rUI34ISIIED EVERT• SATURDAY Mon:NI-NG, AT ONE DOLLAR A-YEAR, PAYABLE IN ADVANCE OR, $1:25 AT THE END OF THE TEAR. OFFICE: CRUM:B Row, EitorTT-ST., MARIETTA, PA. ADV E RTISEMENTS AT THE ITSTIAL RATES A large addition to the Jon PAINTING depart ment of " THE MARIETTIA N " establish ment enables us to do everything in the Job line with neatness and dispatch, and at very low prices. The Bugle Calls! The War has Begun! -4 War of Extermination against Bad 7'eeth, Bad Breath, Diseased Gums, 2oothaohe, Earache, and Neuralgia. OUR ARTILLERY IS DR. WM. B. HURI)'S DENTA.L TREASURY. A COMPLETE SET OF REMEDIES FOR PRESERVING THE TEETH, Purifying the Breath and Mouth, Em 24 curkg._ Toothache r and Neuralgia. CONTENTS: 1:/r. Burd's Celebrated MOUTH WASH, on bottle. Dr. Hurtt'e Unequalled TOOTH POWDER, ono box. . • bt. - mirrd l / 4 . ma g ic TOOTHACHE DROPS, one 'bottle. Dr Flurd , s qINTIVALLED NEURALGIA PLAS TER. Dr. Hurd's MANUAL on the Best Means of Preserving the Teeth, including Directions for the Proper Treatment of Children's Teeth. FLOSS SILK for Cleaning between the Teeth. TOOTH, PICKS, etc., etc. Prepared at Dr. Hurd's Dental Office, '77 Fourth St., Brooklyn, (E. D.) Paten, ONE DOLL IR l or, SIX for $5. Zr The Dental Treasury makes a package eight inches by five, and is sent by express, IQ — Fu/1 direction for 'use is on each article.. The following articles we can send sepa rately, by mail, viz: The Treatise on Preserving the Teeth sent, post-paid, on receipt of 12 cents,orfour stamps. The Neuralgia Plaster, for Neuralgia in the Face, Nervous Headache, and Earache, sent, post-paid, on receipt of IS cents, or Six stamps. The NEURALGIA and RHEUMATIC PLASTER, (large size), for Pains in the Chest, Shoulders, Back, or any part of the body, sent, post-paid, on receipt of 37 Cents. . Address, WM. B. HUKB & CO., Tribune Buildings, NEw YORK. 113 — Dr, Hurd's IVIOUTH WASH, TOOTH POWDER, and TOOTHACHE DROPS can not be sent by mail, but they can probably be obtained: at your Drug or Periodical Stores. If they cannot, send to us for the DENTAL Treasury, Price, $l, which contains them. _Nato are Dr. Hurd's Preparations Good? The best evidence that they are is, that their firmest eliends and best patrons are those who have used them longest. Dr. William B. %Hurd is an eminent Dentist of Brooklyn, Treasurer of the New York State Dentists' Association, and these preparations have been used in his private practice for years, and no leading citizen of Brooklyn or Wil liamsburg, questions their excellence, while .eminent Dentists of New York recommend them as the best known to the profession.— Without the aid of advertising, dealers have 'sold them by the gross. The Editor of the Brooklyn Daily Times •su) si—"We•are happy to know that our friend Dr. llurd, is succeeding beyond all expecta tions with his Mouth Wash and Tooth Pow der. The great secret of his success rests with the fact that his articles aro precisely what they aro represented to be, as we 'can testify from their tong use." The well known P. T. Barnum writes:— "I found your Tooth Powder so good that my family have used it all up. We find it the best Powder for the Teeth that we ever used. 1 shall leel obliged if you will send me another supply at the Museum at your convenience, with bill." But their cost is so small that every one may test the matter for himself. la- Beware of the ordinary Tooth Powders. Dr. Herd's Tooth Powder contains no acid, nor alkali, nor charcoal, .and polishes without wearine the enamel. Use no other. What will Dr. ilarces Remedies Effect? Dr. Hurd's Mouth Wash and Tooth Powder will give young ladies that finest charm in woman—a sweet breath and pearly teeth.— Try them ladies. Dr. Hurd's Mouth Wash and Tooth Pow .der wilt cleanse the mouth from all foul ex halations, and if used in the morning, will .make the breakfast taste sweeter and the day begin more pleasantly. Hundreds of persons , can testify to this. Try them, gentlemen. Dr. Hurd's Mouth Wash and Tooth Pow der are the best preparations in the world for curing bad Breath and giving firmness and health to the gums. Hundreds of cases of Diseased Bleeding Gums, Sore Mouth, Canker, etc., have been cured by Dr. Hurd's astringent wash. Dr. Hurd's Mouth Wash and Tooth Pow der give an additional charm to courtship, and make husbands more agreeable to their wives and wives to their husbands. They should be used by every person having ARTIFICIAL TEETH, which are liable to impart a taint to the mouth Dr. Hurd'a TOOTHACHE DROPS cure Toothache arising from exposed nerves, and are the best friends that parents can have in the house to save their children from torture and themselves from loss of sleep and sympa thetic suffering. Farmers and. 'Mechanica ! you cannot well atibrd to neglect your teeth. For a trifling - sum, you can now get preservatives, than which Rothschild or Astor call get nothing better. Remember that DYSPEPSIA. and CONSUMPTION OF THE LUNGS often originate in Neglect of Teeth. Send for the Treatise on Teeth, and read Dr. Fitch's ob seivations on this subject. If too late to arrest decay in your own teeth ) save your children's teeth. Neuralgia Plasters. Dr. litied 3 o Neuralgia Non-Adhesive Plas ters are the most pleasant and successful reme dies ever prescribed for this painful disease. The patient applies one, soon becomes drowsy, fulls asleep, and awakes free from pain, and no blister or other unpleasant or injurious consequences ensue. For Earache and Nerv ous Headache, apply according to directions, and relief will surely follow. Nothing can be obtained equal to Dr. flurd's Compress for Neuralgia. Try them. They are entirely a novel, curious, and original preparations, and wentlerfully successful. They are of two sizes, one small, for the face, price 15 cents, and the other large, for application to the body, price 37 cents. Will be :nailed on receipt of prace and one stamp. What are the People Doing? The American people are intelligent enough to appreciate preparations that contribute so much to the happiness of those using them, Aud they want them. Every mail brings us .letters„ some ordering the Treatise on Teeth, : some the Neuralgic , Plaster, and not a few ,enclosing 37 cents for the Mouth Wash, to be sept,by mail ; but to these we me compelled to reply that it is impossible to send a half pint bottle by mail. The people want these , Iternedies. Who will supply them? NOW I 6 TII LLIANOIi: FO.ll. AGENTS Shrewd agents cap make a small fortune in carrying these artieles around to families,— The Dental Treasury is the neatest article that, a man or woman can earry around. Send for one and see, or, better, a dozes, which we sell, as samples, for $7. Agents supplied liberally with Circulars. I.SIONV is the time to go into the business, to do good, and make ,a profit. We are spending thousands foi the benefit of agents. New England men or :ivomen here is something nice, and a chance 40 take the fide Wat Mi. ts B. IJURD C Rood. Address 0. , , • Tribune Buildings, NFw Yon*. That remittances may be made with gonfi i)enee, W. B. H. & Co. refor to the Maypr of brookiya ; to G. W. Griffith, President of Farmers' and Citizens' Bank, Prooklyn to Joy, Coo t & ;1:0.,.New York; to P. T. Barnum, E.,19., Nov York, etc., ote. P'_ .T_J.: Barer, Proprietor_ VOL. 8. "THERE'S NO SUCH WORD AS FAIL." The proudest motto for the young-- Write it in lines of gold Upon thy heart, and in thy mind The stirring words unfold, And in misfortune's dreary hour Or fortune's prosperous gale, 'Twill have a holly, charming "power— " There's no such word as fail.', The sailor on the stormy sea, May sigh for distant land; And free and fearless though he be, Would they were near the strand: But when the storm with angry breath, Brings lightning, sleet and hail, He climbs the slippery mast, and sings "There's no such word as fail." The wearied student bending o'er The tombs of other days, And dwelling on their magic lore, For inspiration prays; And though with toil his brain is Weak, His brow is deadly pale, The language of his heart will speak ) "There's no such word as fail?' The wily statesman bends his knee Before, Fame's glittering shrine ; And who a humble suppliant be To genius so divine ; Yet though his progress is full slow, And enemies may rail, He thinks at , last the world to show " There's no such word as fail." The soldier on the battle plain, When thirsting to be free, And throw aside a galling chain, , Say, " Oh, for liberty !" Our household and our native land— We must—we will prevall; Then breast to breast, and hand to hand, "There's no such word as fail." The child of God, tho oft beset By fods without—within— These precious words will near forget, Amid:their dreadful din ; But upward looks with eyes of faith, Armed with the Christian's mail; And in the hottest conflict, saith "There's no such word as fail." PRENTICE SAYINGS.-- The, Nashville Union says a Union man "with a but" is as bad as a rank secessionists. But when our rams get to work on the Mississippi some tall Union work with tremendous butts must be expected. The New Or leans papers of the Sth complain bitterly that the butchers in that city refuse Con federate: notes in market. If they can get nothing but worthless paper, let them sell nothing but spoiled meat. Our New Orleans Butler has drawn the cork from the mouth of the Mississippi and placed it in the mouth of secession. Unless the rebels can get more salt, their flesh won't keep through the summer; it will rot from their bones. The rebels accept the services of all the female rebels can get. They want bells to make cannon and belles to shoot them. There have been hundreds of well-attested cases where the rebels buried their sick and wounded before death. The Saviour said "let the dead bury the dead," but he never said let the live bury 'the living. Some of the army hate Gen. McClellan because he ranks higher than they in Military position. He can say with Hamlet, though in a different sense, "Oh my of fence is rank." The Cincinnati Enqui rer says that "Commodore Porter does not let the grass grow under his feet." People who work on the water seldom do. If Jeff Davis and his gang be not hung our good mother earth will prob ably refuse in disgust ever to bring forth another crop of hemp. A telegraphic despatch, published-yesterday, says that Gen. Halleck's forces have "got a strong position right in the enemy's teeth." We hope they havn't got a position right between his teeth. If Gen. Floyd shall be hung, the sheriff and clergyman on the scaffold had better look out for their pocket-books. TO MARE A HUSBAND DIE EASY.—The husband of a buxom wife near Exeter, England, had long been dying, and, at length, one of the clergy of the parish, making one of his daily visits, found him dead. The disconsolate widow in giving her account of her spouse's last moments, told him her poor dear man kept groan ing, but could not die. "At last," said she, " I recollected that I had got a new piece of tape in the drawer, and so I took some of that and tied it as tight as I could around his neck, and then I stopped his nose with my thumb and finger, and, poor dear 1 he went off like a lamb l" ilar As Father Morris walking through a parish famous for its profanity, he was stopped by a whole flock of the youthful reprobates of the place. "Father Mor ris Father Morris ! the devil's dead I " "Is he ?" said the old man, beninly laying his hand on the head of the nearest urchin. "Yon poor fatherlesq children." af6tptOtat Vtintspbania atcrurnal far itt family Circle. 'MARIETTA, JUNE 21, 1862. BUNYAN'S Toms.—A new tomb has been erected over the grave of the author of 'The Pilgrim," in BUnhill Fields Burial Ground, City Road, London. The requisite funds for this memorial have been raised by public subscription. The length of the tomb is about seven feet, and the height rather . over 4 feet. On the top, in a reclining posture, with book in hand, is the carved effigy of John Bunyan, in stone, with the head resting on a pillow, the.length of the figure being 5 feet 8 inches. On the north side, in relief, is a stone panel representing Christian starting on his pilgrimage, with the harden on his back; and on the south side Christian is represented as in the act of reaching the cross, and the burden falling from his shoulders. At the east end of the tomb is the following insrip tion, engraved on a piece of the old stone.: "John Bunyan, author of the "Pilgrim's Progress ;" ob. 31st August, 1688 ; aet. GO." HOME GuAuns.—As a company of our Home Guards were marching along State street, on their way to Camp Douglas, they suddenly met an unexpec ted enemy, in the form of a wild and wrathful bull who, not liking the appear ance of the advancing column, made a furious attack upon the front lines, as intending to mow his way through to the rear. The foremest of the valiant soldiers prepared to receive the enemy charge with fixed bayonets, but on a near approach, his formidable appear ance proved too much for their untried nerves, and several broke ranks and scattered. One of them, howeirer, man fully stood his ground, and succeeded in impaling the enemy on his glittering bayonet. The point of the cold steal penetrated Mr. Bull's heart, and he fell to the ground.—Chicogo Post, JOliN Dr.F.w.—This Philadelphia fa vorite commedian died in that city on the 20th ultimo, of congestion of the brain. He had been complaining for a few days and while holding a child in his arms, belonging to a relative, fell insensible to the floor, at his residence, in Eighth street, between Market and Arch. He remained unconscious to the last. He was a native of Dublin, in Ireland, and came to this country early in life. He was married, about fourteen years ago, to Mrs. H. Hunt—the present Mrs. Drew who, was already an actress of high stand ing in her profession. He was thirty-five years of age, and leaves three children one boy and two girls. Goon.—" Who made you ?" asked a lady teacher of a lubber of a boy, who had lately joined her class. "I don't know," said he. "Don't you know ? You ought to be ashamed of yourself. A boy fourteen years old I Why, there is little Dickey Fulton—he is only three—he can tell, I dare say. Come here, Dicky; who made you ?" "God," said the infant. "There," said the teacher, triumphant ly, "I knew he would remember it." "Well, he eughter," said the stupid boy "taint but a little while since he was made." KO" A wag on seeing an old gobler trying to swallow a cotton string, very facetiously remarked " That was the last attempt to introduce cotton into Turkey." Do you know sir, that when I left home, my neighbors honored me with a musical escort ?"—Oh, I under stand, you were drummed out of town. far "There, cow!" cried a little girl while rummaging a drawer in a bureau, "there, now, gran'-pa has gone to Heaven without his spectacles !" ler The robin taps on the ground, the worm puts out his head to see what is there, and the bird seizes and devours Cr A young man who recently took a wife, says he did not find it half so hard to get married as he did to get the furniture. Ur A little boy being asked in Sun day school " what is the chief end of man ?" answered : "The end what's got the head on. Cr In youth, hearts are trump ; in manhood, diamonds and clubs, at the close of life spades are sure to win. tier The man lacks moral courage who treats when he should retreat. tritttu Horsy-Ramsu.—We see long direc tions given for the cultivation of this, perhaps the easiest and simplest raising of all esculents. It requires a rich, moist, deep soil. Plant pieces of the root with a portion of the crown, a foot apart, a couple of inches under ground, and let them alone, except to remove grass and weeds, and you will have horse-radish ever after. Persons who have springs or streams upon ' their premises can plant along them, where the soil is moist and in good condition, and a crop for a lifetime may be pretty sorely calculated on, provided the whole crop is not used up, and a little care .is taken to stick slips in the ground oc c ,1 'onally, in fall or spring.—German to i. Telegraph. ARMS GIVEN Ur.—On each occasion that a boat goes into the river now, it comes back with a number of arms gil) r en up by deserters from the rebel service, who are now in their homes in that vicinity, peacefully employed at their respective pursuits, The 500 men noticed some time since as having taken the oath of allegiance at the hands of Captain Harris, of the Island Belle, have all given up their arms, and are at work in that section of the country,from which the most of them hailed. Some of the the citizens of the neighborhood inform ed bur officers a day or two since that last week a Colonel, two Captains and three Lieutenants who had been serving in the Confederate army, returned to their homes in that vicinity, having be come sick of the service.—Nash. Star. A FEMALE TEAMSTER.—The Nashville Despatch states that on Saturday last one of the soldiers, or rather a teamster, attached to one of the Ohio regiments aud: who has been confined at the hospi tal for a few days with measles, was discovered to he a woman. She hails from the vicinity of Gallapolis, Ohio, and first joined the reguar army, when her sex was discovered, and she was engaged as a teamster to an Ohio regiment at twenty-five dollars per month. She is represented as about eighteen years old, and made rather a handsome boy. She has three brothers in the army, but not in the regiment to which she was attach ed. COMFORTS FOR HOMELY WOMEN.—Beau ty, says Lord Kaimes, "is a dangerous property, tending to corrupt the mind of the wife, though it soon loses its in fluence over the husband. A figure agreeable and engaging, which inspires affection without the ebrity of love is a much safer choice. The graces lose not their influence like beauty. At the end of thirty years, a virtuous woman, who makes an agreeable companion, charms her husband more than at first. The comparison of love to fire holds good in one respect, that the fiercer it burns the sooner it is extinguished." to - The princely mind will ruin a private fortune. Keep the rank in which Providence has placed you; and do not make yourself unhappy, because you cannot afford whatever a wild fancy might suggest. The revenues of all the kingdomes of the world would not be equal to the expense of one extravagant person. Cr Let us so order our conversation in the world that we may live, when we are dead, its the affections of the best, and leave an honorable testimony in the consciences of the worst. Or Nothing sits 6o gracefully upon children, and makes them so lovely, as habitual respect and dutiful deportment towards their parents and their superi ors. FACTS ABOUT . LONDON.—The census develops the curious fact that there are more Scottish descendants in London than in Edinburg, more Irish than in Dublin, 100,000 more Romanists than in Rome, and more Jews than in Palestine. There are also, in the same metropolis, over 60,000 Germans, 30,000 French, and 6000 Italians, a very large number of Asiatics from all parts of the east, and many who still worship their idols. iEr Until I was thirty, I drank noth ing but water. Since then I have drank only what circumstances made it fit I should drink. Temperance and moder ation keep me in health and strength. Besides. I adopt the Roman regimen 1-)athe with cold water and rub dry.— That's exercise. None of your common fresh brushes, but such as are used to rub horses' legs.— Thomas H. Benton. Term s----cD]2a Dollar a -Y-sa,r HOW THE PRINCE TOOK A JOKE.-OWE • ing to his slimness of person, the Prince had preserved the sobriquet of "Slender Billy ;" and upon one occasion, Lord Fitzroy Somerset, not being aware of his presence, asked at the dinner-table : "what has become of Slender Billy, to day ?" "Here I am, Fitzroy, and shall be happy to drink a glass of wine with you." Another ludicrous circumstance arose from a slight baldness the Prince had, even as a young man and which attempted to conceal, by, havicg his back hair carefully combed, and brought over the bald spot. One day, Freman tle, allusion to this, remarked : "You see, his Royal Highness makes the after guard do main-top duty." "A well-stored barn requires no thatch," the Prince promptly replied. Fremantle, who was unaware of his presence, colored up, and began stammering an apology, when his brother aid-de-camp set him quite at his case by the friendly manner in which he exclaimed," Jack ! "I'll pay you." TURNED DP A.LITE.—Some time since, Mr. David Yohe, of Pigeon Creek, Washington county, Pa., went to the battle field at Fort Donelson and had disinterred (as he supposed) the body of his son, who had received a wound du ring the fight, of which he afterwards died and was buried. The body was conveyed home and re-entered in the family burial ground, at Pigeon Creak, all the family being satisfied of the body, except a sister of the deceased.— Last week Mr. Yohe was astonished at receiving a letter from his son, whom he supposed dead and buried, stating that, after some weeks treatment in the hospital, he had recovered, so far as to be able to join his company and ex pected to take part in the next battle. The joy of the family can better be im magined than described. THE GRAVE Or ABRAHAM.-A corres pondent. who met the Prince of Wales while traveling in the East, says : The Prince was at Heborn while we were there. He and his suite obtained per mission to visit the cave of Machpelah, Abraham's burial place. They are the first Christians who have been allowed to enter it since crusades, nearly 'MO years ago. Dr. Stanley says everything is kept in the most laeautiful order, and nothing could be more satisfactory than the state in which the tombs are pre served. Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Jos eph, Sarah,Rebecca and Leah are buried there. COLT'S ARMORY.—The number of men now employed in Colt's armory is about 1,100, and the pay-roll amounts to near ly $50,000 st mounth. The value of the machinery and tools in the old armory is not less than half a million dollars. The new 'improvement or addition will just double the size and capacity of this immense establishment, making it the largest armory in the world. Tho car penters are now finishing the interior of the mail building of the new part, and about $40,000 worth of new machinery for making gun stocks has been placed in the wing connecting the two main buildings. CLERGYMAN'S LIFE.—To a person who regretted to the celeprated Dr. Johnson that he had not been a clergyman, be cause he considered the life of clergyman an easy and comfortable one, the doctor made this memorable reply :—"The life of a conscientious clergyman is•not easy. I have always cosidered a clergyman as the father of a larger family than he is able to maintain. No, sir, Ido not envy a clergyman's life as an easy life ; nor do I envy the clergyman who makes it an easy life." A LITERARY KlM—Align Chattier was esteemed the father of French elo quence; be spoke as well as he wrote. He flourished about the year 1420. Margret of Scotland, first wife to the Dauphin, afterwards Louis Xl., as she passed through the Louvre, observed Allan asleep, and went and kissed him, when her attendants expressed their suprise that she should thus distinguish a man remarkable for his ugliness she replied; "I do not kiss the man,but the mouth that has uttered so many charm ing things." a. "I remember," says the celebrated Wesly, hearing my father say to my mother, "How could you have patience to tell that blockhead the sump thing twenty times over 2" "Why," said she, "if I had told him bat nineteen times, I should have lost all my labor," NO. 47. [From the New York Herald.] The " Bloody Royal" of France on the Battle-Field of the Republic. SEVEN PINES, June I.—llo not these simple names call up strange visions of the old, old time, and of the grand old race from whom these simple captains have come down ? How the gay and brilliant Court of old France arises be. fore one !for it is impossible to associate these men with the distinctive Orleans. Inevitably we go beyond biro, back to the more glorious name of acicn re big, Think of the desendants of Hugh Capet on a battle Geld—princes of that very "blood royal" that is so wrought in the world's- history ! Kings, though with out thrones, and here as simple str.,:c.nt,l in the kingly trade of war, however little; it may sound and seem like reality. tl!:.re they are; and moreover, not only t'!e Count of Paris and Due de C)::-,ri!, are there, bat there, also is ihe de Joinville Wherever General McClellan rid. is easy to single out the three ri - able figures from the brilliant ,f,.ren:t that rides near him. The Prince d..! Joinville is more easily found than th. , others; he rides more characteristie,lll:-, and his dress is peculiar. He "douches" loosely in his saddle and stoops over. S. A. R. the Count de Paris seems what he very certainly is, a brave gentleman and a gallant soldier. He is not a con ventional prince, nor yet exactly a con ventional soldier. We see in him the Bayard of France's royal race, a true knight, and the champion of the future. His features and figure show the Ger man blood that comes by his mother. He is larger and fuller in frame than the others and promises to be fuller in flesh. His hair, too, verges towards the Ger man tint, and the predominant expres sion on his face is a truly Uerthan ami ability and good nature. Yet he is a true Frechman ; for, on the night of the battle of Williamsburg, when ail near headquarters were cold, hungry, an,l thirsty, he stood by the fire and non chalanty ate chocolate, and offered a piece to General Summer. That, we take it, proves his Gallicism. Sweet chocolate to a savage old soldier, hungry as au earthquake. But of all princes the perfect beau ideal is the Due de Chartres. Be cer tainly realized what has been dreamed by so many young ladies of what a per fect prince ought to be. Peculiarly effeminate in form and face, with a quick nervous manner; courteous and brave and always careful to look well—a gal lant Frenchman all over, and a gallant soldier, too. He will doubtless be re membered in the future as the best ap proximation to personal royalty that we have yet seen on our . side the water. Whoever saw these men on this day, as, with Gen. McClellan, they rode over the field of the Seven Pines, and up to and into the fire, must hail) had odd fancies of the topsy-turvy arrangements of old Dame Fortune—born priuces,with their swords out in the cause of repub lican freedom and unity. MALICIOGSLY MEAN.-Art unfavorable slough may be got up in a rual district by a man who combines caution with malignity, and all in such a way that you cannot lay hold of the malicious but cautious man. Let us suppose a new Dr. is coming to the village. You, the old doctor, go about the village and beg people to try to receive him civilly: lie may not be a bad man after all, The truth probably is that nobody supposes him a bad man, or intends to receive otherwise than civilly ; but a few days injudiciously spent may excite a preju dice which will take some time to allay. Some one speaks in praise of an acquain tance. You may reply, in a hesitating way, "Yes ; he is rather a nice fellow but—well, I don't want to say anything bad of any one." lu this way you have not committed yourself, but you have given a worse impression than you,could probably have conveyed by,auY difluite charge you could haVe made against the man. Honest and manly folks, indeed, may possibly call you a sneak. What do you care? Some muscular Christian may kick you. In that case you will have the comfort of knowing that it unquestionably serves you right. TETE SLIDF,LT, FAMILY,-A Paris letter pretends to give a graphic detail of the plans end policy of the. Slidell family, in their united capacity as a Rebel embassy in the French capital, down to the mo ment when Napolen accorded his latest and very probably last—interview to Mr. Slidell. The meeting took place in very quiet manner at the residence of the Count De Persigny, during au at ternoon reception of some of the most distiagnished French statesmen and po liticians. Napoleon took Slidell to a seat, and conversed with him iltring the space of an hour, winding up with an advice to the Rebel leaders "to lay down their arms, as their canse was hopeless." Count de Persigny left Paris for London the next morning and it was presumed that his journey was undertaken with refer.ence to the new shape in which his Imperial master had produced his idea of intervention in American affairs. Or A bookseller in Breslau has found a collection of proverbs iu the hand writing of Martin Luther. It contains 33 pages in octavo, and about 500 pro verbs, and has never appeared in print.