University of South Carolina Libraries
kww -1 FOR THE DISSEMINATION OF USEFUL INTEIEN.[NARBLPP WE M' iii WEDNESDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 27, 1867. __ STESDAY ORNI I6a4sblyn advabte. Fanral InitetiQn, Obit sr ae ,. ""d a # . vnAV ;L ' riH pay e F Grai re r e &-wsmEMARTH! . 7- MoM n n aumageur actiee ofw e se-4- e ten i N 14 a9ty adopted rg, ~b1~ amUnot apt ourI ~e~Isth e tuelf .*~iM4ho" W.4pay Om sie omplle toadot ted t aled nt.he partisoe of mur ~ areun iaborcrefo oru ih.i6s crnfo orts, &c. '**od to this sfit en." - F ., 'w.:'PT Sbi M. D,f un Nov.cs 13frmrl. for the imple ed sohe odeu ~I-w re unble tO,erQe feoted to confrouseol Macers "A *M t thp des -sufcent on :.eW SP tli~A, MusiD, ) use0ml nd rolel aPoes, Sueccessio farht G,swith otersnal and Lter ero d ine ent, etpse MuhodelMnthly.iI Singl coaies, Munsc bmeeknar, as speies,1 cetsethe stt.- 9550 othEravcoiegs, fia)ueu a12, iand sp*ldi pem br n' at ach with therseIan enirs :WaModl onl.ine c~ie for 20 W.le fe JENNOlG DEMOREST,alubl 7e coies, $d1l ad splndi Amec seIrdb a 3ec ith the peim o each, Novm~~.1 etf. Airs The Fortieth Congress. As an adjourned session of this body commences to-day, a few fact ' concerning it and its special sitgapi %3diapai-yffrposes; may not be uninteresting to our readers. - The first session of this body was,by.speeial Act, held on the f9n$K or March last, for- if this bd not been done, there could have been no session.until ,th.e 4th of December. next, --he: day ap. pointed for the-regular session- of Cougres. The=March session ad joare oyer untiLJuly, whei Con -gress re-assembled,.,it- aas . under stood, for theexpress purpose of T. hi n.tb President. This movement farlelf,wheo, after many disagreements- between the .two houses, tha o adjourn un tile, 91:p4. er.her wher @eys.re t & aa-ao4he nvoed purriosw to reive-and onsider the:ioW tof the" Jadiciar; -rom: nte,. the suh,eet of impeach .~.his session- can only ,last.-nine cays, w esnp.c i)o legisla k leS ld -the nnajnrity f'Ce d ciarvtmmittee ref aed to present artic:ofnpeachment, it is thoagthe faiher=of the pro posed onslaught on ..xecutive, Mr. Ashley, Mr. i:utwelt. and others, will'tt tit tbfo? ft up on the House, in n i the Committee. Te, 1iteo' such a propositicA (icis$arily consume the "whoe time of thip short sssion; an'd nothincr what -ever would be rc;igliaed by this ninE dfa' sitting,: at a large expense to . .eo n.try.. It is stat ~ in somneUuarters, that if the 41: ra U&'=iie aent ,l$'f-,,s iyoie#.i0n ",Qr p Prthh sidn a l b rY."Pro posed as a substitntefor that : a69;. but even if this d ac gec aud., go.upoa tIke reordi 's66Wot Houses, it. could e "exp.ned f ron tho jur,als la any sabsege. sgsion o Con e~ ss e Pr sident"s"the. . ationab InteLjiecer . ha a'utth*tiel? ' Ie qv,tt.pmunicatie his ann'a 1nessg A;t. ad erned session. - e sent no me WAS -n, Ig objects, nor unde any law < lik t ss and maneuvering, and discissing AA rt'syAlting in the coneoc some new. par:ty sdhemes. Ssta.n[ding' 'o'rniittees of the' Edoise were- not fiUled t th~e, pre c3ding sessioi,~and, of coifrse, un~ Speaker wreir,oed to fil1 the committeps, the work, woyld con susi6earLy -We ilT6ttet duration' of the,segion..... -iyditieo. these obstractions to impeachmentana. general leg. --%4sdit ii*ell iindnistood that Mr. Wikaa, &f Iowa. the Chair; man of the Judiciary . Committee, persists in the souid legal opinioni that the: United 'States Courta Iijye no criwinal contmon jurisdict ~t'on; and thiUnited States Senate, as- a court' o inipeachment,~ has none. In addition to this opinion of,the Qhairmian of t'he Committee, tiee is the~fct that there is no ajated. Jaw giving the, Senate a court jurisdiction over alleged high crimnes .and misdemeanors. jongss eannot now -pass an ex pcto law which would apply to their present .purposes against the President. -It is, otherefore, very likely thaA t majority of theindiciary Cominittee will be oppose4 to presenting articles of impeachmpent. - .. -Snih're iome of tile facts eon pecte~with-th6. 1i.story of -this boly Under exsstng. cironnm -tanes, with the general condem nation they have- received at the ijands of ,their- eohstituents, and gith their party distracted and di yided,-. what -their future action wll.e,time alone can_develop. ti-. charles R -Deeker, ne of the smallest-men in' the- wvorld, is now in .Nasliille. His-height is only thirftyorie inehes, -his weight forty-five ponds, and he- is nine teen years of age. He -is~a sm ~'art as 'he is, little and good-looki,ng, and4-i a-gnrilemen- of most pleas inig address and courtly manners. Rents r ?~g i Macon. Stores whikii last. year brdught two or thre4'ibipsad ddllars, are now offered ats one -hiousand, with no takers. Property holders have killed the goose that laid the gol rlen gg. The Lutheran Synod. This ecclesiastical body has ad journed. - We make the following extracts form the last day's pro- I c ceedings: f Rev. Prof. Smeltzer, Chairman d of the com-mittee7appointed at the t last sesion' of the Synod to - make .a proposals to the Gonertl Synodtin s reference to the location of . a fi Theological Seminary, reported 1; that in accordanee with in'struc- c tions,'the following plan had been o presented to the General Synod at b Sta'unton, Virgini&:" i1.L a- h Synod shall he repre- b sented .in a Board.,of Diectors 1 2.:e BeneialSynod shall: take ' under its- asperviaion, as it. own v -beological Seminary, the Semina- :,v ry of the Synod of-South CaroIlna, a kPown formerly at,the Lexiagton t S'ominary, but- more recently as tlie Theological Seminary of Neir- v beiy-Soltli Carohina, - t 3. The Synod of South Cai-olina c shall.release all elaims to the afore- ii siidSeininary and bestow it- gra- t feitously on the' General Synod ,i; 4. The Genera Syiod shall have b pdwer totege-the location= and .a alter the name, jpioide4 _the in- L dividuality of the' TJiological b Seminary of Sooth Carohna be n ''rpetuat6d, and the Alumni not a -pi-ivedforthei- Almnit llfater. o 5. The Synod of Sotli Cai-olina s will assire the GeneralSyied that c she tP supqrt Professor in the istit t son.ar .btni f o her own funds. - -This plan vras presented to the t Geuei-al $gno4 and aciepted by -a that body. It no,w remains for- 1I tho pyod h9re to. sanction the aeton. of the eonimit.t The fbllowing r.eso%utloj -:ire. e hNn a lh tedn o ec : :iat h~ Synod .of a South Caroli ia sanetions. and coi- c firms the above mentioned ~plan s presited by the: Corniitfec .to b tie Geneil'Synod, at its last c Conv,ention in Staunton, Virginia.y 6 .Resolzed That in vie of loca- 1s tin*ith T"iolociial Sminjiry. within the bounds of the Synod, $ apd a$ bid for the location of the 'a Sen inary, the fiynQd' of $outh.1 Orolini-6rfdlitKorf1 oig.f New berry College; uTil exlressl. p An clte*ic fo'rnem-bers of the a K 3,rd of: i-eeto .-of .Nieberry a ldiee a -held, wth '-d"e a !lownh teasts: , ' FOr a'(lilf MeiFbeis-= Rec,:.D i- h Vi(ieiidayh onorary President r ii Bo.wman.ans1 4 fe. v LTjMembers-Capt.CLS)ke - a Capt. W. K. Backman, Maij. G. C Jtpb.eart; 5.K N offman,' .Eor r 1. Summer, CS87irr, Capt. J. e iKF , Major P E. Wise, W. t .1enford; -. JL Hirterand~ Dr. i 4 flloingresolution, pro pose byiRev. T. S. Boinest, was adopted: - .Whreas,the$Ahqldzaship system t under whiek' New berry College li wainaugdrated, id ufrto.this t time. has been carried on, has s proved a failut-e, and rendered it r imepossible for the Board :to .nieet la the -salaries of the -Professors ; e th~erdfore, be it . a Resolved, T hat is tbesne4 this Synod that-thieBoard of Diree- a tors~of Newberry "Cfl e~ should 3 make an appeal to the holders of t fullorlarsips, whether paid for in t fulo npart, to relinquish said d Sholarships voluntarily to the a Board. d The Eufaula (Ala) News has a E good stoi'y 'of a Radical .office y seeker, at. a negro meeting some- -' where near that place. IRad was trying to get Cuff to understand r that the history of the world de- a monstrated that the negro race a was not cspable of making legis- i lators or*rulers, but might do very e well to assist others to office by t their votes. He told them that It there was not an ~in.stinco-in -hi's- 2 tory where an African had- ever- d become a ruler amnong the -whites. r After -his speech was closed, an rj old leader (not opposed to taking d office himself,) replied that he was s all wrong-that ne~groes h.ad been c rulers, and'the Bible, the* greatest -of authors, said so. When asked where it'said-so, his reply was: t "Don't it say that the old nigger- t Demus;-wvho ~eame to Jesus by f night,. was a ruler of the Jews ?" l This wths unanswerable, #nd the c ent of the carpet-bag sect subsi- t ded~ The Black Crook is to run in New York until the close of the vear ihn it will be replaced by ( anl"ie unto it. but more so." s Romance of the Ballet, A, MUCULY MARRIED WOMAN. Last winter a wealthy Cuban anceived an extravagant, passion >r quite a pretty young woman ancing at a leading Broadway [ [eatre ; wrote to her and solicited n- interview. He poured his pas on out in burning words, and of ,red to pour out his gold as free r; but she informed: him, as the elebrated English actress. did her puleut admirer, that the way to er arms lay through the chucb. le:sought to shake her resolution, ut in vain despair -of ,possessing er :otherwise, he inade Er his -ife. He fired of her in a fev reeks, and as his relations were iolently sopposed to such an alli: ace he soon -deserted b-er, 'and re .ned 'to.$avana. ' Tioa proud to follow. him, hlae rent back tothesfage, indduring he month of May a cler"k. in -a inmercial house down town fell i lovc with her-arid went through iie same experienee as the Span ir.~~HEyrnen= 'liefore' V'irus for er, and so the young feltow,'with degree of dishonor characteris e oi'an-older head and a cooler eart, entrapped -: her-into a false rarriage. H:s employer aceident fly discovered the deception ;,he me'interested in his pretty dan muse, and apprised her of' the rerk's villainy, assaring her he, otild:be compelled to'tved her, if fie desired, if by process 'of la. -smeralda deelitied to -have any bingm ore to do with the rogue, ad- released him uiiconditionally. he merchant- wras so'niuch struck.: ith the woman's spirit and beau r that, although she. had twice )seuted.to marry i..eol d..blood, e, proposed. matrimuuy .oober, d for the third time phe. accept 1. Certain legal steps arer eces try befoge thc. last niptials can e consummated; but tlc'comm.er iat lover is desperately enaniored f her, and' has alirad'iiaecdhe a handsome inan.^n' Andthde era deed of the- property, with 10,000 for pin money. 'His friends reindign;ant, and aver:that-he is fatuatod. But he swears be loves r,'and wil :ma.ry ir.aooias raetieaple: .She says she it eqp L atatta 4. ipt,fzr d d ,es to.and.~ ympthb w pr,. nd is now leadii a e:'y q 4Tg,net. nd exemplaryTife. -her fiane is -nearly forty, and te-lorng been. sdnght as- husband i-modish-circe e to- no 'pwrpose: [isiver .-seems to.hv,e a et o gadth.r is lit,ti49g14,t lle. rill wed Esmeralda 'this wit.t nd snap his fngers at..com'ment.i nd criticism. She will join Grace ~hurh; be pasMdg'pn by B'rowe ; ide to morning service with gold j asped~ hymn book, and lek ten imes more as'if she. wat born to all than many of her. sex wlio. rate of blood-.and, breeding. Baron.si YouNo .ON . ARRIAGE. -A few auindays ago, Young trea ed his audiece to a vy quaint id of.a speech. Hie wants all be.young women married off in tanter, and wants all the young 1n in Zion to marry t.hem:; and e open ly threatened, if the young ien failed to do the job, that be nd the' bishops and the elders' oujd. take' the matter in hand, d marry them all, themselves.. arr-ying for love had played out;. hat old fashioned way of getting arried-.was exploded. It wouldn't o here ; beeause, if a young man lowed himself to love a young irl2 ad then married her, the ieens unsually was to pay when e wanted to take a-second wife. he had his heart, and it w~as im.: ossible to, divide the. affection. zith two or more wives. But he insisted that the. yoting: en, as a duty, a religious duty, bould go for the young women. d marry them 'all off. They ere instructed to marry them by oules, and pairs, and triplets ; o quadrdipld; quintuple, and sex uple, if the'y could support' them. he only cornsideration for a pru et inan .was to inquire -h.ow -any wives he conld support. 'he young womnen, also, were or ered to marry whenever a young aint went for them ,.and to 'be ome mothers in Israel. SMALL FAuif.-In England here are many farmers wh~o nrore han support themselved an.d large miies on the product of six acres esides payinig heavy rents. Agri ulturists in G'ermiany, who are e proprietors of five acres, supl iort themselves on two, and lay up money on the product of the emainder. wt h The ladies have dispensed wt h "Suivez-moi je~une houmwe.") long treaing ribbog. The Boys in- Blue and the Boys In Grey. The folfowing comes.to. the Rich mond Whig. from ' Boy who fought in grey" and stood up to his work manfully in thirty-two hard-fought battles LoU;SA OUNTY, OCtober 2. * * * * I see you praise the Boys iri Blue for keeping thiigs quiet-' in Richmond. - The boys who fought them dressed.in Grey will:join you. in ,the-coi pli me nt. We .know. what they are, we fought them to. the knife, and they p rlvode themselves foemen worthyof oursteel. Thoy\vihipped 1 us, not because they, were bi-aver nen, (yet. 'would not say they 1 were less so,) but beed'use of their nuibers :and' perseinee. 'But they did not fight to establish a : negro governmen t; oh I no. Could 1 the Boys in .Blue stand on the I Southern soil side by.side ivith mo and my faithfnl comirades to-day; they wotild east theii votes .in fa vor of the government fr which they fou,1t, .and for whidh theii e'mrades died-a White ian's gov= ernerit.* .nion of white meut. I took them prisonei s; they'treated the kindhy: Politicians on bath sides made tl -wAr. Thesoldiers under their respective. Genecals,.. brave andtrue on both side., fhught:it to foughtit to the bitter eud. We sur' rendered anal laid-down. dur arm, the boys in blue were vigtorious. I have no special.objections, save tha of pridey for the .Bys in Bluetohave things their own. way. But .I- do ha ,a. stoious .b jeion 1o tLheJoys with :the ne_ageghl uniform- = mean the Boys. in Black-ru1ing, oyet the. e ysi fi4 or lu; an I would su. tQ yo l3hig.ffiTarfy and South tin ean'i hlfe .nen ftiiolli ' see tons ? ho are makkig ip '.no$her fiht the Bys hi 'Bincand .rtbeforrtlfey 't 'dbfic vitb tfishiatter, that t'he-Boys u 6: and fiey; eonibined::aae a;ce frmidabIkrpover, and if we, ha-v - to teach tent a lessur ,t wiM; be. onoD Cy Wou't oon forget. MX4r* .4 o w O o TA ,EY. pained to learned tfat frcis rar :. ... Raliings. an .iritcrestifnr anl .f :1r este Vf Ue4'. ei tzeni, Evaq Raiirs; q:.wsa aecden tall- dr:istred on -Menday of :adt w'eek, while attemptinrg- ta- cross: H urg5gi hbk ek, at iffe foijE hdrseback. floi. stcr 4as anth.or horse in advec of her unf.r5ssed the creel in safetf. Miss jMary 'fell "fromn her ~ horse avhoix 'bout thie m'taufe of %4e~ it s supposed, frenesudtlen - iddi. nes. The*ater ' was not -deep; butrunning very' swvift, and. she waahed a$e waeet- below - the frd, over some rocks. where- th stream- was much deeper. She was - drowned . before ,.assistaneo could be.proonrcd. Her body,1was found the- sis mor.niig, a few4 hndred yards~ belowv.the ford. In~ this heartreQading- agliction,. the. familyof t)e deceased Jaive .the varm sympathies of th cornmuum-. ty.-I4ancaster' .edpr~. . OmNFA!rr KILLs A 'rna A Mrs: JeisiaMRien,-of Hamp~den Md., left bei~ iwfAnt daughter, ten weeks old, skeepirug in: bed, and a little boy, three yearsi old in the room. Hie was ealutiqueOd net to: wake her -up, *2he m other was gone but a little,while, when she heard the screams .of the child, and, hastening to .th. roomn, she found the little boy in the act of gtting off tbh'9ido,bile 'the" ba by had its ehest crushed in,it colla-bone broken, and otherwise so severely injured that death en sued in twenty.,fonr houirs. It is supposed that that t-he boy, hav ing by some means awoke the child, and got her to - rying, at tempted to stop her cries, with the result stated above. Chicago lawyers talk of making a discorint on divorce fees when a large num ber.of bills are wanted in one family. A bar of gold, taken from Colo rado Gulch weighed two hundred and twenty-six ounces, valued at $5600. Mrs. Ella Merrick -Tho.mas, of Amherst, Mass., is' the youngest mother in Anierica, being only thirteen years of age. -"Put out.your tongue a-little further," saiI a physician to a femnale patient ; "'a little further, madam, if you please-a little further still." "Why, doctor, do you think there's no end to a woman's to,-,e " credth fa jr.ieaid. A Hard Shell Sermon. "And When They. Ripz Early i? the. Morning, behold They .as al Dead Corpus&". My friends and hearers, I wil preach' onto you this-day--wn and weather permittin-from 'thi thirty-sevingth.Shapter uv Isaisy thirty-sixtlh"verse, "And the de stroying'angel smote in the eain cf the -Syrecians a hundred anc fourseore and five thoni'id mei ah.. "And when they ri up in th norning,. behlatd they were all! d'edG :orpuse:!." An tkusit -is, my un eonverted friendt and bearerst tha1 the destroying angel stalks arounc with his -meat axe, ready to send ns to the boneyard before we kit ,it down to breakfast=ab. An it it aid, ny frens, that rosc are rec xd violets are blie-ah,,bat it's nc ise of tryin to. honey-fuggle round the angel (abriel n,hen -e tbotf his horin for yoty to tack yo taih xrid gt nuder dirt-ah. "AAnd when'they riz up erig ir the rningo behold tiey wiis : lead.cQrpuses.' My wretched brethring and sis tring,"es'" waS riding -along' thl troad one day I seen a iarn Wsettlir a the top iv- his feinee, -vith igubIe-barre' shot gun on Iis l.ag 'tb, anid a.,s etti4 a.:as%'ettin1,ii fanunii uliv.i ef with a nob Bt-rgw hat; - and a cassin oft thi forthe u July an North- Anbrica ai' tie 'Cntitti ion, .r. the Sr promo Court,' anthe birdu lii rty and the Prosident f tle .tii e sto'ah, 4 when. I .heIr .'tm inaseassin an-seen that big -ho gan, thinks. I to =.mnyself, ".in thl Woi''Fs of the-tex-ah. ' Adi icn .they 'rit ey ii the morning, b<bfl6y beyNyaI -Ani tale'oki Roanv1tw&wo; an sez F ;n :'titfgfdly .1 ' -ff,yoi ear' nCffih to ir waf, } , il foi,"e .r and otarial]f. rirnti., fyi imnuttalisou,1 ah, ad neve get, nibb whn..ywn .up fiabiWah avdise he; "You go-t helJ yot -4eld 9 ' -rss mistiegoti1 ini?stako?de ti'~" idi :ah i 'ifpu ha4 to 't he' ies; odt'tyra 'covi crap ..itA.fidgiggis, upon- StwAagjtJI cu .ens 39s e iw yo ali--dT cldalleahido, anj gco h ai fory'4 tb a '" MA r 3t r, My etrm fre. -it eut*hi d' t1d ~,f,t bri*' . ,qzy',.,1 wn. nae,'ai c.icn.net odk- trac,trara :a ced:eany&*ling tu this here miserat4b a bat aid.erab. grass,'tya kin take rAi ha1fdaledoh l'~ Ah s I."MfI iil. s,wediNien.~4 afeaeyou will pever~ regisr- y<i nme i' .the book .of etrneklife lassw Mnd~ to registe.4d fted-n' g4:asg niggeis-al -Oh mts'fak2erl~iinan," sdzJ ~ trimble.fur y.Q,iu.t.ure, fur you are on-the road a.leain.- to ierditiob ah? A'n-ses:he- "You are.di' c!e liar, fo i'niouwi6adi e edii to Scrit6n-aIi7" I~!iavVd a~ graau ijy haiqti,A scqz I>1. - - 'And~when theyi.ip e:trIy jr the moruing,.behold the~y wei* a1 dead corptises.' Air sez he6 "Let' '6ntiiz ei/ bi d-d to em all-ab." "Oh ff's4f eing feller e eet,er," ag,, "gf v i wojald Wa afgace y~M mWi)i come to jiniethath&eiy, quire an'be-man~Ipatedfrom tiue shacklei of sin-ati."' Ainhceccked unp Ii miti.t Ire, "I had t weity-si: likey niggers mancipated onm hans wonst,;an efyuope yo jat bout mancipagan to me agmn i makebuzzard vittles out uv y< d--d ole swi'veI'ed up earkass befi h-I could eripple uv. a -gnat-ah. MY'constant fi-eiis and* hearers *venh I scen that wicked man cockin uv his gun-ah, I begun t< feleceedin~gjubous, anAke spwrdi uv the tex smoted upon my ear "And when they riz up~early ii the, morning, behold they was al dead corpuses." But my Christian hearers, I fel ealled .upon to try my han on more time on this objurit mnan-ah and sez I, "My blasphemous fren you are continually an foreve: d-d ah, ef you don'tL immejitj git down ofner that air ferice, an go to some - sequester.ed spot ai pray for your -soul's redemption ah" And -he jumped down ofnel the fence sh-ore enuf, but he didn'1 go to ne sequestered spot ah ; but my unconscious hearers, he stuel that big ole double barrel shot-gui close up to my reverend head-ah and sez he, "i've hearn a sequestel was the next thin g to a confiscator and of that's yo business in thi. here settlement, you had bette1 begin to goow mity d-m smnal nri hatif-n11r 10s ,ab." A n ms bearers,.it lokd- oy s m p$I idrove uv- male-a-trotteddonti'a -' trtlest gun.ah,lI/-I pat spusetobii Ran, and galinped thog nese furdo,. an wetyk or " and-t1hink., I, Iny3 Agrs,.-,4: &hYt air man don't uull, up n git to the end oius ropt-ah, "And whewthriz up early in the morning bo1hod UwpeWr all dead -corpnses." :- id And sure. enosgJ$;my;;, hearers, ,in about- three day, proffauated m n,atn the freedman" birp4 4pa a milngtag commion,a. ir a killiniu a i nreet ' my lisnen frens d fea't' Iseed Irini astandir-_oirt1'6 t einensit uv spactr kM' t the-f die rkt, 'or I eoa sy!f in th languagoor he :inpd - ldhi mst-ah e : . a /t .A' oen ftIdsai ea - c$t1tn'doii't -A bgle bartd blo1iraAriL.; .- - A4 d when theyaiz ng e a t raing bebMyo ,t.p'a h!ke Teache's . W- Riam ZPay,a ef&usyn-, Sa t pany yea 1 i' g wIlyai4exceet cred inusic, e a "s in 6 - o an .h*,9h SIforin~ t~Svgn,"h1l "'bla tW t c t went es isrj ag; a llt tieec?Ada e p Js d. Ie 3 and- he '1si 4i in' Pde .bi tA tz,n~ 4c~ tained, an engagement 9! 9 1 . at fact <of an engagement e g iy'k.ow, aegt be V,r A __ 3P - eeres nrte )etspese1DruBa*h Wnza6~ eoo'n-as4t dos'6a,.cbitgh *ecer nances and sprkling' eyes"a%ki the .wole "'as~Dr. Hall would say. u?T~~ttifnI ypung her blushing cheeks~f4L)dMly eaneer- ,bite tie deber *r zoereediAgly - embkzr,rsed ly turning over the leavagef.4he Q24th pC . bgnas soon ^as suffcent e could be restored, and at. t t Js rhi o'lNhe fofl6wi' ~the she was.i'nh f; s, fi ia yEar,afterivars I h ~ h and wvite e " Thengentle Patience sni 4oe Pt, And PiffTe had Patefee" ti 3 .~W" THE RECORDER oF14ME. ter forty-eight years of coit nous editorial life an.d labg:. upos.4ho >Recorder, the Seni& ditor1wiAhes Sto retire, to fol1otW 'amiwe ~iet - life, and one free4ro# ~rple ing 'cares - He flnda IiiniseWitn the evening of his a~ys; willing~of re ilinquishment o' phose eget&sts of' a political nature better, suited to younger men. The Junior Editor alsos desires to retire, as bia health requires a more active atd ont-door iife> He would, n6eri-heless, retain his present position, provided he is suited in a copartner in .the busi ness, 'Will o r brethern of the :Press please cai attention to our edesire to sell; by so doing,.tell Kmuch oblige us. (Miedgevilte Recorder. A poor seamstress, in New York,,who m .akes~ panitaloons for eight cents a pair, w as kicked out of doors, by her eusployer, because she refused to take twenty-five cents for four pair. Why is.a blush like a little girl ? 2o. -cause t bhonmer, a womn.