the naticttiatt. ,Atutipthz, 131 a. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1862. la' Messrs. MATHER & ABBOTT, No. 335 llroadway, New-York, are duly authorized to act for us in soliciting adyertiaments, receipt for the same. THE POSTAGE CIIRREEGY.—The Treas ury Department has made a new arrange ment for the delivery and distribution of the postage currency. On Tuesdays and Fridays it will be sent to New York, Thursdays to Philadelphia, Saturdays to Boston, and Mondays and Wednesdays to Washington, whence it will be dis tributed among the States •not reached from the other depots of delivery. The receipts are nowlbut $40,000 daily, but on and after November 6, $lOO,OOO worth will be furnished. AN OLD Somm.---Thomas Stewart , aged ninety-two years, of East Newton, Ohio, was a private in the 101st Ohio Regiment, and took Tart in the battle of Perryville, where he was complimented for his bravery and soldierly bearing. He has four sons, two grandsons; and three sons-in-law at present in the army. He was born in 1'770, at Litchfield. Con necticut, where his father now resides aged one hundred andlwenty two years ar It is said that Mr. Rankin, col lector of the port of San Francisco, now in Boston, has tondered Governor An drew a company of cavalry of Massa chusetts men in California oo the con dition that the expenses of transporta tion to the Bast shall be paid. Govern or Andrew has acceded to the proposi tion, and the company will be assigned as part of the quota of the city of Bos ton, if accepted by the city government. Az-James Douglas, of Stony Creek, was born in Rhode Island, Aug. 1, 1753, and is now in his 110th year. He is rather below the medium size, and such good health and vigor, that we see no reason why he should not continue to live a few more ceturies. He persists in working, like most old people, and in summer time walks about two miles ev ery day to labor on a farm.---New Ra ven Journal. ger The Milwaukee Wisconsin of Monday states that it was not Mra An na Bishop, the operatic singer, who was lately burned to death in that city, but another lady of the same name—the wife of the proprietor of the City Hotel at St. Paul, Minnesota. Gir When Great Britain fought Nap .olen, she made the Bank of England totes legal tender, and the premium on gold rose so high that twenty-one shill ing pieces rose to twenty-seven ; but that did not prevent ler from carrying on the the war succeasfnily. WILL report has reached Clucinnati to the effect that tho rebel Van Dulrn wee killed by a staff officer of the rebel }'rice. Van Dorn and Price had some diffien3- ty; Van Dora drew a pistol to shoot him but- Price's staff officer killed Van Dora before he could fire. or General Jeff C. Davis has deliver ed himself up to the civil authorities of Indianapolis, to be tried for man slaughter, in killing General Win. Nel son. He was admitted to bail, and has gone to his comniand, with tho army of the Cumberland. A Dwarf Elephant, twenty years old and only thirty inches high—a perfect Tom Thumb of the elephant tribe—ha 3 just been added to Wombell's (now Ed mond's) menagerie , in England. It was imported from Maloof'. W General McCall, who is still suf fering from his recent sickness, is at Willard's Hotel, Washington, preparing evidence in relation to the part taken by the Pennsylvania Reserves in the battle of Malvern Hill, sr The Government has advertised for two thousand Head-Boards for Graves to be delivered whithin thirty days.— They are to be black walnut, clear of knots, four feet long and ten inches wide. gir A Clergyman has administered the following warning t • o crinoline carers ; w "Let women beware, while putting on their profuse•and- expansive attire, how narrow are the gates of Paradise." sr The Richmond Dispatch com plains that rebel soldiers have been bu ried in that,olty before they were dead. We don't know that there was anything verpwrong in it. sr An Intelligence Office has been es tablished in• Cincinnati for the purpose of finding , employment for negroes as they arrive from the South. ifir An individial recently claimed a certificate of exemption on the ground that a large wart on his nose obstruc ted his eight, PEN. PASTE AND SCISPARS, The 40,000 men to be ~rafted in New York are to be put t'n old regiments.— No new ones will be formed. In Vienna a company has been formed for the purpose of-washing the windows by machines. The charge is one cent Per window. The Albany Gas Company have re fused to sell their coke, and determined to give it to the poor of the city. This is an example worthy of commendation. On Friday contracts for horses for the governmont were awarded at Phil adelphia, at a rate varying from $ll4. to $ll6. The colored population of the District of Columbia have addrelzsti a memorial to the Pr;sident.for a speedy transfer to the home furnished them by the agent of emigration. The President has appointed Col Henry H. Sibley, of Hinursota, who was mainly instrumental is putt!ng down the Indian massacre, a Brigarlis . .. Clan oral. This was richly deser7erl. A largo Union meeting ims held at - Beaufort, N. C., or. the 21st ultimo.— Eloquent speakers were present, and resolutions endorsing the Fresidant'e proclamation and free labor were adopted. Evory State of Jeff Davis' new nation which Mr. Glsdetone thinks ie aetablish est has the United States flars nc.v wa ving over some portion of it, and on% Florida, is entirely nr_der the control of the United States luthoritic.3. Major W. W. Russel, Fwaaeter of the Marino Corps, and :ncently attached to Gen. McClellan's staff, committed suicide last Friday morning with both sword and pistol, while laboring under temporary insanity. Mrs. Jessie Fremont has in press a volume entitled "The Story of the Guard; or, Chronicle of the War," in which it is said she will. "tell home truths appertaining to her husband's much-abused campai:,a in Missouri." A. Washington corzospond:at says: The National Bank Note Company having brought the clz.ily delivery or postage currency up to $58,00, thero is now a slight falling off, owing to the process of 3orae the ar rangements but this will soon bo reme died, and the daily delivory of currency carried up to $lOO,OOO. Fine specimeas of cotkm have been grown in Indiana this season. As Liany as twenty-eight balls were found on a single stock. No doubt is Mt but cotton can be made s preiltaLlo crop in all the ,Oho river - counties of Indi ana and Illinoia. A refugee from the vicinity of Lees burg states that a rebel cavalry force appeared in that place on Monday last and forcibly carried south all the no gross who had previously been collectcl together there, and placed in confine ment, by order. cf General Lee. • A person named Sely Lewis, who was arrested at Memphis charged with being a spy and smuggling goods through the lines, bad been tried by court-martial, found guilty and sentenc ed to death, but the death sentence has been revoked by the President nod I imprisonment for months ordered. The horse railroad recently built in Washington has proved a great success. 'f,-tu can ride from Georgetown to Navy Mtn; for ilTe cents a. distance of nearly fi ve mugs. The number of cars now employed is forty, but it is proposed to put on the roe.d soma thirty-five cars in addition. It is alleged in 19;tshington that the person who farnisllod John an Buren with a copy- of Gen. Sco, + t's letter to Secretary Seward, store it from the Slate Department, is which he Yfes 4:" til lately a clerk. It is also alleged that the same person appropriated other Ile portantatate papers. An accident occurred on Friday morn ing on the :Northern Central Railrsad, near New Cumberland, Pa., by the breaking of a rail, which precipitated the train down the embankment, badly breaking the care and injuring a num ber of the occupants. The accident de layed the train six or eight hours. Quite a number of rebel prisoners captured at Antietam, and in the sever al engagements in Maryland, have ta ken the oath of allegiance and have been released. A number of them are now in Washington seeking employment at their trades. Several printers are among the number. An order has boson issued by Major General Wool prohraiting the issue of .any more passes to visit prisoners at Fort McElenry. Parties who have-ob tained inch passes have abused the prvilege thus granted, and the General is determined in future to avoid giving them an opportunity to repeat' the of fence. J. F. Bollmyei, editor of the Dayton Ohio, Empire, was shot dpad last Satur day morning by Henry M.'Brown. The difficulty grew out of personal =sunder standing, occasioned by the shooting of, a dog belonging to Mr. Bollm,yer by Brown's son. Brown gave himself up, and was sent •to jail to await a trial._ A tiigedy, • - - - TfE MA]3IET T lAN. --A Blankets are being furnished to those of the drafted men who are unable to procure them for themselves, by 2°mo — charitable' persons who desire to do their share toward the comfort of our soldiers, and make no ostentatious dis play of it., It is worthy of remark that those engaged is this priaseworthy movement are the Mennonites, the "con scientious" men, upon whom such un reasonable abuse has been visited, and who now 3hOT7 themselves more patri otic than t:' , l .tay-at-home --nestion m-ongera who revils them. Cr P. Montgomery, late Editor of tne Vicleouzg Whig, who zeoently made his escape from the South, is stumping Illinois for the "Abolitionists," Puragn i Brownlow and Senator :Fright of Indi- I atm, are in the same business. The Hon. To. Holt of Kentucky, has written a litter to Mc.ssacinetts in favc..: of the Abolition party. The Rev. Mr. 0-•:to: of Tennet.:c; 4.nd Colonel Ham ilton of Texas, are speaking in Ne^ York ^,n the F^MO side of the question. inet it ? -or is it i' The ‘o:, - ..nr.3 from tie internal tax it is said Pt Wkshitigton, will largely exceed iha estimate of Congress. The data recei::.l by the Commissioner of Ileirc!ze, leads to the belief that it. will reach nearer 3250,09!),009 than $150,- 000,0 . 30, the eui it was Ztrst thought it would pro;luce. In cne district la New York, '.there tl.s colleotor thougikt 3,- 000 would be 15;23 are re Taizetl. if - -; Captain Boggs z!ated at the As tor House in New Y;:rlz, that the robel melody beginning "lienr.la Butler 11-9 to toin, has Mmcst r.G.:zsd to be sung by the secesulonistz of Now 0r1.: , 27. Our men,-however, have catizht it cp ; the camps of ''.lo rot-lora' army are .;Iva with it ; and it can be heath' Gf a r -tight ovsning on tbe vessels ascealir.g the Cr The United States military store keeper at Washington rer , ;...ted on Thursday that within tho last week he has receive& 52,000 blanbats, which are being• izeuzd f - o the army, that he has .7i pt ,d far the array of the Poto mac, from the 24th instant to 0.7.te, 000 uniforms, 50,00 a of - Aria have =seen sent down to Harper's Perry end that neighbothood. A boy, twelve years of eae, named Hurl, escape:: from Clo Indian attack ea a seta•:ncnt near Lake Shetck, Minn., ar.d s!firr:ed end led his baby bret!..3r, two years olil, sixty ntilee to New Ulm, as :^..eay.. - st settlement. /".9 "butts in the woods" wete fourteen Zap making the :oerney, subsisting ca wild fruits and roots. The mother of the children hStB aiRl,O Leen rescued. The Readieg papers say 'that measures are being'tahon by the Inn keepers of Berke county to test the U. S. Tax Lr.w, whick m,Aes them pay for two licenses—fcr one 1".3 tavern keepers, :uot:.•er as retail liquor dos.l ers—and that they have the best author ity for believing that such a construc tion 17:13 never dreamed of by the . &m -ore of th 3 bill. :Liss Lizzie Fly, of Denmark, is announced as editor of the Bridgeport Reporter. Two editors of that paper have gone to the war, and to avoid a like catastrophe the publishers have wisely resolved to place in their chair editorial one who Is exempt from such service, err The Commissioner of Internal Revenue has decided that all marriage certificates must hero a ten cent tax stamp upon them or else be declared invalid, and a penalty enforced against them, which, in addition to fines, may be the seperation of the parties. ' The late Governor General of t qanada, Sir Edmund Head, has refused the Giovernorship of Bombay, at .Z 12,500 sterlia.7C per annum, in consequence of the clim'ete not being likely to agree with Lady _4lead. Isn't he a consider ate hnsband li' The i.'rrek - tnakers of Manchester, England, degrosus o'f testifying their rev erence for the me.mo,:v of rrince Al bert, have agreed to ,lontribute the bricks required to lay the' foundation of the memorial to the Prilue Vhich is to be erected in that city. sir Mr. Lyons hae proposed a resolu tion in the rebel Congress offeriin $2O to every negro who should kill a whits Union soldier. Pretty good for oor "wayward sisters," who howl so dismally over the arming of negroes. gir At the commencement of a late term of the Supreme Court in Boston, there were on the docket no less than one hundred and -fifty cases of divorce. Many of them had their origin in=spirit- naliem. Sr Milton Dale, of Knight's Land ing, Yolo county, Cal., has a Durham cow that gives at two rankings eight gallons a day, and from it Makes two and a half pounds of butter per day. or The debt of Mexico to the allied powers, is stated in round numbers as follows : "To England,.s7'4,ooo,9oo ; to Spain, $10,000,000; to 'France, $500,. 000." STONEWALL ADMINISTERS SACRAMENT. A SAD STORY.—The Hartford Press —On the morning of a recent battle I relates that between three and four near Harper's Ferry, after a sermon by l weeks ago the wife of Mr. e George L. one of his 'chaplains, Stonewall Jackson, Ford, of Glastonbury, Conn cticut, who who, by the is, is an elder in the Fres- I has mourned unceasingly over the los s byterian churcb,.adiLiaisteredthe sacra - of two children three or four years ago, ment to the church members :..4 his ar- I and had recently been troubled with my. He invited all Christians to park.:- - ' church difficulties, spiritualism, Scc., `-13" cipate in this ceremony. A Baptist, an d was i,..T he .'ar and mother, Mr. health, became violent the straightest of his sect, thoroughly ly insane. Her fax,..... ^qme to as imbuet with the idea of close comma- Lucians Talcott and wife, ~.. nionwas seen to hesitate ; ?gut the ac- . sist her husband in taking care or per, ,- casion, and the man who presided, o?er- and after four days and nights of inces came his scruples, and thus it has hap- sant care, Mr. Ford, Mr. Talcott and paned that the prespect of a fight and wife also I?ecame insane—through a sort the eloquence of Jackson made a Bap- of mesmeric influence, Mr. ' Ford thinks List forget that baptism is the door into ,and all four were shouting and break the church. In all Jackson's army an ing ell the furniture in the house. The oath is rarely utterorel A religions neighbors removed Mr. Ford from the enthusiasm pervades it which makes nresence of his wife, whet he became every mi:-1 a kern. Conscious of the rational again, and remains so. Mrs justice" of our °flan, and imbued with Ford was removed to the Insane Re the strongc3t convicticu of patriotism, treat. Mr. Talcott And wife were ta his men are irresistible. In this inci- ken there a few days later, and Mr. Tel dent we have an explanation of General , qtt has since •died. AU the parties Jackson's invincibility, and we are thus are of respectability and property. Mr. enabled to understand why his men are Talcott and wife ware spiritualists all heroes, and why they endure without a mom= thp severest hardships to I which ~. ny troors have been subjected during the war. When peace is restored it will be honor enough for any man to ez.y, "I belonged to the army of Stone- wall Jackson." I.:.PORTAIIT.—The Commissioner of Internal Revenve iias decided drit, un the new tax law, - butchers who run a wagon through the country, from which to sell their meat, Must take cut pedlar's license for the same. The license is ten dollars for one and fifteen dollars for two homes. • It has. been arse decided that yen das criers come under the head of ate ticneers, -.ad must take cut a license e.ftire they can henceforth cif a single sale. The price of an auctioneer's li cense is twenty doll'lrs. Hucksters who buy up produce through co - ntry and sell is towns or cities from their wagon must tali° out a peiler's license. If they hard their pro duce to the city or town and sell thence , from atolls or tables, they are rezitir ed io take out dealers license, prc-ri dir:g their saes reach a thons7ad annually. THE 11FAIIIST AST CP TEM W.4a.—Tbe meanest act of the wh 'e sucurrad et C~spiin Bills. When the I—zitle was over, and tie night had covered the de,,d and the wounded under the darl: tress, the Bishop-C eneral 2ulk ztationed himself, with P. small and secret force, the shadow of the forest, by the side cf the dead, hyena-no, and, when a benev olent and Christian heart came to look for his dead or waunderfriend,ho would take him prisoner, march Em off, and strip him. A.CriEO7G3 OF SURGEONS IN TEM ARMY.— In the regular service there are 281 sur geons and 271 enlisted medical cadets and hospital "stewards. In the volun toer service there aro 2,060 surgeons and 1,200 contract physicians employed e 3 assistant surgeons. There are also 202 stall surgeons and 120 assistant staff curgoons. The total amount of these is 4,124, and is exclusive of new appoint ments. TEE SOLDIEZ'S FRISND.—For over forty years, Doctor Holloway has been supplying all the Armies of Europe with his rills and Ointment, they having proved themselves the only Medicines able to cure the worst cases of Dysen tery, Scurvy, Sores, Wounds and Bruis es. Every knaPanck shonid contain them. Only 25 ctn. per Box-or Pot. 232 EDITORS DR.IFTED.-AMOn g, those Mated in Queen Anne's county we ob serve the names of john T. Hand, editor of the Maryland Citizen, and John H. Thompson, editor of the Centreville Times. These gentlemen will now be in a favorable position to determine that oft-debated question, "Whichls might ier, the pen or the sword ?"-t-Cecil Dem ocrat. A SAD INCIDENT.—The funeral of Ser geant Charles Lewis, of Canterbury,. killed of Antietam, was held last week at Canterbury, Connecticut. At the same time was buried tha daughter of the Rev. ..N„ B. Hyde, a bright girl of twenty-one, betrothed to Lewis. She sickened upon hearing of his death, and soon after died. • Senator Hunter, of Virginia, made quite a blunder, and electrified the rebel Senate, some time ago, by inad vertently swearing one of the clerks, to the Constitution of , the United States. gar A shoemaker, .named Davidson, w ail shot by his faithless wife at the Frement. hotel, in Lafayette, Indiana, on Friday Toot. She was arrested and lodged in jsil. He will recover, Sr ',rho diffinvoce between war and peace has been well defined by one of the ancients. - "In time el peace the eons bury Jathers ; in the time of war the, fathers bury their sons'," eir John G. Whittier, "the Quaker Poet," hfut been nominated by the. Re _publicans of the 4th Senatorial Dis trict in Massachusetts for State Sena tor. • . Ur Gen . . Mitchell has died. of yellow fern, 'Pctrtitiiyal,'s-oilthlina,s w 3ALTIMORE, Nov. 3.—The American '-ns a letter from Dutton, Caroline coun ty, Maryland, giving an account of the lynching of a negro who was under ar rest for having outraged and murdered a little girl, the -daughter of Edgar Plummer. On Saturday night, a large number of excited people came into town, surround ed tho jail, forced open the doors, and took the prisoner out and hung him.— While he was suspended fifteen bullets perforated his body. He was then taken down, when his throat was cut by the infuriated mob, and his body dragged through the streets. It was finally ta ked to the front of the negro church, where it was cut to pieces and burnt. Sourn..un Busicu.tr.—"My dearly be loved hearera," said a very popular preacher down South, haranguing his hearers on tire importance of persever ance and fortitude during the present war, "you must do what General Wash ingtokdone nt tiro battle of Waterloo. In the head of the skirmish his horse was gilled by n British cannon ball. Did Warhicgton gi:e up his horse to the enemy ? Not he. He sung out at the top of his voice, "A horse, a horse ! my kingdom for a horse l" A horse was insta_Aly bro-,ht him by Prank Marion and he drove the British from the field, and secured the liberty of South Caro lina." AN EIGHTY DOLLAR BREAKFAST: At Tiffin, Ohio, on the 15th ultimo, the Elephant Hannibal, belonging to Van Amburg's Menagerie, treated himself to a repast which cost him over eighty dol lars. A candy pedlar had stocked hie wagon with a supply of delicacies, and had gone to the hotel stable for his horse, when Hannibal broke loose from his fastenings, smashed the wagon to finders, and "gobbled" down, in a few .:.cments, six thousand gingerbread cakes, seventy pounds of assorted can• dy, and forty pounds of "French kisses." MONEY FOE THE YrooPs.--Nine hun dred thousand dollars were, a few days since, sent West—s3oo=4J it to Cin cinnati, and $600,000 to Louisville— for toe payment of troops. The Secre tary of.the Treasury has directed that $200,000 $300,000 shall go forward dai ly, until all back accounts of this de scription have been settled. • COVEN NMENT COTTON. - The entire cotton crop from _ the Carolina Sea Islands this season, raised by the con trabands, is estimated at not less than 35,000 bales. This has been grown and will be gathered under the direction of the Government. 4 ' small portion will only be ginned on the spot. Last season tho amount of Government cot ton was 2,000 bales, which sold for $600,000. What it cost the Govern ment to produce this amount is not stated. SINGULAR LucK.—Mr. Samuel C. Har ris, of Butler township, Schuylkill coun ty, was enrolled twice in that township aad once in Columbia county. It seems that his residence as well-as office are on the boundary line of the two' counties, and the marshals of both claimed him. He was not only enrolled three times, but his name was down three times on the day ofdraft—once in Columbiaand twice in Schuylkill. A wonderful freak of the blia•goddess I PLIIC.K.-S. H. Hill, a young man who had just returned from New Orleans, where he was a .waiter .for for an officer in a Vermont regiment, enlisted in North ampton, Mass., .a few days ago, but was rejected by the surgeon in consequence of having a stiff finger. He was told if he would have the finger taken off he would pass. The-finger was accordingly removed, and the plucky young man has re-enlisted. RECEIPTS PROM CIISTO3IB.-If the re mainder of the year 1862 be as proEi porous as the part which has gone by, the sum total of the receipts from cus toms for the year will be over $65,- 000,000, a greater amount than has - ever been collected in any previous year. O' Huntingdon and , Center counties having fctrnished their,. quota's n, teers, escaped tin drafted Altogether. C ON SC lENTIOUS SCRUFLES. — The follow ing is the form of the oath administered and the questions propounded, when ex emption from military duty is claimed on the plea of conscientious scruplea.— We have nothin; to say on the hard ness of the oath thus Made necessary, or the humiliation of the questions that must be answered. It is a bitter dose to swallow, and the man who could rest easy over such swearing, would be able to sleep on a bed of sabre bayeigta, It qftid that the WI has been , o— mo bee. dified, but iach ~,,t the fact- "he , following is the oath pit , required.: STATE OF PENNEELVAICM -County, S. Before me, Commissioner to Superin tend Drafting for said county,— per sonally appeared --- who being duly did depose and say, that he had conscientious scruples to bear arms, be lieves it unlawful to do NO, whether in self-defence or in defence of his country, or otherwise howsoever ; that the sam ples and belief above stated, have not been formed lightly but -carefully, du liberately and conecientionsly, and ase declared and_professed not for -the pur pose of evading the military service of his country in the present exigency, but because he solemnly and religiously holds and maintains them, and in his conscience believes that it is his boun den duty to act in accordance with them on all occasions, and under all cir cumstances. 'Would you take up arms in defence of your own life or the lives of your wife and children ? Answer, 'No,' 'Would you stand by and see your wife and children murdered without ta king up arms to defend them P Answer, 'Yes.' 'Would you stand, by and see yovr father and mother murdered withoutlit king up arms to defend them, if in so doing you could prevent it? Answer, 'Yes.' 'Would you allow your property to be taken from you if you could pre vent it, and if in sp doing yon could prevent it without imperilling - 31)dr life and limb ? Answer 'Yes.' Sr Charles James Faulkner, sent Minister to France by Mr. Buchanan, used this language en the Emancipation Debates in the Virginia Legislature in 1832 while then advocating the complete manumission of every slave in "'Virgin ia : "But, sir, it is said that society having cotrfirmed this tight of property on the elaveholder, it cannot now take it away from him without an adequate compensation, by which is mina full value. I may be singular, in the opin ion, but I defy the legal research of the House to point me, a principle re cognised by the law, -even in the or dinary course of adjudications, where the community pays for the property, which is removed or destroyed, because itis a nuisance and injurious to society." This is going farther than the President, who offers compensation to the loyal slaveholding B s iates, and only enfran chises unqualifiedly the slaves of the traitor States, and then because of a military necessity, r foar million slaves, men and women, working in the fields, that being equal to eight millions men and women North, the delicite habits and labors of men and women consid ered, being the salvation of the traitors in arms. far The scoundrel who has been furn ishing the rebels witk information of army movements in advance, haa been detected. Re was the confidential clerk of Adjutant General Thomas, whose loyalty has been called into question more than once. Re will probably be promoted to a more responsible position somewhere, and to a place where he not only can serve his Southern brethern better than heretofore, but steal some thing handsome for himself. He was detected in the business last fall, but Thomas said he coold not spare him from the department, and he was re-: tained. Instead of that, if the charges are trae, both Thomas nod his clerk ought to have been shot long ago, gir Seven thousand men are now busy in completing the iron-clads in and, around New York city. In addition to. these, ten first class foundries have alt their men engaged upon the machinery and turrets, while the ordnance shops in the country are preparing the arm*. ments. iiEr A steel suspension bridge of one hundred yards' span is now undergoing the scientific test at Birkenhead, Eng land. The steel used in its construction stood the handsome test of seventy tuns, per square inch of tensile strain. A Mrs. Rosenfield was burned to death in Baltimore on - last Friday, by her clothes taking fire from a lighted, match which she had carelessly thrown on the floor and then walked over. air The Louisville -Journal says that lotteries are now licensed in - Kentucky. A per tentage of the profits is to ba used to buy a State Library. tar Aiways bequeath to your wife as much money as , you can. You know , that her second husband, poor fellow, may not have a cent in his pocket. Gir Why in a lover like a dog ? Ba, cause he bows no be WOW.