oqt gioga fitauttg .-(3,,.44t0r Is published every Wednesday Moorning at s2_ per year, invariably in advance. coPti & VAN GELDER, ..,,.corm.} • (v. O.VAN GELDER. - - 1111 — :411.11=1111 - 1 -- .1.-1111K — .111 ADVERT I 812NTei- 13..A.T.1E8. TEN LINES or ..11SioN, OP. LEI3B, MAKE. ONE SQUARE. i7 - 0.7)f cz,--Tr-s• - 1 In. s Ins. 41ns. ;Mos. 6,5105. 1 Year ---=--- 'pia $2,00 $2,60 $6,00 $7,00 $12, 00 I li i k : di l l i l i a n r r c :,', ......... 10 2: 00 00 ' 1 : 0 1,:3 00 1 3 1 1 4 7: 0 0 0 0 2 8 2: 0 00 0 0 1 0 2, 3 0 0 1 0 8 0 0 0 0 0 o ll , n w ir c e o l ........... .... I p;:ook 9.0,001 00,90 40,001 00,001 moo ------- ..—.. Special Notices 15 cents per lino; Editorial or Local 20 cents per line. . • ...__ BUSINESS DIRECTORY. W. D. TERRELL, As CO., WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS, and dealers- in Wall Paper, kerosene Lamps, Window Glass, Perfumery, Paints and Oils, Arc., &c. Corning, N. Y., Jan. 1, 1868.-Iy. WILLIAM 11. SMITH, ' ATTORNEY AND COUNSELOR -AT LAW Insurance, Bounty and Pension Agency, Main Street Wolleboro, Pa., Jan. 3,186 S. - S. F. WlLson. J. B. NILES. WILSON Ac • NILES, ATTORNEYS & COUNSELORS AT LAW, (First door from.Bigoney's, on the Avenue)— Will attend to business entrusted to their care in the oonnties of Tioga °ad Potter. Wellsboro, Jan. 1, 18617 HILL'S UOTEL, WESTFIELD Borough, Tioga Co. Pa., E. G. Rill, Proprietor. A new and commodious building with all the modern improvements. Within easy drives of thebost hunting and Ilsh ing grounds in Northern' Penn's. Conveyances - furnished. Terms moderate. Feb. 5,1886-Iy. • GEORGE WAGNER, TAILOR. Shop first door north of L. A. Sears's Shoe Shop. 1,• - •Cutting, Fitting, arid Repair ing done promptly and well. Wellaboro, - Pa., Jan. 1, 1888.—ly. JOHN B. SEICAKSPEARE, DRAPER AND TAILOR. Shop over John R. Boaren's Store. ygif" Cutting, Fitting, and Repairing done promptly and in best style. Wollaboro, Pa., Jan. 1, 1868—ly WM, GARRETSOII.T, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELOR AT LAW, Notary Public and Insurance Agent, Bless bur:, Pa., over Caldwell's Store., JOAN I. 'MITCHELL AAITORNEY AND COUNSELOR AT LAW, Wellsboro, Tioaa Co., Pa. claim Agent, Notary Public, and Insurance Agent. Ho will attend promptly to collection of Pensions, Back Pay and Bounty , . As Notary Public) ho takes acknowledgements of deeds, ad ministers ortbs, and will act as Commissioner to take testimony. gr - Office over Roy's Drug Storo, adjoining Agitator Otrice.--- . -Oct. 30. 1367 Sohn W• GuornseV, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELOR AT LAW. Having returned to this county with a view of making it his permanent residence, solicits a share of public patronage. All business en trusted to his care will be attended to with promptness and fidelity. Office 2d door south of E. S. Farr's hotel. Tioga, Tioga Cq., Pa. sept. , , iIZAAK WALTiri HOUSE, Gaines, Tioga Canntsr, Pa. HORACE C. VERMILYEA, Prtor'n., This is a now hotel located within easy access of the best dshing and hunting grounds in North ern Pennsylvania. No pains will be spared for the accommodation of pleasure seekers and the traveling public. [Jan. 1, 1868.] PETROLEUM HOUSE, tVESTFINLD, PA., GEOHCIE (MOSE, Propri etor. A now Hotel conducted on the principlo of live and lot live, for the accommodation of the public.—Nov. 14, 1866.-Iy. GEO. W. meow, ATTORNEY & COUNSELOR AT LAW, Law renceville, Tioga Co., Pa. ' Bounty, Pension, acid Insurance Agent. Collections promptly attended to. Office 2d door below Ford Ilona°. D30.'12,18117-4' R. E. OLNEY; DEALER in CLOCKS & JEWELRY, SILVER t PLATED WARE, Spoctacloo, Violin Strings, , Siwuutiald, Pa. Watol.., n Jew dry neatly repaired. tEnge.ving done in plain English and Gorman," 1150pt.67-Iy. Thos. B. Brydon SURVEYOR .16 DRAFTSMAN.—Orders loft at his room, Townsend Hotel, It onshore, will meet-with prompt attention. Jan. 13. 1867.—ti. FARR'S HOTEL, TIOGA COUNTY,yA., Good stabling, attached, and an attentive hog kr always in attendance. , E. S. FARR '-- Hairdressing &iShaving, Saloon over Willcox S, Bailer's Store, Wenc her°, Pa. Particular attention paid to Ladies' Rau-cutting, Shampooing, gyeing, etc. Braids, Puffs, coils, and /3 wichos on Lipid and mado to or der. t 4. t H. W. DORSEY DBACON,. D., late of thd 2(1 Pa. Cavalry, atm' nearly four years of arinS,' service, with a large' typerience is field and hospital itacticedias opened an office for the practice of.medirind and surgery, in all its branches. Persons from a Wane° can find good boarding at the Pennsylvania Rotel when desired.— Will visit any part of the State la consultat, or to perform surgical operations. Nco t 4, Union f lock, up ,fairs. Wollebo o, Pa., May 2, NEW PICTURE GALLERY.— , FRANK SPRNCER has the pleasure to inform thticitlzens of Tioga county that he has%completectOsis NEW PHOTOGRAPH GALLERY, and is on hand to take all kinds of Sun Pictures, such as A mbrotypes, Ferrotypes, Vignettes, Cartes do Visite, the Surprise and Eureka Pictures; also particular attention paid to copying and enlarg— ing Pictures. Instructions given in the Art on reasonable terms. Elmira St., Mansfield, Oct. 1, 1566. Wsn. H. Smith, KNOXVILLE, Ps. Pension, Bounty, and In. suranco Agent. ' Communications sent to the above address will receive prompt attention. Terme moderate. ' [jan 8, 1868-Iy] 1 U. S. CLAIM AGrENC For the Collection of Army and Navy Claims . and Pensions THE NEIV BOUNTY LAW passed July 28,1866, gives 1 tiro and three years' soldiers extra bounty. Send in your discharges. OFFICERS" EXTRA PAY. Three months' extra pay proper to volunteer officers who were in service Starch 3,1865. PENSIOIyS INCREASED Teal! who have lost a limb and who have been perms neatly nud totally disabled. All other Government claim prosecuted. JEROME B. NILES. li Ilsboro,October NORDTAN STRAIT, ABENT for the National Scriom of Standard School A Books; published by A. S. Barnes it Co. 111 It 113 'William, corner of John Strout, N. Y., keeps constantly a toll supply. All orders promptly filled. Call on or address by mail,' j • N. STRAIT, Osceola, Pa y ;Noe 15, ISG7-Iy. BLACKSMITHING. THE undersigned having rolurned to Wells horo and opened his shop, on Water street tolicits a share of patronage. Ile proposes to d WORK CHEAP FOR CASH theing, horeee $3,50 and other w ork in _proper April 2ti, 18(33.--6tn 3. G. PUTNAM, VrILL WRlOliT—Agent all. the heft I. TURBINE WATER WHEELS. Alen Stowart's Oscillating Movoinenc for (lung and Malay Saws. TFoga. Pa., Aug. 7, 184.17, 1 y. llomity and Pension Agency. RA vi INU4eceived definite in at ruc tionn in regard to , tile extr bounty allowed by the act approved ' , II /S,l.bc,a,t nd having on band a large supply of all t n - -ttli y Mal 1:8,1 am prepared to prosectite all pen .,aa an.) bounty claims ntleli may bo placed In no' Lm", Percoollving at a dietanca can counntualcato `"11,111.‘ by letter, and their contionnicatlonn trill be ii , an idly answered. WM. If. SMITH. Wt iliburo.Octotter 24,11301. ', C. L. 'WILCOX, Dealer in DRY GOODS of all kinds, Hardware and Yankee Notions. Our assortment is large Atvl . pritea low. Store in Union_ Block. Call 0 gentleumn.--may 20 1868-Iy. VOL. XV. CITY )300K BINDERY BLANK BOOK MANUFACTORyp 8 Baldwin Street;:: (SIGN OF TAB BIG BOOK, 2D JPLOOR, ELMIRA, N. Y. noon AS TUE BEST, CAEAP AS MS CHEAPEST Of every description, in all styles of Binding, and as low, • for quality of Stock, as any Bindery in the State. Volumes of every description Bound in the best manner and in any style or dered: ALL KINDS OF GILT WORK Executecl_ in the best manner. Old:Boolca re bound andin . nde good as new. NerksZIZUN I E142)1121A COMPLETE YOUR SETS! as prepared Co furnish back numbers of till Reviews or Magazines published in' the Milted States or Groat Britain, at a low prim, BLANK BOOK & OTHER PAPER, Of all sizes and qualities, on hand, ruled or plain BILL HEAD PAPER, •• Of Any quality or size, on hand and cut up randy for printing. Also, BILL PAPER, arid CARD BOARD of all colors and quality, in boards or cutlo any 8170. STATIONERY, - Cap, Letter, Note>P,aper, Eirvelopes, Pens, Pe9eitg - ',---&e. ' Prof. SHEPARD'S NON-CORROSIVE TEEL PENS, OF VARIOUS SIZES, FOR LAMAS AND GiNTLV.MEN, Which I will warrant equal to Gold Pens 4 The best in use and no mistake. The above stock I will sell at the Lowest Bates at nll times, at a small advance - op Now Yoilt prices, and in quantities to snit purehaiers. All work and Bieck warranted as represented. I respectfully solicit a share of public patron age. Orders by mail; promptly attended to.— Address, LOUIS DIES, Advertiser Building, Elmira, N. Y. Sept 28, 1.867.-1 y WOULD announce to tho citizens of Wellabo ro and surrounding country, that ho ha, opened a shop on the corner of Water and Craf. ton streets, for tho purpose of manufacturingf r all kinds of REPAIRING AND TURNIIW . DONE •. to order. ' COFFINS of all kinds furnistied on short notice. All work done promptly and war ranted, INC'ellsboro, Juno 27, 1866, UNION, HOTEL • MINER 'WATKINS, Pnornivron HA VI Nd fitted up a new betel building on the giti of the old Union lintel, lately deetroyed by tire lam now ready to receive and entertain guests. Ile. Union Lintel ryas Intended for n Temperance !louse, and the Proprietor believes it ran he sustained without grog. An attentive hostler in attendance. Weilsboro, June 26, MT, JOHN ETNER, ,r TAILOR ANL) CUTTER., has opened a chop on Craton street, roar of Sears & Derby's shoe sr where ho is prepared to manufacture gam n is to order in the most substantial manner, alal with dispatch. Particular attention paid to Cutting and" Fitting. March 26, 1868-1 y HAII.IIIII.'ON HOUSE, On strictly *nporanco princAptel,. INiftrris Run, it. c. Tr , int.—March b, 15f5.—iy. F R. * ItIMBALL, GROCERY AND RESTAURANT, Ono door above the Mont Market, WEI,LSBORO, PENN'A, rip ESPEOPFULLY annouticos to - the t tiding It, public that ho has a desirable stook of Gro ceries, comprising, Teas, Coffees, Spices, I , lugars, bit:lt:Lases, Syrups; and all*that constitutesWi' rst class stock. Oysters in (ivory,. q!398 . _ ... at al/ sea sonable hours. "'',-a-Wellsboro, Jan. 2, ISP,7-tf. Proprietor. i Great Excitement) Johnson impeached, add Eno hree's Rooms and Shoes triumphant! The aubecriher would say to the people of Westfield end vicinity that Ito is manufacturing in Patent foot . which he believes to possess the following advantage over nil others; Ist. there is no crimping; id, no wrinkling, save en they breah to the feet; :Id, no ripping.. In short, they are just the thing for everybody. Samples on band and orders sOlicitoti. Sole right of Westfield township 'and Bore' secured. Ile has also just received a splppdid set of bannerol patterns, latest Styles. Condo Ode, come Pali We are bound to sell cheat, for cash or ready pay. Ehop ono door south of Sander's& Colegrove. Westfield Boro', Feb. 13' 1668. J. R. EtilnllEE. '3'.' JOHNSON. AVELLSBORO HOTEL. C. IL GOLDSMITH, Proprietor.—Having leas ed this popular Hotel, the proprietor respect fully solicits a fair share of patronage. Every attention given to guests. The best hostler in the county always in attendance. April 29, 1868.—1 y. TIOGA GALLERY Or' ART. Iwould respectfully inform the citizens of Ti oga and vicinity, - that I have built a new PHOTOG RA PH GALLERY in the Borough of Tioga, and having a - gbod Photographic Artist in my employ, I am now prepared to furnish - all kinds of Pictures known to the Photographic Art. Also having in my employ a number of first class Painters, I am prepared to answer all calls for houseS sign, car. riage, ornamental and scenery painting. Ad dress A. B. MEADE. May 6,1868-6 m. Tioga, Pa. THE PLACE TO BUY DRUGS. - AT tho Lawrenceville Drug. Store, wheris:Ylits will find every thing properly belonging to the Drug Trade CHEAP, CHEAPER, CHEAPEST, and of the best quality for Caeh. Alto, Paints, Oils, Varnishes, Lampe, Fancy: Notions, Violin Strings, Fishing Tackle, Window-Glass, kr.. ' Cash paid for Flax Seed, C. P. LEONARD. Lawrenceville, May 8, 18t17. Glen's rails Insurance OommanY) GLEN'S 'FALLS, - N: Y. -' Capital and Surplus $373,637,66. - 0 - - FARM RISKS, only, taken. No Premium Notes required. It is LIBERAL. It pays damages by Light sing, whether Fire ensues or not. It pays for lire stock killed by Lightning', in barns or in tho Its rates are lower than other Cotnpanie• of equal responsibility. I. C. PRICE, Agent, Farmington, Centro, Tioga Co. Pa t - May 29, 1.867-Iy* '• J. W. RITTER [VALUER & LATHROP, DRALERS IN lIARDWA RE; IRON, STEEL, NAILS, 8 PO VES, BELTING, SAWS , CETLERY WATER LIME, MIII.ICULTURAL pWPLEMY'iST ' S , ' • Carriage and Harness! Trirnminga, JIARNESSEEi, SADDLES, Av. Corning, N. Y., Jan. 2, 1867-Iy. OVOICE LOT OF GRAIN BAGS fur •iai r ki cheap! at WRIGHT Sr. BAILEVH Wetlabor°, Juno 5,1857: CALEN DE It, . Fre tie b; Maine 'anti Clocks, at [doel9] , POLES'S., _ - - • . • N. t. ThA. .0 n: . 1 H., „4•: 01.01 r • MEI ccri.?, m.a.ct a , ' l' 0.: BLANK BOOKS I am solo agent for JOHN RUHR, CABINET FURNITURE, ocat•Eil tint 10.12:€:)4Disl. ME ME INTRODUCED INTO- { MEkICA FkOM GERMAN-, in 83 5. HODFLAND'S GERMqI BITTERS, HOOFLAND'S 'GERMAN TONIC, PREPARED BY DR. C. PAa The greatest known remedies for • Liver Complaint, DYSPEPSIA. I Nervous Debility, j4 I 7NPIPE, , • Diseases of the kidneys, ERUPTIONS of the SKIN, and all Diseiseg arising from a Do. ordered Liver, Stomach, or iIIIP.V7LITY OP MP, BLOOD , past ths following symptoms, apstof you,,finft Mgt your system is affected my any of Thep, you may rest assured that disease has commenced its attack on the most important organs of your body, and unless soon checked by the use of potoerfut remedies; a miserable life, soon terminating in death; will be the result, Constipation, ,Flatulence, Inward Piles, Fulness of Blood - t4the Head, Acidity of the Stomach. , Nausea, Heart- ,' burn, Disgust for Food. Fulness or Weight inlthe Stomach, Sour Eructations. Sink ing or Fliittering at the Pit of the Stomach, Syvinuningof tiwinirning the Head: 'Hurried or Difficult Breathing, Fluttering at_ the Heart, Choking or.Suffccating Sensations when in a liying,Posture, Dimness of Vision, . „' Dots or Webs before the Sight, Dull. Pain in the Hoag, Deft- ."••• eiency of Perspiration, ' ' • lowness of the Skin and Eyes, Pain in the Side, I3aclr, Chest, Limbs, eta., Bud den:glushea of Heat, Burning in the Flesh, Constant Imaginings of Evil, and Great Depression of Spirits. An these indicate disease of the Liver or Digestive Organs, combined wills. impure blood. figpflapb:a reenwl ,t3ittcro, is entirely vegetable, and captains Ito liquor. It Is acompound of Fluid Ex tracts. The Roots, Herbs, and Barks from which these extracts nre made are gathered Germany. All -the medicinal •rlrtites nTe extracted frotri them by a scientific chemist. These extracts are then forwarded to this cornitry.to be used expressly for 'tilt manufacture of these liitters. "'l`here Is no alcoholic substance of any kind used In compounding the Bitters, hence Kip the only Bitter's that can be usedlrixtctuceia where' alcoholic stim ulants are not advisable: • Ocrutatt, (goal(' is a combination of all the ingredients of the Bitters, with PURE Santa Cruz Rum, Orange, etc. It is used for the same diseases as the Ltiftere, ca cases where some pure alcoholic stimulus is required. Inu will bear in mind that these remedies are entirely difierent from any others advertised for fife cure qf, the diseased named, these being;scient(fic prepantlimo s - nf medieftial extracts, while the others ace nirr4 decoctions of rum in sonic form. The TONIC is decidedly one of the mod pleasant and agreeable remedie , l ever offered to the public. Its taste iv exquisite. It is a plea: ere to tuke it, while er , taaratiag, and lardiCiaai qualities have caused rI to he knonla n,r the g,•eam s t o f all tonics. • CONSUMPTION. Thousands of cases, when, the pa. tient supposed lie w i ts nfflictied Ivastr this terrible Wisenseihteve hemu cured by the use of these remedies. IL' xt refine emaciation, debility, and cough: are the usual attendants tipon severe eases of dyspepsia or disease of the digestive organs. h.'ven in ellbefi of genuine COll4 timpt iOll, these remedies will be found of the greatest bmtetit, strengthening and invig9rat in,,:. , i;:‘ \ r D B 1 ,6,-, • i - ? I, i r Y.i :., .. ' Ti,..r i an medreim, (vital to lionfland's Ger»111)1 /Mier; go? nide I» eIISTS of Debility. They impart a e••••-•••• Ihe Ala , le .1 l • it itimuith digryt 11, en the op zoud, he.athq erwilan.Na d t:,!. na bl e the. /rum the eye, impact a 1 , 1,, , An to the dicks arvicha4E the putivit _roan d shoPt-breathe,d, enlaczated, peak, and nil -pans' iathilid, to a fnll:f.eced, stone, and riyar. • nus person. • Weak, and Delicate le strong by lasing the Marrs or Tonic. In tart, they are Prevail* 1 Medicines. They can be administered with perfect safety to a child (litre monts old, the most delicate female, or t i tan of ninety. 'Tile Remedies aretlie best 33100ci Purifiers . . ever knr6,l, and will cure all diseases resulting from bad bliifi. , -Keep oar blond pure; keep lode Liver •in order; keels 7fildr digestive organs in a sound, healthy condi , lion, by the use of thev,trofdies, and no thscase will ever assail you. . , . . COIitPLMZT4)II. Ladles • - w1 n' wish at fair skh.i and good complexion, (rep from ix yeilloi , 1 hat tinge and oil other disfigurement, should use these remedies Occasion ally. The Liver in perfect order, and the 'blood pare, will result. in spark ling and blooming cheek's. , CA,V‘rxia M. . .17bofiand's German Remedies are coutiterfeihe .The genuine have the signature of p. Ar, Jackson. on the, front of the outside wraliprr of each bottle, and the name q% the article blown in eachballe All otht , rs are counterfeit . • • . Thousands of letters have heeu re celved, testifying to the virtue orates , remedies. • - READ THE RECOMMENDATIONS. ' 'ROM HON. HEO. W. WOODWARD, ChiPfJustito of the Suori;mp Ooin - t.of Ponneyiinuta. I'un.A.brotrizii;l6 two 16th, 1867. Ifind "Honfland's German Bitters" is not an intox icating beverage, but, is a- good tonic issefla in disor ders of the digestive orgaue,,-:crod, of great bent in eaves •of tiebitity , , and r want df nervous action. tn,the systfm. Yours truly: z GEO. wooDireißD. • FROM HON. JANIES THOMPSON; • Judge of the Bnpz eme Court of reermylvabifi. ' • PRILMIELPITIk, Arnit'2Bth, 1860. I consider " IloollFtrad's German Bit-. tors' , a valuable merlieine in Case Of at• tachs of Indigestion or Dyspepsia. I can certify this frtim,rity experience of it. Yours, with respect, JAMES ifIIOMPSON. Yvon!, REV. JOSEPH. U. KENNARD, D.D., Pastor of the Tenth.llaplist Church, Philadelphia. DR.JACKSON—nt kit :-- hur,i;Pea feequent7 y re quested to connect my name with recommendations (If &prim, kinds of medicioee, lad regar‘iiuy the practice as out of my appropolule sphere, I kamin all cases de clined; but with a clear proof in rarimai instances, and particularly in my mon family, of the usefulness of Dr. lfoofiand's German hitters, I depart for once from $719 usual course , to express my full COntieilian that for general debility of the syetem and especially for, Liver Complaint, ft in a sato nod v aluable preparation. In some cases it may fail ; but usually, I doubt not, ft will be very beneficial to those who suffer. from the abore cause. Yours. very respectfully, j. H. KENNARD, B.iyhth, below Coates St. • Pried of the `Bitters, $l,OO per bottle ; " Or, a half ,dozon for 151)0. Price of the ToniO, 81:50 - "per bottle,; Or, a half dozen for 87.50. %Ito Tonle is pnt up in quart bottle. Recollect that it is Dr. frog!land's German Remedies that are so universally used and so highly recommend ed; and do not allow the Druggist to induce you to take any thing else that he may say is just as good, br rause he make, dlarger•prqfit on it. .These Remedies will be sent by express la any locality upon application lo the PRINCIPAL OFFICE/ AT THE GERMAN MEDICINE STORE, • N. 13,31 A .12 CH TREiT, • CHAS.' M. EVANS. Fropribtpr, „I"9Traoqy 4AoBeozi & co. 'Thum Remedies- are for sale by Druggiete, : Storelceepere, and Medi. eine Dealers everywhere. ; Do not forget to examine it'd, the article you buy, order to pd the grnutne- . • • .1 • The above Remedies ore for sale by rugkits, Storekeepers, and Medicine denierci, everpatere tlireughout the ,Uaited States, Canadas, Spoil America, find the;Weat 4 ..! Vb.° -r. • . ,Rokixnvia.66l3.lb is; Vac, 130aviutaxi3asz of lill7"igescic.saa.." WELL§BORO, PA., JULY 8., 1868. gotto' Olviorstcr. THE Pt LOWE.R,OF LIBERTY DY OLIVEIt WIINPELL 110L4ES• What glower is this that greets the morn, Its lines from heaven so freshly born ! With burning star and flaming,brand • It 'kindled all•the sunset WWI • • 0 tell us what its name may-he,- Is this the flower of Liberty? It is the hahner ,Of the free, The starry FloWer of Liberty. In,savage Nature's fair abode..,. . . • - Its tender seed. our, father's sowed The storm-winds rooked,its ewclling bud, Ity o POilif 2 l3,/coves , were streaked with -blood Till to ! earth's tyrants shook to see _ The fill•hiown Flower of Liberty ! Then hail the banner of the free,. • Tbq starry Flower of iiitertyl- - Behind its streaming rays unite, Ono mingled flood of braided The red that fires the Southern rose, „ Willt ; spetlesi,Whito from Northern snows, Add, spangled o'er its azure, see The sister Stars of Liberty! Then bail the banner of the free, Flower!of Lihertk! - • The blades of heroes fence it round ' Wherifer it springs ls holy ground ; From tower and dome its glories spread ; It waves where no lone sentries tread; It makes tho land as ocean free, And plants an empire on the.sea , Then hail the banner of the free: The starry Flower of Liberty. Thy snored leaves fair Freedom's flower Shall ever Boat on dome and tower, To all the heavenly colors true, In blackening frost ar crimson dew, And God loves us as ire love thee, , Thrice holy Flower of Liberty l Then hail the banner of the free, • The starry Flower of Liberty. Vtiorellaittous irdinq•. ARTHUR WILLETT -- I - A TRUE TALE • One cold winter morning, the last Sunday of December, 1849, a halfnaked man knoeked timidly at the basement door of a tine substantial mansion in the city of Brooklyn. Though the weather was bitter ' even for that season, the young man had no clothing hut a ragged pair of cloth pants, and the remains of a flannel shirt, which, exposed his muscular chest in, many large rents. But in spite of his tattered apparel and evident fatigue, as he leaned heavily updn the railing of the, basement stairs, a critical observer could not fail to no- hoe a conscious air of dignity, and the marked traces of cultivation, and' re finement in his pale haggard counte- mince. -The door was speedily opened, and disclosed a large comfortably. furnished room, with its glowing grate of anthra cite, before which was placed a luxuri ously furnished breakfast table. A fashionably attired young; Man, , a broca!l e dressing gown and - velvet slip pers, was reclining on a sofa, busily reading the inclining papers. The beautiful young wife had lingered at the table, giving the servant -in wait ing her orders for the household matters of the day,: when tifq timid rap fit the door attracted her attention. She coin mantled it to be opened, but the young ,master of the mansion replined • that it was quite useless—bcinw,it o _door wan, nt.- some thieving beggar but the , ..—' krt.v. "Chine in to the fire,":said the Young wife, iMptrlsfvelY,'"befere yeti Perish!" The metlieant l , without exhibiting,. any surprise at such usual treatment •ot ii street beggar, slowly entered the room, manifesting a painful weakness at every step. On his entrance, Dr. Afaywood with a displeased air, gath ered up his papers and left the apart ment. The compasasonate lady unwise ly placed the half-frozen man near the, itre,nyhile obe prepared a boWl 'of fin , grant coffee, Nvhidli with abundant food, was placed before him. But noticing the abrupt departure of her husband, Mrs. Maywood, with a clouded counte nance, telt the.roem, whippering„ to the Servant td retriain until the stranger should leave. She ran hastily upthe richly ; nionn ted'stairease, and paused before the en trance of a small laboratory and medi cal library, and occupied solely by her husband, who was a physician and practical chemist, She opened the door and enterett the JO . Orn: ; Maywood was sitting' fit a small table with his head resting on his hand, apparently in deep thought. ,"Edward,' said the young wife gent ly touching his arm, "I fear I had dis pleased you, but the man looked so wretched I could not bear to drive him away," and her sweet voice trembled as she added—" You know I take sacra ment to-day." ' 'Dear Mary," replied the ,fond hus band, "I appreciate your motives. I know it is pure goodness of heart which leads you to disobey me, but stilllmust command that no beggar shall ever be permitted to enter the house. It is for your own safety that I insist upon it. How deeply you might be imposed upon in my frequent absences from home I shudder to, think. The man that is now below may bea burglar in disguise, already, in your , absence, taking im presSions in wax of the different key holes in the room, so as to enter some night at his leisure. Your limited ex 4erience of city life makes it difficult for youln credit so mud) depravity. It is no charity to give to street beggars, it•only encourages vice, dearest.": "It may be so," responded Mrs: May -1 wood, "but it ceems wicked not to re lieve suffering and want even if the person • hal behaved badly—and we know it. But I promise you not to ask another beggar into the house." At this moment the servant rapped violently at the door, crying that the .beggar was dying. "Come,".Edward, your skill can save him,l know," said his wife, hastening from the room. The'doctor did not refuse this appeal to his professional vanity, for he imme diately followed his wife's flying foot steps as she descended to the basement. They found the mendicant, lying pale and' unconscious upon the carpet, where he had slipped from weakness from his chair, where Mrs: MaywOod had, seated hien. "He is a handsome fellow," murmur :od the doctor, ns he bent over him to ascertain the state of his pulse. • And well he might ' say so. The glossy looks of - raven 'hair had fallen from the broad white forehead; his closed eyelids were bordered by long raven lashes, which lay like a silken fringe, upon Ids pale bronzed cheeks, while a delicate nose and a square Massive chin displayed, a model of manly beauty. •- -"Is asked the - young, Wife • - "Oh, no, it's only a fainting fit /ll du'eo,,by the midden change -of tem peraiaire and perhaps the first stage of alarvation,"i replied the doctor, sym liathizing,ly. Ho had forgotten for the • moment his cold maxims of prudence, affil added, "he must be carried - to room withoUtilre, and plated in acorn . fprtable bed The coachwan.was called in to assist in lifting the athletic stranger, who was carried to a roon, in a--chamber, where the doctor administered 'with his own hands strong does of port Wine sangaree. The young man soon became partly conscious, but all conversation was forbade him, and he -sank quietly to sleep. 7 "He is doing well ; let him rest as long i as lie call ; should he wake in my absence, give him beef tea and toast ad libitum," said the doctor profession ally, as lie left the room.. . leas than an hour afterwards, Dr. Maywood and his lovely wife entered the gorgeous church of the "Most Holy Trinity." • , And qi the ; hundreds of, fair ,4amem that'entered its broad pertal`s,,',dreSsed with all the taste and magnificence that abundant wealth could procure, not one, riyaltnr ,in grace and beauty, the orphati'bride of the rich phyeleian. Her tall graceful figure waarobed ,in a violet Silk, that' Only heightened by contrast her azure eyes, bright with the lustre 'of yotithful happiness, yet there was a touch of tender pity in l their drooping lids, that won the confi dence of every beholder. The snowy ermine mantilla which protected her from 'the piercing wind* rivaled but could not surpass the delicate purity' cjf her complexion, • Many admiring eyes followed the fault less figure of Mrs. - Maywood as she moved with unconscious grace up the aisle of the church, but none with more heartfelt devotion than the young, wayward,,,but generous man who had recently wed her iu spite Other poverty and the sneers of his, aristocratic ac. 7 quaintances. The stately organ had pealed ,its last rich notes, which were still faintly ech oing in the arches, when a stranger of venerable aspect, who had previously taken no part in the services of the altar, rose and announced for his' text the oft quoted but seldom applied words of the Apostle—"Be not forgetfUl to entertain strangers, for thereby. some have entertained angels unawares." Dr. Maywood felt his forehead flush painfully ; it appeared to him for the moment that the preacher must have known of his want of ,charity towards strangers, and wished to give him a public lesson ; but he soon saw from the tenor of his discourse that his own guilty conscience had alone .made the application in his particular case. It had, not the space; nor indeed the power s to give any synopsis of the ser mon , but thatssit, combined with the incident of the morning, effected a happy revolution in 'the mind of at least one of its hearers. So much so that on the return of Dr. Maywood how church he repaired at once to the room of the mendicant to offer such attention as he might stand in need of. But the young man seemed to be much refreshed by rest and nutritious j food, and com menced gracefully thanking his host for the kind attention he had received, which without doubt, saved his life. "I will recompense you well, for thank God, I am not the beggar that I seem. I was shipwrecked on Friday night in the Ocean Wave, on my return from India. My name was doubtless among the list of the lost—for I escaped from the waves by a miracle. I attempted to make my way to New York, where I had ample fundg in bank awaiting my orders .but must have perished front:&ld and Manger Vac" -it bet, been for - your Wife'S' provident Charity-, I was repulsed from ,every . door as an im-' vasSor,_abd could-get neither food nor land tell Y ett l, l l 4 .' hunger ,.o nf christian city, I felt to be - truly, a atter fate." "My name is Arthur Willett," added the stranger. "Why, that is my wife'sfamilyname. She will be doubly pleased at her agen cy in your recovery." "Of what State is she a native ?" ask ed Arthur Willett, eagerly. . "I married her in the town of B—, where she was born." At this moment Mrs. Maywood en tered,the room, surprised at the long absence of her husband. Arthur Willett gnzed at her with a ook of the wildest surprise, murmured : `lt cannot be—it cannot be, I am de irious to think so!" Mrs. Maywood gazed with little less ' astonishment, motionless as a statue. "What painful mystery is this?" Cried Dr. Maywood, excitedly address ing his wife. who then became con scious of the singularity of her conduct. "Oh, no - mystery," she replied,. sigh ing deeply, "only this , stranger is the image of my long lost brother Arthur." And Mrs. Maywood; overcome with emotion, turned to leave the room. "Stay one moment," pleaded the stranger drawing a small ring from his finger, and holding it up, asked if she recognized that relic. "It is my father's gray hair, and you are—" "His son, Arthur Willett, and your brother." Mary Willett Maywood fell upon the mendicant's breast, weeping tears ofthe sweetest joy and,l,thanksgiving. Doctor Maywood retired from . the room and left his sister and brother alone dn that sacred hour of reunion, saying to himself: "Be not forgetful to entertain strang ers, for thereby some have entertained angels unawares." A , REMARICABLE OBITUARY.--The following singular gbituary appears in an lowa paper in relation to a boy kill ed by a railroad accident: He was asleep in the car; it run off the track, struck a tree, threw his head against the ear with such force as to produce insensibility. He was-. taken to the hospital, where he died the next morning, sensbility never returning. He ,was seventeen years old last Sep tember, six feet high and weighed 175 pounds. He was the most higly organ ized boy I ever knew—the best educa ted, because he mastered what he stud ied.. He was a linguist, Latin,' Greek, English. Mr. Walker, who was partial to him, volunteered to teach him, evenings, all the Latin learned in col lege. He was a mathematician, for which he had a passion, a surveyor, draughtsman, artist; carpenter—the best biographer I ever knew. . Ho had a woman's loving heart— a man's inflexible purpose. He also worshiped hiss mother's' memory--his' eyes were just like hers. Cats, dogs, horses, birds, children, were his pets. 'He had an intense curiosity in relation to all the contrivances of the creation. He watched a bird with the deVotion of an ornithologist—was struck with the gallantry of the male canary, when a lump of sugar was put in the cage, it waiting till the female ate as much as it wanted, He had an intense desire to see the ocean—whey taken to it, he was a'sved-pelt-bound—niaile a spontane ous collection of' shells along its rest less shore—there they are, in his little teal - dna, just as, he himself placed them. :Wben at thelnines, he collected min eralsin the'same way. He begged .his uncle,' over and Over again, to let him go into this war, who thought ho was too young to be exposed to all the temp ' tations bf the camp.' He read Abbott's Life kit Napoleon when ho was so little - 7 -the hook Sb big that he looked like a tumble bug at a cart wheel ; he latend ed,.at the time, to do all that Napoleon did, even to marrying Josephine. He --- 1 had great purposes", all unexeeutqd—he seemed a case of incipient greatness— his only fault; contempt of danger. Jn ,a moment of unconeiousness, i 'death `came Upon him, like a thief in the night. Ms uncle, his cousins, hip poor father—all his kin—feel as if a poisoned arrow had hit:them. His uncle will have likenesses made of him to give to all who loved him. [Vet the Agitator.] NOTES OF A VISIT TO GETTYSBURG. Some of your readers may be interest ed in a brief sketch of a recent visit- to! Gettysburg, which I enjoyed, inr com mon with many others, during the Meeting of the General Assembly;of the 'Presbyterian church, in Harrisburg:. Through the courtesy of the officers of the Itailroadsleading thither, about three hundred of us, delegates and in vited guests, were furniShed with freo tickets,- and a train of elegant cars bor rowed from the several roads for' this occasion. Governor Geary and his lady, with Whom, as Members of the church in which the Assembly met, we had al ready enjoyed several pleasant inter views, cordially consented to aecom- Pally us, and act as'our guides over that memorable field. $ Our journey lay through some of the most cultivated and delightful Milan() valley scenery of the State. S venal towns, whose names became fa iiliar during the invasion of General Lee, Were passed ,in our route;—York, \ ‘ r hose terrified in habitautssuffered thetns -lees to be blackmailed by General Ewell to the tune of $`28,000; -Hanover, and Han over Junction, where that redoubtable chief, J. E. 13. Stuart, tapped the Rail road, and cut the wires; with other points of like interest. Four hours brought us to Gettysburg, where we were met by a Committee, and conducted to the public square.— There the ladies and 'venerable were provided with carriages; while the Gov. from the center of the Square, announc ed the programme for the day. • As no time was to be lost, the whole company Proceeded at once to the head quarters °el Gen. Lee, about three-quar= , ters of a mile up the Chambersborg road. This was a small - whitewashed block-house, at the corner of a grow .:. by the roadside. Here the excursionists, mounted upon the wagons and fences, with their maps - .:outspread, surveyed the scene. Rev. 13r, Hodges, a witness of the first day's battle, stood upon a wagon seat, and pointed out the posi tions and movements of the troops.— The assault, the repulse, and final re treat of our forces through the town to their strongly intrenehed position on Cemetery hill, were graphically ,de Piet ed. • While the company were returning to a bountiful collation, prepared by the Indies of Gettysburg, in the hall of the fair ground, two of us visited' the spot where the gallant Reynolds fell. The way lay across a plowed field,,over which the scattered hones of unburied men lay bleaching in all .directions. Here and there fragments of clothing, knapsacks, canteens, &c., were encoun tered. At a corner of the fence enelos ing a small piece of woods, the intrepid soldier met his fate, at the hands of sharpshooters, while reconnoitering the enemy's position. The scattered trees :still bear.upon,their trunks the traces of. their deadly aill).',' Froin:, this. :point we crossed a meatic;v;,:on our *ay', to ,the Theological Seminary, passing by tblib - i - sdaretayPs_where the dead were Here sand there bones migni he--4,—. ' protruding from mingled heaps of earth, stones, canteens, and kuapaseks, with which they had been hastily covered. For, with the utmost dilligence of the citizens, but a part only df the rebel dead could receive a decent burial, and many it is said, for lack of a friendly hand to cover them, were actually con sumed by birds and beasts of prey, or left to rot on the field. Passing through a little grove covered with the marks of the battle, we en ter the Seminary from the rear, and ascend ed to the Cupola, whence Gen. Led had reconnoitered our position on 'thel sec ond day. Here with glass in hand we• had a fine survey of the field. It ex tends several miles in each direction, over a succession of low ridges, green valleys, and wooded hills, bounded in the distance by mountains, through the passes of which the army of Lee so mysteriously melted away, before their tardy purSurers. As we passed through the halls of the building, our attention was called to the marks of blood on the pine floor, where the wounded had lain, whiqh no scouring has availed to remove. These traces were especially noticeable in the library, where many of the wounded of both armies bled and groaned' and died together. After the collation' at the Hall, we proceeded up the Baltimore pike, to the corner-stone of the monument, whieh the Martyred President laid at th 'ded ication of the National Cemetery. Here the Assembly, with uncovered I ends, united in a fervent prayer, led b the venefablo Dr. Skinner, of R. Y. 'Then by request, Gov. Geary read', the Ad dress of the immortal Lincol, 4tand ing on the very spot from which It was delivered nearly tour years ago'. ' The plan of tie National Cemetery next engaged our attention. it, occu pies the slope oil the hill, facing the town, and is disosed like a fan spread out, or rather like an inverted amphi theater, with thi monument for its fo cal center. Nearest the monument, are large square blocks of granite on which are engraved the names of the 'several States represented. Beyond these, in 'ever widening arcs, are, the tablets of the dead, marked with name, company allul division, in such order that visitors may readily trace their dead without a guide. From the most available point, the in . Governor directed our attention OVe., that memorable field, and delineated the progress of the battle. Turning our backs upon the town, with the I.illage cemetery on our left, we could command ant extended view of the positions of the left wing of our army from the hikh pinnacle of Round Top down to the center, where we stood. 10 the right, on the long parallel ridges, lay the right 'wing of the enemy. Here, near a large peach orchard, a hal -mile distant, was the scene of the principal conflict of the second day, in Which Gen. Sickles bore lo conspicuous apart . At the foot of the slope in Mitt, It.tooil the modest cottage, which ser-ved ..`‘, tit I.! bead-quarters of Gen. yead.e From the high, rocky cones of Round Top, and little Round Top, from which, on his first arrival Gov. Geary dislodged the enemy; our guns commanded sev eral roads, and poured a galling fire urtiA on the fiank of the enemy. Upon these distant heights at a point called Devil's Dell; several whole 'skeleton's 'mayl still' he seen. From a point on the owosite ridges the lines of the enemy extended five or six miles, sweeping down, past. Cemetery' Hill, and bending thr,ough ,the town, and a mile and a half beyond like an immense fishhook with its' barb resting. on Culp's 11111. , This latter point was one of special interest to . 3ev. Geary, and Accordingly we proceeded' thither; passing in our course, tin ra vine up which the Louisiana Tigers wade their desperate but fatal aesaUlt Culp's Hill lies about a mile east of the Cemetery. t lt is covered by the primeval forest 4nd huge boulders of granite. On the! farther slope •of the hill Gen. Geary with three brigades confronted Ewell with a superior force on the ridge opposite and held him at bay for two fearfulday sometimes at the point of the bayonet. The timber in the valley bears witness to the teiri-• ble conflict. Much of it has fallen and the dead trunks , still standing though hacked and sawed are still Atli of grape and minnie balls; some of which we secured. But alteady ho* changed the scene. As the Governor remarked the hand of time has nearly erased all trabes of the horrid attire... The trenches' have mostly been filled, and the breast works broken down, or overrun with grass. And it was difficult as we stood, upon the,high places ofthe field, with tike elear.sky above us, and the green and peaceful landscape around us, to realize that on the third ,day of July, 1863; an embattled host of j 120,000 men, :advancing along their whole line, in one mighty desperate char e, were reli ed back in broken, thine , and disor dered masses beneath the e oudy conepy of battle. But though these art ficial traces may disappear, yet as the yeare roll on, the field of Gettysburg will take rank with the great battle-fields 1 of history. And the gatitude of all' succeeding gen erations, shall embalm the memory of that heroic army, which, by its valor and devotion, was the means, under God, of turning the evenly balanced scales of victory to the side of freedom, righteousness and peace, in the utrilost crisis of tile war. W. P. GIBSON. CIROIIMSTANTIALEVIDENCE. With a certain lord, any centuries since, resided a little girl, who was an orphan and his niece. The child he used with extreme cruelty. - She was frequen tly heard by the servants, while suflbr ing from his violence, to cry out : "Good uncle, kill me not!" Eventually she, disappeared. Itwas at once assumed that she , had been murdered by her uncle. He 'vehemently denied the charge; but public opinion ran so strongly against him that he was ar raigned, convicted and executed. Ten years, afterward, the child, now grown to be a tine young woman, turned up to claim some land which had been de vised to ber'before her disappearance. She had taken refuge from• the barbar ity of her' uncle with a kindhearted lady, and by her had been conveyed "beyond sea." Ambrose Gynnett brings us nearer to our own times. This man. it will be remembered, vas tried, found guilty, and hanged for the murder of his Uncle. The uncle had been sleeping iii Gynnett's house, which was on the coast of Kent, the back garden running down to the seashore. He disappeared. No body was found ; but a trail of blood was discovered from 'the house to the garden end, and there, too, was found a clasp knife, known to belong to Gyunett, covered with gore. Gynnett, protested his innocence, but he was sentenced to death, and absolutely hung in chains, or rather in that iron cage in which the corpses of Malefactors were suspended from the gibbet until the birds of the air had picked the flesh from their bones. By what seemed an interposition of • Providence Ambrose ,Gynnett did not die. The hangman ; had:dune his work Won - but - been suspended,-and the [poor fellow recovered consciousness to find hiMself imprivned in the gibbet the. rermira mime Asfreii raseileit&VP‘,.."Wfia preservation, he was pardoned. Many years afterward, the uncle for whose supposed assassination Ambrose had been hanged reappeared. It turned out that on the night of the alleged murder, he bad risen from bed with• a violent attack of bleeding from the nose - . He bad endeavored to allay this -with the cold steel- of the clasp knife. He had gone into the garden in the hope that the freidi air might stop the bleed ing. , At the garden 'end ho had been seized by a press gang, carried at once on board ship, and conveyed to the West Indies. The topic of wrongful executions -oat orally suggests the case of the Maid and the Magpie to which Scribe gave a happy ending, While Rossini removed the record from the dusty archives of Justice to•the ever-shining Temple of Fame. The story is no fanciful myth. Tho magpie and l the maid both lived, though not at Palaiscaux, but in Paris ; and the one suffered 'for the crime of the other, whose seal delinquency was only found out long after infallible Jus tice bad solemnly strangled the inno cent servant' girl. There. is mention made in Mer ier's Tableau de Paris of an annual n ass which was regularly celebrated fc4 the repose of the soul of this unhappy victim at the church of :St. Jean en Greve, the service being I popularly known as masse de la pie. In those days Justice with its bandaged eyes seemed to have , played a sort of game of blind-man' -buff. When a crime was committe, , it was " Turn round three times anyl catch 'whom you can.'' The same author elates a ease iu which another servant girl had been brougl4 to the gallowS equally innocent of the crime imputed to her. Her master had endeavored to seduce her, and failing wreaked his vengeance by placing valuables in her box, and then denouncing her as a thief. he scoun drel was powerful, the facts seemingly, daninatory; and the only defence tears and asseverations of ihnocence. 411 e was banded over to the hangman, or rather to his bungling apprentice, wlii)ne unavoidable nervousness—the natural consequence to a first appear anc(—left the girl inanimate, but not dead. A surgeon's dissecting knife set the tide of life in motion again, and his care soon effected her complete resuscia tion. In doubt as to hoiv he should act under these strange circumstances, he sent for a priest in whose discretion he placed implicit trust. The priest, a venerable and solemn looking person age, arrived just as the girl was awak ening to the outward world, which she mistook for that which is promised in the future, and, perceiving the priest, s i e clasped her trembling hands, and e.Sel a i aluil : " Perq Eternel f vous save: mon i»nocenee, cz3rn petie de moi !" (Eternal Father, you know my inno cenee, have compassion on me!) It was difiienit to remove this impression, Nt liiii:ll, however, had furnished the cleArest. po ) ;sible proof of her innocence to 1 .11,0-e who heard the touching rip pel 1 it,) one whom _ she regarded as her Ku acute and All-SeeingJudge. No at tell pt was made in this ease to prove I la' girl's innocence before a court of justico. Sim hid herself in a distant village, not tlaridg to face iltUllall jUS- I ii. agaiii ; and, considering all things, ii must he owned she was right. Mer tier says he knew thQ priest, .and had the story' from his own lips; so he be ing: by all testimony, an upright, truth ful- Mau, there can be no doubt the tale is ant lien tie. '( a young lady - who said she didn't like turtle soup. Affectionately rebuking her, 1 1 was answered, piteous ly, that she didn't much object to. the taste, but that she thought it so crud and wicked to kill the turtle doves, MI ' NO. 27. 1 JOBBING DEPMITZENT. Tho proprietors have stooked the establishment with a new a varied assortment of ' • JOB AND. CARD TYPE ,t, AND PAST PRESSES, and are prepared to exento neatly and promp*, POSTERS, HANDBILLS, CIRCULARS, DILL READS, CARDS, PAMPHLETS, to., Ay. Deeds, Mortgages, Leases, and a full assorimnet; of Constables' and Justices' Blanks on band. People living at a distance can depend on hav ing their work done promptly and sent back in return mail. A Disappointed Youth. We shall call him Brown, because if he was not Brown at first he has been done brown since. He is a susceptible young bachelor, is Brown, and admires female loveliness in ail its forms. His friends call him Butterfly Brown on ac count of his flitting from flower:to flow er. Brown Is a resident of this City ; rich but respectable, as such things go. His " dearest" resides here 'also. Al though Brown Is devoted to his There sea, the fact does not prevent his keep ing one eye open for other beauties. - Brown was stiinding on the corner of Fourth avenue and Fourteenth street, conversing with some of the - mad wags who irthabit that locality. A vision of beauty passed ; - she was a young lady of Brooklyn, one of the most beautiful and fascinating of the, belles across the river. The transcendant beauty of this loypl . y maiden struck Brown's heart s4uAte between the eyes, and set that susceptible organ to bobbing like a pat ent churn-dasher. By diligent enquiries he learned her name and lineage and habitation. Then his wits were at fault. He consulted his friends aforesaid. They advised him to write to her an, ardent letter, portraying his love, his riches, and his eagerness for an interview. "By Jove I'll do it," quoth Brown, and forthwith, by the help of Claud , Melnotte and• Romeo, he compounded a love letter, which must have. touched the heart of any one but - a Brooklyn girl, and sent it over the river. • Days of restless anxiety ! Nights of feverish unrest ! No answer ! Who that has not been along there can tell the agony of suspense chat rended the fond heart of the susceptible Brown.— In his despair he consulted his friends. They advised another letter. It was sent. In the mean time, the wags aboVe mentioned, feeling interested in Brown's welfare, concocted a letter which cover ed the entire ease, and - one which, from their knowledge of the despairing lover, they judged would prove a very balm. in Gilead to bib wounded spirit. It was dated at Brooklyn, copied,,m,aneat ladies' hand-writing, and sent over the river, to be mailed.. In duo time Brown came bounding into the store, where his friends preihi ed, radiant with joy, and dancing like a bubble.on'a summer morning's wave. • " By. Jove, boys, I've . got it ? And such a letter. Just the thing, by Jove. She wants to see me. lam going- over there this evening. Listen." Brown then read the letter to tits wicked authors. llo.theri cut as much of a pigeon-wing as his tight pants would permit. " Was there ever anything sweeter ? By Jove, I'll have her picture and a kiss, or I'll never leave lirooklyA alive. Joe, you may have Theresea, and, next to Minnie, she is the divinest creature that breathes, by Jove Scene changes to Brooklyn. Time, 8 p. m. Brown in parlor, solos. Enter young lady, who says : " Mr. Brown, I believe ?" "Yes, mann (rising and pitching hid shoulders toward - her), I received your kind note in response to my own, arid am most happy to present myself ac cording to your request." " Sir , —(surprised and indignant). " Yes, Minnie, I feel vtry, very hap py." ` 4 Sir, I wrote you no letter ; you are laboring under a great mistake." - ,my poCliet77ls4kirwcrnit"irrajt---hareArt . " Mr. Brown (glancing at the letterj —I perceive what. - you have not the - pres p r i fb,l4.4o jou are the victim 'of r 43 the two ridiculous letters." . "DDidn't yea write this letter though? —By Jove, it is too bad. But I hope when we get better acquainted—". "Mr. Brown (indignantly)—l know nothing about you, neither dial desire to ; and if you write me any more, Billy letters, I shall refer them to my bretho. Good night, sir." " Good night, Miss I—." - • - "Good night, Sir, good night." Brown departed with an inordinate sized ilea in his ear, in lieu of a picture and a kiss. TO add to his woe, the next hest girl having heard of the . transfer of his affections, reiltises to see . _ him. He is now trying to prolong his miserable existence by taking whisky juleps at irregular intervals.-He says that love is A dizziness; . and perhaps , it may be when mixed with whisky and mint. What is ."pne-Horae Power." The use of the term " horse. power," is very common ; yet few, except good mechanics arid pugineers , attach a defin ite meaning to it , but regard it as indi cating, loosely, '. about the power which a single horse,could exert. It is, how ever, when used in the sense under con sideration, as definite as possible, and means the power required to .lift 33,000 pounds avoirdupois, one foot high in one minute. • A horse hitched to the end of 43, rope over a pulley one foiit in diameter- plac ed over a dee well, traveling' at the rate of two anti a half miles per hour, or 220 feet per minute, will draw up 150 pounds thesame distance he travels.--_ The force this exerted is called in chtmiA • ": horse-power," it being tua. approximation to the average amount' of continuous power it is fair to demand, of a strong horse. If we multiply the , weight -raised (150) by the number of feet it was, moved per minute (220,) the producb will, be the number of pounds which the sane power would raise one foot high in the same length of time, (33,000 pounds.) The dynamometer is an instrument made for measuring power, particularly that .exertedin drawing. Those used for testpg: ; the draft of agricultural in struineula,lire- simply very strong bal ances, or spring steelyards, graduated to indicate the power required to raise any weight, within reasonable limit at the rate of two and a half miles per. hour. When we apply thodynamome - ,4 ter in ascertaining the draft of machines if the index indicates 150 pounds, it shows that the horse is required to draw just as hard as he would, do if raising 150 pounds out of a well, with a - rope over a putty one foot in diameter, at the rate of two and a half miles an hour, and so for other,weights. The velocity at which 'a team mimes is to be considered, as well as the weight to be raised or the load to be drawn.. If the horse travels faster than two and a htilf mileS per hour, while raising 160 pounds out -of a well, he exerts more than one horse power, if he walks slower than this, he does not exerts force equal to one horse power. In ascertaining the draught of a plow, or mower and reaper, by drawing taster than two and a half miles perhour,tte dynamotneter Would indicate more than the correct draught ; and by ,driving SloWer, th O draught would appear to be less than h. really is. In testing . the draught of . machines ,la team, should always nievnat the rate of two and a half miles per hour, 220 feet perminute, sviiich is the universally accepted rate with referenCe to which. dynarticaneters are graduated, and an easy one to ap proximate in driving With ahnost any_ kind of team. A Baker should 'feel complimented if called a big loafer. Mil