111•11!..1111111.11P1111PIIIPI '',f. „..THE - BRADFORD ~ REPORTER ' O l / 115 =7° TOW AND Al otbap aiontin,p., erptetnbet 10, 1853. :itlettett V ottrg. THE REWARD RI JOIN O. WiIITTILA to w i r ing backward from his mantmod'3 prime, • les tot the spectre of his mipent time; And, through the ab i de 0 cv „ ra i c ypress, planted thick behind. ow reproachful whisper on the wind, From his loved dead? no bests no trace of Passion's evil force wshuns thy sting, 0. terrible Reinorse ? Who would not cast 1 0 of his future from him. but to win litotes obliwton for tile rung and sin Ot the sealed pastw in' the eVI!, which we fain would shun, le4u, and leave the wished for good undone; Our ttrer , gth to•day, 'etatusinurrow's weakens; prone to fall, '.,r,F;linJ, unprofitable servants all, Are we alway. ichn, thus lookin; backward o'er his year* %es net his eye•lids wet with grateful tears, If he bath been S ,r:TI 'tea. aeak and sinful as he was, ' cheer and aid, in some ennobling caue, His fellow men? Se hash hidden the eutca , t, of let in • r>,7 of •un•hine to the cell ot sin; If he bath lent .iirength in the weak, an& in an hour of need, 'Ter the suffering. mindless of his creed, One tine bath bent, tie asa not tired in rain; and. while he gives . ;tt prase to Him in whum he moves and lives, With thankful heart. I,eaze: backward, and with hope before. koring that from hi■ works he never more Can henceforth part. iFfoto ,he New York Evening Pilt) [( I L. BEN TON'S HISTORY 1835-JAMLS MONROE, PRESIDENT.] Residential Elret►on In lb. House or Repre. senlstives. , i n+l,te.t,ly been •11 , twit that the theoly of the a•T.I )matte 1 ,/4 (11k111.2, - Wlig enlllPly . : •11. . •,4 11,11 111 atql V.ce PI —1,1111) o.e he people 14 rte only it, e. , cnrs. to 'or intel;tgetice the per.ow; for there high swions w. i s en :•mn.!' !hat, in practice, 11,44 thwor , ,) ren lan,rl horn the herrinnii, , , F u r gu ..rr ie jerriihe efecnirs were m ale Stjor , ii, to he people, having no choice of .heir own, r to deliver their votes for a part•cular to the will of hrice who elected . P.us fie theory had laded in ita applica•ron -:.ee,errotar colle2e; hut there 111 lit be a sec• cli.c . ion, and has been ; and here Li'. 'he constitution has faired again. lo :eery, of o choice being made by the electors, a an: of a majority of electoral votes be :o any one. or on account 01 an equal Ina- • r —No •he'llouse ol Representatives became fk. real college for the occasion, limited to a rsrf.eat rf the fise highest, (before the constitu -va.amrth.led ) nr !he two highest having an `•:•liltd; mn The President and Vice President 'r , ••,•• separwely, or with any de. it tlieir cfrice All appeared upon the etideniial nominees—the highest on the s:aring a majority, to be President; the next also having -a majority, to be Vice Prest• 4at ttie per.ple, Iro:0 the beginning, had dis -cal,ited betiveen the persons for these respec tepl,tes. always meaning one on their ticket for the other for Vice President. Bu', ray eo , y of the constitution and its 'Words, those V,ce Pre.tidents might be elected Presi r• ;:,e House of Representatives, either by be . itie five highest when there was no ma. 1 .. f. or being one of two in an equal majority.— .., t.tteuty hoed in the House of Representatives ..orn .i,e hist election, the demos kraleo inciple— "Pftple to govern—prevailing ihere,as in the elec tialccolegeo, and over-ruling the constitutional de qs c; each. The that election in the House of Representatives 'what of Mr. Jefferson and Mr. Burr, in the see ` - f 1 800-1801, These gentlemen had each a eliny of the a hole number of electoral votes, .cd an equal niuriity-73 each—Mr Burr being Pueniled for Vice President: One iif the contingen- NI had Inca occurred in which the election went to the house of Representatives The federalists had acted more wisely, one IA their state - electoral e u‘kges, (that of Rhode island,) having withheld a vote froni the intended Vice President on their rude, Mr. CharlesCotesworth Pinckney, of South Carolina ; end so,prevented an equality of votes be 14 een him and Mr John Adams It would have been entirely conventional ie the House of Repre- Rua:lves to have elected Mr Burr Preside nt, but the same time, a gross violation of the democrat `Principle, which requires the will'of the majority 0 be complied with. The federal states undertook ele ct Mr Burr, and kepi up a struggle for seven `alt and nights, arid until the thirty-sixth ballot Ther e were sixteen suites, and it required the con• ""eare of tim e to eflect an election Until the " sixth Mr. Jelletsoit had eight, Mr Burr six, ' t 'd two were divided. On tire thirty six h ballot 11r lefierson had ten states, arid was elected Gen '' ll Hamilton, though not then us public life, took ' &Tined .part this election, rising above all per to, and at! patty con.iderations, and urging the '`` le teltvis from the beginning to vote for 24i.idl er i°ll Thus the democratic principle prevailed.— lb° choice of the people was elected by the House of Reltrwentativee i and the struggle was fatal to lb * 'rho bad opposed Mat principle. The federal 411, wva broken down, and at the ensuing Con. gran elections, was left in a small minority. Its PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., BY E. O'MEARA GOODRICH. candidate at the ensuing Presidential election re ceiv r if d but fourteen votes out of one hundred and sev hty.six. Burr, in whose favor, and with whose n ivance the struggle had been made, was ruin ed--fell under the ban of the republican party, die appeared trout public life, and was only seen after wards in criminal enterprises, and ending his life in want and misery. The constitution itself, in that particular, (the mode of election) was broken down, and had to be amended so as to separate the Presi dential from the Vice Presidential ticket, giving each a separate icte ; and in the event of no elec• lion by the electoral colleges, sending each to sepa rate Houses—the three highest on the Presidential lists to the House of Representatives, the two high est on the Vice Presidential, to the . Senate. And thus ended the first struggle in the House of Repre sentatives, (in relation to the election of President,) between the theory of the constitution and the de. mocratic principle—triumph to the principle, ruin to its opposers, and destruction to the clause in the constitution whicepermined sorb a struggle. Tne second presidential election in the House of Representatives was after ihe lapse of a quarter of a certtury,and under the amended constitution which carried the three highest on the list to the House when no ore had a majority of the electoral votes. General Jack.on, Mr. John Quincy Adams, and Mr. William H Crawfo il, were the three, their respec- flue votes being 99, 84, 41; and in this case a sec ond struggle took place between the theory of the constitution and the democratic pritiqgle; and with eventual defeat to the opposers of that principle, though temporaril successful. Mr. Adams was elected, though General Jackson was the choice of gat people. having received the greatest number of votes, arid being undoubtedly the second choice of several states whose voles had been given to Mr. Crawford and Mr. Clay (at the general election). The represen tat ivesiroin sonic of these states gave the vote of the state to Mr Adams, upon the arge• merit that he was best qualified for the station, and that it was dangerous to our institutions to elect a milvary chieltain—an agreement which assumed a gmndiati•liip over the people. and implied the ne ces.ity of a r-ii c eiror iirelhgence to guide them for their own L•tl,rti The election of Mr. Adams was peifectly Corwin] tonal atid,as such lully subm tiled to by the people; but it was also a violation of the demos kruteo- principle ; arid that violation Was sig• natty rebuked. All the representatives who voted atzairtst the will 01 their constituents, lost their fa vor, and do:appeared i limn public life. The repre• merino/on in the ;Luise of Represenia!ives was large ly changed at the fir,-1 general election, a.rn! presen- ted a lull oprsMott to the new Pret.tdetit. Mr. A 1.110411111,•e!I %Va. by' i and at ;lie en=u n.:2 Cec:l-1 was 1 t..'ea I.y Crei,eral Jack-on r»,:e than tw, w one.-378 to S 3. Mr. Clay, who .00k the read in the House far Mr. Adams, and alter‘‘ Aids look upon himself the mission 01 revorteihng the people to his eleetion in a series of public speeche=, was himself crippled in the effort, 10.4 his plage in the tlvatoctiatte party, j , tureti the 11'litga, (Men called national republicans,) and has since resettled the doMeartenitig spectacle of a former great leader El/armlet t%e head of Ills au- merit foes in all their detears, and lingering on their rear in their victories. The demociatic principle was main victor over the theory of the constitution, and great arid good were the results that ensued It vindicated the demos in their right arid their pow er, and showed that the prefix to the constitution, r• We, th.s people, do ordain arid establish," &c, miy also be added in its administration, shr•wing theta to be Atte to attotottsier al to make that in strument It re established parties Lyon the, basis of principle, arid drew anew party lines, then al most obliterated wider the fusion of parties during the "era of good feelings," and the efforts of lead ing men In make personal 'parties for themselves It showed the conservative power of our govern• ment to lie in the people, more than its constituted author . vies. It showed that they were capable of exercising the function of self-government. It as sured the supremacy of the democracy for a long time, and until temporarily lost by causes to be shown in their proper place. Finally, it was a cau tion to all public men ao.nst future attempts to go vern Presidential elections in ihe House of fiepre. senialive. It is ha part of the object of this " Thirty Years View" in dwell upon the conduct of individuals, except aa showing the causes and the consequences of events, and, wider this aspect; it becomes the gravity of history to tell Ilia', in these two struggles for the election of P.esident, those who struggled against the democratic principle lost their places on the poOtical ihea!re, the mere voting members be. in put due° in their states and dlstricts, and the eminent ac•ors forever-tistracised trim the high ob ject of their ambition. 'A suboolinate cause may have had in , effect, and 411,iwoly, in prejudicing the public mind against Mr Adams and Mr. Clay — They had been political adversaries, co-operated in the election, and wear i .to the administration to gether. Mr. Clay. received the office of Secretary of State from Mr Adams, and ibis gave rise tolhe imputation of a bargain bete een them. It came within my knowledge, (tor I was then intimate with Mr. Clay,) long before the election, arid probably before Mr. Adams knew it himself, that Mr. Clay intended to support him against Gen. Jackson, and for the reasons atierwaids averred in his pehlie speeches. I made this known when oc ca.-ions requited me to speak of it, and in the pre sence of the mends of 'he impugned parties. It went into the newspapers upon the information of these friends, and Mr. Clay made me his acknow ledgments for it in a letter, of which this is the 'ex act copy : " I have received a paper published on the 29th Wa in), at Lexington, in Virginia, in which is contained an article stating that you had. in a gentleman of that •plan, expressed your disbelief of a charge injurious ,o me, touching the late Presidential election, and that I had communicated to you unequivocally, before the 154 of Dasher, 1824, my determination to vot•frff Adam mid net for Got Jackson. Presumitsg tha REDARDLE96 OP DENUNCIATION PBOll •NT QUALM." the publication was with your authority, / cannot de. *ay the expression of proper acknowledgments for the sense of justice which has prompted you to render this voluntary and faithful testimony." This letter, of which I now have the original,was dated at Washington City, Dec. Bth, 1827—that is to say, in the very heat and middle of the canvass in which Mr. Adams was beaten by Gen. Jackson, and when the testimony tiould be of most service to him. It went the rounds of the papers, and was quoted and relied upon in debates in Congress, greatly to the dissatisfaction of many of my own party. There was no mistake in the date, or the fact. I left Washington the 15th of December, on a visit to my father.in-law, Col., James M'Dowefl, of Rockbridge county, Virginia, where Mra.Benton then was; and it was before I left ‘Vashington that I learned from Mr. Clay himself that his intention was to support Mr. Adams. I told this at that time to Col. M'Dowell, and any friends that chanced to be present. I told it as my belief to Mr. Jefferson on Christmas evening of the same year, when re. turning to Washington and making a call on that illustrious man' at his seat, Monticello, and belie,. ing then that Mr. Adams would be elected, and, from the necessity of the case,would have to make up a mixed cabinet, ( expressed that belief to Mr. Jefferson, using the term, familiar in English his tory, of "broad bottomed;" and asked him how it would do? He answered: " Not at all—would never succeed—would ruin all engaged in it." Mr. Clay told his intentions to others' of his friends from an early period, but as they remained his friends, their testimony was but little heeded. Even my own, in the violence of party, and from my rela tionship to Mrs. Clay, seemed to have but little ef fect. The imputation of " bargain" stuck, and doubtless had an influence in the election. In fact, the circumstances of the whole aflait—previous an tagonism between the parties, actual support in the election, and acceptance of high office, Imade up a case against Messrs. Adams and Clay which it was hardly safe for public men to create and to brave, however strong in their own consciousness of integ rity. Still, the great objection to the election of Mr Adams was in the violation of the principle demos krateo ; and in the question which it raised of the capacity of the demos to choose a safe President for themselves. A letter which I wrote to the repre sentative from Missouri, before he gave the vote of the state to Mr. Adams, and which was published immediately afterwards, placed the objection upon this high ground ; and upon it the battle wall main ly fought and won. It was a victory of principle, and vhou:d not be disparaged by the admission of an unfounded and subordinate cause. The Presidential election of 1824 is remarkable un•ler another avpect—as having put an end to the practice ol caucus nominations for the Presidency by tr embers of congress. This mode of concen trating public opinion began to be practised as the eminent men of the revolution, to whom public °pillion awarded a preference, were passing away, and when new men, of more equal pretensions, were coming upon the stage. It was tried several times with success arid general approbation, public sentiments having been followed, and not led by the caucus. It was attempted in 1824, and laded, the friends of Mr. Crawlord only attending—others not attending, not from any repugnance to the prac tice. as their previous conduct had shown, but be. cause it was known that Mr Crawlord had the larg est number of friends in Congress, and would as suredly receive the nomination. All the rest, there fore, refused to go into it : all joined in opposing the •• caucus candidate," as Mr. Crawlord was called ; all united in painting the intrigue and corruption of these caucus nominations, and the anomaly of n:embere of Congress joining in them. By their joint efforts they succeeded, and justly in the fact though not in the motive, in rendering these Con glees caucus nomination odious to the people, and broke them down. Thei were dropped, and a dif ferent mode of concentrating public opinion was adopted—that ol the party nominations by conven tions of delegates Irom the states This worked well at final, the will of the people being strictly obeyed by the delegates, and the majority making the nomination. .But it quickly degenerated, and became obnoxious to all the objections to Congress caucus nominations, and many others besides— Members of Congress still attended them, either as delegates or as lobby managers. Persons attended as delegates who had no constituency. Delegates attended .upon equivocal appointments. Double sets of delegates sometimes came from the state, and either were admitted or repulsed, as suited the views of the minority. Proxies were invented— Many delegates attended with the sole view of es tablishing a claim for office, and voted accordingly. The two-thirds rule was invented, to enable the minority to control the majority; and the whole proceeding became anomalous and irreaponsable, and subversive of the will of the people, leaving them no more control over ihe nomination than the subject of kings have over the birth of a child which is bortk to rule over them. King Caucus is as po tent as any other king in Ibis respect ; for whoever gets the nomination—no matter how effected—be. comes the candidate of the party, from the neces ally of union against the opposite party, and from the indisposition of the great states to go into the House Representatives to be balanced by the small ones. This is the mode of making Presidents, practised by both parties now. It is the virtual el ection ! and thus the election of the President and Vice• President of the United States hu passed-.not only from the college of electors to which the con. atitution confided it, and from the people to whom the prao: ice tinder the constitution gave ii, and from the House of Representatives which the constitution proved as ultimate arbiters—but has gone to an an. omalous, irresponsible body, unknown to law or ronetitotion, unknown to the early ages of oar gov. ~,Iment, and of which a large proportion of the membere composing it, and a mud* larger propor tion of interlopers attending it, have no other view either in attending or in promoting the nomination of any particular men, that to get one elected who will enable them to eat of the public crib—who will give them a key to the public evil. The evil is destructive to the rights mid sovereignty of the people, and to the purity of election.. The tame• dy is in the application of the democratic principle —the people to vote direct for President or Vice President, and a second election to be held items. distely between the two highest, if no one has a majority of the whole number on the first trial.— But this would require an amendment. of die con stitution, not to be effected but by a concurrence of two-thirds of each Houses of Congress, and the sanction of three-fourths of the states consum mation to which the strength of the people has not yet been equal, but of which there is no reason to despair. The great parliamentary reform nr • Great Britain was only carried after torty years of contin ued, annual, presevering exertion. Our constitution. al reform, in this point of the Presidential election may require but a few years; in the menwhile I am for the people to se/ad, as well as sled, their candidates, and for a reference to the House to choose one out of three presented by the people, instead of a caucus nomination of whom it pleased. The House of Representatives is no longer the small and dangerous electoral college that it once was. Instead of thiosen states, we now have thir. ty one; instead of sixty five representatives. we now have above two hundred• Responsibility in the House Is now well established, and political ruin, and personal humiliation, attended the viola tion of the will of the state. No man could be el ected now, or endeavor to be elected, (after the experience of 1800 and 1821,) who is riot at the head of the list, and the choice of a majority of the Union. The lesson of those times would deter im itation, and the democratic principle would again crush all that were instrumental in thwarting the public will. There is no longer the former danger from the House of Represntatives, nor anything in it to justify a previous resort to such assemblages as our national conventions have got to be. The House is legal and responsible, which the conven tion is not, with a better chance for integrity, as has ing been actually elected by the people, and more restrained by position, by public opinion, and a clause in the constitution born the acceptance of of fice from the man they elect. It is the constitution. al umpire; and until the constitution is amended, I am for acting won it as it is. TIM STUN FIRE ENOINC -Mr. Stimpeon, the Secretary of the Massachusetts Charitable Associa tion, arrived here a few days since, having been sent by that Society to borrow the Steam F ire En gine, for the purpose of exhibiting it at the great Fair of that Society in September next On mak• ing appliration to Mr. Greenwood, he wab told that the machine rould riot go, but he should have an opportunity of seeing it operate. Day before yes terday, the machine was taken out After it had gone through a series of experiments in the way of throwing water and steam to the satisfaction of Mr. Stimpson,the engine returned to the house tc.ti had backed in, wnen the alarm of fife was given. Mr. Stimpeon had here an opportunity of witnessing this machine put out fires; the engine ran to the fire and had water on before any of the other appara tus came on the ground, and the fire was knocked into 1 pi" in less than no time. The steam fire engine is no longer ar. experiment. Its utility ex ceeds the expectations of its most sanguine fiiender —Cincinnati runes Norm. use or Kissino.—A kiss, ever since the day that Jacob kissed Rachael, has been a token of friendship ; but, alas! it has served a traitor's pus pose in some cases, as may be seen from the fol lowing: A gent, not many miles from Shippens burg, returned from a sleigh ride, on arriving at the paternal mansion of his lady, gave and received a kiss of triendship, as he supposed, but, alas ! the sequel will show how much he was mistaken, for the door having been closed, he overheard the fol lowing corroeisation— " Why, Lucy! ain't you ashamed to kiss a man oat there all alone With him 1 When I was a girl I wouldn't have done it far the world." " No, mamma, I am nnt," answered Lucy, " for I only kissed him to tell by his breath it he had been thinking A NEW REAMICO OF SMAHAPEARE —ln a country town' down East' a Democtstie newspaper was started ; depen ling mainly for support on the con tributions of the ' laithlul' in that region. its mot- to WU.... Be twill and rear not."—SHAltsiritAlLE. An old farmer, who had been quite activs in pro moting the interests of ibis newspaper enterprise, took op the first number and commenced reading it, with landitory comments. As he read the motto, his face flushed with honest enthusiasm, and he exelaimed—" Fear not Shekopeare no, that we won't, nos any other darned old Federalist." Otr , The greatest folly of which parents can be guilty, is, to twist honesty, neglect charily. and starve themselves, lot the sake of giving their chil dren a start, when they start them in a direction in which they ammo to ruin themselves. Otv There is said to be an editor in North Caro. line with seven bullets in his body, received in duels and scree. encounters. Some one suggests that his paper be called the " Bulletin," and as the editor contains "leaded" matter, it should be set Qtr Johnson says he never was in a tight place bet one, end that was when be had a mad hall by the tail. Had be held on, the ball would have dragged Dim to death over a stubble field, while if be bad not held on the eritter would have tamed mond and gored him to death. The question now which did Johnson de—hold on or let go! .4. great deal of what is ea:lea hypocrisy ksgoeni• ly arises horn the delicacy ore halt ioodehdittg the ittefinge of another. listellantous. A Faze FIGHT.- Me following is a description of a free fight in Western Virginia, as related by one of the eye witnesses Thereof. Premising that there was but one blow struck, in answer to an in terrogatory as to who he was, the narrator replies: " I reckon he was from low down on Groyne, eomewhar. Jes as they War jawin, a chap rude up on a elaybiank boss—l reekto he was Me:winger stock, a acrowgin anemd, a kettle blind o' both eyes —a peen lookin chap enough, an' when he got fer nen«he place, sea he, " Is this a free fight ?" they tole him it war. "Nell," says he, gittin oft an' hitchin his ole claybank to • awingin limb, " count me is !" He hadn't mouton got it ow, afore Kim. one latched him a lick, and he drapt. He riz drickly with someOeficilty, and see he, "13 this a tree fight?" and they tole him it arr. 'Welt,' sea he , unhechin his hosts, an' puffin his left leg over the back leather, " count me out" awl then he marviled." A &roan lincr.—" Doctor," said a waggish par ishoner id good old Parson to him one day, " I think that I moat have 'a pew nearer the deck than I now sit." " Why "says the parson, " can't you hear well where you are'!" "0' yea," was the reply, "but that ain't it. The lact,is there are so many people between me and the; pulpit, that by the time what you say gets back to where I sit, it is asjlal as dish-water." (CIA countryman visiting a young M. D who who toid recently pot oat his shingle in the neigh. borhood asked the doctor where he got the allele. tons he saw in his room. 4 4 We raised them !" was the reply " Du tell'!" queried Jonathan. Did you ever go to a military ball V asked a lisping maid the other night of an old veteran of Jackson's army of 'la. " No, my dear," growled the soldier; " in there days f had a military ball come to me, and what 'dye thinks rt tuok my leg off." Otto' They have a pig in Ohio so thoroughly ed ucated that he has taken to music. They regulate hie time by twisting his tail—the greater the IWISI the higher the notes. 0;:r Mrs. Partington rays that nothing despises her so much as to see people vi ho profess to expect salealion. go to church without their purses when a recollection is M be taken TWO SHARPS —An old man picked op haifa dol lar in the street " Old man that's mine, raid a keen looking weal, It en hand it oser." " Did yours have a hole in it," asked the old man. Yes,' replied the other smartly " Then it is nor thine," mildly replied the old man; " thee moat learn to be a little sharper next time, my boy " CCP' Mrs Partington says when the marriage knot is first tied it is a " beau" knot, but it soon gets to be a hard knot. 0:7 A celebrated portrait painter says that the reason tom cats are so musical is because they are all fid_lle strings inside. 0::: A good minister prayed fervently for those of the congregation who were too proud to kneel and too lazy to stand. Law.—Going to law is incising a cow for the sake of a cat. Kr An eminent physician has recently discos. erect ihat the nightmare, in nine eases oat often, is produced, " from owing a bill to the newspaper man." Cc:r An old gentleman, who has dabbled all his lite in,statistics, says be never heard of more than one woman who had her lite insured He accounts for thus, by the singular fact of one question on ev ery insurance paper being," What is your age!" How rapidly they build houses now,' said Cornelius man old acquaintance, as he pointed to a neat two-story house—" they commenced that house only last week, and 'they ate already putting in the lights." " Yee," rejoined hie friend, " and next week they will pnt in the liver." QV- Old Squire 8— was elected Judge of the inferior Court of some county in Georgia. When he went home hi 4 •delighted wife exclaimed— '• Now my dear, you are Judge, what am I ?" , t The same darned fool you tillers was," was the tart reply. Kr The Syracoge Sinndaid says: " A bachelor lei a boarding-house, in which were a number of old maids, on account of the 44 miserable fair" Be before him of the table. 0::!?-The Persians have a saying that " ten men i.ures of talk were sent down upon the earth, and the women look nine." Ins• The same editor who said a poor man had his head taken off by passing events, now says— "the man who hung himself with a cord of Wood was cot down shortly after with the edge of a preci- pice, or as some say, with a should rr bidder' Ote- Dialogue—Old Gentleman, (affectionately) —" My eon, why do you chew that filthy !oboe. co 1" Precocions Youth (Attfliy)—" To get the juice nut of it, old codger !" Ots• Mr. Smith, don't yon think Mr. Skeesicks 4s a young man of parts?" is Decidedly s o, Misi Brown; he is part num skull, and part knave, and part fool !" " Ma, that nice young man Mr. Saultang, is very fond of kissing." " Mind your seam, Julia ; wtio told you such nonsense ?" " Ma, I had it from his own tips." 04,- A pretty woman is like a great truth or a great happiness, and has no more right to bundle hersell op under a green veil, or and other similar abomination, than the sun has tow on spectacles Otr A wag recently appended to the list of mar. kat Ingullninnv in qincinnati, sr No whistling near the sausage sta.." Thunder and Ilan Storms. The late severe atronts tit thunder and lights) ttt g, accompanied with hail, have directed public alten• lion anew to these phenomena. Notwithstanding the raven of science, however, trimly erroneous impressions exist as to their causes, anti even find their way into the newspapers. A few words on the subject may not be 8 / 1 116$. All such storms owe their origin primarily loth* heat of the sun, which by evaporation, fill, the up per air with vapor, evolving electricity in the act. The same heat, b 3 rarefying the air, creates currents in the atmosphere, the friction of which produces electricity. This electricity forms the vapor into thin vesicles or tiny bladders, and prevents thews from uniting; and large masses of such vessels make clouds. These Omit) are some positive, and some negative, and when they approach each other, the thickness oh the electricity on the aides nearest each other increases, until finally the resistance of the atmosphere between be overcome, and a die. chargetakes place of lightning,accompanied by the detonative sound we call thunder. Thunder, consequently, occurs only where the atmosphere is in different electrical states. It might be supposed at Big thought, that the cloud, alter a single discharge, would be relieved and calm en sue. But while the clouds are conductors, The sirs. to of air betw e en them are non-conductors, and these last, being also highly charged, impart their electricity to the empty cloud, which makes a new discharge, and coniinctreeeiving arid discharging until equilibrium is restored over the entire sky.— The zig.z.ag, appearance of lightning is produced by suecessivedischargesthrough a ser.es of elands, the electricity passing, as it were, by stepping stones down the firmament. The noise that accompanies such explosions bas a rattling sound, occasioned by the discharges being at unequal distances from the bearer. Hail is produced by a cold current of air coming in contact with a warmer cloud, when the vesicle. of water ate beginning to change into rain drops, which they do the instant the electricity, which holds them together in that form, is discharged.— The size of the hail-stones depends principally on the height from which they Rill, as they appear to increase by congealing fresh vapor a ound them, the further they descend. They are r f all shapes. Las . week, in the upper part of New York city, they fell several inches long, and resembled the hits of tee one breaks !rum a bath tub on a winter morn ing. On Sunday they fell in New Jersey, as large eroun4 as a qnarter of a dollar, and fist, like a wa ter %rem pebble. Generally, however, they are oval, 0,.r round, varying in size from amid! seed up to a gooesberry. Many extraordinary hail-storms are recorded in history. lifezeray relates one which occurred in Italy, in 1510, and which destroyed many birds, beasts., and fish, some of the stones weighing near ly ten pounds. In 1686, enormous hail-reones fell at Lisle, in Flanders, some of which contained in the middle a dark brown matter, which, being put on the fire, give out a loud report. In 1797, a great hail storm occurred in England, traversing *dis tance of sixty miles, with a breadth of two miles, and no: oily killing lov‘ls and other smaller aril• mak, but spieling tree;, and even knocking down horses and men. Later in the same year, several persons %%ere killed iii England, by a hail -storm, , the stones of which frequently rneariureil from 'en to thirteen or fourteen inches around. Hail-storms of great severity have frequenly occurred in this cputirry, but none we believe involving such disas trous effects. The hardness and lucidity of hail determines the height horn which ri has fallen, and the intensity of the cold which it has endured. If spongy, to soft crystals, like snow, it has descended but a shot► distance. But if solid ice, and pettedly clear, like those which tell on Sunday, has come from the higher regions and experienced Arctic culd. We have all heard of the smile of Providence.— I was mach pleased with 17iicle Jim!s idea oo the subject '• Good morning, Uncle dun.•' " Good morning." " You've got your daughters all married 'off, Erato you." Yea." r• Really, Providence smiled upon yon•" "Smiled! No, bless you, she snickered right out." The surest way to prevent a young couple from unarr . Mg, is to oppose them. Ten them you would soon see them in their graves,' and twelve months afterwards, their baby u ill pass you twice a day in a willow wagon. Just ask your most particular friend who is roll ing in wealth to lend you a hundred dollars when you are in need of it, and see how poor he becomes at once—see his golden coffers vanish" and bank• ruptcy come upon him ! 1)::7- If yon want to make youraelt a favorite with your neighbors, buy a dug and tie him up M the cellar or yard at night. They wont sleep any all that night, thinking of you. The lady who was nearly killed by the acciden• tal discharge of her duly is dowly recovering. " John, has the doetor striver! " Yes sir."— " Then go for the undertaker immediately, tot ' corning events east their shadow before." " Wood is the thing el.er all," as the man with an oak tag said, when the dog bit it. A man may be so mean u to prevent him from artniurina on perfectly safe enterprises. 3. oheedol—beeminses is older than miaq.•. Adam dwelt in Paradise se4 e!over almost a wee's betbre the devil cams atom. R Millanini ilea