14 RUN & SLOAN, PUBLISHRS. VOLUME 25, BuSINESS DIRECTORY 4••• - - SAMUEL T STERRETT, TI yid „ rroi Iron Wire. Whole- ' red get ii. l'ori.er ut French and Yillhietreet. wnosike ths Turners' lime'. Lrir Ya bt et') art.ete 4/1 the above lute Da land. toretner .nth an etten•..e ...orunent of and Cooking Curustlit. to A.l kinds or Rooting and 1 4 0 mq executed . rth brunet.. au4 dutHitch, on reasonable ' WI" CLEMENS & CAUGHEY, Wipl-XxxLX 6 . o eXre. 1104 Dealers ,n Donte.tk and Imported lusts and ',upon, also rjgg,r. Tybar pp, Fir m a., Yah . 1111 . & Ar ,,a, for Sludrats Hunt° Ale Nu, 7 Bunnell BlueS. Bum - A f ro, Lrle. Pa, pg. 1./Vs X - _ . NEILEIt & riPtlsrs to earns nee. NU, I a nie , lea Blocs. Cot. „ c w made on all the Principal CI ties of the Butes t,inadas. and proceeds promptly remitted Rank McKee, goal sod Silver baiirhi and *oil 1.10.re.i paid 011 TIMB oppil Monet , remittvd 10 Kurnpe. Land Warrants bought. and kxated 011 the 11:1011t rCS 04.141 ab • Wing JOll .- N - F DUNCOMBE. trroaary ... Cot %GEL:AA • t 1... e. in Marshall's thrice. Erie. A A CRAIG i m .scs or the Fore, /Mee - elbowed to N 1 Hughes Most, 11d duk.r....otte •t reel. I Pat - - _ E CHAPIN u..ass .f thr .hud Guitar, resi4enoo 811th AL j.ur to Jvw, P Music arrsuirod for pvi Cotillion Band- N. S 111:1iSI :I.Si , D.IGI"P ;IRE 4 4RI Is t s ow . Letwveri 114..ww0 Hotel and VT !teed liconae Tbr 11/I•ber, .4111fftnieti 11.11. fir ail her prr tumor Ibr ipyr. n•ir..Ufferi..•PiS Prrrr QI 0 1 1 and uyw.o d. _ . L W OLDS Amt.ltS*ll, t R , 1111., tl.l eltireto ,o 1 roVe, 411.1 I vi .yer ,1 qqaillY,lrsec , mt hoop!.! ,n 11. e. ~1 e rer) Lot,,;:r r. 3r of I.,Ode,'s r ornate,'late poet. Ero•Mil koe :off ut any OM. calibre for ernieremi wa if , fbr fen ,4"11 if,: lief - W.1,1 , a L .o order L. T FoX, rt 9. l :or ..IRsowyr Ll_ I n„ I. v. ,I,ur• wegt l kinerican bowl, k,nr, Ya DR EMERY, 1 ,, F. tew floors wen of American G NV. TODD, With Caruth Terry, & Dew J , , l lSer. lit t..1411-h. 4 ..rman 4,65 Do serlic ki4rewart. GI.II/6. %%. nit. r•. ice 154 Marie' L•ert fvoto li.: :mli, 11;1.1tioN r •I.olle t J. a Al Rr,.lt k I n.) II a ReIR 111 Woo, lie *Ulf, :.nap., . I n• N. , SH. I ll.u•e 1).11 0 L. ELLIOI"f, dweiling lark ILou 4 WOll ar r nit.ot _ PR t' BIM WNE U., ftwe.. WT. ,oulti •It pic Pub!, 4 quarr, 1.. twee, r,els Ne. I 1:40 . 66M0T)f1 11WL.54.:, r6R E H ABELL, V•M RI rl, Ilf.X.ltal ,•• t Et.e B • /. •.tle •,! e t ,kvn It. iI).V li' 1.. ‘‘4 , f.l”lPt! awl 1. 1) EDN'ARD. erl at Law. .. 41'11,1 Pa Prnfnei hi• NV St I 10 , 111,11 P ... /14.< attention ) 1) IVa Lll E 1: & Co titi 1 ;Pfr:11:0111 11.111M1 rS are hatow .ht ul Ih. Pubs .t tiftelte. Erot, A;•• —bra th I uhl, •lef, F L.inie sad Iron . 1. "..,vo • I Ant Ac A 11•1 . ..onedf 4,,,u c, DA 0,14 , 1 ay turf bw ~1.. P. Nlmetero f ..% a f I 111. kJ L • .1111,‘ CA RSOS (Tli X ff:-iM, 11,,,,E1 ACE E G NEE.' LEER T Lon, (Tice un French it., Boutb E Phil( Ltte. Pll ‘iM:ENT, H11%1R01) . & CO, i,.., , Traka. of . ..Imes, Hollow Ware, liaisons. Motel%fry t. •olid I ibe ,Stale .1 r.e. re THOIAS M ft or tor mix o► a. t noru k ro I taltalt wt kr, Watch.... Jewelry. All vet rlpgrAir, %soles' 10. Look lag t. 1....11/11$01 and /Alley Goods. Rhona awl ?evil! JARECKI. , DIT wept .1,14. of State greet, fne. Pa .1 B. (;('NNISON n Book., ,M,u I rt %Ica r nl9l, rhea p Pu Mice! Nr;o..ikaiwr.„ (kid prnik, 00 !• FIST 1401 A I F.• HI, I ILA/ , BOOTH & STEW.IIIi. 1 1.12&12 Ind R PIA t! 11 FR no .. .wide [y G uciebeen Hoe Heed Hod.. Hrtm , H . . flute/ LIDDELL, KEPLEIt& 4'6 L.o.ett Rl[. oi Iron Fence. n Va 550.1. Far Prool ranotterr. awl ell k d. of Marhi.w, a fux) , ..asi inn.. Ice o. me to q ler sTERKErr s: luorrtia. Jobber. and Rev.' , I.e.ilees 11, rt ,td Dry Gruc +r, I •.o , l•tutio, PrtAluce. l ure.gli arid 1)0104..11C rail, A rn 'low and Atone V% ate, F'lo,,r I ,-r., N. toWatt. Snot. 42a in, Anted POMO. to Ilt.r rronett %,fert. Aa• a o,e Reed 101 •.: , sad rot ' , •a at 1..“ V .RICO .Ver JACO, .11111n.t, %Orin Ea oil corner of the Pun it M SANFORD (k: sal.al•ts Got.l. Mtt.Pew, fla nk Notes. I Ira I tr, t 'er ri fie el tel of L/ - wale orl the ~rtnc.w.: cll lee eon ptani kor eNo I . . 0 NJara. Crio _ _ 11E RON 11,101n•arl Wet t. On! Lamm ueld I kirtrilleC•fs tinti RUFDS REED •..aa n Lorloth Grrman • chi A Lite, .e An IlArlwarr ru n . , ,r,s, Itou N 3 3 = CA 1 ) I . :1.1. / " 1 ' 'MITERS. inbiller•, get , rill, I Wr - 11..rs , : ,In I• Wd., fir ,wen. mg, hilfdvb , op. iron. Strel,Piliii 15.11 H n: •1••••• t. wur duw. Mw +Ns a'. Hotel. I ere 1 • A,lll A , 611, , nup. and a pen amortawai,o - , 4.1.11 e 1.11111 tr I - - . - - - GE( II TLE la.. t'oe,ni P. vuler ttietlO.d to WWI pfOutplties• , 11, t ,I,•..aieh JOSIAH KE1.1,04;44 onsionooloo lieron4ot. on :he Public I).X tut af. ate .I,Y( •%trite FuW. cot AHTEIt a BROTHER eau .na Rrtau I Ih-filer. •n inc. Punk &cc . ~ too, Eli+. Pa . . _ L Y 1.1.1.„ . Iyulagll MeMiLiDt "Calico. en Or P•,b,ie Mquare, i fu 1.4. e. •I, bt Male illreet. Lire. DUHLIN SLOAN, ,• ,n.u• lioutc Klan SlALocoery and Printrr•• Card• Nn 9, Hr iotr.ir,e. JOHN ;;WESEV Twr 't • Uak.t Iv Wm 100111 iveles•iir w wl. 4111... Ar. / 111' •LI ou,c P. . _ JOHN & CO. mi..tam o and 4. ..Mini...W1 Mere 'l4 WI., .-;141•Vr• £0 Opal. Yin' ?No • ai AV a.l ti • , Pr r Pu Net, L. Y. GEuittiE J )10KToN au .'llietriuin L. l'ubhe Dock. Brie 11'1,4r l',a,Let, MEM I. 110 Z ENS \\*EEG ,t, CO. 411,1 itttl.l Dirabers 111 Foreign •n , l Dgmeirtre D .$4,10 kahle.g, Mow. and r boes. hr Mn Wr .. g •10C., , s lnt J. C. MARSHALL, ../1•1 AT L..w- 4 .15ce .:p ocllre ,a i arneouly Hall nOll4lllll • odif.•, 'fIBBAItS, (t. II Al ES, . •••• Ib.Grurel.f,, 1 roctep , UtrdWILI4 ik • • ..11r.,16/1'• I.lleW 11.rr 1 . Pk 311111 JACKSON A: SUN. (-,..x431, kissuware Queens Wan SAO.. aie rt.c.pa,4e, Fate. Pa. 'mutt_,. - rUSitIO. eweta.. lion/arr. ..esum, see L u , l e e . ll::fu.,) Amu u. (Ake Wr,gut•• Meek. e.n J IV. DOUGLASS, ••61 1...*--06eie ay eta in. 11. W,ll:stn'. HL,ck. nert 46a `Y tr..) Jlui "P. "".• ~ .C4.l, f ter. 6r w an.IMItINK itlo. *are 4"14. . 1,4 4Prit ti. t the 1 . o,lrt Er,e, Pa • ..... • S. • MADILL t' I3TV It llii ITCPVIt v , r — rmr , s Warrainsana(vrthiretevonorpcmit .Mn 1, 14,1 ist./ Cl{ 'Cr 111aasd pal ::1 16.`Lue•t 4 ' 4 lur rale Ofilte, N.oct, cusu ro,t uW V.INAC 16114.8.2 • 1.., r.I 1.44.41. 'IA rEit, Us Ire • rery e r I Wit.. A U•c or.c‘. Ire au4 4.• ilkod. ol .,_ „ ••••w " ,• 11,411 knel 1 bird weft. oil the ..'"•• • a WN I A. tiALIIKAI'I'H, ~pie ua b.au WINK. OPlesne She neW Cot - M CHAPIN, k luta I OS vntl , r-.4nkto to he Empire 111:oc s• n 4.1. kot b surelos. +0 "00. r. .ers trawl:m.4oSe .it wt. k skStelllo.l P AZILI2.II itaTZL. 04/01 Lailk4.34 AltigLilai sue, ret 111CPC4T s ti le I r 0 term (11.1. a 4,,,.. %,..... „ow" 4 4.4 c e r .. 4 ,44b0u by tic prom '4'1.4 144 4 ready for we r ecepuou bit .44444444, 14, wors ,_"4 •.4 Narbise• furabsl444l "Nth *gm) ouryvaia• ....., reeelikacidadoa asisesi••illahlim suifteh e i. N. law iii, mg 111111. • WEEKLY I BSERVER =1 1,01:1.4R LAN I=ll select PR TILE SILATKIL IT 11.11. •Zolltel L.CIFT The sort► is white with glesolies The lake one sheet of silver Ii Beneath the utoriug's ruddy glow She frosty vapors round us rise Sweet ts the cool and springing a That waves the pine tree on th Vet •oieeless as a whispered pre Breathes down the valley el a Come, it's an hoar to stir the hi , To glowing life in every vett. Up, for the sport is keen and . • Aorom the broad and Icy phu On each impotent foot. to-day, The ringing steel again we'll And o'er the crystal sea way We'll leave the w.ald and c Lad oh, what joy is ours, to pl Ia rapid round sad swat ea Lad snatch, between thr want' One moment's rest and haat Then, when the brief, sweet d And stare above begin to b Dawn the broad ►aho that b We meet wiz sweethearts We hear their cheerful laugh Our bounding hearts give With rapid sweep around w Like headlong wing away We greet them well, how bi- Of cheeks that kiss thu fr And homeward, o'er the mu Each pruud boy leads hi. 1 Theo gsthend round the e W has 'nada without are With laugh, aad jest, and We pass the jocund ere , Aroaa4 the board our fart Comes nature'. welcom. And slumbers never bung Sit light us each uotro No lagging pulse impede No startling dreams But health and pea , e, 1. Smile lA...ring round Then when the morning Spring, gaily o'er the With hardy sports we h Ur hardly laborr blear TiJoict FISHER'S.GHOST. A TRUE BY In the colony of New 7STti Wales, at a place called Penrith, distant frog Sydney ab out? thirty seven miles, lived a farm'' named Fisher. Hr had been, originally, trangported, but had been become free by servitude I Unceasing toil, and great steadinass of character, li s ad acquired for him a considerable property, for a pers‘on in his station of life. His lanes and stock were not worth less than four thousand pounds He was unmarried, and was aboutforty-five sears old. Suddenly Fisher disappeared; and one of his nf ighbors—a man namedSmiili—gave out that he had gone to England, but w..uld return in twa or three years Smith produe , tl a d ,uruvut, purporting to be executed by Ft.tior; awi, ace .r ding to this docnnaent, Fieher hal appointed Smith to act as his agtt during his absence-- Fisher was a man of vEy n d centric character, and 1 1 , . ail m r ab , ut ht. de parture, instead of ere4ing •urpr..e. vas d, clar d to be "exactly like Abour mix months after Fi•l. ,, r' , ii.appeatrance, an old man called Bell \V• ir, w., had a stna.i farm near Penrith, .ys drive hi own cart to marker, wt re. ur..iri e , :rap Sydney, one night, when lie beluol, re. T. d -e a ran which bounded the road—Fiski,r The high( was eery dark, and the distance of the fLuce to the middle of the road was, at least, twch. )arus. Weir, nowerthele.s, Saw Fiji. r's figure seated no the rail. lie pulled his oil mai._ up, and called out, "Fisher, is that your' No au-a. r was re'urn rd; but there, soil m the rail, sat the form of the man with whom he had been on the moat in- Weir,—who Was not drunk, al- tituate terws though he had taken several glasses of strong li- qui.r nu the road—junped of his cart, and ap proached the rail. ro his surprise, the forty vanished. "Well," exclaimel old Weir, "this is very curious, anyhow;" awl breaking several branch es of a sapling, so as to mark the exact sp.)t, he remounted his cart, pu his 'll4 mare into a jog tr.,t, and soon reachtd his home. Ben was not likeli to keep this vision a .•ret from his old woman. All that he hat seen he faithfully related to her. "Hold your nonaeu'e, Ben!" WU old Betty's reply "Yon know you have been a-drinking and disturbing of your imagination. Ain't Fish er a-gone to It And if he had a come back, do you think we shouldn't ',heard on it'" -Ay, Betty:" said old Ben, "but he'd a cruel gash in his forehead, and the blood was aii-fresh eke Faith, it makes me olluller to think on't. It wt•re ills ghost." "How can you tslk so foolish, Bete." said the old woman. "You must be drunk, sure-iy, to get on about gliestesses." "I tell thee I am not drank," replied old Ben, angrily "There's been foul play, Betty; I'm sure on't. There sat Fisher on the rail—not more than a matter of two miles from this. Egad, it w••re on his own fence that ho sat. There he was, in his shirt-sleeves, with his arms a-folded; just as he used to sit, when he was awaiting for old Bea and the blitelis to guard it, Mr. Grafton any body coming up the road. Bless you, Betty, cantered up to Fisher's house. Smith was not 1 seed 'im till I was as close as lam to thee-- only in possession of all the missing man!s pro. when, all on a sudden he vanished, like smoke." party, but had removed to Fisher's house. It "Nonsense Boo: don't talk of it," said old was about a mile and a half diatsat . They in- Betty, "or the neighbors will only laugh at you. quired for Mr. Smith, who was at breakfast, Come to bed, and you'll forget all about it be- MUM out, and invited Mr. Grafton to alight;— fore to-niorrew morning." Mr. Grafton accepted the invitation, and after a Old Ben went to bed; but he did not next few desultory observations said, "Mr. Smith, I wonting forget all about what be had seen on am anxious to purchase a piece of land on the the previous sight: on the contrary, be was more other side of the road, belonging to this estate, positive than before. However, at the earnest, and I would give a fair pries for it. Have you cud oftearepeated request of the old woman, be the-power to sell?" promised not to mention basing seen Fiser's "Ob, yea, sir," replied Smith. "The power ghost, fat fear that it might expose him to ridi- which I hold from Fisher is a general power;" cute. and he forthwith produced a document purport- On the following Thursday night, when old hig to be signed by Fisher, but which was no' Ben was returning from market—again is his witnessed. ,art--he saw, seated upon the same rail, the idea- "If you are not very busy, I should like to deal apparition. He had purposely abstained show you the piece of land I allude to," said Mr. from drinking that day, and was in the full pas- Grafton. session of all his moms. Oa Ads 000111011 old "Oh, certainly, sir. lam quite at your ear- Ben was teo mush alarmed to stop. He urged vise," said Smith; and he then ordered his horse the old mare on, and got home as speedily as to be saddled. possible. its soon as he had unharnessed and It was necessary to pass the pond where the fed the mare, and taken his purchases out of the remains of Fisher's body were then expueed.— cart, be mitered his cottage, lighted his pipe, at When they same near to thepm. Mr. Grafton ever the fire with his better half, and gave her looked Smith fall in the feecodi, Mr. Smith, an account of how ho had disposed of his pro- I wish to show you something. Look here:"— dues, and what he had brought back from Syd- He pointed to the decomposed body, and narrow -1 oey in return. After-this be said to bee, "Wet, ly watching Mr. Smith's 000ttesenoe, Snarl- Betty, I'm not drunk t o- night, any iww , ant I?" xi: "Theo are the remains of Bieber. How do "No," said Betty. - "You are gate sober , sew, you eneount-tar their being foutd it this poor' Able like, tonight, Ben; sad therefore you have Smith, with the greatest coolness, got off his oome home without any ghost in your head.— 1 , horse, minutely examined the remains, and then Ghosts! Don't believe there is such things." I admitted that there wasp. doubt they were Fisk "Weil, you are satisfied las not dinar; bat ~, Ws. He confessed himself at a lose to amount perils* sehar," said the old sm. • ' Ike their dismay, Woe it geoid be (be said) "Yes, Ben," said Betty. "Well, then," said Ben, "I tell thee what, Betty, I saw Fisher to-night, agin!" "Stun!" cried old Betty. "You may say shaff,"said the old farmer, "but I tell you what—l saw him as plainly as I did last Thursday night. Smith is a bad 'no! Di you think Fisher would ever have left this coun try without coming to bid yon and me good-by?" "It's all fancy!" said old Betty. "Now, drink your grog and smoke your pipe, and think no more about the ghost. I wont hear on't." "I'm as fond of my grog and my pipe as most men," said old Ben; "but I'm not going to drink any thing to-night. It may be all fancy, as you call it, but I am now going to tell Mr. Grafton all I saw, and what I think;" and with those words he got up and left the house. Mr Grafton was a gentleman who listed about a mile from old Weir's farm. Re had been for merly a lieutenant in the navy, bat was 'now on half-pay, and was a settler in the new colony; he was, moreover, in the commission of the peace. When old Ben arrived at Mr. Grafton's house, Mr Grafton was about to retire to bed; but he requested old Ben might be shown in. Ho de sired the farmer to take a seat by the fire, and then inquired what was the latest Milli is Syd ney. :d •till. behtia4. rly. hoer' • is don.) "The news in Sydney, sir, is very small," said old Ben; "wheat is falling, but maize still keeps its price—seven and sixpeuce a bushel; but I want to tell you, sir , something that will aston ish )nu." "What is it Ben? " asked Mr. Grafton. "Why, sir," resumed old Ben, "yuti know I am not a weak-mind .el man, nor a fool, exactly; •for I was born and bred in Yorkshire." "No, Bon, I don't believe you to be weak minded, nor do I think you a fool," said Mr Grafton; but what can you have to say that you come at this late hour, and that yottiequire such a preface:" "That I have seen the ghost of Fisher, sir," said the old man; and he detailed the particulars of which the reaer is already in possession. Mr. Grafton was at first disposed to think with old Betty, that Ben had been Fisher's Ghost through an extra glass or two of runt on the first night; and that, on the-second night, when per •ttly sober, he was unable to divest himself of the idea previously entertained Silt, after a little consideration, the words -low very singu lar!" involuntarily escaped him. "Go home, Ben," Mr. Grafton, and let in • see you to-morrow at sunrise. We will go tort li,:r to the place where you saw the ghost.' Mr. Grafton used to encourage the aboriginal natives of New South Wales (that race which has been aptly described as "the last link in the huthan chain") to remain about his premises.— At the head of a little tribe then encamped on Mr Grafton's estate, was a sharp young man named Johnny Crook. The peculiar faculty of the aboriginal natives of New South Wales, of , tracking the human foot not only over grass but over the hardeet rock; and of tracking the where abouts of runways by signs imperceptible to ci vilized eyes, is well known, and this man, John Crook, was famous for his skill in this particular art of tracking. He had recently been instru mental in the apprehension of ieveral desperate bushrangers, whom he had tracked over twenty seven miles of rocky country and fields, which they had crossed trare•fouted, in the hope of check ing the black fellow iu the progress of his keen pursuit with the h irse police When old B u Weir made his appearance iu the morning at Mr Grafton's bowie, the back chief, Johnny Crook, was summoned to attend. tie came and brought with him several of his subjects. The party set out, old \Veir showiug the way The leaves on the branches of the sap., lings which he had broken on the first night of see,ug the gh.),t were Wither , and sufficieui.y pointed out the exact rail on which the phantom was represeated t have sat. There were stains arm ne brint r‘ng, cL reply, MB l tile g'ow ITS a i snow I nag fat: ful blase, uwing shrill, rry lays g sun, is told, our of reit, with gold, e 4 breast. ur sleep, c olch annoy I t kire.p e country Loy harp and cle&r 111'1 BEM MEI upon the rail. Johny Crook . , who hal titt:n no idea of what be was required fur, pronounced these stains to be "White man's blood," and, af te•r searching about for some time, he pointed to the .tpot where he said a human body bad been laid. very uncommon; and not a single shower of rain had fallen for seven months previously—not suf ficient even to lay the dust upon the roads. In consequence of the time that bad elapsed, Crook bad no small dicuffilty to contend with; but in about two hours he succeeded in tracking the footsteps of one man to the unfrequented side of a pond i►t some distance bib opinion that another man had been dragged thither 'roe savage walked round and round the Foond, eagerly examining its borders and the .edges and Weeds springing up around it. At first lie seemed baffled. No clew had been wash ashore to show that any thing unusual had been sunk in the pond; but, having finished this examination, he laid himself down on his face aud lurked koenly along the surface of the smooth and Stagnant water. Presently he jumped up, uttered a cry peculiar to the natives when grati fied by finding some long-sought object, clapped his hands, and pointidg to the middle of the pond, to where the decomposition of some sunk en substance had produced a slimy coating streak ed with prismatic colors, he exclaimed, "White man's fat!" The pond was immediately search ed; and, below the spot indicated, the remains of a body were discovered. A large stone and a rotten silk handkerchief were found near the bo dy; these had been used to sink it. That it was the body of Fisher there could be ni question. It might have been identified by the teeth; but on the waistoost there were some large brass buttons which were immediately re cognised, both by Xr. Grafton and by old Ben Weir, as Fisher's property. He had worn those buttons on his waistcoat for several years. Leaving the body by the side of Me pond, and . - ERIE, SATURDAY MORNING ! , FEBRUARY 17 In New South Wales long droughts are not $1 50 A YEAR, IN ADVANCE. that somebody hail waylaid him on the road when he left his home for Sydney; bad murder ed him for gold and bank-notes which he bad about his person, and had then thrown him into the pond. "My hands, thank Heaven!" he oon eluded, "are clean. If my old friend could come to ife again , he would tell lou that I had no hand in this horrible murder.' Mr. Grafton knew not what to think. He was not a believer in ghosts. Could it be possi ble, he began to ask himself, that old Weir had oommittAid this crime, and—Boding it weigh hea vily on his conscience, and fearing that he might be detected—had pretended that he was led to the spot by supernatural agency—and thus, by bringing the murder voluntarily to light, hoped to stifle 41 suspicion? But then he considered Weir's excellent character, his kind dip sition, and good nature. These at onee put to flight his suspicion of Weir; but still he was by no means sat i s fi e d of Smith's guilt, much as appearances were against him. Fisher's servin gs were examined, and stated that their master had often talked of going to England on a visit to his friends, and of leaving Mr. Smith to manage his farm; and that though they were surprised when Mr. Smith came, and said be had "gone at last," they did not thik it at all unlikely that be had dune so. An inquest was held, end a verdict of wilful murder found against Smith. He was thereupon transmitted to Sydney for trial, at the ensuing lesions, in t h e supreme c o urt. The case naturally excited great interest in the colony; acid public opinion reepecung Smith's guilt was evenly balanced. The day of trial came; and the court was crowded almost to suffocation. The Attorney- General very truly remarked that there were cir outwit:knees connected with the case which were without any precedent in the annals of jurispru dence. The only witnesses were old Weir and Mr. Grafton. Smith, who defended himself with great comp inure and ability, cross-examined them at considerable length, and with consummate skill The prneecution having closed, Smith ad droseed the jury (which consisted of military of ficers) in his defense. He admitted that the circumstances were strong against him; but he most ingeniously proceeded to explain them. The power of attorney, which he produced, be con tended had been regularly granted by Fisher, and he called several witnesses, who swore that they believed the signature to be that of the de ceased. He, farther, produced a will, which had been drawn up by Fisher's attorney, and by that will Fisher had appointed Smith his sole executor, in the event of his death. He declin ed, be said, to throw any surpicion of Weir; bat he would appeal to the common sense of the ju ry whether the ghost story was entitled to any credit; and, if it were not, to ask themselves why it had been invented? He alluded to the fact— which in cross-examinatioa Mr Grafton swore to—that when the reuisins were first shown to him, he did not conduct himself ass guilty man would have been likely to do, although, be was horror-stricken on beholding the hideous spec tacle He concluded by invoking the Almighty to bear witness that he was innocent of the dia bolical criwe for which be had ben arraigned. The judge (the late ziir Francis Forbes) reca pitulated the evidence It was no easy matter to dell with that pen of it which had reference to the apparition; and if the charge of the judge bad any leatilug one way or the other, it was de ckle-0:y in favor of in aequittal. The jury re tired: but after deliberating fir seven hours, they returned to the Lamm with a verdict of Guilty Del Judge then sentenced the, prisoner to be hate:ell ea the following Monday. It was eu a Thursday night that he W4r, e'mvict•si. Oo the Sunday, Smith expressed a wish to sec a clergy man. His wish was immediately attended to, when he cool . ..seed that he, an! he alone, corn witted the uturd , r; and that it was upon the ve ry rail where ‘Veir swore that he had seen Fish er's ghost sitting, and that he had knocked out Fisher's brains with a tomahawk. The power of attorney, he likewise confessed, was a forgery, but declared that the will was genuine. This is very extraordinary, but is, neverthe less, true in eubstanoe, if not in every particular. Most persons who hays visited Sydney for any length of time will no doubt have had it narrated. Son John—l have too umeh Legislative work to come home on Saturday nights as I said I would—so you mind the farm. I have man aged to ge t on a good many committees, so as to come popular by having my name printed oftener in the papers, and I manage to say moms thing occasionally and I have soon my name 8 times printed in the daily bee. American prin ciple is looking up some here in Bovton and we are going to discord all forign elements in our government (by the way have the barn door painted over with some other oulour besides Spanish brown. I don't like any thing spanish) The government has made a lick at the foreign malitia and disbanded all the companies, (dont use any wore British oil for your deefness for I have thrown away that box of Simla salve your mother put in my trunk to rub my rumattek leg with use American physic it is the boss) We are going to have the latin lingo taken off the state coat of arms and put plain yansee english in its place. We are suing a head I tell you and make a clean swoop of every thing of forign extraction I have visited no plus of amusement excepting the live buffalo° isilich is a regular na tive he looks very moth like a hairy cow.— Speaking of cows reminds me of our Durham bull you may sell him to Wade the butcher he is of foreign extraction. A friend asked me to go to the Atheneum and see the library and pictures but I was told nearly a ll the pi c tures are painted by the old masters as they are called --and these I am told are without exception all foreigners besides many of the books are in forign languages so it is contrary to the spirit of of my principles to visit such • place. I was going to see Bativard's great painting of the Holy land which is making seise stir, but a na tive artist told me ii was painted _mostly with Venetian red Dutch pink aad Naples yellow while all th e skits were Prussian blue too much of the forign element to be interesting to me. By the way speaking of paint, ha.* the front btindr which I had painted with French green last fall painted some odor other than imentimied above. Stop the Zion. Herald and t a ke the, fai t hs. pri. vetoer in its place. Give ea! Marseille vest to dick the plowman and tell his to stone Jip the scotch terrier oa the farm and to kill that Mal tese oat. He gave it ae OS. Moine of wad Va4land in the thir teenth century met with opposition. A lecturer upon the subject, in Bosses,' says its ass was prohibited by parliamentary law, under the iia pre:Lidos that it produced dismal. AU milder punishment, Ailing to stop ita nee, a law was pa lled tasking it a capital e(nes to bars °ea In the reign of Edward the Zunt, a an was UP vitally pat to death for *slag it, Ths ladies, al ways jealous of their primal sisams, am* hoe ale to its soft andetiiiichlgnaminti ..tuna it ,Fired the :oesplexion; a formidable oppbeitios Imo thus raised, but convenienes and neoessity have triumphed over all obstacles, and those vast magazines of hest, ars now affording us is exhastible *applies of highly eonseatrated cad soavenisat fuel. Fro tbe Bowe !boa A Dropped Letter. Botres, Jaa. 1611, 1855. From your affootiouste father 18551 Prim Illoosoloot d Words NM CALIFORNIAN CHABACTBRA In the San Francisco newspaper, entitled the Wide Wear, Mr Whitt!Wick amused the people at the diggings with a sketch of Californian character. The diggers liked to see their every day acquaintances in print, and called for a cor rected and revised Olden of Whittlestiek's work's. This has daily appeared in twenty-four pages large octavo, from the press of .Booestell and Williston, Court Block, Clay Street, one door below the Poet Other, Sea Francisco." Herein the miner may read about himself.— If he be an unsuccessful miner, this is his char. meter: He knows California to be a humbug. In his judgment the mines mast soon give out.— He thinks that if he had arrived in 'forty-nine be could have made his fortune. Hut not in digging. No! Hard-work is not what be was cut out for. There was a fine opening in 'forty-nine fur any man of talent and energy to speculate in real estate. Ho don't believe half the tales ttld about profitable mining. People can't f“ol hint with their stories. California being a humbug, kis would go home if he hadn't to admit when he lot home that. Jim and Tian knew just bow it would be—that they were right and that be way wrong. He won't admit that. He will starve first. He u pretty nigh starving. He eouid go and work by the day for the Rattle Gulch Water and Mining Company, but ho likes inde pendence; and, as be has his mind to cultivate, objects to doing forted labor for more than eight hours a day. Prospecting is, in his opinion, the only way to strike a lead. The big strokes are what he is after. lie don't want merely to make a living—ho could have done that at home. His luck will turn some day. It is all luck.— Brooks went home with a fortune, and t o ld th e unsuccessful miner's friends that the unsuc cessful miner hadn't half worked It work that does it—it is luck. Brooks would have worked for nothing if he hadn't been so lucky; besides, Brooks was avaricious. The unsue• cessful miner had slaved it. in California long enough; Australia is the place for him; wi,hes that he had gone there at once; want of capital is the only thing that hinders him from going now. Too many persons are allowed to come into the Biggins. In his opinion it is immigra tion that has ruined the mines. .He believes in c l ifarm mining. Thinks that the directors of a quarts mining company make a song thing of it, and wouldn't mina starting such a company himself, if he could find purchasers tit' stock.— Seldom writes home. The glass is nest present,d to the face of the successful ruiner. In the opinion of th- su-i -ceasful miner. the idea that the mines are work ed out is all stuff He does not believe in lurk; attributes his own g mid fortune to innate force of character 13,1,tvet , that he would bawl; g alonganywhere, and that any man who rea:l) works in the mines can dO well Ncver weari.s of writing 13 ime to his friends. especially to those who aiwai's Nild him, etc Think-tile no. successfui nittit•r r her green in lit- sp• eutati but sees clearly that his own 10-scs iu quirtr.. mining and town-lots were claire!). unavo , dable. Has an interest in tw.. &tyres in d.ff , rcot parts of the mints, and is cry ~pt to went, , 0 those localities to tht, ocw-e ttnttr. wL , m,t ask his opinion, as the likeiteNt pLiztt at which : h e . gin. Consider- p- sp et rte a t ry .00d • 1.-op; hut as Wog as he a cis, tll , r(li rig an aver age yield, prefers that on: ,•00e should do it. Is confident that 11 , g .io a panfull of dirt quicker, and get moo • a ..,1 , tut ttf it, than any other man in the mines ('',,:n- to tit • original inventor of the long-tom. Ind kn tr citv a sluice was first-rate for washing g , 'd 1 ,, 1111 he five it was introduced. Looks upon slerpine in a tent as an enervating luxury. ti,ve Is, n & blanket and a stone. Another kind of digger is the digger-Indian. IL is clumsy; has black, matted hair; is (sane! , featured; wears any thing or nothing—r to nay, wears whatever clothes he gets and all that he possesses. If he has been fortunate, he may be met attired in several shirts, coats, and pin'', loons, one over the other. If he has not bh u fortunate, he wears perhaps, oothing but 1 g:nzle pair of -stockings. Of soap he has no knowledge —water touches his skin only when he goes into it for fish. He eats acorns, and grasshoppers embed together when fresh into a pasty mass, or sun-dried for winter use He gets up dances, at which he appears not in full dress, but strict ly and always in full undress, while his wires and his daughters appear in the usual variety of costume. He gambles deeply, at a game known by our children as which hand will you have?— He eats not pik, but rejoices with his whole tribe at the effancling of a whale. He takes a wife, or a family of wives, by exchange of gifts, giving a jug and taking in exchange a net. His body, when he dies, is burnt, and it is a point of honor with his relatives to stand in a:. ring as near as possible to the burning pile until it is consumed; his bereaved wife puts ou a wid ows cap of pitch, which she wears on her head for several months, according to the digger-In dian way of going into black. Another of the noticible characters is the Chinaman. Wherever there is money to be earned, John Chinaman is earning it. lie is a butcher in Dupont Street, a merchant at Sacra mento, a fisherman and fish-drier on Rincon Point, t washerman at the Lagoon; and his idea of what will do for a flat-iron there amazes the Anglo-Saxons. His enemies insinuate that lin en has a tendency to return as cotton from his hands. In every thing, as in washing, his no tions of work are Asiatic. If Chinamen have any thing to lift, they first ascertain whether one man min lift it; and, if he can, they send four to perform the duty. All their work is done on the same scale. For ease in carrying heavy bur dens, the Chinaman depends on the balancing of weights at each end of a pole carried on his shoulder. If he has a bundle weighing fifty pounds to hang on one end of his pole, he will hang fift pounds of any thing as ballast on the other. John Chinaman, in figure and costume, much differk from western notions of the grace ful or the beautiful. Little Californian boys shoot at him with arrows barbed with ping, men passing him on the pavement jostle him; dogs OW at his heels. He is disliked, except by his countrymen; but they back hint with energy. Is he before the recorder , and wants an alibi: - Twenty John Chinamen will prose that ha was in twenty Other places at the time in,question. John Chi namet has his own way of shopping. He en ters a store and gases for a long time silently and stolidly at the object of his desire. The it=at Let retires in dudgeon. John at the expression of his mind in keg- Lk, martins the priee asked for the article, Veibids about one tenth of it. His offer is re: and he departs; be never ogees more at Ohe learvisit. After a few days he returns to ew Ilia offer, and, if it be refused, to buy ow tramper's tams. The Chinaman is no es a miser, but he dislikes diggisilr, for reeking and tospwashing he displays genms.— lie lives sparingly, unless poultry be pat in his Way; for he has a womideyfal greed for thickens. ja forty mine the Must, were eminent in Sin Pm/ism as keep& of the cheapest and best frequented satin' Oman. Tbey wen the only less who had on hand an anfidited wapplf potatoes—thee a Californian binary. These trades lam sow declined. The founder of the best of them has removed, and is said to be a eating-how keeper in the Sandwich basis. ' psis si a poor Premisima but Owe out a line of business as bootblack, and the French bootblack moo become a stoat California character. A file of bootblaeks sow does duty in front of the California Exchange, sad the man with dirty boots who passes them and is no customer must mu the gauntlet. The first boot black provided for his easterner a wooden stool. Competition led to the introduction of a abair with a beak to it. Capital then entered the field with arm-chairs and cushions; and, to the arm chairs and cushions, newspapers were added.— There invention was exhaustel until somebody hit upon the idea of blacking boots in-doors.— C•lifurnia boots are not all to be blacked with ease. A respectable city bout-blacking establish meet that had suffered much grievous wrung at the feet of vissessori of greased or wet bouts, posts in (runt of the customer's peat—close to his eyes—this placard: Boots blacked (not wet or greased) 25 eta. Boots blacked over, ler, etc.) 50 eta. Boots blacked (when wet or greased) 50 cts. sir Persons considering tb•so rates too high, are recommended to visit the Plaza, where ex penses are nos so have?. The Cilifoinians have a decided taste fur ba gar candy. Oue of the most imposing and im perturbable of public characters at San Fran else), who with a rough, bass voice pursues the even tenor of his way, is the "Big Lump Candy Man " Urateful to all men is the sound of bin, "Here you are: Big lumps and atr•r-r-oogly fia vored Ever-r-ybody buys them: Sam Br-r -annan buys them." There have arisen lately, base men copying his cry, and intercepting some part of his custom; so that he is bound now to cry his big lumps as "the Old Or-r-riginal," to assert himself occasionally, as the man "the pa per; tell about " We have given very reduced copies of Mr. Whittlestiek's sketches, and have omitted from the series two most important characters—the newsboy and the grizzly bear. ONE HUNDRED AND PIPIT DOLLAILS roR SET TINO A GANDRICS Lao.—Dr 8 Came to settle at Bloomfield, a half a mile north of what is now Piety Hill, or Birmingham, in 1820, and oom ineuced farmiug and the practice of medicine.— A year or two afterwards, a nighbor, as he was called, a man who lived about eight miles off, with whom the Dr. was at variance, called him about the middle of a bitter winter night, to go to his house and mend a broken kg. The doc tor was Dever backward in obeyinga professional call, and was under way in a short order. Ar riving at the place, he f mind the patient to be au old gander, who sure enough had a broken leg; so he net out to work, made splints and band ages, put the leg in place and went home, lair mg Mr Gand....r as comfortable as could be ex peeted. In due time the owner of the gander was preseuted with a bill of $lO, for surgical services which la: refused to pay. Dr. B. sued him before a justice, and recovered the amount ei , h c , ,st The gander appealed, or his ownor dil for him, the judgment was affirmed with uew co-ts. The gander took another and •last 4ppeat to the Supreme Court, where the jadg uncut was affirmed with uew costs, from which urt au ..zouicion is-u«...1 for $lO damages and $l5O cost- (.1 suit, which was levied on the farm Lud finally pod, leaving the world in doubt which Wam the greatest goose of the two.—Day ton (U ,) Estipir,7. iper.k Mr G. W. Bougay (who is Bungee) has just beeu favoring the public with what be rails his "Off•haod Telwigs and Crayon Sketch- Senator - . •uwatet is thus sketibed: summer is a stockholder lathe bank ~ r;„su .uglit. Wu may know that he has c , n , lerable bullion then , for his clialles are .tiored sit sight, slid our first men are his en dorsers." Cain• Cli-s.r-les may be a stockholder in the bank of original thought, but like many other bank holders, he has been trading for yearn on borr ,wed capital. As for the endorsers, &Wry ought to k.ep shady The philosopher of the New York Tribune, is hit off after this fashion: "Thc subject of this sketch is the prince of paragr..plo-t--the Nspoieon of essayists. fly is the great recording secretary of thus Conti• none, employed bj that masses to take notes and tnt them " The ut , grapher Bungay has evidently made a tut- aL to the name of tireeley's employers. In printers' parlance, the name lb au eta too wide• —Etesiv r IttLAnoNSLIIP —A &soder-stepped Onboard a steitintr.rat as sue was lying at a certain point on the Oi»,) river, and brawled out—"ls the captain aboard! • The captain, who was standing among the crowd, responded, "Yes, what Liu you want with him?" "Oh, nodal:kg particular; he's a distant relal ti , m Of mtne, aud to stet him." "A relation of %otirs".''• inquired the captain, somewhat surprised "Yes, a slight relation. He's the father of my first child." You'd better belvn-e the captain sloped, while the crowd enjoyed the sport to their heart's con tent. , Tun Lasousor. or Pisa WOOD.—In North Carolina it is frequent among her forests of fat pine, for a lover In di. tress to send the fair ob ject of his affections a bit of its staple produc tion, whit an eye painted upon it It signifies "I pine." If favorable to him, the young lady selects from the wood pile the best and smooth est specimens of a knot—this signifies "pine not" But if, on the other hand, she detests him, (there is no middle grounds between de testation and adoration with young women,) she burns one eye of his message; and this generally throws the young man in despair, for it means "I make light - of your pining." A GOOD Orts.--Bitting on a piassa of the Cataract was a young foppish looking gentle man, his garments highly scented with a min gled odor of musk sad cologne. A solemn-faced odd-looking man, after passing the dandy several times with a look of aversion, that drew goneral notice, suddenly stopped, and in a i t onfidental tone said: "Stranger, I know what'll Wm that meat out of your clothes; you" "What do you'mean, sir?" said the exquisite, fired with indignation, starting from his chair. "Oh, get mad now; swear, pitch round, fight just because a man want' to do you& 'dadaist!" coolly replied the stranger. "But 1 tell you I do know what'll take out that mad; phew! You just bury them elotherg bury's= a day or two. Uncle Josh got foal of a skunk and he"— At this instant there went up from the crowd a simultaneous foar of merriment, and the dandy very seutibly "cleared the coop," and milked up stairs. How TWIT SOUND A Fill ALMA Ix STOOL HOLM.—An American, writing from likockials, Sweeden, says: "Fire is a rare4trace here, 46100 home, tense, even the poorest Wag itatit stone, - eousignently it dfs, 511• r.. thew Brat excitement. Aiosg every street s mit FOllll beating a dram violently, tad every bones • obliged by law to send a butyl of water, which stands ready is such eoortlaert This rather slow and primitive method of extingnitat• ing eentagratioes would mersely Si/WIN it eat timisr-box Mem" B. F. SLOAN, ED ..-....v... ~ r 7:- a•^ ft eraNadoesl Intalligetioer .. noo n = feature au Betail, tately de... m ., Stnithaesiaalstatitute, by Rev. - J. ff. . whq lute resided for some Team at Ilia aria It is as follows: . l-, lab Brasil, after Russia, China, sad out ostagallh try, is the largest eoutigthias territogy Gielrernwiest. She has 1..0,1. five hi n g r ed of Atlantis sm. ousicnn, pewit s Ili surpassed. Alt/beset Brasil is saiwly l pical, yet, es account of the the climate does not have (with 4 ,? .... . the low, marshy, maittilabl tad region or a.m) the great extreises of heat htloWn torrid sate is other portions of the 111:11 41g the vicinity of Rio de Janeiro the de/ideal • A tome, the tbousands of flowers, the ist palms, the rich and beautiful fruits, and . nriast tropic vegetation constassly ton's description of the , fabled Illslglailllll. where -4„, •- toe isms! siamasr Mr. Fleisher also demonstrated, in SW nittgaketch of the history of Brasil, die, Empire is as wonderful in its political and Government as in its flora and fusista. 4 Brasil was first discovered.by Pinson A Ow lab Davtgator--* companion o f o o l u ,:d o i 1500. He was followed by Cabial, t a Potties* who claimed the laud in the ttue of his arch. On the Ist of January, 15151, 14141 AMU°lo de Lonsesailed 1040 whathe duel - Ott Ile be a large river, which he named the "Rivet K January," and, although be soon discoveret bid mistake, yet to this day the magnificent adee of water is known by the misnomer "ith is Janeiro." The first colony established *4 fie waters of that bay was in 1566, by a boa ai French Huguenots, under the patronage ea mind Ooligny. They were, however, overmans by the Pirtnguese as well as the Debit', *beim after years occupied a portion of the Roraima coast, from 1634 to 1654. From the leek data. Brasil become a colony of Portugal, with ata . great commercial restrictioSis se Coma berm 1642. Thai this vast region reme.ned Ta ma 1808, when the royal family of Portage' had from Lisbon upon the invasion of the Pima army and sought refuge at Rio de Jelieirre,, which become tur a' time being the capital.-. Brasil rapidly impr.ved (as the eomincreial Pe. !unctions were thrown aside) and it easiest' is. corponited as a portion of the kintliim. Toles. printing press was established in 1808, but it was reserved in after years for indgpessidose Brazil to have a press entirely free and undninik:' led. The leetnrer exhibited several :potion ot Brazilian typography, among which were Lies• tenant Maury's letters on the Amazon gaieties and newspapers. Rio, a city of 80,000 habitanta, has several daily papers wtiellt, /W. ing the seasons of the Imperial ' liigitletete„ print full reports of all the debates the• meisisig aft , r their occurrence. • In 1821 the King, Don . John, reeereed er Portugal, leaving his son, Don Pedro, aileitsery. Brazil was treated badly by Portug al, maik zili m ee resented it, proclaimed a uosistitigicsai Empire, and Don Pedro was made the grei am; : n peror. Their Constitution is singularly HU& and the whole Government more nearly, some quaiiiioations, resembles oar own awl. emit.. other. There are 21 Provinces, each, hetwissitis G o v e rnor and independent Legislature. it is thus a decentralised Government . There - lathe Imperial Legislative Assembly, with its Romp - of Representatives and its Senate, corzeigiondisap„ to our Congress. But, in order that the LPseia vinci.d Governments may b.: more close!) ai the general Government, the Emperor sp points the Governors and the people elect titeir legislators. There is a nobility, bet it is moos • ionie merilo, and cannot doh entr i om foamy 110 , u There it also a liberality a guarattaml. religious toleration which surprised us, eat ees , no be surpassed outside of England and the United States! Brasil is not a bot•bed of revoistios as epos ish America, but has tied a peacefulness mid s . material prosperity in advauee of every Afargi. can Gov, rniu.ut save our own. Sue has had,bet one great change iu her atTerOCUCIII ethltAll2; snot that the famed sibl.eation of Dun Pedro sad it his sou, the present elf:tenet. gar ' peror Ihr eoast committee, carried mitisisS, own Katiing, vett.,el,. and steamers, is immoase--. Two-thirds of tht. cuff c of the world is Pais* Is Brasil, and more than nne half of this in:4MM crop comes to the United States. We boy aeon than fourteen millions of dollars worth frozo air • zii, while we do Out sell her btv. little wore gm thy ammut of four million.: of our produetw f , ag t d w, can readily asscnt to wh it tbt lecturer asseseja . ' As our duty, i. e to culti vase -Inger relatioss tri* Brazil. More than once we were poistuttelbs Southern 'nimbi t• d portion f Brasil , sad titiriis Platte countrit• as the fi Ids for the trinmpintitle Aincrican commerce, and trot the mia.metat almost uninhabited equatorial region of 1 4 Amason. • The coucludiug par l•f Ulu lecuiremsa takr up 'kith bcriptions of the bay and city of (le Jauert.--4 novrl "lest:. of that snout gi „ n , 0, • .:.• .e z ,•••, l . 11,-..tirry, and the fruits toir-•' em, mid p , rp, tuel verdure of that laud of ask obantweat The keturer also wade it known that the bp. peror is a bona' fide E.uperor, no Emilio Bola; 4. °lupe, but a mac, iL whose veins course tAm_ r . blood of the Brapaez.is and the Hapsburgs. Jilt— is the son of the sister of Napopeon'eemeed Sm. 1 . 0 press. lit: relsumi by marriage to every pria.v.i. cps! re.guing house in Europe. The lap of P,rtugai was his sister, and the resew, as of course his nephew. The Prince de :Olei married a younger sister. The Empetialt 3 `"" half sister of the King of Naples and ancitialibbas Queen of Spin. The ihriperor, the Me sus marked, is a fine looking men, having flak plezion, blue eyes, and is just six feet Len es in height. Brusii is bound to advaane. . CAS foreign slave trade is now abolished lead question of domestic servitOsie is not a• soughs , :0" as with us; and judging from the per" do tar Dd reer of Brazil will be onward aad in atnkia j ig er g, • . trait with the volcanic &police of , • d America. p. 411 A VALID Raasone-rtiniele Peter 2.,mile - a &unshed $ few years egio wag the mossonansiet d Vennoot ea an inietcate horse deafest, , a o. sue day called upon by lit amatear of thin . •• 1341' is sear& of somethingfast Tbr told as follows in she N Goesage --,•-. 4 i "There," mid Uneisi Peter, pointinconmmainfiam imal feeding in the meadow beyond the v d "there, sir, is a man ' , under, who mkt tins',. mile in two minitoe and twenty seecessikiieft sot Woe dime' . - 77 “liodeedl" said his companion. ..I 4.T. - sarti4l "yes:: nottinued Uccle Peter s liallik Imit,.: years old i. t.'tis epring; is in good eondkipni * b I S za wed, and is a Brat rate mare, tad eho va wild is one minute and twenty stimali, -. slot fee one thine" . _ ~., neasill “Well, whet is it?" wee the gamy. t . ;41.4 emte n 104 5 . 1 , 8," resumed tisejoehoy, i l l f r. piece of proprly. Shi i me au* tilt tall, kali itiW' eqesie *• ,t. then is ode thing only why she can't go • is two sissies and twenty secoodeP' "What in the Old lisEry is it their Widths maws, impatiently. "The Massa is too great far the door we the Ai wag's seply il .4 . 4 . rnr• .i' ,4.: T • sd • • ,b gS=I NUMEgfilkild a .031 .4