BY DAVID OVER. PKIXIT POETRY- - THE VISIBL.E CREATION. BY MONTGOMERY The God of Enture and of Grace In all his works appeals; His goodness through the earth wc trace. His grandeur in the spheres. I 1 Behold this fair and fertile globe, By Him in wisdom plann'd; i' was He, who girded like a robe The ocean round the land. L'.ft to the firmament your eye; I'hither his path pursue; His glory, boundless as the sky, O'erwhelms the wondering view. He bows the heavens—the mountains stand A high-way for their God; He walks amidst the desert-land, 'i' it Jidea where He trod. The forest in his strength rejoice; Hark ! ou the evening breeze, A.B once of old, the Lord God a voice is heard among the trees. Here on the hills E* feeds his herds, His tlocks on yonder plains; His praise is warbled by the birds; 0 could we catch their strains Mount with the lark, and bear our song Hp to the gates of light, Or with the nightingale prolong Our numbers through the night t In every at-am his bounty flows Diffusing joy and wnalih; la 'fvery bt.xxe his spirit irlows —The breath of life and health. llis blessings fall in plenteous showers Gpun the lap of earth, 1 hat teems with folhge, fruit, and flowers, And rings with infant mirth. It God hath made ihis world so G-ir Where sin and dealb. abound; How beautiful beyond compare Will Paradise be found ! "URICfcLTIiRiL. From f/'te American Agriculturist. IIOW LOSG WILL TREES LIVE, Why may uot trees live forever? Is there a necessary limit to their existence? Do they, like animals, have their infancy, youth, matu rity, decline, and death? This is the common opinion. It is believed that they die, not sole ly because accidents befall them, or diseases as sail them, or because they are cut down by the woodman's axo—but because, escaping all such contingencies, their cells and vessels become hardened and inorastsd, end the fluids ceaso to flow, and they perish from sheer exhaustion and old age. They wear out and run down, like an old clock. Let us overhaul this opiuiou a little. Vege table physiology shows that the living parts of an exogenous tree, that is a tree growing by ad ditions to the outside are: (1) the extremities of the stems and branches, including the buds; (2) the extremities of the roots and rootlets; and (3) the newest strata of wood and bark. These are all that are concerned in tho life and growth of a tree: and these are renewed every year.— The functions of life in an animal are carried on for a whole life-time in one set of organs; and when these organs wear out, tho auinial dies. But the life processes iu a plant arc car ried on through organs annually renewed, and hence the plant is not subject to decay, for the same reason that the animal is. Every year the urude sap rises from tho roots to the leaves, where it is digested, and from whence it de scends, leaving deposits on the way, of new buds, bark, wood, and roots. If, then, all that is concerned in tho life and growth of a tree is annually renewed, making the living and active paits of a tree never more than one year old— way should not the tree continue to live on for ao indefinite period? There seems to be no ne cessary reason, no cause inherent in the tree it self, why it should die. Again: a tree is uot, philosophically rpeak og, an individual, like a ntau, of any animal. It is a community, an aggregation of individn •lK The ouly real individual in a plaut is the Sr*t ell of which the plant was originally com posed. Krery bud on a tree may also be con sidered an individual, since it has in itself all A Weekly Paper, Devoted to Literature, Politics, the Arts, Sciences, Agriculture, &c., &c—Terms: One Dollar and Fifty Cents in Advance. the cleuieuts of an independent plant, and may I be made to produce one. Now, if it be object- ' ed that the inner parts of the tree die, or ut least become inactive heart-wood, yet the outer parts do not: individuals may perish, but the community docs not, for it is renewed and in creased every year. Trees have been happily compared to the "brancing or arborescent coral."' This struc ture is built up by the combined labors of a multitude of individuals—"the successive la bors of a great number of generations. The surface or the recent shoots alone are alive: all underneath consists of the dead remains of for mer generations. It is the same with the veg etable, except that it makes a downward growth also, and by constant renewal of fresh tissues, maintains the communication between the two growing extremities, the buds and the root lets." {Dr. Dray ) As tho coral struotUre, considered as a mass, lives on indefinitely, though the individuals composing it perish, so a tree considered as a composite structure may live on in the some way, without uny assignable limit to its lite. Every joint in the root, aud cveiy bud from it? branches might be token off and set up by itself to form a separate and in dependent tree; but if tbey all choose to stay ou the homestead, need they ond the family die out? So much for theory. We shall present some facts next month. PROFITS OF SINGLE GRAFF. VINES.—We have often urged all our readers to set out at least one cr two grape vines somewhere in the garden or door-ysrd—not usually to raise grapes for sale, but to secure a supply for home consumption. The first cost of procuring and setting a vine or two, or three, is trifling, while the product is large and of great value. A grape vine requires but little ground room, and whoever has a few feet only of soil by the side of the dwelling, may put out a vies, where "there may net he even room for a fruit free to expand its branches. The vine may be trained op over a porch, or on the sides of the dwelling itself. Ou page 337 of Lt volume (Nov. No.) wc gave an account of two vinos (a Concord, and a Hartford Prolific) which yielded 60 lbs. of !ncious grapes the 2d year after planting. — | These were unusually well-rooted wheu pet. out but ore an indication of what may be obtained very SOOD after planting. We now give ar.oth 'cr item which we recently gathered from our , old frieud and long-time subscriber, Stephen Hnigh', of Dutches Co., N. SL. He has an Is abella grape vine, 12 years old, which is train ed upon a trellis, and branches out about 25 feet each way from the root. The past Au tumn he picked from this single vine two hun , dred and twenty six pounds (22G,) leaving at the same time fifty pounds of unripened grapes which were afterwards made into wine. (In all 276 lbs.) The ripe bunches were carefully looked over, and the green, bruised, aud de caying berries cut out with a pair of scissors. They were then packed precisely according to tho directions we gave in October last (Vol. 17, pago 307.) Dec. 22, when grapes were a rarity in the city, Mr. Haight sold the product of his single vine here, for $564, (25 cts. per lb.) Pretty well for ono vine.— lb. BRAINS. An American slooo of war had put into an English port, and the first lieutenant went ashore to reconnoiter. In the course of his travels, be entered a tavern where a number of British officers were carousing. They at once recognized the lieatenant's nationality by his dress, and resolved to amuse themselves by bullying him. "Well, comrade," says one, "you belong to tho United States, 1 see." "Right," was the answer. "Now, what would you do to a man who should say that your navy did not contain an officer fit for a buroboat?" continued the En glishman. "I would blow bis brains out!" returned the lieutenant, with great coolness. There was silence amoDg her majesty's ser vants for a moment, but finally, one ot' them, more muddled than the rest, managed to stam mer out. "W—well, Yank, I say it!" The American walked to bis side, and re plied. calmly: "It is lucky for you, shipmate, that you have no brains to blow out /" Struck by the dignity of the answer, the of fender at once apologized, and our hero was invited to join the mess. The greate&t charm of books is, perhaps, that we see in them that other men have sut . fered what we have. Bome souls we ever fiud who could have responded to all our agony, be what it may. This, at least, robs misery of its loneliness. Tbfe origin of Pennsylvania is thus given by an eld epigrammatist': Penn refused to take bis bat off Before the King, and therefore sat off Bome other country to light pat on Where he might worship witb Lis bat on ! BEDFORD. PA., FRIDAY, MARCH 18, 1859. DANGERS OP SKATING. ! A correspondent of the Philadelphia North American writing from a town in Massachu setts, where skating is all the rage, tells about his adventures ofl the ice with Mary. Hear him : WHO MAIiY IS. Mary is as pretty a piece of humanity in ihe shape of woman s you can find this side of Heaven. Such eyes! such hair! such teeth! And her hand ! Well now there; I think it was just ttie smallest, tho whitest—why, ivory is slow to it. And her foot was ]{{j 0 a lit tle white rose bud, its snowy leaves just show ing enough to set off the neat covering that concealed 'he rest from profane eyes. It did not seem a foot, as one saw it reposing in its j tiny kill slipper, like a Canary bird in its nest. I MARY HAS THE SKATING FEVER. Well, sir, this Mary caught the skating fc- j ver, which is now raging so fear fully. I heard ; her express a wish for a pair of skates and the next day she had the best pair that could be found in the city, and nobody kuew who sent them to her—but, bless me, bow my blood boils ' at the thought of the consequence?. MARY PUTS HER FOOT IN IT. We went down upon the ice, and there that little devil of a Mary just set quietly down, ordered mo on my knees and quietly placed that foot, tho foot, the poetio myth, in my lap and bid me puton her skatos. Sir! had Venus dropped from heaven, and Lid me rub her down with rotten stone end oil, it could not have astonished uie more than when that divine foot was "placed in my unworthy lap. I felt very faiut—but J buckled OD the skate, and stood up, with Mary by my side. THE BACHELOR'S DEAD SWIMS. Have you ever taught n woman to skate I No ; well, let me tell you. You've been in a room lined with mirror?, havo'ut you?— You've seen a kaleidoscope with a few old bills of glass, &e., in a tin tube, and turning it have seen all sorts of beautiful figures. Just irna | ginc a kaleidoscope, and in place of beads and broken glass, please substitute blue eves, curv ing eye lashes, lips, ivory, wavy hair,crinoline, gaiter boots, zephyr worsted, cupids, hearts, darts, a clajj. at" thunder, a fia*L f iiyh using, and 'auld Nick.' Imagine yourself the centre of a system with all these things revolving rouud you, and a viols', buuk IrealLiog sighs upon you all the while, and you have Mary aod ber victim in the first skating lesson. GAITERS IN THE PIT OF HIS STOMACH. Hut just let mo try to describe our perfor mances. Mary I start—she on my left arm all square. Lord have mercy on my poor puzzled ; brain while 1 try to describe the stirred end mixed rainbow of sights aod sen timet, U.— First, Mary's dear little gaiter loots present themselves to my astonished vision, and before 1 have time to wonder how they canto up before me 1 feel them pressing their blessed beauty, with emphasis, into the pit of my stomoeh. MARY PITCHES INTO niM GENERALLY. Next scene—wavy hair, with & thirty dollar bonnet and a divine head, came pitching into my waistcoat, with such force that I fetl the buttons against my spine. Next—Mary gazed up at me from between my jack boots, and anon her blessed little nose is thrust into bosom of my shirt. Ah ! nr. friends, all re search and study on (be mysterious subject of woman has teen comparatively in vain, till i| this eventful year of 1859, the fashion of skat ing has opened and varied sources of informal lion. MARY SUBDUES HIM. 1 car Mary! I offered myself to her ever, tiuio she turned up, r came round. I am hers : but I wish to enter my solemn protest before the world, that she alone could not have j conquered me. Hut who could hold out, when surrounded by cn army of Marys on skates? I au hers!—but lam awfully sore! Ah! I have learned something. Cupid makes bache lors tender as cooks do tough steaks, by ham mering and pounding. COURTING BY TELEGRAPH. A ceitair, young utan, whom we shall call Smith, was employed at an office on the Na tional line. In the course of business, ho as certained that a person having charge of a station in a small town some seventy miles dis tant, was a youDg lady, and that her name was Sarah, Forthwith, in an' interval of leisure, flashed ever the wires this message : "My name is Smith—how old are you ?" To which an answer was promptly return ed : "My name is Sarah —None of your busi ness !" The next one ran thus : "1 am not married—What are you worth ?" "To which the words came back : "Worth a tuillioD." As a climax, the youth replied : "Will you marry me?" Tho answer was, 'Yes'—aud in four months tbey were married. An Irishman who had returned from Italy, where he had been with his master, was asked in the kitchen, 'Yea, then, Pat, what is the lava I hear the master talking about ?" "Only a drop of the crater," was Pat's re ply. A Yankee doctor has got up & remedy for hard time. It consists of ten hoars' labor well worked in. Wontod by a Dutch gardener—a journeyman cooper, to head a cabbage. What tune can make every one glad? Ans. Fortune. VARIETY IN CREATION. There are 56,000 species of plants on exLi tion in the museum of Natural History of Par is. The whole number of speoies in earth and sea cannot be less than four or five thousaud. These aro of nil sizes, frfcui the invisible for ests tC a bit of mouldiness to tho towering frees cf Maltbar, 50 feet in circumference, and the fcanisas, whose shoots cover a circumfer ence of five aures. Each of these has a com plicated system of vessels for the circulation or its juices. Some trees have leaves narrow and short; -others, as the talipot of Ceylon— have leaves so large that one of them can shel ter fifteen ot twenty tnen. Some exuviate their leaves annually, as a whole robe, leaving the tree nude, its bare stem towering and its branches spreading themselves uncovered in the shy; while the leaves of others drop off one by one, new ones constantly growing in the place oFlfae dismembered onep, aud the tree re taining its perpetual verdure - There have actually been ascertained, in the animal kingdom, about 60,000 species of liv ing creaqsrcs. There are 600 species of mam malia—tioso that suckle their young —the most ofwbiob are quadrnped*. Of birds, ; there are? 4-,000 species; of fishes, 3000; ot reptiles.'ToO, and of insects, 44,000 species. ' Besides|hese, there are 3,000 species of shell fish, am )not less than eighty or one hundred ! thous&naspectes of animalcules invisible to the I naked c\ A Some iVrfA of life require a moist atmos phere, a dry oße. A blue water lily ' grows in 4s canals of Alexandria, which,wbeD the water Jfosporates from the beds of (be eq uals, driemp; end when the water is again in the nanelsm again grows aad blossom;. Aud some of tboweßt animals may he completely dried and fcpt in this state for any length cf : time, bul irsn they are again rrcistened, they resume th®tnctions of life. Some plants are adapted ufijf to particular climates; others grow in d*;reat climates; but they do not flourish eqwify weli in these. As a tree which in the Soutfcrn States attains a height of 100 feet, at Grt Slavo Lake, the Northern limit ;at which :■ found, becomes dwarfed to a ; shrub of oal five feet high. Life, both vege table aod atfcal. is infinitely modified; tut in all cases irsXst development ts only uudcr those oonditmg to which it i specially adapt ' Bff."~ "How flialfOM wnr rtry- O Guff! in wisdom tbou Kit fliade them all.— Life Illus trated. IJFE How truly § es the journey of a single day, its changes at: its hours, exhibit the history of banian lifaj We rse up in the glorious freshness of (fyiog morning. The dew? of night, those ffeet tears of nature, are hanging I from each boi*h and reflecting morning. Our hearts are biting with hope, our frames are buoyaut sri:!* health. Wo see no cloud, we fear no storm, ar.d wirh our chosen and belov ed oompanioi clustering around us, we com mence our jiiirney. Step by step, the scene becomes mo® lovely; hour by hour, our hopes become brighter. A few of our companions have dropped away, but in the multitude re maining, and the beauty of the 6cenery, their loss is unfe*. Suddenly we have entered up on a new country. Tho dews of the morning are exhaled by the fervor of the noon day sun; the friends that started with us are disappear ing. Some remain, but their looks are cold I and estranged; others have lain down to rest, i but new faces are smiling upon us, and new ! hopes are beckoning us on. Ambition and ' fan.a arc fcefoio us, but youth and affection are behind us. The scent is more glorious nod i tiriliiani, but tho ho.-nty and the freshness of i ;ho morning have faded and forever. Onward l and ouwsrd we go; the horizon of happiness < land fanio reoodes as we advance to it; tho Iphadows begin to lengthen, aud the chilly airs of evening are usurping the noon day. Still We press onward; the goal is not yet won, the j|aven not yet reached. The orb of hope that Jad cheered us on, is sinking in the West; our mbs begin to grow faint, our hearts to grow j d; we turn to gaze upon the scenes that we j Lave passed, but the shadows of the twilight ; have interposed their veil between us: we look ; around for the old and familiar faces, the com panions of our travel, but we gaze in vain to find them; we bavo outstripped them all in the ; race after pleasure, and the phantom yet un oaught, in a land of strangers, in a sterile and j inhospitable country, the night time overtakes ' us—the dark aud terrible night time of death, and, weary and heavy laden, we lie down to rest in the bed of the grave. Happy, thrice happy, is he who has laid up treasures for him , self, for the distant and unkuown to-morrow.— 1 Knickerbocker. MASKS AND FACES. A great masquerade ball was given iu Mil ! waukee about a week ago. The News of that ! city, io the course of an article describing it, 'says: "One gtutlemen fell iu love with his own sis ter, while another man danced, talked and promenaded with a geutlemau iu a woman's dress three hours in the vain hope of finding out who tho dear creature was. One youog man took his mother to the sapper, and groat was the surprise of both on learning how mat ters stood. One of our leading merchants gave his ring to a young lady if she would raise ber mask that he might see her features, when it was bis own sister, who he supposed was at home witb the toothache! Two gentlemen got into a warm dispute as to who a certain young lady with a black domino was, aud after making a wager of two bottles of champagne, found out that the young lady was the yonger and mis chievous brother of the losing party." Wanted to kDOW —where the hail stones are quarried? FUTURE EQUALITY. We stand upon common ground. The Great Leveller will knock at your door, Sir Million aire, as well as at mine, and we must both open to him, whether we bid him welcome with our hearts or nqf. Roll along, then, in your chariot, nor heed the poor pedestrian who drags his blistered feet over the hard sidewalk.— Stoop not at the imploring voice of the ragged mendicant. We aro all travelling the same way, and shall ultimately reach the same inn— the grave. "There the wicked cease from troubling, and the weary are at rest." The weary! is there not consolation in the assur ance? Courage, then, storm beaten joumcyera over the desert of lifel Toil on, yet, while autid trials and tears. The goal is at hand—your home—your haven of rest. Does the man of this world, who has laid up stores for many years and spoken peace to his OWD soul, afflict or oppress you? forgive him. He is your fel-. low traveller to tho land of souls—he will soon stand upon an equality with yourself.— His treasures cannot bribe the spoiler. His gold may soon become cankered, and his fine gold be dim. Let not the rich be unduly elated, nor the poor unduly depressed; for in the great com munity of the dead there is nothing known of inequality. Let the proud bo bumbled at the thought, and the humble lifted up. Come, neighbor, thy hand! We will trudge along life's uneven road together, if you please and encourage each other so to live—will it uot be Cie tetter way? that when our summons comes to depart benoe, "We go—not like the quarry slave at night Scourged to his dungeon—hut sustained aud soothed By an unfaltering trust, approach onr grave, Like one who wra-ps the drapery of his couch About him, and lies down to plasint dreams." HOW COFFEE CAME TO BE USED. At the time Columbus discovered America, coffee had never been known or used. It only grew in Arabia and upper Ethiopia. The dis covery of its use as a drink is ascribed to the superior of a monastery in Arabia, who, desi rous of preventing the monks frm sleeping at their nocturnal services, made them driok the infusion of coffee, upon the report of some shepherds, observed that their flocks were moae lively after brovreitig on the fruit of that plant. Its reputation rapidly spread through ! tho adjacent countries, and io abont two hun* j ured years it reached Paris. A single plant, i brought ir 1614, became the psrent stock of ' ail the coffee plantations in the West. Indies.— I'be extent of consumption can now hardly be realized. The United States alone annually consume at the cost of its landing from four teen to fifteen millions of dollars. You may know the Arabia or Mocha, the best coffee, by its smaii bean and dark color. The Java and East India, the Dext iu qualily, is a larger bean, and of a yellow color. The West India Rio has a blue, greenish gray tin'. OBEYING ORDERS. A certaiu General of the United ?ta!es Ar my, supposing his favorite horse dead, ordered an Irishman to go and skin him. 'What, is Silvertail dead?' asked Patrick. 'Wbt is that to you?' said the officer; 'do as 1 bid you, and ask me no questions.' Pat went about bis business, and in about two hours returned. ♦Well, Pat, where have you been nil this time?' asked the General. "Skinning your horse, your honor." 'Did it take you two hours to perform the operation?' 'No, your honor, but then you see it took me about half an hour to eateb the horse.' 'Catch him! fire and furies! was ho alive?' 'Yes, your honor, ond I could not skin him alive, you know." 'Skin bim alive' did you kill him?' 'To be sure I did, your honor! and sure you know I must obey orders without asking ques tion'. WHEN DEATH COMES. Death comes at morn, when the sun is just j rising in the east; at noon, when its rays are moswesplendeut: at eve, when it gradually; sinks beneath the horrizon ; at midnight when ; it is entirely hidden from view. It comes to : the babe just commencing to prattle , it comes to the man of middle age, when the connecting j links binding us to life nre most strong ; it; comes to the aged man with trembling limbs i and faded eye sight, led aloDg by others ; it comes to the poor, struggling to obtain a meagre sustenance ; it eomes to the man in | ! easy circumstances, by whom life is best em ployed ; it comes to the wealthy, re.hng in affluence and ease; it conies to the idiot laugh ing at his own folly ;it comes to the man ! just neuse enough to pass through liie easily , it comes to the educated man glorjiug in nia Cicero and Homer; it comes to the christian who looks upon it only as a happier land.- Reader these words are spoken to you. " ill you heed them ? CHRISTIAN EARNESTNESS. How beautiful and how needful in our churches is Christian earnestness ! What are professed Christians doing to bring sinDcrs to the Saviour ? Shall not the sight of souls in the guilt of unnumbered sins, and under the threat of everlasting woe, move us ? Surely there is power in the death of Christ as a motive. May His love cousiraiu us, as it did one who was "wounding Him iu the house of his friends," but was brought to repentance aod to duty by a picturo cf the Crucifixion beneath which were engraved the words : "I did this for thee ; What Last ihou done for me?" VOL. 32, 0.12. THIS LORD'S PRAYER, We hare lately fallen upou something very different from the usual poetical paraphrases of Sacred Writ. It is a versification of the Jjord's Prayer—an orison, the brevity and concentra tion of which ought to be a lesson to those who indulge ia many words when tbey pour out prayer and praise. It has lately been publish ed in Loudon, is composed as a duet, and har monized for four Tcioee, with an accompani ment for the organ or piano-forte. It runa thus : <; Our Heavenly Father hear oar prayer;' Thy name be hallowed everywhere ; Thy kingdom come : thy perfect will lu earth as 10 Heaven, let all fulfill ; (live til is day's bread, thot we may live; Forgive our sins as we forgive ; Help us temptation :o withstand; From evil shiel! us by Thy hand ; Now and aver u:ifb '1 bee. The kingdom, power, and glory he. Amen." Here notbiDg ia redundant, nothing wanting. The music, simple and melodious, is said to be worthy of the words. OWE OF THE SENTRIES. In a recent lecture upon Washington, Theo dore Parker told tho fallowing anecdote: At Cambridge, Gen. Washington had beard that the colored soldiers were not to be depend ed upou for sentries. So one night, when the pass word was 'Cambridge,' he went outside the camp, put on an overcoat, and then ap proached a colored sentinel. 'Who goes there?' cried the sentinel. 'A friend,' replied Washington. 'Frieud, advance unarmed and give the coun tersign,' said the soldier. Washington came up and said 'Roxbury.'' 'No sar,' was tLe response. 'Medford,' said Washington. 'No sar,' returned tho colored soldier 'Charlestown.' The colored man immediately exclaimed, '1 tell you, Massa Washington, no man go by here 'out he says Cambridge.' Washington said 'Cambridge,' and went by, aud the next day the colored gentleman was relieved of all fuither necessity for attending to that particular branch of military duty. PROSE POETRY. I gsv2 fast* n rose ha? t rieg, and I asked her to marry me then—but she sent them all back, the insensible thing, and said she'd no nothing of men. I tcld her I Lad oceans of money and goods, and tried to fright her v.ith a grow}, but she answered she was not brought up in the woods to be scared by the screech of an owl. I called her a baggage and everything bad ; I slighted her features and form, till at length I succeeded in getting her mad, and and she raged like a sea in a storm. And then ic a moment I turned and smiled, and called her my angel, and she fell in my arms like a wearisome child, and cxtfa iioed, "we will merry this fall." DO RIGHT, i A man that has a seal worth a six-pence must bare enemies. It is utterly impossible for the be6t man to please the whole world, and the sooner this is understood, end a position taken in view of this fact, the better. Do right though you have enemies. You cannot escape them by doing wrong, and it is little gain to borler away your honor and manhood, aud divest yourself of moral courage, to gain what? Nothing! Better abide by the truth —frown down all opposition, and rejoice in the feeling which must inspire a free and in dependent man. WEIGHT OF A MILLION IN GOLD.— In answer to the question "what is the weight of a mil lion of dollars in gold 1" an officer of the mint calculates as follows : The weight of one mil lion of dollars of United States currency, in gold, is 53,750 troy oz. This makes 4479 pounds, 2 oz, —or nearly two tons and a quart er, reckoning 2000 lbs only to each ton. As weighty as this is, we have no doubt that, if the amount were offered to any body who would lift it, there would be enough persons found ready to break their necks in tho vaio at tempt. THE INCORRUPTIBLE PRESS. The incorruptible of the feuilletonist may be judged ef by she following fact- A di rector was vaunting the success of a new piece— "Why," he said, "the very cheek-taker is rubbing his hands, put that in. Tell the pub lic that the check-taker is rubbiDg his hands with glee." "I cannot, sir.** "l-annot! Why not ?" "Because, sir, the check taker has enly one hand." A lover had been offered a kiss if he would prove His assertion that locomotives wore ac customed to chew tobocco, ss well as smoke out of their pipes : "Observe the sound As the crank oome* round, He archly said, "It's choo—choo—choo, To go ahead, And ohoo— oho©—choo— chtw, To 6cfc'er." Benevolent impulses, where we should not expect teem, in modest privacy, enaot * scene of beautiful wonder amidst the pi"*" l ' B of angels. Calamity never leaves ns where it found US ; it either soften" or harden* ibe heart of its victim*. ,