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:jz: JNb 17111" a'. - Tenns of : Advcriiiiiy: Mtl Vernoh' ; Republican: Od s,r 10 Huts, us iBBi rUiia,. II Mj A FAUILT MEVSFAFO, B1DI0ATBD riBflCUUJILT 0 TD nrrUBBTS 01 KNOX COUNTY. Wintry ' On.luar l raoutiis,. 1 - '. 1 1 . . Wi m i I Onaanuar. lyear Two squares 1 mouths,... ...... Twosquarasl jaar,. ...... ..'.i X Oolum I raootlis, ........... H Columo 1 yaar, , s 00 4 ii i i f i i r i , i t : - o 111 eo ..... ..i., 12 00 ae o (2 50 PER TEAK I!f ADVANCE. fy VM. T, DAS COM, , raoraiaroa, huIimk'iii nim, id j -; K Column I mooth ,, X Columataav.............. .. T... M 00 1 Column moQtli., '., 0 C 1 Cotonm lvaar,...;...-.:......;...".A.. 0 BuainaaaCarda, notaoe.ain& liaaa imrrtar,-. a 0 Notlca In local col uib, Uims and 1cm &0 cests, or ; flra lines, t.n oauta per Una. J 1 rf Aduilollratu; Mad, altackmf nt, .divorce, and trno r ' l.nt advertisamanta mast be paid for Ixfore iDBrrt.li DEVpTKU TO POLITICS,' 'LrtEllATUHE, tHE MA,ItiCKX AND GKNEltAL INTELLIGENCE. OrriCI IN KREHLDF BLOCK, Ju STOKt, AH klnda doni prompt-v, fa auperio- jtyle, to bo paid TO xi. ; MOUNT VERNON, OHIO. TUESDAY,' JUNE 27, 1805. , . NO 'Si 7 j 1 1 V.' 1 m r. . M. &J N. It. B.-CHANOH OF, XI M K. Th. WLnUr irraoireineQ jon the , V.kN. R B. liu fteenlxed, and theUaus tV lenvlni lit, Vernon ere u follows: 1 , riiim ono booth, Mill leaves. i.v...k...l .:.'.-....:l2 r. AeeommodatloD,leftTee.'....l.... .....4:Mj p. b. Bipress laraii......i i....l0:lt r. a. ITE4UTI 009 BOBTS, I I j Kail leaves....J. I ;....,...1:40 . . Aooommodntloa leave-... J.......... ...... V:4x i b. 6ipnmei....-..j , ,..7:uS A B, tTTCtn onthe Oantri Ohio Boad Intra Newark ma follows: I . Ail.. 1 . 1........M0 a.'m. -.it. voing watt,.., sine; west,......, i...... .4 12:00 m. .-..1.... ..1. .. ...j. . i..2'12A'.B On tha p. 0. k 6. mad (oTng KaaL the can leave aark,.......J 1 4. 8-40 k. . " J I , J2:00 ' a. 30 r. B, Newai Oolnr Waat. keu thai Central Road. ther leave , pa on a Willi, I . -.r k MEECTDRY. J DISCIPLES CfiOBOH.' VI: Street, let ween flay Hod McKensIe, V rRESBTTEREAM jpljRda, corner Oeyv and Chest- aa( etreete " 1 A- B T I a . METHODIST fenSCOPAIl CHURCH, carper flw and Chestnut striata. Rev. E. JU.. BUtill. PROTEST Kim EPISCOPAL CHOnntI, eoreor Oajr and High etrieta, Rer GEO. B. REE8E. CATHOLIC CHCRCH, cadnar High and MrK,.nr.lr, - 7 .'' f Bev. JCLIU8 BKENr. KETnoniST i prfoTRST(NT CIIDRCft, Mechanic! . atwatbatii'ajndtt(tln BAPTIST OBfRCtW WaSrtet' Vtw.en MnltorrT and Meehanlc. R. J. W. iENBARUER. COVOREOATItlNAL CHCRCnTfulhrnry ri.. htwan Sugar and Ha.rttrmmlc. -TJt. MONROE. UNITED PRESBTTERIANN6rny' Main and 8nar atraatai Rar. 8. M. UUTCHISON. METHODIST WESLEY AN' CHURCH, aimr Hut. barrj and Wooiter. Rar. MR. TRAVIS. KREMLIN - BUSINESS CARD. IVHOLESALE AN 0 RETAIL; GROCER, Jfays Cawli for , BUTTER, EGGS, RAGS, OATS, ETC. -r-Wholtwla and Ratail Dcalaraln - - ' . BOOTS' & SHOES, , ... . ; LiTuan, Kit ako FIxdixos, ' DH.H.SRS l.t - ' Dry Goods , and Notions, 1 " "-' "PAT CASH TOR" , 1 BUTTER, EGGS, RAGS, StC. -i I. I.- ... , TOt. M'CLELLAND, ATTORNEY - " , COUJYSELLOU AT LAW. BUNN & SNOW, i J ' PLAIN" AND ORNAMENTAL ,;, PAINTING, GRAINING ' " AND PAPER nANCINQ.; ' , Miss IHY A. DONNELLY, ' ' MILLINER ANTS. MANTAUMAKBE, MU Vamon, March 21, 18-ljr. CEO. W. MORGAN, Attontoy at LnWi OFFICE Orer tha SUoa Store of Millet 4 White, i , MOUNT VERNON, OHIO : Mareh Slat, 1886-ljr : ': .. MARCH 9th, 1864. . s , WARMER MILLER, ' r' " 13 RECEIVING FRESH ' ! - i NEW GOODS PaVchaead alnea tha Great Decline In Tilcea. All that araot OVap Good, call at March H, mi. WARNER MILLER'S. MILLINERY. Mr.' IIrx-is Jic J olinsoii, On Wat Gambicr St. tar id Ward School Building. ARK prepared to do W ork In tha tnnKt approved ety!?. aitharln Straw, Silk, or Crape. They keep a good aaortmetat fff Ritibona and other 'riming..- Mar, 1M. : . . ' ' t. JR, BROWN, Ilomasoputliio Pliyaalolau, amCSWoodtard Bnlldlng, Main Btreot, ' V 'jjy 10, 1804- , - '...MT. VERNON, 0. AMERICAN HOUSE, J-ROSS HANLIN 4 CO. Propwtor& , JiE ABIC, OHIO. '" ) Jane 20, 186J-j j J . '' A. iM.OAanaiaa x, a. pni, CERTIFICATB JflJTilbWTY THE Knox , Cod nty ."National Bank of Mount Vernon, Tft4URT DttPARTMIurr. 40rrtol of hi CoupmoLiaaiK or thi Cprrmcy, . . - WAsmiruToif. Anril 2Ath. Vhhui Bit Mttfoctor videoc prseatd to th JO(lWri(foe4. H bu been mtvle to Appear that "The JCnox Ctmntj KaUantU Unk of Mount Vacuo n," in tha CU of Moant Veroon. Id th County of Knox aad $t4 of OhiohM been duly ornnised uudr nd m ufOibk to tha req aire menu of the Act of CoogreM. t titled "An Act to froTida Kttian! Currency,-ared by ft pledge of United SUtta Bonds and to provide for tha circulation and redemption t be roof," approved June 8, 1H4A, ud baa com plied with all the pro. iioB4 of tuld Aot required to be complied with before afiotnmeaoi'iff the buflioete of Bankioft under eaid Act: . , Nov thereforo, I, Fmemftn Clarke, Comptroller of tha Currency-, do bereSy wrtlfr, that The Knttx Conntf Ational Bank of Moont Vmi.n," In the City of Mount Vernon, in tha County of knot od Htnte of Ohio, U iutbortied to commence the bunineu of Banking under tha Aclnoreaaid- w .. (3AV) U leatiraaoTwhartof. witneM 'mf hand and .it -ii r offlca iwenty-flftb daj of April, ' .1 '.''C'Cv FRfiEMArfi'ci4Ki?. May 15, 'OA-flwIlfi! ; - - Cowplrollei Vf i1 Currency. Administrator's Sale. J'H purtuanee of u order f tha frobafa 0hrt In and for Knox Connty. Ohio, grnnte-i on th 24 tb day of ay A. 0. l60SI will olTor nt ?abp Auction oa Th Mtk day of JurutL D. 16G5. At 1 o'clock P.'M",, npon the prtmUflt, the following denribl real entitte, ttUuate m Knot County.. Ohio, to-wit: BiiittiiJiiied ourflTBolh parte nf a purt of the North wedt quartet of 8tctioa Lia Btti Tuwuihlp and 12tb Henire, coinmeaclng At ihu Nurth-eaM coiner of Mi CiMtnll tlte .KKtailfty in tlte town of Amitv; ihwneiienningHnth Wt tIt ilirer.ttcn alone; the fteee alley ! aald town (Vi tW-Hio pU to a atone) theaea ta aAolb-taaterly direett'in. Y.' ft-l(Hi pnlee to a ptea; theaee North to the alace of hgiabiagf eoa iiia let; 7 atratid 190 potea moi or let. ,s JAlraitd at 'JT .' : m A, eineeentbt ttf Ihla aqnitwred 2flaqd3J In the towa-of m(t In waid eouuty.- :' ' i i-.AnpralMdafc f IW ' . r '1 v V TKKWH OK tMLK One third In hand, ape third Ifl pMt awr kHldcn n two yearn from Jit tlnf of anle mth Ihterett,' I'aferred pnyroen'n Ui l- .-r-irHd by anottgate. . . . - i . .UHh H. BUM W ti, -4??.W; " Adiu'jrpfM. aiai U.S. LOAN! $230,000,000. -i , By authority of the Secretary of tha Treinary, tha undtrretgned, the General Subvcrljitiun Agent Lr the ale of United Stated Socurlllert, offors to the public the thjrij auries of Trooeury N"o,tct, bearing thloix and throe tentha per cent Interest per annnm, known aa tie , o 7.30XOA.DST. Theie notca are iaaued; unjet date of July Ifi, 1805, and are payable three yean troia that date In currency, or are eonrertfble rt the option of -the holder into ; i 5-20 Six per Ccnt. .: GOLD-BE a.RINO! BONDS. , Theaa Bonda ar nov worth a handanmo premium, and are exempt,' aa are all the Government Jlonda, fro iaot,. County, and Municipal taxation, which adds from one to ttrw fwr cent.' per annual to their taliu, ac cording. to (he rata levied npon ,othTi proper!. ,.Tha intercat la payaUe imi anuuaH hy coiipoia attached to each note, which mav bacut oT and autd tonj hank orhankr.w.. , ? The lutercat at 7.30 pt cent, amoaiits to due cent per day on n $S0 11910. Two ceiita m ii()o so VVy iooo ; t)l u u a ) 5000 Notes of all the dcnomlnotTinra named will be promptly furnished upon receipt of rubdcrlptlona. . Theffotca'of this Third rjerlea are precisely similar inform and privileges .-to the SeVen-Thlrti.is already Bold, except that the Government rcaervea'to itnelf the optlen of paying Interest in gold coin at 0 per cent., in-atead of 7 8-lOtbi in currency. Subscribers will de-duot tbt interest In currency -up t July 15th,'ttha time when they subscribe, ' . The delivery of the notes of this third eerlcs of the Seven-thirties will commenco on the lt of Juno, and will bo made promptly and continuously after that date. . Tho slight change made In the couititlou of this THIRD SERIES ailccttonly tho matter of interest. The payment In gold, If made, will ho equivalent to the currency IntoreHt of the hiirher rate. ' .1 The return to specie payments, In the event of which only will the option to pay inti r'st in Oold bo availed of, would so reduce and equalise prices that purchases made with sli per cent. In gold would be fully equal to thoso made with seven and three-tenths per cont. lu currency. This la j " Tho Only Loan .in Market Now offered by the (lovernnient, aud it superior attain tagen muke It tlte , . Great Popular loan or the People. Leoa than $230,0O0-OO of the Loan authorised by Con grew re now'on the market. This amount, at the rate at which it h being absorbed, will be tubacribed for within sixty days, when the notes will undoubtedly command a premium, as has uniformly been the case on closing the subscriptions to other loans. lu order that citizens of erory town and section oftht country may be afforded facilitiea for inking the Loan, the National Banks Stale BaLka, and Private Baukers throughout tlte country have generally agreed to receive subscriptions at par. Subscrilera will aolect theirownagents, In whom they have confidence, and who only are to be renponnible for the delivery of the notes fi r which the receive orders. JAY COOKE, SuitsORirTiox Aormt, rMlade'iihia BtinscKirTtoKS will 11a RKrmvrDby the : First National Bank, Mount Vernon, Ohio, The Knox County National Dank, lit. Vernon, 0. . . First National Bank of Mansfield, Ohio, i May 10, 18tt4-2mia. - THE NINTH NATIONAL BANK j OF THE CITY OF NEff YORK. . CAPITAL, 91,000.0004 PAIO INr Fiscal Agents of the United States, And Sieciul Atut for Jay Cooke, Subtsri)tlon Agent, Will deliver 7-30 Note, Free of Charge, by exprese, in all parte cf the country, and receive in paymtmt C)ecka on New fork, Philadelphia, and Boa-ton, current bills, and all fivo per cent interest botes, with iotereet to date of subscription. Order sent by mail will be promptly filled. . This Bank receives the accounts of Banks and Bank era en favorable terms; also of Individuals keeping New York account ; J. U. OR VIS, ' fruidmU J. T. Hill, Cathitr March 7, 18do-oiuo. . .1 A pamphlet directing how to speedily aaaTORi sionr and give up spectaclee without aid ol Doctor oriuedlclue, sent by mail free on receipt of It) cenU. AMrei . E, U. KoT, . T.. :" Dec, ao, lSe-Iy nao Broadway, N. Y. : MOUNT VERNON ' ' " .UNION BRASS BAND. THIS BAND la now completely organised, and in good healthy condition, It has a choice selection of Munio aad-nniler competent instruction haa arrived at proffloWnry in ita musical execution. It Is rady to flll all calls for musical services at some or abroad, on reanonable term', oither for Cotillion Parties or for Braes Music. ' ' J, W. F. S1N0ER. Pres't. C. P. OrkiioUt, 8ecy W. M. Tuoxrsos. Leader. (Deo. 13, lS641f. CANCER DOCTOR. Junton I. ao1tii6ii9 TtT0ULi) to farm all who may he af)iicfrf with CanaVf Tf mat nets preparea in cure inai lorminnDie nis eaao by anroresa differing from all other, known only to himself. His treatment eonsinta In "the application of a single plaster, composed of European herhe, e lining little or no .pain. On examination he will ha able to say to the patient whether their case Is curable or not and will guaranty a permaaeut Curej of art he an-dor take. Also, will gnarrantco a permanent care in the worst ease ot Hhumatlsm. 1 Bafiaanrita Mm. Samuel Ney, Qeo Man teller, E ft Gantt, ami Oavid Morey, Mt Vernon, 0 ; John Xall, Centerboiy, Knox Co Ohio, . , Ornca At his reniiience. Bedford. Cnvshopa Co.. 0. 13 miluBoulh of Cleveland. July 20, lfi04-ly' Howard ' Associatione . .".V. PHILADELPHIA. PA.'- ?- ' Disease of the NPrvous, Seminal. tTnnftr and Boxual Byatemn new and relliibie trt-roant lu Brporta f f the HOWARD AS80WAT10N Sent by mail In sealed letter enTelopres free of charge. Address, Dr. J. 8KILLKX HOIf(ffITON, Howard Assc-eition. No. X Houth hlnth 8trt-et, Philadelphia, Pa. , Doe. fltb,ll64-lr. , KEN YON HOUSE, ' Corner of Mala St. and the Tublle Square, " ,; V '.' ' MOUNT VKUNOX, 0. ..' nAVINfl I-i-a-ed Ihli well known and popular Hold, and Alteiltt up la eii)erii iilvle, I aia prepared to evcotnmmliile travel..,-, aud ail oil,r-4 K, may ((iT.nie a rail. Th. patronage or the Tnhiie (. rtanrtinlly no-lield, , J03ECU SCAIIUKOLUH, CAVE CITY HOTEL. rpnE suhecriher has leased Hi's fl kn.mn HooBe at JL '-TllS CAVKS,1' fnurU-i'O milrs i t of Mt. Vnrui.u. aud' three-foiirtti. of a mile fr'im Millrmnl. llr i, & arranrcil fur the entrtAiiHiipol nf I'll'-Ml' su I II t' i'. iV,'J I'ARrlKS. ''Th. Cnv.ii''ar the nm't rnrmnMr Brt'f ii-B;iifiil proiiodB in thi. sprliin of nhin. Prompt .tuiitii1!!, ari'f rf'jd fire giurunti'il to all pi,rti aud traveller.. ' , . I. 8. JIcCA -I. A M, June Ji), I1 - '. , l-tojinrlor. ' t'oo ru'ru-va of annuls. , llT b. w. LOKUKLLOW. , When the hora of Dity are numbered, And the voices of Ilia Nibt Wake the bntler soul, thnt aluuibered, To a holy, calm delight f Ere the uvetilng lamps are lilited, -, , ' And like iihiuitomB prim and tall, "' " 1 ,. Shadows from (he fl.ful 0 re-light , - Uuuce upon the parlor wall ; ( Tliet) the forms of the departed f- .... ; j Eiitttr at the opn door ; Tl'1 'beloved, the truo-beitrteil,,., !;j " v . Coum to Virtit mo ouuu moru : , , . i ii '.'' v. lie, the young and strong, who cherished - , p Noble lo(Tn!f" for the ulrit'p, By tlie roadside fell and perished, ! I ',i , . "tVcary with the march of life! . . . It i:- z: :. f hey,' tha holy ones and weakly; - ; . t i r Who the crotta of sutlerlng btrft . ' Folded thetr oale hands so aieekly, 1 Spke with us on earth aoiuore I, , - ( r , . i . 1 '.',... 1 And with them the Being Beauteous, " i ' Who unto wy youth was given, ,i , r ... More than all thjiKr f1ie to love ine( : ; Aiidia now a auipt la heaven. o'J t j j ; ' " With a slow anil nUtej"it hiutstcp " r' 'Ctmvea tUatuietiiiBUrierdiviiiu, ,. - t s j !..! Xnkes Oie vnruut chtitr heittije nie.. t . Lajltrjentle haud ioiaiue, J ":- ' r" ' , . .H J T' And Mw sits and ga ,ca at me, , , With thhse deep and tenrtcreypfi, ' ' ' Like the star i ho still and nuiit-liko, )''',; ( ; J.uokihg dowuward from the skies. -v.: ;-i i , -. ?pp".'.i j.j ,:A . .:;,.'fV Uttered not, -ret omnrohendod, , t """' In the spfrivs voiceleHs prayer, ! ' Bolt reukM(, in bleaHinga en'ded,-, - ft it Breathing from her lips of air. ."u . J:.-; , 't t r 0 0, though oft depresedatd lonely, All my fear a. laid aside, j HI hot remember only " Hu(l aa thru have Uved-and dlod I T1IE LEFT HAND CLOVE. .. . ; . i ; .i . i ; . il . i i ii ii.'-.ii'.i CBAFTgll I.- ' "' ' :' On one Bunny October mrninpr, iu the year 1850, Ibebollatif rvoiisington Old Church were ringing a merry peal iu houor of a wodiliupf, which had bvva cvlebrutcd withia thoso lirno-houorcd walls about ton miLUtes butore. The churchyard was crowded with Epectatoes, chii'lly of the humble class ; the awning was up from tho chinch door to the frato ; a cluster of handsome cnrriuirea drawn by high stepping horsea, waited outside, and the path down which tho happy oouplo were to pass was liued with spectators aa full of napor interest, us If tlie greut event of events had happened to them instead of to totul strangers. Servant girls loitered there, ivpirdles of the injunctions ua to speed and cure with which they had been churned ere they left their boins j nursemaids wheeled their charges', nud butcher boys leaned their trays apuinst the rtilings ; policemen lingered on their heat ; a cab or two drew up beside the cujb stoue ; and a brass baud iu the distance, which Jiiid, beea playing ''-AUuia Laurie?' with tbo (jrentest dil-ij,'euce, suddenly changed their tnuo to "Come, huste to the Wedding," us the beadle rushed from the porch in astute of intense excitement, and the whits veil nud orange flowers appeared upon the threshold. , . . I wonder why wo all take such aa absorbing interest in a wedding ; if wo see a funerul procession going slowly uloug the street, we gaze after it a moment with a shivering sense of what is some day to come to us, und theu go on our way. But if a carriage full of white "bonnet?, veils uudjies passes as a mo-meut after, and we have the time to spare, we generally set off at a round trot after it, to get to tbo church in lima to see. tho bride go in or coma out, as the case may be. The bride alone for it is an understood thing that all the interest of tbo occasion centers oa her. Tho bridegroom tnny be a wonder in her eyes, but iu ours he is simply a lay figure, ovor whom the mautle of her glory fulls iu graceful folds. She may be youug und pretty ; she. may bo old und plain ; but still she is tbo "bride," and it is ut hsr we crowd to look, at her we smile, for her wo smile, fur her we sigh, after her we send our good wishes, and throw our old shoes. Why is it thnt we feel such nu absorbing interest iu her? We cannot tell. Some of us who have never been brides, Diay be admiring and envying; some of us who hnvo been brides, to our sorrow may bo pitying aud fearing for ber ; yet the atti action iu either casA is nearly the sumo. .Ia the present case the brido was neither very toung nor very . beautiful. She was a tall, dark ludy, apparently about thirty joars of age, w ith good teeth, hair aud eyes, aud a very plensuut smile, The bridegroom was apparently about live years her senior, bronzed uud bearded like a soldier, and wearing his left arm iu a eiing. .A murmur ran through the crowd. . Madam Humor was whisperiug that the pair bad been lovers iu their earliest youth ; tlmt circauistunces had separated them : that the lady had bceu forced into a distasteful marriage, aud the gentleman gout to India ; aud that now, attcrubstnice of many veurs. be bad returned with a title, with wealth, aud honors, by the score, aud laid them all nt the feet of his brat love, whom ha found a widow,- toiling as a eovemena for : her daily bread. ' We ail love u bit o romance in our bearts ; and this l.ttlfl falo wus received fco kindly by the crowd, that as the bells pealed oat nguin, and the carriages drove away, they wbid followed-by a ringing; cheer, with tho heartiest erles of "Uod bless you !" a shower of old shoes and slippers, procured, Hymed only knows where, but which, we verily be- lieve, Were taken by enthusiastic servant girls off their own feet, iu the sudden excitement of the moment , . , AH was over The bells rang out their last exultant peal, the bride and 'tho bridegroom had driven away juto their "Fool's Paradise," accompanied by their rejoicing friends, and the eager crowd went tq their several tusks once more, in the work-a-duy world. "'" But one of their number mummed, eveu after the Itttt notes of the Wis hnd died away, and the ret) waistcouled beadle had guuo home to his twoive o'clock, dinner. ( IJe was a piau apparently about twenty six years of age, who hud beeu watcbiug the. progress of events, at first somewhat contemptuously.,, lie was a bachelor, and was wout, to pride himself upon his state of siugle-blessediiexs t to Wa must owu that he watch.d the bride's coming with a very suspicious smile ; but a that little tale to which we liavo already alluded ran through the sympathizing crowd, it cnughf bisoar. aud the exi)it.'iou of hts fuce changed. ,Ue. too: haiHnd, an early love, whu nt the entreaty of nor witluweil mollier, bail given lum up, and married a man far better fitted to be tier father than herhnsband. 1 " ' 7 Iiut hew Id! ilia rvs-smliTiuica between tl, two stories fame to nn md ; for the lady wns atill'a' wiri'. tlio rmithor of fiv -treBiiliful children, tbo miMresa ot a Inxnridns homo j Hud if V evpi gave a Ihimght td the past; probably framed it in a thanksgiving thai Sue bad married for money anrl-kindura., rather than for !nve and poverty.- ' lie did ntif blame her fur (his worldly prndence, which hd fult: firy sure bli hid learned ii th lupso of vears, but he conlrutcrj jtj future with that of" the, man who had just driven away, and sighed doeply as he did so. We cannot say that he, tod, witilied. to tako back his lost love once more, but the void thut she bad left iu his heart suddeply became ou acliing one, and through the happiness of the newly wedded pair, he seemed to see bis own loneliiwss in a stronger light thau usuul. iJ'hu yeurs wtire getting on, aud he was older than, he bad been, Tho boys who bud been his schoolmutes wero now tho Leads of happy homes j ha oiily was left without one to lovo him bostof all.' It was a miserable fwling, but he could not shake it off. , . ,, ,., ..'.t.t. . - ': lie turned to leave the churchyard, and as ho did so a sudden puff of wind blew aside the dead loaves at his feet, and nestling among them he saw a small white glove a lady's glove. ', lie took it up ; tha size, six aud throe-qnariers, was marked inside j and just beumtth It, iu dainty letters, was wrlttfn ''Angela," lit was a left hand glove, of the whitost aud rnost.elastio kid, aud had ovidontly been worn but onco. The young man, turr.ed.it over iu his palin,' with a curious feeling of warmth' and satisfaction, about the region of his heart It was a ridiculous, little thing, lint somehow be could not leave it there among tho dump mould, and the withered leaves, and the lonely graves. ,lt sppko of youth, heaaty, iiud, happiness, and lovo too 'plainly to bo thrown asde. ! And so ho 'gazed1 and mnsed, till tho church clock ovor bis head struck the. hour of one. ,. Then, he started, and, looked oronnd him with on amused smile. '. . , , ; "Am' I sixteen or tweutyix ?" he thought to himself, "to staud dreaming here in the-broad lijjbt of noon over ajbit of white kid, hd iny patients and the doctor waiting fot nie all the while t What a-'donkey I must be 1, A clear case of temporury insanity I Hut for all that, if ever I marry, my Wife shall be the woman who dropped this glove,1 Heaven bless her for a careless thino; f. 1 : Ho folded i carpfully, put it away in the breast pocket of his coat, and Walked off with long Btiidos toward tho Burgery in 'Brampton, where he speut the greater part of each: day iu each week. . : . ., .a - ; ' , .',..- , t CHAPTEll.II. t , 't.', . 1 ' ' Generally speaking, we (hiuk nothing is much mora foolish thau to make certain resolves iu this uncertain world of ours. We talk very largely, when wo first set out on the beaten track, about tho wonderful thiugs we are goiug to do about the way wo are going to "hew out"' our own destiny; aud find our way to onr owu darlmgcndst but, by the time we are forty, we. confess with' sorrow, that all the ''hewing" has beeu.iu vain that neither vinegar nor the pickaxe cuu make the slightest Impression upon the Alpine rocks of lifo ; aud that iu the place of beuding and shaping circumstances to our own lordly wills, it has been circumstunccs thut have shapeti and moulded them. Of course we would all gladiy be a( tho top of tho tree if we could it is the highest ;iougn we aim ut wnen we beeiu to climb. ''Hut if it is our "kismot" to oouteut ourselves with a lower brunch, do we not inevitably fiud ourselves securely perched thoro t ,..We might as well spare oursulvee,all trouble uud pain at the beginning as at the end, aud, simply doing our best at whatever calling haa been given to us, rest happy with what that dnty performed can bring aud givo ui. Is not all the labor, all the outcry, all the weary longing with which we strive after a golden apple high in air, utterly wasted, uay, ivni-vin limn wasted, if that apple bo for anoth er f . One man wilt fold his hands beneath the tree aud see the apples, largo and fuir, coming tumbling into them of their own accord j another may work heart aud life out together, and be rewarded with a windfall at the best Now, since the wind full is the utmost he can hone for, why should ho not earn it as easy as possible! : "' It takes some years, howovor, and a great deul of experience to enable one to digest this doctrhur thoroughly. For our part, we be- liove it is only the heir to the winutull. who can fully understand it, for the proprietor of tho choicest iruna generally inclines to tue opinion that it is his owu superior merit, not bis lucky star, that has endowed him so bountifully. For tDe life of him ho cannot under stand why every one should not meet his success ; he ascribes their failure ouly to ignorance, evtravagauce or laziness, though ho himself may be the most ignorant, extravagant, aud the laziest of human beings.' Now Qrautlcy Mills was one of these for- -iunnte beings who sit at the bottom of the tree, in the soft grass, ana are tluly ami generously rewurded for thoir pains. He had been left an orphan at an early age, and afterwards adopted by a bachelor uncle, who died when he was tweuty-ond, aud left him a partnership in a good medical practice, and an annuity of two hundred pounds. It was not a .fortune, it is true ; out mere are worse things in tho world than two hundred golden sovereigns couiiug into your purse of their own accord, and without any exertion on your Own part, every 30th of December.- The young man was careful over his- money, and instead of spending it he put it. away ft the. bank, and and contented himself with such emoluments as bo could manage to pick up from bis part' ucrship with his medical friend. They sufficed for all his expenses 5 meanwbihvtlie nest-egg in the bank, with iutorest added to principal every quarter day, was-trteadily increasing. I Grautley Mills did not algayg intend to remain an humble: partner in a business. A' handsome broughaiuud a pair of bay horses, a stately bouse, surrounded by lawn, lake, and gardeih-a retinue pf liveried sorvants, and lux-urics innumerable, gilded his vision of the fu-tnro whenever he indulged himself with a quiet glance1 thut way r and by his side iu tbo brougham sat a fair . lady, who was also tbo mistress of those servants, the sharer in those luxuries, aud the light of that maguificent home a stately, dark-haired, dark-eyed creature, little like his false first love ; and oii ber lips Was ever a smile for him, and on hr hand a small white glove, the fellow. to that which he still kept, like a miser's dearest trcmur, io the secret drawer DLhkwritiiig desk. Well might he dream, since be was one of Fortune's favorites, to whom tho brightest, dreams comes truo. ." ' , , ' . -j ., -,r ' As ue suuntored leisurely one murnihg from bis bachelor lodging to bis partner's house, with tlie t pleasant y1sT(Jn"8tiil haunting his brain, he noticed that a cab laden with boxes, StooiJ before his' tldor,' and that , an unusual bustle 'eooihed to'potyide: tho .-place. .He (timed into the surgery' and rhng tho bell. 1 It was a longtime before hi boy appeared, and when be dirt it Was with a broad grin upon bis fuce, '"J)r. Overly was too busy to ooma out just then," he said. ."Would Dr. Mills be kind enough ti) attend Jo all bases till hff Was tit leisure I" Pr.' Mills "wus uot ia the best t'f humors at tins intelligence'. It. seamed to h;in for tho first time that he was treated as k partuer, not as a fripd ; as if the good (I. .:lor were ketpin biiu at arm's length, and doing business, but uot exchanging confidence v-fib hirii. He knew no inoro than we do what he wanted or why he felt aggrieved ; boths was out of sorts, and, it was v small relief to gruiplile inwardly at his partuer ho-fure le knew whether b wub to blame or not i Having attended to tlie patients who were In waitingand wriiteu a few letters, the doe-loi sat dowa with, hia cigar, and a new. num ber of the Laicrf to while away his time until his partner should seo fit to muka liii up pourauca. Eleven struck . upon tho church clock near by, and the cab, uow empty, drove away from tho front door. Still the bustle in the house continued ; even iu thut quiet, nook he could hear steps upon the stair:), aud voices in the hall, aud boxes and parcels lumbering about in the room overhead. Once, as a door opened up staira, ho . heard a fresh, youug voice, a girls voice caroling out tbo song ; For, oh. Id my heait I an lova tliat I.lanirnll.n. ' Aod awwt -Ti-iiny Jou, too, Iu trutU do I luva I The doctor pricked up his ears with a sudden look of iutorest' ; be had a little Welsh blood iu bis veins, aud the airs of iht principality were ou that account special favorites with him, But who could the singor be T To his ccrthin kuowledgo thoro had been nothing younger or prettier than tho purblind cook in the house for many a day j und his partuer was a widower, with only one child, a boy at a public school. Clearly it was not he whom the cab had brought. , Gracious, heavens I had tha doctor got married again , without saying a word to him t and was he ashamod in consequence to show his fuce in tho surgery f At that, fearful though most absurd supposition, ho pearly pulled, the surgery bell down in summoning his attendant Mercury. ' 'James.' he said sharply, 'when will tho doctor te at leisure T '., ',' ' , ; ' , 'I cnu't say, sir, exactly,': replied the lad, with the samo 4inintelIIgiblo grin npon his face. 'You tee, sir, Miss Bulla is just come home from school.' - 1 . ' ' , . 'Aud pray who is Miss Bella V . 1 " , 'Master's ward, sir, ' She is just como homo from school.' ' ' ; ' " ' ' ' "". " - 'Oh,' said tho doctor, 'I suppose that was the young lady I heard just uow singing up stairs V . : 'Yes, sir, she sUigs like a lark and flies over' tho house like a bird. We're all out ot breath trying to do what she tells as, and as fust as she tells us ; but it's grent fun all jtho same. I'll tell master you want him, sjr.' ' 'Humph !' ejaculated the young doctor, as tho loquacious page left the room ; 'my worthy friend seems to have a nice inmate. I'm vory glnd I don't live in the house, that's1 all. ' A boarding school girl a broad and butter miss just out of short frocks and fancying eveiy man who looks ut her is ready to shoot himself for her sake ? I'll take very good core not to.go too much ia her way.' Even as' he entertained these uuclmrita- bio thoughts ho started to his feet, aud flung open the door, for it seemed to him that all tbo crockery In the establishment had beon thrown down with a heavy crash in the surgery hull. ' Sure enoagh, there was a tray upon tbo mat, and broken glosses aid plates in all directions, while among tho relics sat a pretty, dark-eyed, mischievous looking girl of eighteen, laughing as if her heart would break at the havoo she had mnde. v !.!;, . : Isn't it a shume T. she began, as tho door opened ; aud then, as she looked up aud saw a strungor, she colored brightly, aud sprung np iu an instant.' 'Is Undo John in theie ?' she asked. , . - :. -..( . ...... Qfo, 'be has not been here this .moruingi' replied ho' young 'doctor, vory" courteously, considering thut ho knew ho must be speaking to the obnoxious boarding school girl 'But you seem to have had an accident' . 'Yes, I was bringing Uncle John his lunch, and cook said I should find him here ; and theu I trod on my dres, or fell over the mat, acd down it all came 1' - 'Well, never mind,' said be ; 'I hope yoa have not hurt y bursal.' ' "' 'Oh dear uo I' Bhe replied carelessly. ' 'If I were to hurt myself every time I fall down, I nil t Ut as well go to the hospital at once, for Ll urn always tumbling ovor something or some body. Uncle John says 1 must belong to the lamily of the Bounding Brothers, to come out so safe after so ninny hard knocks.' It was difficult to meet bur bright smile and feel that the Bounding Brothers could possibly be unpleasant inmates of any house. So Dr. Mills picked up tho broken plates and glasses, aud. carried the tray into tho house for her, feeling as if she had performed rather a meritorious uc'ion than otherwiso ia smashing so much crockery. ' ' ' 1 ' ' " ' An acquaintance begun iu so unceremonious a mauuer could not possibly help becoming rather an intimate one,. As the days went by Mibs Bella hud little eveuiug parties, tq which Doctor Mills was always iuvited, aud to which he regularly came. They danced together, road the same books, sang the same songs and we all know how such thiugs gen-ernllv end. : . ' The doctor wns ouly human ; and flesh and blood is, after all, more tangible than a dream. Withia six months he fouud that tho lady of the glove was but a dim and half forgotten shadow compared with the dark-eyed, laugh ing, good-tempered Delia, who from morning till night was always doing something careless and provoking, getting into scrapes with her ancle, and coining to him to help her out of them. She was the wifd he wanted ; aud yot ho did not speak. " Some absurd feeling of remorse kept him faithful in deed, if.not in thought, to the lady of the churchyard, Ouly she was so far away, aud Bella so near at hand, aud so loveuble I Certainly it was a most perplexing scruple. ' - Id the midst of his' uneasiuess, his partner cam into the surgery pue morning, and found him sitting by the lire, lost iu a brc wu study, which apparently was not of tbo -most pleasant kind. ' The worthy doctor's eyes twinkled, and slapping his junior ou the shoulder, ho exclaimed, Sjotne, my boy, Out with it 1 there's no use sitting here and sighiug. If yoa. like Bella, and Bella likes yoU,.why sbbuldu't yoa trfke her at -ouco,J Her fortune' and yours-wilMmy me eat, for I want to retire ; aod there yoa are, with your wifn, your hoose, aud your profession all ready to your band. v 1 .1 1 For a moment the young man could scarcely believe his ears j but the first glauce at the doctor's face reassured him. Bella was his if he could will her j and would that take very long t Had she not shown in a thousand ju-noceut ways, that, she preferred biiu to. all others f What could separate 'iherh now f Ouly thut noueensicul bit of white kid, and that .foolish vow- h had breathed -over it? Pshaw I -what folly I '., r.dT : .n.'ri.;':i I As bo hositotod for one instant -over .the memory, Bella herself, ready dressed for a Walk,' came funding into the Surgery." ' ' ' ' Oh; udcIb Pshe exclaimed, 'did I leavB'ttiy glove here. yesterday '-:'. '. t ,-: ! . ,N"n -n : 'The sixth pair within two week,i Bella f said he, 'aud yoa promised me' ,, j ,'Yes,'I know,' said Bella, 'and I anl'do tdr-ry ! but reilly they1 hare legs of 'fhtfr own,' I think. I never saw. anything like it-' iif.- '.' i 'Nrl,'said her uucle. 'Which ono is jt now ?' . . . 1 ! .'Ob. the right, uools.i. I can keep: the. left well euough,; I have never; lost a left hand glove siuco Adda Grant was married ut Ken-singto'n ; and theu i ' ' '"v,;" " "Hurrah ! say that again f shouted Doctor Mills, starting suddenly out of his chair. , .'Say whitt V asked Bella, looking at him as il she thought he had gone mad. ' ' '' ' ' 'You lust a glove a left hand glove at Kensington Old Church f r- iiYel.BToplied. , - i -n.: . :;'l -.'!' ' - .'At a wedding !'. said he. ; . . . t , . , i .Yep,' replied Mia. .' V i 'i -lite'fid glove V ho continued! " - R'Yes. of courso,' said Bella. 'People don't wear black ones at a wedding, do they V ' 'Size, six and three-quarters, In tha year 1850, in the month or October, and ttio bride groom had his aria in a sling, he weut oa lu coherently. ' " . ' , ' ''"' ' ' ,' ' 'Good gracious l yes',' replied, Bella. ', ' 'Is Tour Dame. Angella t' he asked, i ' 'My second name is,' she repliod.' ' 'But how did yoa know that f I am so ashomed of the uamo that I never write it now, thongh I thought it was vory fine when I was sixteen r 'Oh. most delightfully careles of' Bellas, J . . :r.. I : ,u..l.l.l I' !, you must,, ue uiy suu 1 iiwuum 1 claimed j and unlocking his desk he displayed to her astonished eyes a small while- kid glove, an old friend of hers I ' ' :; Never mind what they said afterwards. Iu threo mouths more tho bells of Kensington Old Chnrch ranjr for another wedding as hap py as the first. And when the bride came down tho path, ehe wore only one glovo-lAe glove; out oonoaiu 11 suone a rnaiu gum , .. . . . - , . I .j! I .1 rlug, una the heart or urauiioy aims was ready to break with joy. - ' ' ' . I - I iiil ' - California Vegetation and Extrav-. , ; agauce. , , , , 1 All tho veg'dutiou of , California is mon-strons in growtli. Strawberries as big as a hen's egg, home of which sold at a Sanitary Fair for a dollar apiece. Indeed, eggs have Bomstimes sold in market at seven to tea dollars per doien. We havo n conception of the extravagance of the people, ' They never think of the price of any tbiug so long is they have the money. .1 boy live oa their capital instead -of income, and begin anew .every year,. 4- lazy atage 'driver will toss the stable boy who waters his horse a silver nan aouar as if it were but two cents. Judging from their gonorosity, we think this people must be iimueusely rich, but they aro poor keep themselves so by their extri,vaganco ; no population iu tlie world, living at the same rato, has so little Wealth. But tho great crops green vegetables are to be had through the whole year, aud in sizo they beat nature. ' A respec tub) Presbyterian clergyman told me ha planted a . peach pip, . and 'in fourteen mouths it had grown to a tree ted feet bigb, and bo ate peaches grown upon it Now, yoa don't believe this ; but it is true. One man' cut a stick which he carried as a cane for a week or two, aud then sticking it into the crnund as a snnnhrt for a week sanlinir.it sprouted, aud in two years he gathered a peck of penrs from that very cane I We have no conception of the activity of that soil. Prodigious props of wheat and oats ate raised ; and as to poaches, plums and poara, why I should rain my character for veracity should I givo you the facts about them. Poara weigh fivo aud b'ix pounds ; grapes- weigh fqur and a half pounds to. the bunou. 1 It is the greatest grape-growing country in the world j they are produced in the greatest 'uro'uajou grapes for bretfkfust, grapes for dinner and yet they are nottheap, because labor enters into their cultivation, aud labor is high,.' So nothing is cheap, though it is picked up, in .the .streets, because .the man who picks it up, will charge yoa a quarter for stooping dowa and picking it up. All yegetablos, potatoos, turnips, eta, are sold by the pound, and yoa, cau imagine what the billb must bo. Addrtn by Rev.' Dr. Beilowt. Tli or five hooks verv odd names now-a- days. A dry fellow stepped into a bookstore the other day, and asked tho clerk "Have yoa got the 'Woman in Whiter "Yes," replied Iho clerk. "Alt Alono'?" said tho enquirer. "Yes ." responded the clork. "In the Dark'f" still queried the strang er. ..: "Yes sir," acuin promptly replied the at tendant, 'Well, all I have cot to sav ii." retorted the questioner, as he turned to the door "you ve got a mighty Dice thing 01 it . A Little Mixed. The celebrated speech of Sir Hoy.lo Roche; "Mr. Speaker, I smell a rat; I sea him floating in the air: but mark me, I shall yet nip him in the bad," was evidently the model upon whioh a writer ia Kansas framed, the other day, some remarks upon the recent election. The Leavenworth Con servative says that by the result of the elect ion, "the fall of corruption baa been dispelled, and the wl eels of the stuto government will no longer be trammeled by sharks , that have beset the public prosperity like locust" A Siubf Repabtek. Mr. Wendell Philips was ridinir in a railroad car, when he was ad dressed by a man of such rotundity that he seemed to carry every thing before him. The man asked Mr. fhilips what was the oDiect of his life. "To beneGt the negro," was the bland reply. ' "Well, then, why don't yon go down sooth to do it!" "That is worth think ing of.. I see a white cravat arond your neck; nrav. what is the object of your life?" "To save souls from hell." May I ask you whether you' propose to go tuere to do ltl . . . Sorlr nneiptv. ..Keen vour friendships in repair. ., Answer your letters. Meet good w ill half way. AH good men excite each other's activity. Better things are -said, more incisive, more wit and insight are dropped in talk aod forgotten by tha speaker, thuu get into T tlUJlS. 11 Q UBIO UU II-CI F ' "H v ... selves of the powers of oar companions.;'' "The. world -repeats itself," is no old saying. When ono visits .the modern shoddyites and pbtrolehmocraey,' one is reminded of the remark made by Plato, who was so strock with the luxury of the citizens of Agrigeotuai, both id the styles of their houses and their tables, remarked : "They build as if they were nev er to'die, and eat as if they had not an hour tO nVe.!,'":'1 " ,; X" '-:' I"" le i'iT..i. ! 11 mimi':.--' 1 , 'I 111 '. !! ! ' I 1 V-'i", ! 1 1 A man who-has made a .fortvno by Indus try pud close economy! in a retail business, at lenirth'rvtirod frorh trade!, add vised to loan his money on interest. ' One day, io midsummer, a tread happenea 10 aity to pun? -jciow pleasant it is to have soch long, bright days 1" )Wby y-e-s," replied.be, "but. these long days the Interest comes in to alow 1" ''-"' ' 1 - ' ' 1 ; 1 '"'.T". . A jolly - old darkey down Soutli .bought hlm8eH a Bew bat, and whea it commeuced f aining he put it Bmlef his coat'- Wheh ask ed Wby he did not pat bis' hat 00 hi kead, he replied! o.'iDw tats miue; boagbt it wul my own mosey; lioad heloug'to masaa, let him take keor of bis owu property." : ' ' 1 ,. ' "'" &"' " " '" "M t. S mith ," Said the cou&eokj "you kny y oil oncecrflciaod.in t,pi.li)it-MlOiyv: W" that vnn .nmikrilipd?" , .... . ! "No, fir; I hold the caidle for the man who did." ' - ' -: - ' "Ah, the court anflerstood yoa diflbrentlyi' They apposed thst tlie discoui-s came from ,0No!'e!r; I only tli'rowed Sight on it -' ' i : ' .X . . , . , i ,iv- ! Th. (ide to the celebarted CongTfss Spiing at Saratoga has beeu finuly adjusted tbe representatives or th iak am! While estate having accepted an offer $300,000 for their en' tii iuttrWBt ili the Sjirirgs. - .;i : t- I; .;.,-..! : k ., ;Li .:,v . ' l i ? ' Mr. Nasby "Makes a Pelexasliuu , . ; uv Uliseir ina Visits ike, I'm IfllMlt. BaiNTVllssT, (whieh i ( liT Noo Gersey, Mr ieh is in the ptait , May 15.1HCJ.- i North, and the lioft .' A It Mm ntjiits uv the Nor ay them rcceutly subjoogatid all tho Socio1iVi Aesociashuns nod lurches yn ulvru. y uv, hey seut delegashtms'for the pnrj'11' urJ, vnlunloerin S advise Jocson the nod I'rfjy-" dont 1 Foeliil tliat Noo .tiorsy," sbouldeu't I. behind iu the advise bizbiss. I electad' myself a delegnshun horrered a clene shirt, and traveled 2 Washington. ' I waz annouhst as )" dolegashuu from Noo Gersey, aud wua tow-uiist UBhorod iti2,.the presenta. '' . ,T "Whor is tho duleKashuuf ejakoolato'd th President, "hurry em up, for I'yo ;thirteen mora to tcsceve this afternoon." . v-r "Androo Jonsou," said I impressivly I rep-reeeut Noo Gersy, a stait that hez jest duo, brnorlo the decoest President..' -. .'.i.'.l'.l "Troo." returned he. "sich stajtt honor pat riots after they're, dead" , . . "I rcsont tha insinooashan with skorn.' Et h pruf that tho murder uv tho Presydent rung the nonier hart uv Noo 0rsy, let me say . sir ;; L tjiat the Oamdoa and Amboy Drokttutj, at meetin called fur the purpus, aDsoiopiiy voim 2 karrv the the corps uv the deceest Presy dent over the road fer harf furei ahtmomeiVer'- J be4 nkordid to any livin or ded iiidividjoonl. Bat lot that para Noo Gorsy needs no speshl , plecdor. Thor she stands. ' Look at her f " you bey a mycroscopa. V . ' -: '; 'i ' 1, KUm AOdrOO;Ca a origiuai uiuiunrmy who, whatover sins he may hey committed," never skratcht bis tikkit or diluted his whisky. In behaif nv that Dimokrisy I ipoatL'.i fO;I "Ez hea beeu meu8bnnd.2 yoo. wnnst or twist a immense rospopghility resta on yqTT shoulder. ,' .The Sulhern stuitl strnggled s fur j their rites, but wore squelcht. They foughH-like heroes, but fell, becbz nv . over powriii , numbers agin em. ..They're down yoot, iron, J heel is ou2 their necks. What will you doT Will you grind em, er'wiiryou ;be; umgnaui-ii ) mous?..;;; ;. I ' ,'- ' ) " ". I . "Wunst we wax a happy nashna aua w kia be so agm it rests with yoo. ; Yoo must t. conailiate Dimocracy. Our party North, it magnauvmus. We stand reddy to forgive " yoo for uavin draftings, fr bavin taxt nt' toi support a -' unconstohsheuiil . war, provtdiu," 3 ' you'll stop now. ; Woo our Southern brathrin... f I back with jentil works. They air . a, high ,' ? spirited and sensitive race, that kin never be enbjoogated. Take em agia 2 yer basiam, : w and don't heomiliiite: em by. condishuua.'i!l Give em a chanze 2 fergiv us fer, yhalin u?.;( ) em. .Restore theij niggers, aaj. their war, debt,Jinvito Magoffiu aud Vance and Brown and the restuv tiro Guvners hack' 1 their; va-i rioas capitols-Jgive Lea aud Foriat and Bot .'t egord their posishuna in the regular aripy,; u t and penshuu the disabled coufedrit horoea. ' "Ther musut be no hnngin. ; Toq've gp-f '"; ' . dnfortnitstttitsman- D'avia he fclkin2 jroor'"1'' hands becoz be wuz ignoreut uy tho stylaV .i,t ; yoor (lait LinMu's) miuyuns, , -He mite ,,hev knodo that the sojors nevor soed a woman' ta-kiu to the woods without chasia her. ,: But Bo- maat'uot be hong.-" Dwaocris luOks 'upou'"Jj " the matier thus. i;, '- '" ? ' . "' u-t , '-Yoo cau't hnng a man for conspiria agio the Guvment ouless he taiks op armt: T "Ef a fow tako up arms, it's only a riot, and 'i no hangin matter, cept when Ablishoists like, j Joha Brown do it Io siuhi cases hangia it 4 alluz in order. -, ,,'; ,1 r.. 1 ('If a number of staitsdo it, it's a revoloo-- shen, aud them ez yoo capcher must .be treet ez bollyjeggoreuts, pnd prizners uv war. , Tp hang prizners nv war,' Audroo, i? murder. . d ' 1 "This wood probably sutisfy the South. At'"' the North, less is reqwired. The' Dimocracy is easlv cousiliated. Give oar Ioeders enuT uv the officii 2 rapport em', with " tho jriy-"! lego nv managiug thiugs 2 soot as,' ana the' ' ' trubble Is ore. On thetn toruis we'll support : voor Administrashen. or cny other man's, cor-' :; ' jelly and hartily, and pceso will agin wave her white pluyuns over ine lunu ami win cunun--yoo 2 wave thorn ontil tho Suthern hart is '' "I hev dun Noo Gerey hez spoke. ' " . ' . ., 1 rather spect my words bare froot ' Look ' out fur a change uv policy. " .-;';'" ' " Petroleum V.Nasbt. ' ' : Lait pistor uv the Ch 1 rch ay the Noo, Dievyd ' peusashon. '' " ' "' " '; ";'JI'':''' The Programe of the Dcniocracjv We loarn from the Cleveland Herald that " the leaders of the Democratic party in Ohio,'';1 have, within 0 fjw days, had a lengthened ? night sessiou perhaps reaching into the mom-; ing at CincinuutL It is said that INmdleton 1 V n.-iiJ - . - S fl'k. .1 BOu V auuuaiguain wcia pnrauu.. iuo iic, gentle was the coutroling spirit, and he evidoDt- ai ly camo to the consultation with the 'pro. gramme well digested, wnicn ne presonwu,ia r a speech to tho oonclave. ' The spirit and warden of his address was to J this effect There are eleven States, which, J with slavery, are firmly planted on the doc . trine ofState Riirhts. That issao hoanot been settled by this war, it is yet to be fought for ;-. and on that line, aud the Democracy mast 3 rally and must fight. -Vallandigham counsel-; ed extreme Uuderaess on the part of the Deni-fJ 0,-racy towards Mr.-' Johnson,, and cited his r ' proclamation te-orgaoiring North Carolina, .1 under aTmiliUry Oovernor, leaving the ques-n;; tion of nogroe suffrage to the voters of ; that a State, at a step in the right direction upon the doctrine which is proposed td be the basis of , , tlie party. Vullandigham said (hat lenocruts,:4 mutt give all possible oodutouauce ami sympa." thy to Mr.' Johnson, for il was probable, so doing, tiiit Presideut wouldi prove' at radical.-) npoti StaW iighti as they eould wish. ,(i , Vallandigham, also adviavd that the .war apoo StantoU .be as;. bittejr and iiers'iMtautaa.,,, possible, to 'the Widening xt the. breach he-;i tweeniGeii. Sherman atd the Secretary of War,; ;, far, aa appearancoa now iudioated, Geni-Slier-piurt, would be the available Democratic cwy) b rJidute io tha next Psideutiul auvaa. , '.,,,1.,. 1 j Th caucus accepted tbo; views of YullnnJ-.', ighamil aud qndorsed his sufiUmeuta heartily. ,t Sp.ituiBy ba.-ceotiderc-d setttad at tu whutis to Wthe future- pulicj ot the ,01)io. P'uuona-,,, CJ.:; p.. iu V " I ! I ",:H! 11-"H ! 'li : ' - . .-: l ; , iiii Ii;-.-.'j , '' ' 'J ' nlita ve "Tnil.' ' " . .1 '- .-ii.....;. ,.t tr,i vi. M' I I IU lUn mill VT 01 lllu BUI, UI Alumni vi-' -. - vt, David Tod, for damages' tauned by tvason V Of hia sorrows id Fort Lafayette; and lieprivv'1' tion' of Bible and waste pajwri the fjoprenu. (todrt of Ohio.decii?, tfu .Taesduy. that tie la of Cogrtiss providing fof f ! removal of rf rif.'snch cuee.s to. the Dtrict. Court (if the 1 United StaifS, 18 conjoiotiouai nun in 1 ' ll'liis relieves Jurli;eVfomVerth(rmtnt'u dhty'w I of further, acting in the caaoj end-.tuthov'.-'-a 1 the; martyr to pursue Ins -meuy .petore j u-i- , e gwa);uo;snil Leavitt, ' i i A loHuirtiiMa shuemakef tited to girt In -j Wlte Sawn nvggi( nnHiiii, j'i.-,k fore he went, to poll l'":'sion,, On beintr afi d tho reatoo or this proi.e dii'ir,. liTi' ih.-i ii..,t having a poor Bieiiirry, i took this' firlir-' pf nifrpsliinj "it as liawii'-t whi'e. v , V 9 bajtigntiou, was, sure to ruit'iij hiin uf-,'1 ( : sil,.,. , . , - I A Yankee doctor bus auiiSi i"i tuxtti.'.-t from aunsoifesapoweif-il t,n'c '..'. ! . , coutaiiia tliii in'ii t' i -.-''-i 1 : - ;-Vt. calls ii"..'i'l !. .i- lit-.' -! 1 1
Object Description
Title | Mt. Vernon Republican (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1854), 1865-06-27 |
Place |
Mount Vernon (Ohio) Knox County (Ohio) |
Date of Original | 1865-06-27 |
Searchable Date | 1865-06-27 |
Format | newspapers |
Submitting Institution | Public Library of Mount Vernon & Knox County |
Rights | Online access is provided for research purposes only. For rights and reproduction requests or more information, go to http://www.ohiohistory.org/images/information |
Type | Text |
Description
Title | page 1 |
Place |
Mount Vernon (Ohio) Knox County (Ohio) |
Searchable Date | 1865-06-27 |
Format | newspapers |
Submitting Institution | Public Library of Mount Vernon & Knox County |
Rights | Online access is provided for research purposes only. For rights and reproduction requests or more information, go to http://www.ohiohistory.org/images/information |
Type | Text |
File Size | 4683.41KB |
Full Text | :jz: JNb 17111" a'. - Tenns of : Advcriiiiiy: Mtl Vernoh' ; Republican: Od s,r 10 Huts, us iBBi rUiia,. II Mj A FAUILT MEVSFAFO, B1DI0ATBD riBflCUUJILT 0 TD nrrUBBTS 01 KNOX COUNTY. Wintry ' On.luar l raoutiis,. 1 - '. 1 1 . . Wi m i I Onaanuar. lyear Two squares 1 mouths,... ...... Twosquarasl jaar,. ...... ..'.i X Oolum I raootlis, ........... H Columo 1 yaar, , s 00 4 ii i i f i i r i , i t : - o 111 eo ..... ..i., 12 00 ae o (2 50 PER TEAK I!f ADVANCE. fy VM. T, DAS COM, , raoraiaroa, huIimk'iii nim, id j -; K Column I mooth ,, X Columataav.............. .. T... M 00 1 Column moQtli., '., 0 C 1 Cotonm lvaar,...;...-.:......;...".A.. 0 BuainaaaCarda, notaoe.ain& liaaa imrrtar,-. a 0 Notlca In local col uib, Uims and 1cm &0 cests, or ; flra lines, t.n oauta per Una. J 1 rf Aduilollratu; Mad, altackmf nt, .divorce, and trno r ' l.nt advertisamanta mast be paid for Ixfore iDBrrt.li DEVpTKU TO POLITICS,' 'LrtEllATUHE, tHE MA,ItiCKX AND GKNEltAL INTELLIGENCE. OrriCI IN KREHLDF BLOCK, Ju STOKt, AH klnda doni prompt-v, fa auperio- jtyle, to bo paid TO xi. ; MOUNT VERNON, OHIO. TUESDAY,' JUNE 27, 1805. , . NO 'Si 7 j 1 1 V.' 1 m r. . M. &J N. It. B.-CHANOH OF, XI M K. Th. WLnUr irraoireineQ jon the , V.kN. R B. liu fteenlxed, and theUaus tV lenvlni lit, Vernon ere u follows: 1 , riiim ono booth, Mill leaves. i.v...k...l .:.'.-....:l2 r. AeeommodatloD,leftTee.'....l.... .....4:Mj p. b. Bipress laraii......i i....l0:lt r. a. ITE4UTI 009 BOBTS, I I j Kail leaves....J. I ;....,...1:40 . . Aooommodntloa leave-... J.......... ...... V:4x i b. 6ipnmei....-..j , ,..7:uS A B, tTTCtn onthe Oantri Ohio Boad Intra Newark ma follows: I . Ail.. 1 . 1........M0 a.'m. -.it. voing watt,.., sine; west,......, i...... .4 12:00 m. .-..1.... ..1. .. ...j. . i..2'12A'.B On tha p. 0. k 6. mad (oTng KaaL the can leave aark,.......J 1 4. 8-40 k. . " J I , J2:00 ' a. 30 r. B, Newai Oolnr Waat. keu thai Central Road. ther leave , pa on a Willi, I . -.r k MEECTDRY. J DISCIPLES CfiOBOH.' VI: Street, let ween flay Hod McKensIe, V rRESBTTEREAM jpljRda, corner Oeyv and Chest- aa( etreete " 1 A- B T I a . METHODIST fenSCOPAIl CHURCH, carper flw and Chestnut striata. Rev. E. JU.. BUtill. PROTEST Kim EPISCOPAL CHOnntI, eoreor Oajr and High etrieta, Rer GEO. B. REE8E. CATHOLIC CHCRCH, cadnar High and MrK,.nr.lr, - 7 .'' f Bev. JCLIU8 BKENr. KETnoniST i prfoTRST(NT CIIDRCft, Mechanic! . atwatbatii'ajndtt(tln BAPTIST OBfRCtW WaSrtet' Vtw.en MnltorrT and Meehanlc. R. J. W. iENBARUER. COVOREOATItlNAL CHCRCnTfulhrnry ri.. htwan Sugar and Ha.rttrmmlc. -TJt. MONROE. UNITED PRESBTTERIANN6rny' Main and 8nar atraatai Rar. 8. M. UUTCHISON. METHODIST WESLEY AN' CHURCH, aimr Hut. barrj and Wooiter. Rar. MR. TRAVIS. KREMLIN - BUSINESS CARD. IVHOLESALE AN 0 RETAIL; GROCER, Jfays Cawli for , BUTTER, EGGS, RAGS, OATS, ETC. -r-Wholtwla and Ratail Dcalaraln - - ' . BOOTS' & SHOES, , ... . ; LiTuan, Kit ako FIxdixos, ' DH.H.SRS l.t - ' Dry Goods , and Notions, 1 " "-' "PAT CASH TOR" , 1 BUTTER, EGGS, RAGS, StC. -i I. I.- ... , TOt. M'CLELLAND, ATTORNEY - " , COUJYSELLOU AT LAW. BUNN & SNOW, i J ' PLAIN" AND ORNAMENTAL ,;, PAINTING, GRAINING ' " AND PAPER nANCINQ.; ' , Miss IHY A. DONNELLY, ' ' MILLINER ANTS. MANTAUMAKBE, MU Vamon, March 21, 18-ljr. CEO. W. MORGAN, Attontoy at LnWi OFFICE Orer tha SUoa Store of Millet 4 White, i , MOUNT VERNON, OHIO : Mareh Slat, 1886-ljr : ': .. MARCH 9th, 1864. . s , WARMER MILLER, ' r' " 13 RECEIVING FRESH ' ! - i NEW GOODS PaVchaead alnea tha Great Decline In Tilcea. All that araot OVap Good, call at March H, mi. WARNER MILLER'S. MILLINERY. Mr.' IIrx-is Jic J olinsoii, On Wat Gambicr St. tar id Ward School Building. ARK prepared to do W ork In tha tnnKt approved ety!?. aitharln Straw, Silk, or Crape. They keep a good aaortmetat fff Ritibona and other 'riming..- Mar, 1M. : . . ' ' t. JR, BROWN, Ilomasoputliio Pliyaalolau, amCSWoodtard Bnlldlng, Main Btreot, ' V 'jjy 10, 1804- , - '...MT. VERNON, 0. AMERICAN HOUSE, J-ROSS HANLIN 4 CO. Propwtor& , JiE ABIC, OHIO. '" ) Jane 20, 186J-j j J . '' A. iM.OAanaiaa x, a. pni, CERTIFICATB JflJTilbWTY THE Knox , Cod nty ."National Bank of Mount Vernon, Tft4URT DttPARTMIurr. 40rrtol of hi CoupmoLiaaiK or thi Cprrmcy, . . - WAsmiruToif. Anril 2Ath. Vhhui Bit Mttfoctor videoc prseatd to th JO(lWri(foe4. H bu been mtvle to Appear that "The JCnox Ctmntj KaUantU Unk of Mount Vacuo n," in tha CU of Moant Veroon. Id th County of Knox aad $t4 of OhiohM been duly ornnised uudr nd m ufOibk to tha req aire menu of the Act of CoogreM. t titled "An Act to froTida Kttian! Currency,-ared by ft pledge of United SUtta Bonds and to provide for tha circulation and redemption t be roof," approved June 8, 1H4A, ud baa com plied with all the pro. iioB4 of tuld Aot required to be complied with before afiotnmeaoi'iff the buflioete of Bankioft under eaid Act: . , Nov thereforo, I, Fmemftn Clarke, Comptroller of tha Currency-, do bereSy wrtlfr, that The Knttx Conntf Ational Bank of Moont Vmi.n," In the City of Mount Vernon, in tha County of knot od Htnte of Ohio, U iutbortied to commence the bunineu of Banking under tha Aclnoreaaid- w .. (3AV) U leatiraaoTwhartof. witneM 'mf hand and .it -ii r offlca iwenty-flftb daj of April, ' .1 '.''C'Cv FRfiEMArfi'ci4Ki?. May 15, 'OA-flwIlfi! ; - - Cowplrollei Vf i1 Currency. Administrator's Sale. J'H purtuanee of u order f tha frobafa 0hrt In and for Knox Connty. Ohio, grnnte-i on th 24 tb day of ay A. 0. l60SI will olTor nt ?abp Auction oa Th Mtk day of JurutL D. 16G5. At 1 o'clock P.'M",, npon the prtmUflt, the following denribl real entitte, ttUuate m Knot County.. Ohio, to-wit: BiiittiiJiiied ourflTBolh parte nf a purt of the North wedt quartet of 8tctioa Lia Btti Tuwuihlp and 12tb Henire, coinmeaclng At ihu Nurth-eaM coiner of Mi CiMtnll tlte .KKtailfty in tlte town of Amitv; ihwneiienningHnth Wt tIt ilirer.ttcn alone; the fteee alley ! aald town (Vi tW-Hio pU to a atone) theaea ta aAolb-taaterly direett'in. Y.' ft-l(Hi pnlee to a ptea; theaee North to the alace of hgiabiagf eoa iiia let; 7 atratid 190 potea moi or let. ,s JAlraitd at 'JT .' : m A, eineeentbt ttf Ihla aqnitwred 2flaqd3J In the towa-of m(t In waid eouuty.- :' ' i i-.AnpralMdafc f IW ' . r '1 v V TKKWH OK tMLK One third In hand, ape third Ifl pMt awr kHldcn n two yearn from Jit tlnf of anle mth Ihterett,' I'aferred pnyroen'n Ui l- .-r-irHd by anottgate. . . . - i . .UHh H. BUM W ti, -4??.W; " Adiu'jrpfM. aiai U.S. LOAN! $230,000,000. -i , By authority of the Secretary of tha Treinary, tha undtrretgned, the General Subvcrljitiun Agent Lr the ale of United Stated Socurlllert, offors to the public the thjrij auries of Trooeury N"o,tct, bearing thloix and throe tentha per cent Interest per annnm, known aa tie , o 7.30XOA.DST. Theie notca are iaaued; unjet date of July Ifi, 1805, and are payable three yean troia that date In currency, or are eonrertfble rt the option of -the holder into ; i 5-20 Six per Ccnt. .: GOLD-BE a.RINO! BONDS. , Theaa Bonda ar nov worth a handanmo premium, and are exempt,' aa are all the Government Jlonda, fro iaot,. County, and Municipal taxation, which adds from one to ttrw fwr cent.' per annual to their taliu, ac cording. to (he rata levied npon ,othTi proper!. ,.Tha intercat la payaUe imi anuuaH hy coiipoia attached to each note, which mav bacut oT and autd tonj hank orhankr.w.. , ? The lutercat at 7.30 pt cent, amoaiits to due cent per day on n $S0 11910. Two ceiita m ii()o so VVy iooo ; t)l u u a ) 5000 Notes of all the dcnomlnotTinra named will be promptly furnished upon receipt of rubdcrlptlona. . Theffotca'of this Third rjerlea are precisely similar inform and privileges .-to the SeVen-Thlrti.is already Bold, except that the Government rcaervea'to itnelf the optlen of paying Interest in gold coin at 0 per cent., in-atead of 7 8-lOtbi in currency. Subscribers will de-duot tbt interest In currency -up t July 15th,'ttha time when they subscribe, ' . The delivery of the notes of this third eerlcs of the Seven-thirties will commenco on the lt of Juno, and will bo made promptly and continuously after that date. . Tho slight change made In the couititlou of this THIRD SERIES ailccttonly tho matter of interest. The payment In gold, If made, will ho equivalent to the currency IntoreHt of the hiirher rate. ' .1 The return to specie payments, In the event of which only will the option to pay inti r'st in Oold bo availed of, would so reduce and equalise prices that purchases made with sli per cent. In gold would be fully equal to thoso made with seven and three-tenths per cont. lu currency. This la j " Tho Only Loan .in Market Now offered by the (lovernnient, aud it superior attain tagen muke It tlte , . Great Popular loan or the People. Leoa than $230,0O0-OO of the Loan authorised by Con grew re now'on the market. This amount, at the rate at which it h being absorbed, will be tubacribed for within sixty days, when the notes will undoubtedly command a premium, as has uniformly been the case on closing the subscriptions to other loans. lu order that citizens of erory town and section oftht country may be afforded facilitiea for inking the Loan, the National Banks Stale BaLka, and Private Baukers throughout tlte country have generally agreed to receive subscriptions at par. Subscrilera will aolect theirownagents, In whom they have confidence, and who only are to be renponnible for the delivery of the notes fi r which the receive orders. JAY COOKE, SuitsORirTiox Aormt, rMlade'iihia BtinscKirTtoKS will 11a RKrmvrDby the : First National Bank, Mount Vernon, Ohio, The Knox County National Dank, lit. Vernon, 0. . . First National Bank of Mansfield, Ohio, i May 10, 18tt4-2mia. - THE NINTH NATIONAL BANK j OF THE CITY OF NEff YORK. . CAPITAL, 91,000.0004 PAIO INr Fiscal Agents of the United States, And Sieciul Atut for Jay Cooke, Subtsri)tlon Agent, Will deliver 7-30 Note, Free of Charge, by exprese, in all parte cf the country, and receive in paymtmt C)ecka on New fork, Philadelphia, and Boa-ton, current bills, and all fivo per cent interest botes, with iotereet to date of subscription. Order sent by mail will be promptly filled. . This Bank receives the accounts of Banks and Bank era en favorable terms; also of Individuals keeping New York account ; J. U. OR VIS, ' fruidmU J. T. Hill, Cathitr March 7, 18do-oiuo. . .1 A pamphlet directing how to speedily aaaTORi sionr and give up spectaclee without aid ol Doctor oriuedlclue, sent by mail free on receipt of It) cenU. AMrei . E, U. KoT, . T.. :" Dec, ao, lSe-Iy nao Broadway, N. Y. : MOUNT VERNON ' ' " .UNION BRASS BAND. THIS BAND la now completely organised, and in good healthy condition, It has a choice selection of Munio aad-nniler competent instruction haa arrived at proffloWnry in ita musical execution. It Is rady to flll all calls for musical services at some or abroad, on reanonable term', oither for Cotillion Parties or for Braes Music. ' ' J, W. F. S1N0ER. Pres't. C. P. OrkiioUt, 8ecy W. M. Tuoxrsos. Leader. (Deo. 13, lS641f. CANCER DOCTOR. Junton I. ao1tii6ii9 TtT0ULi) to farm all who may he af)iicfrf with CanaVf Tf mat nets preparea in cure inai lorminnDie nis eaao by anroresa differing from all other, known only to himself. His treatment eonsinta In "the application of a single plaster, composed of European herhe, e lining little or no .pain. On examination he will ha able to say to the patient whether their case Is curable or not and will guaranty a permaaeut Curej of art he an-dor take. Also, will gnarrantco a permanent care in the worst ease ot Hhumatlsm. 1 Bafiaanrita Mm. Samuel Ney, Qeo Man teller, E ft Gantt, ami Oavid Morey, Mt Vernon, 0 ; John Xall, Centerboiy, Knox Co Ohio, . , Ornca At his reniiience. Bedford. Cnvshopa Co.. 0. 13 miluBoulh of Cleveland. July 20, lfi04-ly' Howard ' Associatione . .".V. PHILADELPHIA. PA.'- ?- ' Disease of the NPrvous, Seminal. tTnnftr and Boxual Byatemn new and relliibie trt-roant lu Brporta f f the HOWARD AS80WAT10N Sent by mail In sealed letter enTelopres free of charge. Address, Dr. J. 8KILLKX HOIf(ffITON, Howard Assc-eition. No. X Houth hlnth 8trt-et, Philadelphia, Pa. , Doe. fltb,ll64-lr. , KEN YON HOUSE, ' Corner of Mala St. and the Tublle Square, " ,; V '.' ' MOUNT VKUNOX, 0. ..' nAVINfl I-i-a-ed Ihli well known and popular Hold, and Alteiltt up la eii)erii iilvle, I aia prepared to evcotnmmliile travel..,-, aud ail oil,r-4 K, may ((iT.nie a rail. Th. patronage or the Tnhiie (. rtanrtinlly no-lield, , J03ECU SCAIIUKOLUH, CAVE CITY HOTEL. rpnE suhecriher has leased Hi's fl kn.mn HooBe at JL '-TllS CAVKS,1' fnurU-i'O milrs i t of Mt. Vnrui.u. aud' three-foiirtti. of a mile fr'im Millrmnl. llr i, & arranrcil fur the entrtAiiHiipol nf I'll'-Ml' su I II t' i'. iV,'J I'ARrlKS. ''Th. Cnv.ii''ar the nm't rnrmnMr Brt'f ii-B;iifiil proiiodB in thi. sprliin of nhin. Prompt .tuiitii1!!, ari'f rf'jd fire giurunti'il to all pi,rti aud traveller.. ' , . I. 8. JIcCA -I. A M, June Ji), I1 - '. , l-tojinrlor. ' t'oo ru'ru-va of annuls. , llT b. w. LOKUKLLOW. , When the hora of Dity are numbered, And the voices of Ilia Nibt Wake the bntler soul, thnt aluuibered, To a holy, calm delight f Ere the uvetilng lamps are lilited, -, , ' And like iihiuitomB prim and tall, "' " 1 ,. Shadows from (he fl.ful 0 re-light , - Uuuce upon the parlor wall ; ( Tliet) the forms of the departed f- .... ; j Eiitttr at the opn door ; Tl'1 'beloved, the truo-beitrteil,,., !;j " v . Coum to Virtit mo ouuu moru : , , . i ii '.'' v. lie, the young and strong, who cherished - , p Noble lo(Tn!f" for the ulrit'p, By tlie roadside fell and perished, ! I ',i , . "tVcary with the march of life! . . . It i:- z: :. f hey,' tha holy ones and weakly; - ; . t i r Who the crotta of sutlerlng btrft . ' Folded thetr oale hands so aieekly, 1 Spke with us on earth aoiuore I, , - ( r , . i . 1 '.',... 1 And with them the Being Beauteous, " i ' Who unto wy youth was given, ,i , r ... More than all thjiKr f1ie to love ine( : ; Aiidia now a auipt la heaven. o'J t j j ; ' " With a slow anil nUtej"it hiutstcp " r' 'Ctmvea tUatuietiiiBUrierdiviiiu, ,. - t s j !..! Xnkes Oie vnruut chtitr heittije nie.. t . Lajltrjentle haud ioiaiue, J ":- ' r" ' , . .H J T' And Mw sits and ga ,ca at me, , , With thhse deep and tenrtcreypfi, ' ' ' Like the star i ho still and nuiit-liko, )''',; ( ; J.uokihg dowuward from the skies. -v.: ;-i i , -. ?pp".'.i j.j ,:A . .:;,.'fV Uttered not, -ret omnrohendod, , t """' In the spfrivs voiceleHs prayer, ! ' Bolt reukM(, in bleaHinga en'ded,-, - ft it Breathing from her lips of air. ."u . J:.-; , 't t r 0 0, though oft depresedatd lonely, All my fear a. laid aside, j HI hot remember only " Hu(l aa thru have Uved-and dlod I T1IE LEFT HAND CLOVE. .. . ; . i ; .i . i ; . il . i i ii ii.'-.ii'.i CBAFTgll I.- ' "' ' :' On one Bunny October mrninpr, iu the year 1850, Ibebollatif rvoiisington Old Church were ringing a merry peal iu houor of a wodiliupf, which had bvva cvlebrutcd withia thoso lirno-houorcd walls about ton miLUtes butore. The churchyard was crowded with Epectatoes, chii'lly of the humble class ; the awning was up from tho chinch door to the frato ; a cluster of handsome cnrriuirea drawn by high stepping horsea, waited outside, and the path down which tho happy oouplo were to pass was liued with spectators aa full of napor interest, us If tlie greut event of events had happened to them instead of to totul strangers. Servant girls loitered there, ivpirdles of the injunctions ua to speed and cure with which they had been churned ere they left their boins j nursemaids wheeled their charges', nud butcher boys leaned their trays apuinst the rtilings ; policemen lingered on their heat ; a cab or two drew up beside the cujb stoue ; and a brass baud iu the distance, which Jiiid, beea playing ''-AUuia Laurie?' with tbo (jrentest dil-ij,'euce, suddenly changed their tnuo to "Come, huste to the Wedding," us the beadle rushed from the porch in astute of intense excitement, and the whits veil nud orange flowers appeared upon the threshold. , . . I wonder why wo all take such aa absorbing interest in a wedding ; if wo see a funerul procession going slowly uloug the street, we gaze after it a moment with a shivering sense of what is some day to come to us, und theu go on our way. But if a carriage full of white "bonnet?, veils uudjies passes as a mo-meut after, and we have the time to spare, we generally set off at a round trot after it, to get to tbo church in lima to see. tho bride go in or coma out, as the case may be. The bride alone for it is an understood thing that all the interest of tbo occasion centers oa her. Tho bridegroom tnny be a wonder in her eyes, but iu ours he is simply a lay figure, ovor whom the mautle of her glory fulls iu graceful folds. She may be youug und pretty ; she. may bo old und plain ; but still she is tbo "bride," and it is ut hsr we crowd to look, at her we smile, for her wo smile, fur her we sigh, after her we send our good wishes, and throw our old shoes. Why is it thnt we feel such nu absorbing interest iu her? We cannot tell. Some of us who have never been brides, Diay be admiring and envying; some of us who hnvo been brides, to our sorrow may bo pitying aud fearing for ber ; yet the atti action iu either casA is nearly the sumo. .Ia the present case the brido was neither very toung nor very . beautiful. She was a tall, dark ludy, apparently about thirty joars of age, w ith good teeth, hair aud eyes, aud a very plensuut smile, The bridegroom was apparently about live years her senior, bronzed uud bearded like a soldier, and wearing his left arm iu a eiing. .A murmur ran through the crowd. . Madam Humor was whisperiug that the pair bad been lovers iu their earliest youth ; tlmt circauistunces had separated them : that the lady had bceu forced into a distasteful marriage, aud the gentleman gout to India ; aud that now, attcrubstnice of many veurs. be bad returned with a title, with wealth, aud honors, by the score, aud laid them all nt the feet of his brat love, whom ha found a widow,- toiling as a eovemena for : her daily bread. ' We ail love u bit o romance in our bearts ; and this l.ttlfl falo wus received fco kindly by the crowd, that as the bells pealed oat nguin, and the carriages drove away, they wbid followed-by a ringing; cheer, with tho heartiest erles of "Uod bless you !" a shower of old shoes and slippers, procured, Hymed only knows where, but which, we verily be- lieve, Were taken by enthusiastic servant girls off their own feet, iu the sudden excitement of the moment , . , AH was over The bells rang out their last exultant peal, the bride and 'tho bridegroom had driven away juto their "Fool's Paradise," accompanied by their rejoicing friends, and the eager crowd went tq their several tusks once more, in the work-a-duy world. "'" But one of their number mummed, eveu after the Itttt notes of the Wis hnd died away, and the ret) waistcouled beadle had guuo home to his twoive o'clock, dinner. ( IJe was a piau apparently about twenty six years of age, who hud beeu watcbiug the. progress of events, at first somewhat contemptuously.,, lie was a bachelor, and was wout, to pride himself upon his state of siugle-blessediiexs t to Wa must owu that he watch.d the bride's coming with a very suspicious smile ; but a that little tale to which we liavo already alluded ran through the sympathizing crowd, it cnughf bisoar. aud the exi)it.'iou of hts fuce changed. ,Ue. too: haiHnd, an early love, whu nt the entreaty of nor witluweil mollier, bail given lum up, and married a man far better fitted to be tier father than herhnsband. 1 " ' 7 Iiut hew Id! ilia rvs-smliTiuica between tl, two stories fame to nn md ; for the lady wns atill'a' wiri'. tlio rmithor of fiv -treBiiliful children, tbo miMresa ot a Inxnridns homo j Hud if V evpi gave a Ihimght td the past; probably framed it in a thanksgiving thai Sue bad married for money anrl-kindura., rather than for !nve and poverty.- ' lie did ntif blame her fur (his worldly prndence, which hd fult: firy sure bli hid learned ii th lupso of vears, but he conlrutcrj jtj future with that of" the, man who had just driven away, and sighed doeply as he did so. We cannot say that he, tod, witilied. to tako back his lost love once more, but the void thut she bad left iu his heart suddeply became ou acliing one, and through the happiness of the newly wedded pair, he seemed to see bis own loneliiwss in a stronger light thau usuul. iJ'hu yeurs wtire getting on, aud he was older than, he bad been, Tho boys who bud been his schoolmutes wero now tho Leads of happy homes j ha oiily was left without one to lovo him bostof all.' It was a miserable fwling, but he could not shake it off. , . ,, ,., ..'.t.t. . - ': lie turned to leave the churchyard, and as ho did so a sudden puff of wind blew aside the dead loaves at his feet, and nestling among them he saw a small white glove a lady's glove. ', lie took it up ; tha size, six aud throe-qnariers, was marked inside j and just beumtth It, iu dainty letters, was wrlttfn ''Angela," lit was a left hand glove, of the whitost aud rnost.elastio kid, aud had ovidontly been worn but onco. The young man, turr.ed.it over iu his palin,' with a curious feeling of warmth' and satisfaction, about the region of his heart It was a ridiculous, little thing, lint somehow be could not leave it there among tho dump mould, and the withered leaves, and the lonely graves. ,lt sppko of youth, heaaty, iiud, happiness, and lovo too 'plainly to bo thrown asde. ! And so ho 'gazed1 and mnsed, till tho church clock ovor bis head struck the. hour of one. ,. Then, he started, and, looked oronnd him with on amused smile. '. . , , ; "Am' I sixteen or tweutyix ?" he thought to himself, "to staud dreaming here in the-broad lijjbt of noon over ajbit of white kid, hd iny patients and the doctor waiting fot nie all the while t What a-'donkey I must be 1, A clear case of temporury insanity I Hut for all that, if ever I marry, my Wife shall be the woman who dropped this glove,1 Heaven bless her for a careless thino; f. 1 : Ho folded i carpfully, put it away in the breast pocket of his coat, and Walked off with long Btiidos toward tho Burgery in 'Brampton, where he speut the greater part of each: day iu each week. . : . ., .a - ; ' , .',..- , t CHAPTEll.II. t , 't.', . 1 ' ' Generally speaking, we (hiuk nothing is much mora foolish thau to make certain resolves iu this uncertain world of ours. We talk very largely, when wo first set out on the beaten track, about tho wonderful thiugs we are goiug to do about the way wo are going to "hew out"' our own destiny; aud find our way to onr owu darlmgcndst but, by the time we are forty, we. confess with' sorrow, that all the ''hewing" has beeu.iu vain that neither vinegar nor the pickaxe cuu make the slightest Impression upon the Alpine rocks of lifo ; aud that iu the place of beuding and shaping circumstances to our own lordly wills, it has been circumstunccs thut have shapeti and moulded them. Of course we would all gladiy be a( tho top of tho tree if we could it is the highest ;iougn we aim ut wnen we beeiu to climb. ''Hut if it is our "kismot" to oouteut ourselves with a lower brunch, do we not inevitably fiud ourselves securely perched thoro t ,..We might as well spare oursulvee,all trouble uud pain at the beginning as at the end, aud, simply doing our best at whatever calling haa been given to us, rest happy with what that dnty performed can bring aud givo ui. Is not all the labor, all the outcry, all the weary longing with which we strive after a golden apple high in air, utterly wasted, uay, ivni-vin limn wasted, if that apple bo for anoth er f . One man wilt fold his hands beneath the tree aud see the apples, largo and fuir, coming tumbling into them of their own accord j another may work heart aud life out together, and be rewarded with a windfall at the best Now, since the wind full is the utmost he can hone for, why should ho not earn it as easy as possible! : "' It takes some years, howovor, and a great deul of experience to enable one to digest this doctrhur thoroughly. For our part, we be- liove it is only the heir to the winutull. who can fully understand it, for the proprietor of tho choicest iruna generally inclines to tue opinion that it is his owu superior merit, not bis lucky star, that has endowed him so bountifully. For tDe life of him ho cannot under stand why every one should not meet his success ; he ascribes their failure ouly to ignorance, evtravagauce or laziness, though ho himself may be the most ignorant, extravagant, aud the laziest of human beings.' Now Qrautlcy Mills was one of these for- -iunnte beings who sit at the bottom of the tree, in the soft grass, ana are tluly ami generously rewurded for thoir pains. He had been left an orphan at an early age, and afterwards adopted by a bachelor uncle, who died when he was tweuty-ond, aud left him a partnership in a good medical practice, and an annuity of two hundred pounds. It was not a .fortune, it is true ; out mere are worse things in tho world than two hundred golden sovereigns couiiug into your purse of their own accord, and without any exertion on your Own part, every 30th of December.- The young man was careful over his- money, and instead of spending it he put it. away ft the. bank, and and contented himself with such emoluments as bo could manage to pick up from bis part' ucrship with his medical friend. They sufficed for all his expenses 5 meanwbihvtlie nest-egg in the bank, with iutorest added to principal every quarter day, was-trteadily increasing. I Grautley Mills did not algayg intend to remain an humble: partner in a business. A' handsome broughaiuud a pair of bay horses, a stately bouse, surrounded by lawn, lake, and gardeih-a retinue pf liveried sorvants, and lux-urics innumerable, gilded his vision of the fu-tnro whenever he indulged himself with a quiet glance1 thut way r and by his side iu tbo brougham sat a fair . lady, who was also tbo mistress of those servants, the sharer in those luxuries, aud the light of that maguificent home a stately, dark-haired, dark-eyed creature, little like his false first love ; and oii ber lips Was ever a smile for him, and on hr hand a small white glove, the fellow. to that which he still kept, like a miser's dearest trcmur, io the secret drawer DLhkwritiiig desk. Well might he dream, since be was one of Fortune's favorites, to whom tho brightest, dreams comes truo. ." ' , , ' . -j ., -,r ' As ue suuntored leisurely one murnihg from bis bachelor lodging to bis partner's house, with tlie t pleasant y1sT(Jn"8tiil haunting his brain, he noticed that a cab laden with boxes, StooiJ before his' tldor,' and that , an unusual bustle 'eooihed to'potyide: tho .-place. .He (timed into the surgery' and rhng tho bell. 1 It was a longtime before hi boy appeared, and when be dirt it Was with a broad grin upon bis fuce, '"J)r. Overly was too busy to ooma out just then," he said. ."Would Dr. Mills be kind enough ti) attend Jo all bases till hff Was tit leisure I" Pr.' Mills "wus uot ia the best t'f humors at tins intelligence'. It. seamed to h;in for tho first time that he was treated as k partuer, not as a fripd ; as if the good (I. .:lor were ketpin biiu at arm's length, and doing business, but uot exchanging confidence v-fib hirii. He knew no inoro than we do what he wanted or why he felt aggrieved ; boths was out of sorts, and, it was v small relief to gruiplile inwardly at his partuer ho-fure le knew whether b wub to blame or not i Having attended to tlie patients who were In waitingand wriiteu a few letters, the doe-loi sat dowa with, hia cigar, and a new. num ber of the Laicrf to while away his time until his partner should seo fit to muka liii up pourauca. Eleven struck . upon tho church clock near by, and the cab, uow empty, drove away from tho front door. Still the bustle in the house continued ; even iu thut quiet, nook he could hear steps upon the stair:), aud voices in the hall, aud boxes and parcels lumbering about in the room overhead. Once, as a door opened up staira, ho . heard a fresh, youug voice, a girls voice caroling out tbo song ; For, oh. Id my heait I an lova tliat I.lanirnll.n. ' Aod awwt -Ti-iiny Jou, too, Iu trutU do I luva I The doctor pricked up his ears with a sudden look of iutorest' ; be had a little Welsh blood iu bis veins, aud the airs of iht principality were ou that account special favorites with him, But who could the singor be T To his ccrthin kuowledgo thoro had been nothing younger or prettier than tho purblind cook in the house for many a day j und his partuer was a widower, with only one child, a boy at a public school. Clearly it was not he whom the cab had brought. , Gracious, heavens I had tha doctor got married again , without saying a word to him t and was he ashamod in consequence to show his fuce in tho surgery f At that, fearful though most absurd supposition, ho pearly pulled, the surgery bell down in summoning his attendant Mercury. ' 'James.' he said sharply, 'when will tho doctor te at leisure T '., ',' ' , ; ' , 'I cnu't say, sir, exactly,': replied the lad, with the samo 4inintelIIgiblo grin npon his face. 'You tee, sir, Miss Bulla is just come home from school.' - 1 . ' ' , . 'Aud pray who is Miss Bella V . 1 " , 'Master's ward, sir, ' She is just como homo from school.' ' ' ; ' " ' ' ' "". " - 'Oh,' said tho doctor, 'I suppose that was the young lady I heard just uow singing up stairs V . : 'Yes, sir, she sUigs like a lark and flies over' tho house like a bird. We're all out ot breath trying to do what she tells as, and as fust as she tells us ; but it's grent fun all jtho same. I'll tell master you want him, sjr.' ' 'Humph !' ejaculated the young doctor, as tho loquacious page left the room ; 'my worthy friend seems to have a nice inmate. I'm vory glnd I don't live in the house, that's1 all. ' A boarding school girl a broad and butter miss just out of short frocks and fancying eveiy man who looks ut her is ready to shoot himself for her sake ? I'll take very good core not to.go too much ia her way.' Even as' he entertained these uuclmrita- bio thoughts ho started to his feet, aud flung open the door, for it seemed to him that all tbo crockery In the establishment had beon thrown down with a heavy crash in the surgery hull. ' Sure enoagh, there was a tray upon tbo mat, and broken glosses aid plates in all directions, while among tho relics sat a pretty, dark-eyed, mischievous looking girl of eighteen, laughing as if her heart would break at the havoo she had mnde. v !.!;, . : Isn't it a shume T. she began, as tho door opened ; aud then, as she looked up aud saw a strungor, she colored brightly, aud sprung np iu an instant.' 'Is Undo John in theie ?' she asked. , . - :. -..( . ...... Qfo, 'be has not been here this .moruingi' replied ho' young 'doctor, vory" courteously, considering thut ho knew ho must be speaking to the obnoxious boarding school girl 'But you seem to have had an accident' . 'Yes, I was bringing Uncle John his lunch, and cook said I should find him here ; and theu I trod on my dres, or fell over the mat, acd down it all came 1' - 'Well, never mind,' said be ; 'I hope yoa have not hurt y bursal.' ' "' 'Oh dear uo I' Bhe replied carelessly. ' 'If I were to hurt myself every time I fall down, I nil t Ut as well go to the hospital at once, for Ll urn always tumbling ovor something or some body. Uncle John says 1 must belong to the lamily of the Bounding Brothers, to come out so safe after so ninny hard knocks.' It was difficult to meet bur bright smile and feel that the Bounding Brothers could possibly be unpleasant inmates of any house. So Dr. Mills picked up tho broken plates and glasses, aud. carried the tray into tho house for her, feeling as if she had performed rather a meritorious uc'ion than otherwiso ia smashing so much crockery. ' ' ' 1 ' ' " ' An acquaintance begun iu so unceremonious a mauuer could not possibly help becoming rather an intimate one,. As the days went by Mibs Bella hud little eveuiug parties, tq which Doctor Mills was always iuvited, aud to which he regularly came. They danced together, road the same books, sang the same songs and we all know how such thiugs gen-ernllv end. : . ' The doctor wns ouly human ; and flesh and blood is, after all, more tangible than a dream. Withia six months he fouud that tho lady of the glove was but a dim and half forgotten shadow compared with the dark-eyed, laugh ing, good-tempered Delia, who from morning till night was always doing something careless and provoking, getting into scrapes with her ancle, and coining to him to help her out of them. She was the wifd he wanted ; aud yot ho did not speak. " Some absurd feeling of remorse kept him faithful in deed, if.not in thought, to the lady of the churchyard, Ouly she was so far away, aud Bella so near at hand, aud so loveuble I Certainly it was a most perplexing scruple. ' - Id the midst of his' uneasiuess, his partner cam into the surgery pue morning, and found him sitting by the lire, lost iu a brc wu study, which apparently was not of tbo -most pleasant kind. ' The worthy doctor's eyes twinkled, and slapping his junior ou the shoulder, ho exclaimed, Sjotne, my boy, Out with it 1 there's no use sitting here and sighiug. If yoa. like Bella, and Bella likes yoU,.why sbbuldu't yoa trfke her at -ouco,J Her fortune' and yours-wilMmy me eat, for I want to retire ; aod there yoa are, with your wifn, your hoose, aud your profession all ready to your band. v 1 .1 1 For a moment the young man could scarcely believe his ears j but the first glauce at the doctor's face reassured him. Bella was his if he could will her j and would that take very long t Had she not shown in a thousand ju-noceut ways, that, she preferred biiu to. all others f What could separate 'iherh now f Ouly thut noueensicul bit of white kid, and that .foolish vow- h had breathed -over it? Pshaw I -what folly I '., r.dT : .n.'ri.;':i I As bo hositotod for one instant -over .the memory, Bella herself, ready dressed for a Walk,' came funding into the Surgery." ' ' ' ' Oh; udcIb Pshe exclaimed, 'did I leavB'ttiy glove here. yesterday '-:'. '. t ,-: ! . ,N"n -n : 'The sixth pair within two week,i Bella f said he, 'aud yoa promised me' ,, j ,'Yes,'I know,' said Bella, 'and I anl'do tdr-ry ! but reilly they1 hare legs of 'fhtfr own,' I think. I never saw. anything like it-' iif.- '.' i 'Nrl,'said her uucle. 'Which ono is jt now ?' . . . 1 ! .'Ob. the right, uools.i. I can keep: the. left well euough,; I have never; lost a left hand glove siuco Adda Grant was married ut Ken-singto'n ; and theu i ' ' '"v,;" " "Hurrah ! say that again f shouted Doctor Mills, starting suddenly out of his chair. , .'Say whitt V asked Bella, looking at him as il she thought he had gone mad. ' ' '' ' ' 'You lust a glove a left hand glove at Kensington Old Church f r- iiYel.BToplied. , - i -n.: . :;'l -.'!' ' - .'At a wedding !'. said he. ; . . . t , . , i .Yep,' replied Mia. .' V i 'i -lite'fid glove V ho continued! " - R'Yes. of courso,' said Bella. 'People don't wear black ones at a wedding, do they V ' 'Size, six and three-quarters, In tha year 1850, in the month or October, and ttio bride groom had his aria in a sling, he weut oa lu coherently. ' " . ' , ' ''"' ' ' ,' ' 'Good gracious l yes',' replied, Bella. ', ' 'Is Tour Dame. Angella t' he asked, i ' 'My second name is,' she repliod.' ' 'But how did yoa know that f I am so ashomed of the uamo that I never write it now, thongh I thought it was vory fine when I was sixteen r 'Oh. most delightfully careles of' Bellas, J . . :r.. I : ,u..l.l.l I' !, you must,, ue uiy suu 1 iiwuum 1 claimed j and unlocking his desk he displayed to her astonished eyes a small while- kid glove, an old friend of hers I ' ' :; Never mind what they said afterwards. Iu threo mouths more tho bells of Kensington Old Chnrch ranjr for another wedding as hap py as the first. And when the bride came down tho path, ehe wore only one glovo-lAe glove; out oonoaiu 11 suone a rnaiu gum , .. . . . - , . I .j! I .1 rlug, una the heart or urauiioy aims was ready to break with joy. - ' ' ' . I - I iiil ' - California Vegetation and Extrav-. , ; agauce. , , , , 1 All tho veg'dutiou of , California is mon-strons in growtli. Strawberries as big as a hen's egg, home of which sold at a Sanitary Fair for a dollar apiece. Indeed, eggs have Bomstimes sold in market at seven to tea dollars per doien. We havo n conception of the extravagance of the people, ' They never think of the price of any tbiug so long is they have the money. .1 boy live oa their capital instead -of income, and begin anew .every year,. 4- lazy atage 'driver will toss the stable boy who waters his horse a silver nan aouar as if it were but two cents. Judging from their gonorosity, we think this people must be iimueusely rich, but they aro poor keep themselves so by their extri,vaganco ; no population iu tlie world, living at the same rato, has so little Wealth. But tho great crops green vegetables are to be had through the whole year, aud in sizo they beat nature. ' A respec tub) Presbyterian clergyman told me ha planted a . peach pip, . and 'in fourteen mouths it had grown to a tree ted feet bigb, and bo ate peaches grown upon it Now, yoa don't believe this ; but it is true. One man' cut a stick which he carried as a cane for a week or two, aud then sticking it into the crnund as a snnnhrt for a week sanlinir.it sprouted, aud in two years he gathered a peck of penrs from that very cane I We have no conception of the activity of that soil. Prodigious props of wheat and oats ate raised ; and as to poaches, plums and poara, why I should rain my character for veracity should I givo you the facts about them. Poara weigh fivo aud b'ix pounds ; grapes- weigh fqur and a half pounds to. the bunou. 1 It is the greatest grape-growing country in the world j they are produced in the greatest 'uro'uajou grapes for bretfkfust, grapes for dinner and yet they are nottheap, because labor enters into their cultivation, aud labor is high,.' So nothing is cheap, though it is picked up, in .the .streets, because .the man who picks it up, will charge yoa a quarter for stooping dowa and picking it up. All yegetablos, potatoos, turnips, eta, are sold by the pound, and yoa, cau imagine what the billb must bo. Addrtn by Rev.' Dr. Beilowt. Tli or five hooks verv odd names now-a- days. A dry fellow stepped into a bookstore the other day, and asked tho clerk "Have yoa got the 'Woman in Whiter "Yes," replied Iho clerk. "Alt Alono'?" said tho enquirer. "Yes ." responded the clork. "In the Dark'f" still queried the strang er. ..: "Yes sir," acuin promptly replied the at tendant, 'Well, all I have cot to sav ii." retorted the questioner, as he turned to the door "you ve got a mighty Dice thing 01 it . A Little Mixed. The celebrated speech of Sir Hoy.lo Roche; "Mr. Speaker, I smell a rat; I sea him floating in the air: but mark me, I shall yet nip him in the bad," was evidently the model upon whioh a writer ia Kansas framed, the other day, some remarks upon the recent election. The Leavenworth Con servative says that by the result of the elect ion, "the fall of corruption baa been dispelled, and the wl eels of the stuto government will no longer be trammeled by sharks , that have beset the public prosperity like locust" A Siubf Repabtek. Mr. Wendell Philips was ridinir in a railroad car, when he was ad dressed by a man of such rotundity that he seemed to carry every thing before him. The man asked Mr. fhilips what was the oDiect of his life. "To beneGt the negro," was the bland reply. ' "Well, then, why don't yon go down sooth to do it!" "That is worth think ing of.. I see a white cravat arond your neck; nrav. what is the object of your life?" "To save souls from hell." May I ask you whether you' propose to go tuere to do ltl . . . Sorlr nneiptv. ..Keen vour friendships in repair. ., Answer your letters. Meet good w ill half way. AH good men excite each other's activity. Better things are -said, more incisive, more wit and insight are dropped in talk aod forgotten by tha speaker, thuu get into T tlUJlS. 11 Q UBIO UU II-CI F ' "H v ... selves of the powers of oar companions.;'' "The. world -repeats itself," is no old saying. When ono visits .the modern shoddyites and pbtrolehmocraey,' one is reminded of the remark made by Plato, who was so strock with the luxury of the citizens of Agrigeotuai, both id the styles of their houses and their tables, remarked : "They build as if they were nev er to'die, and eat as if they had not an hour tO nVe.!,'":'1 " ,; X" '-:' I"" le i'iT..i. ! 11 mimi':.--' 1 , 'I 111 '. !! ! ' I 1 V-'i", ! 1 1 A man who-has made a .fortvno by Indus try pud close economy! in a retail business, at lenirth'rvtirod frorh trade!, add vised to loan his money on interest. ' One day, io midsummer, a tread happenea 10 aity to pun? -jciow pleasant it is to have soch long, bright days 1" )Wby y-e-s," replied.be, "but. these long days the Interest comes in to alow 1" ''-"' ' 1 - ' ' 1 ; 1 '"'.T". . A jolly - old darkey down Soutli .bought hlm8eH a Bew bat, and whea it commeuced f aining he put it Bmlef his coat'- Wheh ask ed Wby he did not pat bis' hat 00 hi kead, he replied! o.'iDw tats miue; boagbt it wul my own mosey; lioad heloug'to masaa, let him take keor of bis owu property." : ' ' 1 ,. ' "'" &"' " " '" "M t. S mith ," Said the cou&eokj "you kny y oil oncecrflciaod.in t,pi.li)it-MlOiyv: W" that vnn .nmikrilipd?" , .... . ! "No, fir; I hold the caidle for the man who did." ' - ' -: - ' "Ah, the court anflerstood yoa diflbrentlyi' They apposed thst tlie discoui-s came from ,0No!'e!r; I only tli'rowed Sight on it -' ' i : ' .X . . , . , i ,iv- ! Th. (ide to the celebarted CongTfss Spiing at Saratoga has beeu finuly adjusted tbe representatives or th iak am! While estate having accepted an offer $300,000 for their en' tii iuttrWBt ili the Sjirirgs. - .;i : t- I; .;.,-..! : k ., ;Li .:,v . ' l i ? ' Mr. Nasby "Makes a Pelexasliuu , . ; uv Uliseir ina Visits ike, I'm IfllMlt. BaiNTVllssT, (whieh i ( liT Noo Gersey, Mr ieh is in the ptait , May 15.1HCJ.- i North, and the lioft .' A It Mm ntjiits uv the Nor ay them rcceutly subjoogatid all tho Socio1iVi Aesociashuns nod lurches yn ulvru. y uv, hey seut delegashtms'for the pnrj'11' urJ, vnlunloerin S advise Jocson the nod I'rfjy-" dont 1 Foeliil tliat Noo .tiorsy," sbouldeu't I. behind iu the advise bizbiss. I electad' myself a delegnshun horrered a clene shirt, and traveled 2 Washington. ' I waz annouhst as )" dolegashuu from Noo Gersey, aud wua tow-uiist UBhorod iti2,.the presenta. '' . ,T "Whor is tho duleKashuuf ejakoolato'd th President, "hurry em up, for I'yo ;thirteen mora to tcsceve this afternoon." . v-r "Androo Jonsou," said I impressivly I rep-reeeut Noo Gersy, a stait that hez jest duo, brnorlo the decoest President..' -. .'.i.'.l'.l "Troo." returned he. "sich stajtt honor pat riots after they're, dead" , . . "I rcsont tha insinooashan with skorn.' Et h pruf that tho murder uv tho Presydent rung the nonier hart uv Noo 0rsy, let me say . sir ;; L tjiat the Oamdoa and Amboy Drokttutj, at meetin called fur the purpus, aDsoiopiiy voim 2 karrv the the corps uv the deceest Presy dent over the road fer harf furei ahtmomeiVer'- J be4 nkordid to any livin or ded iiidividjoonl. Bat lot that para Noo Gorsy needs no speshl , plecdor. Thor she stands. ' Look at her f " you bey a mycroscopa. V . ' -: '; 'i ' 1, KUm AOdrOO;Ca a origiuai uiuiunrmy who, whatover sins he may hey committed," never skratcht bis tikkit or diluted his whisky. In behaif nv that Dimokrisy I ipoatL'.i fO;I "Ez hea beeu meu8bnnd.2 yoo. wnnst or twist a immense rospopghility resta on yqTT shoulder. ,' .The Sulhern stuitl strnggled s fur j their rites, but wore squelcht. They foughH-like heroes, but fell, becbz nv . over powriii , numbers agin em. ..They're down yoot, iron, J heel is ou2 their necks. What will you doT Will you grind em, er'wiiryou ;be; umgnaui-ii ) mous?..;;; ;. I ' ,'- ' ) " ". I . "Wunst we wax a happy nashna aua w kia be so agm it rests with yoo. ; Yoo must t. conailiate Dimocracy. Our party North, it magnauvmus. We stand reddy to forgive " yoo for uavin draftings, fr bavin taxt nt' toi support a -' unconstohsheuiil . war, provtdiu," 3 ' you'll stop now. ; Woo our Southern brathrin... f I back with jentil works. They air . a, high ,' ? spirited and sensitive race, that kin never be enbjoogated. Take em agia 2 yer basiam, : w and don't heomiliiite: em by. condishuua.'i!l Give em a chanze 2 fergiv us fer, yhalin u?.;( ) em. .Restore theij niggers, aaj. their war, debt,Jinvito Magoffiu aud Vance and Brown and the restuv tiro Guvners hack' 1 their; va-i rioas capitols-Jgive Lea aud Foriat and Bot .'t egord their posishuna in the regular aripy,; u t and penshuu the disabled coufedrit horoea. ' "Ther musut be no hnngin. ; Toq've gp-f '"; ' . dnfortnitstttitsman- D'avia he fclkin2 jroor'"1'' hands becoz be wuz ignoreut uy tho stylaV .i,t ; yoor (lait LinMu's) miuyuns, , -He mite ,,hev knodo that the sojors nevor soed a woman' ta-kiu to the woods without chasia her. ,: But Bo- maat'uot be hong.-" Dwaocris luOks 'upou'"Jj " the matier thus. i;, '- '" ? ' . "' u-t , '-Yoo cau't hnng a man for conspiria agio the Guvment ouless he taiks op armt: T "Ef a fow tako up arms, it's only a riot, and 'i no hangin matter, cept when Ablishoists like, j Joha Brown do it Io siuhi cases hangia it 4 alluz in order. -, ,,'; ,1 r.. 1 ('If a number of staitsdo it, it's a revoloo-- shen, aud them ez yoo capcher must .be treet ez bollyjeggoreuts, pnd prizners uv war. , Tp hang prizners nv war,' Audroo, i? murder. . d ' 1 "This wood probably sutisfy the South. At'"' the North, less is reqwired. The' Dimocracy is easlv cousiliated. Give oar Ioeders enuT uv the officii 2 rapport em', with " tho jriy-"! lego nv managiug thiugs 2 soot as,' ana the' ' ' trubble Is ore. On thetn toruis we'll support : voor Administrashen. or cny other man's, cor-' :; ' jelly and hartily, and pceso will agin wave her white pluyuns over ine lunu ami win cunun--yoo 2 wave thorn ontil tho Suthern hart is '' "I hev dun Noo Gerey hez spoke. ' " . ' . ., 1 rather spect my words bare froot ' Look ' out fur a change uv policy. " .-;';'" ' " Petroleum V.Nasbt. ' ' : Lait pistor uv the Ch 1 rch ay the Noo, Dievyd ' peusashon. '' " ' "' " '; ";'JI'':''' The Programe of the Dcniocracjv We loarn from the Cleveland Herald that " the leaders of the Democratic party in Ohio,'';1 have, within 0 fjw days, had a lengthened ? night sessiou perhaps reaching into the mom-; ing at CincinuutL It is said that INmdleton 1 V n.-iiJ - . - S fl'k. .1 BOu V auuuaiguain wcia pnrauu.. iuo iic, gentle was the coutroling spirit, and he evidoDt- ai ly camo to the consultation with the 'pro. gramme well digested, wnicn ne presonwu,ia r a speech to tho oonclave. ' The spirit and warden of his address was to J this effect There are eleven States, which, J with slavery, are firmly planted on the doc . trine ofState Riirhts. That issao hoanot been settled by this war, it is yet to be fought for ;-. and on that line, aud the Democracy mast 3 rally and must fight. -Vallandigham counsel-; ed extreme Uuderaess on the part of the Deni-fJ 0,-racy towards Mr.-' Johnson,, and cited his r ' proclamation te-orgaoiring North Carolina, .1 under aTmiliUry Oovernor, leaving the ques-n;; tion of nogroe suffrage to the voters of ; that a State, at a step in the right direction upon the doctrine which is proposed td be the basis of , , tlie party. Vullandigham said (hat lenocruts,:4 mutt give all possible oodutouauce ami sympa." thy to Mr.' Johnson, for il was probable, so doing, tiiit Presideut wouldi prove' at radical.-) npoti StaW iighti as they eould wish. ,(i , Vallandigham, also adviavd that the .war apoo StantoU .be as;. bittejr and iiers'iMtautaa.,,, possible, to 'the Widening xt the. breach he-;i tweeniGeii. Sherman atd the Secretary of War,; ;, far, aa appearancoa now iudioated, Geni-Slier-piurt, would be the available Democratic cwy) b rJidute io tha next Psideutiul auvaa. , '.,,,1.,. 1 j Th caucus accepted tbo; views of YullnnJ-.', ighamil aud qndorsed his sufiUmeuta heartily. ,t Sp.ituiBy ba.-ceotiderc-d setttad at tu whutis to Wthe future- pulicj ot the ,01)io. P'uuona-,,, CJ.:; p.. iu V " I ! I ",:H! 11-"H ! 'li : ' - . .-: l ; , iiii Ii;-.-.'j , '' ' 'J ' nlita ve "Tnil.' ' " . .1 '- .-ii.....;. ,.t tr,i vi. M' I I IU lUn mill VT 01 lllu BUI, UI Alumni vi-' -. - vt, David Tod, for damages' tauned by tvason V Of hia sorrows id Fort Lafayette; and lieprivv'1' tion' of Bible and waste pajwri the fjoprenu. (todrt of Ohio.decii?, tfu .Taesduy. that tie la of Cogrtiss providing fof f ! removal of rf rif.'snch cuee.s to. the Dtrict. Court (if the 1 United StaifS, 18 conjoiotiouai nun in 1 ' ll'liis relieves Jurli;eVfomVerth(rmtnt'u dhty'w I of further, acting in the caaoj end-.tuthov'.-'-a 1 the; martyr to pursue Ins -meuy .petore j u-i- , e gwa);uo;snil Leavitt, ' i i A loHuirtiiMa shuemakef tited to girt In -j Wlte Sawn nvggi( nnHiiii, j'i.-,k fore he went, to poll l'":'sion,, On beintr afi d tho reatoo or this proi.e dii'ir,. liTi' ih.-i ii..,t having a poor Bieiiirry, i took this' firlir-' pf nifrpsliinj "it as liawii'-t whi'e. v , V 9 bajtigntiou, was, sure to ruit'iij hiin uf-,'1 ( : sil,.,. , . , - I A Yankee doctor bus auiiSi i"i tuxtti.'.-t from aunsoifesapoweif-il t,n'c '..'. ! . , coutaiiia tliii in'ii t' i -.-''-i 1 : - ;-Vt. calls ii"..'i'l !. .i- lit-.' -! 1 1 |