J. If. LARKIMER, )... R. FENT WARD, Jr., f Edit VOL Villi NO 20. Uj Republican. Terms ofPunrrlttlon IpTpaM in advance, or within thro months, fl 25 tfpaM any tlma wltliln ths ynr, ... jq tr paid after the expiration of the year, 2 00 Terra of Advertising. Xdvortlsomonta are inserted la the Republican it the following rate! : 1 Insertion. 2 do. 8 do. tl 00 2 00 2 60 12 mo. $7 Oil 10 00 12 00 14 00 18 00 One sinare, (14 lino,) $ SO Two sqtfnras, (28 lines,) 1 0(1 throe sqnartSj (42 lines,) 150 3 months $ 75 1 50 2 00 0 mo's. $t 00 II 00 8 00 10 00 12 00 One Square, : I t : Twotqliaret, : I I t Three squares, : I : Four squares, : : i Half a column, i i One column, : : i $2 50 t 4 00 : b 00 : 00 : 8 00 : 14 00 20 00 35 00 Over throe weeks and less than throe months 25 cents per square for each insertion. Business notices not exceeding 8 lines are in sorted for $2 a year. Adrertisemonta not marked with the number ft insertions desired, will be continued till forbid and charged according to these terms. LARRIMEIt &, WARD. ORIGINAL POETRY. TWILIGHT HOL'I BY W. W. S II AW. O happy hour of rest from toil, Thy advent with refreshing power, Comes silently as richest spoil, At twilight hour. When is the hour I lev to stroll '.Mid hendinjf boughs of eveiy fluwer, And gather the fnirest of the wholo 7 'lis twilight hour. The hour of muse ! O sweet art thua When contemplation weaves a bower Of grace as full as Nature now Is twilight hour. O hour of thought ! of dorpest thought, When soul and Into are fraught with power, -And naught but pnice surrounds the spot, Is twilight hour. O glorious hour of charming hope ! Thy lurid tint doth now assure A brighter eve will hence elope, Next twilight hour. O blissful hour! A dulcet spell, Xow we' come as a vernal nhower, Around m steals within the Icll, Li twilight hour. O calmest hour! thy murmuring brceie, Has lulled to rest the hustling world, And philomel alone relieves Still twilight hour. 0 hour of joy ! tby rupture fills, The fount of lore with fancied bliss, And rhispersscem to hush the rills At twilight hour. O dying knurl with gulden sheet, Waft in thy breere a holy wish, To l'egan lands beyond my feet, This twilight hour. Stay passing hour I Stay thou my light, Fain would my being wing its any, Where glows one hour tnat knows no night ' Long tw ilight hour, rhilipsbarg, Pa., June 7, 1859, THE JOURNEYMAN GENTLEMAN. DV CEORtiK ARNOLD. Joe Conway was an oddity. Ho was especially delighted in myste ries, disguises, unexpected documents, in trigues, and romance generally. Consequently, he was always getting in to very Imd scrapes, and superfluous as sertion there was always "a lady in the case." This made him a bit of a misogamist an amateuer woman hater. Yet, for all that, he could not let the sex alone ! A profound love of nature and dissipa tion, attracted Joe and myself to a little villago of D , on the hanks of that charming stream, the Ereliwon. We went to fish, to hunt,-to sketch, lo see the scenery, and to drink, for, as Joe remark ed, the waters of the Ereliwon possess pe culiarly refreshing qualities when mixed with a little cogniac." The afternoon of the second day of our ;journ founi us saat.id up in a dower spangled slope, skirted by willows, whoso gnarled roots were bathed in the pelucid Erehwon. We had sought the spot, to smoke, converse, and digest our some what elaborate dinner, in peace and quiet, with the beauties of nature before our eyes. As is very apt to be the case, when two young men cet together, our talk was of women. Women 1 wha an inexhaustablc sub ject for contemplation, conversation, wri ting, oratory, painting, sculpture, and .matrimony ! it all camnion, said Joe, "women don't appreciate cultivation, intellect nor gooa fellowship. All they look lor is wealth and position, when they love. If they don't find those nmroblo qualities, they won't love, and if a fellow hasn't them, he had better let tho sex alone. 'It takes a gilt key to unlockj their pre vious Utile luuirU. That's so !" "You are sadly mistaken Joe," said I, "and the worst of it is you don't know it. You are angry with the husband-hunters who have given you chose, nnd revenge yourself by damning the whole institu tion at siiiuity, Your wrong. A man Hike you, young, rich, and well, yes, without flattering, I think I may say tol. erably good-looking, has no chance, Y'ou see only tho designing ones, who are abound to marry your bank-account in spite of yourself, and they Jay oft' their charms upon you, ad miweam," "But wo are.the artless ones, who don't want money who are willing to sacrifice ithemselves, and all for that, for the sake of the tender paaaion ?" "They are modest. The brazon-faeed fortune hunters orowd about you, nnd ac custom you to being sought. The really good girls require seeking, and as that isn't & Publishers, n your litin, von never know how many U;ce women there are in the world." "Ml tell you what 1 11 do!" cried Jon sti.rlmg up suddenly, nnd half choking himself w ith ft mouthful of cigar-smoke "I'll test Hint question. I'll do it here in this very phu-e. Til turn mechanic, ignore my moiieyiand my family, make up to the prettiest, proudest girl in tho village, and show you that she won't mar ry me poor. Then I'll come out in my true colors, and show you that my cash is puissant to that which my conversation and acquirements cannot begin to do!" " .Vhat ; many her?" "Not much make her ask me t, and then laugh at her." I confess that I secretly hoped Joe would not tost the question, lie was a capital fellow, as licit in accomplishments, and cultivation as in money. Now I knew very well that D .contained some very charming girls daughters of retired sea captains, merchants, ect., who, honever much they might love a mechanic, would see him hanged before they would many him. Au eonirairc, a young gentleman of wealth and position, would prove very ac ceptable. But he was determined, and when I re turned to the city, in a few days, I left Joe arranging a chest of carpenter tools and getting himself up in a pair of blue over alls and a paper cap ! Joe had a wonderful talent for doing everything tolerably well. He played up on half a-dozen instruments, could sur vey, and dabbled in fine arts, understood short-hand, a little surgery and medicine, was a finished jockey, a fair gardner, had built a stone bridge, written an epic, and half-soled a pair of boots ! ll'ith these somewhat varied accom plishments, he had no fear, of course, but what he could get on very well as a car penter. No one knew him at D , and when ho introduced himself to the "boss" carpenter of the village, he sueceded in pursuiiding him that lie was a journeyman of unsusuai talent. He received several commissions during the first fortnight of his experiment, hut on the whole, it was rather luckv that ho was not compelled to subsist on the pro ceeds of his labors. Otherwise, he might have found it difficult to pay his hoard especially as he commissioned me to send linn some live dollars' worth of cigars ev ery week. l.ne day after he had nearly exhausted his patience, and had done no end of plot ting and planning in vain, the village car penter nsked him to undertake the resto ration of a cornice on Onejoftlre oldest and most aristocratic houses in 1) . Joe agreed, and in n short time was mounted upon the scaflbld, about on a level with the third sto:v w indows of the mansion of old Commodore Hulkington, dexterously making his measurements and plans for a new cornice. It was not an easy task, for the work was elaborate, and the weather warm. Two days elapsed, and Joo had only got ready lo commence putting up the brack ets which sustained the heavy mouldings. Lunch-time came, and the amateur car penter, getting in the shade, unpacked his little dinner-pail, and began a repast at once simple and nourishing, when he saw that the window nearest to him was open, and that some papers, laying on the escri torie inside, were disposed to blow away. "1 know it is n trespass," meditated he, "but it is for the proprietor's good I'll step into that room, and save, perhaps, somo valuable documents." A little gymnastic exercise brought him down from his scaffold, through the win dow, and into a very elegant chamber. "Ahem," said he "a woman's room." There were paintings, slatuetts, ormolu ornaments, and forty other luxurious nothings, such as women of tasio love to gather around them. A euitar reposed upon the bed, with some books in French and Italian. The couch itself bore the im press of a form, as if the tutelar deity of the chamber had been lying down, and passing her time with music ami litera ture. There was a portfolio open upon table, with a pretty little water color 1 Al 1 1 11 j 1 I to kotrli. linir-nnishoil n. won tcu'icw nlir:.- . , . .a , , . 1 y ry m uie corner ..ore cviuence u 1110 cm- experienced an emotion of pleasure a tivated taste of the occupant, and every- copiousness of the presence of some in thing about the chamber, from the i bed, i visible but charming sumt, and 1 have w ith its shower of snowy curtains falling j lmuIe bol(1 to t,,ltfr oftu1 believing that if from a massive gilt ring to the canary , you kncw my motives, vou would forgive bird in the window, bespoke a refinement j I110 and delicacy on the part of whoever had I The. young lady was begining to feel arranged the apartment, seldom found, ..ipd. All women like admiration, even except m yourgand beautiful women who lrom t)loir (s0.cilnej) inferiors, if it is del aspire to have their surroundings like ieutely expressed. themselves. The conversat'on proceeded. Joo proved "Something elegant about this," said'to the fair essayist that she was in error, Joe, gathering up the scattered papers, 'ani ng toiinded her by the depth and rjlacing them beneath a naner-weiL' it ..t i.; i. .m. I f . . . . , . Ion the escritoire, must investigate this j here's an opening for a splendid bit of romance poor young carpenter, and rich, loveiy women, en i muu uimuir, uieio have been bushels of mvels written on the same riot." After a hurried examination of the room i he regained his scaffold, and consuming his lunch, set once more about his labors, a little moro hopeful than before. Thus passed a week. Joe got into a very impudent habit of entering the chain- ber almost daily, in hopes of meeting the fair occupant of so charming o temple. Ho became familiar with all the books and music, whistled the canary bird into a convulsion of song, and drove himself half craiy with speculations upon tho fair un known. He had heard her sing very sweetly of a morning, when she opened the window and just cought a glimpse of her form j but she, seeing him, had withdrawn sud donlv, and he had not been able to discov er whether sho was beautiful as a rose or ugly as a camel. lie had found upon a half-finishod son- net, on the table, several long, brown hairs, appaientiy plucked out ma fit of abstracted meditation. "KXCF.I.SIOK." CLEAUFIKM), PA. WEDNESDAY JUNK 23, 1858. Evidently the girl was a blonde. Ho had found gaiters, of delicate colors und wonderful smullness gloves of cor responding delicacy tasoful and artistic dresses and sucqties. What will you say, oh, my mat ter-of fact and practical reader, when I lull you that my friend Joo Conwuy, fell in love with a woman ho had not yet seen of whom he as yet, knew nothing about? Yet he did. Quite naturally the erection of tho cor nice progressed but slowly. The master carpenter wondered at it, but Joo assured him every morning, that it would only take a day or two longer. One fine afternoon, Joe found, lying on tho escritoire, an essay on music, written in the same beautiful hand which he hud so often seen and admired on the margins of books, and papers in the chamber, (irown impertinent to an alarming extent, he laid down a saw which ho had uncon sciously brought with him, and perused the essay carefully. It was well written and powerful, but there was an error in the philosophy. It will be dull for me to explain here, the mistake which Joe saw ut once it is e nough that the fair writer had confused the Taws which govern melody and har mony, and Joe devoutly wished an oppor tunity to point out the error to her who made it. lie was just meditating an Btistle. to be left with the essay, when the door opened, and his dtnsc inronnue entered? Figure to yourself a voting girl say of nineteen or twenty whose every line and contour spoke of grace and health whoso neach tinted cheeks, bright eyes, and lips like the inner fold of some, tropic shell. told of viva ;ity, freshness, and purity. Her hair was of that peculiar imle brown almost a wood color 'vhich may perhaps ue ocst uesoniieu as a mingling ol ashy golden tints, and Ml in tangled masses half ringlets half disorder on each side of a neck white and delicate as the petals oi me ncauuiui cameiia. She did not scream when she saw the carpenter sitting colly in her nrm-chalr, making himself objectionably at home. She only opened her large gray eyes, hes itated a moment, and said : "Well, sir!" with an accent between surprise and disdain. Joe arose, and bowed politely. "What do you wish, sir?" Joe was put somewhat to his trumps. "I w Uhod to see w hat kind of a fairy inhabited so delightful a domain !" Truly a nice speech for a journeyman enrpented to make to Commodore ilulk ington's only daughter. "Possibly you are not aware that you are intruding, sir. You will oblige me by departing," "Certainly," said Joe, now in the full en joyment of the romance of the thing, "certainly I will go, but you must pardon me one thing 1 wish to explain a little question, n;i which you have doubts. Hainidi.y, .. ...usic, appeals to the intel lectual, oi iiasoning portion of the soul melody, to the passions and fellings." The young girl looked a little alarmed and drew back a few steps- "No !" said Joe, divining her thoughts, "I am not insane. In your essay on mu sic, you say that 'education refines and intensifies our preeeptions of melody.' You should have said 'harmony,' for that rules the brain, which organ is susceptible to the influeneo of education. Melody is lord of the heart alone, and you, made moiselle, ought to be well aware that the heart cannot be taught either in music or in love !" Miss Hulkington was astonished. "Sir," she said, "1 do not know what to make of your conduct. You are very im prudent and very very " "Audacious! Yes, I acknowledge that," interrupted Joe, "but you must pardon nie. 1 lust entered your room to place somt papers in safety, which the wind was Jnloiit to blow out of the window. Once inside, the air of elegance and refinement exhibited here attracted me. Doubtless you have noticed that one's surroundings ... vi. , v, " in avis iv,- ii ' e i . i i iiiiitr in c iik u Bin iirti i an in vnnp rnnni i ft "-- - J v .'waaa .wt.. uoiil A n in.-. in;iy ui ins knowledge, and tho elegmco of his dk tjon I On leaving, he held out his hand-al- most as soft and W i tn n.i her orn be ( stiilling the last traces of a fulse prejudice, gave it a cordial presure. 1 " l nil liuvi nor. Intitr wnrL-mt at vnnp trade?" she said. "Sinoo my boyhood," unblushingly an swered Joo, "out lie glanced at lus hands "1 have generally done the nicer j kinds of work joinery and the like." This excuse passed' very well with a , woman who hod never had the honor of the acquaintance ot a mechanic before. The next day, when Joo heard tho win dow opened, ho presented himself, and after exchanging salutations, the twain a gain fell into a discussion, which became so earnest that Joe was compelled once more to 3iiter the room . Alas for the progression of the new cor nice! For two weeks this Btato of affairs con tinued, and at the expiration of that time Louise Hulkington was compelled, maugre her pride, to acknowledge to herself that , she loved Joe Conway the journeyman carpenter. "' j lie would not believe it. Heentradiet- ed his theory of the mercenary character of women. And, 1 notice, we never believe anything Which contradicts our theories. Finally when tho cornice had to be fin ished, Louise petitioned her father to have an ornamental wardrobe put up in her chamber, Of course, Joe had the task, although tho old commodore grumbled terribly ubout employing such a slow work man. It took Joo six weeks to make that ward robe ! By the t line the job was done very nice ly done, it was too Joe's theory was quite done up, and the sweet Louise Hulking ton had promised to become his bride in spite of her father in spite of her father in spite of Joe's blue over-alls and paper cap in spite of tho notions of the world. Sensible girl There was only one thing left for Joe to do to reveal to her his true position, which I was very hnppy to corroborate. Throe months afterwerd, I said good bye to a newly wedded pair just starting for Europe, on a honey moon trip. As I held the tiny white gloved hand of the bride, and saw her charming fuce be neath the gossamer-tissued veil, depend ing from her "love of a bonnet," 1 said to her proud and happy bridegroom "Well, Joe, if you remember our con versation, on the banks of the Erehwon, last summer, you can toll me what you think now, of the sentiments you then ex pressed." "My dear George," said the Journey man Gentleman," there are exceptions "to all rules." FIRST LOVE. A 1' LEASING SKETCH. "Am I your only and first love?" asked a bright eyed girl, as she reclined her clas sically moulded brow upon the shoulder of her lover. "No, Leily, you are not my only, not my firt love; I have loved "another. Long years beforo I saw you I loved ano ther and I love that other still." "Love that other still, nnd better than me! Paul, why do you tell mo that?" nsked she inising her dark blue eyes and gazing steadfastly into those of her lover, half in astonishment, half in sorrow, while her jewelled fingers tightened convulsive ly upon her orm. "You asked me, Lclia, and 1 answered with truth and sincerity ; you would not have me to deceive you, would you ?" "You love her stiil, then ?" "1 love her still." ''And better than you do me ?" "Not better, but as well." "And will love her still ?" "Until death, and even beyond death ; over her last resting place will I strew spring's earliest flowers, and bedow the sacred gpot with the purest tears that love ever shed." "Handsomer than 1, is she not?" "Her eyes were black ns night, and her hair in glossy blackness outvied the wing of the raven. She hasn't your sweet blue eyes, nor yur soft brown hair; yet, oh! Leila, her eyes have been the sweetest eyes to mo that ever looked tho look of eternal loe." 'Tanl, why do you wish to break my heart ? Why hove you taught mo to love you so wildly and blindly, and then in I the midst of my happiness tell me there is . and impassable barrier between us? This I night, Paul, we mustl part forever! I j would not hnvo believed this, had another j told me!" atid her eyes grew dim with tears. "Be not too rash, Lei'ta ; hear me to the end ; you love me too dearly to part with me thus; think you that you could not share my heart with one that 1 so dearly love ?" Never, Faul, never!" "You shall, Leila, and must! Listen for a moment, while I tell vou of mv first love, ond I am sure you will bo willing to share with he then." "I will listen, Paul, but will not shnrc your love ; I must have all or none; I am , selfish in that respect, and who, that loves 1PJ 1 I U 1 lla 1 U UUt UJL'i X nil. Ul lJI UUt . ... b 1 e . i.iwAimM i" IUIt'1 VI "Forget her, Leila, never! I would not lose one jot of her pure ofiertion for the fairest face that ever bloomed ; no, hot for tho girdle of Venus, or the love of a se cond Helen!" "Then, Paul, you arc lost to me forever; wo must part. Farewell to our every dream of a brightened future. I love you too well, and am too proud to share your love with nught created. O I Paul I you have wronged mo deeply ;" and her ex quisitoly chiseled lips curled with indig nant sorrow. "Step, Leila, or ou will deeply wrong mo also. I met this loved one, as I said before, long years ago, in ono of the swee test and sunniest vales of our broad Illi nois ; wandered with her hand in hand, for years besido the sparkling waters of my childhood's homo. Hirst, by her smiles of exquisite sweetness, sho taught my heart that she loved me with unutterable fondness ; and never hove I doubted ; my trust in her has ever been steadfast and fearless ; never has her eye looked coldly on me, and never will it, till tho breath of the death angel shall dim for tho long sleep, uit in the still hours oi night ha o I been awakened, as if by the gentlo fan ning ot tho sleep-god s wing, und beheld that face, thoso eyes gazing upon me with all tho beatific tenderness of a guardian angel over a repenting prodigal ; and a kiss would fall upon my brow moro sooth ing than the dews of Hermon. The same gentlo hand has led menlong(life's flowery wsy and beside its unruflled waters ; and if ever my arm was raised to do a deed of wrong, or my heart steeled to conceive it. that gentle admonitory voice came whis pering in my ear, and stayed the one mid way and drew the iron from the other. And I do well remember in my manhood's riper years, when deep sorrow fell upon my soul, and I would fuin have drunk ob livion from the wine cup's fiery brim, that same dark eyed woman came, and bade me in the mime of God, to shun the fatal snare; and, twining her arms around my neck, while her eyes beamed with love's deep inspiration, she poured oil upon the troubled waters ; told me of purer hopes and higher aims, and in my ear whispered a golden word that has outlived all sor row. Leila, would you know the name of my first love ? 'Tis mv Mother !" "O, raid, I'll forgive you, and will share your love ; indeed I will." "I knew you would, Leila. Second love is as dear as the first." A Tale of Horrors An Incarnate Fiend Can it be ? Governor M'Willie, of Mississippi, is charged by tho Vicksiburg Southren with having pardoned out of the Penitentiary a man named I'yson, who had assassinated another man by the name of Nelms, for which he was simply sentenced to the pri son for fourteen years. That paper says of the criminal ; He waylaid his victim, with whom he had a deadly feud ; brought him down at the first shot, and then, emerging from his hiding place, taunted his dying victim with words of insult and reproach, and fi nally concluded by placing the muzzlo of his gun to the body of Nelms and firing a second time. This shot produced instant death, and so close was the gun to the victim that tho flesh of the murdered man was burnt by the explosion. Having com pleted the work of slaughter, he deliber ately mounted his hor e.rode to the house of Nelms, culled his wife out, informed her he had murdered her husband, 8nd directed here where to find his mangled corpse I Dyson is a blond-stained, blood-thirsty, incarnate fiend. He is not a man but a ferocious tiger, ard Governor M'Willie has no moro right to turn such a beast loose upon the community than ho has to open the cages of a wholo caravan of Ti gers. His antecedents are well known, too, and they should have forbidden all hope of executive clemency. The murder of Nelms was not his lirst taste of blood. He had previously, in a most base and cowardly manner, murdered a lawyer na med Moss, of I)e Soto county, by shooting him in the back as Moss rode from him. He had murdered threeof his negroes.and one of them in a manner so horribly ap palling as to cause the death of his own wife. Phis case occurred at hisown table, and the victim of his fiendish rage was a woman. Tuking ofTense at something the woman did, or omitted to do, whilo wait ing nt the table, ho rose, drew a bowie knife, and with a single b'.o'v, ripped her open. His wife swooned, and when she awoko to consciousness he had cut the negro's heart out, and, with it upon his knife, he thru.it it into her face I She swoon ed again, and the result of her horror and fright brought on convulsions, from the effects of which sho soon died. Tho Governor of Mississippi, in this event, beats the Governor of Ohio in hit acts of executive clemency. Baboox at Home. A new work has just been published in England, by Capt. A. W. Draysou, of tho royal artillery, entitled "Sporting Scenes among tho Kaffirs of South Africa." We extract from a review of it the following amusing description of an ape family : 'l watched thorn through mv glass, and was much amused at their grotesque and almost human movements, some of the old ladies hud their olive branches in their lips, and appeared to be 'doing their hair' while a patriarchial looking old fellow passed backward and forwards with a fus sy sort of look ; ho was evident!' on sentry and seemed to think himself of no small importance. The estimate of his dignity djd not seem to be universally acknowlcd'-1 ged, as two or three young baboons sat close behind him, watching his proceed ings. Sometimes with the most grotesque movement and expressions, they would stand directly in his path, and hobbfo away only at the last moment. One da ring youngster followed cloao on tho heels of the patriarch during the whole length of his beat, and gavo him a sharp tug at his tail as ho was about to turn. The oid fellow seemed to treat it with the greatest indifference scarcely turning round at the insult. Master impudence was about repeating the performance, when tho pater, showing that he was not such a fool as he looked, suddenly sprang around, and, catching the young ono before ho could escape, gave him two or three such cuffs that I could hear the screams that result ed therefrom. The venerable gentleman then chucked the delinquent over his shoulder and continued his prom in ado with the greatest coolness. Tho old ba boon was evidently acquainted with the practical detans ot Solomon s proverb. A crowd gathered around the naughty child, who, childlike, (seeing commiseration,) shrieked all the louder. I even fancied I could see the angry glances of the mama, as she took her dear little ret in her arms, and removed it from a repetition of such brutal treatment. BfOuWe have some funny stories about tho freshets in tho West, but here is one from the Memphis Appeal which is a tri fie ahead of any of the others ! "The Kato Frisby on her" last trip", had among her passengers a gentleman of Bolivar, who was going to see a friend of his hfty miles up tho river. His business was this: One day last week ho saw a nondescript sort of article floating down the Mississippi near his limitation : it resembled a minia ture Noah's ark, with the hull knocked off rr' !, X?V,lL : of a friend residing fifty miles up the river The contents were not greatly injured. He tied the store to the shore, and started offtolet his trading friend know whero he might find hi ot ple of business." (TERMS 1 $1 25 per Annum- NEWSEHIES-VOL. III. NO Seeinc the Elephant a c Dun Kico had the misfortune to shot his show up atZanesville, Ohio, on that peculiarly unlucky day, last Friday Jth day noted m all the newspapers for tor nadoes, deluges, thunder storms, and all the promiscuous deviltries of tho c-le-menu. We will let the Aurora teh how the 'show' showed ; Now the canvas gives a jirk to the lo ward ; circus man shouts out, "Guv roZ broke! " and out breaks Madam, the fin! '"KfS ftl,-,1A"other Circus ma 'hout! Out of tins n I of ye as soon as you can I" 1 hen helter-skelter, down off the seats pitching tumbling, crowding teaff tugging, dragging, screaming women, oryl .ng children-every body making for the door-while the great old rag was jump ng and swing about over head upon its tall poles like a craw balloon ; an 'extra hea vy blast of wind, and down came a wet dirty, heavy thing, trailing over the peo pie, while the women gave one grand scream, and he men dodged each other and every body else out of the way of the fulling poles. ' 'i "At this point in the performances peo ple began to "see the elephant" distinctly, s'cene 1,ShlninK ed upon the se,Twhiehd thre Were b0,,ne ft"J Bes ses, which once were gay in their bright colors, nmv 1 i i . ""fc" dy, and altogether ridiculous looking 1 tZ Znl0 Justc'lel from under the probtru e canvas were holding their UieHe0:!1' h " I0l8e,,' then best through about a foot deep of mud and water. Men and boys went about wslT'.'l w,ith0,,t hats' whi were taken oil by the fulling tentand the mud running off1 the end of their noses, rr.ends were hallooing to each other in ho night and storm. Sarah Jane was cry ng for Mary Ann, whom she said wL d ad. Polly was stuck fast among tho seats, and many other girls were in unfe--tunate and unbecoming situations. Pa rents were seeking their childron.children were crying for parents, any of whom at hat moment might bo floundering under the canvas l,ke a polywog caugfit in a cofleesacksein. While into all this lan scene walked the brigandish looking show- noiv, aias I CIMUl.u.) .i i , " .'""""'g torches stuck upon poles, illuminating a picture which, could H be described, would cap the climax ot' the ridiculous, and the rest of this thril hug story will, we hope, bo found in th eW 1 ork Ledger. Price five cents a c py. B3uThe following are from Harper' Magazine : Davidson College, North Carolina, con tributes a good story of a man with a very bad habit, As it is nil about lying, tbi reader will believe it or not as he likes: "In the old North State lives a certain John Long, who draws a long bow whef he has any thing to toll, and his charac ter for truth and veracity has been below zerow for many years. Captain Johnson had been so taken in by ono of John's out rageous stories, that he said to him in pet: "If you make me believe one of your lies again in a month, I'll give you flftv dollars." John pretended to be quite hurt by the ofler, and went ofY. A few din's after wards he was riding by the Captain's post haste, on horseback, when the Captain called out to him : "I say, hello, Johnny ! stop and tell iW a lie or two this morning !" John rodo on, but cried most dolefully i "No timo for lying now ; brother Jiinmv has just been killed in the machine, and I'm going for the old folks." On he went, Captain Johnson ordored his horse ami rode over to see tho deaa man and offer his services, tut found him alive and well, ginning cotton, and in no danger from the machine. Just then John rode up and demanded the fifty dollars. The Captain declared that it was a rascally trick, but ho would have hod to pay the money if John ha 1 not let him off." Guard Aoainst VuxaAiuiv. Wo should guard against tho use of every word that, is not perfectly proper. Ue no profane expressions ; allude to no sentence that will put to blush the most sensitive. You know not the tendency gof habitually using indecent and profane language. It may never bo obliterated from your hearf AVhen you grow up you will find at your tongue's end some expression which you would not use for any money. It was on'1 you learned when you were young. B beiug careful you will save yourself a great deal of mortification and sorrow.- -Good men have been taken sick, and In come delirious. In these moments the have used the most vile and indecent lar guago imaginable. When informed of i after restoration to health, they had r. idea of the pain they had given thci friends, and stated that they had learn e i and repeated tho expressions in childhood and though years had passed since, the had been indellibly stumped upon the heart. Think of this, ye who oro tempt ed to use improper language, and nevci disgrace yourselves. B3a,A good deacon making an official visit to a dying neighbor, who was a very churlish and naturally unpopular man, put the usual question " "Are you willing to go my friend ?" "Oh yes, (said the sick man,) I am." i "Well, (said the simplo minded deacon I am glad you are, for all tho neighbor are willing." - . - IQpAn old Dutch tavern keeper wh'i - third wife, being a-ked hi.'view. t matrimony, replied, "veil, den you aee the first time I marries for love dat Wav h goot; den I marries for peuly dat warn goot, too apout as goot as do first; bir uis time I mrrie for monr, ind "ai j potter axIwMlt. r