The Tioga County agitator. (Wellsboro, Tioga County, Pa.) 1865-1871, January 25, 1871, Image 1

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    THE TINA COMITY AG TATOR
is p octsilgn iVCIEVI WEDNV3DAV NERIMINCI 111 r,
P l . 0. Van Gelder.
!EROS OF SIIJSCRIPTION INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE.
Iznligcrlytion, (per year)
RATES' OE ADVERTISING,
TEN USES OF MINION OR LESS, MARE ONE SQUARE
1 Ind atm 4 Inn 13Mos I (Mos 11 Yr
1 :4•111:11r, ... $l,OO $2.00 I 2,60 I $5,00 i 57,00 I SUL®
I 4 2,00 13,00 14,00 18,00 112,4301 11 . !,00
10,0011b.00 i 17,00 j 22,00 I - 40,00 t‘ 30,00
i 15:0 - 0 - 1 ; 25 - ,ii - 0
F 30,00 I 45,00 1,80,00 I 100,00
• ,11311 t
II Of C 01...
=I
e.ii- ,special Notices 15 cents per lino; Editorial or
i • , ~1.2, ) routs per lino. ....
1, an.ient advestising avast be p id tor in adrance.
..;, - -..f mike Blanks, Constable hanks, Dseds,Judg
.; „ c N A es, Marriage Certificates, c., an head.
13iIrt4INESS CA.lll3@
I (4EO. W. HERRICK,
ITTORNEV and, COUNSELOR at LA.W.\
Office in Smith and Bowen'e Block, across hall
from Agitator Office up stairs, [second floor.]
, Wellsboro Pa, Jan. 4, IS7I-Iy.
ino. I. .11iteitell,
Attorney and Counselor at Law, Claim, and In
surance Agent. Office over Kress's Drug Store,
Wellaboro, Pa. Jan.l, 1871—y
William A. Stone,
Attorney and Counselor at Law, first door above
Converse k Osgood's store, on Alain street.
Wellsboro, January 1, 1571 y
Seeley, Coates & Co.
BANKERS, Knoxville, Tioga, County, Pa.—
Receive money on
,doposit, discount notes,
and sell drafts on Now York City. Collect
iuns promptly mado.—Jan 1, 1871—y
• Jiio. W. Adams,
:I, , rney and Counselor at Law, Mansfield,. Tioga
~.nuty, Pa. Collections promptly attended
Jan. 1, 1871—y
rrke s
p •
Wilson & Niles,
Au , :hex, And Counselors at Lacr. Will attend
rroEpTly to business entrusted to their care io
tno eoOntios of Tioga and Potter. Mho on
tna ivonhe. Jan. 1, 1871 y
John IV. Guernsey,
and Counselor at Law. All bueinese
e:a,usted•to him will bo t kromptly attended to.
0,ti(.0 2d door south of llazlett's Hotel, Tioga,
-za County, Pa.—Jan. 1, 1971.
Win. B. Smith,
Bounty and Insurance Agent. Com.
i;.aclptions sent to the above address will ro
...vs prompt attention. Terms moderate,
ille, Pa.—Jan. 1, 1.871.
Seymour & 'Horton,
and Counselor& at law, Tioga Pa
.‘,:ll,,i9iness entrusted to their care will receive
attention.
R. s svmoue J. C. HORTON..
,1411 1. 1871 y
th A10141110:10
Armstrong & 'Linn,
A I." rOANEYS-AT-LAW,
WILLIAMSPORT, PENN'A
l a ., 1, 1871-y
v. D. Terbell Co
,I—.llo Druggists, and dealers in Wall Paper',
no Lamm Window Wass, Perfumery,
,te.—Corning, N. Y. Jan. 1 '7l.
D. Baconi , „ M. H.,
to Ito and Surgeon. Will attend promptly
()Wee on Crafton Street, in rear 61
Mc'. Market, Wellsbt.ro.—.l an. I, 1871.
A. M. Ingham / M. D o
,:-o.l),abiat, litlice at his Rci) ( ance on the
kn. 1, tSi t,
~i POig e 11rdg1U'1'f
r. htp tir:rt duir uurth of Robert: , Bail
, y's Hat divaro Store. Cutting, Fitting and Ito
lainj.hale promptly and well,:—Jan. 1,1871.
Petroleum House,
Pa , CO. CLOSE, Proprietor. A now
Hotel Qontluctutl on tho principle of live and
.;(- live, for tho accommodation °fibre public.
pn 1, 1371.
Hazlett'- Rohe,
op County, Pa Good tablingattach
and an attentive hostler always in attond-
An a. gee. W. Hazlett, Prop'r.—Jan. 1, 1371.
•.1 a,:l I h, Tioga Co., N. E. G. Hill,
Proprietor. Al Lex and emirriodimis buildin g
n•ith all the modern improvements. Within
I.y drive of the best hunting and fishing
r,ouds in Northern Peun'a. Conveyances
furiii‘hed. rerms inmlorato.—.lan. I, thi I. -
`~utith'. Hulel,
Pa., E. 31. zialith, Proprietor. liollie in
condition to aceniimodate the traveling
in a superior wanner —Jan. 1, 1871.
Farliter'
i \I N 1:0E, Proprietor. This howe, formerly
cti pied by E. Fellows, is con:iuctcd on tow
! ..r-neo, principles. Every accommodation
I r {flan and beast. Charge:: reasonable.
.I,ino,try 1, 1'371
Union Hotel.
i; Van llorn, Proprietor, We!labor°, Pa.
1;4 EIII)92.0 is pleasantly located, and has all
h mveniences for man and beast. Charges
In ' lerate,—Jan 1, 1871-Iy.
v ai o Lot and Nine Acres of
Land fOr Sale
111 W 1 LLIAMS offers for sale his
k_i uhkt "ot, Main street, Wellsboio,
:ix Iterct , ."1.,1 hear the cemetery. En
, hre wf • Ist 11-1.3, 1,1 the Wullaboro fours
lin 1,1871 tf
•
Now s Tobacco Store
( I I:I LAS fi tted up the Store first
1...; ,iltz't Thomas Ilardou'e dry goud2
t tu,nnla,.tatolt dealcof
CI (Id! grlitieS), Fancy tt11(1 ety?>tutoil
)BA CC 0, Miehiganiviipe
f'III , IWIN - (?, and all kinds of
l /.U.O TCIII ACC 0, PIPES, and the( hoi
cf.:l Riaiiil if C'JQA RS
t'aii •ina ece f,r
JtiIIN \V. PI 11z-E1
.:tli.born, Jun 1, Iv/
ii3O.VA ;•,\ NITA EY AID AS-
, j:, I
a 0
.1
Cul eul lie 1:1111);11111 I t
•" WI , •"1 I\l ;•t 11.1ati tilt "1,1
ON 1 F;Ft 'Wilt' OFlfit'lll,sl,dll ti.;
• A..., I:. ,1,11.411 to \I k1 . 111 , 4:1 , .1141 11 ,
• Isar. ) r,ni 1,1 I It , 11111. e.
%•' 1.. Adds„,, 11101, Altl) Ar: , (IO,IATI('N.
1.70 Ir. 11, x V. 1 3 1aitvidi.hiii, Vb.
'l' 111 G A 1111 G Si. 'l' 11 It If: !
,
DOIMEN ketept•
hten•t: Ptire Drug? and Th.di , i;H:•:.
P tints and
L,ic:i.-
-tati••crrr. enkce
VI , F(' LAI"
J Ip. I --I )
'WRI,LSI3OI2O AND 11'1 ANSFELD
ST Pt E TAN.E.
TII nadersignel iropr , cttr lot
this I no takes this tnetticti of in-'
lisming the public that the above Stage
(Sundays eve pted,) between the too pin
ac follimti:
Leaves Wellshoro at 3 a. m., aad arrives at
Mansfield at 1.0.30 a. Ela-
Leaveis 'Mansfield st,t 2.30 p. m. and arrives at
WolLiboro at p m. l i Wt.tFaris
San 1, 'W. B. VAN BOWS.
;
's Notice.
WHEREAS letters of Administration to the
estate of 11;.nry C. If/A:worth, late of
Osceola, dereated, have bean granted to the sub
sitmr, all persons in lebted to the said
,e.tßtts
are requested to make immediate payment, anti
these having claims or demands against the es
tate of the said decedent, will make known the
Bowie without delay to
EDWARD E. DOS WORTH.
Osceola, No . , 21., 1470. . '‘ Aduer
...42,00.
"PENNSYLVANIA HOUSK
LATELY known ge the Towneinii
and for a time occupied by D. D. Holt
day, has been thoroughly refitted, repair
ed and opened by
DANIEL -MONROE,
who will be, happy to accommodate the old
friends of the hones at very reasonable rates.
Jan 1, 1871
.* DANIEL MONRDE.
TIIE undersigned is now prepared to axe
cute all orders for Tomb Stones and Mona
ments of either ,-• ,
ITALIAN OR RUTLAND MARBLE; I
of tbelatest style and approved workmanship )
and with dispatch.
lie keeps - constantly on hand both kinds ofj
Marble and %Vibe able to suit all who may fa=
vorltim with their orders, on asreasonabletormsl
as can be obtained in the country.
JJ FRANK ADAMS. •
Tioga,Jan. I,lB7l—tf.
Fall & Winter Millinery
AIRS. SOFIELD respectfully annonnees to
the public tb\at sho is now receiving a
completa stock of
Fall and Winter Goods.
Especial attention is invited to her assortment
Corsets, and Ready Made White Goods,
• Also, Zephyrs and Germantown
Wools in Fancy shade.
Patterne in Zephyr and everything pertaining
to the trade. KID GLOVES of the beet brand.
[J. B. Nn.Es
Hats, Caps, Bonnets, Ribbons, Flowers,
Laces, &e.
Tbe Wilcox Gibba Sewing MachiLe for sale,
or rent by the week.
ibw A LAND AGENCY.
THE subscriber would inform the public that
he has Lb) agency of a quantity of
•
lOWA. LA,NIIS
_,/
which he will sell fur cash, or exchange for real
err personal property, on reasonable terms.
GREAT 'BARGAINS OFFERED.
He w\puld say that he has examined the prop
erty and titles for himself, and believes 4o eau
make it for the interest of persons going West,
to give him a.cail before purchasing elsewhere.
For particulars, inquire of S. B. fIOODELL,
May 11, '7O ly Tioga Co , Pa.
SASIIIFIL LINI.
Wellsboro
\ Uuion Graded
A, C. WINTERS, A, M. SUPETNTEND
ENT OP GRADED SCHOOLS, •
And or High School.
yr is the determination of the Directors to
make the course of instruction as thorough
and systematic as can be found in the• State
Commencing with the primary department, the
pupil must malter every Fear 's allotted work, be
fore being admitted to the next higher.
Tho hest of teachers will be employed in every
department, the most approved methods of in•
struction used, and the best of c re exercised
over th^ pupils in school and' out.
Tho Moir Selloor, -- oliers then q advalatageer
The Principal is n graduate of Itlne Rochester
Universiiy, New York, a gentlemen of large ex
perience in the host conducted schools of the
country, who haq spent two years in Europe,
and spests German. .French end lectAian. Ile is
qualified to give superior instruction in History,
I•'inc Arta and the, Ancient • Languages. Instruc
tion in Higher Mathematics, the Sciences, Book
-I,•eeping and Alinfic, will be equal to that of the
best academies.
The Board hope to soon be able to secure in
struction in Painting and Drateih.9,,XY a lady
who has hn several years' instruction by the
lest masters iiGerinany, and who has practised
in the Galley es of Berlin, Dresden 'Munich and
Florence
• The b,qt the cheapext school. ' The
Board intend to obviate all objections to tbit
class of popular schools, as far as possible., A
sullicient corps of teachers; trill be employed,
that full justice may bo done te every pupil—
Tuition is free to all within the old borough Boa.
its. Pupils from abroad are invited. Board in
private luinillos from $3 to $4 per week
Tuition, Common 116 , (per term, $5.
" nigher English.Matbetnaties,ac., $B.
BY ORDER op Dos nu,
September 7, ISTO. tf
MRS. SMITH, on' Main Strcet, has just
opened a very large assortment of
2411C0W g l a©UP
lIIILLINERY COODN,
Which Selling at COST,
such ae ------ ---
HATS, tONNETS, STRAW GOODS,
LACES, FLOWERS,-RIBBONS,
COLLARS, 11'.EICERCIPFS,.
#LC., •
I au the only re gent in this Ode° fur
PATENT MUFF. -
Ladies that have not noticed these MulTs Rill be
astonished at their clieuptletrs, I...(auty and coin
fortr
all of which Rill be tVdd much below former prim
car. MI work done promptly, bi,d to please.
MR;S: CAROLINE
4Tellsboro, Nov, 7, 1870—If.
NEW MEAT MARKET,
L'inte ho use;.)
rir HE !.ula4criber haw openoLt a wart , et for the
11„ al....,attatoriatiertiu IN ant 1,1
h'S 11 MEAT.
Cush will he paid for peAk, Ittet, thutit.n, heef
cattle, hidvs and sheep pats
Fresh ft4.4h every Suturdny.
• IIEZERLAII s - rowE I.L. JR..
Nov nu,l)vr 2, 1870 tt
lIAIINESS SI - 10P
.
Cl W. NAVLE, would sat to 11 friend
. that his 'Harness E'holt ribsfullblast
9.1.. t that he is prepared to furt.i-1. heart or 1411
Etrlra. E 4 ta 7
ntdiee, in a •gt,,,tl and • eubstantial roan
uer, and at prices that eari'dfail to suit. I
The beet work wen are ernployed i and itt i one
tile beet tunterial used. Cali and see.
Jan 1 IS7I y G. tit. NAVLE.
11.F1,1 IP. LI
AGOOD dairy farm in Tiogn township, Ti
oga county, Pit. about 2/ miles west of the
Borough of Tinga. shout 100 Acres improved,
and 40 unimproved has on it three barns,
three dwelling houses, an apple and peach. °rah
erd, ando,ther frdit trees; Terms easy. ftklso ad:
joining on the west, a farm nod tiutherTands
from 90 to 200 acres as tivt•irod. •Aith 80 acres
improyed, with a good barn. a good house and
apple orchard. (I_o9d for i drirying arm.
Jan 1, 1871—tf. C. It. SEYMOUR,
.Tioga,Pa.
ESTR AY —Came to the enclosure of thC enb
scriber, abotit the iniadle of last Bcpteni—
tor, ooven ',hoop, which tire_ now kept at the barn
of William Cold, io 'Broughton liolldw. The
owner is requested to p'rovo property, pay ober—
& and takethem away. A. J. KREINEII.
Delmar, 404, 1871 Bw.
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VOL. XVIII.
THE (SLID
Tioga Morbid Works,
AND FANCY GOODS
- Mrs. A. J. SOFIELI)
WcllAoro Oct. 5, 1870. tf
SCHOOL.
New Millinery !
for Sale or Rent,
111
xtAiLwir TIME TABLES.
fiN and after MONDAY, Dec. 6, 1870, Train%
kJ trip leav tOornhig, at the following honre,iis '
poirta WEBT,
5,45 A. Ml., NIGHT EXPRESS (Mondale excepted)
for Buffalo, Dunkirk and the west.
6,06 A. NIGHT EXPRESS daily, (6,15 A. AI. 'tor
Rochester, Sundays oxcepteil) fcr Buffalo, Dun
kirk, and the treat.
6,00 A. 1 , 1"., WAY FABIIMIT for Bochestsr, Sun
days excepted.
1025 A. M., BfAILIBAIN,,Sundaye etscsiptld:for
Buffalo and Dunkirk. ' , • -
12,05 P trlif FitßlliiMP, Sundays Sit ill tid,,for, ,
LIOrDPUSY4 I O'•=•-• •1: =i • .••.;
200 A. M, 11./.llDlMoyualtzp., ansidays'elcepttd;
or Roopoetotaxo _
6,30 P. hl gAtIfiIIArt:TRAVI, 40410 the Wisf.'
1,35 P. BE, VAT EXPRESii,Efultd4s orteiited;
P. M., fox Rochester,) for Bunklo tad die"weit.
12.13 A. - 51„ EXPAESS. MIL; Banda,* ex reed,
torPtiffalo, Dunktrkandthe west.
'•
GOING EAST.
12,13 A. M., NIGHT EXPRESS, Sundays excepted,'
connecting at New, York with afternoon trains
and stearaerslor the New England Oitiea.
4.;45 A. U., _OINOINNATI ;EXPRESSiltondaya el
cepted, connecting .at New Jersey-axial, trains
for Philade. Baltimore and Washington.
2,04 Abc.,OHMODATION TRAIN, for Blreire,
SundaYe excepted. : , • ;
11 ; 28 DAY EXPRESS, ,Suudays excepted,
- connecting at Seteey City - with Midnight Ex.
Press tratzvfor . • r
12,18 P sufittatuiiiirA { FAY, daily,
11,40 PREiGHT,ilundaye excepled.
4.30 M., DIVISION MAIL, Sundays excepted.
7.44 R. M..--LIGHTNINO EYPREB3,4I - ally, connect.
log at Jersey Oily •wirli morning Expres s train,
for Malamute ancl'Washtngton. -" - • -
BAGGAGE CHECKED THROUGH:
4F84 A revisectandcomplete"PookatTlme Tableof
Passenger Trains on the Erie RallWay Mid ohitettlng
Lines; has recently been published ,and can be-precut ,
ed on application co' the Ticket Agent aft he Company
WM.'S,. BARR, • , , , - L.- I/. RECKER, •
pen') Poos,.Ancnt. . 3 Cen'lßup't.
& Gamine, & Tioga R. /it
Gains will run as follows until further notice
OWN° NORTEE FROM TIOGA
N0..2,' 2'35. No. 4, 9 28. No. 0, 8,34. No. 8, 8,22.
N 6.13, 11,35. No, 12, 12,12. No. 14, 5.80. No. • 11
8,20.. No. 18, 11,12.
GOING 801. 7 / 7 1 PROM TIOGA. '
.No. 1, 9 28.„,,N0. 8, 4.55, No. 5, 6,01. No.'7, 1,15
. 0, 7 : 26. No. 11, 10,18. , No. 18;1,42. ,
L .11:811ATT11011,8up't.
NorthOrn Clontral 8.8.
TRAINS FOR THE NORTH.
Trains for oanindBgulaleave Elmira al follOW a t
Accottiodation at 7 12 p m
Rapilim[fastest train on road] ....... ...... 11 66 a'l23
lUall 10 801, m
Accommodation .616 pm
On aud aftor Dec. 5, 1870, train will arrive - and'
itsnurt from Troy, a a follows;
LEAVE NORTHWARD.
921, p. m.—Dally (oseept Sundays) for Eltalra and
Buffalo ,v la tale Railway from Elthira.
10 14 a. ta.—Dally(oxcept Suudays) for Elnalra,ltuffa—
lo , Canandaigua, Rochester, Snap ;Bridge and the
Canada& . .
LEAVE SOUTHWARD. ,
955 A. in.—Dally(excont Sundays) 'for DaWilton);
Washington,Philadelphia,ac.
71,7 P. m.-,— , Dally (except Sundays) for:Baltimore,
Washington and Philadelphia.
. ,
ALPRED R. FISKE • . ED. 8 .YOHHO
Uen'iSupt Harrisburg, Gen'trasi.Ag't
'Ultimo/Oft.
Arriral and Departure of Stages.
rrilE Stages running over
•14 .1 -ro'
the difierent ratites from
Welleboro," will depart and
- arrive ac follows from the
Welloboro Poet Odic
Wri.tsnono & Troai.—Depart b & 10, a. in., arrive 134
1 and 7 o'clock P. In
I '
WELLS DOR 0 dt MANErzrn.—Depart 8 a.m., arrive ti . p.
WELL SDOII o & COIIIMRSPORT.—Dep. Mon. Ar: Thur. 2 p.m.
arrive Atcnday &Thursday at 12m.
Wr BDOR 0 & Jrasity Su - cam—Depart Mort.e Thar.9a m
rrivo Tuesday k Fri. 3 p.m
Writsuoao & Sot Rout—Dep. Tues.. 3 Friday at 3
p. m., arr. Tues.'Sc Friday-at 12 at. ,
W ELMV-
WELL,SBORO, PA.
I '
r.,, - ANDIZEIW roLEY
,
.?, 1
v 4: who hae•long been Isaiah
/,
~e ` 12 ;\ " f • fished in the Jewelry busi
-1 e, C
- ,,,, ,~, nese in Wellab6ro, has 461-
..:.,
ra . t "
~: ..... ~.i ways on sale, various
e l / 4 ,•1 . 1.4.-...,,? . f.„ - - -- - kinds and prices of
II
AMERIC.t.N WATCHES,
GOLD OR SILVER* CLOCKS, JEWEL
]
RY, GOLD GRAINS, KEYS; RINGS,
PINS, PENCILS, CASES;-GOLD t:6
STEEL PENS, lir HIBIBLES,
SPOONS, RAZORS, ] PLA
• TED WARE, •
MING MACHINES,
&c., &c„ . &c.
Wiih hurt otlser'articles uvually kept in Such
establishment, which is sold low fop . „
C A'S H.
Repairing dnno neatly, and promptly, and 'on
linrt NOT/Cg. A. FOLRY.
Jannaiy 1, 1871-y. . ,
„
To the Citizens of liansfi.ed
\ AND VICINITY,_ ,
. -
•
TAKE pleasure in announcing to the pelalle
I
that Lhave ou hood a large and splendid as
sortment of ,
PARLOR AND COOK
•
ST OVE
hoth useful and Ornamental, which I ant offering
to the public cheaper than ever sold- before: I'
will sell a good No. 8 Cook Stove wittrFurniture
f0r,f2.0. I keep' in stock P. P. 'Paeltham'a.pop
ular Cook This is said to ho the best Stove
made in the Foiled States. I also heap the
Lightning X 'Cut Saw, _
the fastestkeutting -Saw iu the world. The man-.
ufacturerspf,this Saw challenge the *orld ender
a forfeit of WO that that this is the fastest nut
ting saw made.
Thanking my friends for their patronage in
tho past, and hoping still to merit their favor, I
nm as ever, grateful,
• • -9. 8,,PFF....
P. S =I ehallenge one nod nll of the' Stier
doalers in thii county to sell as cheap as I do
3, W. banish,-not excepted. , ''• G. B. Kw
Mansfield, Nov. 2,1870..-Sm.
Administfatoni: Notice.
. LETTERS, of Adosipletiatia peirdeate life,
g been granted to the undersigned on
the estate of WrzieTtnnn MeTut3re,late\ofJaek
inn township,"Tiog.i Co ;,Po deot
eons baying elaPns, ligainst;silfd
thorn indAttiiiii=theilaraft,gretlottmoir to call
f 74 stigetnent on la. B. t3BIV , ES, - .
CAROLlNEltatirtritig - ;.
" .- r t , . • '
- Jan. i; fiadtale ;MN
---,NF'',4.11a0.11.1) ; :-' 1 7 944 :,- : 00,1
.poErs 6*Ntii,"
•• ~` ;4) t
;WOULDN'T DO4,
I would not kiss the - iiisiteit
• Unless it iiiiiants too;
As well froinifin
The morainal altar oold dew ; ••
Nor clasp a %mad, though:soft and 'warm, :
Unless it presses nap awn , • -
:I'd 'rather love the perfect form, -
Carved out. of Parisi; stone..;
I will,not warthip eyes, tilo' brjgbli,
And bountiful they,-be,, , . •
Unlesif they bend their living ligbt
tin me -and Only me,
I ionialtioklova a form. tbitt beacon'
Itself bad stinip nd
If I but dritinied tli,atlayo
Other Wits Illiioolo
PM
41"-rdezizA
[Correspondence • • the •Agitatoi.] - •
• ,' 1 • ' Rettexasua r,'Jan. 10, iStl. •••
. ;• : i ~ ,
- ,It 'seems strange to .ne"T4E - first 0
write .1870:one; it bears : iiiniP,r,eagi.tuld
Creates 'r eile4ti fi ne k
and" thouglft'th t it
thicklyy` thrtmg around is like sllrci-fika
,on a midsummer's ' ever=clitncing, - , flit- .
ting, i#Cr 'Fistleas; lin*ing on and last
In the distanee;•tinlyto bejellokVed *
others in - endless - fOui:408::' tura. few'
dayi since, pritrotir`captipikiirtts"lBlo4l
andino* a Unit added " to` the 187 d th is,
havO l gone heti:Welt; `Midi that to be ftil• .
,lowed by another unit,Told that by otti:,
ere,' until others shall.takeup.the,str4n
and _mark time's kaleuda.; as they ' ant
rapidly„ hurried, along. , „.,.110w.;.,m43i
landmarks, think youfare now retrial 4 ,
ingthat existed at the dvent? Pe ,
,F
,very few,l - And Yet, ati 0 3 , ,th0:0m at 2
j i
nineteen centuries, wh t'strinage see ee
, _ ,_ . ,
have transpired upon ur . eartb ! b IPA
many generations hav •'appeared l;;.
fore the. footlights;%sun their sOug, a d
passe,d'ofrthe stage! 4Ovit ;manYA;il,o;- . ,
tionshave Oprunglntii,: xieten96, , ,,exei.
eisedilespotle power, ra id inonume4ts
i s
to perpetuate their nam "andgreatneTe,
and to-day are only indwri upon -tpe
pages of history ! HliNti , tnany Med
archs, tyrants:and - deipte -
. have ruled,
reigned and passed awa ;and the world
been made better by t air leaving-I—
-i
How many poets hay, sung and en
raptured it world witht ., Ofr enchanting
melody
,during those ye I r 4 ,and to day,
not even the urn that. entombedithera i
or the granite that marked: their last
repose, are left to points totheir quiet
rest. If 'our iniaginatiortfall no for that ,
period of lime, what shall wa say of
the eternal ages that had existed: before
that dim vista- of time, ,of which we
have no, chronological ,l record 7 -What
of those nations,. eoun rieTi . mid Cities
which are elaimed ' to have been old
when our Savior was born ? of themil
lions of antediluvians Idlo peopled the
earth befornits destruct on by, Del
uge ? oflthe Patriarch and P rophet?,
whose fabled history i . transmitted to.
us,onlY by the oral . teasinission, — lrem
generation to ir, enratio , throtigh the
il t
primeval ages of .. au nlettered , nni-
Verse ? '-
i
It is said this earthf'hurs was old,
When Homer, blind an 14094 sang his
immortal songs; ; geneifiption s had, pe,o7,
.41,,...:.__ta_ti., - ...2......t.f ,-...-..... k ~...: ... --, ,„...„.,...1. _
the gigan tic yram ids of Egypt \had're
-I._
ceived a' fo ndation atone.' Thebes,
Babylon, Pompeii, Balbec, Ephesus,
and even Rome, were Old before Jude
an shepherds announced the .birth of
our Savior. Socrates, Plato and Arlpt
totie had worshipped 'their nnknown
gods, had laid the foundation 9f a bear_
then,mythology, and, suffered as; mar
tyrs to their cause, long „ere , the Jowly
born of I ‘ iethiellem had taught his fol
lowere, s" Peace oil earth and good will
to men." '
II
The jingle-Of bells ' is heard at *all
hours Of the day,' • for' we are hiiving
good sleighing here. From theaDpear
ance of the turnouts, it Is not a very of
ten-occarring of rcumetanceyas you will
a e e the very seine uncouth wooden
sleds used by. the primeval settlers about
two hundred years ago ;—I know they
are the same, because they have r heiri-
Itlals of William. Penn', . Wilhelm' Von
Seiderberger, Kreitzer I case Imo; Von
der Tann, all engraved upon 'them in
hieroglyphf6s that were in_ use at that
date. , . It le,said;the originator o , tbern
is dead ; ,lis overdid himself , don't
1 1
know where his last resting Pie , may
be if I, did, I would !ornatej hisi tomb
with a chaplet of icicles. , 4 ,
We have had eeveral , fires since my
sojourn here, and I have alway been
.prominent In their extinguishment. I
am an adept at -it; it . is a part (of My
profession, upon which k-pride Myself
vdry'highly ; ter the truth of which I
refer the reader, to. J. 8., Niles, Esq..
Re witnessed my dar ng •exploits at a
time that tried men's souls—in the dead
of the, eight,—when tthe lurid flames
were leaping , _scathing and lapping at
every surrounding object; threatening'
thhpalace of wealth and f the hovel of
poverty-; desolation and ruin were star
ing us in the face. I became frantie,=--
'the demon of the 'Fire King was with
in me ;—I shouted Coders to the 'fife
men'; cursed :their stupidity ;" and ' fi
nally seized the hose, r and, In my anxi
ety to t;e useful,, turned it upon the
steam engine-:- (others were therediree- 1 ,
ted toward the bnrning buildipg.) I
became the center of attraction :, a well,
directed stream from across, tht way,
uPon , my.saered person, was t a first
indication I had that'my services were
not needed. I was disgusted ; Ilfelt in
jured—my apparel - , ditto. My pinion '
of firemen and 'steam 'engines - s very
much lessened ;—henceforth I ork b
myself.
By the Way, it IS, very nice katin
upon 'the , Susquehanna now, and th
river has *become nl c avorlie resort fo
• the young of both se es ; and every af
ternoon you will see the oppe4te, side
otthe river, one , vast picnic of gay and
hilarious 'youth, froth the pent up city,
1 [that last expression is borrowed] ; and
Saturday• afternoon 'being -, a- cart of a
holiday, I troeeetied'to the rendezvous.
It was gay'-:-It waslestive ; ntiti•as my
nature is, I in spirit 'entered nto llici
festlvitY.. I ' endured until endurance
ceased to be a virtue' and flualtpr called
:a ragged,urehla to, me vild requested
the loan of his,skates for an , Ixtur. At
first ho refused,; buttolding a twenty
live cent scrip before his eyes,lhis ob
`jeetions ,were overcome.
~ BI Imple *
ments were not of the most I primed
pattern,- - (and let-me say in par nthesis,
I am not the' most improved- s kate:`;)
let I concluded to make an - off it ; 'lin'd
l if t er : / * .i lPi 'l i l kiil litoll46 * , t 9 4 , ,f641.
I
'`theiviire NEL 10%1 'lvOlie " witliall ttio
as given
j,EO U~5 .: ,
MC
1; - orm ma - i iTt
•
- PA . '4ANITARY 25
; dignity'df'the Moeflinprevliel Siabit,
vii preeseilet WznYbeletoi'leit'
powers eciullibilnin, end td try Berne
`of; the tergiterilitiOniof'in
61r - times,:len
- I:thought . might venture 7 tiMcing - he
delat of, the icylleiStiithilktinie.—l wine
particular not 'to 'eithihit myself Moo
touch, naturally bashful;) until 'a
fimprable OpPOrtniiitio fihikuld °Pint. for
My joining 'the - festivities.`' not
'long to Wait. ' The. keatiatiien selected
their laiilea,[ tind Moved ofr hy - Jvvos;
sichnnilpg,oyer' the smooth
glare
~efe'tnile:itietch.o4l o o3i srid
returning to - the -,
starthigielni, to JiiiiteitieWfrtirn the
goal: , The,ladieslargelepredernintited;
and,' tindq,al I 'the' 1310tip3stinOes,'T felt'
'fiqt lio'iiiist l o#44liii as *eh.*
pelts as A6te ; coPsegaeaiyy; : with a;
e e elheeeo ll 4 l ein**4' L ra,herealtinient,
i4roposed an,,,Upproilded,:, buxom
that for thetime,being we loin:our
fortunes in '
one; "ikeoiplo"-'-ah'n foo/pi .
1 1 4elip Alnetntigno .I„ . the, was ,oast :
I Woe 4 het seq,,,wttO baud - I knew
it Was soft, bectinsa OTOS,
On,--and with,edetertninatide Worthy
of';:aNapeleini . :ara,"atirtad.i„ I saw
at coace, : that )34 4a4 149 ii #4 1 464:
in' a in4illtary 80:01, as : to _step for
When Aef right,tuoved in s itTeg:We4
'in:l4i opposite dlieetion • cOnskiientfr
Wet * l 4*:tcYget4:o •
, 1 ?Y• •
aNkl, egreqz B V: OPP
prea.aank ,qr Abe
in t h e wzdcet et - tthQ 9 .o. -1 0 - c!,Preo4tieitl l4 ;
;hey
#I I
merry; shPut 4i iP7Pne
hurter were echoed hack from ahOTO
_to s pre. I jpinedin the spirit of the
occasion ; I became lybilatt ; I Was in'
ecstasies ; gazed ;
,Mica the fair face be:.
side rue ; smiled, and ge,Ve an extra
prt esure of the.band ; I became ' regard=
of expense --regardless Of all around
My thotights were centered bri ,
one object; my e n v of bliss was
when, regardless Of Consequiences t ; in
au .Ungdarded moment—When leving
vies spoke loVe to eyes that, , ne',er might
meet again ^I thiuskotit my right tan
gier at an inoppert4thitnoreent. It col
lided:with There WiS Celli.:
sloe ; our ; equilltitium was lost; and,
amid the Plaudits' (jeers; I shonid have
said,) of hundreds; we were a confused;
mass of corporeal matter`—oti ice. The
lady vias extricated..l sought the
-nor of the shales; and 'serenely dellV
eredtheni over to `hie kind care and
'hewing, I'ol4, doiterMined • that if ever
I skate again, it Shall be upon a seclu
ded and, out of the way-frog,pond !
The curtai n drops; the foot ights are
. .•
on, • • , ' X-27.
--721[For tholiglitatord
MICHAEL ANGELO,O. 11.
• , •
;1111cheel Angelo /seen* to have be
come a painter almost through compul
sten, Although he first ,commenced
his studies in the department-of paint
ing, ji is attentiop was soon drawn aside
to sculpture; and for nearly twenty
years, with one mxception,
,4e worked
unremittingly, in , this department.—
this single exception-was the remarka
ble cartoon, drawn c'oui,petition with
Leonarde :da,,Yinci,„-for ! the Pallazzo
ICechio, in Florence; and of whickthe
wOnderful , delineations of the human
body attracted, Students from all part!
..,
• - ------;- - - ---- 4 -; 1 - 44, t-4 - .r-rour years ,M - 1
age, that be cornmencen painting; ana
then, through the, command of the
stern and irascible old Pope, Julius 11,
he undertook the frescoing of the entire
ceiling of the Listeni chapel; a
,work
of vast niagnitode, and the difficulties ,
of which were greatly increased by be
peculiar architecture of ihe_gine.—
This -as , vomited, and divide into, lir
.regular spac.es. rectangular, 41 ngular,
oval, and circular,* variops idz s, pre-1
i r
*wilting both ploin and 'concaVeSurfa
ces. The Sides already contained tWeive
large paintings, exeepted by the, great
est artists of .the p receding generation;
al
among-whe was'Angelo s former Ili.;
struetor.
To choose subjechi of sufficient dig-7
nity, aud,coin6ine, them with this grand
architecture so as to form, one harme r
nious whole, was a work, which 'none
but a master architect, as well i es artist,
would dare undertake. He entered up-,
on It with - great relactince, ai he was
not familiar4ith fresping,; and so:fir
doubted his ability to !earn, as to call
artists from Florence, to ,-,perform the
technical part. But in their hands the .
work. fell sofarbelow his , lofty conceP
tions, that c in a fit of irritation '
he
drove them, from the room, locked the .
'door, effaced their ,work, and,. seizing
the,brushes, carried out, alone and nn
aided, those de4gns which no man of
less7genlus than himself was capable of .
'Comprehending or executing. He re
' fused adnaittance to all. Even the im
, patient old Pope, who,, afraid of dying
before the , completion of , his, favOrite
prOject,,was constantly_ urging Angelo.
on to greater exertions, was not perMit,
ted to enter the chapel until .the' task,
was half done. , He
- yeas,amazed, and
delighted; at the beauty,,ta grandenr,
and the pert6 l o,l6/2ot the scenes. .rain-
Ong, had never heforaattaif o d"'s uh:
success. i rhe History of tile 'bieation
occupied some '
of The most luiportant
spaces. ' Majestic figures of the proph
ets and sibyls.were seated in the arched
portions of the ceiling. The genealogy
opthe , Saylor occupied leis important
.places beneath;'and four bistorieat
scenes filled the corners: By many, it
is thought ".Then Creation Of ' Man"
contains,'in the figure of the dreator l
the most perfect, tne 'twist sublime ef-
fort of painting. ' We gazed with more '
satisfaction upon the grand old figures
of the'' prophets ;- for there is always
Soinething repelling in tinS , atteMpted
representation of the Eternal Father:
, ,
The entire belling contains over three
hundred figures ;' and xet this vast work
Was throWn open to the eager public in
I r e tas' than three' yearn from its: cern
meneement. i tiventy yearilater,'*hen
in' hig tifty-zninth ,year, he
_Wait 'called'
uPon to paint the • ervia -of th chapel,
whielYstill remained'' Untider 'ed i and
tf i
here, on the ,unbroken wall, opposite,
the
,pli trance, 4e. placedilia 'tLast 4nde
ment,!' Called, O the , grandest eft.. , 4 - of,.
human geninii?' ; • ' . '.rohahl,i,:there is, no,
'painting in the, World whe'ge, glaring
defeets all forth more severe oriticiSM,'
arid whoseinhpltabie perfections area°
`l4eißOt l . - allent,is ni nie. Fort‘hree hundied
years, artiste ikon all `parts 'of the world
have made Pilgrimages dither,, toad- mik:e, to eondenin v and tosirlyi l invaini,
to imitate.. t. , i4, l 4Bitißqs il( l ie. a.,
T,h e , centLa 'figure . .. , represents the,
.Ate*dah, as a stern, wFnthini judge ' Ip- ,
jteut:naly,np,on,jnatiee and revenge ; -,
• Vroue ed at hia,feet',, in aa, 4/440i10g,
'040 1 4
‘ t Y114 4- „V,ltgkii;l4ri.y"i i 4T99.lo ,
a i l'via stoutio4 A 40,4100 4114,41-10:`
lIMII
=
MIMI=
tyre; the latter . .bearlng their iniPle-
Die a Cs, of torture, certifitatesi, by
which to gain a4P 4Bol o l ab9vP.' [;b obs
of, angels ;the' Below,,Oti the
left, the. redeemed ~are rising
from - their' graSes, responsive' to, the
trumpets Seunded above. 'cia',9i . aright i
the` condemned : are belcgdiagge4oo*A
by demons into everlasticg fire. The - re
is nowhere any. rest or repose; no Jo
manifested, even among the blessed s--
all Is stern,, terrible justice.,,
~Acting*,pharon; ferrying the, con:'..
dembed across, the Styx, Biagio, the
Pope's Secretary. He ventured to eon
demn‘ the painting- as dn7ortay the
chapel.' Acgelp, in revenge', fitisigned
.1110. to an unenviable
Biagio appealed. to, the rope & that at
let* his features, might be .etfaced.—
,'.`Where hat he Placed you r,dernatid.
otl Paul " Hell," was the repi.
Had it been 'Purgatory, we could
tope got you out; but in hell, nulls
est redenitio." Ef.• M. :W.
Welleboro,"Trin. " •
, ~ . •
i , ,Ohinese Beggars: .
; , 4 . • ri . , . ,
~Ili e reis tt,claSS or beggaii. 1 4 . C__himi.
We' Members of which are all afflicted
in'seme way ;::blind, Or larne t ,Or malt&
ed; Or 'With wenti'dii, - in 'many
,cases Self'
WI icte i d. , Dr.' Lockhart' relates the case
of A man, who cane At his. hospitatin,
tiii'Vigh ale with r violent, inflammation : '
4 , 4 ,
: ,oy..i k es ; • invitig thelids epormoua-'
s
oil": ' 110 stated that ;he - Was a'
'pl terer, and that 'some lime had acct=
.dentelly . fel len In to,,his, eyes:.. Further
tnq U iry, however, showed that the man.
had intentionally:filled both* eyelids
with lime, for the ptirpoSe of destroy-*
ing his sight, so as , to excite cornpas=
Sion; anti he had succeeded,, for the
eyeS were, totally destroyed, . This plan
is not nnfrequently resorted to by, beg-.
gars, when with sound eyes they can
not earn a livelihood. I They will some
times blind their children In early, life, ,
by means of lime, or by puncturing the
eyes with a toanse needle. The follow-
'
ing plan is' towever the Most extraor
dinary one that has been met with.—
Four men were - seen one day crawling
on their hands and knees, having lo s t.
theirlegs a few inches be low the knee.
Theyasserted that their eight legs had
all! been burned of? in a fire. But it
was ascertained that iii the southern
part of the province. of Shansung beg
gars have their legs taken off by a pro
fessional beggar-surgedn ; his plan be
ing to tie ,a piece of thin string around
the middle Of the calf, drawing it closer
day by day, till mortification of the
loWer limb ensues. After a while the
bone. is exposed, sawed through,' the
**end closed up, and the beggars sent
ferth, amidst the congratulations of
their friend's, as in a fair way to obtain
a beggar's fortune. Numbers however
sink under the tortures of the tedious
operation. Devices which remind one
of Western rogues are sometimes rasor
ted to. .
Mr. Cobbold, who was forMerly a
'Missionary in Niugpo, in his very en
tertaining book, ',Pictures of the,Chi
nese,/' relates au act of charity of his
own.. A man came to his house with
his wrist fearfully wounded-hacked
through, as he, asserted, by pirates.—
Mr. Cobbold called a, chair,, and hurried
on'- tv -wv - --.--:-------.7- , -.--,,4.s t ionery
doctor. It was pronounced a case or
amputation, A Buddhist priest was
engaged as nurse; the surgeon set to
work to remove • the bandage ; the pa
tient shrieked in a becoming manner;
-roll after roll of the bandage was re
moved, until at last the wrist was dis
closed, perfectly sound and whole. So
, An ._
geniously was ,the .imposture contri
ved, that it thus at first deceived-even
the practical eye of a foreign surgeon.
• There is a large division In the beg
gar host whose character is low even iu
the estimation of their friends. They.,
have mostly ,been thieves in former
days, and though set at liberty, they yet
carry the badges of their crimes about
with them, whether as a punishment,
as a sign of penitence, or as a means of
exciting compassion, the writer is not
prepared to,say. They are called "man
darin beggars." Some wear a. very,
small wooden collar, . a model of the
Caugue borne by convicted thieves in
the streets. Others carry a heavy stone,
on their' shoulders from morning till
night, their crimes being ,greater than
.thefirst. class. -Others, , again, have a
Idayy iron spear padlocked to their foot
. and shoulder. These are chiefly. men
banished from other. proilnees. Oth-,
ere;*oxe light heated and less harden
e(i by manacles, whirl, bowls of water
round with juggler skill ; they a r•e
called Y Shake the falling sky." Oth
ers go through all the exercises of the
noble art of defense, only beating the
• i
air, not boxing a brother beggar ; and
,begging priests of the Buddhist and
Taoist type are frequently ,met with—
net true mendicant friars. sent forth by
r. , ,
the monastery. abbots,, but priests with
mit 4 home, either. •outcasts 'from tem
pips or fictitious characters.
MABRY.
Mr. Nasby after Listening to the Debate
• onithe MeCreery Resolution to Restore
the .Arlintgon Estate to the Lee Pam-.
Dreams a Dream, in whichhe
veils a Possible (andprobabic) Future.
AtilllNflVON t P.t.:C. 20,1870.
Washington Isn't a reinarkatily good
place for Democrats jist at this time
'The ?i.blishinists are in : power, and ev
erybody seems to realize the fact. The
hotel keepers all know it. ,They know
that . Dlinncrite kin
. hey, nothin to
make here, add, ez a censekence, when
one !IV us makes his appearance he Is
unanimously rekested to pay
. afore he
registers his name- I( wuz not so un
der lohnSon. The landlords, all kneW
'teat of we hedn't money, all. we lied
to'dO wuz to get oh good :terms with
Sciliiison 'and we rood get it, and credit .
wuz theni attainable. In consekences
uv thIS inhurnansuspishen V men uv
my'appearanee, am not pa
,roniSen"a
hotel in Washington at present. I take:
my wild at'free lunches and repose 'et
night wider a bridge. It is sometimes
cold;-and sometimes damp, but ez
heven't any money I Prefer it. It's at'
best free. Pin not laarripered by hours
t or exposed 1,5 b uv 8-1)ETC.....„1:1811.d
hotel' clerke , with diamond pins. I
• • ,
breathe the free ,eir uv heven, mixed
Slightly uv course with the odors (rein
an ti4jeinin_liVery stable,. Which is,
hovievei,a 'geed thing; ez it , - reminds
,me ; that uv earth, and uv, earth
.earthy:
The mite .that M,eCteery, uv jten-,
interdoosed,his, pisolooshea
4414 the Arlint99 carats , to ; the slice ,
APOY,AII.O_4III9 PrgYlgint fort4idiggin
=I
up uv the bodies uv. the Vederal
Mere which wuz berried ther, I went
to Sleep full uv that idea. 'I wuz rejolst
heiond expreslien, for I, saw iu, that
Movement a reterni to sultan like , a
sense of jqtitio on thiipart tiv', the goy
erntaent toward 'the ,peopie uv the
Smith, which failed to bust it. (loin
to sleep with my mind full uv . this, I
dreamed a dream.
~• To my dreaM,. my mind o , erleeped
tWO years. I fotind myself standln• In
the Federal cemetery at Arlington on
th 4 ground madeelassiele by its wunst
binowned by: 'general Lee. I
wus amongst the monuments and bed
stuns commeruoiathi the dead birelius
who wuz beneeth em; and, wuz Indul
gin in a Spasm uv' eussin the govern.
mint which not only yoosurped the
property uv the great and good Lee,
but wich deseeratid it by yoosin it ez a
cemetery. for, its •ded sOljers While
thus musin, I saw a regiment, mare or
less, uv Federal soljers'enter the leem
etery, armed, not with muskits, but
spades and picks. ; .ekt their head wuz
men chest in gray, which I
.recognized,ez .ex.:Confederit officers, who
,wuz
directln the force.
To my astonishment theynen'iv bloo,
every mail by - ern with' an exPreshun
tri!boomiliashen etch ez I never saw
ekplled, ceminenet knockin dovin the
tntiab-stutis and pllin Uv em up, after
, wleh the 3 dug up the graves; and 1111S
MI out the skeletons uv -the deceest
birelins, dumped em permiskus into
Federal army, wagons wich bed arrived
for the•purpose.
"What does this mean?" I, askt 'the
Confederit officer who seemed to hey
charge tin the perceedins.
•
"Mean s !" he returned ; "it means
the t at last the era nv good feelin hes
re urned. It means that at last the
D mocrisy is In power, and thrit. the
p oper equillibriUm hez bin reatored."
"What year is this?" I asked in as
,onistrinent.
'1873. The elechsben last -fail made
Hoffman President, ;and the Congress
is Dimocratic likewi e. Hoffman wuz
inoggerated day before yesterdai, and
we to wunst commenst reconnatiuctin,
adcordiu to our idee.' •
.• Wut is the programme ? 1,,a, ?e - a.
‘; 6 l4cCreery immejitly \inter oosed
tub Bathe resolooshun with wuz defect
eddu 1870„giviu back the Arlington
estate to the Lee family, and removin
thi4 dead Federal soljers from the
gi,ounds, that the site hereof mite not
offend the youthful Lees. The South
wuzn't satisfied. It waz goo tl *muff, ez
far eZ.it•went, but they •wantid • suthin
more. • They Wautid au ticknolligrufmt
that them dead sobers' never should
hes ' en there, and they demand that
that Acknolligement be made in"sich
way that it wood .be understood, that
it was an opology,_ Saulsbury uv Del
aware got the idea. Immejitly he
moved to amend the resolooslien, 'pre
vidin that the work uv removin the
dead soljers and restorin the grounds
he reformed, by vetran Fedral soljers
seleetid from all the reginients in the
servis, ez a ante token IN the regret- uv
the government for Kevin deseratid the
prOperty, with W:tiz promptly passed.
To further soothe the Southerh mind
a hundred. Confederit officers wuz re
kested to take command uv the men
and sooperintend the work, and—" .
came up and salootid the officer who
• wuz a talk in with,rue.
"We hey the wagons loaded with
skeletons—wat AO we do with ern?"
"Dump em into the Potomac, /where
the current will wash em out to sea."
"But wat else is to be done?" sed I.
"Not much. Theworit_ uv , consilia
shim is going on 7) A bill is 'peudin
preVidin for the removal uv the dead
bodies uv "Federal SOljers from alit the
cethetries\in the country, and the des
trueshen by all tho'tomb-stuns and the
tnott umenti erected to em. The names
uv the battle fields is to be changed, so
that all ( ' metnry uv the onpleasttntis
shall pe obliterated. - The vessels which
took part in the war is to'be sunk and
their names taken off the records uv
the Navy Department, ito make the
government trooly nashn 1, ez it wuz,
the, South 'is to hey comPl to control uv
the Government iu all its departments,
and is todiotate its policy i,o everything.
All the battle flags, guns, and trophies
uv all - kinds is to be taken out uv the
Nasithel and State CapitoAs ; cele.brash
,ens'- and reunio,ns .uv federal regi
ments is to'be prohibited, and it is to
be made a penal offence to even mem
shun the name uv any ono uv the bat
-ties with took place between the yeins
1f3 . 61 and 18(15, and all them .wick 'lost
.theleforchoons with .the Confederacy,
and .who lost property in lionsekenee,
is Lo hey it restored, when practicable,
or: the valyoo in money, with the most
uv
,ern take, ez they'prefer 4vin in Noo
York. The.CabinCt is now made up
uv Southern men, and - to remoonerate
em for Wat they hey eutrered, they are
all men 'who hed commands in ' the
.Confederate • arrny go myself - to-
Mos row tolemove the bodies , from the
Cemetery at Gettysburg, and to destr iy
the Federal asylums for soJers at Day
ton, Ohio, mid Augusta, Maine." We
did . hew s4rie trouble. The moment
We commenst talking uv, restorin es.
tales to confederits, and remnueratin
uv em for ost property, - then come
somelhOusaiids of southerners whose
property lied btu' yopsted by
,the. Fed-
eral Govenument Who demanded, re
inunerashun likewise, but they didn't
ask a second time. The proposiShen
wuz respeVed with shouts uv !allure by
every Dimoerat in Congress.
"MeCreery then, in 1870—"
"W-uz simply two years ailed ud hia
time; that When the Repub-
Ilicin party 'lod its 'grip in 1871, we
ltunw'd ,We hed em. INVci held Mc-
Creery and sieli ez he steaddy, , till af
ter the elekshuu gave t s the power—
At this point a gentle bog which
wuz mantic! in search ust.Jiit- breakfast
happened to meander that way. ,He
had tiouhtless at. eon] period uv
his life in a distillery, for z --he carne
within smellin distnnce'uv ehe Coln- =.
metteed rooting about ni bead:, Fre,
awoke me, and I realized t at What I
bed experanc6d merq the) base
less
fabric uv a dream. .
But after . all ther6is suth min dreams,
Let the - Dhneerady wunst git into pow
er and we abet - see wet we shel see.
There IS -old scores to settle- , there, is
remunerashens ',1.0 be made4 l -there,
*estitoosheira:: We'ail*, dead' "nor. hey
We lost - our memory. El.that 'dream
relatin to the success uv the,Dimocraoy
tocid be tree the rest it wend fOlier
quiet ,enuff: -
Rkric:4o4. V, NAssrz.
linikr9st*tater.l.
NO. 4.
MI
f The Agitator
Book
'& Jrib - Printing House,
Is welt supplied with Presses and Typos to exe
cute, an kinds of. Job Work with neatness and
dispatch.
Large additions of alt the late styles, of typo
have been added to:this department.
Loeitlon--Smith & Bowen's Olsok, 24 Floar
. .
Canadian Winter'Sp 'rt " .
•
• Of the richer-classes of Canada, •It is
wenknown that a set 'of people more
capable of enjoying theniselves does '
not WO. Yet few' mere tourists have
a chance of seeing them at their gaYest.
When the cold is most keen and the
wind outs like a knife; when the great
Canadian river is turned into amass of
joined icebergs, and Is no longer-an easy
highway from thelakes' to the ocean ;
IVltert the Grand Trunk .railway, that ,
othtir, highway of Canada, is bloclAed
with snow,
and its trains are breaking
down with even *ore than' their ave
rage \regularity ; 4 *hen to try to. reach,
Canada, means Ito ,be stuck half way, ;
*be run into a anew drift, to be bumped
about, to be frolen and starved—if not,' '.
to be collided wlth, to have rails.break
ing under you, to be rolled down an '
embankment, and roasted alive at its
footHstill to be, in divers ways, hoqi
bly ' tortured ; *hen, in fact, nobody'' '
with U. least self respect will try o ;
pass over to them—then Canadia s 1
make merry; then, American freedo
from social restraints, joined to Engli h ''
bodily hardihood and vigor -see t
they can' beth do togetherto eguile t e 1
try o
lii every large town, t e
temple of jollity is the strati g rink.— ,
In summer, this building lo ks merely
an immense wooden shed, ery:dt eery
and uninviting. But in w ter, when _
it is floored With smooth ice, and its
,walls are kiting with flags and other-
wise cunningly decorated, when it is
brilliantly lit up at' night and filled
with bright faces and gay dresses, the
shed is transformed and beeoineS a fairy '
palace,' However deep the snow may
have fallen o drifted outside; there is
good skatingV. all times, within ; and
in ail) evenin s the rink is the scene of
the most picturesque Canadiad festivi
ties. Montreal people fell you that,
when you have seen a fancy ball in
their rink, you May at any moment dle
In Contentment. In Canada, skating is
more than a mere pasiime ; it is a seri
ous business, one of the trials of life, i ,
one of the tests of personal merit, and
offers one of the moat conspicuous fields
for the winning of honor and renown.
Thus Canadians will say of some belle.;
I whose claims to distinction they wish 1
to uphold, " She may not be ai pretty
as A—, nor as pleasing in manner as
B--, but her skating is perfectr br ,
of some beau, "He is'nt handsome,
and he is'nt agreeable; but you should
Just see him waltz upon skates !" 'Be
side Mcating an d an extraordinary
amount of dancing, the sleigh and "to
boggin" play a great part in the amuse
meats of a Canadian winter. Boston
is called the headquarters of sleighing
for the whole of the continent; but
though the equipages may not be in
such throngs, or so grand. anywhere in .
Canada, as on the famed "Brighton
Road" of the Bostonians, onn keen and '
clear afternoon, still.sleiging in Cana
sla is not only the chief means of loco- :
motioh for half Of the year, but the
foremost among occasions for sociabil
ity, the most successful. of match-ma
kers, the most characteristic amuse
ment of the country. Nothing can roll
Upon wheels in a Canadian winter—
everything_glides upon runners, to the'
music of tinkling bells. And then is'
the time of " muflins ;" that is, whey a
1.112;t2, n-railing liiinself ol4he custom of '
the country, has secured a young lady
for the season, to share with him his .
sleigh-driving and other of the nation
al amusements, in Canadian phrase she
is called his " intiffin." The' origin of
the term seems to be.wrapped hfobseu
rity i Canadians will not address them
selves in earnest to itsjinvestigation ;
an\d, no more serious suggestion can be
gOt from them, than that the things
may have been so called " because fel- .
lers are always burning their fingers
with them."
Of the sport of " toboggining," ono.
of the most curious points is the great=
ness of its celebrity in Canada, contras
ted with'the almost absolute igibirance
of its name beyond the frontier.—`,i A
toboggin," says a late work upon Can
ada by a Canadian, " IS' a light Indian .
steigh,•made of very thin wood, curled -
over in front, and ustd chiefly by_ plea
sure parties in sliding down hillsides
covered with crusted but lightly packed
snow." A toboggin is made to hold at
least two person's, and as, in'the prac
tice of the sp9rt. these two persons are
usually of ditfei V ent sexes, some light is '
thUs thrown uptiti the great esteem in
Which it is field by Capadians. The -
sitter in the back scat of the toboggin
steers, with his hand. AnY want of
care or skill on his' part, is pretty sure-'
to lead to an upset. However, as the
'Sleigh Is light, and the • selected snow ,
bank probably not very hard, such-up-
sets are only the occasions for more _
merriment, and , zonietiunea do good ser- -,
vice by calling fortli-the talent of sore
andcaricaturist. The cones of ice : —
and snow Which, fed by theConstaht- _-
spray showers, grog' up at the foot of '
the falls Of Mon t.i re11(:i, wake ri'fLa- , _ .
i woos toboggin grot nd for Quebec. 'rue •
larger Of these cone, sornetirlie4 becomes
nearly, a hundred feet high ; but there .
".4 a smaller one, which all except the
most venturesome prefer for toboggin
lOg. After they have toiled hp ,to the,
top,, they intrust, themselves to their
miniature sleigh, and slide (1(44 at full
speed, gaining a velociy Which some
times carries them, i , is titid, half
mile or more over the level Ice surroun
ding the cone. Of the soeial effects of
such a national pastime, it is almost
needless to speak. What,coUld be' more
likely_ to break through formality, to. • ,
: make the
,aentta •fl taupe between
~trvg,
persons ripen inb the !nostgenlal,sym
wally, than their,faeitigin Common the
toils and the dangers of the toboggln,— , -
the'lleadiolig rush dOWnw*rd, with its
giddy excitetnent, the' thquent upset
abd-Precipilationt - of both' voyagers to,.
gether down into- the silow ? When- - .
brought under this tieiitin l ent, , it is said:
' the sbyest,and most intrfetable_young
~.
• men have been known___, 1
to turn : matrl- -1 '
monist, . within --acweek-Ls'a bracing .a
tot*, to the nerves is this sport,
,and; so
:stimulant to the lietOtfid action of-the
heart. ThiS inay redeem ' the amuse-
'pent from titter pue:ility ; but it Mint
still be a question for the "philbsopheri‘
Why it should flourish titriong tlio,fieit .
society of Cwhatia, while it is 'rejected
by all except the very little street boys,
.
in the' States.' - _
Rubbing the hands, after doing .a
day's washing, with a handful of line .
takes out that withered look and.
01l the 'soreness. This is• well wort,h
reaterobethag, as all ,kaow"ttto AlsOuni=,
foigt of btift; and olugisy,lkap,i,ls. f
M