~, ~' VOLUME - LXXII: THE CARLISLE HERALD: • Publimited every i'burailny neerning by - W &-W ALLA C-E , EDITORS AND PROPRIETORS'. Vice in 101,111%. Hall, in rear qf ihr Court I low Terms--$2 00 per annum, in advance TES OF ADVERTISING 2 841 1 3 IN 1 4 441 01 3,c, ci I ,ci 2 00 3 00 4 01 7 011•12 00 '22 00 3 00 4 001 h 00 0 00114 00 20 00 4 00 5 COi 0 00111'00 10 00. 21 0.1 4 70 5 75 1 0 75;12 50,15 00; 01. 50 5 30 6 201 7 50,14 1,01.20 0.1, 3'• 00 o 50 7 50 4 50 , 15 50122 00 1 2; :01 7 501 8 511 9 50117 5012 50 A 101 '(2 8 5.1 9 50;10 50,20 0130 00' 2) 11l 111 00112 011110 90124 10140 00, 75 00 10 00 1 20 00.* 00.4,1 00'73 ,01(01.1 0, 11213 5 • 3 0' 1.. 3 50 Itn‘o'4. 4 OU 3 .5 00 6 '• 7 50 I year. I I 0 00 12 Ilnea 0011111 tut“ x lunre Prtr Executo.'. and Atltulnigtrit,s' 71an Poe Alitthorn' Noticom, • 2 11, • For Assignees' and similar Noflo , s, , :I 110 For yearlyCartld, not sanerd tngly t.is lions, 700 For Aonourrenten t0..03 vents por lino, oninis r . trseted for by thy year. rot Iluslorss roil special Notions, 10 Cents per I ill, Doubt, , gololnit fpl yeti Won en to rstrn. i - Notices of 11arriagen anti Debflts priolisbed fine. DARE AND DO. Dart thouv,lttalters frown ; Dar in words your thoughts express; Dnre to rise, - though oil east it oil ; ' Darn the wronged nod sesrnell . to tdr-s Pare from co.toin to deport; Niro tlio prirolean pool moomss Dore to I n cur it next your :wort 0, nr hon of Lore curs, : In 101,, Dare forrako what you damn wr,n D /re to walk in at:41110111 . 8 Wu); Dar/ to give whero : D /re Oa to prerept.e l'lbey Do What conu•irnn fokyi Da what rowon .ape ix hint; Do with all vice mind and might Da dut,. and no 1,1,7 t. 4 NOT GUILTY. In the Spring of IS— I was ( - died to Jackson, Alabama, to attend court, hav• ing been engaged to defend a yonng man who had been acensed,of robbing the mail. The stolen big had hrrn recov ered; as well .as the IQ4AOI, trout which the money had been milled. Tilr,e let- tern were given Tll9 fur my examination, and I returned them- tMthe attorney. Having got through toy pre liminaries -about noon, and as the ennui would not come oil before the next day, I went into the court in the afternoon, to see what was going on. TO first case that came up was one of theft., and the rtrietoner was a young girl n o t. more than seventeen years of age, named Elizabeth Medworth. She was very pretty, and .bore that mild, innocent, look which is seldom found in a, culprit. She had been Weeping profusely, but as she ftOnd so many eyes uj e her she be_ came too much frightened to weep any more. The complaint against her set forth that she had stolen I sloo from a Mrs. Nasby, tufa as the case went on I found that this Mrs. Nasby, a wealthy widow living in the town, was the gill's mis tress. The poor girl declared her in nocence in the wildest terms, but ei rcu in stalies were hard igainst•hei•. A hun dred dollars in bank notes had been stolen from her Mistress's room, , And SIM was the only one who had access there. At this juncture, when the mistress was up on the witness stand, a young muM came in and caught me by the arm. "They tell me you are a very tine lawyer," he whispered. "I am a lawyer," I said. "Then save her! You csrtaiely cam do it, fur she is innocent." " has she no counsel r • I asked. " None "that is good for anything—no body that will do anything for her. Oh, save her, and I will give you all that I have got, I can't give you much—but I eau raise something." I retinae(' a moment. I cast my eyes toward the prisoner, and she was at that mu neat looking at me. She caught my eye, and the volume of entreaty I read in her glance resolved me in a moment. I arose and went to the girl, and asked if she wished me to defend her. ,said yes. I then informed the court that I was ready to enter the caws, and was admitted at once. The loud mur murs of sattsPaction that ran through the crowd told me where the sympathies of the people were. I Milted for a mo ment's cessation, that I might speak to my client. I went and gat down by her niti, and asked hor to state candidly the whole case. She told me she had lived with Mrs. Nasky neatly two years, and had never had atik , ltiouble before. About two weeks ago, she said her mis tress had missed a hundred-dollitrs. " She missed it front her drawer," the girl said to me, "and asked me about it. That evening I know Naney - liuther fidd Mrs. ntsliy that she saw me take the money from the drawer—that she watehed'ma through the key hole. - Thou they went to my trunk and found twenty-live dollars of the missing money there. But, sir, I never took it ; some body must havo puttt there." I then asked her if she suspected any one. "I don't know," she said, " who could have done it° but Nancy. She' has nosier liked me, because she thought I was better treated than sho. She is the cook. I was the chambermaid.", - She pointed Nancy Luther out to me. She was a stout, bold-faced girl, some where about five and twority years old, with a low forehead smalloyes, a pug nose,, and thick lips, I _, caught her glance at once, as it rested on the fair young 'prisoner, and the moment.-1 . -„ tooted the look of hatred which I read. there, I was : CoilVineed that she was rogue. "Nancy 'Author, did you say the girl's' name was ?" I asked, for it new light had broken in upon me. Yes, sir.". I loft the court room and went to the prosecuting attorney and asked him for the letters I had landed him—the ones that had been stolen ft:Om the mail-bag. Ile gave them to me, and having selected ono I returned the rest, nint told him I would see he had the ono I kept before night. • Mrs. Nasby rammed her testimony. She said oho intrusted We room to the prisoner's care, and no ono oleo had acme thorolovio hersolr. .Then sho do scribed ,dbout 'the iniAing 'money, and 019sed by tolling how she found twenty 'five dollars in the prisoner's 'trunk. She 'eould swear. that it wah — the 'identical money sho had lost,lin two bins and ono five dollar:note. - "Mrs., says I, " When you first missed the money, had you any rea son to holieve that the prisoner had taken sir," she anovroiod. ' • - ~ 41t. • • 1.% ltPh, "Had you ever-detected her in any dishonesty?" "No, sir," Slruull you have thought of search lug her trunk, had not Nancy Little' advised and infn•iued you?" "No, Mrs. Nasby d:ft the stand, and Nancy Luther took her place. She came up With a bold front, and cast a • defiant look upon me, as if to say : "Trap mo if you can." She thou gave her evidence as follows : She said that on the night that the money was taken she saw the prisoner go up stairs, and from the shy manner in which she, winkt up, she suspected that all was not right, so she folic-km' her " Enz. drith went. to, Mrs. Nas by's room and i!lq the dour arter-hor. I stooped down and looked through the keyhole, and slce, her take the money and put it in lice pocket. Then she stooped down and picked up the lamp, and as I saw she was coming out I bur- lied away." - Then she wont on, and told how she informed her mistress of this, and how she proposed to search the girl's trunk. I called?ifts. Nasky back. " ton said that no ono save yourself has access to the room," I said. "Now couldn't Nancy Luther have entered the room if she wished " Certainly, sir ; I meant that no one else had any right there." " I saw that Mrs. Nasby, though natu ly a hard woman, was somewhat moved by poor Elizabeth's misery. " Could your cook have known, by any means in Your knowledge, where your money uas r " Yes, sir ; fur she has often come to my room when I was there, and I have often given her motrey to:buy provisions of market men who happened to come .along midi their wagons." (rue more question : have youdin)wn of the, in is.nier having used' money since LILL:: wah stulim 2 ` \u, ,ii 11,1 W called Nancy Luther back ; and she Lean to tremble 3 little, though lift 1 ek wa, as'liol,,Land defiant as ever. " Miss I.lllber," said I "why did you not i!j,J.'ortii your mistress at once of what you Karl seen, without waiting for Ler to not: about 'her money. • " Bee:luso I could not at once make up :Hy ndntl to expose the poor girl, — she missver‘etl promptly. " You s.ty you toolmil through the key hole and :a:s her take dm money?" "Where did she place tho lamp Nylien Alm (rid sw.'" "On the bureau." "In your testimony you said she stooped down when she' picked it up. What do you mean by that Tlr• gild hesitated, and finally she said lie did not mean anythin,l, oily that picked up the lamp. " Very well," said I, "how long have you 'wen with Mrs. Nasby ?"- "Not quite a year, sir." " I low much flocs sho pay you a week?" "A dollar and three-quarters." "Have yon taken up any, of your pay since you have been there?" "Yes, sir." " How nineli?" I don't. know, sir." " Why (but't you knout " I lowshonld I ? I have take❑ it at• different times, just as I wanted it, and kept no account." Then you have not laid up any money Ninee you have been there?" "No, sir, only what Mrs. Nasby may EMME " Will you tell me it you belong to this State'.' "I do, ,ii " Iu w hat to .vu She hesitated, and for a moment the hold In di: forsook hee: I next turned to NOM .Do you .ever take a receipt from your girls when 00 pay thorn th , ,,tp, "Can you send ,and got one of them MEM Las told you the truth, sir, about the payments," said Mrs.. Nasby. I don't doubt it," r replied, " but particular proof is the thing for the court room, 50,., if" you can, I wish You would procure thb receipt." , She said she would willingly go, if the court, sabi so. The court did say,so, and she ll.ir dwelling was not, far off, and slit ! soon returned and handed me four receipts, which I took and exam ined. They wore sighed in a sating, staggering hand, by the witness:, "Now, Nanc'y Luther," I said, turn ing to the wittiest, and speaking in 41, staril tug tone, at -the fl - one time looking her sternly in the eye, " please tell the court, and jury When: you got the seventy-live dollars you :font in your letter to hulr sister in Somers?" At this she started as though a volcano had burst at her foot., She turned pale as death, and every limb shook violently. I..vNited until the people:could have an opportunity to see her emotion, and then I repeated the question„ "I—never—sent—any," she grasped. ," You did I" I thruidered, for I was excited. _ " didn't she faintly murmured,' grasping &ho railiug , by lair side fur ISiipPort. "clay it please your honor and gon t non of the jury," I said, "I came hero to dofond a man who was arrested for robbing the mail, and in the course - "of my preliminary .examination I had, access to the letters which had bethi torn open and robbed of money. When I entered Upon the case, and hoard the name of the witnogs , pronouncod, I weal out and got thiS letter, whidli I -now hold,- for I remembered having soon.one beaang the signature of Nancy Luther. 'This letter was taken' , frord the mall bag, and it contained soventy-iliro dol lars; and by looking at the posG Mark you ,will observe that it was, mailed the day aftor,tho oils hundred • dollars_ Waco taken from .)Irs. Nasby's claim., and is directed to airod.'s Luther, Somers,- Montgomory county. - As you will .ob servo that one band wroto the linter and signed the receipt, and the jury will also so observe. ,Aul_noW only add that it is plain to son how the hundred dollars were disposed of. Seventy-live dollars were soot .off for 'Mae keeping: While the riiMaiiting twenty-five dollars wore placed in the piisonor's trunk, for thp' purpose of covering the real criminal. I' now loavo my' client's case in your Laudon .• CO &. The case was given to the jury im mediately following their examination of the letter. They had heard from the witness's own mouth that she had no money other own, and Without leaving their seats they returned a verdict of "Not Guilty.'l I will not describe the scone that followed, but if - Nancy Luther had not been immediately arrested for the theft she would have been obliged to seek ,protection of the officers, or the excited people would have t 4 , maimed her at leas irtlioy had hot done more. The next morning I - received a Jeotc, handsomely written, in which I was told that the within wasThut a slight token of the gratitude due me for my effort in behalf of the poor, defenceless maiden. It was signed "Several -Citizens," and con taitiod ono- hundred dollars. Shortly afterward, the' youth who first bogged me to take up the case,' called,upon with all the money he could raise ; but I refused his hard earningsohowing him that I had already boon paid. Before I loft town I was a guest at his wedding— my fairocliont being the happy bride. • TuE SMOKERS. The great tobacco controversy con tinuos to agitate Great Britian. The Dublin University Magazine for Septem bOakes up the subject, saying by way of ';'llP - Ology, "Our desk, is littered with books relating to tobacco," One thing seems - to bo sufficiently evident : Few habits are more exlionsive than the habit of smoking. Tobacco is shown by official figures to cost more than bread in Oermany, llollnnd, the 'United 'States, and England. The total'expenditure in the last named country in 1868 for tobacco and snuff was e 11,08,289. Those figures are important, but two, things should he riimombered.-,The first is, that all aggregates of expenditure by to nation aril startling. It would be the Same with the cOst'of countil's buttons or pills, or friction matches. The costof ,tobacco is not large if its use be in any way . serviceable. Is it? One writer sa3's that it is not. It is a poison. ." It may call henbane, - he says ; "cousin,. and claim kinship " with belladonna." But even this fact is not conclusive, because there is poison in broad or in most other articles of food. It is unde niable that there is poison in to bacco, but it is not a poison which acts'rapidly and fatally, and it is only in individual cases that it acts perceptibly at all. 'However, if the use of tobacco does Pro- duce morbid affections of the body, it is well that everybody should know it— oven the ladfes, sin.q,,e this Dublin writer affirms of his own knowledge, that many ladies are in the habit of smoking Now let it be distinctly understood that the 11,e of tobacco produces lOC ?IMO dorotaxy ! If we may judge by its im pressive name, this must be a frightful disease to have. 1t may he explained t that, "lecomotorotaxy" means no more and no less than a general paralysis of the nerves supplying -the Muscles. Therefore, good sir, if you will puff your meerschaum tilled with " Lone Jack.," or "Corporal," in a state of ignition,,, understand that you may be siezed with locomotnrotaxy, at any moment, and rendered forever incapable of figuring in base ball matches and other games implying the possession healthful biceps. But this is not all. If you will smoke you mustAjust make up your mind to submit to one or all orthe following dis eases : Giddiness, sickness of 'the stom ach, dyspepsia, diarrhea, anzia pectoris, liver complaint, heart complaint, pan creas-complaint, nervousness, amaurosie, paralysis, apoplexy, Atrophy, deafness, nausea, ulceration of the gums, cheeks, and mucous nipmbrance of throat, hys teria, hypochondriasis ! There, reader, only read that and go on blowing your cloud, if you can! You Will? Of course you will. Wo might fling a whole medical dictionary of the largest-size at your head, and it would notreform you. We have noticed the fact that men, as a mass, are ii - ot to 'be scared out of their little indulgence by scientific terms. " It is the excess, you know ;" and what is peculiar is that nobody ever' has tlie excess. Smoke away ; but wo tell you frankly that, according to the writer we have quoted, you will „Kaye "shocks at the epigasttium."—N. F. Tribune.' ONE THING d7' A TIME. . groat many things may ho well done, provided that only one thing at a time Is . attempted. Many active,, energetic people suffer their lives to waste, simply hecause they aro without method of any kind. True, they aro busy, and fussy, and fidgetty, .and full to the bursting with all manner'of plans and projects ; but while agonizipg ,with the pains of parturition, they seldom bring any mat ters of importance to birth. , They should recollect that good deeds are not produocd in litters, but aro laid down on a solid, basis, alter the order of, steps ascending toward the summit of a pyramid. As a rule, the first thing to be done is that of immediate, presoa .duty. It should bediffie to-day, and not be. post poned until to-morrow. It should be done now, and not when ono feels more like trying it. Tho body is lazy. The mind is often sluggish ; but to will is to do. Tho will hoe hnporial force in Men of will, who firm* resolve to rule thorn solves,. and sttiftki;l'-ei , they all, the circumstances around thorn. , Vow things worthy of being done can bo accomplished without hard: t work. Shiftless - people • aro: cowardly.. ',They shrink from contests with difficulty of hardship. They run from refuge to 0 1 - 0 quiokriands of idly hope. . Frill of wishes,', they imagine that,. sinnoliow;luck will 1111 their hands with benefits. And so they dream and wonder how others get along, and why they do not. Life oozes thitnothiug but stag-. nation and decay ter all such, cowardly spirits that clam ..not compote— for the prikeS of diligent industry.• • Hard work grows Miss , and becbmen a pleasuro to all Who have felt the stimului of its medical' charms. Ono ' O ak well done makee the - next lighter. The ert,`. clout 15yraousan, who began by, carrying the calf, found himself able , to carry the grown .flup bullock with ease. "One thing:at a time, dint those makdo life pleasant and fruitful, Wit smoked up in this oountry,bet year, $10,224,00 worth of tobacoo. • ._. . . . . . . . . . . . ..., . . . . , . . . . .. . . . . . :• ; .;,;:.: i . . ..,.. • ~ . L l-4 ...,,, . , ~. , ~,.,• fa ' . ~....: : : , ' L" ' ;_, :. -- , : i i, -. ..:..i. - .. • ... CARLISLE, PENN'A., THURSDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 8, 1872. THERE COMES A. TIME. There cameo a [lmo when we grow of d. And 111,0 a sunset &Aril the sea, 'Slope gradual, and the night wind cold, Tomes whisperlug_.uland-chilllngly; .- And Woks aro gray • As winter'e day, And eyes of saddest blue behold the leaves all weary drift away, And lips of faded coral say,— "There comes a time when we'grow old." There comae a time when Joyous hearts, Which leaped as leaps To laughing main, Aro dead to all waye"mernory, As prieoner in his dungeon chain; And dawn of day Lath passed away, The moon bath Into M.A.. rolled, And by the embers wan and gray,\..: I hear a roles in whisper say,— " There comes a lime a" tea WO grow old." There COMON Will,me when niaultaad'a prime le shrouded In thelnflat of years; And beauty, fading like-a-dream; Bath passed array in silent tear./; it Aml then, how dark !- But, oh, the spark That kindled youth to lutes of gold, SU I burns with clear and steady ray ' And fund affections, lingering There conics a time when'we grow old." Thorp comes n time when laughing spring And golden eummor eceses to he : And we put on t,ho tutttunn roho To tread the lest doolirity But n..w the iSZI:o With roiy Beyond the sunset we behold, Another dawn with fairer light ; While Welchers whimper through the night, There IN n time when we grow old." [For Tim ANCIENT CARLISLE. IVAucrlutio, February 1, 187:3 MESSRS. EDITORS :--liesu'rning whets I left off last week, I have to aay that .I:[lzch's tavoro, indicated to the traveler by the sign of the lamb, was one of Car lisle's' most reputable- hostelries. Mr. Ulrich himself, in his best days, was a valuable citizen and a useful public serv ant. As a host, he spread a bountiful table, and order ruled in his household. J.lis family were above the average in character ; Mrs. liliich being a landlady of great notability, and - her daughters, young ladies of uncommon excellence. At no public house iu Carlisle did trans ient lodger or permanent guest find more comfortable quarks. Among Mr. Ulrich's boarders, used to he a jolly midshipman, familiarly called "Jack" by his intimates, with - a sur name equally suggestive of the sea. He spent a long furlough in Carlisle, and during his stay made many friends. He was a felloW of infinite jest, and was liked by every one ; and no wonder, for a more genial, jovial gentleman, never trod a quarter-deck or—to use one of his own phrases—"doubled the Capo of Good Horn in the Month of Juvember." It used to be pleasant on a Summer evening, to sit on the broad bench in front of Mr. Ulrich's, and liken to the two Bayloya, father and son, advertising their proficiency as teacher and pupil, in the art and science of music. The elder Mr. Bayley's specialty was the Kent Bugle, . though he taught on other instruments, and was a com plete band master, having served in that capacity in Prridve's famous military school. His son William, who was then but a boy, played on the picolo flute. He has since become master of many in struments and a Unions musician, ex celling his father both as performer and teacher. Mr. Ulrich used to give Sunday 'sour crout dinners, which were quite .cele brated in their day, and to which a fow select outsiders wore sometimes invited. Thu savory dish, flanked by unctuous pieces of chine, and served smoking hot, was declared by the gourmand; food fit for the gods, and too good for mortals wlni could not appreciate it. Albeit, not an especially digestible dish, it was considered perfectly harmless, when floated through by the yin die pays, known in common p.trlance av Motion galtela whiskey. In front of Mr. Ulrich's, on market mornings, there officiated an, old public functionary, of the name of Thomas James, whose business it vl , as, as town crier, to kuock. r .flonin pots and pans and_ old chairs to the highest bidder. llia manner of ringing,.his bell—accompany lug eaelt stroke with an inward " knock" of his right knee —u.iod to,be occasion of :mirth and. 'matter of imitation to idle boys. - - Mr. James left as a legacy to the town, three children, the youngest of whom was a flue stalwart_ looking fellow,.', and the othar twO wore such .woll.known public characters, that to speak or them flora would be super fluous. Opposite Me. LlMeh's, diagonally on the loft, were the house and store of Mr. James Bredin, 'a gentleman who pros. pored in his moroAntile pursuits and bought valuablo town lots ; among them the celebrated apple and peach orchard, of the 'thou lately deceased, Mr. John Craver. This , orchard, was situated about a quarter of n mile east of BAT._ rack's Lane, and was celebrated in its day for the abundance and excellendo of its fruit„ TIM pualli troes were largo and healthy; And bore a heavy annual mop for many successive years. At the roar of Mr. Ilredin's and back of the house once occupied byr Doctor Gustins' lived , for a while, and kept shop, a man who had a sotiambitiMis to be a fifer. Whether it was from-sheer hivo of the instrument, or from a desire tonmulato Jim;Vogt, and march around 'with Sawnoy :Mitchell a nd his hopeful' brother-in-law, ~Too I cannot say, but certain' it is, that for a whole ." consecutive year" as Artemus Ward would say, George vexed, the air, and : worried the public ear, trying to; learn Yankee 'Doo lie, and had not yet fully succeeded whoa this deponent took leave of the borough. • •Tho stono house opposite idr, 13ro din's,'wns rit: ono limo• occupiottbytho "Agricultural Bank," of which Mr. John Bodon,• .brother to Congressman An drew, of the same name, was cashior. It was aftorwards convertmhinto a 'pub- - hc house and 119 such has reinained to this day. Itaelc of that was the liense And office of 11Ir. Archibald - garnsey, an' ex cellent and well educated old gentle Man, who served the public in the *capacity of .Tnetice'of th'ePeace. Next to Mr. Rate soy lived Mr.' David SMith, boot and shciehmkor, a man who beth a&Fneollanto and oltizeh,:stood• high in imbibe favor: De hid two sone, spirited and worthy yonnk.rnoni-isno of whom early doVolbped a taste for art, and finally dovotod him eulfCo miniaturepainting as a profession. 110 was a, co-tomporary,.. and . a while, a rival' of Mr. - Thomas OM cer, , though/ I believe -he never reached , the celebrity attained by that gifted young artist. Mr. Offi cer, by, the way, was one of - the, last miniature painters of any eminence pro.. duced by this country—the daguerreo type and photographer having come in to sweep.away the entire profession. North of Mr., Smith's, on the west side of the square, stood a little brick build lug which, at the time I am thinking of, was occupied as a Doctor's office, by ono of the most talented and kind-hearted men that- ever, nr-that region at least, graced the medical profession. As a gentleman, Dr. Alfred Foster had no superiors ; as-a physician, there was but oue_othis associates who wag equal. He was withal, a man of varied infor mation and extensive reading,.;" I have just finished this," ho said ono day, ; holding up Vol. XIV of the Encyclo pedia Americana, and lam .sorry it has come to an end. I hay& read every volume as it came out, and it has afforded me-a deal of entertainment." North of Dr. Foster's office, at the corner, was the house of Mr. Jack Miller, a quiet gentleman, who dealt in hardware, and whose honriehokl, con stituted a branch of ono of tub oldest and-most respectable family confections in Genial°. Opposite Mr. Ulrich's, diagonally to the North, stood the old Episcopal' church, in which Dr. Campbell, aftAr wards Mr. Woodruff; and-after him the Rev. Professor Spencer, officiated as rec tor. It was a forlorn old structure, in strong contrast with the well-propor tioned and massive edifice worshipped in by the Presbyterians, and showed how feeble most have been the church of Eng land element in that part of King George's dominio'ss, when Pennsylvania was yet a colony. After the resuscitation of the College, the church, under the auspices of err. Spencer, took a fresh btart, and erected a new :building, which; though . not a model of architecture, was a groat improvement on the shapeless old pile Which it superseded. Opposite Dr. Campbell's church, on the same diagonal' line, was a three-. storied brick, owned by the Carlisle Bank, and occupied Piucknoy, the cashier, who, it will be.remembered, preceded in that office, Mr. Andrew Mc- Dowell. When Mr. Pinekiley and his family moved back to Baßimer . % which they did after a short stay, the 4welling, parker. the building was occupied by Mrs. Hunt as •a holtrding .house. Here . Professor Vetbako stopped wbo ho first °mho to town, and hero sojourned dur ing his 'brief career as minister of the Episcopal , church, the lamented young Woodruff. Opposite the bank; in " Galbraith's corner," old Mr. Speck, sometimes called Doc tor Speck, kept an apothecary shop. Back of this in the dwelling part of the building lived Mrs: Galbraith, a lady venerable alike in character and years, with a genettology running back into the early annals of the.county, our lf f amily with which are connected sor, 'if the brightest names of State. Passing from Mrs: GalbraitleJ north westwardly, we come to Carothers's corner, the. stage office and chief pub lic house of the town. Though a sunny nook it used to be shaded by . a row of locust trees, under which, on any fine day, might be fopnd a group of Car- lisle's moo of leisure—a class' which iu number, and devotedness to their call ing, was not exceeded by that t,f any town of twice the size, north of Mason's and Dixon's line. Mr. Carothers's house was thastopping place for distinguished travelers, and' hero it was that Mr. and Miss.Olark, the celebrated dwarfs of 0 fifty years ago, made their home while giving concerts in the town. They were charming. singers and their concerts, which were given in the County..thill,ivill be well remembered by some of your read ers. The. duel) of "Sandy and Jenny" which they introduced nud popularized, was all the rage for awhile after they left, and the tune of it, years after wards, used to lie reproduced by " Tom Watts" and "Math Alexander" when those - two worthies happened to ' . meet, which they often did, at :the Meeting House pump. As whistlers, rinn and Roub had no peers. When Mr. Carothers retired,from pub- lie life, the good will and custom of his stand were transferred to his brother-in law, Mr. Jamo - s Bell, who had taken.tho house provionsly,.occupied by-. Pogle, at the corner of Main amt Pitt streets. The earothers'S prOperty passed intoithe .hands of Mr. Thos. C. Lane,lind-Wac by him used as a. store for the sale of dry goods and grocories Mr. Lane was a gentleman of high tone, aria was asSisted in his business by clerks and -salesmen, of corresponding characier: The four oetitions of the square, around which I have been making a circuit, were separated from each otherand from the streets by rows of posts of about 4,1- feet.in height and 8 or 9 InChesin (Berne , tor, rounded at the top and painted white. The object of Oen) posts; judged on the Josh Billings 'principle of the 'uses to whieh.they w i ero put, seems hardly suffi cient to have justified the 0.K1131130, " mewl," says Mr. Billings " has four fogs, tow to stand onto and tow to kick with." Eio those_ posts had two 'uses, one for men to lean against and the other for boys to jump over, and certainly no eqUal num— ber of posts ever sorynd a town in thei) , two respects inure faithfully. "-. "Resuming my -ramble up the street, the 'first building above Mr. Miller's was the. tailor-shop of 'Mr. Corm - Lek•Mc- Manwi; a small frame tenement, rinbArk able for nothing except for the man• who occupied it ; - who was no ordinary: per son either, professionally or a 4 a man and citizen. In feet Mr. ille4antts was a good deal aboid the 'aViiragti'driiit notempuraries, both in inealianical 'skill and 'general intellig,ectoe; as-a tailoi• - lie was to' Carlisle what Watson was at that time to philladelphla ; and although a few "of our iiiguieites used ter boast, that they ' wore •nothing not made by Watson,' the &Oat majority of the' well 7 dressed' Potiplii 'of the place, Wore 'in- debted fotltheir Prosentableappparance, to the artisilo shaar.4 'of Mr: Cormaolc McManus:. lie was a facetious' man' in ilia way:and his"bo ne used. to be much quoted by his customers, as' for instance r "Hetes 'got" down to 'bir a' lawyer'," 'as Cormaeir Mollantis said;, when' his eldest sou brit the' !knell for the bai." le not deadly heaUtitbl, but she's. killing,genteol," as 'Cormaok • . II1I ; , a • 7 •• Ih' t 44. ➢foManus said, of a well-known lady." There was another old citizen of the same family name Mr. CharleS _ McManusi_who..osuilt_the_OoneThOuse on East street, and whose name bearing the date 1800, may be seen handsomely engraved on a slab over the front door, but they were not related. --These- two gentlemen were at the head of the small religious' . society .toNwhieh they belonged, vi and of which, they` at that time, the 'most intelligent representatives. ,Next to the shop of Mr, McManus was another, which, when I fist knew it was "run" by a man rejoicing in the name of John Pfarrengaren, who used to shave his customers in the morning, and then sit down inside of his open' door, and amuse himself and the boys outside by playing_ with cup and ball. Mr. Pfarreugaren was succeeded by Mr. John Peck, one of-the old vicinities of Carlisle, who in complexion might be said to take the shine off the '"ace of spades." Mr. Peck was, in his day, one of the best and blackest of men. It used to be common in the early days of anti-slavery, for op ponents of that cause, to ascribe all merit in a- colored man to the admixture of white blood, but John Peck was a stand ing. refutation of this sophism. He- was a negro of pure African descent, with qualities of character which the proudest Anglo-Saxon might have envied. Next above the barber shop was the housUand store of Mr. Archibald Loudon, claretm at rotergbge nomon t I romem her Mr. Loudon, first as the quaint look ing old gentleman,'who used to stand in fro'nt of his door, pretty well out into the street, and light his cigar with a' burning glass. I remember him next, as the very kind old gentleman who used to give such a big piece of "liquorish" for a cent ; a great deal bigger piece than could be got for that money, either at Dr. Speck's or Dr. Fahnestock's. And I remember hint last, as the very learned old gentleman who gave us for our winter- evenings' reading, the " Indian Wars," the first book with leather cov ers I had ever road, and the most interesting and ~ 'wonderful book, as I then believed, that ever was pub lished, Weems' life of Washington, and the still more romantic history of Gen. Marion, by the same reverend au thor, were bmiks of thrilliWg interest; but they could mot make, the, hair staud on a buy's head, like the narrative's col lated by Mn Loudon. Thesonarration; by the way, had, the merit of authentie,"whoveai those of Mr. Matthew Carey's travellia4 Ito fic agent-113 we found out when we grew up -wereto large extent m tin out of " whole cloth." Above Mr.. Lane's, next to- the house of.Tudge Hood-al honorable and worthy g,entleumn, but not an original Car lisler-was a small, neat red brick house with which all graduating students Mad occasion to ainte 1. For was not Mr. Alex ender Nusbit tka ooly chirogra pher in all the to NU., Wit )SC pea was equal to the orntunutatiuo revived try our learned diplomas? Could any other hand co t /upon, with his, in the embellish ment which was required, .for the Gutisint I . 8 and L (19 n U.4 . .9 and Jacobus's, with_ their surnannis:-,of loss classical Latinity, which tilled up the blanks of thosp - woivierful parchments? Alt !Mr. Nesbit you little wet it, but you and Andrew Comfort-who made the tin boxes -did almost as' much as the learned- professors, toward fitting. out some of Dickinson's students, with a title to scholarship. Messrs: Editors. it is time for me to stop, not only this letter, but all these letters. I have, without intending it, -slipped into a job which would scent to hav'e no end, and from which I may as well desilt, now 'as at any other, time. And better ; for if Igo on, 1 shall run the risk of boring yob and perhaps wounding the sensibilities of some of your readers. , Por it is hard for any one, even with the best intentions, to talk with freedom about persons and character, witinlut transcending the limits of delicacy. Allusions to individ uals by name, are dangerous liberties, which, as a raki, a prudent Mau will avoid rather than apologize for. 'lf in what I have written, I have exceeded the privilege Which an anonymous and friendly writer may fairly claim for him self, I hope to bn pardoned on the ground oC. my good intentions. Very Truly Yours, A. G. C. THE GERMAN EMPIRE. 'rho establishment of the' German Empire dittos from tho -eigliteonth -of January, .1871, and it is consequently the youngest of the great powors ou earth. -- The .German Empire is a confedera tion of twenty-five States. It comprises four lt ingdoms (Prussia, Bavaria, Sax ony and Wurtemborg, six Grand Duch ies, live Duchies, • seven Principalities and three Republics. The latter, which are usually called the free cities, are Lubeck, Bremen and Hamburg. Be aides these, Alsace and Lorraine, the newly-acquired territories, are direct de pendencies of the Gorman Empire, and are administered by a Gcivernor. It was formerly believed that republics only wore to able form a compact federal gov ernment, but the successful organiza , tion of the Gorman Emniie refutes thief argument. The German Empire is inhabited by forty millions of people. • With the ex ception of about 1,500,000 Poles in East ern Prussia, 100,000,Danes in Northern Schleswig, and about 200,000 French in Alsace and Lorraine, the population .consists - entirely Germans. "By far the largest State is Prussia, which hes a population of 24,000,000 ; next conies Bavaria with 4,800,000, Saxony "with 2,- . 40000, ,and Wurtomberg with 1,800- 000. The aggregate population of the other twenty States is about 5,500,000. The population of Alsace and Lorraine, according to theTrenoli census Of 1808, is nearly 1,500,000. The Ger Man Empire has 9,016, goo graphical square miles: Its area is con sequently • considerably smaller than that of European Russia, which has 100,- 265 s,quare miles, and it is also smaller than the Austrian__Empire,. which. Ant. 'braces 10,780 square Miles, and it is Only, a little larger than. Erauco (0,588 square miles,) bht considerably- lamer than Groat Britain. and Ireland (5,182 square miles;) and Italy,with Rome (5,778 .squareniileS.) . ',Wih' regard to popula tion,;European. Russiai , with • nearly 70,- 000,000 of people' ' exceeds the 'German. Empire, but the latter outranks all the 'other European States With regard to tho, number of Inhabitants. YOUR HOUSE., netrue to yourself at the start, young man, • - - Be true - to - yourself - and - to - God Era yon build your home mark well the hoot Tee E ell the ground and bnttd you not - On thu sand or the shaking sad. Dig, dig the foandation deep, youfig man, • Plant.firmly the outer wall ; Let the props ho strong and the roof be high, , With an opening turret towards the slay Through which heaven's down may fall. • Let this be the room alto soul, y ouog map, %nen ' , bedews shall herald care; A chamber with never molar thath To hinder the light—or door, or latch, Tu shut la the spirit's prayer; .11.111 d slow and sure—'tie for life, young Olio, A life that outlives the brea tk; For who shall gainsay tb, Holy Word? " Their Forks dofollow them," saith th ,-Lord •"ther.in there is no death." Dui d du , p, nod hig h, and broad, °wig. ulun As tho ne,lllll rate dema n ds ; Lot your title-dards ho clear Awl I,llght, Till you urger your claim lo Out hut.) ~, I, ;lit For ihu hotter Out mittlo With 11“11118. THE D ESERT ED DRIP Eoli 0 OM: " Well," old fellow, "what do you think of her?" , Mr. Olney Gardiner leaned4ux.uriously back in his easy chair, and lighted a cigar before ho answered the eager ques tion put by Grove llfilton. He was a slender, handsome young fellow, with blue eyes, Apollo-like fea tures, and a feminine delicacy of, com pleziouri while Milton, 181 s. regularly handsome, was yet taller, and more manly, and striking-looking, in the Arm mould of brow and chin, and the deep, smouldering light. f bright, hazel-dark eyes. "She's very pretty," was his calm and mild reply. a. 0, " Pretty I" echoed Milton, half-dis posed to be ("trended. " Beautiful, then, if you will. ..Yes, I think she is•beautiful, with no ordinary style of loveliness. Will that content you, you grasping felloW?" "And you will consent to oflleiate as my groomsman?" " Certainly - if you Wish it." While Mr. Milton and Olney Gardiner, his friend, were thus talking in their luxurious quarters on the' third floor of Rosstninster Hotel,. Clara Miner, in her room below, was taking the gilt hair pins out of her tresses, and "comparing notes" after very much the same fashion with her widowed sister, Mrs. McDer mott.' Nonsense,": cried the latter, petal lantly. " Grove is worth a dozen faint ants like Olney Gardiner." Clara looked languidly up. Golden haired, lin sapphire blue eyes, and dimpleslitaing away on peach soft cheeks, she was as. lovely as the sirens of fabled song, and her voice was correspondent to her face, flute-line and deliciously modulated. • • "I don't deny that," she answered, calmly. " I only say that lie Is very handsome. Grove showed bud 'taste in selecting a groomsman Iyhoso personal appearance was so much superior to his own." " Clara !" cried Mrs. McDermott, who - vaS an impulsive, warm-hearted little personage, " I never spoke so when 1 was engaged to Froward. You don't act at all like a person who is in love„" "I know I'm not sentimental," Clara responded, yawning ; " but somehow the romantic °lenient was left out in my make up. not r;. , sponsible for it, am I r And Mr 4. MonOrnioet bit hor lips, and wont hor way, somotly thinking Grove Milton fi great deal too gdod for calm, icy Clara. " I am so glad yuu liko him, Clara." It was M. Milton 'Who spoke, and Clara did not answer until she had adjusted the folds of her lase scarf. " Yes; he seems to be very pleasant. He has asked ine to drive to the park With Gin), this afternoon. Have YOU any objections 2" "Objections, Clara ant perfectly delighted that you and he should be friends." And Gr'uve Milton 'fficant it from the very bottom of his heart. "I know I'm a littlo inclined to be stnpidland common-place," said honest Grove, "and it is quite natural that Clara should'enjoy the society ,itif a pol ished and intellectual per3on like Gardi ner, who has written hooks nod under stands all her woman notions."' It was two days beTore that which had boon selected for his wediling, and grove Milton had just returned front an ab alnico reudered - necossary by ono= or the unavoidable turns of . lle mot Mrs. McDermott in the broad hotel corridor as he ontoreol, dusty with travol, flushed with bright expect:lD olls. "Juliet,"—his face brightened as he set down his carpet bag on the stairs— "just look bore, and see what I taco bropght home for her. Do you think oho will like it?" I•lo drew front his breast a 'sin dl vel vot,case, liUed with the softest amethyst Silk, and opened it, so that Mrs. McDer mott could see the glitter of a little pearl crdss, suspended to a heel:lnce of larger pearls. "How pale you look," he cried, gaily, as ho glanced up. "Is it the reflection of the pearls f" . • "Oh, Grove Grove !", cried Mrs. Mos Doimott, clasping herhands convulsively together, "holy can I ever toll you ? Why did they leave mo to break it to you?" Has anything hapPenodr Milton asked, his min face growing J'vhitor as Ito' spoke. ," she 11l ?" " 4 No, not ill ; but," and sho Nook() with an ellort,.,"iiii!H gone." " Gone whore?" With Olney Gardiner, She married Lint tide morning." , , pearls fell like shattered .drifts of moonlight to the floor.• t - Grove Milton clasped both hands over his face, _as if a suddonllash of lightning had stricken him blind and sick. - '"piney Garslima. Married to UM! '' o 4asied, almost inaudibly. • "Be a man, Grove. Bear it as a man, should," faltered Mi•s:"McDermott, fMal ,ingas guilty as if It io:lii4solf, instead of her false, beautifiil :Young. sister, had . rreitted this true a soin forever. BWthe blow foil• upon Grove Milton diifdrebtly from went they all had' fancied that it would. 11 atood an instant silent and motion less; a's if Cho sudden agony had moment tarily turned ,him to.stono, and . ,then he lOoked up with a torribiO shadow obThiti forehead, and r an evil Oteo in the brown oyesthat had always been so•marvelously soft in their wine-like depths. "Llo is a villain 1" he gasped ; and me—great-119avon-L-Jtovir pum_ancliper. foot had fancied her !" "She never deserved your love, Grove," said Mrs McDermott, soothingly ; but ho did not seem to hear what she "Where have they gone?" he asked, in a low,, measured voice. "To Canada," Mrs. McDermott an swered, • reluelantly, yet compelled to speak. "By what train ?" "They loft hero at twelvo o'clock, Grove," as ho glanced at his watch. "You do not intend to follow them ?" "I.shall follow them to the world's ondbeyond it, into the hlaelcin;s, darkness, if need should be." "Grove," pleaded Mrs. MeDetopotl, laying one trembling hand on his arm, "do not go ! Yon will .do something which you will regret for a lifetime." . "I don't know what I shall do," he answered, moodily, as he shook off the clinging grasp. "I only Arnow tbmtwl must follow them—that I' must meet Olney Gardiner face to' face, and tear Clara away .from his false and cruel arms." And he broke from the terrified ivoirriii before she could recover her voice to argue further '• Grove !;' she called put wildly. , ,But ho was' gone. "Got mo a carriage, somebody ; drive me to the Montreal Express I" she cried, throwing on'her shawl. " I will stop Lim yet !" But there were unavoidable, delays ; and when at last the jaded horses drag ged the hack up alongside of the railway platform, the official's gilt buttons stared Placidly at her, and answered her eager questions by the 'composed reply— " Montreal Express, mum Cone these ten minutes?" knd so het• journey was all in vain Grove Milton - sat leaning back in the corner of the car, his hat pulled over his eyes, his arms folded on his breast, as the express train sped on through purple twilight—and fields all scented with summer's bloom and fragrance. Ali, how widely at variance with his own - ill - Oughts and feelings was the sweet key-note of nature ! Would he over appreciate its tender cadence again ? IL5w slowly the moment:: dragged along—how impatiently his heart throb bed—and all the while, underlying it at all, the fevered. burning ofrsbis brain seemed es if it would drive him mad. Suddenly the train grow to a gradua pause—people after their fashion, a. such a season as this, rushed to the fret]. platform. " What are we stopping for'."' caller out Milton, impatiently,, putting his hear , out of the car window. `Accident ahead, sirl--morning train ran oil a culvert !" answered a brake man, who was running past. Grove Milton sprang from the ear, ant pushing past the indheihninate eiowd, cashed to the scene of disaster. It was a lovely spot, belted on either side by masses of phi() woods, while a culvert crossed a wide, although a some what shallow stream, which meandered through the valley .bellow—a scene whose sylvan beauty was marred just now, by wreck, ruin, death and disaster. They had telegraphed for assistance, but it had not yet arrived, and' this sec ond train was a signal help and aid, and was welcomed by all. But Grove Milton hurried post the splintered cars and broken rails, looking only for two faces. !' • "Fate itself is pitied un in sido," lie told himself, with a thrill of triumph. But the two faces were not there " Aro you looking for friends, sir?" asked a kindly old gentleman, who was rendering all the assistance in his ppwor. "They have placed the dead in the foi.e most car." Groi , e Milton nothlud his thanks an( passed swiftly on. Patience ; It was only a mere gnestron of limo He stopped abruptly in tho doorway of tho receptacle of death, for the first face which his eye fell upon was that orOlney Gardiner, beautiful even in its rigidity, not marred or blackened by .Scar or sign of accident —enly dead. • And Clara lay beside him, a Crimson mark across her fair forehead—both beyonsithe„ reach of 'mortal vengeance for ever. • The h i and of Providence had dealt the blow'forihn ; and Grove Milton, knetil ing• beside the. twil dead forms that lie had loved co well in life, forgave them, Years have passed since then, but Grove Milton has never'inatzvied. die passes•quietly ti'lrough the orbit of his daily life, and few know the awful tragedy which once overshadowed it.. '! I TOLD HIM TO GONE OUT MIT nAT Doti."—Max Adder Says that an editor advertised the other day that he would take a good dog in payment for one year's subscription to his paper. The noxt day forty-three dogs Wore soot - to this office. The next day afterivai;ds, when the news had spread out into the country, four hundred farmers had sent two dogs apiece' by express, 'with eight baskets full of puppies, all marked C. 0. D. In the. meantime, the offer found its way intO. the neighboring States, and before the end of a 4 weak there were eight thousand ilOgs tied up in the edi -tor's front and back yards. TheasSort 7 went included all kinds froni blood howl& dOwn 'to poodles. A. 'few hun dred broke loose and swiliMed on the stairways and 'in the front, entrimi, and stood' outside the sa - mtnin . thineterum, and howled and luulfiglits, and sniffed under ~,the crack of the door ns if they h wore angry for some editor. And the &lit& olinibed out of the window, up the water spout and out on the roof and wept: There was no iti s suo of,„the paper for six dayS, and the only way the friends of the; eminent journalist' could feed hint Nina by senidinLy"hinch up CO balloon. At last t oniobody 1101101 V, a barrel of arsenic aid three tons of hoof and poisoned the dogs,, acid he' camo down, only to-find lying on the table a bill from the Mayor, for . : eight thousand dollars, being the municipal tax au d'ogs - at ono dollar „per fiend. , Jib is not offerin g tlip same . iuducenients to atihsoriliors now, and doson's4ant a giill NUMBER 6 WISE: AND OTHERWISE A run-ur job—An auction NOTHING is so elmap as end manners, - 1311HEenEs of,Trust—Pmitaloons oh credit. . FAIIMERS sow wheat,; 111IL1VCS sew tnrCsl. WHAT is larger for being cut nt bOth ends?—A. ditch. , Wno always sits with his hat on before the Queen ?-ller coachman. - . nv: are a(robats murderers? When they poise on each other. Warns is it right to talc° any' one in? When itTains. lir only is bright who shines by. ,him self. AN honest death is better than a dis honest life. Tuli;nl;'is no fault in poverty, bat the minds that think so :no faulty. A CHEERFUL face is nearly as gout' for invalid as.healLhy weather. ' A TIME to run—When you 'are in a hurry. A NOISY piece "of crockery—ZThe eel) that cheers. HE that - npeuks ill of other men burns his own tongue'. 6TAIRE iS 'tighss in which the bebOldor sees everybOdy's face but his own. WamEN do not talk more than men. They're listened to more, that is all. A BAD sign—To sign another man's nitrite to a 'note. NEBRASKA has an editor so lazy that he spells wife, yf. Wuv should artists take small pox ? Because it's sketching. QUERY for phikilogists—hi an 'arse laugh derived from a'Nersedialect? Movrsu for a new trial—popping to Mrs. Number Two. A, CALIFORNIAN offered $4OO to a companion if he would kill his father. A Idir,wm;Kcy, judge prexerves order in the court, by exhibiting a seven shooter. Tnr, sting of a boo carries conviotinu With it—it makes a man a bee-leaver at 12921 PAY SON says : " When WO meet, in heaven we shall.see how little we know about, it on earth.:: No manners aro so fine as - the most awkward manifestations of good will to- ward men Tni nian who never alters his opinion is like standing water and breed:s reptiles oc the mind IT is a queer woman who asks no questions, hat the wornau who does is the querist. A x lowa man reported that he could'nt find a cord in the' dictionary because the book hadn't an inddx. A MAN who sat upon a japer of carpet nails said they reminded him of the in come tax. PEN EILS aro a bad lot. They make people steel pens, and then ,they say they do write. Wdiv are . our eyes like • friends sop.- t'ated by distant clinics? They corres pond but neVer meet. IT may sound like a Itrados:, yet the !Caking of both wingwof an am is a retty sure sday to make it fly. ONE brand of Cincinnati Nalisky is '.wanted to contain 437 tights to, fhe DEM AN unlucky person on being asked what be cleared on a certain speculation, answered, "Nothing but my pockets." THE Jenson that there aro more divor ces in I,he West than East is' that they havenibre room to live apart out hero. A citizz:: of Lowell announces that "a fuo borders or meallers can, be com dated hear." A.Missoum musician at down upon a keg tif powder and began to smoke. 'They found Ole button. WHITE vests are a bad investment for the young men, now that the girls have mot to using so much oil on their hair. SORE one says that a Sunday evening/ tea is the must sociable and enjoyable meal of the whsle week. A. ISA N who gives his children habits of industry, provides for them better than giving them a fortune.., 13 LI S';l , l;T, imagining Two ragged urchins outside - of a restaurant wind?w, and two mince pies inside. ANNA DICKINSON, it is. 411,'confesses she has made neafly $lO,OOO during the last two years at lecturing. Too many persons are far less ashamed oC having done wrong than of being found out. Are you one of them ^ IT is as impossible to get .money out of a miser as it is to on muttomdtops out of a battering ram junricE consists in cloinco tO Men Clece4y, in giving win no of- " lies a man who never had an enemy." Then I:ere. lies, a man who never had au Wendell A VonNo Intliallian "proposed" to six foung just for fun ; and lyrtti con sidenibly annoyed by being aveepfed by all of tlann. 0. • MAN RIND are very odd croata LW, 0110 half cemaires What they practice, and the ether half practicp what they EMIG is ill to hope to please Jill alike. Let a Iliad stand with his face in \Vhat direction he will, ho must necessarily him his ba'ol;_on, one-half of- the wo . rld.: good pcopla would make goodueis Rgreeablo, and smile instead oftroWnitz Yirtheir lidw many would be won to the good cause. • DoN'w cram the . child iet schiml ; it is mil for ileatirain ; nor at the tahlo—it s sorrow for the stomach ; both' bring doctor's Visits. , / • Tmuic,iztotsr folks who aro in Midi a grate limey few git religion 'that' th9y confess sills they aint gilty ov, hud oVer look then that they am.—Josh Tiin Want, a new penny paper, has 4ppeared in Pittsburg. Just imagine the condition of the wretched Pittsburg-. ors, with Wont staring them in the:face ()Very day. . A GENTLEMAN, having written a letter, •eoiL'dluded it as follows : "Give Every- . body's love to Everybody, so that No botlymmy.be aggrieved by Anybody be ing forgotten by Somebody." • Is apprehension ,o f the small=pox; a western paper says : " Vaccinate : l To liteness never hurtS anybody. .. pea will.novei attack •yon it you allow vaecination to take your arm.l' !ran following speech was made by the winner of a ,prike in a foot 'reed': clentlenni, 1 have woa this "cup by the use - briny logs; I trust I may never lose the use of my logs by the use of this cup."