SlNEtar BY AMIE SIIIIN,BII. Simeon Sikes, silver-seller, sallying solitary southward, steadily seeking sat isfactOry sales, sauntered soberly, swing ing satchel, systematically showing solid silver spoons, sugar sjlovels, small-sized salvers, superior spectacles, sharp scis sors, snuffers, sowing shields. Sombre skies, sent soft showers, soaking Simeon's satchel, shoes, stockings, shirts, skin. Suddenly ' something seemed saying softly: "Sweet Sally Slater Simeon soon shall see." So-Simeon straight way • strode stupendous strides, seeking Sallie Slater's snug shelter; Roan saw sundry stately sycamores; standing sen tinel, shading said spinster's socidded. shelter; spied Sally sitting 'Bolus, sewing stockinet, slyly snuffing sweet-scented Scoicii - Tainfti------Stidden surprise seized Sally's sedate soui, seen noon's swift strides, Sally's sanctity somelmz: skedad dled shamefully. She, soniewhiirsensi tive„ shrank suspiciously, started sud denly, spilled some snuff, soiled stock inet; stuttered, stammered, said,: "Seat sir?" Simeon shivered, shook, said: "Smart shower 1" Sally said, "Slightly so." Siincon's shins seemed sore; so Sally sought some soothing salve; sup plied some soft-soled slippers. .Square. , . shouldered? slab-sided, spindle , 4lAed .. . -Simeon seemed sentrtnentally-1404 Soon "Sally - said Sold somertilVer;since Sunday, Simeon, ." Simeon scowled sav agely. Sally suggc,%l supper. " Sar-. saidr•Simatil; "something sufficiently strengthening ; some -strong stimulant 1" So Sally sent sirloin steak, sausages, sonic) soothing sangareo. Si mcon's stomach soon seamed satisfied. So Simeon smoked several sugars . ; sat -stupidly ;--soon-slept ;--snored- sonorously: Sally sitting, solemnly stitching, stocki .net shirts, suddenly sneezed. Simeon started, stared, seemed seared ; suspie,-. surveyed surrounding space. Shutters, shades seemed secure. Sally; stVing -sowing, said softly . : "-Some boilk slyly sneaking, sneaking Sinmon's silver ?"' Simeon, slightly susceptible, seemed suddenly smitten; sought side-; sacrilegiously sUrrounded, sancti• monious Sally Slater's slight symmetry ! She seemed somewhat suspicious, said : "sickish, soft !" Simeon, staving.. Big = nifleantlyoain : " Sweetest, surely soli tary souls slmpuld sympathize I" . Sally slipped Simeon, Sim. Scented- subdued. She seemed sorry; showed some -soften- . ing symptoms ; supinely sought Sim's sturdy shoulder. So Sim smacked Sally I So straightway surrounding she smacked Sim. Simeon said : "Set some suit able season." S.allysaid;. "Septemb,ur,r, Sim - , - shrugging Sim's shoulders, - said ; -"-scioner!"' Seripture surely Sanctions ,M U lt-stremsympathy "Say Snnday..?'2, To succuMtied I Several supernal seasons slipped softly, sweetly, some where. Seven small scions sprung suc cessfully, shedding sunshine—shouting, singing, soldom sick; squalling some times ; still sweetening Sally's solitude. So succeeding, summers serenely ,sped. Shneon still sells silver, supplying sub stantial subsistence. , I=2 tslCAintoucit moot; urn Woodsad:et Patriot. ArtEcnoTP. we THE, LATE GENERAL Trtotts.—Since The Cincinnati En quirer has seen fit to speak of the dig:: pity and decorum of the negroes who voted at the recent election in that city, we' are prepared for almost anything. It is passing strange, - however, that the Enquirer should publish .the following anecdote .of the late Major General Thomas. Has it not read the Demo cratic article on General -Thomas in Tic Yew Orleans Picayune? The press is teeming ‘skaiv4 . C949 _ Qfl, tile late c39ral 110111a8i 4 811Virirr, his remarkable coolness and braver - upon the battle field. There is no doubt that he was a wonderful man in that respect, and that few, if any, military heroes in the past have deservedly left 'greater reputations. ' A friend of ours whO somyed under the General, vouches for the authunticity of the following anecdote, the scehe of which occurred upon the dreadful and sanguinary field of Chickamauga, which.. was Bared by the gallantry and courage of Generals Thomas and Steadman: A United States regular regiment was subjected to Such:a fire that-it,brolce .its - ranks' and . fled—onicers and men iii wild confusion, In their rapid flight to the rear two'of the officers met General Thomas. He arrested their stampede at once, remark ing, "Gentlemen; your regiment is there, or ought to be there"—dosignnting, point in the line of battle in which the . dentlict was fiercest—"aml you will rejoin your commands instantly," and !the bravo-old soldier, in the midst of the deadly storm of iron and of lend, neither Moving to the right nor the left, sur , rounded by the dead and dying heroes, saw the odder Obeyed' to the letter. Throughout_the whole, - battle he- was constantly under fire and in the thickest . of the 'tight. - He was a man who would have been distinguished as a Marshal of the great Napoleon. EXTEMPORANEOUS PREAMING.-11l OHO of thelower counties of Maryland there flourished, in the palmy days of the "pecu liar institution," au old &whey preacher, who used no notes, and , prided hinisolf On his exteinporanebus effortS. His white neighbors called him " Doctor" . — ,p,titiO Which ho accepted, of course, with :ludierons gravity. • dt a camp Meeting . - which the "Doak" was hold ing, one, of the friends 'gave . liim, .as a t,V, this passage in the Psalms •of •periltry and harp'; I Myself 'will arise right early." ' The •"Doctor" adjusted his epeotacles,Lnnd read: • ",Wakg, I)oh:sic trtjo and harpl ; my arouo right airly. ; ;; -; ho Doctor ,wont on to .oxplain that Moms was a very darly ?leer; that he ;had araslo tree which grqwnegrino 'Window; aad ho was .wont . toylsO.inighty Oily and , hang:kid , ' harp on do peaslo troo,•lcK psalme.--Editer's'-Dratpoi.,- ire Harpers' MagOttiiivr Nay.‘, • JIM smlLErs FR 0 G MAIM TNiAIN'S MABTERVIECE • lie cotched a frog one day and took him home, and said, ho u calilated - to edu cate him ; and so he never done nothing for three months but sit-in his back yard and learn the frog liow to jump: And you bet he did learn him too. ',He'd give him a little punch behind, and the next minute you'd see that frog Whirling-in tip air like a doughnut—see him turn a summerset, and maybe a couple, if he got agood start, and come down flat footed and all right like a cat. .Ho got him up so hi-the matter of catching flies, and kept him in practice so constant, that he'd nail a fly every time as far as he could see him. .Smiley said that all' the frog wanted was education, and ho could do almost anything, and I believe him. Why I've soon him set Danief.Webster down hero on the floor—Daniel Webster - was the' name of the frog—and sing out : "Flies, .Dan'l,, flies," and quickeen you could wink he'd spiing up and shako a fly off the counter there, and 110 down on the floor again as solid as a gob 5,f laud, and fall to scratching the` side 'of his head with his hind foot as indilforet as if ho hadn't no idea he'd done any mor'n any frog, might do. You never ' seed a. frog so modest and straightfor'ard as lie was, for all he was so gifted. And when it came to• a square jumping on a dead level, lie could get over more ground at ono Straddle than anyanimal of his breed you ever see. Jumping on a dead level was liiistrong suit you unders'tand' and 'When it came to that Smiley would ante up money to him as long aS he had a red. 'Smiley was monstrous proud of his frog, 1 and well ho 'night be, for fellers that had traveled and been everywhere all saicl,that lie laid over every frog they seed,. " Well, Smiley kept the beast in a lig tle lattice box, and-lie used to fetch it down town sometimes, and lay for a bet. Once a rollep4-41, stranger in camp, ho was came-aeross-him-Witb-his box-old-says-: "What miglit-:ihie you'vo got in the Uox 9 " And Smiley, sorter indifferent like : "It miglff, be a parrot, or it might-be a canary, may be : but it ain't it's only just a frog." And the feller took it and looked at it careful, and turned it around this way and that, and says, : "H'm--$o 'tis. Wonlie . . oed for ?" "Well," Smilely says, easy,, and care less,__" he's good_ enough_forAune_.thing,, I should judge he can otitjtimp any frbg in Calaveras county.". The follow. took the box again and took another long and particular look and gives it back to Siniley again, and says Very deliberate : ".Well; I don't see nu pointsabout that frog that's better than any 'other, "Maybe you . don' t," Sm iloy said. May -be you understandings; -and - maybe - you - RIVIPrStand..IO.M.;-.lxm,y-bo.-yon-ain!t. only a amateur, as it were. Anyways, I've got my opinion, and I'll risk forty dollars that ho. can .outjump any frog in Calaveras county." And the feller studied a minute or two, and then says, kinder sad like—" Well, I'm only a stranger here, and I ain't got uo frog, but if I had a frog I'd bet you.' And thou Smiley says : " That's all right. That's all right. If you'll hold my box a minute, go and got you a frog," and so the feller took the box and put up his forty dollars along with Sini ley's and told him to wait. So ho'sat there a good while, thinking to hisself, and tuk the frog out and pried open hir mouth and took a teaspoon and filled him-full of quail shot—filled him pretty near up to the chin, and set him on the floor. Smiley, he wont out to the swamp and slopped around in the mud fot it long time, and finally ho keiched' frog and fetolted him in, and give him to .the feller, and says : "Now, if you are ready, set him along side of Datil with his forepaws just oven an't's, and I'll give you the word." Then heArgiAtleituit Nib fifi i t ` ud the fi;ller . touched up the frogs from behind, and thetiew frog hop ped off lively, but Dan 4 f gave a heave, histed up his shoulder—so like a French man., but it wasn't no use ; he couldn't budge ; ha' was planted as solid es an anvil and he couldn't :to :more stir than if ho was anchored out. Smiley was a good deal surpris3d, and he w,ts dis gusted, too, but he didn't have no idea what, the matter was; of cohrse. The feller took the money and started away ; and wheil he was going out of the , door he sOrterjerkedbis thumb over his. shoulder-this—way—at ljauiel, and says again, very deliberate, don't see no points about that frog th:it's any better'n' any other frog." Smiley stood scratching hisl&id and looking .down ou ,Daniel a long • time, ,and'at last he says: 'LI do wonder what in the nation that f:rtig throwed•eff for ; I wonder if there' ain't 'something the matter with him ; he 'pears to look mighty baggy somehow ;" and he kotohed Dan'l by the nape of the neck, and lifted him up and says "Why, blame my oat, if he don't weigh five pounds," and turned hint upside down and he belched `out mdouble landful:of- shot,- and- them he soon how it was, and he was the mad oat Man 1 Ile sot the frog down rind took after that feller ) but - he never • }retched k him. A WOUI.D.BE-AGILWAIA, taking his sent between Madame do She], and the reigning heauty of „the day, said "How happy I am to be thus seatedpihe tween rg wit and a beauty I" "Iris," replied Madame do Stael, "and without possessing dither." LADY .teaohor, addressing ono of the boys : do.you study very hard?" "I don't hurt, myself, very much I" " But do , you know you will Twat ho' President Milos you study Aard at something?" "You got 'oat I ain't I learning to smoke as hard as I eau ?" = • • • Tins boy-avho, When asked to what trado' - he would wish to he brought up, replied -9. will he a trustee, because ever since papa has boon a trustee we - have had pUdding atdinnor," waS a•wilpf child . iu his zeneratiou. -The .greateet sueeesies now-a-days are these . concocted with be dealing with- ether:ripple's OUR '0 R A .NDMO T.TIERS. • Gail Hamilton is writing a eerie of vivacious papers in. Harper's Pazar, called "Blotting Papers." She criti cises the grandmothers of the past in a very sprightly and justliishion i . • "It is simply impodsilble—listen lio - w, I. pray, all knights of high and lOW de gree, marching along thousand . scoria strong- great hearted gentlemen singing- ~ this song of woman's sphericity—it is simply impossible for any woman to db the whole Work of her household, and make her life what a woman's life ought to be. This is a rule that admits of no exception and no modification. The machinery of the family is so. com plicated and so'exacting that one woman cannot have the solo charge of it without neglecting other and equally important ' matters. The duties which, a woman owes to society, and to "the moral and .spiritual part of her household, are just as imperative as those Aich she owes to its pliyisical comfort. And if she alone ministers to the latter, the former must be neglected, and the latter will hardly be tharaughly accomplished. ' ." I know all about our noble grand mothers. I have heard of them before I think we could- run a - race with them any day. But if we cannot whose fault is it? If tho women of-to-day are puny, fragile, degenerate, are they _not the grandchildren of their grandmothers— bearing such constitutions as their grand mothers could transmit? It was the. duty of those. venerable ladies not only to be strong themselves, but to seo to it that their children were ' strong. A sturdy race should leaye a sturdy race. It . was far more their duty to give to their children ' vigorous minds, stalwart bodies, healthy. norves, firm principles, thaMit was to spin and weave and make butter and cheese all day. Wo should hate got along just as well with less linen laid up in lavender ; and if our grandmothers could only have waited, we would have woven them more cloth in a-day- than - their .hand--looms would turn out in a lifetime. But there is no royal road to a healthy manhood and womanhood. Nothing less costly than human life goes into the construction of human life. " Wo should have more reason to be gratefUl ,po our ancestors if they would have given up their superfluous indus tries, called off their energy front its per- . ishable objects, mullet more-of their soul and strength flow leisurely in tobuili up the soul and strength of the generations that were to come after them. Nobody__ is to blame for being born 'creak. If this generation of women is feeble, compared with its hardy and laborious grandmoth ers, it is simply Menus° the grandmeth ors put-so much of their vitality, their physical nerve and moral fibre, into their work that they had but an insufficient quantity left wherewithal to endow their _children ; and solhey wrotigkt us evil._ his grandmothers. All agree in award ,- inj,t them._praisc for ,hcroic_qualities.- They fought a good fight—perhaps the ! -_best they could under the .circumstauces . with their light. We would gladly over- look all in their lives that was defective and fasten our, eyes only on that which was noble. But when their fault is dis- tinctly pointed out as their virtue, w their necessity is 'exalted into our o .sample, when their narrowness is held up to our ambition, we must say that it Was fault and greed and, narrowness, grandmother or no grandmother. In deed, those excollent gentlewomen no doubt long before this have seen the er ror of their gays, and if they could find voice wthild be the first to avow that , they did set most too great store by chests of sheets, and bu reaus of blankets, and pillow cases of stockings, and stacks of provisions', and that, if it were. given then to live their lives over again, they would endeavor rather to lay up treasure in the bodies and brains and hearts of their children, where moth end mildew do not corrupt,' which time does not dissipate nor use .destroy, and whereof we stand in sorer need than of purple or scarlet or fine 1113IN0 IN THE WORLD.—Yon should bear constantly in mind that nine-tenths of uware, from tho very nature and ne cessities of the, world, born to earn our livelihood by the sweat of the brow. What reason have we' tlien to pressime' that our children are not to do the same ? 'lf they be--as now and then ime will be-- , endowed with extraordinary pourers of mind; those powers may have an opportunity of developing themselves; and if they novorlad thatopportunity, the barns is not very groat to us.or to_thom. Nor does it hence follow that the descend ants of laborers aro always to be labor ers. Tho path upward is steep auttloog to be sure. Industry, cares, skill, excel lence in the present parents lay the foun dation of, a rise under moro favorablo circumstances for the children. ..Tho children of these take another rise ; and by and by the descendants of the present laborer become gentlemen. • This is the natural progress. It is by attempting, to reach the top at a singlo leap that, so much misery is produced in the world ; and the propensity to mako such attempt has been" Oltorcsled and oppouragekbY tho, strange projects that,we have wit 'nessed of late years for . making the la borers virtuous and hapy, by giving thorn what is -galled education. The education I speak: of consists in bring ing up children to labor with steadiness, with, care, and with skill ; to show thorn how to do as many useful things as pos sible ; to teach them how to do them all in the best manner; to set them an ox ample of industry, sobriety, cleanliness, and neatness; to make alithese habitual to them, so that they shall never be into the contrary practices ; to lot them alivayksee a goild livingprocood froni labor, and thus to remove from thomtho temptation to, got at the goods of others by violent to fraudnlont mettns, and to keep far from their, minds all the inducements to hypocrisy ,and I '. Wilma, Cobbett. . - Two couutrpnen wont into a Latterly to buy one of- thorn a lint. They were delighted with the samplo, inside of thb crown of 'whieir inserted.a lookleg glaia !' What is this: glass for ?" said ono of.tho men, Themther . inepationt at sueli a display of rural ignoratioeox elaiMod "What for? . .why r foi• the than. 'Who buys the het to see how it-ilts him." GM ITOW ABOtTT ELAYAIT. A Methodist minister was on his tram, els through the west of Illinois, • twenty years ago. ,Illinois was a wild placO 71, then. He trave ed twenty mileS one day before coding .to a farmhouse. But there ho was re eived with hospitality. Chicken potpie ,nd corn dodgers com posed his supper; but to a hungry 'man -these aro as a truffled turkey. An old grandmother of the house was most profuse in her hospitality. Sh e pressed the potpie upon the holy man's plate until ho could oat no more. And, then when the family was gathdied around the great log chimney and its blazing fire, the venerable dame opened her mouth and thus spake— , "Al), well-a-day I it's rather a corn . fort to have a minister of the Gospel in these parts. •,It's twenty years agO now since I have seen ono on 'em.. rye - been reading o' my Bible all that time, and a waiter to see a minister to ask him a question about something I don't rightly understand". "Madam," answered the cautious min ister, "I am so tired with my long ride that I could notenter into a serious ques tion till have slept but if you will auk me to-morrow morning, before I set out, I will answer it- to the best of my The old thcly expressed herself satin- j. fled, and the cunning minister secived a " soft couch for the night. The next morning grandruawas up early, and hard at work frying slapjacks for the min ister's breakfast. The - last being dis patched, the old lady was Still in n ner vous fidget about her question, while the holy man's horse -Was. saddled and brought to the door. After adjusting his saddle bags, and shaking hands with - the family, he mounted his horse, and turning to her, asked : "And now, madame, what is your question? " Well, minister," said she, " yor know.how it says in the Bible, that arter Elisha-was made a ploplint; flre - fifiiVen opehod, and Elijah was taken up to I eaven in a chariot and , "horses . o' fire. . It's better , nor twenty years sin' I seed that ore in the Bible, and I have puz-led over it over since; and there ain't a soul round these diggins knows any more nor - I: But you're a minister o' the gospel, and ought to know all thorn things. Now,' what I Want to know is this : Did Die Lord take up Elijah right straight to heaven, or didu'll he go kinder slantendicaar ?" _ Histgyylias..notrecorded tlio-miuiet-ei reply. 'WANTED—A CHARACETIL—John Quill, who is rapidly making a reputation as a very funny-and quaint . writer,- ~tells, the folloWing story in The Sunday despa t ch : We recently discharged a servant girl named Emeline, and she wanted a cer tificate of good character. As she souldn t vead, -and we—desired to-bedion ost,--iiii-li&erliCri:lnr,following:---Ellie JriA, have skomed iltditer_brother,- - be cause there has been an Irishman sitting on our front doorsteps with a discourag ing,elub fora week past, and we have gone in and out through,the alley gate: Einelino is a native of Ireland. She has black eyes and black hair. When ever she comes home from a wake her eyes are blacker, and she has less hair by three or four handsful. Emeline is en gaged, and her young mauls the most successful assimilator of butter and sugar and milk that ever emigrated from Ire land. He is equal to any demand of this" kind upon his stomach. EMoline Ims been vaccinated, but it didn't take. ' This is the only .thing about Emelino that we know of that non't. take,' Spoons take, and hem stitched .haudker• cltiefs take; and she can nail more pillow cases awl forks within a given time than any other girl of the - SlllllO size and weight in this :land of the free. Her "Sunday out" comes twice a week, and she can wash stockings in the tea kettle more efficiently than any liviqg iler way of taking oars of 'a baby is to hold it upside down by the leg until it litirsts a blood vessel; and if she washes windoNiis she never sluices water down on the pavement unless min is going' by with a new ,high hat, on; then she slings &around by the tina - upful. line's most unpleasant pbculiarity is that ,she always b lotad the gas out when she goes, to bed ; but it will be better to this practice, in the hope that she will suffocate herself some She would be much more efficient as a gOdd quiet, docile 'corpse:- than 'as 'a servant girl. MAKE Sun.—What for?'Because if you do not you will never accomplish anything. Life is a fold into which har viist hands in great, numbers have been sent. - Make a stir! Swing -- your ,soythe' and cut down the grain. Use your hands, binding into bundles uli that is ready for the garner. Male a - stir The ground needs plowing for other seed. There is no room for idlers, and busy plo are sure to l 'inake a stir. Make a stir 1 Cut down the weeds that grow rank between the corn. , . Life isa battle field. Mahe, a stir or you'll never win a victory. :Only the ig noble, the cowardly and bate are afraid in this hottest of strifes.. -49etan and. .his hosts_ are ou the alert. .They prosy _ sore upon the poor 'earth soldier. Con. test, eagerly, every inch of ground over which you pass, prover ,yielfi. 6ccope in death.. •6o shell the Lord, Who I'vatnes each battle, crown you with victory' laurel. - • "Still waters run de pest," many Say,. "fl l . quieti don't make a stir t The oceans aro deep enough,. are., tliOy not ? They are never still, 'Wave after Wave disturbs the surface. They aro always making a stir. - Deep minds, pure and earnest hearts, will make a stir ; 'one, too, that the senses can appreciate. ' ➢iris. •J. S. WArianoit. Irish'officer, on seeing a beautiful picture.Aetched upon a wall, exclaimed, Itqa,tilne painting, but it was never done in America." "Oh, says friend,. "don't yen see it le on a Solid wall, and therefore must have been Clone thie country?" "Ah," replies ho, "I see that plain enough, but I only 'meant ilia man• who did' 'it was never 'in•' Ainerloa." Ttu oldest impq in tho world is said tobo printed at' Japan, China. • n hap made Its appearance weekly for ono thon 7 aand,:years; noatly-printed-_oa. a--largo shoot of silk. . • , la {TERM ADIATOt • $2,05 n year.