Edward JL. L’etersou and Miss Mary A. Saylor, both of Sheffield, were in the I city hist Thursday evening and arrived I at the court house just as Judge Gibons 1 was starting for home. The judge was I apprised of the fact that the young couple had entered into an agreement to pool their issues for life and desired his assistance in making the contract binding. Nothing warms the heart of Judge Gibons quicker than to have an opportunity to make people happy and in this instance he was more than felicitous in the manner in which lie made the knot which only a court of ( i equity can untie. At the time of the ! ceremony there was a bevy of handsome j young ladies in the office and they were so delighted with the clever and fatherly ; manner assumed by the judge in per-1 forming the ceremony that they all declared. there and then, that when the happy hour should approach for their nuptials no one but Judge Gibons could unite them. The Misses Fannie Clark and Julia Sapp, blushing, signed their names to the marriage certificate, after which the ladies, in a body, sent the happy couple on their way home by throwing after them all the old shoes that had been accumulating about the j building for years.