1 11 iin nwra Maiiis it. ni PlttE. Cdifor ami PuMIr. OLUBIE 5. HB IS A FREEMAN WHOM THE TRUTH MAKES FREE, AND ALL ARE SLATES BESIDE. Terms, fyi Per year In advance. i r7oMAS OAKLAND :i hCEBESS QUEENSWAR r ! LqODAND WILLOW WARE, AND NOTIONS, i ill liuuu" v' EJ4CO.V, FLOUR, :ED AND PROVISIONS, 1323 Eleventh Avenue. -.sen 13th and 14th Sts., Altcona. ron.h Spires, Brashes, "U'ood V' vi'sre. Shoe Marking and Station- : ' c lM Ii om Riauuiuviuici a puuivu '.j ,,4 aij other poods in mj line at . I.'.i!t::::or Cincinnati and I'itts .I j -r-t -ri.es- To dealers 1 proseuttba 'VutiWc if saving them all freight '..jv"ve, aShty are not required to pay !!r :; the r-r;:iei;v.l cities and no dray "."."', are nude. ' Dealers may rest as v p-ni? itrc of the Lest quality and nioi'.enue as city rates. Dy doing ".--hi bu.-isis.s find by promptly and ori'T all orders, I hope to merit i .u x"..!ity and elsewhere. Orders re- liriuiiti'teJ ami satisfaction puaranteed J,: THOMAS CARLAKD. : , Jy 2'J, lr,j.-tf. nvTli fi E W . YEAGEE. I ff!i!tjale ruiI Iietall Dealer In NS AND GOOK STOVES G-EVERY DESCRIl'TIOX, niSffllEI-MIfJlM KIS OWX MANUFACTURE, .GENERAL JOBBER in SPOUTING ill ill other vrorh in Lis line. T''a Street, near Caroline Street ALTOO.Wi, 1M, '.'s '.i'J.e: in the citv liavir-jr the ripht to " 'wnci " 3ARLEY SHEAF" l '.'OK SrOVE. the most perfect Complete and satisfactory tiove ever uitroduccd to the public . ,Tv Immln.se. - Trices Low. AT!rACTIOX GUARANTEED. jH'UUl), JIORIiELL & CO., Washington street, arFa. R. R. Depot, Johnstown, Pa., HVic'csfl.' and Ldcil Dealers in IliliSSIEMYfflS M1LUXEKY GOODS, AND SHOES. HATS AN I) CAPS. 1,!t-is A.D riji, CLOTHS, .ADV-MADH CLOTHING, M-AIIi.. Vl.LI.OW WAKE. " -'' ui::; and willow ware, :5Sand FESD, ALL KINDS, .'."rT, :,!!.'1,! manner of Western I'rodiice, v! ,';:ty.:,e f-'xl retail orders solicited ('-.,'.. fi.'.o-i on the shortest notice and -'i.-UIlatjiD tHfrilS. VOoiJ, MORRELL & CO. hifr 7 . t,7. - .a ......... j AS. B. ZAIIM. ZAHM 2l SON, PEALER8 IS COODS, GROCERIES, HARDWARE. QUEENSWARE, PCapsjEootshoes, ALL OTHER ARTICLES ay Kept in a Country Store. JL AKD COUNTRY PKODUCE ' JN EACHASGn FOR goods! tfouE on main street, Door to the Post Office, IScj. rr.FVSP.TTPn t KrLM) YOUR 30OTS AND SHOES Meu'i and Bt IV. - J" ULilrrstfr..l ,.i r. n :r i . . i crjict, iriuuj imui ma ma nu , "fiumers and t.tn nuh ir it enmn v t . -OFs manulacture liOUTS and -V J any liesire(i eize or qusjity, from -J, 'rench calfskin boots to the coarsest t,r,,. , . e- . ( ... i.iu Tsar best MAxm, on the staort rf "J..'ee. an(i at aa moderate prices as like iv'!-. ,'?-hilve worn loots and Shoes made v a 1 a'"J Ul my worit. miners enn Fv 1 TJ n-na ue convinced. :rom .a!nn" of Boot3 aa1 Shoes attended 'iiii' f i r " a.uiaiiime manner. for Pa8t favors I feel confident that 5iL, 'u.l'ri(;es will commend ino to a con lucreaae of the same. K, r . JOHN D. THOMAS S. April 23, 18CQ. it!r nrni THE GREAT OAK HALL ORIUM! 241 Main Street Johnstown. S. J. IB k BROTHER HAVE NOW ON HAND The Largest, Best Made AK!) MOST Dl'RAOiLE Stock fl? CMMsit EVEU KEPT IX JOUXSTOWrt, consisting chictly of MEN'S COATS. MEN'S PANTS. MEN'S VFST.q YOUTHS' COATS. YOUTHS PANTS. YOUTHS' TESTS: OYS' COATS, BOYS' PANTS. BOYS' VESTS. We have also constantly, in stock a complete assortment of IBM'S FMNISniXO GOODS, Hats, Caps, Trunks, Valises, &c. ln- of every description on the shortest notice. Call at Xo. 241 2Xaiu Street, AND SEE HOW IT IS YOURSELVES ! Johnstown, April 22, lS71.-flm. AE W FIRM IN M OLfi STAiXD GOOD GOODS & GREAT BARGAINS Foil THE ItEAlY CASH I J A VINO bocomo proprietors of the STORE s ItOUM ami STOCK OK GOOD.-- recently litv Ijnjfinf to II. A. Slio-muktTii Co., and iiuving ptirt'hMsed un additional STOCK OF NEW GOODS IX U Ml AT VARIETY, Me are nnw prfparfd to supnly all 1ho old ons toiucrs of the late tirin, anil'as insny new ones as will patronize us, with (Joods of nil kinds at PRICES FULLY AS LOW n? any other rarrchant in or out of ('itmlri:i county. It is our intention to keep our Store Constantly stocked with a full and w-l I selected isoitment or jky hoods, j)Ff;ss (;ids, FANCY GOODS, IXOTIOXS. HOOTS, SHOES, HATS, CATS, CLOTHING. CAKPKTS. FI HNI- TCKK, OIL CLOTHS, Ol'KKXSWAHK, GHO- JiACCO, C IGAHS. und all other articles, laru-o r sumll, that can bo found in any store of like chariicter in the county ; and as we intend to SUluI, EXCLUSIVELY for CASH OK COUJVTnY PKODUCE, ami make no had debt, we feel sure that our stoek and our prices will not only seeura but retaiu !r us a liberal share of putronnire. EARLY VISITS FROM ONE AND. ALL nrc respectfully solicited, and if we fail to ren der entire satisfaction, both as regards the fluid ity of our tfoorls and the prices asked for them. It. will certainly be no fault of the new linn at trie old tand fit Shoemaker v t o.. Hitch reot. I)jn't foryet to call and we'll not for-et to jrlvc you full value for your nmiifv. Ebonsbur?, Jan. lo71.-tf. JEMOYAL and ENLAKGE3IENT. COOKING STOVES, KEATING STOVES. Til COPPER & SHEIT-fflBI WARE. Havinir reeentlv taken noFsesinn of the new ly lifted up and eominodious buihlinsr on Hlirh street, two doors oust of tho Hank and nearly opposite the Mountain House, t he subsenbtT ii better prepared than ever to manufacture all articles in the TJN.C'Ol'I'KK and SH KHT-IItON WAKE line, all of which will be furnished to buyers at the very lowest living? prices. . The subscriber nJso proposes to keep a full and varied assortment of Cocking, Parlor and Heating Stoves of the most approved designs. rSrOL'TING nnd ROOFING made to order and warranted perfect in limmifac ture and ma terial. KI.l'AIKING promptly cttendel to. All work donu by mo will bo ilone ria-ht and on fair terms, and all STOVES and YV'AUEsold by :ui' win be depended upon as to quality and cannot bo undersold in price. A continuance and increase of patronnne is respectfully solici ted, and no effort will be wanting to render en tire sutialaction to uil. VALLTE LUTltlNGEIl. Et.easburr, Oct. 13, lS70.-tf. Mild! ID Will. WM. P. PATTON, 3Ianufacturer1 and Dealer iii -AU KINDS OF CABINET FUENITUBE oh. 13 O m (I loi Iintoti Street, JUITXSTOWJS', PA. Cank CnATita, AVoon Seat Chair?, Kitchen Fcknituke, Hku Locnoes, PIatthesses, Tkte-a-Tetes, Extension Tables, JMsixo Tajiles, Cl'PBOAHlJS, &C., &C, ice, StC, &C., &0, ltF.ISTBAI)S, Washstam,' SuKiAnti,' Cham bkk Skts,' I'Aiium Sets, WAitniioinss, Hook. C'askb, &c., ic., Jcc, &e., &c, EVEUY 1T.. SCHIPTION OV SCHOOL AND HALL FURNITURE made to order in excellent stylo nnd at low r.Vc;PS- , C,llllm't au1 t 'hairmakeiV malerials or nit kinds tor sale. Furniture delivered at anv point in ,Tohnstf)wn or ut Railroad Station free of extra charge. WM. 1' 1'ATTii': Johnstown, Oct.U3, 1870.-tf. ftlUSIU! MUSIUII The "Sisters --'-- OP ST. Joseph" will be prepared tf) jrive I . L-. . I? K't 1 A SSf Hlfi'll I IIU I J .vii ' ' Jf 1 M KUIKKI l.-N or UAHl-ffSSV. r.KT ougan at any vv nnie Tter i?aster. t?"or terms apply io i lie EMiperloress, MS- ter M. IIoktkssi:, or to ltev Charges modemte. I Ebensburx, April 1, lS71.-tf. C. CnmsTr, 00 F A MONTH II, fL an1 fi rr hi mi fit init.h 00 UsJ ed. Ejtpcns.es paid. 11. Shuw, AlIrtd.Mc, BMP . n. EBENSBURG, (Driginitl odrg. KITTY Li i; E . BY J. GIL. I.ONDEN. I llng-er by thc, little etreain; thy melodies I hear; mine ear: I.iko the voice of distant loved 9nes!t falls upon The bosom of thy tilvery waves rcllect the stars aboTe, love. And all thy songs of gladness are messengers of Uut thy murmur holds a sadness, around which memories play, hood's day : And It tenches me to love theo as I did in child For you seem to ask nic fondly, in a lang-uatre of thine own, land alone. VThy I wauder near thy shady banks so weary You have often seen a maiden by the name of Kitty Lee, hood's hour with me. VTho sat upon thy soft green banks In child Who east tho tiny jiebbles, and watched them Or g-athered Cowers that sweetly grew upon thy as thsy sank, mossy bank. It was here I learned to love her, as we listened to thy sonj; could e'er be wrong-. And no impulse ever taujrht us that to love It was here we strayed toother, and when we older grew would be true. We promised to oath other that vth always Kitty's parents they were wealthy, while mine werelseeniinjr poor, could endure ; Vet tho encoring blows at poverty 1 always For Kitty fondly loved me, despite my clouded Rky, or by and by. And bid me to have patience, 'twould be brljrht But we parted from each other upon this self same spot, be forgot; And vowed our ties of friendship should never Then with trembling- voice she whispered: "Wherq'cr in life you be. Remember that you have the prayers of little Kitty Lee." I met tho world as others do, all f riendlesa and alone, mine own ; Yet 'uiid it all I often found a heart befriend And Kitty often wrote to me to battle with the 111, incmborod still." For though wo lingered far apart, I was re- 1 strove the harder then to win the ba.ublcd boast of fame, honored name. That I might bring-to Kilty Lee a proud and Thus years went by, succoss was mine; within a distant land favoring hund. I had been blessed by many smiles and fortune's And thus I wrote to Kitty Lee, of wealth and proud success, turo happiness. And breathed the old love o'er again, with fu- She answered me and simply Mid, "I lovo you aa a brot her, . other. Eut ere you get this little note I must obey an- Think not my love shall perish though, for with angel hosts above ... sinless love. Lies the record of our childhood a bright aud They, may wed my hand to fortune, but my heart sbali still be freo you be." To hold thy cherished image, where'er in life Thus is a life of happiness so often cast away, Like the withered llowers of autumn that grew upon our way ; For oft bright hopes do perish by a simple turn of heart, depart. And leavo a lingering sadness that never will So your beauty holds a sadness around which memories play,' hood's day ; That teaches tne to love theo as I did in cbiltf- And the bosom of thy silvery waves reflect the stars above, love. Th4t I may see reflected my childhood's holy Lotnlen's Wil'licood Sonys. Salts, Sluices, 5pttSolts,it. TUC GIFTED FHOG. nn'innr cf TlTtt i a t r. 1 rl a cstvl more suited perhaps for children than l'or thoso who aro older grown ; but there is a lesson in the Btory which none will fail to admire and accept, notwithstanding the simple language in which it is taOght : It was such a pretty pool. Every eort of water-plant grow there, from the tall purple loosestrife and crimson willow weed to the creeping money-wort, with it a golden blossom?. Tho great white water-lillies liked to lay their eleepy heads on its calm, clear surface, and forget-me-nots ne6tled along its banks. In the evening th6 May flies could not resist the pleasure of dancing there, though they knew it might bo a danco of death ; for were there not numerous pink spotted trout watching for them below, and ready to dart on them at a moment's notice ? One evening at sunset a lively little trout was employing himpelf in this way with great success, when he observed an intelligent looking frog sitting on the bank, half in the water and half out, arid croaking. "Why don't you come right in V called the trout. "You can't think how lovely it ia. And tho May Hies are just in per fection. Come aloiig !" "No, I thank you," said the frog ; "I'd rather not." "rcrhap3 you can't swim V suggested tho trout, apologetically. "Can't I, though !" answered the frog. "Let me tell you that when human be ings try to' swim, it's me they imitate, not you!" "I should think not," said the trout ; "why, the poor things havent got any final Well, come along,' froggie, and let's Bee how you perform." "No, thank you," said tho frog again ; "I had enough of the pond when I was a young thing, with a largo head. I am too old to make such exertions now." 'Too old ? too lazy, you mean." "That's rude," said the frog. The trout darted upward and caught a fine May fly, then dived, and presently appeared again, saying in a conciliatory tone : "Aren't you hungry, old fellow ?" "Very," answered the frog. "Don't you like May flies V "llather ! Don't you tsee I keep open ing my mouth in hopes one will fly iu by mistake ?'' "You might wait long- enough, " said PA. THURSDAY, the trout, "though. your mouth is pretty wide and with that hb disappeared. Early the next morning, before the dew was oil' the ground, a sparrow in search of worms observed the frog sitting in the same spot. "Why don't you come right out and look for your breakfast, froggiet" said she. "Much too early to be-stir one's self," answered the frog. "Perhaps you cau'i hop ?" said the eparrow. "Can t I, though V said the frog. "If I chose I could hop a good deal farther than youl'' "If you could hop, I should think you'd have a try for that bluebottle sitting on tho thistle near you." I'll open my mouth wide," said the frog, "and perhaps he may come in. hy, there he goes right away. What an unlucfcy fellow I am, to be sure !" "Dear roc," said the sparrow. "Do you call that being unlucky ? I'm sure my nestlings at home open their mouths wide enough, but nothing drops into them but what 1 put there. But I must bo oil'." That evening when the trout came up for his supper, there sat the frog in the same place. "Good -evening, froggie," ho paid. "How many flies have popped down your throat since 1 saw you last ? Not many, I'm afraid. Why, you are getting thin ; your yellow skin hangs quite loose, and your eyes look positively goggle!" "Personal remarks are never in good taste," answered the frog ; and as he showed no inclination to continue the conversation, the trout went about his own affairs. Next morning tho sparrow appeared again, and there sat tho frog as before. Ualloo ! froggie!" said she ; "you there still ? What are you waiting for ?" "I am waiting for Providence to send me a fly," replied the frog ; but this time he spoke rather hesitatingly, for he was beginning to feci weak and hungry.' "Providence only helps these who help themselves," said the eparrow. "I don't believe the fly will be sent." "I certainly am a most unlucky beg gar," said the frog, "considering the number of flies that passed this way, and not one of them comes in, though I open my mouth so wide that my jaws ache." The sparrow hopped up to him, and looked at him for a moment with her head on one fide. "Well, you are a queer fish !" she said. "I am not a fish at all," replied the frog, with a calm dignity; and the sparrow picked up a tine worm, and flew off to her nestlings, Afser she was gone the frog observed a little blue b utter fly sitting on a blade of grass near. The pangs of hunger induced him to stretch his yellow neck for it, but so blowlj that the blue butterfly had time to escape, "Just like my luck !" solilo quized the frog. What's the use of oxert ing one's eclf ? Nothing ever comes of it." "How weak I feel, to be sure ! I think it'3 the effort of holding my mouth open so long that makes tne ill. I'll go to sleep." But he scarcely closed his eycB when a rustling sound close to him made him open them. There between him and the funlight looked a dark figure with cruel eyes. It was a great shrike, cr butcher bird. Poor froggie ! While lie was thinking what an unlucky fellow he was, the butcher bird pounced upon him, and put an end to his existence, after which he deposited him on a thorn till he should feel inclined to eat him. "Well, froggie, you there still ?" cried the trout, when ha came up in the even ing. "W'hy, he's gone! fairly Btarved out?" "Killed and spitted ?" 6aid the spar row, who had watched the whole pro ceeding, concealed in a bush. t "Poor fellow !" said the trout ; "I was afraid it would end so." Oswego Press. Cutting Off the Wf.ono Heap. An old farmer was out one fine day look ing over his broad acre?, with an ax on his shoulder, and a small dog at his heels. They espied a woodchuck. The dog gave chase and drove him into a" etcne-wall, where action immediately commenced. The dog would draw the woodchuck part ly out from tha wall, and the. woodchuck would take the dog back. The old gen tleman's sympathy getting high on the side of the dog, thought he would help him. So potting himself in position with the axe above the dog,' he waited for the extraction of the woodchuck, when he would cut him' down. So an opportunity offered, and the old man struck, but the woodchuck gathered up at tho same time, took the dog in far enough to receive the blow, and the dog was killed on the ppbt. For years after, tho old gentleman, in re lating the stdry,; would always add, "And that dog don't know to this day but what the woodchuck killed him." The Wythcville Va. Dispatch relates tho following: "Not far from us a young lady attempted to leave the parental man sion at dead of night, by lowering herself from her chamber by means of, a' pulley and a rope fastened to the window. She had just reached the ground, where her lover awaitod her, when her enraged sire appeared, seized tho young man, fastened the hook to his pants, and raised him skywards, leaving him dangliug in the air until morning. The elopement is post poned indefinitely." JULY 20, 187i. 4Tlei Star-Simngted llunner." T10y IT WAS COMPOSED ASD SET TO MUSIC, AS UtLATl!-.D BT iK OCTOGENAT.IAN. "And you knew Francis Key ?" "Know him ! Why he lived but a few doors above my father'3 houso. There were two brothers, John IIoss and Philip Barton Key. Philip was an olli cer iu the British army during the Revo lutionary war, while John was in that of the United States. John lived on Pipe's Creek, uear Taneytown, Frederick county, Maryland, where Francis and his 6ister Anna,5'John's only children were born. There was an exiled Scotchman, Mr. Bruce said to have been heir to the throne of Scotland who had built a mill on Pipe'6 Creek, and there, in tho com pany of lhi3 noble old aristocrat, Frank spent his very early boyhood. The brothers, Philip and John, were large, manly looking follows, but Frank and Anna were of much smaller mould. An na Key was a beautiful little, girl, with the checrfulest ways and most pleasant face I ever saw. When they moved into town, near my father's Frank was half grown, and ready to enter as a law stu dent with lioger B. Taney, then at the head of the Frederick bar. Roger was a tall, gaunt fellow, as lean, they used to say, as a Potomac herring, and as shrewd as the shrewdest, lie married bright little Anna. It was like the union of a hawk with a sky lark; but she lived to be the wife of a Chief Justice of tho United States, and I never heard that either repented of their marriage, Mr. Taney was a strict Catholic, and Frank an Episcopalian, not considered very zealous and sharp in his profession, End much given to dreaming. He went to Virginia, aud brought home a wife much larger and tallsr than himself, went to housekeeping on Market street, and had a couple of little children when I left homo in 1809 to seek my fortune ia Lan caster, Pa. . "You have heard of Admiral Cock-. burn, who commanded the British fleet ? The atrocious scoundrel ! Words can never paint the miserable coward and boaster in his true colors. After his dep redations along tho Eastern Shore of Maryland, there followed the sacking of Washington, the battle of North Point, and the attempt of the enemy to take the city of Baltimore by water, as they had failed to do it by land. You know all about the bombardment of Foil M'llenry, September 13th, 1814. I have gone over it again, in fancy, hundreds of times, and I'll tell you Frank Key, patriotic as he was to his heart's core, could not help composing that poem. It was forced out of him. Just think. He was a prisoner on the fleet, which was anchored two miles from Fort M'llenry the city's main defense. He could watch all the enemy's preparations and he knew the danger they foreboded. Through the terrific cannon ading of that midnight fight, whilo the sky was lit up with the fiery courses of the flying bomb?, do you think ho could sleep ? As tha struggle ceased upon the coming morning and he looked through the dim twilight for the flag of his coun try, his heart sick with fear and doubt, could he help the outburst of the first verse? And then, as through 'the mists of the deep' tho banner loomed dimly ia the morning sun's first rays, aud ho ex claimed, " "Tia the star spangled banacr ! oh, long my it wave O'er the land of the free nnd the home of tha brave! it was prayer and praise all in one ; and there has never been anything like it cince." Mr. Hcndon stopped to wipe his sweat ing faco with his red bandana handker chief, and take a rapid stride across the floor, lie had forgotten his cane and tho weight of his eighty years in this remin iscence cf his Ftroug young manhood ; and if Admiral Cockburn had that moment stood before him, in the flcsh-cnd-blood of his real self, I would have been the chronicler of his fate. - "'Have you beard Francis Key's poem V said one of our mess, coming in one evening, as we lay scattered over the preen hills near the captain's marquee. It was a rude copy, written in a scrawl which Horace Greeley might have mis taken for his own. Ho read it rIouJ once, twice, three limes, until the entire division seemed electrified by its pathetic eloquence. An idea siezed Ferd. Durang. Hunting up a volume of old flute music, which was in somebody's tent, ho impa tiently whistled snatches of tune after tune, just as they caught his quick eye. One called Anacreon in Heaven' (I have played it often, for it wa3 in my book that he found it,) etruck his, fancy apd riveted his attention. Note after nolo fell from his puckered lips until, with a leap and a ,chout, he exclaimed, Boys I've hit it I' and fitting tho tune to the words, there rang out for the first time the song of the 'Star-Spangled Banner.' How tho qien shouted and clapped, for never was there a wedding of poetry to music under such inspiring influences ! Getting a furlough, thebrothers sang it on the stage of tho Holiday Stroct Theatre coon after. It was caught up in the camp?, and sang around our bivouac fires, and whistled iu the streets, aud, when peace was declared. and we scattered , to our hornet", curried to thousand of firesides as the most pre cious relic of the war of 1812. FetuN nand Durang died I do not know where and Frank Key's bones lie in the cem etery at Fredericktown ; but I guess that song will live a? long as there isaii Amer ican boy to sing it. Mrs. Nellie Eystcr, in Harper's Magazine fi,r July. NOT BT 11. G. Tho basest fraud of earth is agricul ture. The deadliest i'jnisj'uti-.s that ever glittered to beguile, aud dazzled to betray is agriculture. I speak with feeling on this subject, for I've been glittered and be guiled, and dazzled and destroyed by this same arch deceiver. She has made me a thousand promises, and broken every one of them. She iiaa promised me early potatoes, and the rain has drowned them. Late potatoes and the drought has withered them. 5li3 Las promised me summer Fq-jaih-C3, and the worms have eaten them ; win ter squashes, and the bugs have devoured them. She has promised cherries and the cur culio has stung them, end contain living things uncomely to the eye and unsavory to the taste. She has promised strawberries, and the young chickens have enveloped them, and the eye cannot see them. SLe has promised tomatoes, and the c'd hens have encompassed them, and the hand cauuot reach them. I arose before dawn to set out sweet potatoes ; tha ague seized me ; I had thirty chills and three pscks cf potatoes. I toiled in the heat of the day to culiivate cabbages ; I raised twenty-two blisters, but nothing more. I labored with the latest twilight to hoe my melons, but found tho rheumatism. No wonder Cain killed his brother. He wus a tiller of the ground. The wondur is that he didn't kill his father, and then weep because he had no grandfather .to kill. No doubt his Early Pose potatoes, for which he paid Adam seven dollars a barrel, had been cut down by bugs, from the head waters of the Euphrates. His Pennsylvania wheat had been winter killed, and wasn't worth cutting. His Norway oats had gone to straw, and would not yield five pecks per acre, and his black Spanish watermelons had been stolen by boys, who had pulled od the vines, broken down hi3 patent fence, and written scurrilous doggerel all over his back gate. No wonder he felt mad when he saw Abel whistling along with lus fine French mcrinces, worth eight dollars a head and wool going up every day. No wonder he wanted to kill somebody, and thought he'd practice on Abel. And Noah's getting drunk wa3 not at all surprising. He had thrown away mag nificent opportunities. He might have had a monopoly of any profession or busi ness. Had he studied medicine there would not have been another doctor with in a thousand miles to call him "Quack ;" and every family would have bought a bottle of "Noah's Compound Extract of Gopher Wood and Anti-Deluge Syrup." As a politician, there is no doubt he might have carried his own waid solid, and ccntrclled two-thirds of tho delegates in every convention. As a lawyer he would have been retained in every case tried at t'.o Ararat Oiarter Sessions, or the old Ark High Court of Admiralty. But he threw away all theso advantages and took to agriculture. For a long time the fjrcuud was so wet he could raise nothing but sweet flag and bullrushes, and these at last became a drudge in the mar ket. What wonder that at last he did get half a peck of grapes that were not flung to death by Japhet's honey bees, he thould have made wine arid drowned his sorrows in a "flowing bowl." The fact is agriculture would demoral ize a saint. I was almost ft saint when I went into it. I'm a demon now. I'm at war with everything. I fight myself out of bed at four o'clock, when all my better naturo tells me to lie still till seven. I fight myself into the pardon to vo:k like a brute, when reaeca and instinct tell me to stay in the house and enjoy myself like a man. I fight tho pigs, the chickens, the moles, the birds, the bugs, the worms everything in which is the breath of life. I fight the docs, the burdocks, the rnullens, the thistles the grapes, the weed?, the roots the whole vegetable kingdom. I fight tho heat, the frost, the rain the hail in short, I fight tho universe, and get whipped in every battle. I have no more admiration to waste on the father of George Washington for forgiving the do struction of his cherry tree. A cherry tree is only a curculio nursery, and the grandfather of his country knew it. I have half a dozen cherry, trees,' and the day my young George Washington is six years old I'll give him a hatchet and tell him to down with every cherry trea on the olace. Cincinnati Times. A dVxnkkn fellow with, a box of match es in hiu pocket lay down on the sidewalk in Muscatine, thck other day, to enjoy a quiet snooze. " While rolling over in his sleep the matches took fire. . Awakening, he snulFed the air conspicuously, smolt the burning brimstone, and ejaculated, "Just as. I expected, in h 11 (hie), by hokey.', Lrrri.E Kisii have a proper idea of bu siness. Sot being able to do better they start on a small scale-.. NUMBER 24; SilCACXliVW A 3IIXC. Among the many dangers the Cornish miners have to battle against, one of the greatest arises from accidentally carrying tho excavations too closo to some disused pit, that perhaps many years since has been boarded and earthed over, and iu course cf time forgotten. V hen miners have reason to suspect that such is the cr.se a s:i?p:;:ion gener ally caused by a greater exudation of wa ter than is usual S'.iey r.t once proceed to what is technically termed "hole it ;" und the following description of it mav best be given in the word of r.rs old Cornish miner, ono cf the principal actors in tho undertaking : "Well, you see, sir, we were woi king two hundred fathoms down runnin;: a level due north and to our surprise the further we went the mere moist the earth got, till on going to work one m:inirg, we found the whole er,d of the wall cov eres with .drops of dew. Sctifig thi.5 it struck all of us at once thnt there must be a pit at no grent distance, and (as they a'most alius are) full of water. Fancy thif, sir; a body o' water reachir. many fathoms abovs ; yn-j are working only separated from it by a thin crust of clay, putting you in lhe momentary fear of this giving way, and tha water ru;-hiug in upon you ! "However, there it was, and must bo got rid of, and this, tou, by 'driving' oc 'hiding' right into it ; fjr if'ift we fhouhl never be safe, or tell when v.e micht come unawares across one of the many levels or shafts which run such numerous ways and depths. "When the captain of the mine learned cf its existence an offer was soon made on tolerable generous term3 to any who choose to empty it : which offer six of us accepting, we at once proceeded w ith our dangerous task. "The first thing v.e tiid wa3 to put up strong frame work with doors attached, opening inward toward the old pit, to that tho instant the mino was holed, by running and closing the doors in passing, the mas3 of water would bo kept Lack for a time long enough, r.t all events, as wo hoped, fur us to roach the ladders. After placing three of the?o safety valves, as we called them, ulopg the level at short distances ap:trt, we proceeded slowly and cautiously with the more dangerous part of the work. Bit by bit we got nearer and nearer to the old mine, at every blow of the sledge on the borer expecting tho rush of water to follow, often fearing to stiik3 more than ono blow before running fur our lives, til! the j constant dread which wo were alius in so worked on the nerves of the bravest that even a falling stone would be sufiieient to put every ono of us to flight. "Never shall I forget the morning when at last we did get through : and I can fancy seeing one o my mates as ho then stood with the borer held up for another to strike, the rest of us watching for tho blow to fall, and prepared to run if nec essary. "At last, while every eye was fixed on 'cm, the steel hammer rang on the borer, which in another second was sent whizt zing far away down the level, as with a horrible roar the water came tearing and crushing through the earth. "It was a run then for Ife, sir ; and in a f ir shorter time lh::n I enn tell it, wo were throogh the first floor wa-, and in the e.ct of swinging to the next, when the first wn3 dachod against it ; but, thank God, th"i3 for a time resided the pressure of jthe water, or I should not be here tell ing of it. "On we rpod, our o::ly hope of safety lying in gaining the ladders before tho last door gave way ; and what a distance they seemed, when even a few moments gained might rescue us from death! Breathless, at last wc reached them, and had ac-cendd but a few round v.-hen,, with a bang -whirl crash the water was upon us, and, fast as wc chmbed, like some horrid monster reeking our de struction, it glided up r-tcp for step with 113. "Even now a shuddering feeling creeps over roc ns I call to mind the fierce strug gle it was to climb faster than the water rose. Faint and weary, wc still tore up ward, for to rest only. far a few moments would, to a certainty, have been 'dtuti.' Un. un. with our droid c-nemv gaining 011 our flagging footsteps; now with cold water gliding to our knees, yet still with, renewed desperation struggling on. Thank Heaven the adit was at last reach ed, and we were saved. Dragging our exhausted limbs a few feet higher, we watched the dread torrent rushing through tl,i3 outlet. Then it was that, Riving a glance toward my comrades, I find titer o are but tvo left. Yes, sir, six of us went down; thrcz only camo up. .Whether thev were overtook in tha level or washed from the ladders none could tell, for death was too closely following us at the time to allow of us bestowing a thought on our noor mates. However, wo thought a deal more about them on reaching the mouth of tho pit, where stood their pale- ing to grans, and asking,, with a frightened cry, 'Where are our husbands V liltt U lll,4VMJ V rx ' I 1 C UUUIJ Vli.Jf j-'"'". v..'.., roaring gulf, for our hearts were too full to ultcr even the simple word dead." Custom is the plague of wise mv.n, and the idol of fools.