Term of Publication. Tarn WATitaaraa Rb-ubucab, Offlea la Ssyen' bdltdlnr, eit of the Court Hoou, li pnb llabtd trtrf WednMdsjr moraine, st per annum, is advahcb, or M If not paid with in th ymr. All akxrlptloa must kMttll aaaMlly. Mo paper will be tent oat of the Btate anleu paid tor is advasck, and all each snbrerlptloni will invariably be dloeon tinned at the expiration of the time for which they are paid. Commnnlcatloniion tnbjecte of local or general Intervit am respectfully mltcltrd. To eniare mum Linn Oivon of tills kind mut Invariably be Invariably be ccompunltl by the name of the author, not for publication, Dili ae oiiarani: All lotteri ptirtalnluR to bunincaeof iy otmi alnittlm mutt be oUdreawd to the Editor. TOAST FOR LA BOB. Here 'i to the man with homy hands, Who tuga tha breathing bellows Where anvil, ring la every land, He'i loved by all good fellows. And here' to him who goes afield, And through the globe is ploughing. Or with stout arm the axe doth wield, While anchnt oaks are bowing. Here's to the delvor in the mine, The Bailor on the ocean, VNih those of every craft and llni, ' Who work with true devotion. Onr love for her who toils io gloom Whero era nks and wheels ' e cranking; Bereft she is of nntnre'8 bloom, Yet God In patience thanking. . A curse for him who sneers at toil. And slm as his share of Ubor, The knave but robs his native soil While leaning on his labor. Here may this truth be taught on earth, Grow more and more lu favors There is no wealth but owns Its worth To handicraft and labor. Then pledge the founders of our wealth, The br.lldors of our nation; We know their worth, now to their health Diink we with acclamation) A TALE or LOVE! Two maids wore walk'ng in the grove, (They both were growing old), The one to tell a tale of love, The other to be told. "He is not rich," the elder said, "Nor handsome, nor hlgh-boin; The man whom I propose to wed, Most oilier glvls would scorn." 'What in he, then? you make me fear;" The maiden's tears fell fast ; "lie was the flut to offer, dear, And lie may be the last I" clii fading. 91 OT OOD EKOt'GH FOR llfctt. In the days of the good old colony of Virginia, the distinctions of rich and poor were based upon laws which, like tho.c of the Mi-des nnd Persians, alter ed not. One of the most devout fol lowers of this code, was a wealthy planter, living in what is known x tho Northern Neck. He was in all respects, a frank, openhearted, gentleman ; but his estimate manly of his fellow men was founded upon the principle that governed his selection of horses ni.oon. W ealth, too was by no means an unimportant feature with h'm. IIo had onr human weakness, and, like all of ns, was influenced more than he ever believed, by pounds,shil lings nnd pence. This Mr. G had quite a largo family, and among them was a daugh ter whose beauty was the standing toast of the country. She was just eighteen, and budding into lovely womanhood. Not only was she beautiful in person but her amiable disposition and many accomplishments made her more tiian ordinarily attractive, and the gentle men in the Northern Neck were al ready sighing for her love, There were in the country at this time a young man who was already rising high in the esteem of his neigh bors, lie came of good family, tut: was, as yet, a poor young surveyor, who had spent much of his time in traversing unknown forests, with nothing but his compass for guide, and ' liis chain for his companion, locating ' t land and settling disputed titles. He Svas a model of manly beauty, and ex pelled in all thevaried fealsof strength in which the olden time Americans took such prido. He was calm and reserv ed, and there wrs alxmt him a dignifi ed sweetness of demeanor that accord ed well with lift frank independence of character. He was a great favorite with all that knew him, and there was no gathering to which he was not asked. - - .... 1.1 Mr. u seemed especially to like tno young man, and it was not ionS before he insisted that tho latter should abandon all ceremony in his visits to him, and come and go when he pleas ed. The invitation was heartily given, and as promptly accepted.. The yonng man liked the planter, and he found the society or the beautiful Mary . G a very strong attraction. The ' result was that he was frequently at the planter's residence j so irequently, . . indeed, that Mrs. G felt called upon to ask her husband if he did not ' ' think it wrong ti permit him to enjoy such unreserved intercourse with their ; daughter. The father only laughed ' ' edatthe idea, and said he hoped his 3 Li i i :i i -ii: anything like love for a poor survey or to blind her to her duty to her family. . , Nevertheless Mary G 1 was not so fully impressed with this conviction of dutv ns was her father. She found ' more to admire in the poor surveyor .1 man in an ner weaitny ana aristocratic suitors ; and, almost before she knew it, her heart passed out of her keeping, ' and was given to him. Shekrvedhim : . with all the honesty and devotion of net pore Mart ; and she would nave ; thought H happiness to go out with him to the backwoods and share his fortunes and trCtbles, no matter how mnch orrowthey might trine to her. th ' Nor did she love is valrZ The n fount; man, whoa knowledge of the ; wtrldwsi afterwards at rreat,kad not '--" then Isaraad io maidens hindiac th T'ftm.. . ..St.. 1 Ojsuaauoss WMaogjsry ortw be- twess hit pososud fast of . Vwly.tsc. &?ct IM'- i M) fif fit lie wapeiaftfg HeiillKii. JAJS. L SAYER3, VOL. XI. He knew that in all that makes a man in integrity and honesty of purpose, he was the equal of any one. lie believ ed that, except in wealth, he stood upon a perfect equality with Mary G , and loved her honestly and manfully, and no sooner had he satis fied himself upon the state of his own feelings than he confessed his devotion, simnlv and truthfully, and received from the lady's lips the assurance thr J she loved him dearly. Scorning to occupy a doubtful po sition, or to cause the young lady to conceal aught from her parents, the young man Lankly and manluily ask ed Mr. G for his daughter's hand, Verv anarrv rrrcw the planter as he listened to the audacious proposal. He stormed and swore uinousiy, aii( denounced the young man as an un grentful and insolent npstiut. "My daughter has always been ac customed to riding in her own carriage," he said. ''Who are you, sir ?" "A gentleman, sir," replied the young man, quietly j and he left the house. Tho lovers were parted. Tho lady married 6oon after, a wealthy planter, and the young man went out again into the world, to battle with his heart and "conquer his unhappy passions. He subdued it ; but although ho after ward married a woman whom he lov ed honestly and truthfully, and who was worthy of his love, he never was wholly dead to his first love. The time passed on, and the young man began to reap the reward of his laliors. IIo had never been to the house of Mr. G since his cruel re pulse by the planter 5 but the latter could not forget him, as his name scon became familiar in every Virginia household. Higher and higher he rose every day, until he gained a posi tion from which lie could look upon the proud planter. Wealth came to him, too. When the great struggle for independence dawned, nnd he was in his prime, a happy husband, and one of the most distinguished men in America. The struggle went on, and soon too "poor surveyor' neiu me .. it 1 1 i .1 highest and proudest position in the land. When tho American army passed in triumph through the streets of Wil liamsburg, the ancient capital of Vir ginia, after thesurrenderof Cornwallis, the officer riding at the head of tho column chanced to glance up nt one of the neighboring balconies, which was crowded with ladies. Rccignizing one of them ho raised his hat and Iwwed profoundly. There wasa com motion 011 the balcony, and some one wanted water, saying Mrs. Lee lmis fu'nted. Turning to a young man who rode near him, the oftifcr said p-rnvolv ! K' "Henry, I fear your mother has fainted. You had liettcr leave the column, and go to her." The speaker was George "Washing ton, once the "poor surveyor," but then Commander-in-Chief of the armies of the United States. The young man was Colonel Henry Lee, the commander of the fimous "Light Cavnlrv legion :" the lady was n mother, and formerly Miss G , the belle of tho "ISorlhern INcok. "Matuc Twain" describes as fol lows the personnel of the Imperial famtlvof Kussia: "The Emperor had on a white cloth cap, and white cloth coat and nanta lixins. all of questionable .fineness. The Empress and her daughter wore simple suits of foulard, with a little blue spot in it, blue trimmings, low crowned straw hats trimmed with blue velvet, linen collars, clerical neck ties of muslin, blue sashes, flesh-colored gloves, parasols lady readers will take due notice. The exceeding sim plicity of these dresses would insure inem against creating n Benisuiim m Broadway. The little Grand Duke wore a red calico blouse and a straw 'ni Ami !.! K.a vtn tnlswin a timlrfwl intii ' ililU ttliu. JliUl Ilia lamiwiiLj i.nvrai.v -" ; Simpiicity 0f costume and ;k; , t t , f manner cannot go very well together, and I was curi ous to see how the imperial parv would act They acted as if they had never been use to anything finer. They were as free from any semblance of pride or haughtiness as if their house had alwavs been a village min ist.'s house. They conversed freely and nnconstrainedly with anybody "nd everybody that came along, (they all sneak English,, and so did the great officers of tho Empire that were with them. A BURGLAR named Frank Riley was arrested in Chicago, a few dayi ago, for the crime of breaking open a safe in IxmisviIIe, Kentucky, am! taking therefrom the sum of forty-six thousand dollars. Among the effects found on his person by the officers of justice was the following letter : . Executive Mansion, Washington, D. C, Dec 13, 1866. "Henry A. Smythe, Collector of Cus toms, INew 1 one : "Sir This will introduce to your favorable consideration Frank Kiley, of New York City, viA whoee charac ter! became acquainted mi lematee, and whom I commend toyou as worthy of s suitable appointment under you. "With great respect, very truly yours, SXDMXW JOHMOX." Thia docament was in a very dilapi. dated ssodition, arising from ooneUnt om,s Ur. Susy informed the offi- FIRMNESS IN THE RIGHT UAYNESBURG, PA., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1867. AS VERRwa BOY. Henry Ward Beecher is never s great as when yon see him among men, or we might scy, perhaps, among children. He never left off being a boy. There is something so honest, noble and childlike in his great square- out social utterances, that in tri3 sphere he is perfectly irresistible. So ! powerful has this influence become that the whole city of Brooklyn, and to a considerable extent the whole na tiou, is aff oted by his social example. The narrow, contcmptiblo mannerism that characteriz" the people atleoting Churchaiiity, the Miss Nancvish wavs of too many, even ot our clergy, the pompous aire, exquisite snobbish- , ness, pious propriety, and severely or nate methods 01 soeecn ana writing commonly supposed to give evidences of refinement and taste, tho great thundeiersweepsaway withouo blastol 11s trumpet of truth. JUr. lieecher lias taught tne woriu that to be saints men need not be hypocrites,and to love the beautifuljone need not be a sap-head. Culture may kill out a man s uaturalness, and leave 1 only mere airs. Ueaa Brummel and Jieeclicr are lorcver at war. un, now disdainfully Araniinta Sophranisba Roscwaler inverts and elevates her proboscis at tho mention of some char actistio "Beet'herism" of the Brooklyn Bruncrgcs. "Did Mr. Bcc.'her actu ally play ugly mug, and stir the pud ding at a social gathering ?" said one of these ancient maiden saints to us a few days since. "It is positively hor rid. It is a characteristic 01 men who love truth supremely llin.t per- m 11 sons have but little innuence over them. God makes a truly wise man so simple and unpretending that men never look into the manger lor tne King of the kingdom coming. Yet it is there that we find our King. "A little child shall lead them." The child is the model for Christians to follow and frame their characters by. So does Mr. Beechcr. So do not the great, the grand, and those filled with pomp and bIiow. Visit Brooklyn, and you shall see a man as brown as a Western farmer, with a perfect tum ble of hair, falling all over shoulders as broad as a blacksmith's. His gait is rapid, abrupt and blunt. He rolls as he walks like a Cape Cod shipmas ter. He wears a rough sack coat, pepper and salt perhaps, breeches, wide, roomy, and better fitting than the pants on Webster's statue in front of the State House in Boston. He swings his arms as he gets over the ground, ever and anon lifting his hat nud smoothing back his hair over his mosxive forehead. Ilia leaturcs are coarse, his skin as rough nnd ruddy as a Jack Tar's, and his whole air that of a man overflowing with human nature. "How are you?" is his grcct 'nv as he mccti you no manncrish hand-shaking or I rench airs ; ho pass- (1 right 011 unless you have business. Then if you hem or haw, or hesitate or don't come right to the point, ten chances to one it ho docs not taKe French leave at once, and leave you to meditate upon tho abruptness of the wonderful man. In short, Mr. Beechcr has no non sense in his make up. lie is mini with good sense, ond woe be to Mr. Diplomacy if he crosses his path with his endless circumlocutions. He crashes right in on your forms of pro priety, your nirs and distinguished considerations. We once saw him beset by a committee it must have been sent to extend thanks and dis tinguished consideration for his great services in bchait 01 our country while in England. There wero kid gloves of course. There was a per fect puff of patchouly from silk hand kerchiefs and court dresses, and dia monds in a shower, and all that. Then the French etiquette, the prelimina ries, the coming to the point, the craven manner, the bowings, nonsense, hypocrisy, gentility, in short, refine ment of the poor creatures, bewildered the poor man so that when at lost he shut them off with an abrupt grunt, not even saying good evening, we thought he breathed again as one gasp ing tor fresh air. 1 his is the Amen ennism of our times and country. He is religiously and politically an em bodiment of our future Church and State. As the prophet of the coming kingdom, he heralds in what his whole life will yet exemplify. No man of this nation is to impress upon the nation his character more than Henry Ward Beecher. Franklin stimped his sprit of econ omy upon our American boys, but Mr. Beecher will stamp his whole soul upon the lives and aspirations of our whole people. Cure fob Ingrowing Nailssv It is stated cauterization by hot tal low is an immediate core for ingrowing nails. Put a small piece of tallow in a spoon and hold it over a lamp nntil it becomes very hot, and then drop between the nail and the granulations. The effect is most magical. Pain and tenderness are at once relieved, and in a few days the 'granulations all go away, leaving the diseased ports dry and destitute of all feeling, and the edge of the nail exposed so as to admit of being paired away without any in convenienoe. 1 The operation causes but little pain if the tallow is properly heated. ' : Apropos A. "ladies' shoemaker" advertises himself as one of the lumina ries of the "aols her system." . AS GOD GIVES US TO SEE THE THEORIES OF AD VERTMIStl. The business that mainly occupies men in this world is trade ; the secret of success in trade, after reasonable judgement and industry are used, is advertising. This fact was never so generally recognized by business men 0 . 1 ?il- At? !i it as now, ana wiui wis recognition wey include the fact that only jiidi-aous ad- !. !....:. L T LA J ,t it judicious is one of the deepest pro blems which come before them. For this problem contains many conditions, such as, for example, the medium for advertising, tt-e time, the region, the class of persoiU to be addressed, the quality and quantity of things said, the persistence thai may be desirable, and, a'jove all, the discovery of some new and striking way of seizing pub ):e attention. For the priz:i of1 ad vertising are the result of combining bold expenditures with original anil pleasing methods. The theories of advertisers upon all these conditions, particular .'y tlie last, are wonderfully various, those who disbelieved in advertising at all, being now too few for mention. One" man believes in advertising in publieaiio. :- where all his competitors advertise.! another where ho will bo aloue : one thinks advertising needless when busi ness is brisk, and useless when it is dull ; while another thinks the reverse; one believes 111 the cwy, another in the town 5 one bases his hope on mere length, and another takes half a page to print a few sentences, while another puts his announcement npsido down. Some advertise moderately and steadi ly, and some inako showy displays oc casionally. Iarge cities are full of devices outside of Newspapers. Boys distribute handbills at tho ferries and on the streets 5 a painted bed with net tings looped up greets the eyes of those who cross Fulton ferry, in mosquito time; men march solemnly about, dressed in some mysterious garment that proclaims the merits of India rubber goods and weather strips, or covered with buttons Jiom crown to sole, or bearing sign boards of chiro podists; a nuisance in the shapo of an advertising van haunts Broadway, and the curbstones, the fences, and the very pavemcuts everywhere are a flame. It may be called accidental, but the fact is that nearly all of the large for tunes made intrude during the Inf.' thirty years, both in this country nnd in England, have been made in con nection with iwrsistent and studied ad vertising. Drs. Jayne, Brnndreth and Ayer, Davis' Pain-killer, Russia salve, Bonner's Leihcr, Plantation Bitters, Hostctter's Bitters, Spalding's prepar ed glue, Holloway's pills, Eastman's business college, and Jiarnum s Mu seum are good examples. The amount of money sometimes paid for ndver Using is almost incredible, some firms having expended fifty thousand dol lars in a single week, and even tens of thousands upon a single advertise ment. Bcsido burdening the fences, several parlies have their own poets and advertisement writers, at liberal salaries. Messrs. Phalon & Son arc reported to have such a man, to whom thev nav three thousand dollars a vcar. and whoso duty was for a time com prised 111 devising a new conundrum every day, which should set forth a new the night blooming ccrcus. The secret of judicious newspaper advertising may be briefly stated. It consists, not in long standing adver tisements, which are inevitably placed in obscure corners ; but in short, fresh paragraphs, 1 renewed frequently, and possessing tho interest of reading mat ter. These are read for their own sake, and make new customers, as well as guide old ones. Mrs. Lincoln. Amongst all the mean things done by tho democrats, about the meanest is the persistence with which they dishonored President Lincoln, and visit their hatred of him upon his willow. While Brick Pome roy shocks all decent people by his ri baldry over the murder of our martyr ed chief, his more respectable coadju tors manufacture slanders on her who brars his name. One story has scarce run ib) rounds before another is started aTicr it ; and the last, by the World, is, that she is in New York, under the name of Mrs. Clarke, trying to sell her clothing and jewelry to add to her slender income, it Mrs. Jjincoln is reduced to such necessity, shame to the land, and it is the people, not her self, she screened when she dropped that honored name, in such a transac tion 5 but we have no doubt the story is a sheer fabrication, made to gratify democratic hate of the great dead, who had honored his wife as do few living men. Piflta. Gazette. The Paris Exposition has been a greatpecuniary speculation, and should the Emperor declare its permanency, it will prove a constant source of wealth. According to agreement, the profits, if any, arising from the Expo sition, are to be divided equally be tween the Btate, the city of Paris, and the company owning the charter, grant ed by a law passed by the French Legislature, in 1865, for the purpose of organizing this stupendous under taking. Ik a matrimonial advertisement for a husband, tho advertiser says that as she "wants a full-grown man, none need apply who are under six feet." That ia notan unnatural notion for a lady bent or by-men. RIGHT. ItWn. Tll t'cvcral Valvoatoa. A correspondent writing from Gal veston, Sept. 9th, says: The city resembles one vast hospi- trl. Tho number of deaths to date since commencement, (July 24th,) reaches nine hundred, mostly North ern and Western people, foreigners, and officers and employees, civil and nilitary, of the United States, book keepers, and clerks, brought here to die dv the hundred from the larger Northern, Western and Eastern cities; members of Northern, Western and foreign firms and business houses, one third of which, somo with large stocks of goods, are now closed on account of employers and employees having beta summoned by "ellow Jack" to their long and narrow houses in the graveyard. The Jews have suffered most 111 proportion to their number, many of them succumbing to their noied dread of death nfter taking the disease. This month, 011 account of its sudden weather changes and equi noctial storms, will prove the most fa tal. The type of disease is very malig nant. Several of our best physicians, among them Drs. Rowe, Taylor, ifcc, ot tho United States army, and JJra. 1 fauna and Gault, of tho Galveston Medical College faculty, fell victinB and are in their graves. Others of the profession are now down with it. The streets ore nearly deserted; busi ness is at a stand; the city wears the aspect of a continuous Sabbath; gloom has settled upon the countenances of many you meet; the churches are de serted; the firing of tho United States army and navy signal guns, the ring- ' r 1 1 1 II. 1 xl ; I 1N OI Oil UCU, UI1U UllltT IlUlSfS I11IVB been stopped authoritatively during the epidemic, not to disturb the fever sick, whom we count by thousands and in every house. Nurses and phy sicians are worn out and scarce, inc suffering is very great, and much of it remains untoldonly known to Him who scourges us in His wrath.- An Incident in the Cabs. In ono of the ears that ply Fulton ave nue, Brooklyn, somo days since, a young swell in olbumen pantaloons, azure vest and milky tie, was disgrac ing tobacco by putting it into his mouth, ond wantonly sending the liquid residuum over tho ear floor. In its "flight" it alighted on the dress of a lady that circumstances forced to sit near thespittoon, and the fellow was tiltcrly too gross even to apologize. 1 lowever, when the lady made a re quest for his handkerchief to repair the stain as far as might be, and when the fellow refusal, he was considera bly surprised, nnd the passengers de lighted, by the lady very quietly turn ing up that section of her dress soiled by the fellow's brutality, and wiping it on tho dandy's pantaloons, with a result that made littlo channels run down to his boots. With a simple "Tako that, you dirty puppy," the woman resumed her composure, and the man suddenly remembered that he had an errand on the street. Let 'em all be served that way, aud rub it in hard. Last week a hotel-keeper in Lan caster, "smclled a mice 111 this wise Two countrymen took lodging nt his place, and fared sumptuously, drinli ing three bottl 8 ot wine daily. I he last day, and before they had settled their bill, a dispute arose nlxjut the speed of their horses. They at last settled upon a race, and appointed the landlord judge. When they were ready, tho judge, like those of the Olympian games, gave the word one, two, three, and go. Away they went, and have neither been seen nor heard of since. No doubt they ore runuing at this moment, (a bill in some other place,) leaving this landlord iully com penatcd by having had the honor of being judge. In a speech nt Pleasant Valley, Ohio, General Garfield said that in a recent conversation with him, Gen. Grant betrayed the deepest anxiety as to the mischief the President may do before Congress meete. Genera'. Schenck, remarking that Congress would soon be in session again, Gen. Grant anxiously replied, "It will I. seventy-eight days yet." "Why, Gen cral," exclaimed Schenck, considera bly surprised, "do you count the days?" "Yes, I do," replied General Grant, "it will be just seventy-eight days, and I would to God the time were nearer !" A man in Round Rock, Texas, slaughtered a beef and found in it a gen true ten dollar gold piece. A far mer lost a purse containing hlteen dollars in gold while surveying on the prairies in the locality, and it is sup posed that the steer swallowed the com while chewing the purse, The money was lost several years ago. A LITTLE girl who bad been visiting in the family of a neighbor, hearing them speak ot ner lather being widower, on her return home address ed him thus : "Pa, are you a widow er r "Yes. my child. Don t you know your mothers dead?" "Why. yes, I Knew mother was dead; but you always told me you was a new I or er." ' The Philadelphia Ledger, which is one of the largest printing establish menta in the United States, was ttartr ed in 1838. by three Journeymen prin ten, two of whom are yet living and are millKHinairea. - EDITOR AND PUBLISHER. NO. 17. Front the Colutnbas (Ohio.) Journal DEMOCRATIC ORATOR COIHIOI SUED. We arfl informed that a village in one of tho "backbone" Democratic counties was the scene of a funny in cident a fiiw evenings since whereby a Democratic orator was titterly con founded and brought to grief by men of his own party. Ihe circumstances are as follows i lie had told them how the rich bondholder had reduced them to slavery in spite of the efforts of the Goddess of Liberty and several other personages, both human and celestial, till then ftnknown to the audience. He quoted extensively from George Fran cis Troiu's "deraagoguo" speech, and among other things tho following: "Work! work I work! From the dnwn to the dusk of day, For your hopes are crushed with a weight of debt. That tho toil ot your llfo woa't pay !" Having wrought up his hearers al most to mutiny, lie Icit that branch of his subject, and proposed to show up some of tho llepiiblicnii leaders, le guining with Ben Wade. "Whv, fel low-citizen, said he, "there is lien "Wade, a regular agrarian, who wants all the proerty divided so that every ninn will have an equal slmriO' Thundering applauses, and cries of "Bully for him!'' "Thai's tho tick et!" "He's tho man for mo!'' "Why, fellow-citizens," said he, "Ben Vadeisa IJmlical and an agrarian; he" Deafening applause, and yells of "Good for the Biulicals !" "Bully for tho 'grnrians !" The speaker was thunderstruck. Evidently, his hearers had never heard of Ben Wade and tho Badicals. They had been well stirred up against the rich, and they thought that radi- ( lism was a species of democracy, of wlncli lien n ado was the champion. "Gentlemen fellow citizens, con tinued tho speaker, "I don't think you exactly understand me. Ben W ade is the V ice lTciilent, elected by the Uni I tea Is, and lie is liunselt a Kadical, .md an agrarian land pirate to boot. Why, what do you think? IIo pre poses to take the rich man's property, lor winch lie toiled 111 early lile, and give it to those who have no property, even to those who do not work. hut do you " A veice, "lhree cheers lor lien Wade !" And in snilo of all that two or three village leaders, candidates lor constable and supervisor, could do, the crowd gave three tliiinderini cheers fur Ben Woilo and tho "'t,iaiinns. The orator, finding that he had got on the wrong track, abruptly brought his remarks to a close. A lie, in that m stance, made Ben Wade several friends, yet we scarcely feel like eongratulii' ting him on the acquisition. A.fTKtl'ITY or THE lit' WAX RACE. Shakespeare, in "As You Like It," makes Rosalind fay, "The poor world is almost six thousnn 1 years old, and there are plenty of people in our own liay who believe that this globe came IVcdi fi'om the hand of the Creator only sixty centuries ago. But geolo gy has exploded that theory, ami tne ahlest theologians now ogreo that the "six days" of the creation represent vast periods ot time, while tiie earth itself is of inconceivable antiquity. Ihe question winch now excites atr tention is whether the human nice is notfiir older than is generally believ ed, and whether it wits not contempo rary with tho great animals, remains of which are now and then discovered, but which becamo extinct before the date of any history, sacred or profane, or even of tradition. The interesting discoveries resulting from the explora tions now in progress in Kent's Cav ern, Devonshire, England, show, in disputably, thnt man was in existence when the mammoth, three dillercnt species of the elephant, the rhinoceros, -.i i jions, ami ouier iimitmi.i were cumiiiuii in that country, but which are now extinct, for the bones of the animals mve been found, and with them, tools, weapons, and other articles winch were the unmistakable work of human hands, guided by intelligence. These remains have been lound imbedded in gravel ond stalagmite, and the explo rations have been conducted under circunistanccs ond with a care pre cluding the posibility of deception. A report ot these discoveries has been laid liefore the British Associa tion for the Advancement of Science, in session at Dundee during the pres ent month, and an interesting discuss ion upon the antiquity of tiie human race ensued. Sir Charles Lyell took the ground that these discoveries were proof positive that man was co-exist- ent with the mammoth and other ex tinct animals which have been believ ed, heretofore, to antedate the human race. Other members agreed with him, nnd in the face of these discover ies, defiantly challenged those "who had whispered abroad objections to the theory of the antiquity of man, to come forward and state them now. wona. Grkat Ylsld of Wise. George Hasmnn, one of the great wine grow ers of Wisconsin, made 1,030 gallons of pure grape juice from 470 Concord vines, on 4-10 of an acre, and 1,300 gallon of pure grape juice from an acre of Norton's Virginia, containing 1,200 vines. "Vitals baked here," is the horri ble announcement placarded in the windWw of Nw York eating house. Terms of AdTertlwlnur AMD JOB WOK K Adykotibexeictb Inserted at SI aapenqiinre . . I 1 . -. ! - .1 U lUlI .1111111. for xuh additional insertion j (ten llm or If counted a square). All trauslent adertisem..n I 10 ue paia lor in advance. . ... . U.rM.u. HnriPHMlnnilwtha tlMld Of llMVll news will be charged Invariably 10 renin a line lorencti iniwruoo. , A lllwnd deduction made to persona advertls lng by the qunrtei', half-year or year. Special nottcen charged one-bull mute than regular d TertltM'luentH. Job l'ltixnoof everrklnd In Plulniintl Fan cy eo!oi: Hand-iii, lUnnks, Curds Paiimhli'ti', Ae., 01 eeiy vmieiy nnd style, pilntcilut tli shortest notice. The l:r PtRLU'AN OrnrK litis JiMt been le-lttted, and every thing In the rrlnl lng line enn be executed In lbs most artlstiil uiannerand at tne lowest mica. Ix)Vi8 Napolfx)n'8 Palace. A story is told in private circles about a wealthy mt ill-informed American who wont to Taris and applied lor lodgings at one of the most aristocratic "old family" mansions of tho city, where he read the words"Hotel de C'ril lon" over ihe door. Haughtily dis- missed there, ho next applied at an other of the same sort, tno "Hotel de Boissy," unaware that tiie custom of placing the name over the door is one. of the old observances of the French aristocracy. At this juncture some one informed him of his blunder, and great was his chagriu. Subsequently no met a friend who recommended him to go to the "Hotel du Louvre," which is really a public house of entertain ment. But ignoiance had fiiccumlKHl to wisdom. "No, hang it I" was the erudite reply, "I'm up to that, you know j you don't get 1110 to apply for board nt Louis Napoleon't jmtuee !" Vr? experienced editor pays a high nud deserved compliment to tho fair patrons of tho press. Women, ho says, ore tho best subscribers in the world to newspapers, magazines, etc. We have been an editor for forty years, and never lost a dollar by female mh- scribers. They seem to make it a point of conscientious duty to p:iv the preacher and the printer two citfscs ot tho community that stiller more bv bad pay, and no pay at all, tlmii all tho rest put together. A Saratoga correspondent savs that a burlesque advertisement was pasted in the Union Hotel, annouiic- 5 Al -4 lt - 1 X 1.. Iligliitll, ill oriier to overcome it iituu- inl prejudice against the use of hash, the proprietor will, on Monday, plain a two dolkr and a half gold piece in a certain quantity ot tho hash; on Tuesday, one-half that omount in two pieces ; on Wednesday, one-third Unit anion nt in three pieces," and so on for a week. Bayard Taylor, in a recent letter to tho New York Tribune, says : "Since I have come to Europe I have Ix-en cohs.autly called upon, in France, Switzerland and Germany, to explain our present dificulty, ami that while 1 have found a great many persons un friendly to the permanence of tint Union, no ono has the courage to con fess himself on admirer of Andrew Johnson. Pat's Turtle. The head of a turtle, for several days after its tole ration from the body, retains and ex hibits animal lifo and sensation. An Irishman had decapitated one, 'find some days afterwards was omu -ipg himself by putting sticks in its mom n, which it bit with violence, A lady who saw the proceeding exclaimed "Why, Patrick, I thought the tai l It was dead!" "So ho is, ma'am; but the cr.itur's not sensible of it," The Franklin, (Louisiana,) rianlrrx' Banner of the 7th, contains tho fol lowing interesting paragraph in a leader detailing tho inducements to emigrants: "There arc three mill ions of acres of tillable lands in At- takapas nnd St. Itndry, which can be bought, According to quality ami quantity, or location) at from from ft I to &10 per acre. We know ot good sugar lands that can lie Iwught for $10 an aero, a few miles from naviya tain." The Use op TonAf. This is the way boys reason whon forbidden to use tobaccos The lawyer smokes; bow can it bo illegal ? Tho doctor chews ; how can it Iki unwholesome ? The. clergy smilf ; how can it. lie immoral ? The politician smokes, chews or sou'l's; how can it be impolite ? Newspapers ix the Uxiri-n States. In the year lift) there wer.j but seven ircvsapcrs and periodicals published in the United States; in 1810 there 3o0, including 25 publish ed daily; in 1832 there were 5&S; in 1800, 2,01, circiihiting annually 927,951,ol8 copies. A FreN'cii Savan has likened tho uickness of volition in an animal to e telegraph. He tells his class: When the whale is harpooned the nerve allectcd instantly teiegrapns in the creatures' brain, "Harpoon in tail;" upon which tho brain telegraphs back, "Jerk tail and upset boat." What a wonderful thing is science. A correspondent of the Maine Farmer, says: "Jinny a housewife may le glou to know when she has a piece of fresh meat she wishes to keep a few days, that it can be succcssiUy done by placing it in a dish and cov ering it with milk. Sour milk. , or buttermilk will do as well. 1 have practiced the plan for years." "I say Jones, how is it that your wife dresses so magnificently, and you always appear out at the elbows ?" Jones, (impressively and significantly,) 'yon see, Inompson, my wife dressos according to the Gazette of Fanlmm, and I dress according to my Ledger." Ladies are like watches pretty enough to look at sweet faces and delicate hands, but some'hing dilhVult. to regulate when set "agoing." -. Next month all the conductors aud other employees of tho Erie Road Ore to be uniformed with blue coat, naval cap, and gray pantaloons. ,N , ,, .- . A BALL struck a little , boy in the eye last week. Strange to say,' the bawl immediately came out ot; lis mouth. A i' :, j v. ..sifl if '(